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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058568_0001"/>
?"<lb/>
THUfl<lb/>
October 19,1995<lb/>
Vol71,No. 17<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N C<lb/>
14 pases<lb/>
Stagnant student fees examined<lb/>
I : .<lb/>
?kdHh-ML-<lb/>
Around the State<lb/>
(AP) - Scott Rhoney is try-<lb/>
ing to solve an environmental mys-<lb/>
tery: How is mercury getting into<lb/>
some lakes and rivers in southeast-<lb/>
ern North Carolina?<lb/>
Rhoney and other researchers<lb/>
are looking to the sky for the an-<lb/>
swer. They think the mercury may<lb/>
be entering the atmosphere from<lb/>
a nickel-smelting plant in Cuba or<lb/>
a gold-mining operation in Brazil,<lb/>
then falling to the earth in rain.<lb/>
Or the culprit might be a North<lb/>
Carolina plant<lb/>
(AP) - State officials planned<lb/>
to eat fish before rolling cameras<lb/>
Wednesday to restore consumer<lb/>
confidence in North Carolina's sea-<lb/>
food industry.<lb/>
The point of the noon dem-<lb/>
onstration at Union Point Park was<lb/>
to assure consumers that "our sea-<lb/>
food is wholesome and safe to eat<lb/>
said Bruce Freeman, director of<lb/>
the Marine Fisheries Division of<lb/>
the Department of Environment,<lb/>
Health and Natural Rt sources.<lb/>
Around the Country<lb/>
(AP) - The ex-wife of a man<lb/>
accused of torching a high school<lb/>
embroiled in racial turmoil testi-<lb/>
fied Wednesday mat she only ad-<lb/>
mitted knowing something about<lb/>
the arson after investigators<lb/>
threatened her with prosecution.<lb/>
Janice Johnson, who was still<lb/>
married to Christopher Johnson at<lb/>
the time, testified Tuesday that she<lb/>
saw a dirt-filled paper bag "soaked<lb/>
with charcoal lighter fluid" and<lb/>
with matches stuck in it in her<lb/>
kitchen the night before Randolph<lb/>
County High School in Wedowee,<lb/>
Ala. burned down.<lb/>
(AP) - A 9-year-old who<lb/>
struck his teacher in the chest over<lb/>
a class assignment he didn't like<lb/>
has been handed over to juvenile<lb/>
court.<lb/>
The boy, who was not identi-<lb/>
fied, was detained Tuesday by ju-<lb/>
venile authorities after the St.<lb/>
Louis medical examiner ruled that<lb/>
the death of Nedra Morris, a sub-<lb/>
stitute teacher, was a homicide.<lb/>
Homicide detectives have rec-<lb/>
ommended that the boy be<lb/>
charged with involuntary man-<lb/>
slaughter under the juvenile code.<lb/>
The court will decide later this<lb/>
week what to do with the boy.<lb/>
Around the World<lb/>
(AP) - A bomb exploded in a<lb/>
car parked near the entrance to a<lb/>
Moscow airport, killing a police<lb/>
officer inside the vehicle and in-<lb/>
juring three other occupants, the<lb/>
Interior Ministry said Wednesday.<lb/>
It was not immediately known<lb/>
who planted the bomb at Vnukovo<lb/>
Airport on Tuesday or why, offi-<lb/>
cials said. The car was parked 30<lb/>
yards from the entrance to the air-<lb/>
port, which mostly serves domes-<lb/>
tic flights and flights to other<lb/>
former Soviet republics.<lb/>
(AP) - Helicopters prowled<lb/>
the skies and dogs sniffed through<lb/>
fields near the tense Korean bor-<lb/>
der Wednesday, looking for a<lb/>
North Korean agent who may have<lb/>
slipped into the south.<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
mmmmwmmmmmmmmwmmwmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
With the completion of the<lb/>
recreational center at least a semes-<lb/>
ter behind, some students have<lb/>
questioned who will pay for this<lb/>
delay.<lb/>
One major concern for SGA<lb/>
President Ian Eastman and his<lb/>
Executive Assistant Chris Arline is<lb/>
what will happen to the money col-<lb/>
lected from fall student fees, which<lb/>
was designated to be used to open<lb/>
the rec center.<lb/>
"The rec center will need a cer-<lb/>
tain budget to operate per year<lb/>
said Richard Brown, vice chancel-<lb/>
lor for business affairs. "The money<lb/>
($20 per student) represented the<lb/>
operating budget assuming the rec<lb/>
center would open in January<lb/>
The $20 fee tacked on to stu-<lb/>
dent fees was actually reduced from<lb/>
a proposed $35 fee, according to<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life Al<lb/>
Matthews. After filtering through the<lb/>
board of trustees. SGA and the N.C.<lb/>
Board of Governors, the fee increase<lb/>
was reduced to $20. This increase was<lb/>
divided in half for each semester.<lb/>
"We were comfortable with the<lb/>
$20 because the money coming in was<lb/>
only dealing with the center opening<lb/>
in late spring Matthews said.<lb/>
The first installment of the in-<lb/>
crease was collected with fall tuition<lb/>
and designated to be used for start<lb/>
up costs of the rec center, but now<lb/>
the money is sitting in a reserve fund<lb/>
account until it is determined how it<lb/>
will be spent<lb/>
Matthews said between $350-<lb/>
500,000 is needed to purchase move-<lb/>
able equipment including weight ma-<lb/>
chines, free weights and nets. An ad-<lb/>
ditional $75,000 is needed to purchase<lb/>
a climbing tower. Matthews said these<lb/>
expenses are necessary regardless of<lb/>
the opening time.<lb/>
"The problem we're running into<lb/>
is that they student life said they<lb/>
would have the place operational<lb/>
sometime in January, and that's why<lb/>
they said they needed the fee increase<lb/>
for the fall semester Eastman said.<lb/>
Eastman and Arline, who have<lb/>
formed a committee to manage financ-<lb/>
ing the facilities, are looking for al-<lb/>
ternatives for the fees students paid<lb/>
at the beginning of the fall semester.<lb/>
Their suggestions included refunding<lb/>
$10 to seniors graduating in the<lb/>
spring, allocating $10 to the future<lb/>
site of the intramural complex (be-<lb/>
hind Allied Health), asking seniors<lb/>
to donate their $10 to the intra-<lb/>
See SGA page 3<lb/>
SGA appropriates funds<lb/>
Wendy Houston<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The main focus in the Student<lb/>
Government Association (SGA)<lb/>
meeting in Mendenhall on Monday,<lb/>
Oct 16 was finances.<lb/>
Ian Eastman, SGA president,<lb/>
presented the following proposals<lb/>
for next year, in an attempt to keep<lb/>
student fees as low as possible: $40<lb/>
for student recreational fees, $11 for<lb/>
athletic fees and $5 for technology<lb/>
fees.<lb/>
"The fees were successfully low-<lb/>
ered even further than expected, $30<lb/>
rather than $40, this past year<lb/>
Eastman said.<lb/>
A proposal must be presented<lb/>
before Thanksgiving Break and will<lb/>
be finalized in a Board of Trustees<lb/>
meeting on Dec 8.<lb/>
A question touched on the topic<lb/>
of waiving or refunding the recre-<lb/>
ational center fees for graduating stu-<lb/>
dents, since the center will not be fin-<lb/>
ished by their graduation date.<lb/>
"The fees should be refunded<lb/>
Eastman said.<lb/>
Efforts are under way to allevi-<lb/>
ate the recreation center's cost to<lb/>
graduates. In conclusion, the as-<lb/>
sembly agreed a future meeting<lb/>
would be open to the public con-<lb/>
cerning the recreational center<lb/>
fees.<lb/>
"Nancy Mize, director of rec-<lb/>
reational services, is in charge of a<lb/>
membership policy of two years,<lb/>
and there will be a reduced fee<lb/>
Dean of Students Ronald Speier<lb/>
said.<lb/>
SGA's financial report shows<lb/>
their current revenue is $262,433.<lb/>
After total appropriations to van-<lb/>
See FUNDS page 3<lb/>
Homecoming Student's condition upgrades<lb/>
?J k A  ? ? tion as private as possible. talks and positive messages fron<lb/>
boosts spirits<lb/>
Meningitis victim<lb/>
receives support<lb/>
from football team<lb/>
Wendy Rountree<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Diagnosed with meningitis<lb/>
earlier this month. Iris Lee Thomp-<lb/>
son, a freshman and walk-oo m?<lb/>
ber of the ECU football teaat cob-<lb/>
tinues to stay m Pitt!<lb/>
pitai under dact atetfreafecw<lb/>
items to he m e<lb/>
M Ha<lb/>
tion as private as possible.<lb/>
Kay VanNortwick, director of<lb/>
Student Health Services, said she<lb/>
and the health services staff have<lb/>
been keeping ??<lb/>
track of<lb/>
Thompson's<lb/>
progress.<lb/>
"When 1<lb/>
called out there<lb/>
yesterday Tues-<lb/>
day 1 and talked<lb/>
to some of the<lb/>
xu4 he as bet<lb/>
. . i J<lb/>
tea<lb/>
 -<lb/>
Photo by MSI CiAMK<lb/>
Banner judge Janet R. Johnson examines an entry in the<lb/>
Homecoming banner contest yesterday afternoon.<lb/>
formances by the Marching Pirates ami<lb/>
the Pure Gold Dancers as ?1 as?w<lb/>
scheduled events.<lb/>
The Spirit Cup will also be i<lb/>
at the Piratefest This a-aid<lb/>
Holly Hagey<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It is time once again for Homecom-<lb/>
ing at ECU and with an increase in the<lb/>
number of floats, banners, bands and<lb/>
candidates, this year's Homecoming has<lb/>
started off with an increase in spirit<lb/>
"Homecoming is a very important<lb/>
pier: to the university said Assistant<lb/>
Director of Student Activities J. Marshall.<lb/>
"It's an intense project"<lb/>
Activities are scheduled throughout<lb/>
the week and have already begun with a<lb/>
banner judging held on Wednesday.<lb/>
One event on the agenda that will<lb/>
not be held, the major concert scheduled<lb/>
for Thursday at Minges, was not possible<lb/>
for Homecoming this year.<lb/>
"We made offers on five different<lb/>
bands including Hootie and the Blow-<lb/>
fish but because of routing the date was<lb/>
not a good time for the bands said<lb/>
Marshall. "They wouldn't accept the<lb/>
money we offered - it wasn't from a lack<lb/>
of trying"<lb/>
Another way to get organizations<lb/>
involved in Homecoming activities is<lb/>
HouseHall decorations. Registered uni-<lb/>
versity organizations, residence halls and<lb/>
departments can apply to take place in a<lb/>
contest in order to win cash prizes. The<lb/>
organization displaying the most creativ-<lb/>
ity and spirit wins the prize and will be<lb/>
announced at the game against the<lb/>
Temple Owls at 2 p.m. on Saturday.<lb/>
A highlight of Homecoming activi-<lb/>
ties is the Piratefest held on the mall.<lb/>
This is a large scale pep rally which in-<lb/>
volves many activities such as announce-<lb/>
ment of the Homecoming court unlock-<lb/>
ing of the Pirate's Chest for prizes, per-<lb/>
the organization with the<lb/>
Points are awarded tor<lb/>
events such as float banner<lb/>
Homecoming representative and Homt<lb/>
Hall decorations as well as to gnuesttot<lb/>
bring in canned goods. Al goods ?e<lb/>
lected are given to the Salvation<lb/>
The Spirit Cup and a cash prra of<lb/>
are awarded to the winning ofganoaiOR.<lb/>
"We're getting all of the student<lb/>
together to build school sptnt" satd<lb/>
Amber Hoffman, a member on the Stu-<lb/>
dent Homecoming Committee. "The par-<lb/>
ticipation, in general, has increased this<lb/>
year, and that's really good. The commit-<lb/>
tee has worked reairy hard<lb/>
Events scheduled for Saturday be-<lb/>
fore the game include a Step Show to be<lb/>
held at Minges as well as the Homecom-<lb/>
ing Parade which begins at 9:45 a.m.<lb/>
Extra incentive for better participa-<lb/>
tion involving floats has been given in<lb/>
the form of a $750 for the winning float<lb/>
"We were embarrassed by the level<lb/>
of the quality of the floats last year<lb/>
Marshall said. "We had four or five<lb/>
groups that went all out From there it<lb/>
went downhill drastically<lb/>
Some standards have been changed<lb/>
to encourage organizations to develop<lb/>
better floats for this year's parade. One<lb/>
of the changes involves a mandatory two-<lb/>
thirds of the vehicle must be covered.<lb/>
"There's that kind of pride in east-<lb/>
em North Carolina about ECU Marshall<lb/>
said. "I've always been impressed with<lb/>
the level of pride that people have about<lb/>
this school<lb/>
talks and positive messages from<lb/>
Thompson's coaches and team-<lb/>
mates on a cassette tape for Th-<lb/>
ompson and delivered it to the<lb/>
 hospital last<lb/>
Monday. This<lb/>
was in response<lb/>
to a suggestion<lb/>
made by one of<lb/>
Thompson's<lb/>
nurses who told<lb/>
VanNortwick<lb/>
that a tape of fa-<lb/>
miliar voices<lb/>
could help im-<lb/>
prove his status.<lb/>
"I took it<lb/>
out there<lb/>
VanNortwick<lb/>
said. "The nurse<lb/>
11 talked to said<lb/>
he listened to<lb/>
"He is off of the<lb/>
life support<lb/>
system and is<lb/>
functioning on<lb/>
his own. And, he<lb/>
is eating now<lb/>
? Kav VanNortwick,<lb/>
director of Student Health<lb/>
Services<lb/>
j she can only hope<lb/>
tieve that Thompson's cur-<lb/>
t progress is a positive sign.<lb/>
"I feel that he has turned the<lb/>
corner of life and death<lb/>
Twrtoi t ?i" ? j- said.<lb/>
? cases of meningitis<lb/>
?rted on campus.<lb/>
 al support<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
Phlebotomist Treniti Cox draws blood from freshman Janie Harris at Tuesday's<lb/>
bloodmobile sponsored by the ECU Club. Freshman Shannon Warren gives a smile.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0002"/><lb/>
m ?-?? inin(ii?i? P iwesupji-<lb/>
-Jki.<lb/>
Thursday, October 19,1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
October 11<lb/>
Assist rescue - A student was transported to Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital after she fell down the steps in the Austin building and injured her<lb/>
ankle.<lb/>
Larceny - A student reported that his bike had been stolen from the<lb/>
bike rack located west of Scott Hall. Parts were also taken from three other<lb/>
bikes on the rack.<lb/>
October 12<lb/>
Drug and paraphernalia possession - A student was issued a state<lb/>
citation and campus appearance ticket for simple possession of marijuana<lb/>
and possession of drug paraphernalia in the Reade and Third Streets park-<lb/>
ing lot Another student was also issued a campus appearance ticket<lb/>
Assault- A student reported a male tried to run her off the road while<lb/>
she was riding her bike down College Hill Drive. The offender was driving<lb/>
a cranberry colored four door Jeep.<lb/>
October 13<lb/>
Assist rescue - A student was transported by Greenville rescue to the<lb/>
hospital after she fell to the ground and began having convulsions in the<lb/>
Reade and Third Streets parking lot<lb/>
October 14<lb/>
Underage consumption - Four students were issued campus appear-<lb/>
ance tickets and state citations after having a keg party in their residence<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
October 16<lb/>
Information gathering- A student reported that another student has<lb/>
been gathering information on her. The accused has approached the stu-<lb/>
dent and has extensive knowledge of her past All the criminal elements for<lb/>
stalking have not been met however, and the situation will be monitored<lb/>
and investigated.<lb/>
October 17<lb/>
Larceny - A student reported that someone stole her book bag from<lb/>
a locker in Christenbury.<lb/>
Assist rescue - A staff member was transported to Pitt County Memo-<lb/>
rial Hospital by Greenville rescue after injuring his knee at a recreation<lb/>
services event north of Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Compiled by Tambra Zion. Taken from official ECU police reports.<lb/>
CORRECTION: Face painting at last weekend's International Fair was spon-<lb/>
sored by Gamma Sigma Sigma. The sponsors were incorrectly indentjfied.<lb/>
South Greenville's<lb/>
Neighborhood<lb/>
Restaurant and<lb/>
Gathering Place<lb/>
Game Day or Any<lb/>
Day<lb/>
U. MSMurphy'g<lb/>
Sunday Brunch 11:30 - 2:00 PM<lb/>
? Featuring Grilled Entrees &amp; Sandwiches<lb/>
Also Salads, Appetizers and<lb/>
Freshly Created Soups<lb/>
? Quaint, Relaxed Atmosphere<lb/>
? Full Service Bar<lb/>
1914 Turnbury Dr.<lb/>
(919) 355 -7956<lb/>
Please inquire about catering<lb/>
Bring your ticket stub on Game Day for a 12 price appetizers<lb/>
"Experience the Excitement"<lb/>
of ECU away games and other sporting events<lb/>
on our TV's<lb/>
georges<lb/>
hair design<lb/>
-Full Service Unisex Salon<lb/>
-Tanning<lb/>
-Skin and Nail Care<lb/>
-Walk-Ins Welcome<lb/>
-European Trained Stylists<lb/>
-Latest In Facial tr Body Wax<lb/>
-Professional Hair Products<lb/>
Gift Certificates Available<lb/>
THE PLAZA MALL<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Open MonSat.<lb/>
9:30 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday 1 p.m6 p.m.<lb/>
Tel: 7566200<lb/>
STANTON SQUARE<lb/>
Stantonsburg Road<lb/>
Open MonFh.<lb/>
10 a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday 9 a.m6p.m.<lb/>
Tel: 7570076<lb/>
CHARLES BOULEVARD<lb/>
SHOPPES<lb/>
Charles &amp; 10th Street<lb/>
Open MonFri.<lb/>
9 a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday 9 a.m6 p.m.<lb/>
Tel: 8305536<lb/>
HoifCut I I Pfms or Conning fackoocr<lb/>
!$200Off<lb/>
Expires<lb/>
georges<lb/>
$ 5OO Qff<lb/>
georges<lb/>
'November 15. 1995 hair design J J November 15, 1995 hair design ?<lb/>
mm mb saw an am ??? mm mm ? mm mm saai ami L? asm mm aaai mm ??? aaai ana) mm aw mm avJ<lb/>
Greenville escort services busted again<lb/>
Owners charged<lb/>
with conspiring to<lb/>
commit prostitution<lb/>
Marguerite Benjamin<lb/>
Senior Writer<lb/>
Earlier this month an investiga-<lb/>
tion of area escort services resulted<lb/>
in the arrest of three employees from<lb/>
Diamond, Cherry's and Crystal's es-<lb/>
cort services. At the time, no owners<lb/>
could be charged, but that changed<lb/>
last weekend.<lb/>
According to Investigations Of-<lb/>
ficer Tony Dennison, the investigation<lb/>
continued after the first arrests were<lb/>
made, and on Friday night police re-<lb/>
ceived the proof they needed in order<lb/>
to charge the owner of Diamond Es-<lb/>
corts, Jackie Ray Graves, and his<lb/>
fiance Heather Moore with conspiracy<lb/>
to commit prostitution.<lb/>
"Actually the owners were<lb/>
charged on two counts Dennison<lb/>
said, stating that the second charge<lb/>
was aiding and abetting prostitution.<lb/>
"The way it works is like this: phone<lb/>
lines for people to call in and request<lb/>
escorts are in the owner's house, the<lb/>
owner supplies each girl with a pager<lb/>
so she can be reached at any time.<lb/>
"When the owners get a call, they<lb/>
page the girl and tell her where to<lb/>
meet the client The girl then meets<lb/>
the client and calls back to the ser-<lb/>
vice to tell the owner how long the<lb/>
session will be<lb/>
Dennison said the charges of con-<lb/>
spiracy were founded on the fact that<lb/>
the owner takes the responsibility for<lb/>
calling and transporting the girls, and<lb/>
that charging the girls with prostitu-<lb/>
tion was well founded.<lb/>
"The act is still considered escort-<lb/>
ing until the girls get down to undress-<lb/>
ing Dennison said. "When clients go<lb/>
and the girl gets naked and asks the<lb/>
client if he has condoms - one girl<lb/>
even had a tube of KY Jelty - at that<lb/>
point, you don't have to go any fur-<lb/>
ther<lb/>
The owners of Diamond Escorts<lb/>
were arrested and posted $2,000<lb/>
bonds while the escorts themselves<lb/>
posted $500 bonds after being<lb/>
charged with attempting to sell sexual<lb/>
favors to undercover police officers.<lb/>
The court date is set for Nov. 28.<lb/>
"At this point, the escort service<lb/>
is still not closed Dennison said.<lb/>
"Graves says he's not doing anything<lb/>
wrong and he plans to continue what<lb/>
he's doing. He'll probably keep doing<lb/>
it even if he is convicted. He seems to<lb/>
think he's providing the community<lb/>
with a valuable service<lb/>
Graves told a reporter in an ar-<lb/>
ticle for The Daily Reflector that his<lb/>
service was doing a lot of good for<lb/>
Greenville by providing prom dates for<lb/>
high school boys and escorts who<lb/>
pose as dates for gay businessmen.<lb/>
Dennison said after a half-hour<lb/>
session which costs $100, the escort<lb/>
gets to keep $60 and the owner gets<lb/>
the rest<lb/>
"I guess that's what the attrac-<lb/>
tion is for these jobs Dennison said.<lb/>
"I mean 100 bucks for a half-hour is<lb/>
outrageous, but people do it all the<lb/>
time. I just can't see giving up hard-<lb/>
earned money like that<lb/>
As far as there being any legiti-<lb/>
mate escort services operating in<lb/>
Greenville, Dennison expressed doubt<lb/>
"I really don't think so he said,<lb/>
" because we have arrested girls from<lb/>
almost every one of the services. They<lb/>
know what the job consists of before<lb/>
they take it I am convinced of that,<lb/>
because they know other girls who<lb/>
work there, and they find out that<lb/>
they are expected to sleep with the<lb/>
clients<lb/>
No ECU students were involved<lb/>
with the arrests made this weekend.<lb/>
According to Dennison, die investiga-<lb/>
tion is far from over. He said the next<lb/>
step is to bust girls when they are with<lb/>
regular clients so that the clients can<lb/>
be arrested too.<lb/>
"There will definitely be more<lb/>
arrests made Dennison added.<lb/>
a&amp;r?3&amp;<lb/>
?!?j3v<lb/>
ELTORO<lb/>
Barber t Style<lb/>
men's hair styling shoppe<lb/>
2800 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
Across from Highway Patrol<lb/>
Behind Stain Glass<lb/>
Mon-Fri. 9-6<lb/>
Walk-ins Anytime<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
Say PIRATES<lb/>
A Get Hair Cut for S6<lb/>
Evtrytime<lb/>
$6.00<lb/>
Haircut<lb/>
GRAND OPENING<lb/>
Hot Dogs, Italian Beef &amp; Sausage Sandwiches<lb/>
iDIKMfl.<lb/>
TOHOMEOFROCKiROU<lb/>
Friday October 20th<lb/>
LIVE<lb/>
REMOTE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
WSFL Merchandise<lb/>
VIP Tailgate Tickets<lb/>
Game Tickets<lb/>
Tee Shirts<lb/>
And Lots More<lb/>
754-2225<lb/>
Located in the Kash &amp; Karry Chevron on the<lb/>
Corner of I4th &amp; Charles<lb/>
Accepted at<lb/>
more Schools<lb/>
than you were.<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
? - ? oc<lb/>
Am.<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
It's every<lb/>
-you "wa?t to oe-<lb/>
? Via U.S.A. Inc. 1995<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0003"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Thursday, October 19, 1995<lb/>
CAMPUS REP<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
n s leader m college marketing<lb/>
I jii energetic entrepreneurial<lb/>
student tor the position ot campus rep<lb/>
Nj sales involved Place advertising on<lb/>
bulletin boards lor companies such as<lb/>
I ess and Microsoft<lb/>
ob earnings. Choose<lb/>
your own hours 4 8 "ours per week<lb/>
? Can<lb/>
:ius Rep Program<lb/>
issage Media Corp<lb/>
 Seattle, WA 98119<lb/>
(800) 487-2434 Ext. 4444.<lb/>
GAMMA sends message cmrt authority speaks<lb/>
off the winmk .irtiviti?? with a OrinL- ? "?<lb/>
Staff I<lb/>
Alcohol Awareness Week is spon-<lb/>
sored by Greeks Advocating Mature<lb/>
Management of Alcohol (GAMMA).<lb/>
The awareness week has taken<lb/>
place on ECU's campus for seven<lb/>
years. It is extremely big nationally,<lb/>
said Julie Smith, Alpha Phi and<lb/>
GAMMA President.<lb/>
"GAMMA doesn't say don't drink<lb/>
at all, but it enforces safe drinking<lb/>
Smith said.<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
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off the week's activities with a Drink<lb/>
Out. It took place from 3 to 5 p.m. at<lb/>
the bottom of College Hill. The pizza<lb/>
party provided nonalcoholic bever-<lb/>
ages and had a turnout of 156 Greeks.<lb/>
Tuesday. Oct. 17 the Attic held<lb/>
an All Greek Social. From 6 to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Greeks were allowed into the club with<lb/>
no cover charge. The dance-off had an<lb/>
enormous turnout of 313 sorority and<lb/>
fraternity members.<lb/>
Greeks will meet today. Oct. 19<lb/>
at 4 p.m. at Minges and walk for alco-<lb/>
hol awareness to Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"I'm expecting a huge turnout<lb/>
Smith said. There will be police es-<lb/>
corts and the media will be there<lb/>
Directly after the walk, Rachel<lb/>
Cherrier. a representative of Mother's<lb/>
Against Drunk Driving (MADD), will<lb/>
speak on the campus mall.<lb/>
All proceeds earned from the<lb/>
week will be given to MADD and one<lb/>
sorority and fraternity with the high-<lb/>
est percentage of attendance will re-<lb/>
ceive a $150 cash prize.<lb/>
They are also sponsoring a ban-<lb/>
ner contest in which the eight sorori-<lb/>
ties are paired up with two to three<lb/>
fraternities and will be judged Satur-<lb/>
day during the Homecoming festivi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
"GAMMA is very positive: it pro-<lb/>
motes health, well-being and an aware-<lb/>
ness of drinking consequences<lb/>
Smith said.<lb/>
Staff Reports<lb/>
Law and order are on ECU's<lb/>
agenda for Monday night.<lb/>
Henry J. Abraham, a James Hart<lb/>
Professor of Government at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Virginia, will present "Re-<lb/>
flections on appointments to the Su-<lb/>
preme Court of the U.S in the<lb/>
Jenkins Art building at 7 p.m. Oct. 23.<lb/>
The lecture is sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
College of Arts and Sciences in honor<lb/>
of Tinsley E. Yarbrough. the 1995 re-<lb/>
cipient of the College's Distinguished<lb/>
Professor Award. Yarbrough is a po-<lb/>
litical science professor who currently<lb/>
serves as interim vice chancellor of<lb/>
academic affairs.<lb/>
"He (Abraham) is a great author-<lb/>
ity in the same field as Dr. Yarbrough<lb/>
said David Conradt, chair of ECU's<lb/>
political science department. "He has<lb/>
lectured widely all over the world<lb/>
Abraham is a prominent special-<lb/>
ist in the study of judicial process and<lb/>
has written several books and articles<lb/>
on the subject.<lb/>
"He's been sort of a mentor, as<lb/>
well as a good friend of mine for many<lb/>
years Yarbrough said, i did teach<lb/>
with him as a visiting professor at the<lb/>
University of Virginia back in the late<lb/>
70s<lb/>
Yarbrough is also considered an<lb/>
authority on the influence of federal<lb/>
courts and justices on American gov-<lb/>
ernment and politics.<lb/>
"Often there is discussion as to<lb/>
whether non-lawyers should be ap-<lb/>
pointed to the Supreme Court Nu-<lb/>
merous prominent law professors have<lb/>
suggested Abraham would make an<lb/>
excellent Supreme Court justice<lb/>
Yarbrough said.<lb/>
Keats Sparrow, dean of the Col-<lb/>
lege of Arts and Sciences is looking<lb/>
forward to the event.<lb/>
"Dr. Abraham is so well re-<lb/>
spected, there will be a lot of people<lb/>
from the community who will come<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
from page 1<lb/>
mural complex in the name of the<lb/>
class giftproject or to leave the<lb/>
money untouched for the future. The<lb/>
suggestions are being considered by<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
Matthews and Brown are looking<lb/>
into the solutions proposed, but<lb/>
Matthews said currently, he is look-<lb/>
ing for a more accurate account of<lb/>
the budget.<lb/>
"We're going to look"very seri-<lb/>
ously at any recommendation that<lb/>
comes from student government<lb/>
Matthews said.<lb/>
Matthews said it is most likely<lb/>
that students who graduate in Decem-<lb/>
ber will never see their $10. He also<lb/>
added that students must pay now for<lb/>
projects others will benefit from in the<lb/>
future, such as Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Eastman and Arline believe it is<lb/>
only fair to look at keeping fees as<lb/>
low as possible.<lb/>
"It's a constant concern<lb/>
Eastman said. He said the ideas will<lb/>
be presented to the finance facilities<lb/>
committee for formal recommenda-<lb/>
tions at the SGA meeting next week.<lb/>
The board of trustees will vote<lb/>
on these potential solutions at their<lb/>
Dec. 8 meeting, at which time they<lb/>
will also determine the '9697 school-<lb/>
year fee increases.<lb/>
Eastman said after he receives<lb/>
the proposed fee increases, the SGA<lb/>
will hold an open forum for debate<lb/>
(tentatively before Thanksgiving<lb/>
break).<lb/>
"Our main objective is to look out<lb/>
for the students' concerns and mini-<lb/>
mize financial burdens involved<lb/>
Arline said.<lb/>
FUNDS from page 1<lb/>
ous campus organizations ($162,714).<lb/>
the total available balance is $99,714.<lb/>
Gamma Theta Epsilon, the Inter-<lb/>
national Geography Honor Society,<lb/>
requested $3,450. but the Appropria-<lb/>
tions Committee approved an amount<lb/>
of $250 which passed without debate.<lb/>
Army ROTC Pirate Battalion re-<lb/>
quested $2,800, but received only<lb/>
$1,000.<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi. the National Busi-<lb/>
ness Teacher Education Honor Soci-<lb/>
ety, requested $7,553; however, they<lb/>
were given $150.<lb/>
"There needs to be some debat-<lb/>
ing. We just gave away $1,400 today.<lb/>
Our money won't last if we give it away<lb/>
like water said Harry Bray, speaker<lb/>
of legislature.<lb/>
SGA meetings are held at 5 p.m.<lb/>
in Mendenhall room 213. The next<lb/>
meeting is scheduled for Monday OcL<lb/>
23.<lb/>
To moke $$, it<lb/>
makes isto<lb/>
in mr<lb/>
$2 fir 25 words or<lb/>
lesswith availd<lb/>
ECiTUX<lb/>
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now in its<lb/>
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Every Wednesday<lb/>
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Tix.<lb/>
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$1.50 Hi Balls<lb/>
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51.00 32 oz Draft<lb/>
$1.00 Membership<lb/>
Only S5<lb/>
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sc.oo<lb/>
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Friday 20th<lb/>
Captain Cook&amp;<lb/>
the cocosutz<lb/>
Jimmy Buffet Show<lb/>
Saturday 21st<lb/>
20NE<lb/>
Chairmen of<lb/>
the Board<lb/>
Homecoming Concert<lb/>
Wednesday 25th<lb/>
ALLYN BALL<lb/>
.Admission only $1:00 w ECU student ID 9:00-9:30<lb/>
$1.50 Hi Balls<lb/>
$1.50 Tali Boys<lb/>
East Coast<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Quicksilver<lb/>
Wash Pub<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Thursday Nov 9th<lb/>
Advance tickets only S10<lb/>
$1.50 HiBalls<lb/>
lie Co<lb/>
When ECU<lb/>
defeathers the<lb/>
Temple Owls on<lb/>
October ft1, show<lb/>
them your<lb/>
Pirate Pride!<lb/>
This Homecoming Weekend, let's fill Dowdy-<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium with a sea of purple A gold!<lb/>
Visit the Student Stores for our pre-game sale!<lb/>
Buy one regular price apparel item and get the<lb/>
second one of equal or lesser value at<lb/>
Half-price!<lb/>
Plus we're slashing prices 20 on select gift<lb/>
items!<lb/>
Student Stores!<lb/>
Store Hours:<lb/>
Monday - Thursday: 8 am - 8 pm<lb/>
Friday: 8 am - 5 pm<lb/>
Saturday: If am - 5 pm<lb/>
This Sdturddy, we'll open at 10 am for ell your Homecoming needs!<lb/>
Dress Right<lb/>
$1.50 Bottle Beer $1.00 Membership<lb/>
$1.00 32 oz Draft<lb/>
Not valid with any other offer or<lb/>
discount.<lb/>
Friday 27th &amp; Saturday 28th<lb/>
Open Mike Weekend<lb/>
Coll 7527303 and leave Nome &amp; Number for time slot<lb/>
Centrally located on campus, in the Wrisht Building, just off Wrisht Circle919-328-6731<lb/>
More than just booksyour dollars support scholars!<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0004"/><lb/>
??<lb/>
Thursday, October 19, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
4<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
?<lb/>
How sweet it is. After months of hard work by our ath-<lb/>
letic department, a deal has been reached to resume the ECU<lb/>
vs. N.C. State football series. It is a long-awaited rivalry of<lb/>
what should be some exciting games to come.<lb/>
Beginning next year, the Pirates will battle it out with the<lb/>
Wolfpack and we at the TEC couldn't be happier. The last<lb/>
time these two schools fought it out on the field was in 1992<lb/>
at the Peach Bowl. It was ECU's Cinderella season that ended<lb/>
with a record of 11-1, a victory over State in the Peach Bowl<lb/>
and a national ranking of ninth in the country. During the<lb/>
bowl game, the Pirates rallied back to take the game by a 37-<lb/>
34 decision. That would be the last time the two teams would<lb/>
line up across from one another on the field for another four<lb/>
years.<lb/>
ECU does not have an in-state rival like our counterparts<lb/>
around the state. We hope the Pirate vs. Wolfpack match-up<lb/>
will become a long standing tradition thatfjvill be as climatic<lb/>
as the Wolfpack vs. Tarheel match-up has come to be.<lb/>
Not only will the football program benefit, but so will the<lb/>
fans. Since the '92 season both Pirate and Wolfpack fans have<lb/>
been awaiting another clash between these two programs.<lb/>
The regular series was terminated because of an incident<lb/>
that happened in Raleigh one football Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
The series, which previously had been played from 1970-1987,<lb/>
was brought to a halt during the '87 season after an ECU<lb/>
victory. ECU won the game 32-14, and ECU fans proceeded<lb/>
onto the field where they were later joined by Wolfpack fans.<lb/>
Students from both schools were crammed onto the field,<lb/>
and eventually trouble broke loose. That incident helped con-<lb/>
tribute to the ending of the series.<lb/>
When ECU and State met during the Peach Bowl, the<lb/>
fans were ecstatic but no major problems arose like those<lb/>
compared to the incident in '87.<lb/>
We think it is safe to assume that the fans and players will<lb/>
be ready to face N.C. State, and will want to have a long play-<lb/>
ing tradition with the Wolfpack.<lb/>
It will be an exciting series and finally a chance at an in-<lb/>
state rival for the Pirates. The first game is set to be played in<lb/>
Charlotte at the Carolina's Stadium and then ECU will visit<lb/>
Raleigh in 1999. N.C. State will grace Dowdy-Ficklen with<lb/>
their presence in the year 2000. What a way to begin a cen-<lb/>
tury.<lb/>
For the first time in history, N.C. State will play ECU in<lb/>
Greenville. By that time most of us will (hopefully) be alumni,<lb/>
but we will still be anxiously awaiting our tickets to see his-<lb/>
tory in the making.<lb/>
Oh  how<lb/>
long we've<lb/>
waited for a<lb/>
matchup with<lb/>
N.C. State.<lb/>
Thanks to our<lb/>
hardworking<lb/>
athletic<lb/>
department<lb/>
and members<lb/>
of the N.C.<lb/>
legislature,<lb/>
the dream is<lb/>
finally<lb/>
coming true.<lb/>
Who's the<lb/>
best in the<lb/>
state? We'll<lb/>
soon find out.<lb/>
The East Carolinian t??<lb/>
recycled<lb/>
Stephanie Lassrter Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Crissy Parker, Advertising Director<lb/>
Celeste Wilson, Production Manager<lb/>
Tambra Zlon, News Editor Ken Clark, Photo Editor<lb/>
Wendy Rountree, Assistant News Editor Patrick Irelan, Photographer<lb/>
Mark Brett, Lifestyle Editor Xlall Yang, Systems Manager<lb/>
Brandon Waddell, Assistant Lifestyle Editor Patrick Klnson, Copy Editor<lb/>
Amanda Ross, Sports Editor Lanl Adkinson, Copy Editor<lb/>
Paul Hagwood, Staff Illustrator Paul 0. Wright, Media Adviser<lb/>
Erika Gohde, Production Assistant Janet Respess, Media Accountant<lb/>
Jeremy Lee, Production Assistant Deborah Daniel,Secretary<lb/>
Kami Klemmer, Production Assistant<lb/>
Serving the ECU community since 192S, The East Carolinian publishes 12,000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday. The lead editorial in each<lb/>
edition is the opinion of the Editorial Board. The East Carolinian welcomes letters to the editor, limited to 250 words, which may be edited<lb/>
for decency or brevity. The East Carolinian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication. All letters must be signed. Letters should<lb/>
be addressed to Opinion Editor, The East Carolinian, Publications Building, ECU, Greenville, NC 27858-4353. For information, call (919)<lb/>
328-6366.<lb/>
Taking back freedom<lb/>
?<lb/>
A handshaking matter<lb/>
An old saying states that you can<lb/>
tell a lot about a person by their hand-<lb/>
shake. As far as this writer is con-<lb/>
cerned that notion is gospel. There<lb/>
are few ways to make a worst impres-<lb/>
sion than with a clammy handshake.<lb/>
Webster's Dictionary defines the<lb/>
handshake as "a gripping and shak-<lb/>
ing of each other's hand, as to sym-<lb/>
bolize greeting, congratulation, agree-<lb/>
ment or farewell Taking this defini-<lb/>
tion into consideration it's hard to see<lb/>
how people can take something so<lb/>
significant lightly.<lb/>
Historically the handshake dates<lb/>
back to the time of the ancient Greeks<lb/>
where it assumed all of the above<lb/>
duties and was utilized as the bond-<lb/>
ing motion of marital vows as well.<lb/>
In politics it has always been the<lb/>
first thing to follow the pen when<lb/>
agreeing on treaties. How often does<lb/>
one see a well renowned world leader<lb/>
pat another on the back as a show of<lb/>
appreciation of a job well done with-<lb/>
out a handshake preceding it<lb/>
As the application of the motion<lb/>
can be shown as a favorable the with-<lb/>
holding of the act can be just as sym-<lb/>
bolic.<lb/>
John Foster Dulles exercised this<lb/>
right when he chose not to shake the<lb/>
hand of Chinese Foreign Minister<lb/>
Chao en Lai at the conclusion of the<lb/>
Geneva Conference as a silent protest<lb/>
to his anticipation that the Chinese<lb/>
would not uphold the agreement.<lb/>
Chris Arline<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Hovofien does<lb/>
well renowned<lb/>
wbrd leader pat<lb/>
bacfcqsvcr show<lb/>
of appreciations<lb/>
 vf.<lb/>
About 30 years later we now see just<lb/>
how right he was by the Chinese Gov-<lb/>
ernments support of the North Viet-<lb/>
namese and the vast human rights<lb/>
abuses during the Vietnam Conflict<lb/>
Dulles was taught well. The man<lb/>
at his post of Secretary of State be-<lb/>
fore him was Dean Acheson. He chose<lb/>
not to shake hands with the most<lb/>
notorious witch hunter of the 20th<lb/>
century, Joseph McCarthy.<lb/>
Secret and selective social groups<lb/>
have always used the handshake (in<lb/>
different modifications) as a right of<lb/>
passage. American Indians even used<lb/>
blood to strengthen the symbolism<lb/>
even further.<lb/>
All too often I am introduced to<lb/>
a person for the first time and more<lb/>
importantly than the name, I remem-<lb/>
ber the handshake. Actions peak<lb/>
louder than words (or names in this<lb/>
case.) How can a persons words be<lb/>
taken seriously if even something as<lb/>
simple as a firm handshake can't be<lb/>
performed correctly?<lb/>
A handshake is a personal hall-<lb/>
mark. It is the act that shows that you<lb/>
are in agreement with the actions or<lb/>
beliefs of another.<lb/>
This is to state that if a person<lb/>
was at Fidel Castro's inauguration and<lb/>
you shook hands with him immedi-<lb/>
ately preceding his oath then you<lb/>
would be in agreement and okay with<lb/>
the fact that he was in charge. His<lb/>
views on human rights abuses are fine<lb/>
and dandy as well.<lb/>
Of course all binding precedent<lb/>
deals are off if you knew that your<lb/>
very existence on Earth would be<lb/>
short lived if you didn't But that is<lb/>
beside the point.<lb/>
All extreme circumstances aside<lb/>
the best way to make a bad first im-<lb/>
pression (aside from showing up at a<lb/>
vegetarian rally with enough veal cut-<lb/>
let sandwiches for everyone and their<lb/>
in-laws,) is by giving a poor, clammy,<lb/>
backbone deprived, quiche eating, self-<lb/>
esteem lacking handshake.<lb/>
A handshake is the mortar a per-<lb/>
son uses to make a bond. Who's go-<lb/>
ing to take an agreement or a meet-<lb/>
ing with a person seriously if their<lb/>
mortar can't hold a cotton ball to fly-<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
Aah Freedom! You're finally out<lb/>
of the dorms. Your roommate and<lb/>
yourself have your entire college fu-<lb/>
ture planned out The two of you have<lb/>
just signed a lease for your new apart-<lb/>
ment and all looks good. You're even<lb/>
on the ECU bus route.<lb/>
(Time advance two days) You're<lb/>
all moved in now! Everything is in<lb/>
place, the stereo is set up just right,<lb/>
all the pictures are perfectly hung and<lb/>
centered on the walls. The food has<lb/>
all been purchased. It's all been neatly<lb/>
unpacked and placed in the cabinets.<lb/>
Your food in these two and your room-<lb/>
mates in the other two.<lb/>
Nothing can ruin this great feel-<lb/>
ing that you have about your new<lb/>
found freedom. Except, that third<lb/>
roommate. You know what I mean.<lb/>
That person who somehow wormed<lb/>
their way into your apartment calling<lb/>
themselves your roommate's boy-<lb/>
friend or girlfriend.<lb/>
Soon, that nice, neat, fully-<lb/>
stocked cabinet of yours begins to<lb/>
look like it was raided by a camp of<lb/>
refugee college students after having<lb/>
been downtown and seem to have<lb/>
those late night munchies. Your<lb/>
mouth begins to salivate as you stare<lb/>
at the lone crumb that remains in you<lb/>
precious cabinet<lb/>
You gulp down that sole crumb<lb/>
in hopes that is may perhaps appease<lb/>
that growing anger inside yourself.<lb/>
"That's it you say to yourself in a<lb/>
semi-happy tcne. "I will not tolerate<lb/>
this anymore Your swoop out of the<lb/>
kitchen as a hawk swoops towards its<lb/>
prey. Your going to confront your<lb/>
roommate and tell them how you feel.<lb/>
All your built up frustration is<lb/>
just about verbalized when a single,<lb/>
lone thought breaks through your<lb/>
impenetrable wall around your heart<lb/>
That single thought is how can you<lb/>
possibly tell your roommate how you<lb/>
feel without hurting their feelings.<lb/>
This is your closest friend, your con-<lb/>
fidant The last thing you want to do<lb/>
is to lose this friend because you could<lb/>
Brian Lewis Burns<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Nothircari<lb/>
rum tbis great<lb/>
except that third<lb/>
roommate.<lb/>
not tolerate a few disrespectful things<lb/>
that third roommate did.<lb/>
So, you hold back your thoughts,<lb/>
you bury your feelings and decide to<lb/>
give them, one last chance. Perhaps<lb/>
it's just you. You have probably been<lb/>
under a great amount of stress and<lb/>
you are probably acting too judgmen-<lb/>
tal.<lb/>
A few days go by and all has<lb/>
seemed to have healed itself. You de-<lb/>
cide to go to the laundromat and<lb/>
wash your clothes which have been<lb/>
piling up for longer than the laws of<lb/>
physics can support While separat-<lb/>
ing your white's from the dark's you<lb/>
start to find shirt, shorts and even<lb/>
underwear that is not yours.<lb/>
THAT'S IT! You pioclaim at the<lb/>
top of your lungs. Without washing<lb/>
your clothes, you rush back to your<lb/>
perfect apartment and confront your<lb/>
roommate. All the anger and frustra-<lb/>
tion finally is verbalized in a 15<lb/>
minute sermon to your roommate<lb/>
who is horrified by this ghastly dis-<lb/>
play from you.<lb/>
Your roommate and you have<lb/>
the battle royal and in the end, who<lb/>
is the winner? You and your room-<lb/>
mate decide this situation is not<lb/>
working out and that you both want<lb/>
to move out<lb/>
Could this situation not have<lb/>
ended differently? Trust me, it could<lb/>
at<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Diversity - YES! Nubian - NO! I<lb/>
take issue for with the use of Nubian<lb/>
in a pageant for women of color. I too<lb/>
am a woman of color and consider<lb/>
Nubian, as an adjective, to be a de-<lb/>
nial of one's true heritage. It is too<lb/>
often used as a blanket term and is<lb/>
incorrect In fact, to be Nubian is to<lb/>
be a member of one of the Negroid<lb/>
tribes that formed a powerful empire<lb/>
between Egypt the northern Sudan,<lb/>
and Ethiopia from the sixth to the<lb/>
14th centuries.<lb/>
To call the event a Nubian pag-<lb/>
eant is almost absurd. Why not call it<lb/>
the Masai pageant or event he Aztec<lb/>
pageant since some of the contestants<lb/>
are Hispanic? "Nubian Queen" is too<lb/>
exclusive a title for a pageant geared<lb/>
toward all women of color.<lb/>
Most of the Africans who were<lb/>
brought to the Americas as slaves<lb/>
came from Sub-Saharan Africa, not<lb/>
Egypt, the Sudan nor Ethiopia. I<lb/>
wholeheartedly encourage all African-<lb/>
Americans to explore and recognize<lb/>
the richness and diversity of the Sub-<lb/>
Saharan African Cultures of their an-<lb/>
cestry.<lb/>
Xymena Solano<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Biology<lb/>
Here we<lb/>
Before I begin, I wanted to say that<lb/>
within that last few weeks, "race" has<lb/>
been hot topic in the media and every-<lb/>
day conversatioa We've been bombarded<lb/>
with OJ. Simpson and the aftermath of<lb/>
his trialtelevision program. Of late we've<lb/>
also been hearing a great deal about the<lb/>
Million Man March. There has been a lot<lb/>
of conflict brewing, and I've been pa-<lb/>
tiently waiting for someone to say some-<lb/>
thing stupid, giving me the chance to<lb/>
get a whole lot of things off mv chest<lb/>
(well, a few anyway). Therefore, I would<lb/>
like to thank the person who wrote the<lb/>
letter to the editor in the Oct 12 TEC<lb/>
for opening up this can of worms.<lb/>
Yes discrimination in this country<lb/>
has gone too far! I agree wholeheartedly,<lb/>
but I can assure you that my reasons for<lb/>
feeling this way are probably very differ-<lb/>
ent from his. Let me set something<lb/>
straight though: It didn 1 all begui with<lb/>
Affirmative Action! If discrimination had<lb/>
never been practiced by the people who<lb/>
run this country, there wouldn't have<lb/>
been any need for Affirmative Action.<lb/>
Maybe I learned United States history<lb/>
somewhat differently from you, but the<lb/>
previous statement should be obvious to<lb/>
anyone who thinks they know a little<lb/>
U.S. history.<lb/>
Since some people obviously don't<lb/>
know what Affirmative Action is, I guess<lb/>
I'll have to elaborate for them and oth-<lb/>
ers that think like him. Affirmative Ac-<lb/>
tion is a program that was designed to<lb/>
give opportunities (not privileges; I'm<lb/>
not aware of any) to people who tradi-<lb/>
tionally have been denied those oppor-<lb/>
tunities. It just so happens mat African-<lb/>
Americans fall into the category of<lb/>
people who have been denied many op-<lb/>
portunities, but despite what he and a<lb/>
lot of people think we are not the only<lb/>
beneficiaries. In case you don't under-<lb/>
Olayta L. Riggsby<lb/>
Guest Columnist<lb/>
stand my reference, the program was<lb/>
designed to help benefit other minori-<lb/>
ties: Hispanics, Native Americans, and<lb/>
women of all races and ethnicities just<lb/>
name a few. Actually, according to a great<lb/>
deal of researchers, the prime beneficia-<lb/>
ries have been white women. The time<lb/>
for the elimination of the program has<lb/>
not come yet<lb/>
Yes, ECU does practice this policy,<lb/>
but did you know that at historically<lb/>
Black colleges and universities, white<lb/>
students are able to benefit from Affir-<lb/>
mative Actions as well because at those<lb/>
institutions, they are the minorities? (Yes,<lb/>
whites can receive Minority presence<lb/>
Grants, and I've met some who took ad-<lb/>
vantage of those opportunities). A lot of<lb/>
people who fuss about Affirmative Ac-<lb/>
tion at the university level haven't taken<lb/>
that fact into consideration, but I won't<lb/>
hold that against them We're all capable<lb/>
of being ignorant sometimes. (For fur-<lb/>
ther discussion of this topic, look for my<lb/>
article in the upcoming issue of Expres-<lb/>
sions. I don't have the time or space to<lb/>
discuss all of that information in this fo-<lb/>
rum).<lb/>
have. If you simply tell your room-<lb/>
mate how you feel when you feel it,<lb/>
these feelings would not build up<lb/>
inside yourself and you would not<lb/>
have to carry them with you like a<lb/>
burden. Your roommate should be<lb/>
understanding and should be willing<lb/>
to listen to you.<lb/>
As is the custom today, people<lb/>
do not talk out their differences. To<lb/>
the average citizen, it is easier to walk<lb/>
away from the problem and try to<lb/>
bury it in the backs of their skulls.<lb/>
The problem never went away, it's<lb/>
still there. The longer you wait, the<lb/>
harder it is to confront it.<lb/>
Why not deal with your prob-<lb/>
lems as you encounter them. With<lb/>
roommates, I know you do not wish<lb/>
to hurt their feelings. However, once<lb/>
in a while, you need to think of your<lb/>
own and do what is best for yourself.<lb/>
If that means creating a rule about<lb/>
overnight guests then so be it. What<lb/>
ever it takes for the situation to be<lb/>
resolved.<lb/>
The last resort should be that<lb/>
the two of you end up moving apart<lb/>
and not being as close as you were<lb/>
prior to this disruption. If you were<lb/>
friends before, why can't you again?<lb/>
If your roommate and you have<lb/>
a disagreement about overnight<lb/>
guests and that third roommate, then<lb/>
perhaps a neutral part can come in<lb/>
and listen to both your sides and help<lb/>
you come up with a viable plan.<lb/>
Don't give up on each other real<lb/>
easily. Yes, food will disappear, just<lb/>
don't always blame it on the third<lb/>
roommate when it could very well be<lb/>
you own roommate is constantly raid-<lb/>
ing you cabinets in search of the Lost<lb/>
Arc.<lb/>
Just remember, you are friends<lb/>
and you should not allow someone<lb/>
to come between the two. I am sure<lb/>
that the third roommate does not<lb/>
have the intention of splitting the<lb/>
two of you apart and if you just sit<lb/>
down and talk about it, I am sure you<lb/>
can work it out<lb/>
again!<lb/>
I'm aSuming that the writer of the<lb/>
letter is a white American (he never did<lb/>
say), so I have to say that I am concerned<lb/>
about his notion that his race is being<lb/>
trampled upon. By whom? Where? When?<lb/>
Yes, it's true that the past cannot be<lb/>
changed and that no one can hold this<lb/>
generation of white Americans responsible<lb/>
for past crimes, but I have to ask in all<lb/>
honesty. What do you think you have re-<lb/>
ally lost'<lb/>
And as far as the O J. SimDson trial<lb/>
being the "icing on the cake I don't know<lb/>
what that person means. Fferhaps some<lb/>
people have taken the position that "the<lb/>
Ijusticel system doesn't work" (not for ev-<lb/>
eryone), but as for me, I knew that a long<lb/>
time ago! My father knew that a long time<lb/>
ago! My grandfather knew that a long time<lb/>
ago! What'staken everyone else so long to<lb/>
figure that out'<lb/>
What if a white man had killed tow<lb/>
blacks and been found innocent' Well, I<lb/>
really don't think there would have been<lb/>
any LA- type riots. If that were the case,<lb/>
this whole country would have been burned<lb/>
sown a long time ago. However, since some-<lb/>
one brought up that point I'll throw out a<lb/>
name for them: Emmit Till (that's Till not<lb/>
Smith). If you don't know who that is, make<lb/>
a trip to Joyner Library and get a small<lb/>
piece of the education that you, your par-<lb/>
ents or someone is paying for.<lb/>
It would be nice if we could all be<lb/>
treated and seen the way the Rev. Martin<lb/>
Luther King, Jr. wanted, but as you know,<lb/>
this is anything but a perfect world we<lb/>
live in, particularly here in the U.S.<lb/>
Someone who has lived less than half<lb/>
his lite here shouldn't have to point that<lb/>
out That's all what I wanted to say for<lb/>
the moment I had to keep this writing<lb/>
short (by my standards), so I haven't<lb/>
said all that I wanted to say  but I<lb/>
think I've said enough.<lb/>
?V<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
E<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0005"/><lb/>
Bear witness tc 28 Dark brown ink<lb/>
In a state of 29 Garden item<lb/>
30 Angry<lb/>
31 Doomed one<lb/>
32 Rims<lb/>
35 Farm bird<lb/>
38 Strictness<lb/>
40 Machine pattern<lb/>
43 Dreadful<lb/>
45 Duck<lb/>
48 Compositions<lb/>
50 Soldiers<lb/>
52 Taste or smell<lb/>
53 Resorts<lb/>
54 Stop<lb/>
55 Opera solo<lb/>
56 Grizzly<lb/>
57 Outer garment<lb/>
58 Light color<lb/>
59 Mend<lb/>
62 Agt.<lb/>
ANSWERS<lb/>
7 Soliloquy start<lb/>
8 Before tome oi<lb/>
gram<lb/>
9 Proceeding fro<lb/>
old age<lb/>
10 Send off<lb/>
11 Not working<lb/>
12 Peruse<lb/>
13 Put on record<lb/>
21 Festive occasion<lb/>
Nn!ds1313mUIsAVis<lb/>
aaV-s3Al' 1"liv<lb/>
?3B 0tN3HIV?1I<lb/>
a3IMIO1?3 aHs3 b VHlSi<lb/>
? b?dSJW 3sB3B<lb/>
s u3lXa"? i s31AV3 H<lb/>
3 3i ? -3sN CiJBa 31a 3<lb/>
OiMvIhHjs?r o iBsd0i<lb/>
00a 3 sj 31 D N ? 3a<lb/>
3IOll'S;3!ajl ! 1 1 Svo<lb/>
? V 3 d ? 3a sB<lb/>
j ai d n I ? 3XVb13130<lb/>
d VIISNinaD1ii a3<lb/>
v3 fo! 13 d 0331V0B<lb/>
11 u i 1 a IS31aVn3?<lb/>
??MHMNi<lb/>
mmmmmmmm<lb/>
i an<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0006"/><lb/>
Thursday, October 19, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Hughes brothers sear the<lb/>
screen with Dead Presidents<lb/>
Ike Shibley<lb/>
Senior Writer<lb/>
Allen and Albert Hughes may not<lb/>
be the most promising young directors<lb/>
working in American film today, but they<lb/>
would certainly have to be included<lb/>
among them. The Hughes brothers first<lb/>
seared the silver screen with their blis-<lb/>
tering portrait of criminals, Menace II<lb/>
Society. Now, two years later, they have<lb/>
again scorched the screen with an incen-<lb/>
diary tale of one man's struggle to sur-<lb/>
vive in a world in which he seems out of<lb/>
place, with Dead Presidents.<lb/>
Dead Presidents begins with fire.<lb/>
The flames on the screen burn their way<lb/>
across money being taken out of circula-<lb/>
tion, the "dead presidents" of the title.<lb/>
The flames slowly engulf images of<lb/>
Franklin, Roosevelt and Grant and set<lb/>
an eerie tone for the urban drama about<lb/>
to unfold.<lb/>
The most amazing aspect of Dead<lb/>
Presidents is that the Hughes brothers<lb/>
fan the inner flames of rebellion in the<lb/>
souls of their audience by telling a sur-<lb/>
prisingly restrained story' with very little<lb/>
flamboyance. Scenes end with a fade to<lb/>
black followed by an uncomfortable num-<lb/>
ber of film frames filled with only black-<lb/>
ness. The unexpected silence as scenes<lb/>
change typifies what the brothers have<lb/>
coming<lb/>
VttlcM ti us<lb/>
Coming soon for your<lb/>
edification and amusement:<lb/>
Thursday, October 19<lb/>
ECU Poetry Forum<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
ECU Student Jazz Recital<lb/>
at Recital Hall<lb/>
Faculty Jazz Band<lb/>
at Staccato Cafe and Grille<lb/>
Edwin McCain<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(McCain will be live in the WZMB<lb/>
studios<lb/>
with Brad Oldham tonight from 8-<lb/>
10 p.m.)<lb/>
Movie: Don Juan DaMarco<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
Friday, October 20<lb/>
Capt Cook &amp; the Coconuts<lb/>
at the Attic<lb/>
(parrothead)<lb/>
King Missile<lb/>
at Peasant's Cafe<lb/>
Movie: Don Juan DaMarco<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
Saturday, October 21<lb/>
Swingle Singers<lb/>
at Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Chairmen of the Board<lb/>
at the Attic <lb/>
(beach music)<lb/>
The Headstone Circus<lb/>
at Peasant's Cafe<lb/>
KMFDM<lb/>
with Life of Agony and<lb/>
God Lives Underwater<lb/>
at the Boathouse<lb/>
in Norfolk, VA<lb/>
Movie: Don Juan DaMarco<lb/>
at Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
tried to do with their film: tell an emo-<lb/>
tional, tragic tale with quiet dignity.<lb/>
The dignity of the film can be seen<lb/>
in every frame. Though Dead Presidents<lb/>
tells the type of story that could be satu-<lb/>
rated with accusatory shots of various<lb/>
society members, the kind John Single-<lb/>
ton has become famous for, the Hughes<lb/>
brothers instead deliberately refuse to<lb/>
take sides. They neither praise nor con-<lb/>
done the actions of their main charac-<lb/>
ter, Anthony Curtis (Lorenz Tate). In-<lb/>
stead, they artistically spread out the life<lb/>
of Anthony on two hours of celluloid and<lb/>
allow the viewer to make his or her own<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
By refusing to place blame the<lb/>
Hughes brothers make a larger social<lb/>
statement than if they had wagged their<lb/>
fingers. Society has to closely examine<lb/>
itself to figure out why a man like An-<lb/>
thony Curtis, who served his country<lb/>
during Vietnam, who tried to make an<lb/>
honest living and who tried to be a good<lb/>
father and husband, would have to re-<lb/>
sort to crime to survive in the world.<lb/>
Dead Presidents unfolds over sev-<lb/>
eral years, as Anthony matures from a<lb/>
high school kid running numbers for a<lb/>
bookie named Kirby (Keith David) to an<lb/>
adult war veteran working at a butcher<lb/>
shop and trying to survive. During his<lb/>
time in Vietnam. .Anthony refuses to write<lb/>
to his girlfriend Juanita (Rose Jackson),<lb/>
who has had his child while he is over-<lb/>
seas. Anthony explains to his friend<lb/>
Skippy (Chris Tucker) that in order to<lb/>
survive in the jungle one must forget<lb/>
about any other life outside the hot, hu-<lb/>
mid, tropical forests of Vietnam.<lb/>
Anthony's reasons for not writing<lb/>
seem sound, but he expects to be able to<lb/>
rebuild a life with Juanita upon return-<lb/>
ing. Though Juanita is agreeable to liv-<lb/>
ing with Anthony, she brings the bag-<lb/>
gage of having had a boyfriend during<lb/>
the three years Anthony was overseas.<lb/>
Anthonycannot cope with this, especially<lb/>
since the boyfriend still comes around<lb/>
to give money to Juanita. Domestic feuds<lb/>
break out that escalate from shouting<lb/>
matches to a physical assault<lb/>
This domestic situation exemplifies<lb/>
the difficult choices faced by the protago-<lb/>
nist in the film. One can identify with<lb/>
Anthony's jealousy, yet we know he must<lb/>
accept that he left for three years with-<lb/>
out writing. The film refuses to side with<lb/>
See DEAD page 8<lb/>
Noise Kings get<lb/>
Sonic at the Ritz<lb/>
Mark Brett<lb/>
lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Sometimes I wonder why I even<lb/>
care about rock and roll anymore.<lb/>
Like the hippies and punks be-<lb/>
fore me, I've had my musical under-<lb/>
ground bought out from under me<lb/>
by corporate interests and turned<lb/>
into something<lb/>
horrible. I've seen<lb/>
all the life and vi-<lb/>
tality sucked out of<lb/>
alternative music<lb/>
as it was gang-<lb/>
raped by the<lb/>
ghosts of Bad Com<lb/>
pany and the Steve<lb/>
Miller Band and<lb/>
reduced to formula<lb/>
by big record com-<lb/>
pany pinheads. I've<lb/>
seen the even big-<lb/>
ger pinheads in the<lb/>
record-buying pub-<lb/>
lic embrace this<lb/>
ugly bastard child<lb/>
of alternative and<lb/>
classic rock as something new and<lb/>
originaL<lb/>
So why the hell should I care<lb/>
anymore? Sometimes. I've just got to<lb/>
wonder. Then I go see somebody like<lb/>
Sonic Youth, and it all comes rush-<lb/>
ing back.<lb/>
Let me say this now, and get it<lb/>
out of the way. Sonic Youth may be<lb/>
the best rock band walking the earth<lb/>
today. I realize this is a bold state-<lb/>
ment, and if you disagree, I'm sorry.<lb/>
Just keep reading, and I hope to tell<lb/>
you why I think so.<lb/>
But first, let me take care of the<lb/>
preliminaries. Sonic Youth played the<lb/>
Ritz in Raleigh on Friday night along<lb/>
with opening acts Harry Pussy and<lb/>
the Makeup.<lb/>
Despite their delightfully ob-<lb/>
scene name, Harry Pussy was a bit<lb/>
of a letdown. A noise punk band in<lb/>
the vein of Sonic<lb/>
Youth, they are<lb/>
neither tight<lb/>
enough nor<lb/>
clever enough to<lb/>
pull this kind of<lb/>
set off. Plus, their<lb/>
attempts to an-<lb/>
tagonize the audi-<lb/>
ence in good<lb/>
punk fashion<lb/>
seemed forced<lb/>
and uncomfort-<lb/>
able. Though I<lb/>
liked some of the<lb/>
noise structures<lb/>
they put together<lb/>
(however brief<lb/>
those were), Harry Pussy was the<lb/>
evening's low point<lb/>
The Makeup are another mat-<lb/>
ter entirely. Taking the stage in iden-<lb/>
tical outfits of black silk shirts and<lb/>
black pants, the Makeup are what<lb/>
might have happened if Prince had<lb/>
somehow become part of the early<lb/>
'80s punk movement While his band<lb/>
ripped through a blistering punk set,<lb/>
the Makeup's frontman mocked the<lb/>
See SONIC page 8<lb/>
Sonic<lb/>
Youth<lb/>
Thespians bring more<lb/>
diversity to campus<lb/>
Photo Courtesy Thespians of Diversity<lb/>
Nakesha Wilson, Reginald Watson and Terrence Dove (R to L) are members of Thespians<lb/>
of Diversity, a theater group devoted to enhancing the involvement of minorities in drama.<lb/>
Dale Williamson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
While Washington, D.C. has hosted<lb/>
the Million Man March in an effort to<lb/>
shed positive light on African-Ameri-<lb/>
cans, Greenville is the home for another<lb/>
positive effort The ECU Thespians of<lb/>
Diversify, which was founded in 1992<lb/>
by Dr. Reginald Watson of the English<lb/>
Department presents an exciting oppor-<lb/>
tunity for all minorities to exhibit their<lb/>
dramatic talents. And, unlike Louis<lb/>
Farrakhan's event this group does not<lb/>
exclude women.<lb/>
Seeing the Thespians of Diversity<lb/>
(originally named the ECU Black Thes-<lb/>
pians) as a means for improving stu-<lb/>
dents' lives. Professor Watson states, "1<lb/>
organized the Thespians for all stu-<lb/>
dents, not just African-Americans and<lb/>
minorities. But my primary focus will<lb/>
still be to help enhance the involvement<lb/>
of minorities in the dramatic arts<lb/>
Since Watson feels that minorities<lb/>
don't really get the opportunity to truly<lb/>
express themselves, he sees the Thes-<lb/>
pian group as a positive outlet for their<lb/>
expression. "In this organization, I hope<lb/>
to encourage students to not only per-<lb/>
form but write their own plays and skits.<lb/>
This forum will give a voice to those<lb/>
that have been historically voiceless<lb/>
Watson stresses.<lb/>
And the voiceless have been given<lb/>
a voice on the ECU campus. In Febru-<lb/>
ary of 1993, Watson gathered a group<lb/>
of talented students to help perform a<lb/>
play he wrote himself entitled "Black<lb/>
Voices From the Past The play, which<lb/>
includes monologues for fictional and<lb/>
actual characters from history paints a<lb/>
colorful picture of the African and Afri-<lb/>
can-American past Presenting audi-<lb/>
ences with such historical figures as<lb/>
African Queens and Kings, African<lb/>
slaves, and black soldiers, Watson's play<lb/>
featured actors who are still with the<lb/>
Thespians of Diversity.<lb/>
Chris Haywood, who portrayed<lb/>
Mansa Musa and Thurgood Marshall in<lb/>
Watson's production, notes that the<lb/>
Thespian group is "more than a theat-<lb/>
rical event It teaches a lesson in his-<lb/>
tory. Not only does it entertain, it edu-<lb/>
cates<lb/>
Terrence Dove, who played Ben-<lb/>
jamin Banneker in 1994, agrees with<lb/>
the educational value of the group. "We<lb/>
serve the ECU community by indulg-<lb/>
ing in multiculturism and by using indi-<lb/>
vidual talents of the community to ex-<lb/>
press concerns Dove sees the Thespian<lb/>
group as a rare venue for voicing differ-<lb/>
ent ideas about poetry, writing, drama<lb/>
and thinking.<lb/>
Now that the ECU Thespians of<lb/>
Diversity are officially recognized as a<lb/>
legitimate organization by the univer-<lb/>
sity. Professor Watson has great plans<lb/>
for the group. On Nov. 9, the Thespi-<lb/>
ans plan to tape an appearance on Jim<lb/>
Rouse's "Minority Voices" television<lb/>
program, which airs on WITN-7 Sun-<lb/>
days at 12:00 p.m. While exact dates<lb/>
for future performances are not yet set<lb/>
in stone, these performances will in-<lb/>
deed be an engaging reality.<lb/>
Currently, there are nine active<lb/>
members within this organization.<lb/>
While those with theatrical back-<lb/>
grounds are strongly encouraged to<lb/>
join, those less experienced are not<lb/>
discouraged. Membership is open to<lb/>
any interested individual.<lb/>
If you desire more diversity within<lb/>
our community, then force yourself into<lb/>
action. Contact Reginald Watson at<lb/>
328684 and let your voice be heard.<lb/>
LETS SWINGLE!<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU Performing Arts Series<lb/>
The Swingle Singers, a diverse musical octet who play everything from Bach to the<lb/>
Beatles, will perform tomorrow at 8 p.m. Contact the Central Ticket Office for details.<lb/>
7306we<lb/>
rfl<lb/>
Parody distinguishes "Mad TV"<lb/>
CD. Reviews<lb/>
Kevin Chaisson<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Mad Magazine has arrived on the airwaves.<lb/>
That's right Fox has debuted a new sketch comedy<lb/>
show, and it's called "Mad TV Mads TV contingent will be<lb/>
going up against NBC's "Saturday Night Live" every week,<lb/>
but for their debut they only had to contend with a "Best of<lb/>
SNL" special. The NBC show has only done two (that's right<lb/>
two) new episodes this season before resorting to a greatest<lb/>
hits clip show.<lb/>
This might prompt the actors and producers of "Mad<lb/>
TV" to sing in chorus with their mascot Alfred E. Newman:<lb/>
"What? Me Worry?" Well, maybe they shouldn't worry yet<lb/>
but this new show should be at least a little wary.<lb/>
"Mad TV" did have, I admit a pretty funny opening<lb/>
show. 1 was afraid that the previews (featunng a nice take<lb/>
on those Budweiser frog commercials) would end up show-<lb/>
ing off the funniest parts, but luckily I was wrong.<lb/>
Even the opening bit showed signs of a long, funny shelf<lb/>
life. "Mad TV" amiably opens with two Fox casting executives<lb/>
trolling around the mean streets of LA. Stopping their van,<lb/>
they ask bums, hookers, crazed veterans and postal workers,<lb/>
"Hey, any of you ever do any acting? Wanna be on a TV<lb/>
show?"<lb/>
Following that the cast (Bryan Callen, David Herman,<lb/>
Orlando Jones, Phil Lamarr. Artie Lange, Mary Scheer, Nicole<lb/>
Sullivan and Debra Wilson) thanks the studio audience for<lb/>
showing up by offering them free beer from one of their spon-<lb/>
sors. Yep, you guessed it Budweiser. The actual skits played<lb/>
out pretty well, too.<lb/>
Hands down, the funniest bit was a great spoof, "Gump<lb/>
Fiction a frightening blending of two of last year's most<lb/>
See MAD page 7<lb/>
Mark Brett<lb/>
Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
Super Junky Monkey<lb/>
Screw Up<lb/>
The Boredoms and Shonen Knife<lb/>
have had a child and its name is Super<lb/>
Junky Monkey.<lb/>
If you're not in the Japanese rock<lb/>
loop, those two elder bands have distinct<lb/>
diametrically opposed sounds. The Bore-<lb/>
doms are a noise band that make Sonic<lb/>
Youth sound like the GoCos. Shonen<lb/>
Knife is a trio of Japanese girls singing<lb/>
sweet pop ditties. Super Junky Monkey<lb/>
lies somewhere in between.<lb/>
That's a huge musical playground,<lb/>
and these Monkeys run all over it Billed<lb/>
as a funk-metal band. Super Junky Mon-<lb/>
key transcends that category. They owe<lb/>
musical debts to as diverse a group of<lb/>
See MONKEY page 7<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0007"/><lb/>
r-<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Thursday, October 19, 1995<lb/>
fatty<lb/>
V<lb/>
inJztra<lb/>
"Tattooing &amp;<lb/>
Body Piercing"<lb/>
(919) 756-0600<lb/>
Autoclave Sterilization<lb/>
516-A- Hwy 264-A Greenville, NC<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
have<lb/>
Always<lb/>
Known<lb/>
Where<lb/>
To Find<lb/>
TTie<lb/>
Party<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
' Champagne's in the<lb/>
Greenville Hilton Inn<lb/>
marks the spot for<lb/>
your Homecoming<lb/>
Headquarters! On<lb/>
Friday, October 20th<lb/>
and Saturday,<lb/>
October 21 st,<lb/>
Champagne's<lb/>
welcomes students,<lb/>
faculty and alumfii<lb/>
to celebrate the<lb/>
Pirate Pride of East<lb/>
i<lb/>
Carolina University!<lb/>
i Party with old and<lb/>
new friends over our<lb/>
ECU Homecoming<lb/>
drink specials! The<lb/>
fun beoins each<lb/>
night at 9:00 and<lb/>
the cover charge<lb/>
is just $5.<lb/>
MONKEY fr.m<lb/>
page)<lb/>
MAD<lb/>
from page 6<lb/>
bands as Primus, James Brown, Bad<lb/>
Brains and King Crimson.<lb/>
These Monkeys rock hard. The in-<lb/>
tensity level on Screw Up never lets up.<lb/>
Even when they're exploring their jazz<lb/>
yearnings, they bum up enough energy<lb/>
to light half of Tokyo.<lb/>
The opening track is called<lb/>
"Shukuchoku-no-choro-wa-chirou-de-<lb/>
sourou which makes me really wish I<lb/>
spoke Japanese. This one sounds like the<lb/>
Boredoms fronted by cheerleaders.<lb/>
If s quickly followed by "Zakuro-no-<lb/>
hone a Boredoms-style tune complete<lb/>
with fragmented noise guitar and<lb/>
screeching, squealing, screaming vocals.<lb/>
Both these tracks are sung in Japanese,<lb/>
so I have no idea what they might be<lb/>
about They sound pretty freaking cool,<lb/>
though, and are sure to shatter eardrums<lb/>
at the right decibel levels.<lb/>
The first English-language track,<lb/>
"Buckin' the Bolts is also the first song<lb/>
1 would really call funk metal. The Mon-<lb/>
keys fluctuate between Faith No More<lb/>
smooth and Rage Against the Machine<lb/>
choppy on this album, all at 200 miles<lb/>
per hour.<lb/>
One highlight of these songs is<lb/>
"Tamage At a blistering seven seconds<lb/>
long, this track evokes the spirit of James<lb/>
Brown (no mean trick, considering that<lb/>
he's still using it) and features only one,<lb/>
unintelligible lyric. Awesome!<lb/>
Screw Up ends with a tune called<lb/>
"Shower In its six-minute running time,<lb/>
"Shower" glides easily into funk, jazz,<lb/>
punk and 70s prog-rock styles. The se-<lb/>
ries of gasps in the middle of this tune<lb/>
suggests that it's about more than just<lb/>
getting clean.<lb/>
Super Junky Monkey is a unique<lb/>
musical experience. They're far from your<lb/>
standard funk metal outfit with enough<lb/>
intensity to exhaust even the most jaded<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
X<lb/>
lf" Creenville<lb/>
INN 207 SWGreenville Blvd ? 355-5000<lb/>
jExcnange<lb/>
516 S. Cotanche Greenville, NC<lb/>
CELEBRATES<lb/>
OMECOMING '95<lb/>
Join us Saturday morning from<lb/>
9am to Ham for refreshments<lb/>
popular and critically-acclaimed films.<lb/>
Castmember Dave Herman turned out<lb/>
to be a great mimic, copying Gump's<lb/>
speech and mannerisms flawlessly. Also,<lb/>
there wao nice cameo of Lt Dan as "the<lb/>
gimp Granted, if you haven't seen<lb/>
these films yet the stunning humor of<lb/>
this skit will be lost Nasty, evil and<lb/>
funny, this skit alone could merit watch-<lb/>
ing the show next week just to set- it<lb/>
they can top it<lb/>
Not to be outdone, castmembers<lb/>
Jones and Lamarr offer us Ice-T and Ice<lb/>
Cube in a music video parody, "It Ain't<lb/>
Easy Bein' Me The video shows the two<lb/>
vocal rap stars drinking Perrier with their<lb/>
entourage of accountants while still hold-<lb/>
ing on to their "street" image. That one<lb/>
had to have pissed off a few people.<lb/>
Also an interesting (and amusing)<lb/>
touch was to have the cast members<lb/>
come out and do short monologues to<lb/>
introduce themselves. On this front the<lb/>
women in the cast showed nice poten-<lb/>
tial to be really funny. Sullivan confessed<lb/>
to a life in child psyche wards at the free<lb/>
clinic, and that she "really wanted to be<lb/>
on Friends Wilson, a regular comic<lb/>
on HBO's hysterical "Def Comedy Jam<lb/>
discussed having to censor her language<lb/>
on network TV without really doing so<lb/>
(think many, many beepouts).<lb/>
The only real downside as far as skits<lb/>
went (other than one or two just not<lb/>
being funny) were that some were in such<lb/>
poor taste that you almost feel guilty<lb/>
about laughing at them. A fake transcript<lb/>
of a 911 call featuring an unhelpful op-<lb/>
erator listening as the female caller is<lb/>
shot to death echoes a real-life news bite<lb/>
a little too much.<lb/>
A skit featuring a daughter dying<lb/>
of lung cancer while her mother chain<lb/>
smokes around her had a similar effect<lb/>
on me, until the mother spoke and<lb/>
sounded just like gravel-voiced musician<lb/>
actor Tom Waits. Now. that's funny.<lb/>
Another major problem was that the<lb/>
guest "celebrity" was Kato Kaeiin, stretch-<lb/>
ing his fifteen minutes of fame to the<lb/>
snapping point Kaeiin, who was touted<lb/>
through the whole show as "ready to<lb/>
speak his mind ruined his moment by<lb/>
butchering some pretty funny lines.<lb/>
Mad Magazine has always had a<lb/>
reputation of appealing to crass, bath-<lb/>
room-humor types. That may be so, but<lb/>
this TV version might be able to find it-<lb/>
self a larger audience if it can maintain<lb/>
this level of energy. Oh. and I like the<lb/>
bathroom-humor, too. Anyway, it's bet-<lb/>
ter than "The State<lb/>
On a scale of one to 10, "Mad TV<lb/>
rates a seven.<lb/>
alloons<lb/>
hile they<lb/>
last!<lb/>
25 off all regular<lb/>
priced stuffed<lb/>
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Friday and Saturday only<lb/>
October 20th &amp; 21st<lb/>
20 off all regular<lb/>
priced alumni<lb/>
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Saturday only<lb/>
October 21st<lb/>
Mon - Fri 9am - 6pm Sat 10am - 5pm<lb/>
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We are the closest ta 6CU tailgating<lb/>
HENDRIX FILMS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058568_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
Thursday, October 19, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
SONIC from page 6<lb/>
look, moves, vocals and lyrics of the<lb/>
purple despot himself. It was a great<lb/>
and uproariously funny set. and some-<lb/>
thing I'd drive many miles to see again.<lb/>
With the crowd pumped by this<lb/>
performance, Sonic Youth finally ap-<lb/>
peared at around 10 p.m. Opening with<lb/>
"Sister they went through a set that<lb/>
focussed equally on the band's past and<lb/>
present. The new album, Washing<lb/>
Machine, got a lot of stage-time, but<lb/>
not as much as most bands give to their<lb/>
new material. The set included such<lb/>
essential classics as "Teenage Riot<lb/>
"Coo" and "Bull in the Heather but<lb/>
also featured more obsure stuff like the<lb/>
Lee-Ranaldo-penned "Eric's Trip<lb/>
But it's not the song selectio 'hat<lb/>
so impressed me at this show. I real-<lb/>
ized early on that this band can't play<lb/>
a song that wont thrill me. No, it's the<lb/>
nature of their music that is so impres-<lb/>
sive.<lb/>
As a noise band. Sonic Youth deals<lb/>
in sounds that most bands try to avoid.<lb/>
They purposefully mis-tune their gui-<lb/>
tars so that they sound as harsh as<lb/>
possible. They play into their moniters,<lb/>
calling up squelching, ear-piercing feed-<lb/>
back. In other worus, they make what<lb/>
would be a lot of godawful noise in<lb/>
less talented hands (like those of Harry<lb/>
Pussy).<lb/>
But what Sonic Youth does with<lb/>
that noise is unbelievable. Skirting the<lb/>
edge of tonality, they produce rhythms<lb/>
by playing non-rhythms off each other.<lb/>
Lee Ranaldo's rhythm guitar noise in-<lb/>
teracts with Kim Gordon's bass noise,<lb/>
which interacts in turn with the su-<lb/>
preme noise of Thurston Moore's lead<lb/>
guitar, all played to a back-beat of bro-<lb/>
ken rhythms banged out by under-<lb/>
stated Sonic Youth drummer Steve<lb/>
Shelley. It's improv jazz played with<lb/>
buzz-saws.<lb/>
And that's just on the bouncy<lb/>
stuff. What's even more amazing is the<lb/>
way they layer noise on the softer<lb/>
tracks, using ugly sounds to create<lb/>
beautiful ones.<lb/>
This is not a variation on a theme,<lb/>
like the blues-based rock of every crap<lb/>
band since Led Zeppelin. This is not a<lb/>
combination of existing mainstream<lb/>
sounds, as played by Dave Matthews.<lb/>
This is something different. Sonic<lb/>
Youth doesn't push the envelope, they<lb/>
are the envelope. In fact they're the<lb/>
envelope, the mail box, the whole freak-<lb/>
ing post office.<lb/>
It's that unrelenting creativity,<lb/>
that artistic drive, that makes them the<lb/>
best band on earth. Their music may<lb/>
not be for everybody; I doubt Sonic<lb/>
Youth will ever see REM-style success.<lb/>
But 20 years from now, they're all rock<lb/>
music historians are going to be talk-<lb/>
ing about And right now, they're one<lb/>
of the only things that still makes me<lb/>
give a rat's ass about rock.<lb/>
So the next time someone sings<lb/>
the praises of the bland, safe, simper-<lb/>
ing likes of Hooue and the Blowfish,<lb/>
listen closer. The screaming you hear<lb/>
will be mine.<lb/>
DfcAD from page 6<lb/>
one party over another. Because of that<lb/>
unbiased approach, Dead Presidents<lb/>
provides a strong, believable portrait of<lb/>
a life turned sour.<lb/>
The showcase of the film is a bank<lb/>
heist that Anthony plans with Kirby,<lb/>
Skippy and two others. Painted in a skel-<lb/>
eton-like manner, they look like shadows<lb/>
of their former selves, an appropriate<lb/>
metaphor for the internal changes oc-<lb/>
curring in them. Far from a generic ac-<lb/>
tion sequence of a bank robbery. Dead<lb/>
Presidents offers a scene shot with fi-<lb/>
nesse and flair that actually downplays<lb/>
violence. The brutality seems almost sur-<lb/>
real, as it must for the characters. Not<lb/>
until later do they quite realize just what<lb/>
they have done.<lb/>
Perhaps not until later will the<lb/>
Hughes brothers realize what they have<lb/>
done. These young directors have fash-<lb/>
ioned a moving, artistic film that will bum<lb/>
away at the core of its audience's soul.<lb/>
This is a masterful piece of filmaking.<lb/>
On a scale of one to W.Dead Presi-<lb/>
dents rates a nine.<lb/>
This week's topic:<lb/>
Star Wars<lb/>
1. Biggs Daridighter is Luke's friend<lb/>
who goes off to the Imperial academy in<lb/>
a scene cut from the beginning of Star<lb/>
Wars. Biggs later appears as part of the<lb/>
rebel forces.<lb/>
2. IG-88 is the droid bounty hunter<lb/>
in the group summoned by Darth Vader<lb/>
in The Empire Strikes Back.<lb/>
3. Bib Fortuna is the tentacle-<lb/>
headed guy who greets Luke and the<lb/>
droids at the gates of Jabba the Hurt's<lb/>
palace in Return of the Jedi<lb/>
4. Dack is Luke's ill-fated co-pilot in<lb/>
the battle of the ice planet Hoth in Em-<lb/>
pire.<lb/>
5. Nien Nubb is Lando Calrissian's<lb/>
co-pilot on the Millennium Falcon for the<lb/>
second Death Star battle in Jedi.<lb/>
6. Bossk is the reptilian bounty<lb/>
hunter from Vader s group in Empire.<lb/>
7. Admiral Piett is the "lucky" of-<lb/>
ficer promoted to Admiral when Vader<lb/>
strangles Piett's predecessor in Empire.<lb/>
BOOT<lb/>
SILVER<lb/>
JQiifL <lb/>
mm<lb/>
H,y<lb/>
for<lb/>
Costumes ?t Accessories<lb/>
FROM INFANTS TO ADULTS<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Call 355-3752<lb/>
A Division of At Barre, Ltd<lb/>
CJreenollU's only<lb/>
?xolicVightdub ? cTbuCfc C)? C&amp;SS<lb/>
TUESDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
WEDNESDAYS<lb/>
Amateur Night for Female Dancers'1 11pm-lam <lb/>
CASH PRIZE -41<lb/>
?ConUMJiUs Mid U tall -Sit rcgiaicr in .iJviiiuc.<lb/>
Mum arrive by H:00<lb/>
THURSDAYS - SATURDAYS<lb/>
Silver Bullet's Female "Exotic" Dancers<lb/>
$ Dancers Wanted $<lb/>
Hiking Clothing<lb/>
- <lb/>
&amp;?&amp;<lb/>
OPEN mon-sat 10:00-9:00,<lb/>
sun 1:305:30<lb/>
We do Birthdays, Bachelor Parties, Bridal<lb/>
Showers, Corporate Parties, &amp; Divorces<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS SPECIAI<lb/>
$2.00 OFF Admission Any Night with this coupon<lb/>
Doors Open 7:30p.m. Stage Time 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
leu Call 756-6278<lb/>
5 miles west of Greenville on 264 Alt.<lb/>
Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
530 Cotanche Street,<lb/>
inside the Bicycle Post,<lb/>
Mon. -Sat: 10-6<lb/>
757-0713<lb/>
llNKI)m.ui,l<lb/>
. (Behind John's Convenient Marl)<lb/>
j Jj'iLNjC LTLRcqu'?gL<lb/>
CONV.<lb/>
MAM<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA'S LARGEST<lb/>
SELECTION OF HIKING BOOTS.<lb/>
SILVER<lb/>
BLU.KT<lb/>
HOMECOMING 195<lb/>
Remembering the Past Building for the Fu<lb/>
Parade Route<lb/>
9:45 a.m- on Saturday<lb/>
Homecoming 1995<lb/>
ture<lb/>
1. fCU Mice 'Department<lb/>
I tjreenviile Police Department<lb/>
3. tiirforce RPTC Colorguard<lb/>
I Outstanding tHumni<lb/>
Samuel Randolph Alexander<lb/>
5. Outstanding tilumni ferry Brooks ijrier<lb/>
 Outstanding tilumni Dan Ifl. Cjuy<lb/>
7. Outstanding rlluinni feslie 'Hansen Kopp<lb/>
8. Student ?Homecoming Committee<lb/>
9. tCU marching Pirates<lb/>
10. t.lpha Delta Pi<lb/>
Sigma Phi fpsilon ? JfOtIT<lb/>
11. Tim Pinkard 1994 Homecoming Kjng<lb/>
Wendu. Peters 199 Homecoming ?ueen<lb/>
12. ECU Transit Authority<lb/>
13. Roseiwod VS. Band<lb/>
14. Water Ski Club 9BWC<lb/>
15. 'Homecoming Candidates<lb/>
Craig Doucette, Rhonda Cummings<lb/>
ft Wattamuskett VS. Band<lb/>
1, Collegiate Music educators 'National Conference<lb/>
18. School of Health and Human Performance 3tQxfl<lb/>
19. Bertie 'HS. Band<lb/>
20. tlucock Hall Council SEffifC<lb/>
21. Sigma fambda StQtfC<lb/>
22. Columbia HS. Band<lb/>
23. lambda Chi tilpha, tilpha 38 Delta ? JfOtfT<lb/>
21, Child Development<lb/>
25. 'Homecoming Candidates<lb/>
John fjuiich, Kja Samuels<lb/>
26. Diwn VS. Band<lb/>
27. Purple and old Dancers<lb/>
28. tilpha Omicron Pi<lb/>
Sigma tilpha cpsilon ? JfOtIT<lb/>
29. cjarrett Hall Council 3fMZ<lb/>
30. "North fenior VS. Band<lb/>
31. space<lb/>
32. Chi Omega JflWC<lb/>
<lb/>
3<lb/>
?-w<lb/>
'?T4<lb/>
'?r<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
"r<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Eppes<lb/>
School<lb/>
Harris ??-<lb/>
Teeter <lb/>
shoppimj <lb/>
ISlrett<lb/>
Ctr.<lb/>
Charles Blvd.<lb/>
HOMECOMING FOOTBALL GAME<lb/>
2:00PM<lb/>
TEMPLE vs ECU<lb/>
1995 Homecoming Court Announcement HALF TIME<lb/>
33. Dt Ita Sigma Phi ? JfOtIT<lb/>
34. RcanokeffS. Band<lb/>
35. 'Homecoming Candidates<lb/>
Robbie 'ITIcgee, Jenna Sellers<lb/>
36. fCU Cheerleaders<lb/>
37. fast Carolina Dune Buggy<lb/>
3d. Southwest VS. Band<lb/>
39.D?lta'Zeta-5f0tfT<lb/>
40. rfiomecoming Candidates<lb/>
'Za chary Stone, tf.my Teague<lb/>
41. SKWIS ? HfDtfT<lb/>
42. til denrifton VS. Band<lb/>
43. Zeta Beta Phi - 5?0fiT<lb/>
44. Phi Sigma Phi-5?0tfT<lb/>
45. ffomecoming Camdidates<lb/>
fric Stephen Clark, Janice Burnette<lb/>
46. Chocouiinity VS. Band<lb/>
47. space<lb/>
48. tJtLW Environmental tlmareness Club ? JfOtiT<lb/>
49. Prrfrofessional rtealth Affiance ? JfOtIT<lb/>
50. Rose VS. Band<lb/>
51. 'HI nv-oming Candidates<lb/>
Joseph Elder, Sybil mtfean<lb/>
52. fCTC Club<lb/>
53. DH Conlej VS. Band<lb/>
54. 31etcher Hail Council - JfOtIT<lb/>
55. f.Hfanej) VS. Band<lb/>
56. Homecoming Candidates<lb/>
'Uiomas 'ttlarcinoicski, Dee 'Huskey<lb/>
57. fa: tern Wayne VS. Band<lb/>
58. ft Ik 'Hall Council 3SBfC<lb/>
59. space<lb/>
60. Rjchlands VS. Band<lb/>
61. 'Homecoming Candidates<lb/>
Dell Williams, Kara Buttermore<lb/>
62. American Chemical Society ? 33<lb/>
63. Jacksonville KS. Band<lb/>
64. 501 tlmbasadors ? W??<lb/>
65. 'Horses<lb/>
Remembering tie Fast<lb/>
Building fir ibt Futon.<lb/>
Homecoming 1995<lb/>
schedule of events<lb/>
66, Sweeper<lb/>
Friday, Oct. 20, 1995<lb/>
PIRATEFEST, The Mall<lb/>
5:30 pm - 7pm<lb/>
Saturday, Oct. 21, 1995<lb/>
?CD<lb/>
Mewttmbering lb Past.<lb/>
Budding fir ibt Futurw.<lb/>
NPHC Homecoming 95 Step Show<lb/>
8pm Hendrix Theater<lb/>
Homecoming Parade<lb/>
9:45am - 11am<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0009"/><lb/>
?-? h0t tmewiwwwwi<lb/>
Thursday, October 19,1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Swim meet successful<lb/>
Photo by KEN CLARK<lb/>
Lady Pirate swimmers take off during the PurpleGold meet. This intersquad meet for the<lb/>
women's and men's teams helps prepare the swimmers for upcoming conference events<lb/>
Dill Dillard<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A coach looks for promise in his<lb/>
or her team when the team conducts<lb/>
an inter-squad scrimmage, and<lb/>
ECU's swim team coach. Rick Kobe,<lb/>
found it Tuesday at the PurpleGold<lb/>
swim meet held at Minges Aquatic<lb/>
Center. Promise for Coach Kobe's<lb/>
squad came in the form of six bro-<lb/>
ken records, four new marks com-<lb/>
ing from the women's team and two<lb/>
from the men's squad.<lb/>
"1 can't say how excited 1 arn<lb/>
about these times said Kobe. This<lb/>
meet proved to be the fourth<lb/>
straight win for both of the Gold<lb/>
squads. Despite the overall score,<lb/>
the Purple squads came away with<lb/>
their share of record times. In the<lb/>
women's competition, both squads<lb/>
came away with record marks.<lb/>
For the Purple, junior Eliza-<lb/>
beth Bradner established a 2:10.66<lb/>
time in the 200-yard backstroke. The<lb/>
Gold, however, came away with three<lb/>
records starting with the 400-yard<lb/>
medley relay team. This experienced<lb/>
medley team, consisting of Amanda<lb/>
Atkinson, Hilary Stokes, Kim Field<lb/>
and anchor Beth Humphrey<lb/>
trimmed their time to a quick<lb/>
4:03.75. Stokes, from Winston-Sa-<lb/>
lem, would go on to a record of<lb/>
25.64 in the 50-yard freestyle and<lb/>
Kim Field snagged another record<lb/>
when she established a time of<lb/>
2:12.00 in the 200-yard butterfly.<lb/>
Sophomore Stacie Haymes took the<lb/>
top spots in the 3-meter as well as<lb/>
the meter diving events.<lb/>
"T1 women are defending<lb/>
champs, so they are the team to beat<lb/>
in a very competitive CAA swimming<lb/>
conference Kobe commented after<lb/>
the meet. "Our kids are getting<lb/>
faster with every practice<lb/>
Improvement and leadership is<lb/>
what Kobe is looking for in his men's<lb/>
team. "1 was thrilled with the effort<lb/>
I saw out of the men's team. Of<lb/>
course, like any other coach, I ex-<lb/>
pect the seniors to step up and be-<lb/>
come the leaders, but for our team<lb/>
to go to the next level, all of our<lb/>
swimmers will have to step it up<lb/>
See SWIM page 11<lb/>
s4t?lete o? t&amp;e ovee&amp;<lb/>
Rachel Atkinson<lb/>
Erlka Leigh Hamby<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The swim team's Rachel<lb/>
Atkinson is ready for this year's sea-<lb/>
son. She feels this is a strong team,<lb/>
one of the strongest since she has<lb/>
been here at ECU. She possibly sees<lb/>
another conference title for this<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
Atkinson, a senior from<lb/>
Fredricksburg, Va is majoring in ex-<lb/>
ercise science with a concentration<lb/>
in health and fitness. After gradua-<lb/>
tion in the spring, she wants to pur-<lb/>
sue a graduate degree in physical<lb/>
therapy. She mentioned that coach-<lb/>
ing may be in her future. When she<lb/>
is not swimming, Atkinson enjoys<lb/>
shopping, hanging out with friends,<lb/>
relaxing, watching movies and espe-<lb/>
cially baking.<lb/>
Not only is Atkinson a threat in<lb/>
the pool but also in the classroom.<lb/>
She is a CAA Scholar Athlete and pre-<lb/>
viously has been on the dean's list.<lb/>
Atkinson's personal goals for this<lb/>
season are to swim her best times, and<lb/>
make the top eight in all three of her<lb/>
events which are the 1000. 500 and<lb/>
200 free-styles. Atkinson says she en-<lb/>
joys her sport because it is both an<lb/>
individual and team sport. Individu-<lb/>
als have a chance to shine, but it takes<lb/>
the whole team to win. It is even bet-<lb/>
ter when the team is close- knit and<lb/>
gets along outside of the pool.<lb/>
She offers advice to her fellow<lb/>
swimmers before meets and helps<lb/>
them along when things might not be<lb/>
going to well. Atkinson is a team sup-<lb/>
porter always cheering people on.<lb/>
"I would like to tell all of the Lady<lb/>
Pirates to roll on said Atkinson.<lb/>
Atkinson said the worst thing<lb/>
about the sport is when a swimmer<lb/>
comes into the pool with a negative<lb/>
attitude. It only causes them to swim<lb/>
badly and become more frustrated.<lb/>
She says the only thing you can do<lb/>
when you have a day like that is to<lb/>
calm down and get your head screwed<lb/>
on right.<lb/>
Not only do the other swimmers<lb/>
enjoy her, but so does the coaching<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
"She is a leader in and out of<lb/>
the water said Assistant Coach<lb/>
Brent St. Pierre. "She is one of the<lb/>
best swimmers to come through East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
"All of her hard work has paid<lb/>
off for her over the past three years<lb/>
going into her fourth year added<lb/>
Head Coach Kobe. "She is one of<lb/>
the top distance swimmers in the<lb/>
CAA. She is an absolute pleasure to<lb/>
coach. Not everyone is a pleasure to<lb/>
coach, but she is<lb/>
St44'Ttotez<lb/>
Staff Report<lb/>
The ECU Lady Pirate Soccer team dominated the<lb/>
field over the Mt. Olive College Trojans. The Pirates<lb/>
raised their record to 2-12 overall with the shutout<lb/>
victory, winning the game 3-0.<lb/>
The Monday game was played well by<lb/>
the team throughout the entire 90 min-<lb/>
utes.<lb/>
"It felt good to win said fresh<lb/>
man Renee Larson from Toms River,<lb/>
N.J. Larson scored the first goal 40<lb/>
minutes into the first half and later<lb/>
explained, "I believe everyone on the<lb/>
team was happy. I feel it was impor-<lb/>
tant to get tliat victory under our belts.<lb/>
It gave us confidence for our upcoming<lb/>
game<lb/>
Freshman defender Kristen Thor from<lb/>
Pittsford, N.Y. scored in the second half for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates. An hour into the game the Trojans still<lb/>
hadn't scored and Pirate Shari Tomasetti put in<lb/>
the last goal of the game to tie the noose on Mt.<lb/>
Olive.<lb/>
"We came together and played well as a team<lb/>
said Tomasetti a Springfield.Va. native.<lb/>
The action of the game was over-<lb/>
whelmingly on the Trojan side of the<lb/>
field. The Lady Pirates swarmed the<lb/>
Mt. Olive team with delicate yet<lb/>
forceful precision, confidence and<lb/>
persistence. The Trojan's goal-<lb/>
keeper, Eli Webb, recorded an ex-<lb/>
hausting 20 saves against the Pi-<lb/>
rates. ECU's senior goalkeeper,<lb/>
Joey Clark, made one save during<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
The ECU Lady Pirate Soccer Team<lb/>
played their second to last home game yester-<lb/>
day against Charleston Southern.<lb/>
Craig Perrott<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Pirates host the Temple<lb/>
Owls this weekend for Homecoming<lb/>
and are looking to rebound from their<lb/>
loss to Cincinnati in an effort to gain<lb/>
some momentum going into the sec-<lb/>
ond half of the season.<lb/>
ECU, undefeated at home, is 2-0<lb/>
against Big East opponents this sea-<lb/>
son, posting wins against Syracuse<lb/>
and West Virginia. Temple has only<lb/>
won one game all year, getting their<lb/>
first Big East conference win in the<lb/>
school's history against Pittsburgh<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
The open date this past week-<lb/>
end has given the Pirates an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to recover from injuries stem-<lb/>
ming from their confrontation with<lb/>
Cincinnati. Freshman noseguard<lb/>
Travis Darden, who suffered a<lb/>
sprained ankle in the game, is slated<lb/>
to play on Saturday. Offensive tack-<lb/>
les Charles Boothe and Ronnie<lb/>
Suddith are ready to go as well. Full-<lb/>
back Jerris McPhail, who sprained his<lb/>
wrist at Cincinnati, is questionable<lb/>
for the Temple contest<lb/>
In the loss against the Bearcats,<lb/>
quarterback Marcus Crandell estab-<lb/>
lished a pair of career records.<lb/>
Crandell now has 368 career comple-<lb/>
tions out of 681 pass attempts.<lb/>
Crandell, a junior from<lb/>
Robersonville, is now second place<lb/>
on the list for all-time career passing<lb/>
yards at ECU. As of the West Virginia<lb/>
game, Crandell had 4,303 yards, sur<lb/>
passing Travis Hunter (3,928) in the<lb/>
No. 2 position. Crandell has tallied his<lb/>
total in just 20 games. Legendary ECU<lb/>
quarterback Jeff Blake holds the all-<lb/>
time record with 5,133 yards.<lb/>
Crandell is also second on the<lb/>
single-season passing list with 2,687<lb/>
yard performance in 1994. Once again,<lb/>
Jeff Blake is on top of the list, amass-<lb/>
ing 3,073 yards in 1991.<lb/>
Mitchell Galloway also had a<lb/>
record-setting performance against<lb/>
Cincinnati. The junior H-back broke<lb/>
into .the top 10 for pass receptions<lb/>
with 63 and leads the Pirates so far<lb/>
this season with 26.<lb/>
Jason Nichols played his best<lb/>
game ever as a Pirate versus Cincin-<lb/>
nati. The sophomore flanker caught<lb/>
seven passes for 108 yards, equaling<lb/>
a personal best for receptions. Nichols'<lb/>
receiving yardage total was a personal<lb/>
best for a single game.<lb/>
Senior linebacker Mark Libiano<lb/>
is among the candidates nominated<lb/>
for the 1995 Butkus Award. The<lb/>
award, named for Dick Butkus, is pre-<lb/>
sented annually to the nation's out-<lb/>
standing linebacker by Butkus and<lb/>
the Downtown Athletic Club of Or-<lb/>
lando, Inc.<lb/>
The list, initially containing 61<lb/>
candidates, will be trimmed to 10<lb/>
semi-finalists today.<lb/>
Three finalists will be named on<lb/>
Nov. 16. Libiano, who leads (he team<lb/>
in tackles, has 72 sticks in the six<lb/>
games that have been played this<lb/>
year. He had 135 last year, and went<lb/>
on to be named the AP All-Indepen-<lb/>
dent Defensive Player-of-the-Year.<lb/>
Interesting Pirate Facts:<lb/>
ECU began intercollegiate<lb/>
football competition in 1932, los-<lb/>
ing their first game to Presbyte-<lb/>
rian College, 39-0.<lb/>
The Pirate football program is<lb/>
the fifth youngest in the NCAA.<lb/>
Only UNLV, Air Force, Florida<lb/>
State and Houston are younger.<lb/>
The overall record for Pirate<lb/>
football is 285-270-11 a 51.3 win-<lb/>
ning percentage. No games were<lb/>
played between 1942 and 1945,<lb/>
due to World War II.<lb/>
ECU has competed in three<lb/>
bowl games since turning Division-<lb/>
1 in 1977: The 1978 Independence<lb/>
Bowl, the 1992 Peach Bowl, and<lb/>
the 1994 Liberty Bowl.<lb/>
The top three winningest<lb/>
coaches in ECU history are John<lb/>
Christenbury (with a .800 winning<lb/>
percentage), Pat Dye (.727) and<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich (.647).<lb/>
Stasavich hac more wins than any<lb/>
of his counterparts, with a career<lb/>
record of 50-27-1.<lb/>
The largest margin of victory<lb/>
for the Pirates is 74 points. ECU<lb/>
defeated the Newport News Ap-<lb/>
prentice 74-0 in 1959.<lb/>
The Pirates are 8-20 on tele-<lb/>
vision; six of those games were na-<lb/>
tionally televised. In their first TV<lb/>
game in history, the Pirates de-<lb/>
feated The Citadel, 27-21.<lb/>
Temple defeated ECU on the<lb/>
field in 1986, but the use of an<lb/>
ineligible player forced the Owls<lb/>
to forfeit the game at the season's<lb/>
closure.<lb/>
Men's soccer hands<lb/>
shut out loss to UNC-A<lb/>
Intense match<lb/>
turns out positively<lb/>
for Pirates<lb/>
Erlka Leigh Hamby<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The men's soccer team battled<lb/>
it out with the UNC-A Bulldogs to<lb/>
come away with their third shutout<lb/>
win of the season. The scoring of<lb/>
the two goals came in the mid and<lb/>
late second half to win the game 2-<lb/>
0.<lb/>
The game, played on Monday,<lb/>
was intense throughout the entire<lb/>
match. The first half was played well<lb/>
with the ball moving furiously up<lb/>
and down the field. Pirates' Marc<lb/>
Mullin. Dan Staton and Chris<lb/>
Padgett all took shots at the UNC-A<lb/>
goal dominating the field. The first<lb/>
half ended with the score 0-0, but<lb/>
ECU was came on strong in the first<lb/>
half and the momentum carried over<lb/>
into the second half.<lb/>
"We stress playing shutout soc-<lb/>
cer said Head Coach Wiberg. "We<lb/>
were very poised and composed<lb/>
The Pirates looked ready to play<lb/>
in the second half. Seniors Mullin<lb/>
and Staton as well as Dusty Belk,<lb/>
and Eddie Stephens took charge<lb/>
with Staton and Belk scoring and<lb/>
Mullin and Stephens adding with<lb/>
assists.<lb/>
"We've began to click and work<lb/>
well together said Belk.<lb/>
"This is our last year says<lb/>
Staton. "We might as well play as<lb/>
best we can<lb/>
The first goal came about 20<lb/>
minutes into the second half when<lb/>
Kyle England fed the ball to<lb/>
Stephens who came on the cross.<lb/>
The ball fell slightly short, but luck-<lb/>
ily it landed right in front of Staton<lb/>
who was able to drive it in.<lb/>
"The goal was a gift, pretty<lb/>
much, from Eddie said Staton.<lb/>
In the middle of the second half,<lb/>
the team suffered a shock. Freshman<lb/>
Chris Burger, went down with a dis-<lb/>
located elbow. Burger had to be<lb/>
transported from the field to the<lb/>
hospital by ambulance. Burger will<lb/>
be out for a minimum of four weeks<lb/>
while his injury heals.<lb/>
"It's really unfortunate about<lb/>
Chris said Head Coach Will<lb/>
Wiberg. "He has started in the last<lb/>
two of three games for us<lb/>
The Pirates didn't let the injury<lb/>
stop their momentum. The ECU de-<lb/>
fense held the Bulldogs well<lb/>
throughout the entire game and the<lb/>
offense outshot UNC-A 16-9.<lb/>
Nine minutes after the Pirates'<lb/>
first goal, Belk was set up for his<lb/>
See KICK page 11<lb/>
Flag Football<lb/>
Championship Games<lb/>
Tonisht starting at 8 p.m.<lb/>
All games will be played<lb/>
on field four of the<lb/>
intramural fields.<lb/>
Women's All Campus<lb/>
Thrown Together vs.<lb/>
Alpha Phi, 8 p.m.<lb/>
Purple All Campus<lb/>
UKB Posse or Club 106<lb/>
vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon B,<lb/>
9 p.m.<lb/>
Gold All Campus<lb/>
Super Ho's vs. Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon A, 10 p.m.<lb/>
Winner's from women's<lb/>
and gold championship<lb/>
games will receive an<lb/>
invitation to participate<lb/>
in national tournament.<lb/>
,<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?w<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0010"/><lb/>
?jfalll ' ?<lb/>
10<lb/>
Thursday, October 19, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
<lb/>
Bills coach recovers after surgery<lb/>
t.<lb/>
'?<lb/>
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP)<lb/>
Marv Levy, coach of the Buffalo<lb/>
Bills, had surgery Tuesday for pros-<lb/>
tate cancer.<lb/>
'The surgery was highly suc-<lb/>
cessful and coach Levy is resting<lb/>
comfortably at this time said Dr.<lb/>
Robert Huben, chairman of the uro-<lb/>
logic oncology department at<lb/>
Roswell Park Cancer Institute.<lb/>
"His condition is officially<lb/>
listed as good<lb/>
Doctors have told Levy that his<lb/>
cancer was found in an early stage.<lb/>
If the tumor is confined to the pros-<lb/>
tate, there is a 60 percent to 80 per-<lb/>
cent chance that surgery will result<lb/>
In a complete cure, Huben said.<lb/>
Levy learnee apart more than<lb/>
it has Marv. He's tough and strong.<lb/>
He just said, Let's go about our<lb/>
business<lb/>
Levy, 70, who has coached Buf-<lb/>
falo since 1986, said the cancer was<lb/>
found during a routine physical be-<lb/>
fore training camp. The diagnosis<lb/>
was confirmed in August after an<lb/>
examination at Northwestern Medi-<lb/>
cal Center in Chicago.<lb/>
Levy has a realistic chance of<lb/>
making it back for the Bills' Nov.<lb/>
12 game against Atlanta, given the<lb/>
Experience of other prostate pa-<lb/>
. tients, according to Levy's doctor.<lb/>
"That certainly is a reasonable<lb/>
goal and expectation with today's<lb/>
standards Huben said.<lb/>
"I'm going to miss some<lb/>
games Levy said Monday. "I don't<lb/>
know exactly how many, but I guar-<lb/>
antee you it will be sooner than<lb/>
what they said If all goes well. I'll<lb/>
be back and ready to go again<lb/>
About one in 10 men develop<lb/>
prostate cancer,<lb/>
according to the<lb/>
American Foun-<lb/>
dation for L'ro-<lb/>
logic Disease.<lb/>
Roughly 40.000<lb/>
men will die of<lb/>
the disease this<lb/>
year, the Journal<lb/>
of the National<lb/>
Cancer Institute<lb/>
has estimated.<lb/>
Word fil-<lb/>
tered through<lb/>
the coaching<lb/>
staff last week, hut did not reach<lb/>
his players until Monday, when<lb/>
Levy called a meeting four hours<lb/>
ahead of his normal schedule a day<lb/>
after the Bills beat the Seattle<lb/>
Seahawks.<lb/>
"It was a pretty serious meet-<lb/>
ing special teams ace Steve<lb/>
Tasker said. 'The part Marv got<lb/>
emotional was when he started talk-<lb/>
ing about us. The fact we ve won<lb/>
games without key players, and he<lb/>
says we'll win without him<lb/>
Assistant head coach Eliiah<lb/>
Pitts will take over the team while<lb/>
Levy recovers from surgery. Levy<lb/>
is expected to be in the hospital for<lb/>
about a week, and he will monitor<lb/>
Bills practices from home on vid-<lb/>
eotape.<lb/>
Levy kept his sense of humor<lb/>
when he announced his illness at a<lb/>
news conference. As he did with his<lb/>
players, Levy<lb/>
talked about<lb/>
football first,<lb/>
gave an over-<lb/>
view of his im-<lb/>
mediate fu-<lb/>
ture, and left<lb/>
without an-<lb/>
swering ques-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"I've re-<lb/>
quested to<lb/>
have no visi-<lb/>
tors at the<lb/>
hospital<lb/>
Levy said. "Please, no flowers, no<lb/>
cookies, no candy, no pastries, no<lb/>
embroideries, no drawings, no bal-<lb/>
loons - nothing cute unless I pick<lb/>
her out myself<lb/>
Pitts, an assistant with the<lb/>
"The surgery was<lb/>
highly successful<lb/>
and coach Levy is<lb/>
resting<lb/>
comfortably at<lb/>
this time<lb/>
? Dr. Robert Huben<lb/>
Bills since 1985, has primarily been<lb/>
running backs coach. He coordi-<lb/>
nated the special teams in 1986 and<lb/>
was given the added responsibility<lb/>
of assistant head coach in March<lb/>
1992.<lb/>
Pitts, a former standout run-<lb/>
ning back for the Green Bay Pack-<lb/>
ers, played in four NFL champion-<lb/>
ships and two Super Bowls under<lb/>
Vince Lombardi. Pitts' pro coach-<lb/>
ing career began as an assistant<lb/>
with the Los Angeles Rams in 1973,<lb/>
and he makes his debut as a head<lb/>
coach against New England on<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Since becoming Buffalo's<lb/>
coach, Levy's record is 101-55-0, in-<lb/>
cluding playoffs.<lb/>
The three road games in Levy'<lb/>
absence - New England, Miami and<lb/>
Indianapolis - will show whether<lb/>
Buffalo is a legitimate contender in<lb/>
the AFC. Buffalo (5-1) could win<lb/>
half of its remaining 10 games and<lb/>
would likely have a record good<lb/>
enough for the postseason.<lb/>
INTRODUCING<lb/>
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Friday,<lb/>
October 20, 1995<lb/>
Tickets $7 in<lb/>
advance with a<lb/>
valid ECU ID.<lb/>
Ail tickets S15<lb/>
at the door.<lb/>
0<lb/>
S?<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
"It don't mean l .<lb/>
a tfcingle if it ain't <lb/>
got that swingle <lb/>
Eight voices that <lb/>
sound like an nj I<lb/>
orchestra- W<lb/>
don't miss it!<lb/>
Tickets are available through<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
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May Not be combined with any other otters<lb/>
With coupon only Expires 11-15-95<lb/>
TAILGATE SPECIAL: FREE Bag of ice with every<lb/>
$20.00 food order<lb/>
The ECU Student Union Presents<lb/>
ALL-CAMPUS<lb/>
COLLEGE BOWL<lb/>
The Varsity Sport of the Mind<lb/>
Win Fame and Fortune! Prizes Include:<lb/>
? The chance to represent ECU at the College Bowl<lb/>
Regional Competition to be held at the University of<lb/>
Tennessee, all expenses paid (February 23-25,1996)<lb/>
? Two $100.00 Book Scholarships from ECU Student<lb/>
Stores for the two top-scoring participants<lb/>
? $25.00 for each member of the winning team<lb/>
? College Bowl merchandise<lb/>
it<lb/>
? I?<lb/>
?M<lb/>
Sign Design<lb/>
Would (ike to thank ECU Athletes and<lb/>
H Staff for their patronage.<lb/>
Q?ocA Uv4t T&amp;U Weetefv A<lb/>
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Wednesday, November 1 &amp; 8 ? 4:00 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Double Elimination Finals<lb/>
Wednesday, November 15 ? 7:00 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Sign-up as a team of 4 or 5 persons representing a campus<lb/>
?6<lb/>
o<lb/>
organization or as an individual to be placed on a team.<lb/>
Call the Student Activities Office at 328-4711 to request a<lb/>
registration packet.<lb/>
Registration Deadline: Wednesday, October 25<lb/>
For more information, call the Student Union Hotline at 328-6004.<lb/>
w<lb/>
"TTWi i imS-ajf ?z<lb/>
- r"<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0011"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Thursday, October 19, 1995<lb/>
11<lb/>
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49 Big &amp; Crusty<lb/>
Bagels 12 15 cz<lb/>
Highland Crest<lb/>
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President's Choice President's Choice<lb/>
Raspberry, Lemon Or Key Lime Decadent ,?<lb/>
Temptations 3JBQO Chocolate Chip 2700<lb/>
Cookies<lb/>
Cookies<lb/>
12 oz.<lb/>
Selected Varieties<lb/>
Instant Quaker<lb/>
Oatmeal<lb/>
11.8-<lb/>
16.2 oz.<lb/>
Stock Up And Save<lb/>
Soft Drink Feature<lb/>
Harris Teeter Frozen<lb/>
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?:? '? ; iu- Iinlu 11) Limit Quantities. None Sold To Dealers. Wu l.l.ullv Accept I oilcnil I-oikI Si.imps<lb/>
SWIM from page 9<lb/>
The men's Gold squad showed<lb/>
poise in a close meet with the Purple<lb/>
team, as they went on to win the meet<lb/>
in the last event. The Gold not only<lb/>
came out of the contest on top, but<lb/>
they set two new records in route to<lb/>
their forth straight PurpleGold vic-<lb/>
tory. Junior Chris Bembenek was the<lb/>
first to snap a record for the men<lb/>
when he turned in a time of 1:56.11<lb/>
in the 200-yard backstroke.<lb/>
Bembenek's teammate, Lee<lb/>
Hutchens. was soon to follow with a<lb/>
record of his own with a time of<lb/>
4:49.71 in the 500-yard freestyle.<lb/>
"The men finished fourth last<lb/>
year in the CAA. but 1 feel that they<lb/>
are ready to take it a notch above<lb/>
last year's performance and contend<lb/>
for the top three spots Kobe added.<lb/>
With the fast times turned in<lb/>
for the Bucs along with a talented<lb/>
diving squad ied by 1995 CAA Rookie<lb/>
Diver-of-the-Year Stephen Barnes, the<lb/>
future looks bright for the Men's<lb/>
team to improve upon last year's<lb/>
fourth place finish in the CAA.<lb/>
The Pirate swim team will start<lb/>
Hnd out all you need to know about<lb/>
Pirate football in this week's special<lb/>
Homecoming edition of<lb/>
their road to the CAA crown Nov. 4<lb/>
at home when the Monarchs of Old<lb/>
Dominion roll into town. Kobe and<lb/>
his Pirates are expecting a dog fight<lb/>
when they enter the pool with trie<lb/>
Monarch's who finished below the<lb/>
Bucs in the CAA. The meet will be<lb/>
held at the Minges Pool starting at'2<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
"Oh. these first two meets will<lb/>
be a true test for our team. These<lb/>
teams usually match up well against<lb/>
us. We'll have to come to race ever.y<lb/>
meet if we expect to be successful<lb/>
IVIV; IV from page 9<lb/>
fourth goal of the season by a pass<lb/>
from Muilin. After the two goals the<lb/>
Pirates held off the Bulldogs for 13<lb/>
more minutes to end the game with<lb/>
a 2-0 victory.<lb/>
"This is probably the best game<lb/>
and win of the season said En-<lb/>
gland.<lb/>
The Pirates will take on Meth-<lb/>
odist today at 4 p.m. for their last<lb/>
home game of the season. Method-<lb/>
ist is ranked No. 1 in Division III.<lb/>
"This is going to be a very diffi-<lb/>
cult game said Wiberg.<lb/>
Hank's Homemade ice Cream<lb/>
316 East 10th Street<lb/>
within walking distance from ECU<lb/>
758-0000<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
GET ONE<lb/>
1 Item Mini Sundae<lb/>
coupon expires 103195<lb/>
Limit 1 per customer.<lb/>
Not Valid with any other purchase<lb/>
Sctra<lb/>
you've waited too long<lb/>
to get that Halloween<lb/>
costume?<lb/>
Try Us<lb/>
lautex masks ? costumes ? ghoulish accessories<lb/>
Dress To Impress<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Arlington Village (919)321-1714<lb/>
TM<lb/>
15 percent less water<lb/>
is used in making<lb/>
paper from recycled<lb/>
stock than from wood<lb/>
pulp - a savings of<lb/>
7,000 gallons per ton.<lb/>
TIP:<lb/>
Shop where they use<lb/>
recycled bags. Reuse<lb/>
your bags on your<lb/>
next trip or for other<lb/>
needs such as kitchen<lb/>
garbage.<lb/>
77ns Green Tip is sponsored by:<lb/>
Heron Bay<lb/>
Trading Co.<lb/>
"Greenville's Exclusive<lb/>
Nature Store"<lb/>
in The Plaza'321-6380<lb/>
BRING TIP IN FOR<lb/>
20 OFF PURCHASE<lb/>
e J 995 Kevin A McLean, Tampa, FL<lb/>
BRING<lb/>
HUNGRY<lb/>
to<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
APPETIZER SPECIALS!<lb/>
 Sun-Thurs. After 9 p.m. Dine-In Only<lb/>
Open 7 Days for Lunch, Dinner, &amp; Fiestas!<lb/>
Downtown Greenville (Across from U.B.E.) 757-1666<lb/>
v?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0012"/><lb/>
m i ?? ??? ???? ??"<lb/>
-?.? <lb/>
12<lb/>
Thursday, October 19, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
DTlffl<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
Attention Students!<lb/>
Langston Park Apartments<lb/>
(Beside Tr River Estates,<lb/>
Near Campis)<lb/>
, AZALEA GARDENS<lb/>
Clear rind Quiet, erne tu-diu<lb/>
urnished ,ip.rtmi'niv S2jO i '<lb/>
RESEARCH ilFORMAHON<lb/>
Largest Library of Information In U.S. -<lb/>
al subjects<lb/>
O'der Catalog Today with Visa MC or COO<lb/>
Eg 800-351-0222<lb/>
?irilllliy or (310) 477-8226<lb/>
Or, rusi $2 00 lo: Reiairch Information<lb/>
! 13?:idaho Ave J206 A, Los Angeles. CA 90025<lb/>
WESLEY COMMONS: 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom,<lb/>
Range. Refrigerator, Washer &amp; Dryer<lb/>
Hookups, Decks &amp; Pat ios in most units.<lb/>
Laundry Facility, Sand Volleyball Court,<lb/>
Located 5 blocks from campus. Free Wa-<lb/>
ter &amp; Sewer.<lb/>
WYNDHAM COURT: 2 Bedrooms<lb/>
Stove Refrigerator Dishwasher<lb/>
Washer &amp; Dryer Hookups Patios on first<lb/>
floor. Located five blocks from campus<lb/>
These and other fine properties managed<lb/>
by Pitt Property Management, 108 A<lb/>
Brownlea Drive, 758-1921.<lb/>
LOOKING FOR NON-SMOKER to share<lb/>
great apartment. New carpet paint.<lb/>
$175mo. 12 utilities. Prefer Older or<lb/>
Graduate student. 551-1863.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bed-<lb/>
room Apt in Tar River. 12 rent, 12 utili-<lb/>
ties. Call 758-9942.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus. 12 block from City Market.<lb/>
Washer and Dryer included. $216 a mont h<lb/>
plus 13 of utilities. Please call 757-2038.<lb/>
NON-SMOKING MALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED to share 1 bedroom. $95 per<lb/>
month plus 14 utilities. 5 mm from cam-<lb/>
pus. Call 754-2840.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED. Starting in Janu-<lb/>
ary; 2BR; $167month Utilities; private<lb/>
room; Call Jody at 551-7624; leave mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Female to share<lb/>
brand new 4BR. 3 full bath apartment<lb/>
home. $250 per month plus 14 utilities.<lb/>
Swimming pool, exercise center, club<lb/>
house, lighted tennis courts, and lots of<lb/>
extras, including continental breakfast<lb/>
each Friday morning. Call 321-7613.<lb/>
TWO ROOMMATES NEEDED. Spacious<lb/>
house directly across from campus. In-<lb/>
cludes washerdryer and alarm system.<lb/>
$200 per monthut ilities. 752-1263. Ask<lb/>
for Cami.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED? Male to share<lb/>
new 4 BDR, 3 full bath apartment $250<lb/>
per month plus 14 utilities. Swimming<lb/>
pool, tennis, volleyball, weight room and<lb/>
jnore. Call 321-7613.<lb/>
2 BEDROOM HOUSE only 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus, appliances included, Pets OK.<lb/>
$350. 2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, 5 blocks<lb/>
from campus, appliances included, Pets<lb/>
OK. $300. 3 BEDROOM HOUSE, new<lb/>
floors, appliances, Pets OK, 5 blocks from<lb/>
campus. $540. 3 BEDROOM DUPLEX, 6<lb/>
blocks from campus, central air,<lb/>
applicances, fresh paint, Pets OK. $450.00.<lb/>
MOORE REALTY 752-2533<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: MOUNTAIN BIKE<lb/>
wanted or others. Will pay cash. Call 413-<lb/>
3816 and leave message on machine, will<lb/>
call back. For Sale, Haro Sport Freestile<lb/>
Bike $150.<lb/>
BIKE FOR SALE, 21" Gaint with Trek<lb/>
shocks, Good con Jit ion! $165.00. Call<lb/>
Chris or Brandon at 830-6811.<lb/>
BROTHER WORD PROCESSOR with<lb/>
14" Monitor and user's guide. Excellent<lb/>
condition. Perfect for dorm room. Paid<lb/>
$390, asking $225 OBO. Call 752-9506.<lb/>
CDO YOU NEED MONEYS<lb/>
WE WILL PAY YOU<lb/>
$CASH$<lb/>
FOR YOUR USED<lb/>
We also buy TOMMY HILFIGER<lb/>
NAUTICA<lb/>
POLO<lb/>
RUFF HEWN<lb/>
J. CREW<lb/>
ALEXANDER<lb/>
JULIAN<lb/>
GUESS<lb/>
LEVI<lb/>
ETC.<lb/>
GOLD<lb/>
- SILVER<lb/>
Jewelry-<lb/>
Also Broken Gold<lb/>
Pieces<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Stereo's<lb/>
TV's<lb/>
VCR's<lb/>
CD players<lb/>
Student Swap Shop<lb/>
LX)WNTOWN WALKING MALL<lb/>
414 EVANS ST<lb/>
HRS. THURS-FRI 10-12,1:30 -5&amp; SAT FROM 10-1<lb/>
come into the staff parking lot in front of wachovia downtown,<lb/>
lx drive to back door &amp; ring buzzer<lb/>
Need CASH???<lb/>
We Buy CDs, Cassettes ?md<lb/>
Ips<lb/>
We'll pay ap to S6 creditors?<lb/>
cash for CD's<lb/>
Downtown 756-5026<lb/>
FENDER CABINET 2<lb/>
ers $75. 830-1223.<lb/>
12 inch speak-<lb/>
PAY IN-STATE TUITION? RESIDENCY<lb/>
STATUS AND TUITION is the brochure<lb/>
by attorney Brad Lamb on the in-state<lb/>
tuition residency application process. For<lb/>
Sale: Student Stores, Wright Building.<lb/>
FOR SALE: dorm frig $50, glass top cof-<lb/>
fee table and matching end table $100,<lb/>
sewing machine $50, Chr istmas Tree $25,<lb/>
matching sofa and love seat $150,<lb/>
waterskis $35. Call 830-2907.<lb/>
UNIVEGA 703 MOUNTAIN BIKE, New<lb/>
with Rock Shocks, STX Rapid Shifter.<lb/>
Green, Retail $800 with warranty. 1st $600<lb/>
takes it 756-8080.<lb/>
VACATION AND CRUISE FOR TWO.<lb/>
Florida and the Bahamas for 10 days. Only<lb/>
$199 per person. Call Pamela at 830-0828.<lb/>
1992 SUZUKI K AT AN A 600 Excellent<lb/>
Condition! Include two helmets. Purple<lb/>
and Black. Asking $3300 OBO Call 758-<lb/>
1393<lb/>
MUST SELL Associated RC10L race car.<lb/>
Trinity batteries, motor, Novak electron-<lb/>
ics, Futaba radio, Pro-tech charger, hand<lb/>
painted body, extras. EC $225. Call Tommy<lb/>
at 758-1031 and leave message.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Black Leather Jacket, New,<lb/>
Never worn, size 44. $175. Call Tommy at<lb/>
758-1031. leave message.<lb/>
1986 HONDA PRELUDE for sale. AC,<lb/>
PS, AMFM Cass Sunroof. Dark Blue.<lb/>
In good condition. Asking $3,500. Call<lb/>
Chris for more info. 551-0564 leave mes-<lb/>
sage if not there.<lb/>
MORROW DRIVE SHOWBOARD<lb/>
BOOTS size 10-10 12; Burton Bio-light<lb/>
pants size large. Call Sean 830-5470 after<lb/>
6pm<lb/>
VOLVO 740 TURBO SEDAN. 1985,<lb/>
98,000 miles. Excellent runner. No rust<lb/>
AC, Stereo, Sunroof. Manual Transmis-<lb/>
sion. $5,500. Tel: 752-2958 or extension<lb/>
6022<lb/>
SPRING BREAK BAHAMAS PARTY<lb/>
CRUISE! Early Specials! 7 Days $279!<lb/>
Includes 15 meals &amp; 6 Parties! Great<lb/>
BeachesNightlife! Prices Increase 1121<lb/>
&amp; 1215! Spring Break Travel 1-800-678-<lb/>
6386<lb/>
SPRING BREAK! PANAMA CITY! Early<lb/>
Specials! 8 Days Oceanview Room with<lb/>
Kitchen $129! Walk to Best Bars! Key<lb/>
West $259! Cocoa Beach Hilton $169!<lb/>
Price Increase 1121 &amp; 1215 1-800-678-<lb/>
6386<lb/>
CANCUN &amp; JAMAICA SPRING BREAK<lb/>
SPECIALS! 111 Lowest Price Guaran-<lb/>
tee! 7 nights Air &amp; Hotel From $359! Book<lb/>
Early! Save $100 on FoodDrinks! Spring<lb/>
Break Travel l-800-6"8-6386<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
it<lb/>
Help<lb/>
Wanted<lb/>
YOUTH BASKETBALL COACHES, The<lb/>
Greenville Recreation and Parks Depart-<lb/>
ment is recruiting for 12 to 16 part-time<lb/>
youth basketball coaches for the winter<lb/>
youth basketball program. Applicants must<lb/>
possess some knowledge of the basketball<lb/>
skills and have the ability and patience to<lb/>
work with youth. Applicants must be able<lb/>
to coach young people ages 9-18, in bas-<lb/>
ketball fundamentals. Hours are from<lb/>
3:00pm until 7:00pm with some night and<lb/>
weekend coaching. This program will run<lb/>
from the end of November to mid-Febru-<lb/>
ary. Salary rates start at $4.25 per hour.<lb/>
For more information, please call Ben<lb/>
James or Michat' Daly at 8304550 after<lb/>
2 PM.<lb/>
WANTED ACOUSTIC ACT to paly BW-3<lb/>
Patio on Wednesday and Thursday 10:30<lb/>
- 2am. Pays $160 - $180 cash. Contact<lb/>
Sean 758-9191 between 2-4pm.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: WAITSTAFF DAY-<lb/>
TIME AND NIGHT SHIFTS available.<lb/>
Must be able to work at least two week-<lb/>
day lunch shifts. NO CALLS, please apply<lb/>
in person between 8am and 10am or 2pm<lb/>
and 4pm, Professor O'Cools Winn Dixie<lb/>
Market Place. NOW HIRING.<lb/>
"HELP WANTED" creative-enterprising<lb/>
students or campus organizations to dis-<lb/>
tribute flyers for adventure travel and<lb/>
spring break programs. FREE TRIPS-<lb/>
Creat Commission and Experience-<lb/>
BEACH OR ADVENTURE ECOTREKS in<lb/>
Belize-Cancun-Jamaica-Hawaii. Call Kirk-<lb/>
Student Adventure Travel 1-800-328-7513.<lb/>
NEEDED, Reliable, Dependable, Labor<lb/>
Workers. Full and Part time positions.<lb/>
Contact Jeff Walker (Walker Roofing Qual-<lb/>
ity Home Repairs and Improvements).<lb/>
(919) 758-3198.<lb/>
DO YOU HAVE INTERESTING TAT-<lb/>
TOOS or body piercings? If so, please<lb/>
contact TLC Entertainment at 758-2881<lb/>
for more informaiton!<lb/>
?"FREE TRIPS &amp; CASH" Find out<lb/>
how hundreds of students are already earn-<lb/>
ing FREE TRIPS and LOTS OF CASH<lb/>
with America's 1 Spring Break company!<lb/>
Sell only 15 trips and travel free! Choose<lb/>
Cancun, Bahamas, Mazatlan, or Florida!<lb/>
CALL NOW! TAKE A BREAK STUDENT<lb/>
TRAVEL (800) 95-BREAK!<lb/>
ASHLEE &amp; ASHLEY'S now hiring La-<lb/>
dies for dancing &amp; escorting, unlimited<lb/>
income, flexible hours. Call 321-9295.<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/>
ation and Distributi<lb/>
FALL AND SPRING<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
12,000 copies per issue<lb/>
FALL AND SPRING<lb/>
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday - Friday<lb/>
For more information, call ECU-6366<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
Deadlines<lb/>
Fall and Spring<lb/>
Friday at<lb/>
4:00 p.m. for<lb/>
Tuesday's issue<lb/>
Monday at<lb/>
4:00 p.m. for<lb/>
Thursday's issue<lb/>
Advertising Services<lb/>
Line Classified Rate<lb/>
(25 words or less)<lb/>
Students $2.00<lb/>
Non-students $3.00<lb/>
Each additional word $.05<lb/>
Display Advertising<lb/>
DC ads may be cancelled<lb/>
before 10:00 a.m. the day<lb/>
before publication.<lb/>
However, no refunds will<lb/>
be given.<lb/>
Term are subject to change<lb/>
without notice.<lb/>
Display Classifieds<lb/>
$5.50<lb/>
All DC ads will not exceed<lb/>
two column inches in<lb/>
width or five column<lb/>
inches in depth.<lb/>
Having trouble<lb/>
finding where to<lb/>
dropoff<lb/>
Classifieds and<lb/>
Announcements?<lb/>
Forms for<lb/>
Classifieds and<lb/>
A nnouncements<lb/>
can be picked up<lb/>
in Mendenhall and<lb/>
dropped off in the<lb/>
Student ?<lb/>
Publication<lb/>
building.<lb/>
TT<lb/>
Help<lb/>
Wanted<lb/>
GET PAID TO LOSE WEIGHT send self<lb/>
addressed stamped envelope to OMNI<lb/>
Enterprises, Weight, P.O. Box 2624,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 278360624.<lb/>
MAKE Sl.OOO'S weekly processing mail<lb/>
orders at home. Send self addressed En-<lb/>
velopes to OMNI Enterprises, PO Box<lb/>
2624, Creenville, NC 27836-0624.<lb/>
O. E. ESCORT AGENCY is seeking a<lb/>
small number of attractive, articulate<lb/>
young ladies, for part-time evening work.<lb/>
Please call 830-2047<lb/>
$1750 WEEKLY possible mailing our<lb/>
circulars. No experience required. Begin<lb/>
now. For info call 301-306-1207.<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/>
ATTENTION LADIES Tired of being<lb/>
broke, want to get paid everyday, Call<lb/>
Playmates Massage, Snow Hill, NC 747-<lb/>
7686.<lb/>
TLC ENTERTAINMENT is seeking ladies<lb/>
for dancing, modeling, and escorting. $50<lb/>
to $120 per hour. Flexible scheduling.<lb/>
Discretion and Confidentiality assured.<lb/>
Call 758-2881.<lb/>
H Lost and<lb/>
Found<lb/>
REWARD OFFERED for return of<lb/>
Cannondale M-400 stolen from bike rack<lb/>
west of Flanagan. Any information given<lb/>
that results in return of bike would be<lb/>
subject to reward. Call Ken at 7584890<lb/>
or 5514000.<lb/>
<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
ATTENTION SPRING BREAKERS!<lb/>
Book Now! JamaicaCan cun $359, Baha-<lb/>
mas $299, Panama CityDaytona $129.<lb/>
Sell Trips, Earn Cash, Go Free! 1-800-234-<lb/>
7007.<lb/>
 Services<lb/>
' Offered<lb/>
NEED A RIDE TO RALEIGH OR<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL? Why spend $37.50 for a<lb/>
bus when I'll take you for $10.00. Leave<lb/>
every Friday return on Sunday, call 413-<lb/>
9099.<lb/>
WILD RHINO SCREENPRINTINGI Call<lb/>
today for the best T-shirt prices in North<lb/>
Carolina! You'll get the best service and<lb/>
best attitude! Daii 830-9503 and ask for<lb/>
Bud.<lb/>
NEED TYPING? Campus Secretary offers<lb/>
speedy, Professional Service; campus pick-<lb/>
up and delivery. Familiar with all formats.<lb/>
Low Rates. Call Cindy at 355-3611.<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 Creenville. 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 F53622.<lb/>
DO YOUR PARTIES NEED SOME-<lb/>
THING MORE? Wax Revolver DJ Services<lb/>
is your ANSWER! We have the best selec-<lb/>
tion of music in Greenville. Call 758-5026<lb/>
ask for Sean and Book your Party Now!<lb/>
DO YOU LIKE TO PARTY? Then Call<lb/>
Diamond Dave's Retro and Dance Party<lb/>
at 758-5711. Diamond Dave is a profes-<lb/>
sional Disc Jockey with a first class sound<lb/>
system. Call Diamond Dave for a price<lb/>
quote with no obligation<lb/>
GRANTS AND SCHOLARSHIPS are<lb/>
available. Billions of dollars in grant s.<lb/>
Qualify immediately. 1-800-243-2435 (1-<lb/>
800-AID-2-HELP).<lb/>
HAVING A PARTY? CALLING FOR<lb/>
RAIN? Rent a canopy! Two peaked-roof<lb/>
canopies for rent $65.00 each per day as<lb/>
is or $100.00 each per day set-up and de-<lb/>
livered. 752-5533. Leave Message.<lb/>
M<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
JR. PANHELLENIC CONGRATULATES<lb/>
our new officers: President, Kristen<lb/>
Hirschfeld; Vice President, Becky<lb/>
Lockeman; Secretary, Molly Wilkinson;<lb/>
Treasurer, Kristi Rose; Projects Director,<lb/>
Sage Hunihan; Social Chair, Caroline<lb/>
Pisani and Public Relations, Erin Riley.<lb/>
PI LAMBDA PHI and the RONALD<lb/>
MCDONALD HOUSE would like to thank<lb/>
those who contributed to the 1st Annual<lb/>
Cardboard Village. Thanks to IFC, Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma, Alpha Phi Omega, and es-<lb/>
pecially Gamma Sigma Sigma.<lb/>
PHI BETA SIGMA Fraternity was proud<lb/>
to support our Brother Benjamin Chavis,<lb/>
Director of The Million Man March on Oc-<lb/>
tober 16th. GOMAB!<lb/>
ALPHA PHI - There's nobody else that<lb/>
we would rather be stranded with. We had<lb/>
a blast The Brothers of Delta Sigma Phi.<lb/>
PI DELTA: Get ready girls! Tonight's the<lb/>
night to meet your stranger. Know who it<lb/>
is yet? See ya tonight!<lb/>
ALPHA PHI - Get ready for Homecoming<lb/>
'95. It won't be long until our alumni ar-<lb/>
rive. They've come from all over, far and<lb/>
wide. To share with us their A. Phi pride.<lb/>
Sharing memories that Delt a Alpha won't<lb/>
forget, This Homecoming will be t he best<lb/>
yet<lb/>
KA: what a road trip it was last Thursday<lb/>
night Thanks for everything. Love the<lb/>
Sigmas<lb/>
HEATHER SUMMERLIN: congratula-<lb/>
tions on your Engagement Love Your<lb/>
Sigma Sisters.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: Thanks for the trip to<lb/>
Margaritaville! As always, we had a blast<lb/>
Can't wait for the next time! Love, Zeta<lb/>
Tau Alpha.<lb/>
IF SCARED, let's get paired! Stranger<lb/>
mixer 1995 was a success. Thank y ou JES-<lb/>
SICA MIDGET for your hard work. We love<lb/>
you! The Sisters of Delta Zeta<lb/>
THANKS TO THE BROTHERS OF<lb/>
SIGMA TAU GAMMA for the social last<lb/>
Thursday. We're looking forward to next<lb/>
time! DELTA ZETA<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0013"/><lb/>
. ?,fllll II ,ti1 ?<lb/>
Thursday, October 19, 1995<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
NTS<lb/>
ECU HOMECOMING 95<lb/>
STEP SHOW, Saturday, October 21. 1995. 8pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theater (Doors open at 7) tickets on<lb/>
sale at Central Ticket Office. $8 in advance. $10<lb/>
at the door.<lb/>
GOLDEN KEY MEMBERS<lb/>
Great job with Sophomore Recognition! Meet<lb/>
ing TODAY. October 19th at 4:00pm in GCB<lb/>
1019 More great activities, t shirts, fundraisers.<lb/>
FUN!<lb/>
AMERICAN RED CROSS BLOOD<lb/>
DRIVE<lb/>
October 19. 1995 12:00pm ? 4:00pm Scott Hall<lb/>
Basement (College Hill) Refreshments served!<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi National Honor Fraternity will be.<lb/>
selling HALLOWEEN BOO-GRAMS Thursday<lb/>
October 19 and Friday October 20 in front of<lb/>
the Student Store. Come by and see what we<lb/>
have to offer. Delivery will be available.<lb/>
"IT'S A MITZAH<lb/>
Second Annual Jewish Singles Event! Come and<lb/>
Enjoy. For further information call 355-7374<lb/>
between 8-lOam or 8-10pm.<lb/>
I ALFR<lb/>
Lunch special<lb/>
2 slices<lb/>
I topping<lb/>
I drink<lb/>
$2.75<lb/>
mon - fri<lb/>
till 3pm<lb/>
ADULT CHILDREN OF<lb/>
ALCOHOLICS WORKSHOP<lb/>
This three-part workshop for students from dys-<lb/>
functional families will explore issues and rules<lb/>
learned while growing up and how childhood<lb/>
roles affect present day relationships. Mondays<lb/>
at 3pm beginning October 30. Counseling Cen-<lb/>
ter. Call 328661 to register.<lb/>
ATTENTION: MIDDLE GRADES<lb/>
The next meeting of the National Collegiate<lb/>
Middle School Associat ion (NCMSA) will be held<lb/>
Tuesday, October 24 at 4:00pm in Speight 308.<lb/>
Our guest speaker will be Dr. Bullock. Her pre-<lb/>
sentation will address the building of professional<lb/>
portfolios for pre-service teachers. All middle<lb/>
grades majors are invited to attend.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will meet on Tuesday, October<lb/>
24 in MSC Room 244 at 5:00. If you have sold<lb/>
all of your raffle tickets, please turn them in<lb/>
and get some more! If you need more tickets<lb/>
before the meeting please contact Tammy or<lb/>
Pam.<lb/>
KAYAK ROLL CLINIC<lb/>
Learn all the basics of Kayaking during Recre-<lb/>
TONITE LIVE<lb/>
on stage<lb/>
Jostle<lb/>
penny draft Sunday<lb/>
ational Services Kayak Roll Clinic, Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays, October 31 - November 16 700pm-<lb/>
9:00pm in Christenbury Pool. Interested indi-<lb/>
viduals will need to register in 204 Christenbury<lb/>
Gym prior to Tuesday, October 24. For more<lb/>
information call Recreational Services at 328-<lb/>
6387.<lb/>
PLANT SALE<lb/>
ECU BIOLOGY CLUB: Thursday, October 19 and<lb/>
Friday. October 20 at 7:30am - 1:00pm at the<lb/>
Biology Greenhouse, Room S-lll<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
Our next meeting will be held October 23rd at<lb/>
5:15pm in Ragsdale room 218A. Open to all<lb/>
majors and refreshments will be served.<lb/>
THE ECU POETRY FORUM<lb/>
Will meet on Thursday, October 19th in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Room 248, at 8pm.<lb/>
Open to the general public, the Forum is a free<lb/>
workshop. Those planning to attend and want-<lb/>
ing critical feedback on their work should bring<lb/>
8 or 10 copies of each poem. Listeners welcome.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY FOLK AND<lb/>
COUNTRY DANCE CLUB<lb/>
Come to our Monthly meeting and Contra<lb/>
Dance! Saturday, OcL 21, at 7:30pm, at the Bap-<lb/>
tist Student Center. FREE! Come alone or bring<lb/>
a friend.<lb/>
MINI-GOLF TOURNAMENT<lb/>
RCLS Student is sponsoring a Mini-Golf Tour-<lb/>
The Erogenous Zone BBS<lb/>
The Ultimate Chat BBI<lb/>
I09 on le lb World of Cyberpace<lb/>
II8 tern a to lifestyle Welcome!<lb/>
free<lb/>
90 Day memberhip to Ibe firI 100 lo sign up<lb/>
Adult access with Proper ID<lb/>
on - une cnmui on - unc aiATCHmnKCM<lb/>
O. ? Uae P.ooal ftd; with f koto1<lb/>
????? of Oils ?? IPCC'i<lb/>
let moat To Dial<lb/>
(919)931-0145 N,8,l<lb/>
nament at Greenville Fun Park Sunday. Octo-<lb/>
ber 22 at 3:00pm. Cash pr ize for first place. Cost:<lb/>
to enter is $3.00 Arrive early to register and<lb/>
practice. Park is just past Fairgrounds on 264<lb/>
East. Call 754-8065 for info<lb/>
REGISTRATION FOR GENERAL<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
General College Students should contact their<lb/>
advisers the week of November 6-10 to make<lb/>
arrangements for academic advising for Spring<lb/>
Semester 1996. Early registration is set for No-<lb/>
vember 13-17.<lb/>
A NOON TIME LECTURE<lb/>
SERIES<lb/>
"A MISTAKEN CHARITY" by Mary Wilkins Free-<lb/>
man. To be presented by Readers' Theater Com-<lb/>
pany. East Carolina University School of Medi-<lb/>
cine. Monday. October 23.12:30- 1:30pm, Brody<lb/>
2W-50<lb/>
AIDS 101<lb/>
October 20, ll:00-12:00am. General Classroom<lb/>
Building, Rm. 1026. Learn the basics: what<lb/>
AIDS is, how you can catch it how you can't<lb/>
This will be a "student to student" presentation.<lb/>
IT ONLY TAKES A MINUTE<lb/>
October 23 &amp; 24 Peer Health Educators will be<lb/>
located at the Student Store. Todd Dining Hall,<lb/>
Joyner Library. Mendenhall, and the Fitness<lb/>
Centers of Minges and Christenbury. Find out<lb/>
what "only takes a minute<lb/>
AIDS PANEL<lb/>
October 24. 7:0O8:30pm. Hendrix Auditorium.<lb/>
A seven-member panel will discuss t he medical,<lb/>
social, and psychoogical aspects of AIDS. The<lb/>
panel will include a person with AIDS, a physi-<lb/>
cian, a caregiver. and support specialists.<lb/>
ECU SCHOOL OF MUSIC<lb/>
EVENTS<lb/>
For October 17 through October 23. Events held<lb/>
at A. j. Fletcher Recital Hall and FREE, unless<lb/>
otherwise noted.THURS. Oct 19-FACULTY RE-<lb/>
CITAL. Paul Tardif. piano; Peter Mills, saxo-<lb/>
phone: Carroll V. Dashiell. Jr bass; and guest<lb/>
from UNC-Chapel Hill, Jim Ketch, trumpet<lb/>
(8:00pm). SUN. Oct 22-CHORAL CONCERT.<lb/>
Maurice Durufle REQUIEM with the Combined<lb/>
ECU Choirs, Rhonda Fleming, Conductor; and<lb/>
the ECU SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA. Stephen<lb/>
Blackwelder. Conductor (Wright Auditorium,<lb/>
3:00pm) JUNIOR RECITAL, Bryan Shaw, string<lb/>
bass (7:00pm). MON. Oct. 23-PERCUSS10N<lb/>
ENSEMBLE, Mark Ford. Director (8:00pm). For<lb/>
Abortions yT60TfVeekJs"<lb/>
GeheraJArlniesla'<lb/>
CwnnrGVCIihTc<lb/>
Jim Control Servicfis<lb/>
Aitemooa.&amp;.?veniciQ.riours.<lb/>
Student Rates WColtegeICi<lb/>
J?ae1gh"Wdm?ns<lb/>
Health Organization<lb/>
Calf 783-0444-?<lb/>
Visit ouHrrteroet Homepage:<lb/>
kouiD<lb/>
Donna the<lb/>
Buffalo q?<lb/>
Tues. ? Mugnifce ? Bring a Mug, well fill for 100 pennies.<lb/>
&amp;?&amp;.? Sunday Bloody Sunday ? 150 Bloody Marys &amp; 100 Dora Beer<lb/>
!i3e?<lb/>
E?a?aaSd&amp;g<lb/>
A PIECE OF I nlf t NEW YORK IN flC(C t GREENVILLE ffrir'VV J Quality Subs &amp; S;3ELI rVICHE5<lb/>
JP BAGEL WITH CREAM 1 CHEESE OR BAGEL WITH I i&amp;i 89c i ?P2S2 . ottr Expires 10-31-95 ' $2.99 ! LARGE SANDWICH CHIPS &amp; DRINK 1 ? Not good with any other offer ExpireslO-31-95 <lb/>
I $4.99 i S 2 LARGE SANDWICHES &amp; 2 DRINKS 1 1 Not good with any other offer Expiresi 0-31 -95 j<lb/>
Tuuf 1 natinnc <lb/>
IWU LUCdUUllb. a 830-6686 355-8883 ? 810 E. 10th St. The Plaza Mall, E Open 7-10 7 Days a Week Food Court ? FAX 830-6686 ? " 1 I 11 MEDITERRANEAN SANDWICH 1 ? (VEGETARIAN) ; 1 HUMMOUS OR FALFEL WCHIPS 1 $1.99 (Small) $2.49 (Large) I Not good with any other offer Expiresi 0-31-95 ?<lb/>
$i .00 OFF! 1 ANY SPECIALTY SANDWICH 1 1 Not good with any other offer Expires10-31 -95 ,<lb/>
additional information, call ECL-6851 or the 24-<lb/>
hour hotline at ECU4370.<lb/>
TECHNOLOGY IN THE<lb/>
CLASSROOM<lb/>
Academic Computing is sponsoring the fourth<lb/>
annual Technology Fair which will he held on<lb/>
Tuesday. October 24. 1995 in the Multipurpose<lb/>
room at Mendenhall Student Center from<lb/>
10:00am until 3:00pm. Users should bring sev-<lb/>
eral diskettes to make their own copies of PC<lb/>
Plus. Tincan, NAV. SAM andor Netscape. A<lb/>
variety of topics will be covered: Netscape. Vir<lb/>
tual Reality. Music and Voice-activated software.<lb/>
CAD programs, Interactive Learning software,<lb/>
SPSS for Windows. Network Educational Appli-<lb/>
cations<lb/>
MAJORSMINORS FAIR<lb/>
Confused about a major? Attend the Majors<lb/>
Minors Fair. 12:30-3:30pm on Wednesday No-<lb/>
vember 1 in Mendenhall's Great Room. The fair<lb/>
is being sponsored by the Career Education<lb/>
Committee. It will give ECU students an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to meet with faculty and students to dis-<lb/>
cuss potential majors and minors. There will be<lb/>
over 40 academic departments in attendance.<lb/>
An excellent opportunity for students who are<lb/>
undecided, uncertain, or just curious about a<lb/>
major. All students are encouraged to attend.<lb/>
UNDERSTANDING ROMANCE -<lb/>
LIFE AFTER A BREAK-UP<lb/>
What do you do when it's over? How do you<lb/>
deal with all the hurt and anger? Find out<lb/>
Wednesday. October 25 at 3:30pm. Counseling<lb/>
Center. Call 326661 to register.<lb/>
CHOOSING A MAJOR AND A<lb/>
CAREER<lb/>
Find out which career is right for you. Take as-<lb/>
sessment insturments and learn how personal-<lb/>
ity affects career choice. Learn the secrets of<lb/>
good decision making as well as the best way to<lb/>
really find out what a job is like. This five-part<lb/>
program will help you find the answers to your<lb/>
future. Mondays at 3pm beginning October 23.<lb/>
Counseling Center. Call 328-6661 for more in-<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
BECOMING A SUCCESSFUL<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
Learn Time Management Study Strategies. Note-<lb/>
taking Strategies. Test Preparation. Test-taking<lb/>
Strategies, and how to Relieve Test Anxiety in<lb/>
this five-part program. Tuesdays at 9am begin-<lb/>
ning October 24. Counseling Center. Call 328-<lb/>
6661 to register.<lb/>
CO-RECREATIONAL FLAG<lb/>
FOOTBALL<lb/>
Warm up your Fall by participating in Co-Recre-<lb/>
ational Flag Football. Sign your team up at the<lb/>
registration meeting on Monday. October 23 at<lb/>
5pm in the General Classroom Building 1031<lb/>
For more information call Rereational Services<lb/>
328387.<lb/>
3-ON-3 BASKETBALL<lb/>
Get your teams together for 3-on-3 Basketball.<lb/>
There will be a registration meeting on Monday,<lb/>
October 23 at 5:30pm in t he General Classroom<lb/>
Building 1031. For more information call Recre-<lb/>
ational Services 328-6387.<lb/>
FRIDAY FITNESS FLING<lb/>
Come join in the fun with free Aerobics, free<lb/>
food, prizes and get a chance try different<lb/>
instructors' styles at the Friday Fitness Flmg<lb/>
on Friday, October 20 in Christenbury Gym 108<lb/>
at 4pm For more information call Recreational<lb/>
Services at 328387.<lb/>
FALL BAZAAR<lb/>
University Church of God, Sponsors its first an<lb/>
nual Fall Bazaar. Saturday. October 21. Huge<lb/>
Yard sale beginning at 6:00am. Exciting auction<lb/>
beginning at 2:00pm. Craft sale. Country Store.<lb/>
Bake Shop. FoodConcessions. Fun for the chil-<lb/>
dren. Directions: from Greenville Blvd. take Hwy<lb/>
43 for approx. 4 miles; turn left at Roberson's<lb/>
Nursery onto B. Stokes road, go approx. 12<lb/>
mile. The church grounds are at the corner of<lb/>
B. Stokes and Rouse roads, adjacent to Cres-<lb/>
cent Ridge subdivision.<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN<lb/>
ATHLETES<lb/>
FCA holds its weekly meetings on Monday night<lb/>
in Minges room 143 at 7:30. Everyone is invited<lb/>
to attend, you don't have to be an athlete to<lb/>
join. Anyone interested in helping organize this<lb/>
group should call Jody at 754-2370 or Dane at<lb/>
758-5463. We will be discussing issues t hat face<lb/>
our society today, how they affect today's stu-<lb/>
dentathlete and what t he Bible has to say about<lb/>
them. So please come join usl<lb/>
PEER HEALTH EDUCATORS<lb/>
It only takes a minute to save your life. Peeer<lb/>
Health Educators will be located at the Student<lb/>
Store. Todd Dining Hall. Joyner Library.<lb/>
Mendenhall. and the Fitness Centers of Minges<lb/>
and Christenbury October 23 and 24 from 114<lb/>
to tell you exactly how Be sure to stop by. your<lb/>
life is worth a minute.<lb/>
BUY<lb/>
DC COMICS<lb/>
HERE!<lb/>
Nostalgia Newsstand<lb/>
919 Dickenson Ave.<lb/>
758 ? 6909<lb/>
Home &amp; Brown<lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW<lb/>
Speeding Tickets<lb/>
Protect Driving Record<lb/>
Reduce Insurance Costs<lb/>
758-4333<lb/>
300 Contanche St.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Driving While impaired<lb/>
Driving Privileges<lb/>
Free Consultation<lb/>
It's Clinique Bonus Week<lb/>
And We Have A FREE Gift For You<lb/>
Treat yourself to SI 5.00 of anything Clinique, and<lb/>
look what you get, at no extra charge. A versatile<lb/>
caddy-organizer, fHled with Clinique favorites:<lb/>
Golden Brandy Re-Moisturizine Unstick, a soft-spoken<lb/>
grided peach lip colour with a rich, shimmery finish<lb/>
Dubonnet ?" Re-Moisturizing I iostick. a rich sip of<lb/>
colour, loved by all.<lb/>
Clarifying Lotion 2. to clear away spent surface cells,<lb/>
make skip more receptive to moisture. Honey Bare<lb/>
Bevond Blusher with Applicators, oil-free, everywhere<lb/>
colour for cheeks, lips, eyes. Dramatically Different<lb/>
Moisturizing lotion, the "drink" skins love.<lb/>
And Aromatics Elixir Perfume Spray. Clinique's classic<lb/>
non-conformist fragrance. Speaks to the individualist<lb/>
in every woman. One bonus to a customer, please.<lb/>
All this week. While supplies last. So check your<lb/>
inventory-cosmetics, skin care-and hurry in.<lb/>
Allergy Tested. 100 Fragrance Fret.<lb/>
(With the exception of Aromatics Elixir products.)<lb/>
Now through November 4, 1995<lb/>
3;<lb/>
Di<lb/>
CLINIQUE<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
Shop The Plaza daily 10-9 &amp; Sunday 1-6.<lb/>
H 1.1 S<lb/>
Gw Dow? ? 11.W<lb/>
Joe $uuu. ? HM<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
Thursday, Octc<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
w7f7 special guest:<lb/>
Government Mule<lb/>
?Mr<lb/>
Friday, November 10,1995<lb/>
8:00 PM<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
DON'T MISS THE FIRST<lb/>
ECU MINGES CONCERT IN YEARS!<lb/>
Join The Allman Brothers Stampede<lb/>
Hit the Central Ticket Office during the Allman Brothers<lb/>
extended hours and save off the door ticket price!<lb/>
Presented By The East Carolina University Student Union<lb/>
Tickets are on sale at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, East Carolina University.<lb/>
MasterCard and Visa accepted.<lb/>
Doors open at 7:00 PM,<lb/>
For more information, call 1-800-ECU-ARTS (328-2787), 328-4788, or TDD 328-4736.<lb/>
TICKET PRICES<lb/>
Student $15.00<lb/>
General Public $20.00<lb/>
At the Door $25.00<lb/>
The Central Ticket Office will extend office hours to 8:00 PM<lb/>
The Central Ticket Office will resume regular office ho<lb/>
e open October 25-27 from 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM.<lb/>
Monday- Friday from 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0015"/><lb/>
Vol. 2. No. 3<lb/>
MMm<lb/>
October 19, 1995<lb/>
8 pages<lb/>
Owls fly in for Homecomingpage.2<lb/>
Fast Facts page 2<lb/>
Jason Nichols page 3<lb/>
Emmanuel McDaniel page4<lb/>
Marvin Burke<lb/>
ECU vs Temple<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
m<lb/>
S Courtesy of GARRETT KILL!AN<lb/>
' HOLUS<lb/>
1<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Saturday, October 21, 1995<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0016"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
October 19,1995<lb/>
The End Zone<lb/>
ECU tries to rebound against Temple<lb/>
Brian Paiz<lb/>
End Zone Editor<lb/>
ECU will be trying to regroup from a<lb/>
heartbreaking loss to the Cincinnati<lb/>
Bearcats, when Temple visits Dowdy-<lb/>
Ficklen stadium on Saturday for Home-<lb/>
coming. Temple on the other hand is com-<lb/>
ing off a Big East Conference win against<lb/>
Pittsburgh last Saturday. Temple defeated<lb/>
the Panthers 29-27, for their first victory<lb/>
of the season.<lb/>
ECU is trying to find out what has<lb/>
happened to their offense. The Pirates<lb/>
were held scoreless in the second half in<lb/>
the loss to Cincinnati, and they could only<lb/>
get three points on the board in the sec-<lb/>
ond half against West Virginia .Senior run-<lb/>
ning back Jerris McPhail injured his wrist<lb/>
in the Cincinnati game, and is day to day.<lb/>
If McPhail can't go look for redshirt fresh-<lb/>
man Scott Harley to fill the void. The Nep-<lb/>
tune, NJ native has carried the ball 23<lb/>
times for 88 yards this season. The in-<lb/>
jury bug also hit noseguard Travis Darden<lb/>
in the Cincinnati contest. Darden injured<lb/>
his ankle, but is expected to play against<lb/>
Temple.<lb/>
Temple is a much improved team from<lb/>
last year's squad that lost to the Pirates<lb/>
31-14 at Veterans Stadium. Coach Ron<lb/>
Dickerson's Owls are led by junior quar-<lb/>
terback Henry Burris. The 6-foot-l 198<lb/>
pound Spiro, Oklahoma native was a sec-<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Brian Paiz<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Celeste Wilson<lb/>
Production<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
Brad Oldham<lb/>
Asst. Editor<lb/>
Amanda Ross<lb/>
Writer<lb/>
Brandon Waddell<lb/>
Correspondent<lb/>
ond team All- Big East selection in 1994.<lb/>
He has tied two Big East passing records,<lb/>
and has also set eight new Temple records.<lb/>
He ranked fifteenth nationally in passing<lb/>
last season This season the Temple quar-<lb/>
terback has continued his great play.<lb/>
Burris has passed for 1102 yards and has<lb/>
accounted for 1169 yards of total offense.<lb/>
"He's a little over six feet tall, very<lb/>
agile, athletic, has got a good arm, and<lb/>
is hard to sack said ECU Head Coach<lb/>
Steve Logan.<lb/>
Temple has one of the bigger offen-<lb/>
sive lines that the Pirates will face this<lb/>
season. It is anchored by 6-foot-6 323<lb/>
pound left tackle Jon Clark, and 6-foot-2<lb/>
290 pound senior John Summerday<lb/>
Sophomore flanker Troy Kersey is<lb/>
one of Burris's favorite targets. Kersey<lb/>
has caught 13 passes fro 304 yards and<lb/>
two touchdowns. Marc Baxter is also con-<lb/>
tributing to the Owls offense. He has 13<lb/>
receptions for 236 yards and two touch-<lb/>
downs.<lb/>
Leading the ground game for Coach<lb/>
Ron Dickerson squad, is freshman Ramod<lb/>
Lee. The 6-foot-3 238 pound Lee has 324<lb/>
yards and six touchdowns. Lee also has<lb/>
430 all-purpose yards.<lb/>
On defense for the Owls you look<lb/>
no further than Ail-American candidate<lb/>
Lance Johnstone, a 6-foot-4, 242 pound<lb/>
linebacker. Johnstone is a three time All-<lb/>
Big East honoree, and he was rated done<lb/>
of the top ten linebackers in the nation<lb/>
by The Sporting News. Johnstone is a<lb/>
definite NFL prospect, and coach Ron<lb/>
Dickerson has nothing but praise for him.<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of Temple University<lb/>
Ail-Big East Candidate Henry Burris will lead an<lb/>
explosive Temple offense into Dowdy-Ficklen.<lb/>
"Lance is a<lb/>
superb athlete<lb/>
and a great<lb/>
player said<lb/>
Dickerson.<lb/>
Logan<lb/>
knows of his po-<lb/>
tential also.<lb/>
"Johnstone<lb/>
is a legitimate<lb/>
pro guy said<lb/>
Logan. "He's<lb/>
going to be an<lb/>
outside line-<lb/>
backer in the<lb/>
NFL<lb/>
Temple has<lb/>
lost to two na-<lb/>
tionally ranked<lb/>
teams thus far<lb/>
this season in<lb/>
Penn St. and<lb/>
Kansas St.<lb/>
Temple and ECU<lb/>
have two com-<lb/>
mon opponents<lb/>
this season in<lb/>
West Virginia<lb/>
and Syracuse.<lb/>
ECU defeated both schools while Temple<lb/>
was defeated by each.<lb/>
Analysis: ECU learned in Cincinnati<lb/>
not to overlook anyone. The Pirates have<lb/>
an important date with Southern Missis-<lb/>
sippi next week, but ECU has the Owls<lb/>
to deal with first. ECU'S running game<lb/>
has been struggling and the Pirates must<lb/>
get some produc-<lb/>
tion from either<lb/>
Jerris McPhail or<lb/>
Scott Harley. ECU'S<lb/>
defense has played<lb/>
well thus far this<lb/>
season, but another<lb/>
all-purpose quarter-<lb/>
back in Henry<lb/>
Burris awaits. The<lb/>
Pirates have had<lb/>
some trouble with<lb/>
mobile quarter-<lb/>
backs, but look for<lb/>
Jette's defense to<lb/>
step up and play<lb/>
well. ECU needs this<lb/>
as their "coming<lb/>
out" game. A win<lb/>
over Temple could<lb/>
put them back on<lb/>
the right path to<lb/>
Memphis.<lb/>
rnoio courtesy oi ecu siu<lb/>
Junior defensive secondary performer Daren Hart<lb/>
has totaled 55 tackles thus far this season.<lb/>
?ct4? Pzct&amp;<lb/>
Location - Philadelphia, Pa<lb/>
founded - 1884<lb/>
Enrollment - 32,000<lb/>
Head Coach. - Ron<lb/>
Dickerson<lb/>
Vickname- Owls<lb/>
Colors - Cherry &amp; White<lb/>
Stadium - Veterans<lb/>
Stadium<lb/>
Conference - Big East<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Current "Record 1-5<lb/>
TidTT vs "Temple<lb/>
ECU leads 7-3<lb/>
1994 ECU 31<lb/>
Temple 14<lb/>
Motes Temple will be<lb/>
the third Big East<lb/>
opponent ECU has faced<lb/>
this season. ECU is 2-0<lb/>
after victories over<lb/>
Syracuse and WVU.<lb/>
??<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0017"/><lb/>
The End Zone<lb/>
October 19,1995<lb/>
Nichols a major factor on offense<lb/>
Amanda Ross<lb/>
End Zone Staff Writer<lb/>
After an impressive start in 1994,<lb/>
wide receiver Jason Nichols hopes to<lb/>
have a repeat season this year. The<lb/>
Norcross, Ga. native continues to strive<lb/>
toward helping the Pirates get back to<lb/>
the Liberty Bowl.<lb/>
Nichols was a redshirt freshman<lb/>
during the '93 season. Last year he<lb/>
came out ready to prove himself and<lb/>
that's what he accomplished. Nichols<lb/>
had an outstanding season, receiving a<lb/>
number of awards and registering some<lb/>
very impressive numbers in his first<lb/>
season of play.<lb/>
Nichols was courted by Georgia,<lb/>
N.C. State and Tulane , but he chose<lb/>
ECU so he could play wide receiver. In<lb/>
high school during his senior year, he was<lb/>
a quarterback where he threw for 945<lb/>
yards and 11 touchdowns, while rush-<lb/>
ing for 830 yards and 10 touchdowns.<lb/>
Last year, Nichols led the Pirates<lb/>
with 42 receptions for 450 yards and<lb/>
two touchdowns. He set school records<lb/>
for season catches and yards by a fresh-<lb/>
man, and was named Outstanding New-<lb/>
comer on the squad by the coaching<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
"Jason is a guy who the defensive<lb/>
players on the squad knew would be a<lb/>
good player for our team" said Pirate<lb/>
linebacker B.J. Crane. "While he was a<lb/>
redshirt in 1993, he terrorized our de-<lb/>
fense in practice<lb/>
Coming off that explosive season,<lb/>
Nichols feels his performance so far this<lb/>
season has been okay.<lb/>
"I haven't gotten the ball as much<lb/>
so far this year as I did last year<lb/>
However, Nichol's momentum and<lb/>
numbers are still high for this season.<lb/>
In six games he has 23 receptions for<lb/>
237 yards. His performance puts him<lb/>
second on the receiving list for number<lb/>
of yards this season. Nichols is just be-<lb/>
hind Mitch Galloway, who leads the re-<lb/>
ceivers with 307 yards on 26 receptions.<lb/>
An expert on punt returns, Nichols<lb/>
has 13 returns for 159 yards. His long-<lb/>
est return came in the CMU game where<lb/>
he brought a punt back for 66 yards.<lb/>
He is averaging 12.2 yards on punt re-<lb/>
turns.<lb/>
Nichols feels he has to come out<lb/>
this year and play better than he did<lb/>
last year because people expect play-<lb/>
ers to perform better and at a higher<lb/>
level than they do their first year of play-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"1 felt like I had to come back out<lb/>
this year and play harder, because you<lb/>
tend to get into what they call a sopho-<lb/>
more slump said Nichols.<lb/>
Nichols, who doesn't seem to be in<lb/>
a slump this season, doesn't set too<lb/>
many goals for himself. "I just go out<lb/>
there and try to play my best<lb/>
He does feel if he had to set one<lb/>
' fiState<lb/>
Jason Nichols FL f?k<lb/>
ReceivingYards Avg.<lb/>
G-Gs Rec.<lb/>
6-6 23237 10.3<lb/>
All-Purpose Yards<lb/>
Rec.K.Ret.<lb/>
No. Yds.No. Yds.<lb/>
23 237 -13 159<lb/>
Jason Nichols had an impressive performance against Cincinnati, as the sophomore<lb/>
caught seven passes for 10$ yards. Jason is second on the team in receiving.<lb/>
goal it would be on<lb/>
punt returns.<lb/>
Nichols would like<lb/>
to make more of an<lb/>
impact on return-<lb/>
ing punts.<lb/>
The tough<lb/>
schedule the Pi-<lb/>
rates endured dur-<lb/>
ing September<lb/>
took somewhat of<lb/>
a physical toll on<lb/>
Nichols and his<lb/>
teammates.<lb/>
"Physically it<lb/>
has been a little<lb/>
tough. We had a<lb/>
couple of guys go<lb/>
down last game<lb/>
The mental im-<lb/>
pact is similar to<lb/>
what the Pirates<lb/>
expected. They<lb/>
knew the first five<lb/>
games were not go-<lb/>
ing to be easy.<lb/>
"We wanted to take on a big sched<lb/>
ule so we could let people know we re-<lb/>
ally can play<lb/>
ECU proved they could hang with<lb/>
the big dogs by coming ot't of Septem-<lb/>
ber with a 3-2 record, when most crit-<lb/>
ics had them with a 1-4 record going<lb/>
into October.<lb/>
With the loss at Cincinnati, a game<lb/>
most people predicted ECU would win,<lb/>
Nichols realizes<lb/>
the rest of the<lb/>
season will have<lb/>
to be played as<lb/>
hard as possible.<lb/>
"You can't<lb/>
take anybody as<lb/>
a joke in college<lb/>
football, because<lb/>
anybody that<lb/>
lines up across<lb/>
from you is ca-<lb/>
pable of beating<lb/>
you he said.<lb/>
With an open<lb/>
date last week,<lb/>
Nichols believes<lb/>
the team is more<lb/>
prepared for<lb/>
Temple. The open<lb/>
date allowed the<lb/>
team to relax<lb/>
their bodies from<lb/>
the stress and get<lb/>
people healthy<lb/>
who are injured.<lb/>
He feels they are<lb/>
ready to hand a loss to the Owls.<lb/>
"We are coming off a loss and we<lb/>
are upset about that, so we are just go-<lb/>
ing to take our time and let it all loose<lb/>
on Temple<lb/>
Even though the Pirates lost at Cin-<lb/>
cinnati, Nichols had seven receptions for<lb/>
108 yards, equaling his previous best<lb/>
for receptions and setting a new per-<lb/>
sonal record for receiving yardage in a<lb/>
game.<lb/>
When Nichols isn't battling it out<lb/>
on the football field, you will find him<lb/>
enjoying a number of different activi-<lb/>
ties. He likes listening to music, watch-<lb/>
ing other sport playing cards and<lb/>
bowling.<lb/>
Nichols tries not to look down the<lb/>
road too far, but he does have future<lb/>
plans for himself.<lb/>
After graduation he hopes to get a<lb/>
job in the field of information process-<lb/>
ing. He even sees teaching as a pos-<lb/>
sible job on his horizon.<lb/>
But as much as he would enjoy a<lb/>
career in the NFL, he realizes it is not<lb/>
that easy to make it into the pros, but<lb/>
that's not to say he wouldn't enjoy play-<lb/>
ing the pro game.<lb/>
"I would love to play in the NFL,<lb/>
but I have to let things work themselves<lb/>
out. I can't sit here and put all mv hopes<lb/>
into making it. I let everything take its<lb/>
place<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU SID<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0018"/><lb/>
October 19,1995<lb/>
The End Zone<lb/>
<lb/>
E-Mac" brings discipline to Pirate defense<lb/>
Brian Paiz<lb/>
End Zone Iditor<lb/>
"We are trying to<lb/>
get back to the<lb/>
Liberty Bowl, and<lb/>
win it,<lb/>
? Emmanuel McDanie<lb/>
Looking back to 1991, you would<lb/>
have never thought a running back pros-<lb/>
pect from Georgia would end up leader<lb/>
in the Pirate secondary. But that is just<lb/>
what has happened as Emmanuel<lb/>
McDaniel, now a senior, kno.vs that in his<lb/>
final year as a Pirate, that personal goals<lb/>
go by the wayside and team goals move<lb/>
into the forefront. All "E- Mac" wants to<lb/>
do is make that return trip to Memphis<lb/>
on Dec. 31.<lb/>
"We are trying to<lb/>
get back to the Liberty<lb/>
Bowl and win it said<lb/>
McDaniel. "I want to<lb/>
leave something for the<lb/>
you.iger players so they<lb/>
can build upon "We<lb/>
have told the younger<lb/>
players to stick with it<lb/>
and live and learn<lb/>
said McDaniel.<lb/>
McDaniel came to ECU in 1991 from<lb/>
Jonesboro High School, where he rushed<lb/>
for over 900 yards his senior season. He<lb/>
was also a Regional champion in the 330<lb/>
intermediate hurdles. However, things<lb/>
changed when he got to Greenville, as he<lb/>
was moved to the Pirate secondary in<lb/>
1992, where he backed up cornerback<lb/>
Travis Render as a freshman.<lb/>
'ECU recruited me as a running<lb/>
back said McDaniel. "When I got here<lb/>
my freshman year they moved me to de-<lb/>
fensive back, then to receiver, and then<lb/>
back to defensive back. I think I got moved<lb/>
about four times before I got stationary<lb/>
In 1993 McDaniel played in all 12<lb/>
games, in which he started eight of those<lb/>
at cornerback and had two interceptions.<lb/>
The year 1994 proved to be<lb/>
McDaniel's coming out season. He started<lb/>
all 12 games at left cornerback, and fin-<lb/>
ished the regular season with 51 tackles.<lb/>
McDaniel had 11 stops against nationally<lb/>
ranked Auburn, and ended the season tied<lb/>
for 18th in the nation in interceptions.<lb/>
McDaniel was named Most improved De-<lb/>
fensive Player by the coaching staff,<lb/>
McDaniel has seen his share of de-<lb/>
fensive coordinators since his arrival at<lb/>
ECU, but Paul iette is at the top of<lb/>
McDaniel's list.<lb/>
"I feel like lette is the best at coach<lb/>
ing us in getting to the ball. He is defi-<lb/>
nitely the best defensive coordinator I have<lb/>
had in my career McDaniel said.<lb/>
McDaniel has seen a defense, that was<lb/>
once known as one of the worst in the<lb/>
nation, make great strides in his four years<lb/>
here, but E-Mac knows that they<lb/>
can't let up one bit.<lb/>
"We are playing pretty good<lb/>
on defense, but we can step it up.<lb/>
I feel like at times we let teams<lb/>
get drive on us that we shouldn't<lb/>
let them get, but otherwise I feel<lb/>
that the defense is doing a pretty<lb/>
good job<lb/>
McDaniel knows that Pirate<lb/>
fans are some of the most loyal<lb/>
in the country, and he says even<lb/>
when he gets criticized he doesn't<lb/>
let it affect his playing.<lb/>
"I take it<lb/>
as construc-<lb/>
tive criticism,<lb/>
whether it's<lb/>
good or bad<lb/>
said<lb/>
McDaniel.<lb/>
"You take it in<lb/>
stride whether<lb/>
someone says<lb/>
something<lb/>
good or bad<lb/>
McDaniel hopes to go to the<lb/>
next level after college, but if that<lb/>
doesn't happen the criminal jus-<lb/>
tice major has a plan for his fu-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
" I hope to go to the next<lb/>
level said McDaniel. "But if I<lb/>
don't, I am going to try to go to<lb/>
graduate school, and then try to<lb/>
get into law school somewhere<lb/>
McDaniel says that football has<lb/>
taught him a lot about life that<lb/>
will be valuable in the future in<lb/>
his hopes of becoming a lawyer.<lb/>
"Discipline and studying are<lb/>
the two major lessons I have<lb/>
learned said McDaniel. "Of<lb/>
course, being a lawyer, you have<lb/>
to spend a lot of hours in law<lb/>
school and in the library, and playing<lb/>
football and going to college has taught<lb/>
me to concentrate on what I need to ac-<lb/>
complish<lb/>
So far this season, McDaniel leads<lb/>
the team in interceptions with four, and<lb/>
has played in 436 plays for the Pirates,<lb/>
which leads the defense. In the Cincin-<lb/>
nati game McDaniel had one of his more<lb/>
acrobatic interceptions as he leaped in<lb/>
the end zone to pick off a Bearcat pass.<lb/>
"That play helped my confidence out.<lb/>
Any play we make on defense can only<lb/>
help everyone gain confidence<lb/>
McDaniel and the Pirate defense can<lb/>
only hope that their confidence level will<lb/>
have them "Walking in Memphis" by<lb/>
season's end.<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU SID<lb/>
Emmanuel McDaniel finished 18th nationally in the NCAA in '94 in<lb/>
pass interceptions. The senior from Georgia has four INTs this year.<lb/>
? CELEBRATING OUR 5TH ANNIVERSARY<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058568_0019"/><lb/>
The End Zone<lb/>
October 19,1995<lb/>
Burke moves into defensive forefront<lb/>
Brad Oldham<lb/>
Ant. End Zone Editor<lb/>
Ever since Steve Logan has been<lb/>
head coach at ECU, he has stressed to<lb/>
his team the importance of putting the<lb/>
accomplishments of the team before the<lb/>
individual.<lb/>
One player who has lived up to that<lb/>
ideal is middle linebacker Marvin Burke.<lb/>
Burke, the 6-foot-0, 249 pound junior<lb/>
out of Jacksonville, Fla. has improved<lb/>
serve player as a true freshman, Burke<lb/>
feels he has improved in his three sea-<lb/>
sons here in Greenville.<lb/>
"I feel I have progressed a lot. I<lb/>
have learned to control my temper, and<lb/>
I have learned how to take coaching,<lb/>
which has overall made me better. I still<lb/>
think there are areas where I can do<lb/>
better though. I still want to get better<lb/>
against the run and really get to know<lb/>
my assignments. Basically, I'm just try-<lb/>
ing to improve every week and get bet-<lb/>
ter Burke said.<lb/>
Marvin Burke says his favorite childhood sport hero was Sam Huff,<lb/>
a brilliant career in the NFL, is a member of the NFL Hall of Fame<lb/>
his play tremendously this year, help-<lb/>
ing to strengthen an already solid and<lb/>
consistent core of ECU linebackers.<lb/>
Last season Burke battled through-<lb/>
out the year with fellow mike linebacker<lb/>
B.J. Crane. Burke played in all 12 games<lb/>
last year, starting five, including South<lb/>
Carolina, Virginia Tech and Auburn. It<lb/>
was a healthy rivalry for the two young<lb/>
players, who pushed each other at the<lb/>
position in order to raise their game to<lb/>
the next level.<lb/>
"B.J. and I have always been com-<lb/>
petitive Burke said. "To tell you the<lb/>
truth, it doesn't even matter much who<lb/>
starts for us because we have such a<lb/>
good rotation<lb/>
Last year Burke was credited with<lb/>
47 total tackles and 23 solo tackles,<lb/>
including a 7-yard sack against Auburn.<lb/>
After maintaining the role of a re-<lb/>
"Whiie watching Marvin play as a<lb/>
true freshman last year, I made a com-<lb/>
ment that he could be the best tackle<lb/>
to tackle player on our defense Logan<lb/>
said at his news conference on Monday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
"This year he has proven to be so<lb/>
Logan's prediction is clear both on<lb/>
paper and on the field. Burke has<lb/>
started all six games, and is second on<lb/>
the team in total tackles with 58.<lb/>
"He's got great instincts, and he's<lb/>
one of the toughest players on our<lb/>
team Logan said.<lb/>
With fellow stand-out linebackers<lb/>
such as Mark Libiano and Morris Fore-<lb/>
man surrounding him. Burke has made<lb/>
this ECU defensive line that much bet-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
"Mark and Morris are definitely the<lb/>
leaders for us, especially in the middle<lb/>
Burke said. "We have a real tight group<lb/>
of linebackers among us. You could even<lb/>
include Daren Hart in that category,<lb/>
even though he plays strong safety. All<lb/>
of us just play very well together be-<lb/>
cause we always know what the other<lb/>
one is doing<lb/>
Working so well with his fellow de-<lb/>
fensive teammates on the field is some-<lb/>
thing that was learned early on under<lb/>
Logan.<lb/>
"Ever since I've been here, Coach<lb/>
Logan has told us that there will be no<lb/>
individuals on this<lb/>
team. No individual<lb/>
can go out and win<lb/>
a game for us. It<lb/>
takes all 11 players<lb/>
to come together<lb/>
as one, and I just<lb/>
try to do my part<lb/>
to help make every-<lb/>
thing click Burke<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"He's gotten<lb/>
better just like ev-<lb/>
erybody else on<lb/>
this defense<lb/>
Logan said.<lb/>
Possibly the<lb/>
biggest improve-<lb/>
ment in Burke's<lb/>
game has been his<lb/>
consistency with<lb/>
the pass coverage.<lb/>
"I knew that<lb/>
once he got inter-<lb/>
ested in pass cov-<lb/>
erage, he would re-<lb/>
ally make an im-<lb/>
pact on this de-<lb/>
fense, and that is<lb/>
what he's done this<lb/>
year Logan said.<lb/>
"He plays the run heavy well, which<lb/>
is really one of the biggest steps for-<lb/>
ward for our defense Logan said.<lb/>
Photo Courtesy of ECU SID<lb/>
Huff who had<lb/>
Over the last six games, some cri<lb/>
ics have noted that the offense has bee<lb/>
riding the defense's successes too muc<lb/>
and not pulling in their own weight. Th<lb/>
way the two sides of the ball work tc<lb/>
gether is an integral part of the gam<lb/>
in Burke's eyes.<lb/>
"I think the defense should be re<lb/>
sponsible for winning games Burk<lb/>
said. "The offense will eventually com<lb/>
around and be successful for us, we?<lb/>
know that. The defense just has to mak<lb/>
sure we don't get scored on until tha<lb/>
happens<lb/>
When taking a step back and tool'<lb/>
ing at Burke from afar, its easy to se<lb/>
why he admires former Redskin and G<lb/>
ants linebacker Sam Huff so much. Bot<lb/>
surrounded themselves with excellence<lb/>
casting off the spotlight in order to ge<lb/>
the job done in a professional manner<lb/>
"When you talk about the great line<lb/>
man of all time, you often don't hea<lb/>
people talk about Sam Huff Burk<lb/>
said. "But here was a guy who was nice<lb/>
calm and collected, who never did an<lb/>
thing oirty or wrong on the field, bu<lb/>
still maintained that tough-nosed att;<lb/>
tude that earned him success<lb/>
Burke sees himself in a simila<lb/>
light, letting his competitive edge b<lb/>
released on the competition.<lb/>
"I'm a very laid back guy off of tlv<lb/>
field Burke said. "Basically I just le<lb/>
my frustrations come out on the field,<lb/>
don't know what it is, but when I ge<lb/>
on the field, something comes over me.<lb/>
Good thing he's on our side.<lb/>
GOLF IN GRIFTON!<lb/>
Drivmg K-ingt- Now Open'<lb/>
Small Bucko<lb/>
Luge Bucket<lb/>
 . I  hiCs ncr 4:00<lb/>
- mi<lb/>
Bring in this ad to<lb/>
Indian Trails Golf<lb/>
Course and receive Sr?<lb/>
off of your greens fee<lb/>
with cart.<lb/>
Man?Fri far 1 8 hales.<lb/>
Student Discounts Available With .1I1J Student ID<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0020"/><lb/>
October 19,1995<lb/>
The End Zone<lb/>
Rules abundant for homecoming<lb/>
Brandon Waddell<lb/>
End Zone Correspondent<lb/>
Tailgating home games are as im-<lb/>
ortant to the ECU student body as the<lb/>
inal score is to the Athletic Depart-<lb/>
nent. This long-standing social tradition<lb/>
?f gathering with a group of friends and<lb/>
jetting loose before the game are nearly<lb/>
egendary.<lb/>
In order to ensure the safety of all<lb/>
ailgaters, the Athletic Department had<lb/>
assed a few rules and regulations they<lb/>
elieve will help all of us have a good<lb/>
ut safe afternoon of Pirate Football.<lb/>
All university parking lots open at<lb/>
J a.m. and only one car is allowed per<lb/>
marking space. Pirate fans need to keep<lb/>
n mind that the lots tend to fill quickly<lb/>
and it's also Homecoming so come and<lb/>
park early.<lb/>
The Homecoming parade will start<lb/>
at 10 a.m. at the Elm Street Gymna-<lb/>
sium. It will follow Elm to Fifth Street,<lb/>
then turn left on Fifth. The big parade<lb/>
will follow Fifth past the Chancellor's<lb/>
house and turn right at Reade Circle.<lb/>
(It's the same route as last year's pa-<lb/>
rade.)<lb/>
There are no kegs allowed in the<lb/>
parking lots so bring your beer in cases.<lb/>
At gametime, everyone remaining in the<lb/>
parking lots will be asked to either go<lb/>
to the stadium or get off the premises.<lb/>
Leave your whistles and other an-<lb/>
noying noise makers in the car because<lb/>
they're not allowed in the stadium ei-<lb/>
ther. Campus police will also be at the<lb/>
gates to ensure, among other things,<lb/>
that you don't bring your liquor drinks<lb/>
into Dowdy-Ficklen.<lb/>
There are no plastic bottles, contain-<lb/>
ers or coolers permitteJ so be careful<lb/>
and don't get pinched by the law. And if<lb/>
your luck is anything like mine, the one<lb/>
game you're thrown out of is the one<lb/>
where Jerris McPhail rushes for 300<lb/>
yards, Morris Foreman makes 32 crip-<lb/>
pling solo tackles and Marcus Crandell<lb/>
throws 16 touchdowns, so watch your-<lb/>
self because they'll be watching you.<lb/>
Some of these rules may seem frivo-<lb/>
lous, but the Athletic Department has<lb/>
the best interests of the student body in<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
"We want to see students fill the stu-<lb/>
dent section  have a good time tail-<lb/>
gating, but do it responsibly stated Lee<lb/>
Workman, assistant athletic director for<lb/>
tickets and promotion.<lb/>
ECU home games are memorable<lb/>
events. Ask anyone who's attended a<lb/>
few football games in Greenville.<lb/>
They'll talk to you about the great time<lb/>
they had tailgating. The administration<lb/>
will also have a close watch on the stu-<lb/>
dents since it's Homecoming so have<lb/>
a good time getting loose, but don't<lb/>
overdo it by passing into an alcohol<lb/>
induced coma prior to gametime.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
QB FB5 44Marcus Crandell Scott Harley6-0 5-10204 210Jr. Fr.<lb/>
HB FL SE82 1 80Mitchell Galloway Jason Nichols Larry Shannon5-10 5-11 6-6174 171 200Jr. So So<lb/>
TE LT LG90 77 59Scott Richards Charles Boothe Jamie Gray6-5 6-7 6-2241 284 293So Sr. Jr.<lb/>
C63Kevin Wiggins6-2264Sr<lb/>
RG RT64 67Lamont Burns Shane McPherson6-5 6-3273 278Jr. Jr.<lb/>
DE<lb/>
DT<lb/>
NT<lb/>
DE<lb/>
35<lb/>
95<lb/>
96<lb/>
36<lb/>
WLB 54<lb/>
MLB 94<lb/>
SLB17<lb/>
CB1<lb/>
SAF38<lb/>
SAF22<lb/>
CB41<lb/>
Jason Davis<lb/>
Andy Phipps<lb/>
Tealang Lloyd<lb/>
Tim Terry<lb/>
Lance Johnstone<lb/>
Alshermond Singelton<lb/>
Willie Brown<lb/>
Deadrake Epps<lb/>
Ted McDuffie<lb/>
Robert McWilliams<lb/>
Allan Jackson<lb/>
6-4251Jr.<lb/>
6-3294Jr.<lb/>
6-2280Jr.<lb/>
6-3235Jr.<lb/>
64242Jr.<lb/>
6-3221Sr.<lb/>
6-1220Jr.<lb/>
5-9166Sr.<lb/>
6-0185Jr.<lb/>
6-0180Sr.<lb/>
5-10191Sr<lb/>
DT96Walter Scott6-3271Sr.SE6Van Johnson<lb/>
NG95Travis Darden6-3252Fr.LT66Jon Clark<lb/>
DT45Lorenzo West6-3238Jr.LG76Ed Bowen<lb/>
OLB7Morris Foreman6-1224Sr.C76Eric Johnson<lb/>
WLB81Mark Libiano6-3235Sr.RG71John Summerday<lb/>
MLB51Marvin Burke6-1249Jr.RT69Roger Chanoine<lb/>
OLB94Travis Darden6-4255Sr.TE83Kedrick Whitrehead<lb/>
RCB21David Hart5-10183Sr.FL11Troy Kersey<lb/>
FS30Dwight Henry5-11175Jr.QB14Henry Burris<lb/>
SS22Daren Hart5-10195Jr.TB29Ramod Lee<lb/>
LCB3Emmanuel McDaniel5-10167Sr.FB4Corey Green<lb/>
6-2290Sr.<lb/>
6-5278So.<lb/>
6-3245Jr.<lb/>
5-11187So.<lb/>
6-1198Jr.<lb/>
6-3230Fr.<lb/>
5-11216Jr.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0021"/><lb/>
"?. m<lb/>
The End Zone<lb/>
October 19,1995<lb/>
Show your Pirate Pride!<lb/>
Let's nil Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium whh a sea<lb/>
of purple &amp; sold! Visit the ECU Student<lb/>
Stores for our Homecoming HALF-PRICE<lb/>
Apparel Sale! Buy one regular priced<lb/>
apparel item and get second of equal or<lb/>
lesser value at HALF PRICE! Plus, select gift<lb/>
Hems are marked 20 off!<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Stores<lb/>
Store Hours:<lb/>
Monday - Thursday: 8 am - 8 pm<lb/>
Friday: 8 am - 5 pm<lb/>
Saturday: am - 5 pm<lb/>
This Saturday, we'll open at 10:00 am!<lb/>
?T3<lb/>
Not valid with any other offer Sate runs<lb/>
October 18-21, 1995.<lb/>
Centrally located on campus, in the Wright Building, just off Wright Circle.919-328-6731<lb/>
More than just books.t.your dollars support scholars!<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
PAPA JOHNS<lb/>
Oumtriif TU farect Pizza<lb/>
I71<lb/>
5 44 FA Large 2-Topping I<lb/>
VmL Pizza, -g -g QQI<lb/>
rc A B Order of Bread C 1 I ?"<lb/>
j DC4L Stix&amp;2Cokes vllTAX <lb/>
I Additional loppings Extra. Not valid with any other coupon. !<lb/>
I Valid only at panicipating stores Offer expires 103195 j<lb/>
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I fa 4411 V One Large With I<lb/>
l,in,LT The Works &amp; -g A QC?<lb/>
 SPECIAL Topping Pizza SA"?TAX j<lb/>
i Additional toppings Extra. Not valid with any other coupon <lb/>
 Valid only at participating stores. Offer expires 103195 j<lb/>
T PIRATE SPECIAL 99<lb/>
I Buy 2 Large Pizzas With One Topping ForXX I<lb/>
I Get 2 Extra Toppings Free! tax '<lb/>
I I<lb/>
 Additional toppings Extra Not valid with any other coupon <lb/>
I Valid only at participating stores. Offer expires 103195 l<lb/>
757-7700<lb/>
1322 East 10th Street<lb/>
Serving ECU &amp; Eastern Greenville<lb/>
Liberty Bowl Alliance<lb/>
UBIETY<lb/>
icm<lb/>
Southern Miss<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Cincinnati<lb/>
Memphis<lb/>
Tulane<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
This week's games<lb/>
Temple at East Carolina<lb/>
Memphis at Cincinnati<lb/>
Tulane at TCU<lb/>
'Pioyt64ticafoi4,<lb/>
Brian Paiz<lb/>
End Zone Editor<lb/>
ECU 28<lb/>
Temple 14<lb/>
Pirate defense steps up once again, sends another<lb/>
Big East team home with a loss<lb/>
Brad Oldham<lb/>
End Zone Asst. Editor<lb/>
ECU 24<lb/>
Temple 10<lb/>
"ECU finds a way to score in the second half, as<lb/>
they cruise to another Homecoming victory<lb/>
Mike Hamrick ECU 24<lb/>
ECU Athletic Director Temple 14<lb/>
" Homecoming victory a boost for the Pirates<lb/>
Stephanie Lassiter<lb/>
TEC Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
ECU 30<lb/>
Temple 10<lb/>
"The Pirates, don't give a hoot, and send the Owls<lb/>
back North<lb/>
Amanda Ross ECU 21<lb/>
TEC Sports Editor Temple 13<lb/>
"ECU's offense rebounds from poor showings,<lb/>
helps Pirates get over .500 mark <lb/>
Dr. Richard R. Eakin ECU 35<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Temple 14<lb/>
"The Pirates get offense back on track<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0022"/><lb/>
?r il uiwmmmiam<lb/>
October 19,1995<lb/>
The End Zone<lb/>
Sept. 2<lb/>
Sept. 9<lb/>
Sept. 16<lb/>
Sept. 23<lb/>
Sept. 30<lb/>
Oct. 7<lb/>
Oct. 21<lb/>
Oct. 28<lb/>
Nov. 4<lb/>
Nov. 11<lb/>
Nov. 18<lb/>
The Rood to<lb/>
Memphis<lb/>
at Tennessee (L, 7-27)<lb/>
at Syracuse (W, 27-24)<lb/>
Central Michigan (W, 30-17)<lb/>
at Illinois (L, 6-7)<lb/>
West Virginia (W, 23-20)<lb/>
at Cincinnati (L, 10-13)<lb/>
Temple (2 p.m.) (Homecoming)<lb/>
at Southern Miss (6 p.m.)<lb/>
at Army (1:30 p.m.)<lb/>
Tulsa (2:00 p.m.)<lb/>
Memphis (Noon)<lb/>
.&amp;4e<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058568_0023"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>