<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00058715_0001"/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
JULY 9. 1997<lb/>
EAST fJAROUNA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
ECU officials concerned over art censorship<lb/>
Censorship of grave concern, director says<lb/>
JACQI'ELINE D. KELLUM<lb/>
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
A recent proposal, which would give local authorities the power to prohibit<lb/>
works of art they find objectionable, has at least a couple of ECU professors<lb/>
concerned.<lb/>
"Any censorship of the arts is of grave concern. It's on the same level as<lb/>
freedom to practice the religion of your choice said Gil Leebrick, director<lb/>
of Gray Gallery.<lb/>
This proposed censorship would apply to those art exhibitions or perfor-<lb/>
mances which are at least partially funded by state grants and presented or<lb/>
performed in a publicly-funded building.<lb/>
Those criteria apply to ECU as a publicly-funded state university.<lb/>
Leebrick pointed out that most art galleries ? unless they are private gal-<lb/>
leries catering to a specific audience ? would be affected by this proposal.<lb/>
"The majority of galleries that have a wide, diverse selection of artworks<lb/>
receive some public funding Leebrick said.<lb/>
According to Phil Phillips, an assistant dean in the School of Art, ECU has<lb/>
not traditionally had a problem with censorship of its artworks.<lb/>
"As far as I know, we've never had someone come in and make a formal<lb/>
complaint Phillips said. "Occasionally, we do have something that may not<lb/>
be appropriate for children<lb/>
Phillips said that in those cases, the School of Art does try to warn parents<lb/>
when they enter the exhibit that some of the works may contain elements of<lb/>
sex, violence, or other potentially objectionable material.<lb/>
Both men acknowledged that what one art patron likes, another may find<lb/>
offensive.<lb/>
"I understand that some material that falls in the venue of art may be<lb/>
appropriate for one individual but not for another Leebrick said.<lb/>
Neither Leebrick nor Phillips said they approved of the proposal's idea<lb/>
that local officials are the best judges of what is appropriate for an entire com-<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
"I would be concerned about someone taking on that role Phillips said.<lb/>
"In essence, what they may be doing is infringing on the rights of artists<lb/>
The university itself does not typically place tight restrictions on what<lb/>
may or may not be exhibited or performed.<lb/>
"The university, in terms of the written word, theatrical productions, as<lb/>
well as works of art, tries not to censor Phillips said.<lb/>
"For an educational institution, one tries not to set boundaries Leebrick<lb/>
said.<lb/>
N.C. artists<lb/>
display work<lb/>
Courtesy of ecu news bureau<lb/>
Recent works by two North Carolina artists<lb/>
are on view at Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
through Aug. IS.<lb/>
Send Your Rain, by Linda Werthwein of<lb/>
Harkers Island, is an assemblage of two-<lb/>
dimensional pieces reflecting "the spirit<lb/>
beyond the visual form, the quiet beginnings<lb/>
of life on Earth to its full culmination Her<lb/>
exhibition consists of four sections in oil and<lb/>
three silk gauze textiles. The semi-abstract<lb/>
works represent ocean and tropical images:<lb/>
seas, sun, rain and foliage.<lb/>
Blackness, by potter Charlene Johnson, is a<lb/>
series of African-inspired hand-carved pottery,<lb/>
including vases, bowls and lidded jars. New to<lb/>
eastern North Carolina, the artist has been<lb/>
making pottery for 15 years. Seven years ago,<lb/>
she began hand carving and trimming her work<lb/>
after the pottery was thrown. "Her pieces are<lb/>
like snowflakes. No two are alike said a<lb/>
Mendenhall staff member.<lb/>
Located in the student center's second<lb/>
floor gallery, the exhibitions are available for<lb/>
viewing from 7:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday<lb/>
through Thursday and 7:30 to 11:30 a.m.<lb/>
Fridays.<lb/>
Mexico holds first<lb/>
democratic elections<lb/>
MEXICO CITY (AP) - Facing the prospect of<lb/>
the first opposition Congress in 86 years, a<lb/>
suddenly conciliatory President Ernesto<lb/>
Zedillo has declared that Mexico has entered<lb/>
"a new stage" of democracy.<lb/>
Zedillo appeared calm and cordial on<lb/>
Monday, a day after his Institutional<lb/>
Revolutionary Party suffered historic set-<lb/>
backs that cost it Mexico City's mayorship, at<lb/>
least two state governorships and probably a<lb/>
majority in Congress.<lb/>
"As of these elections, all (Mexico's) polit-<lb/>
ical parties have entered into a new era  in<lb/>
which we must seek out dialogue, agreement<lb/>
and consensus Zedillo said in a speech to a<lb/>
group of businessmen.<lb/>
He expressed pride in the electoral<lb/>
reforms he sponsored and noted that his<lb/>
party, known as the PRI, supported them<lb/>
though it "surrendered many advantages it<lb/>
previously had, in the goal of a fairer electoral<lb/>
competition<lb/>
He said that the PRI had maintained its<lb/>
position as "the largest force" while shedding<lb/>
descriptions that have dogged it since it was<lb/>
created in 1929 to run Mexico.<lb/>
"After these elections, no one can ever<lb/>
again refer to the Institutional Revolutionary<lb/>
Party as the only party, the state party or an<lb/>
appendage of the government Zedillo said.<lb/>
Decades of authoritarianism, a series of<lb/>
corruption scandals and a devastating eco-<lb/>
nomic crisis in 1995 cost the PRI dearly.<lb/>
Incomplete results Monday showed the<lb/>
PRI losing at least two of six governor's races<lb/>
and its long, unquestioned lock on Congress.<lb/>
Zedillo may become the first Mexican presi-<lb/>
dent since 1913 to face an opposition legisla-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
PRI national leader Humberto Roque on<lb/>
Monday estimated the PRI would win 235-<lb/>
240 seats in the 500-seat Chamber of<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
lifestyle4 ?,<lb/>
Actors gone bui 1 <lb/>
not forgotten. t?<lb/>
opinion3<lb/>
Senator Van<lb/>
Gogh? ?<lb/>
sports6 <lb/>
Track program runs am$ "<lb/>
away with honors.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY:<lb/>
sunny<lb/>
high 84<lb/>
low 73<lb/>
WEEKEND:<lb/>
partly cloudy<lb/>
high 93<lb/>
low 73<lb/>
the east Carolinian<lb/>
STUDENT PUBLICATION BLOG,<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC 27858<lb/>
across from Joyner library<lb/>
Shone<lb/>
28-6366 newsroom<lb/>
328-2000 advertising<lb/>
328-6558 fax<lb/>
e-mail<lb/>
uutecrlecuvm.cis.ecu.edu<lb/>
CAROLINA MASTERPIECES<lb/>
North Carolina artistis Linda Werthwein and Charlene Johnson will display their art at Mendenhall<lb/>
until August 15.<lb/>
PHOTO BY CHRIS GAY00SH<lb/>
Peel accepts new<lb/>
administrative post<lb/>
Courtesy of ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dr. Henry A. Peel, the interim dean of the<lb/>
East Carolina University School of Education,<lb/>
has accepted the post of associate vice chan-<lb/>
cellor for academic affairs.<lb/>
In announcing the appointment, Dr.<lb/>
Richard Ringeisen, vice chancellor for acade-<lb/>
mic affairs, said Peel brings a variety of admin-<lb/>
istrative experiences to the position.<lb/>
"His work in public school administration<lb/>
before joining ECU, combined with his<lb/>
administrative experience here, both very<lb/>
much involved organizational and leadership<lb/>
issues, and will be extremely valuable in his<lb/>
new work Ringeisen said.<lb/>
A native of Martin County, Peel joined the<lb/>
education faculty in 1989. He was appointed<lb/>
associate dean of the School of Education in<lb/>
1995, and after the resignation of Dr. Charles<lb/>
Coble, he was named as the school's interim<lb/>
dean in 1996. Coble left ECU to become a<lb/>
vice president with the University of North<lb/>
Carolina system.<lb/>
Peel will be responsible for academic<lb/>
administration and special programs. He suc-<lb/>
ceeds Dr. David Watkins, a member of the<lb/>
School of Health and Human Performance<lb/>
faculty. Watkins is coordinating efforts by the<lb/>
university to develop its distance education<lb/>
capabilities.<lb/>
Before joining the ECU faculty, Peel served<lb/>
Dr. Henry A. Peel will take over the position of<lb/>
associate vice chancellor for academic affairs.<lb/>
PHOTO BY CHRIS GAYDOSH<lb/>
in administrative positions with the Martin<lb/>
County school system and with the Chapel<lb/>
Hill city schools.<lb/>
He earned bachelor's and master's degrees<lb/>
from ECU and a doctorate from the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Ringeisen said Peel will assume his new<lb/>
duties by July 15 or as soon as the School of<lb/>
Education fills the interim dean vacancy<lb/>
Sojourner lands on Mars<lb/>
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The Sojourner<lb/>
rover sat face-to-face with a lumpy martian<lb/>
rock called "Barnacle Bill" today after travel-<lb/>
ing 16 inches across the powdery red soil,<lb/>
becoming the first mobile vehicle to roam<lb/>
another planet.<lb/>
"Sojourner and Barnacle Bill arc holding<lb/>
hands deputy project manager Brian<lb/>
Muirhead said late Sunday as a television feed<lb/>
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory showed<lb/>
the six-wheeled rover up against a pock-<lb/>
marked rock.<lb/>
Sensors showed it had made contact, prov-<lb/>
ing controllers could direct the little robot<lb/>
geologist from 119 million miles away.<lb/>
The prospecting trip came just a day after<lb/>
Sojourner rolled down a Pathfinder ramp and<lb/>
onto the martian surface.<lb/>
It later plunged its spectrometer into the<lb/>
dust at the bottom of the ramp. That began<lb/>
NASA's up-close chemical examination of a<lb/>
harsh landscape that bears unmistakable,<lb/>
ancient signs of water. The soil analysis has<lb/>
not yet been released by NASA<lb/>
Many of the planet's mysteries can be<lb/>
answered in the area around Pathfinder. Just<lb/>
the first few inches of Sojourner's wheel<lb/>
tracks told scientists that the site is covered in<lb/>
floury- dust that appears to lie above a harder<lb/>
layer.<lb/>
On Sunday afternoon, Sojourner sat just 4<lb/>
inches from the ramp. Then it was ordered to<lb/>
make a 90-degree counterclockwise rotation,<lb/>
and back up 12 inches to put its alpha proton<lb/>
X-ray spectrometer in contact with Barnacle<lb/>
Bill, the nickname scientists gave a bumpy<lb/>
rock about the size of the rover.<lb/>
The rover was programmed to spend 10<lb/>
hours nosing up against the rock to determine<lb/>
its chemical composition. That information<lb/>
was to be downloaded today from Pathfinder's<lb/>
computers.<lb/>
The spectrometer bombards small areas of<lb/>
rocks or soil with radiation, then looks for par-<lb/>
ticles that bounce back. Each element gener-<lb/>
ates a unique response.<lb/>
What's next for Sojourner? Probably the<lb/>
more distant, wide-bottomed rock nicknamed<lb/>
Yogi by NASA<lb/>
"She is the robotic equivalent of Neil<lb/>
Armstrong on Mars rover scientist Henry<lb/>
Moore said proudly. "She's your field geolo-<lb/>
gist, and she wants to thank the people of the<lb/>
United States and all foreign contributors pay-<lb/>
ing for her<lb/>
In its first two days on the martian surface.<lb/>
Pathfinder has returned bleak but spectacular<lb/>
shots of terrain that resembles eastern<lb/>
Washington state, an area long ago scoured by<lb/>
a giant gush of water from melted glaciers.<lb/>
The flood that created the Ares Valiis plain<lb/>
where Pathfinder now stands appears to have<lb/>
carried rocks from the planet's highlands and<lb/>
deposited them in the area, project scientist<lb/>
Matthew Golombek said. Those rocks are now<lb/>
being checked out by Sojourner.<lb/>
Scientists also received a weather report<lb/>
from Mars when Pathfinder's meteorological<lb/>
equipment returned noontime conditions<lb/>
from the first two days of the mission.<lb/>
Temperatures hovered around zero degrees,<lb/>
with light breezes that occasionally caused<lb/>
them to dip as low as 25 below.<lb/>
The camera on Pathfinder is returning<lb/>
valuable geological information in the form of<lb/>
detailed photos of the landscape. Ronald<lb/>
Greclcy, the Arizona State University geolo-<lb/>
gist who works with the 3-D camera, said he<lb/>
could see distant marks left bv water on the<lb/>
edges of hills called "Twin Peaks<lb/>
Horizontal bands on Twin Peaks could be<lb/>
terraces cut by moving water, horizontal rock<lb/>
layers laid down in a lake or a bathtub-ringlike<lb/>
feature left along an ancient shoreline.<lb/>
SEE MARS, PAGE 2<lb/>
PI RATES 5<lb/>
Do you think<lb/>
withholding funds for<lb/>
select art exhibits is a<lb/>
violation of the First<lb/>
Amendment?<lb/>
Yes, It's a form of the artist's expression. Why cen-<lb/>
sor someone's thoughts<lb/>
andfeelings?<lb/>
Charity Miller<lb/>
PieMed. sophomore<lb/>
Yes, I believe it is a person's right to express him or<lb/>
herself in anyvay. It builds die permit's tlumter.<lb/>
By not giving them this right I believe it takes away<lb/>
from the tray this country tras founded.<lb/>
Ryan Boetcher<lb/>
English senior<lb/>
Yes, primarily becuase in the U.S. Constitution,<lb/>
we have a concept that our founding fathers con-<lb/>
ceived called<lb/>
freedom of expression.<lb/>
Roi Boyd<lb/>
Non degree grad siudem<lb/>
PHOtf' BY AMANDA PB0CT0R<lb/>
Yes, it is a violation of the first<lb/>
amendment. People should be able to express<lb/>
themselves through their artwork.<lb/>
Rebecca Taylor<lb/>
Social work, grad siudem<lb/>
<pb facs="00058715_0002"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
news<lb/>
4 across r<lb/>
Study shows North Carolina uniyiersity<lb/>
professors among best paid<lb/>
DURHAM (AP) - Professors at some of North Carolina's leading universities are<lb/>
paid well in comparison to the counterparts across the country, according to a<lb/>
"e TheP1997 annual report bv the American Association of University Professors<lb/>
shows that Duke University paid its facuky better than any other academic msti-<lb/>
prefes'aTDuke received an average of $95,800. That was nearly<lb/>
$6,000 more than professors at Vanderbilt University, the Southeast s next high-<lb/>
est-paying institution. . ,  : <lb/>
Overall. Duke paid its faculrv - which includes full, associate and assistant<lb/>
professors as well as instructors - an average of $77,400, also tops.n the<lb/>
Southeast. The national average salary at doctorate-level schools was ???5J-<lb/>
Meanwhile, faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel HiMhacan<lb/>
average salary of $67,600; Wake Forest University average pay was $59,901); and<lb/>
N.C. State University paid its professors an average of $58,900.<lb/>
Hunt wants political friend in DEHNR job<lb/>
k v, EIGH (AP) - Gov. Jim Hunt has offered the state's top environmental post<lb/>
to longtime political ally Wayne McDevitt, a trusted former aide v-ith limited<lb/>
experience in environmental matters.<lb/>
Administration officials told The News &amp; Observer that Hunt wants McDevitt<lb/>
for the post, which will be vncated .Aug. 1 by Jonathan Howes. Hunt s press<lb/>
spokesman Sean Walsh said he couldn't confirm the report.<lb/>
McDWttt is a former state Democratic Party chairman who will inherit a<lb/>
department that faces huge challenges - the cleanup of the state s nvers and reg-<lb/>
ulation of the swine industry. .<lb/>
For fhe last year and a half, the 44-year-old McDevitt has been a senior advi-<lb/>
sor to Hunt, working primarily on issues relating to federal regulations and local<lb/>
McVeigh's attorneys file motion for new trial<lb/>
DENVER (AP) - Timothy McVeigh did not receive a fair trial in the<lb/>
Oklahoma City bombing because the jurors who condemned Kim to die<lb/>
were wrongly swayed by advene publicity and victim testimony, McVeigh s<lb/>
lawyers claim. ,????.<lb/>
McVeigh's attorneys listed more than a dozen arguments in a 180-page<lb/>
motion for a new trial filed Monday in U.S. District Court.<lb/>
One juror reportedly mentioned to a fellow juror during the trial that l<lb/>
think we all know what the verdict should be McVeigh lawyer Robert<lb/>
Nigh Jr. stated in his motion. .<lb/>
Most of the remaining arguments focused on U.S. District Judge<lb/>
Richard Matsch's decision to exclude pans of the defense's case: its theory<lb/>
that an international conspiracy was behind the bombing, a full report on<lb/>
problems with the FBI lab, and detail on the governments raid on the<lb/>
Branch Davidians complex near Waco, Texas. The bombing was said to be<lb/>
in retaliation for that raid.<lb/>
McVeigh was convicted last month of murder, conspiracy and weapons-<lb/>
related counts in the April 1995 federal building bombing that killed 168<lb/>
people. He was sentenced to death by injection.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
A Matter d T<lb/>
BAR<lb/>
tatter ot iaste<lb/>
BISTRO<lb/>
1<lb/>
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Full ABC privileges with<lb/>
an extensive beer and wine list.<lb/>
658 E. Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
in Arlington Village<lb/>
For reservations, call 355-1111<lb/>
h<lb/>
CD<lb/>
IB<lb/>
Chrysler plans safety recalls of more than<lb/>
1.6 million cars, trucks'<lb/>
DETROIT (AP) - In the largest such move this year, Chrysler Corp. will recall<lb/>
more than 1.6 million cars and trucks this summer to fix several problems,<lb/>
including faulty air bag controls. ? l ?? mi<lb/>
The largest recall involves 850.000 Dodge Ram pickup trucks from model<lb/>
years 1994 through 1997, and 1995-97 Dodge Ram Vans and Ram Wagons in the<lb/>
United States, company spokesman Mike McKesson said Monday.<lb/>
The trucks and vans are being recalled because heated transmission fluid can<lb/>
melt connections on fluid lines, causing fluid to spray on the exhaust manifold<lb/>
and potentially catch fire. Dealers will install new connections that include<lb/>
stainless steel retainers. . , iqq.<lb/>
The air bag problem affects 142,700 cars and tracks made eartyin the 1997<lb/>
model yearincludmg the Jeep Grand Cherokee and Wrangler, Dodge Dakota<lb/>
Sp, Dodge and PKmouth Neon subcompact and Dodge Viper sports car<lb/>
Deilers will replace the air bag's electronic control unit, which may<lb/>
cause the bag to inflate when the ignition a turned off and the vehicle is stand-<lb/>
ing still.<lb/>
Crypt is readied for Mexican drug lord's funeral<lb/>
GUAMUCHILITO, Mexico (AP) - Relatives of the man alleged to be<lb/>
Mexico's top drug lord invited neighboring townsfolk to a funerallucsday,<lb/>
expecting that the controversy over identification of his body can be settled<lb/>
??But the remains they await were in Mexico City Tuesday morning and<lb/>
prosecutors insisted they still hadn't decided if the bloated and bruised<lb/>
corpse was that of Arnado Carrillo Rienres.<lb/>
Carrillo Fuentes is said to have died last week at a Mexico City materni-<lb/>
ty hospital while recovering from extensive plastic surgery on his race and<lb/>
liposuction on his stomach.<lb/>
He reportedly was trying to alter his appearance to escaje tew enforce-<lb/>
ment agents. Some of those who wanted him suspect the" story may be<lb/>
nothing more than an attempt to thwart their chase.<lb/>
But Carrillo Fuemes' family insists he is dead. His mother and two sis-<lb/>
ters have gone to Mexico City intending to claim the body, while other rel-<lb/>
atives prepared for the wake at a family ranch in Guamuchihto, a village in<lb/>
the northwestern state of Sinaloa.<lb/>
Mars<lb/>
continued from panel<lb/>
"These all are indicators of<lb/>
water activity Grceley said.<lb/>
Mars is thought to have had<lb/>
water on its surface billions of<lb/>
years ago. That water could have<lb/>
been lost to space, or it could still<lb/>
be on Mars today, frozen under-<lb/>
ground and in the polar caps.<lb/>
"Mars may even be more water-<lb/>
rich than Earth is. We really don't<lb/>
know Golombek said.<lb/>
The search for traces of water is<lb/>
part of the search for signs of<lb/>
where life might have existed.<lb/>
Those questions won't be<lb/>
answered until NASA returns to<lb/>
Mars with more sophisticated<lb/>
instruments capable of probing<lb/>
beneath the surface.<lb/>
Sojourner can stay in touch<lb/>
with the lander up to 500 feet<lb/>
awav. Rover coordinator Matt<lb/>
Wallace said controllers are reining<lb/>
it in during the first few days; at<lb/>
Barnacle Bill, it had traveled a total<lb/>
of 16 inches since leaving<lb/>
Pathfinder.<lb/>
Scientists have had a lot to<lb/>
cheer about since the seven-<lb/>
month space flight ended with a<lb/>
flawless landing on Friday. After a<lb/>
communications problem<lb/>
between Pathfinder and Sojourner<lb/>
was resolved, the little rover slid<lb/>
down the ramp and into history.<lb/>
' Other spacecraft had landed on<lb/>
Mars, most recently Viking II in<lb/>
September 1976, but they were<lb/>
not able to roll around.<lb/>
The steep-deprived scientists<lb/>
and engineers loosened up<lb/>
Sunday. They played wake-up<lb/>
music for Sojourner - the theme<lb/>
song to TVs "Mad .About You" - as<lb/>
though the rover had astronauts on<lb/>
board. ?<lb/>
There was concern among the<lb/>
rover drivers - those who rehearse<lb/>
the moves on a 3-D screen before<lb/>
rover makes them - that the angles<lb/>
of Barnacle Bill might prevent tle<lb/>
spectrometer from getting in the<lb/>
right position for a good reading.<lb/>
They hit it on the first try,<lb/>
Muirhead said. "To get it the first<lb/>
time - even in our testing, we<lb/>
never got it the first time<lb/>
The rover's top speed is one<lb/>
centimeter per second, or roughly<lb/>
2 feet per minute. But operators,<lb/>
acting cautiously, did not use full<lb/>
power Sunday.<lb/>
Mission managers feel confi-<lb/>
dent that Sojourner will last much<lb/>
longer than its intended one-week<lb/>
lifetime, and the lander will con-<lb/>
tinue to operate much longer than<lb/>
the month it was supposed to.<lb/>
The lander's batteries could easily<lb/>
last for months, Muirhead said.<lb/>
The mission is being followed<lb/>
by people worldwide. With more<lb/>
than 100 million hits since Friday,<lb/>
Pathfinder's Web site was shaping<lb/>
up to become the biggest Internet<lb/>
event ever, Golombek said.<lb/>
"People out there really care<lb/>
what we're doing here Muirhead<lb/>
said. "I think the whole planet was<lb/>
behind us. The people willed<lb/>
Pathfinder to life<lb/>
Mexico<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
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Deputies, the lower house of<lb/>
Congress. It had 297 in the outgoing<lb/>
Chamber.<lb/>
With more than 85 percent of<lb/>
ballots counted for the lower house,<lb/>
the PRI had nearly 39 percent of the<lb/>
vote compared with 27 percent for<lb/>
the center-right National Action<lb/>
Partv and almost 26 percent for the<lb/>
left-center Democratic Revolution<lb/>
Party. Five other parties divided the<lb/>
rest.<lb/>
A party needs at least 42 percent<lb/>
to win a majority in the lower house,<lb/>
fresh air Hicks<lb/>
Women's Hour<lb/>
Indigo Girls<lb/>
Alanis Morrisette<lb/>
Sheryl Crow<lb/>
Meredith Brooks<lb/>
&amp; others<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
Monday - Friday I -2 on ECU's College Radio 9 3<lb/>
The Student Union Presents<lb/>
enjoy movies under the stars<lb/>
Wednesday @ 9pm Fleming hall courtyard. Bring your own lounge chair<lb/>
d<lb/>
y if i ? ?i1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058715_0003"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
3 Wednesdiy, July 9, 1997<lb/>
opinion<lb/>
Th? East CiroliniM<lb/>
easferolinian<lb/>
AMY L.ROVSTER Itm<lb/>
CKI.fi.STR WM.SON MlMtW)Ediiw<lb/>
Matt Hrgr fM6 Diitdot<lb/>
MAROl'ERITE BENJAMIN KmbEh?<lb/>
faoajraum t. kki.i.im ?????kwbew<lb/>
ANDY Tl'RNKt L!(BH?tW<lb/>
Patrick Md-AMMMNM<lb/>
AMANDA ROSS S?om Editor<lb/>
Patrick Irei.an pihso Etow<lb/>
David soi'therland Production M?m?<lb/>
Carole mkhi.e rMCmEftm<lb/>
John murphy s?hwmm<lb/>
HEATHER Bl'RCiKSS WinEdiw<lb/>
Smug ? ECU ammo, M BS. ? f m CmWm m OJ?o??il?riTI??Thti if ?????"???<lb/>
pMWMMM?K?RMRMIW?WB?RW??WR<lb/>
ClKIIIMIHI1lllTT1Jt??"??"???'?'??"  I ??<lb/>
i ECU, ttimfc aWM3Sl fir ??? at I??<lb/>
The last of the fireworks finales have faded away, the hamburgers and hot dogs have all been<lb/>
fully digested, hangovers have come and gone and everyone has gotten back to work. The<lb/>
fourth of July has slipped by for another year, but did you stop to think about why we were<lb/>
celebrating in the first place?<lb/>
Of course, everyone knows that the Rurth of Jury is a day celebrating our independence<lb/>
from Britain, a day to celebrate liberty and justice for all. But have we really come all that<lb/>
far? How free arc we and how secure are our rights that were so carefully laid out in the<lb/>
Constitution?<lb/>
As reported in The East Carolinian last week, in the current 343-page budget proposal,<lb/>
there is a three sentence provision that could have resounding effects across the state. The<lb/>
provision will allow county commissioners and town councils to pull state funding from any<lb/>
art exhibition or performance based solely on their judgment of its decency.<lb/>
What is perhaps even scarier is the feet that this provision is nothing new. In feet, it has<lb/>
been in effect for the past year under the current budget. The only difference is that the<lb/>
current legislature is considering making the provision permanent.<lb/>
So what does this mean in realistic terms? It means that anything risque such as last<lb/>
year's plays Suburbia and Lysistrata, could have had state funding pulled from it based on<lb/>
the opinion of the City Council. Student Union-sponsored events such as lectures, concerts<lb/>
and visiting comedians would all be subject to the provision and at the mercy of the Council.<lb/>
In fact, the provision could reach as far as the movies shown at Mendenhall. If any state<lb/>
money is used to sponsor these events, they are subject to council approval.<lb/>
Of course, this might rot be all bad. After all, the provision was in effect last year and no<lb/>
one seemed to mind. Plus, who would know better what fits into a certain community than<lb/>
the town council itself? After all, North Carolina is full of towns just like the fictional<lb/>
Mayberry from years ago, and would a controversial, state-sponsored art exhibition fit in well<lb/>
in these small towns?<lb/>
The best way to think of it is to think about the town where you grew up. Perhaps your<lb/>
parents are still there and maybe you plan to go back after college. Now think about if you<lb/>
trust the town officials to pick what you can and cannot see. The citizens voted them into<lb/>
office, and thus expressed trust in their opinions, so why not let them decide?<lb/>
Perhaps because it goes further than this. It goes back to the fierce independence of<lb/>
Americans. Our ancestors fought hard for our freedom, and we respect that and refuse to give<lb/>
it up without a fight. We feel that we should have ultimate say in where our money goes, and<lb/>
in what we choose to see and hear. So now is our chance to use that freedom we pride our-<lb/>
selves in. Find out who your representatives are if you don't already know. Write or call them,<lb/>
and let them know your opinion on the provision. If we let them decide without our input,<lb/>
are they really being our representatives? Speak up, be heard, and fight for what you think<lb/>
is right, no matter which side it may be on.tAnd always be proud to know that you can have<lb/>
a say, and that your opinion does mean something.<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Mary<lb/>
AEBR<lb/>
ECU students interested in various cultures<lb/>
ECU has an<lb/>
extremely friendly<lb/>
student bodythe<lb/>
vast majority of<lb/>
ECUs students do<lb/>
not suffer from<lb/>
xenophobia. In fact,<lb/>
they show a keen<lb/>
interest in cultures<lb/>
not their own.<lb/>
Xenophobia a powerful and exotic<lb/>
snundin. word. xVhat ir aiually<lb/>
means i fir or r .tred of strieers<lb/>
and foreigners or anything that is<lb/>
deemed foreign or strange.<lb/>
A phobia is an irrational, obses-<lb/>
sive and intense fear that is focused<lb/>
on a specific circumstance, idea or<lb/>
thing. Phobic disorders, according to<lb/>
modern classification, arc a subcate-<lb/>
gory of anxiety disorders. Some com-<lb/>
mon phobias are fear of public<lb/>
places, high places, closed spaces,<lb/>
social situations, death, the dark,<lb/>
animals, meteorological events, and<lb/>
electricity - just to name a few!<lb/>
Phobic sufferers may experience a<lb/>
variety of symptoms, including dizzi-<lb/>
ness, nausea and immobilization.<lb/>
The cause of phobia is unknown,<lb/>
but numerous theories have been<lb/>
advanced: that phobias result from a<lb/>
single, frightening experience with<lb/>
the thing feared; that phobias are<lb/>
'learned' gradually, over a long period<lb/>
of time; and that phobias result<lb/>
from distorted thoughts about the<lb/>
thing feared.<lb/>
Various treatments have been<lb/>
developed for phobia sufferers, each<lb/>
with similar high levels of success.<lb/>
Psychoanalysts strive to help their<lb/>
patients remember suppressed<lb/>
thoughts about childhood traumas.<lb/>
Bchaviorists may use one of two<lb/>
treatments ? gradual exposure to<lb/>
the thing feared, or intense exposure<lb/>
(flooding). Cognitive psychologists<lb/>
seek to alter the way their patients<lb/>
think about what they fear.<lb/>
Although I am an American citi-<lb/>
zen and a North Carolina resident, 1<lb/>
was not bom here. My cultural her-<lb/>
itage is quite different. The way I<lb/>
dress, what I eat and how I think jre<lb/>
also different ? im mainstream<lb/>
America. But this is liomc for mc<lb/>
and I celebrate the fourth of July<lb/>
with as much enthusiasm as anyone<lb/>
else.<lb/>
However, as I was curious about<lb/>
"real foreign students ! tele-<lb/>
phoned the Coordinator of Overseas<lb/>
Studies, Linda McGowan, who<lb/>
informed me that we get students<lb/>
from far away places like Japan,<lb/>
England, Sweden, Germany and<lb/>
Ecuador. There are approximately<lb/>
115 degree seeking international<lb/>
far mil f&amp; mtiM<lb/>
Com m w m ft<lb/>
Tir EMLWs ffcpKLAce<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Jeff<lb/>
BERGMAN<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
Drug tests target disadvantage are unfair<lb/>
Next time you see a<lb/>
sign on the door of<lb/>
a business that says,<lb/>
"Committed to a<lb/>
drugfree<lb/>
workplace ask<lb/>
who gets tested. Is it<lb/>
everybody or is it<lb/>
die people low on<lb/>
the totum pole<lb/>
During the so-called war on drugs<lb/>
in the 1980s, a McCarthy-csque<lb/>
public got caught in the fervor. The<lb/>
public, blinded by lies, half-truths<lb/>
and unfounded studies, stood by<lb/>
and watched drug testing sweep<lb/>
the land. Most who dared to refuse<lb/>
the tests were fired; the rest were<lb/>
watched with close scrutiny.<lb/>
Drugs are not the only thing that<lb/>
can be found in urine. Urine can<lb/>
show if the donor is taking medica-<lb/>
tion for depression, heart condition,<lb/>
epilepsy or diabetes. Urine can also<lb/>
be tested for pregnancies. Imagine<lb/>
you take a pre-employment drug<lb/>
screening test. Would your chance<lb/>
of getting the job lie hurt by your<lb/>
being diabetic, epileptic or preg-<lb/>
nant? Health costs are sky-rocket-<lb/>
ing, might your employer be think-<lb/>
ing the same thing?<lb/>
Many claim illegal drug use costs<lb/>
businesses billions of dollars. The<lb/>
people, usually politicians, who<lb/>
make the claims are at a loss when<lb/>
asked to provide proof. Most who<lb/>
do produce the proof have some-<lb/>
thing to gain. Hoffman-La Roche<lb/>
has a big share of the drug testing<lb/>
market and provides "educational"<lb/>
literature. Remember, as pro-busi-<lb/>
ness politicians say, "business is<lb/>
profit Anything to make the stock<lb/>
holders happy, even if it means<lb/>
lying to the public.<lb/>
Next time you see a sign on the<lb/>
door of a business that says,<lb/>
"Committed to a drug free work-<lb/>
place ask who gets tested. Is it<lb/>
everybody, or is it the people low on<lb/>
the totem pole who can least afford<lb/>
to be without a job if they refuse? It<lb/>
has been my experience that those<lb/>
with the most authority are tested<lb/>
the least, if at all. Should not the<lb/>
ones with the most influence over<lb/>
the business be tested the most?<lb/>
Logic says yes, reality says no.<lb/>
Politicians speak out in favor of<lb/>
drug testing. Why is Congress or<lb/>
the president not drug tested? As<lb/>
an American citizen, I am con<lb/>
cerned that our leaders might be<lb/>
using drugs. After the government<lb/>
shutdown a couple of years ago, the<lb/>
whole lot of them should have had<lb/>
to submit urine.<lb/>
Arc you willing tu submit urine<lb/>
for drug testing if your career, repu-<lb/>
tation, freedom or livelihood<lb/>
depended on it? The same ques-<lb/>
tion was asked to 120 forensic sci-<lb/>
entists, including some who worked<lb/>
for manufacturers of drug tests. Of<lb/>
the 120, not one would say yes.<lb/>
Keep in mind that urine drug tests<lb/>
can produce false positives any-<lb/>
where from 10-30 percent of the<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Conservative Supreme Court<lb/>
Justice Antonin Scslia called drag<lb/>
testing a "needless indignity Moat<lb/>
"research" that comes out in favor<lb/>
of drug testing b rarely out forth for<lb/>
peer review. The research that does<lb/>
come out is biased and misleading.<lb/>
A study that has stood up to peer<lb/>
review found "no difference<lb/>
between drug-positive and drug-<lb/>
negative employees<lb/>
I cannot think of anything more<lb/>
private than your own urine. Some<lb/>
even make you urinate in front of a<lb/>
nurse. Is the problem with drugs so<lb/>
bad we are willing to give up our<lb/>
right to privacy? Are you willing to<lb/>
let a laboratory dissect your urine?<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
students from 49 different countries<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
ECU has an extremely friendly<lb/>
student body. A few months back, I<lb/>
took a quick and informal poll of my<lb/>
classmates and found that the vast<lb/>
majority of ECU's students do not<lb/>
suffer from xenophobia. In fact,<lb/>
they show a keen interest in cultures<lb/>
not their own and often bombard a<lb/>
foreign student with numerous<lb/>
questions. For example, during one<lb/>
of my communication classes each<lb/>
student had to give a ten minute<lb/>
speech on a country of their choice.<lb/>
It was quite obvious that a lot of care<lb/>
and research was put into the reports<lb/>
because they were so interesting and<lb/>
well-presented.<lb/>
Of course, there always has to be<lb/>
a dissenter somewhere ? like the<lb/>
guy in my class who insisted that<lb/>
ALL people who inhabit hot and<lb/>
humid terrain have bad tempers, are<lb/>
terrorists and blow up buildings!<lb/>
Even the professor ? who, by the<lb/>
way, was a foreigner ? was speech-<lb/>
less with shock. In an effort to clar-<lb/>
ify the situation and make a point, I<lb/>
?died t'lis xenoph He if ho th?ht<lb/>
th i?L peop ho livw-o in<lb/>
extremely cold climates like Russia<lb/>
or Siberia were mild mannered and a<lb/>
bunch of pacifists. He got really<lb/>
annoyed and told me to go back to<lb/>
my dirty country. Hey, I thought this<lb/>
was my country Anyway, before I<lb/>
could even utter a single word in<lb/>
defense, the entire class had risen up<lb/>
as one huge body of indignation and<lb/>
shouted down the rest of his xeno-<lb/>
phobic rantings.<lb/>
Like I saidwe're a friendly<lb/>
bunch down here at ECU.<lb/>
William S.<lb/>
COCHRAN<lb/>
Leave art to artists, not elected officials<lb/>
In American society<lb/>
today, a society<lb/>
abundant with<lb/>
diversity, art helps<lb/>
us understand our<lb/>
role with one<lb/>
another. It helps us<lb/>
come to grips with<lb/>
our fears<lb/>
Art is the measure of a society, of a<lb/>
culture. It is what defines our brief<lb/>
stay on this earth. From earliest<lb/>
recorded history, art was used by<lb/>
humankind as an explanation and<lb/>
an expression of what it means to be<lb/>
human.<lb/>
In American society today, a soci-<lb/>
ety abundant with diversity, art<lb/>
helps us understand our role with<lb/>
I<lb/>
one another. It helps us come to<lb/>
grips with our fears, our traditions,<lb/>
our attempts for certainty in an<lb/>
uncertain world. We are humans,<lb/>
gifted with thought, and thought is<lb/>
the absolute horizon of understand-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
With this in mind, I ask you to<lb/>
consider the proposal set forth by<lb/>
Rep. Sam Ellis, R-Wake, which<lb/>
plans to cement allocation of funds<lb/>
for the arts in North Carolina.<lb/>
"Nobody knows what art is Ellis<lb/>
says, "nobody can define it<lb/>
It is ironic, then, that such an<lb/>
ignorant mind should control where<lb/>
the meager sum of money goes. His<lb/>
plan to take the power from the<lb/>
N.C. Arts Council and give it to<lb/>
County Commissioners to decide<lb/>
what is appropriate an is wrong<lb/>
He says, "If you're going to take<lb/>
our money, you subject yourself to<lb/>
our opinion. And 'our' is what I<lb/>
believe to be the opinion of the<lb/>
majority of the r .pulation<lb/>
Bottom line is this: politicians<lb/>
should not decide what art is.<lb/>
Artists should.<lb/>
As to whether we, the citizens of<lb/>
this great state, should view so-<lb/>
called "controversial" art is entirely<lb/>
a personal matter. It is up to each<lb/>
individual to choose whether they<lb/>
want to view a particular theatrical<lb/>
production, painting, sculpture or<lb/>
what have you. If a homosexual<lb/>
theme frightens Sam Ellis, or is not<lb/>
what he considers of "high moral<lb/>
'ii<lb/>
standards then Sam Ellis can stay<lb/>
at home and not participate in the<lb/>
play or an exhibit. However, Sam<lb/>
Ellis should not decide that,<lb/>
because of Ins own fear of a particu-<lb/>
lar theme, such a work should have<lb/>
funding cut, and therefore stricken<lb/>
from the awareness or attention of<lb/>
the citizens of this state.<lb/>
Art is a reflection of society, and<lb/>
some parts of society may be con<lb/>
troversial to certain people. This:<lb/>
does not mean, though, that fund-<lb/>
ing should be cut as a means of cen-<lb/>
sorship.<lb/>
We live under a constitution that<lb/>
ensures freedom of expression.<lb/>
What Ellis is proposing is a form of<lb/>
strangulation and censorship that,<lb/>
frankly, reminds me of the fear with<lb/>
which Hitler set to destroying all<lb/>
artistic, literary and scientific<lb/>
achievements of the Jewish com-<lb/>
munity some sixty years ago.<lb/>
Dm would Iv'e that Ellis' pro-<lb/>
I ,sal will be c ;cJ. The N rts<lb/>
Council should continue to serve<lb/>
our community by bringing thought<lb/>
provoking enlightening and engag-<lb/>
ing forms of art to the cultural<lb/>
awareness of this great sure with-<lb/>
out the constant inquisition and<lb/>
censorship of politicians.<lb/>
Art is human creativity. It is an<lb/>
expression of what humanity is. If<lb/>
the subtle guise of Ellis's censor-<lb/>
ship is enacted, then it is at the cost<lb/>
of social awareness and of human<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
ku v-MnwevaiiVt-a-aKSf<lb/>
<pb facs="00058715_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
4 Wednesday, July 9. 1997<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
ramblin <lb/>
ON<lb/>
Actors will be missed<lb/>
ANDY TURNER<lb/>
LIFESTYLE EDITOR<lb/>
So, I'm finally getting off my lazy duff<lb/>
and writing a column. I should perhaps<lb/>
first explain the title of the column. It is<lb/>
actually a bit of self-plagiarism.<lb/>
"Ramblin' On" is a column I wrote for<lb/>
another paper during my days as resi-<lb/>
dent media whore in lovely Sussex<lb/>
County, Virginia. If those fine folks find<lb/>
out I'm using the name, they may come<lb/>
tackle me and administer wedgies until<lb/>
plete sentences. A hefty order, but I'll do<lb/>
my best.<lb/>
It was a tough week for celebrities.<lb/>
They were dropping quicker than<lb/>
President Clinton going after a Big Mac.<lb/>
Actors Jimmy Stewart, Robert Mitchum,<lb/>
and William Hickey passed away. Texas<lb/>
bluesman Johnny Copeland went to the<lb/>
big juke joint in the sky, and journalist<lb/>
and North Carolinian Charles Kuralt<lb/>
came to the end of his road.<lb/>
Stewart and Mitchum's deaths have<lb/>
especially generated much attention.<lb/>
They were both superb actors. Stewart<lb/>
acted in more than 80 movies, and<lb/>
I sound like Regis Philbin. Despite the<lb/>
degree of pleasure that may result from<lb/>
such activity, you have to be hush hush<lb/>
about the whole thing.<lb/>
As for the meaning behind Ramblin'<lb/>
On, I hope the column name doesn't<lb/>
make you think that the column is just a<lb/>
silly rant about nothing. You'll think that<lb/>
after you actually read the column.<lb/>
Really, it simply means that I'm just<lb/>
another ass with an opinion who gets to<lb/>
write stuff in the funny papers. My goal<lb/>
with the column is just to write com-<lb/>
Mitchum was in more than 100. Hell,<lb/>
Mitchum was in 18 movies in 1943 alone<lb/>
(granted they use to make movies in<lb/>
about three weeks in those days). They<lb/>
did appear in at least one movie togeth-<lb/>
er, the 1978 remake of The Big Strep. But<lb/>
it was nor merely their acring abilities or<lb/>
prolific careers that made Mitchum and<lb/>
Stewart special. The lives they led off<lb/>
the screen were wonderful examples of<lb/>
what it means to be an American.<lb/>
book<lb/>
SEE RAMBLIN. PAGE S<lb/>
review<lb/>
Wedding Pictures<lb/>
Kathy Osborn, paintings<lb/>
Jacqueline Carey, text<lb/>
9 OUT OF 10<lb/>
JENNIFER TAPE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Wedding Pictures offers adult readers a<lb/>
delicious combination of beautiful,<lb/>
whimsical paintings and a witty, touch-<lb/>
ingly sarcastic story for grown ups.<lb/>
Jacqueline Carey takes on the peculiari-<lb/>
ties of marriage and relationships with a<lb/>
bitchy practicality that touches the heart<lb/>
while it satisfies the gossip in all of us. It<lb/>
is Kathy Osborn's paintings, however,<lb/>
that supply the real punch in the novel.<lb/>
And make no mistake, they are paintings<lb/>
in every sense of the word; Wedding<lb/>
Pictures is not a comic book.<lb/>
By combining the fun of flipping<lb/>
through a picture book with an incredibly<lb/>
twisted look at relationships, Carey and<lb/>
Osborn succeed where many authors fail.<lb/>
They actually manage to contribute<lb/>
some fresh new discussion to the stale,<lb/>
thousand-year-old debate about tradi-<lb/>
tional marriage. The key to their success<lb/>
is one that many self-help book authors<lb/>
should take a good look at: don't take<lb/>
everything so seriously!<lb/>
Through remarkably convincing dia-<lb/>
logue alone, phone conversations and<lb/>
answering machine messages included,<lb/>
Art student weary of bill<lb/>
Jennifer Liggett<lb/>
STAFF WRI I K.R<lb/>
Making art is a wav people express their feelings, problems, concerns, and<lb/>
even their politicsreligion and sexuality. So how would an artist feel about<lb/>
the provision the North Carolina House of Representatives wants to add<lb/>
onto the budget, allowing elected officials to have control over art in public<lb/>
if'passed the provision would give local officials control over any art<lb/>
funded by the state or housed in a public building and it could have a con-<lb/>
siderable effect on the art students of ECU who enjoy the creative freedom<lb/>
of a university environment.<lb/>
When told about this budget provision, Kate Kohn, a junior majoring in<lb/>
painting, remarkedWelcome to the Bible Belt She was disappointed to<lb/>
learn that bureaucrats could have a say in the kind of art that is shown, but<lb/>
also understood the need to not offend those who monetarily support the<lb/>
"1 see the reasoning behind the provision, but if legislators limit funds<lb/>
based on what they think is appropriate, then it stunts the artist, Kohn<lb/>
said "The value of art in North Carolina would decrease as a result or<lb/>
artists not being able to perform and create to their full potential.<lb/>
If officials could censor for content, what would happen if an art student<lb/>
was trying to hang their senior show required for graduation and was told<lb/>
two or three pieces were offensive and must be removed?<lb/>
"This is reallv controversial because it's mainly just a matter of opinion,<lb/>
Kohn added. "Your heart and soul goes into a body of work, and if censor-<lb/>
ship breaks up that bodv of work, then that is completely unacceptable.<lb/>
"Whether the content of a painting contains violence, nudity, homosex-<lb/>
ual issues, whatever - artists better understand themselves through the art<lb/>
thev create. If the work is censored, it's not only frustrating and insulting;<lb/>
we already feel alienated by the community and this makes it even worse.<lb/>
For someone who is planning to do art as a career, funding is part ot their<lb/>
livelihood. This<lb/>
budget provision<lb/>
would pigeon-<lb/>
hole an artist<lb/>
who needs fund-<lb/>
ing into sacrific-<lb/>
ing their creative<lb/>
freedom.<lb/>
"I wouldn't<lb/>
feel positive tak-<lb/>
ing a state fund-<lb/>
ed grant if someone else was telling<lb/>
me what to paint Kohn said. "But,<lb/>
that's a decision I would seriously<lb/>
have to consider. If I didn't take the<lb/>
grant there might not be a show<lb/>
It seems a little odd that this pro-<lb/>
posal came just one week before<lb/>
Independence Day - a proposal the<lb/>
violates the First Amendment and<lb/>
undoubtedly jeopardizes freedom of<lb/>
expression.<lb/>
How would this painting by Kate Kohn (above left)<lb/>
fare under the state legislature's proposal?<lb/>
PHOTO COURTESY OF JENNIFER LEGGETT<lb/>
mOVtereview<lb/>
fy<lb/>
Double your summer movie pleasure<lb/>
Dale wili.i wison<lb/>
SENIOR WRIT FH<lb/>
9 OUT OF 10<lb/>
Summer is a tough time for movies. The more the temperature rises, the<lb/>
more competitive the box office gets. In less than a month we ve witnessed<lb/>
such potential blockbusters as Speed ind even Batman'Rohm rapidly drop<lb/>
from the top of the charts due to a combination of stiff rivalry and bad word<lb/>
of mouth. It's a dog eat dog business, and only the biggest dogs will survive.<lb/>
Well there's a new breed in town that's burning up the screen and eating<lb/>
up the competition bv transforming old ideas into something novel, some-<lb/>
world and it's without a doubt the best to hit the screens in years. Based on<lb/>
the Malibu comic book of the same name. MIH digs into, and jabs at. the<lb/>
mvth of an ultra-secret organization that works above and beyond the gov-<lb/>
ernment to cover up the fact that aliens from other worlds live among us.<lb/>
Earth a it turns out, is a neutral .one where being "ro1" ?&amp; "?ot cllc<lb/>
rate can live. All thev have to do is take on the guise of normal human<lb/>
beings and follow the rules established and enforced by MIB.<lb/>
This is a wild idea that gets even wilder when a renegade alien ship crash-<lb/>
es to Earth without prior approval. In normal circumstances, this may be a<lb/>
simple misdemeanor against MIB regulations, but this craft carries a creature<lb/>
bent on destroying the world, something MIB is forced to take immediate<lb/>
 OuEics of the day come in the form of tight-lipped Tommy Lee Jones<lb/>
and reckless rookie Will Smith. This pairing of superstars mav seem awk-<lb/>
Carey explores the conflicting feelings<lb/>
that arise among friends and family at the<lb/>
announcement of Bonnie and Kip's<lb/>
pending wedding. From the starry-eyed<lb/>
excitement of Bonnie's young flower girl<lb/>
to the jaded observations of the groom's<lb/>
chronically unfaithful brother, Carey's<lb/>
verbal quips and exchanges prove true<lb/>
throughout the novel.<lb/>
The real humor of the story is illus-<lb/>
trated beautifully in the detailed paint-<lb/>
ings. Osborn manages to convey ridicu-<lb/>
lous images like the mutant flower gar-<lb/>
den where the wedding takes place with<lb/>
surprising sensitivity. From the ugly fish-<lb/>
net bridesmaid gowns (donated by local<lb/>
singing group The Five Flavors) to the<lb/>
best man's affairs with numerous gues's,<lb/>
the opportunities to make fun of charac-<lb/>
ters are abundant. Osborn, however,<lb/>
avoids exploiting such obvious humor<lb/>
and concentrates instead on the endear-<lb/>
ing, vulnerable sides of each character.<lb/>
Her touch is subtle; she teases, but never<lb/>
draws blood. Instead, she simply points<lb/>
in the right direction and allows the read-<lb/>
er to draw the conclusions.<lb/>
Wedding Futures is a great look at con-<lb/>
temporary feelings and ideas about mar-<lb/>
riage. It gives you all the fun of wicked<lb/>
dialogue and catty remarks as well as a<lb/>
few really romantic moments for the sen-<lb/>
timental. For the married, those who are<lb/>
about to be married, and those who never<lb/>
ever want to get married, Wedding Pictures<lb/>
offers lively discussion to support every<lb/>
point of view. Definitely worth your<lb/>
time. And if you don't feel like reading<lb/>
the whole book, at least take some time<lb/>
to check out the pictures!<lb/>
At left Tommy Lee Jones and Will Smith take a break from kicking alien booty in Men in Black, while<lb/>
Nicolas Cage and John Travolta square off in FaceOff.<lb/>
ABOVE PHOTO COURTESY OF PARAMOUNT PICTURES<lb/>
LEFT PHOTO COURTESY OF SONY<lb/>
thing<lb/>
unique, something wildly fun. Men m Mark and FaceOff both share much in<lb/>
common. Both feature out-of-this-world action, stylish direction, snappy-<lb/>
humor and, most importantly, energetic stars who dress well and redefine<lb/>
the verv notion of "cool Both represent a ranty in Hollywood - formulaic<lb/>
concepts that succeed in being entertaining and. to a large extent, original.<lb/>
Men in Blmk is the newest entrv into the sci-fi craze that is conquering the<lb/>
ward, but it's the selling point that keeps the film s energy Icvelat warp<lb/>
speed. Smith's performance is loud and in your face, but it blends beautiful<lb/>
ly with Jones' straight-as-an-arrow showcase. Jones Btte frj of <lb/>
dvnamic duo, and the result is indeed electrifying. With deadpan accuracy<lb/>
and ar?uablv the best performance of his long career, Jones steals the show,<lb/>
which is not an easv thing to do when Smith is in the picture.<lb/>
Credit director Barry Sonnenfeld for not only having the smarts to put<lb/>
SEE MOVIES. PAGE 5<lb/>
10 Thursday<lb/>
Hipbone at Peasant's.<lb/>
Hobex at the Brewery in Raleigh.<lb/>
Gladv and Manos at the Local 506 in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Smokin' Grooves '97 at the Virginia Beach Amphitheater.<lb/>
11 Friday<lb/>
Manute Soul at Peasant's.<lb/>
Crv of Iove at the Attic.<lb/>
Colouring Lessons at the Firehouse Tavern.<lb/>
Smokin Grooves '97 at Walnut Creek Amphitheatre in Rakish.<lb/>
Jennvanvkind and Fuastina at the Local 506 in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Shark Quest. S2 Pistols, Starrv Wisdom Band, Papa Luna and the Jumpstarts<lb/>
at the Cat's Cradle in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Joe Walsh, Eddie Money and Night Ranger at Camp Lejeune Marine Hase.<lb/>
Violent Femmes at the Boathouse in Norfolk. Va.<lb/>
Amphitheatre in Raleigh. <lb/>
Hobex at the Cave in Chapel Hill. <lb/>
Trailer Bride and Tweaker at the Local 306 in Chapel Hill. <lb/>
Wake at the Cat's Cradle in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
13 Sunday<lb/>
Widespread Panic and G.bb Droll at Strawberry Banks in Hampton. Va.<lb/>
Ska Night, featuring 7 Foot Politic at the Local 306 in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Schleigho at Peasant's.<lb/>
15 Tuesday<lb/>
SEND US INFO!<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
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Do vou have an upcoming event that you'd like listed in our It's Showtime<lb/>
column? If so, please send us information (a schedule would be nice) at:<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
The Program in Fleming Hall Courtyard.<lb/>
Dicky Palmer at the Comedy Zone at the Attic.<lb/>
Sneakv Pete at the Firehouse Tavern.<lb/>
Sharking Teeth and Richard Scott Group at the Iocal 506 in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Insurgence, Saucy Jack and Bellbats at the Cat's Cradle in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
12 Saturday<lb/>
I<lb/>
Innocent Nixon at Peasant's.<lb/>
Chairmen of the Board at the Attic.<lb/>
l,ong Stem Daisies at the Firehouse Tavern.<lb/>
Widespread Panic, Government Mule and<lb/>
Gibb Droll at Walnut Creek<lb/>
It's Showtime<lb/>
co Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Publication Bldg.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
miiwi ?f hww ?mm?m fmmmmmnwnwnwnmwwmnnwwimnwnnnmmnnmnwmt<lb/>
?????'<lb/>
<pb facs="00058715_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
5 Wednesday. July 9. 1997<lb/>
stvle<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
continued trom page 4<lb/>
Jones and Smith together hut also for<lb/>
having the necessary talent ro trans-<lb/>
form Ed Solomon's witty script into a<lb/>
visual thrill ride packed with mind-<lb/>
boggling creatures and state-of-the-<lb/>
art special effects. Sonnenfeld. who<lb/>
proved himself a worthy comedic<lb/>
director vv ith such films as Theitlliim.<lb/>
lunnih and Get SJforfy, paces Men m<lb/>
litnk at such a kinetic level that the<lb/>
audience doesn't have time to worn,<lb/>
about implausibilities or improbabili-<lb/>
ties. You're having too much fun to do<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
while you wait<lb/>
Free, Confidential Service &amp; Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
TriS7"OOD3 Hms varY as needed' APP?in,men,s preferred<lb/>
209 B. S. Evans St. (Pittman Building -near courthouse) Greenville, NC<lb/>
w<lb/>
ELTORO<lb/>
Men's Hair Styling Shoppe<lb/>
Barber &amp; Style<lb/>
Pirate Special<lb/>
2800 E I Oth St.<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
Across From Highway Patrol<lb/>
Behind Stain Glass<lb/>
Mem Fri. 9-6<lb/>
Walk-ins Anytime<lb/>
7S2-33IB<lb/>
Say Pirates &amp;<lb/>
Get Hair Cut<lb/>
for $7 Every time.<lb/>
Regular $10<lb/>
$7.00<lb/>
Haircut<lb/>
anything but just enjov the ride.<lb/>
Similarly,  fJtt tosses plausibili-<lb/>
ty .ind probability out the window in<lb/>
favor of a good time. And like Mm m<lb/>
Biirt. this action roller coaster is<lb/>
fueled b mesmerizing performances<lb/>
from irs two star. John Travolta and<lb/>
Nicolas Cage,<lb/>
The plot, written bv Mike Werb<lb/>
and Michael Colleary, is about as<lb/>
absurd as tliev come, but with Hong<lb/>
Kong veteran director John Woo<lb/>
behind the cameras, even thing falls<lb/>
perfectly into place.<lb/>
The Cliffs notes version of the<lb/>
stor goes something like this: RB.I.<lb/>
agent Sean Archer (initially plaved bv<lb/>
Travolta) obsessively tracks down<lb/>
ruthless killer and terrorist CCastor<lb/>
Trov (initially played bv Cage). After a<lb/>
dizzying opening tight sequence, Trov<lb/>
is mortally wounded, placed in a coma<lb/>
and captured. This would all be fine<lb/>
and dandy, but 'Trov has hidden a<lb/>
bomb somewhere and Archer needs to<lb/>
find it.<lb/>
Now things get silly. Through the<lb/>
technology of super science. Archer<lb/>
has his face removed and. in a desper-<lb/>
ate attempt to get access to the<lb/>
underworld, replaced with Troy's.<lb/>
Now Archer is Troy, meaning that<lb/>
("age is now playing the part of Archer.<lb/>
Of course. Trov is not out of action<lb/>
yet and he eventually awakens from<lb/>
his coma. I sing the same super sci-<lb/>
ence Archer used. Trov has Archer's<lb/>
face grafted on. meaning that Travolta<lb/>
is now playing the villain.<lb/>
From: George Clinton to Jackson Five<lb/>
Tune in on Sundays 6-9pm<lb/>
on ECU'S College Radio<lb/>
TUESDAY NIGHT LIVE<lb/>
Acoustic night With Spejj<lb/>
Best Local Bands ir<lb/>
July 15th SlowChfM<lb/>
July 22nd Scott<lb/>
$1.00 Domestics &amp; Highball<lb/>
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WEDNESDAY CLASSICS NIGHT<lb/>
10 Specials $1.25 Domestics<lb/>
THURSDAY LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
$1.25 DomesticsHJallf<lb/>
750 Miller Lite Bottles<lb/>
$2.00 Cosmopolitan<lb/>
TGI - FRIDAYS<lb/>
Greenville's Only Disco &amp; 70's Part<lb/>
All Night Long<lb/>
$1.00 Michelob Light Bott<lb/>
$1.50 New Castle Bottles<lb/>
SATURDAY WEEKEND PARTY<lb/>
$1.00 Domestics &amp; High Balls<lb/>
750 Natural Light Bottles<lb/>
THURS . FRI &amp; SAT<lb/>
LADIES 21 &amp; OVER FREE<lb/>
GUYS WITH SCHOOL ID 21 &amp; OVER $1,00<lb/>
All of this mav seem, and admit-<lb/>
tedly is. ridiculous. Hot that does not<lb/>
matter. Once the premise is estab-<lb/>
lished, h'iiiOff launches off into terri-<lb/>
tories that very, very few mencan<lb/>
action films ever dare touch. The film<lb/>
becomes a dark journey concerning<lb/>
identity, revenge and obsession. Woo<lb/>
turns the traditional notion of good vs.<lb/>
evil on its head by placing pure good<lb/>
wirhin the body of pure evil, and vice<lb/>
versa. The result is one of the most<lb/>
daring action films in recent memory<lb/>
All of the above is swell, but the<lb/>
one element that will keep audiences<lb/>
flocking to the theatets is the simple-<lb/>
fact that h'iiii'(Jtf is absolutely fun.<lb/>
The action sequences strike with<lb/>
lightning speed but are never clut-<lb/>
tered, and the dueling stars chew up<lb/>
the screen with lively enthusiasm.<lb/>
Travolta and Cage are having the<lb/>
times of their lives as they leap<lb/>
through the air with a gun in each<lb/>
clinched fist. Travolta, of course,<lb/>
glides with the ease and skill of a vet-<lb/>
eran. He is a joy to watch, but this is.<lb/>
amazingly enough. Cage's movie. As<lb/>
Archer. Cage turns in a phenomenally<lb/>
tortured performance and works won-<lb/>
ders with a character that is trapped<lb/>
inside the body of the one man he<lb/>
hates most in the world.<lb/>
Hard-core fans of Woo will proba-<lb/>
bly not acknowledge Em Off as vin-<lb/>
tage Woo (see Tie tSMrr or HardBoUfd<lb/>
for examples of his best work). Still,<lb/>
this latest entry into the world of<lb/>
action cinema clcarlv illustrates that a<lb/>
little talent and passion can breath<lb/>
tresh life into even the most brain-<lb/>
dead concept.<lb/>
So. for all those who have grown<lb/>
sick of the Hollywood cliche and the<lb/>
deluge of forgettable summer films<lb/>
that consistently take up valuable<lb/>
space at the local theater, two nuggets<lb/>
of joy have just landed at a nearby<lb/>
screen. While Men in Rfirk and FaieOff<lb/>
don't qualify as examples of<lb/>
"Masterpiece Cinema they both<lb/>
succeed in making going to the<lb/>
movies fun again.<lb/>
Ramblin<lb/>
continued from page 4<lb/>
Perhaps their lives were even in con-<lb/>
trast with one another. It is this con-<lb/>
trast that makes American lives inter-<lb/>
esting.<lb/>
Stewart was everybody's Ail-<lb/>
American. He was a graduate of<lb/>
Princeton University, where he stud-<lb/>
ied architecture. He volunteered for<lb/>
service in the Army .Air Force during<lb/>
World War II. gaining an extra 10<lb/>
pounds so he would qualify. Later he<lb/>
would tell people that he was drafted<lb/>
into the service. While he was in the<lb/>
service, he earned two distinguished<lb/>
flying crosses and numerous other<lb/>
accommodations. He was married to<lb/>
the same woman for more than 40<lb/>
years. His way of speaking, like his<lb/>
conservative values, came from his<lb/>
Middle American upbringing. Like<lb/>
many of the characters he portraved,<lb/>
he was simply a good guy.<lb/>
Mitchum represented another<lb/>
dimension of American ideals. From<lb/>
the beginning, he was considered a<lb/>
"bad boy His father died when<lb/>
Mitchum was still a baby. He spent a<lb/>
good portion of his early life discover-<lb/>
ing the country on his own. At the age<lb/>
of 14. Mitchum claimed he was<lb/>
arrested for vagrancy and sentenced<lb/>
to a Oeorgia chain gang. He served a<lb/>
60-day sentence in 1949 after being<lb/>
convicted on marijuana possession.<lb/>
During his sentence, he allowed pho-<lb/>
tographers to photograph him sweep-<lb/>
ing out his cell. He was married to the<lb/>
same woman for 57 years, although<lb/>
questions of his fidelity remain.<lb/>
Stewart fought for his country; he<lb/>
was the perfect patriot. He is some-<lb/>
one we should be proud to claim as an<lb/>
American. Mitchum too was a great<lb/>
American, but he fought for himself.<lb/>
Not that he was selfish, he simply-<lb/>
lived life on his own terms. Mitchum<lb/>
survived despite hardships and mis-<lb/>
takes. He did not allow Hollywood or<lb/>
anyone else to dictate to him how to<lb/>
live. He was true to himself; that is<lb/>
the hardest truth. .As Americans, we<lb/>
like to think we support people who<lb/>
do their own thing, but that support<lb/>
often succumbs to hypocrisy. Stewart<lb/>
and Mitchum were anything but hyp-<lb/>
ocrites, and thev will be missed.<lb/>
WE'VE GOT YOUR FAVORITE<lb/>
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NOSTALGIA<lb/>
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919 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
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Apply at our office<lb/>
on the second floor<lb/>
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209 E. 5 Si.<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
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DISCOVER A<lb/>
LITTLE CORNER OF<lb/>
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Dicky Palmer<lb/>
COMedl $1.50 Highballs<lb/>
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only $4.25<lb/>
includes an entree, 2 veggies and hush puppies or rolls<lb/>
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opened for Allman Brothers<lb/>
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WSFL listener appreciation concert<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Chairmen of the Board<lb/>
Hungry, Pirate?<lb/>
Go to CHICO'S and get a HUNGRY PIRATE!<lb/>
It's the biggest burrito you've ever seen! And you<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058715_0006"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
6 Wednesday, July 9. 1997<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
LOGAN'S PALACE<lb/>
Post-season track awards given<lb/>
AMANDA Ross<lb/>
SPOUTS EDI TDK<lb/>
Oowdy-Fickton'i facalifl continuas in preparation for the home opener in<lb/>
September against Wake Forest.<lb/>
PHOTOS AMANDA PROCTOR<lb/>
l<lb/>
Carolina ticket sales cool<lb/>
off during the summer<lb/>
Track season may be over, but for two sprinters<lb/>
and one coach, their hard work and determination<lb/>
is still paving off.<lb/>
The CAA announced that Charles "Choo"<lb/>
Justice, head coach of the women's team, was<lb/>
named the CAA Women's Coach of the Year for<lb/>
the second straight season.<lb/>
Justice, in his sixth year as head coach, led his<lb/>
squad to a second place CAA finish behind<lb/>
George Mason<lb/>
and coached his<lb/>
team to an 11 th<lb/>
place finish as<lb/>
the ECAC<lb/>
Outdoor Track<lb/>
and Field<lb/>
Championships.<lb/>
At this year's<lb/>
ECAC meet,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates<lb/>
earned a total of<lb/>
25 points, the<lb/>
most ever for<lb/>
ECU, as seven<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
earned All-East<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
Justice said<lb/>
he was glad to<lb/>
receive the<lb/>
award, but it's<lb/>
not something<lb/>
that's on the<lb/>
forefront of his<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
"If I get<lb/>
named it that's<lb/>
great, but if I<lb/>
that we had Justice said.<lb/>
While Justice believed his girls would break<lb/>
more records this year, he said weather conditions<lb/>
hampered their quest to rewrite the books.<lb/>
"Going into the year 1 thought 'man, we're<lb/>
going to break a lot of records Justice said. "I<lb/>
think with the weather we had this spring - it was<lb/>
cold, it was rainy and stuff - so the conditions<lb/>
weren't there to run as fast or jump as far as we<lb/>
thought we would be able to do. But, at the same<lb/>
time, we did do well in head-to-head competi-<lb/>
tion, particularly our relay team, our 4x100 relay<lb/>
team. They won almost every single race that<lb/>
they ran with the exception of one or two<lb/>
That relay team consists of the GAA Women's<lb/>
girl that puts the fire in everyone. She is a fierce<lb/>
competitor and has a tremendous amount of con-<lb/>
fidence in herself<lb/>
According to Justice, Barrow is the kind of run-<lb/>
ner who can motivate others.<lb/>
"Because she is so good, she makes her team-<lb/>
mates better Justice said. "She puts a certain<lb/>
attitude in everyone and they go 'gosh, if Rasheca<lb/>
can think that way, then I can think that way She<lb/>
is a tireless worker and she sets the tone of prac-<lb/>
tice with everyone working<lb/>
For the women's track team. Barrow was a steal<lb/>
that few schools noticed.<lb/>
"Coming out of high school a lot of people did-<lb/>
n't know about her because she came from a little<lb/>
school<lb/>
CAA Women's Coach of the Year<lb/>
CAA Women's Rookie of the Year<lb/>
From left to right Darnck Ingram. Charles "Choo- Justice and Rasheca Barrow were awarded top honors by the CAA. This is the<lb/>
second year Justice has been awarded Coach of the Year.<lb/>
PHOTOS COURTESY OF SIO<lb/>
MORRISVILLE, N.C. (AP) -<lb/>
Now the most difficult task begins<lb/>
for the Carolina Hurricanes: selling<lb/>
hockey tickets in the dog days of<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
North Carolina residents may be<lb/>
thinking about ice, but their minds<lb/>
are more geared toward filling beach<lb/>
coolers than a hockey rink.<lb/>
So far, the Hurricanes are staying<lb/>
cool about their modest season ticket<lb/>
number of 3,000, saying sales have<lb/>
been steady but not substantial.<lb/>
Front office officials hope that num-<lb/>
ber jumps svithin the next month as a<lb/>
push to sell to companies in the<lb/>
Triangle and Triad areas began this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
"Trying to get people to think<lb/>
about hockey in the middle of 90-<lb/>
degree days when they can be at the<lb/>
beach or playing golf or something<lb/>
else, that is a little bit of a difficult<lb/>
. task said Hurricanes general man-<lb/>
, ager Jim Rutherford.<lb/>
"It's just a matter of reaching out<lb/>
! to them he added. "We've got to<lb/>
! get our campaign going a little bit<lb/>
stronger. We just take for granted<lb/>
1 that everybody out there knows<lb/>
about (us) but they don't, they are<lb/>
out jogging, playing tennis, playing<lb/>
golf, so we have a lot of work to do to<lb/>
let people know we're here<lb/>
The team's target for its first year<lb/>
in the Greensboro Coliseum after<lb/>
moving from Hartford is 12,000 sea-<lb/>
son tickets. Rutherford said he'll<lb/>
know by the end of August if that fig-<lb/>
' ure is realistic.<lb/>
k "It's the same as anything, you<lb/>
would like to be further down the<lb/>
road Rutherford said of the 3,000<lb/>
season tickets sold so far. "It's noth-<lb/>
ing ro get excited about or nothing to<lb/>
get panicked about<lb/>
Jim Baldwin, the team's director<lb/>
of ticket operations, said selling<lb/>
hockey tickets is a bit trickier than<lb/>
some other sports, especially in a<lb/>
non-traditional hockey area like<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
"With tickets of these prices, it's<lb/>
not like walking into the store and<lb/>
buying a pack of cigarettes. We have<lb/>
to work with them Baldwin said<lb/>
Tuesday of potential hockey fans.<lb/>
Baldwin said season-ticket sales<lb/>
should jump by mid to late August<lb/>
when companies have had time to<lb/>
digest the team's sales pitch.<lb/>
"Very few of the bigger companies<lb/>
have been approached yet and that is<lb/>
with good reason. We didn't want to<lb/>
go in with half a loaf Baldwin said.<lb/>
"You want to go into a company like<lb/>
Nortel with everything you have so<lb/>
they can pick and choose what ele-<lb/>
ments make sense to them.<lb/>
"Again, companies do not make up<lb/>
their minds on one phone call. They<lb/>
need to see what the various ele-<lb/>
ments are<lb/>
He said some of the areas bigger<lb/>
companies may buy 25 to 50 season<lb/>
tickets for their executives to use.<lb/>
The team also expects interest from<lb/>
employees of companies like SAS<lb/>
Institute, IBM, Jefferson-Pilot,<lb/>
Wrangler and many others.<lb/>
Rutherford and Baldwin are also<lb/>
optimistic that Greensboro can<lb/>
attract a substantial number of walk-<lb/>
up fans. Students will also be eligible<lb/>
for half-price tickets to certain sec-<lb/>
tions 1 12-hour before each home<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"I have heard from the people in<lb/>
Greensboro that when they have big<lb/>
events there that they get 3,000 to<lb/>
5,000 walk-ups. Our biggest walk-up<lb/>
in Hartford as about 2,000 Baldwin<lb/>
said. "We averaged in the 500 to 800<lb/>
students a night. I would say we<lb/>
would be able to at least triple that in<lb/>
Greensboro<lb/>
don't it's not a big deal Justice said. "For me it's<lb/>
more important how the team does. I'm lad I got<lb/>
named it: it gives me a little bit of recognition<lb/>
But Justice gives the credit for his awards to<lb/>
his squad.<lb/>
"More than anything it shows that the team<lb/>
did a good job Justice said. "I tell the skirls when<lb/>
I win something like that it's a compliment to<lb/>
them<lb/>
The success of the ladv Pirate is due in part<lb/>
to a strong freshman group that made their pres-<lb/>
ence known to their opponents.<lb/>
"We had a really good year and a lot of that was<lb/>
because of some outstanding freshmen sprinters<lb/>
Rookie of the Year, Rasheca Barrow. A native of<lb/>
Grandv. N.C. (Currituck H.S.) was the 1997 CAA<lb/>
champion in the 100 meters (12.05) and ran the<lb/>
anchor leg of the 4x100 relay team that took top<lb/>
honors at the CAA and ECAC meets. The win-<lb/>
ning ECAC performance of 45.16 was a new ECU<lb/>
school record. Barrow also earned All-East honors<lb/>
in the 100 meters with a sixth place finish at he<lb/>
ECAC's (12.37). She also qualified for the<lb/>
ECAC's in the 200 meters. The 4x100 relay team<lb/>
set two different school records in the event this<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
"Rasheca had a great year Justice said. "She<lb/>
is the driving force behind our team. She is the<lb/>
Curritcuk<lb/>
County<lb/>
High<lb/>
School,<lb/>
which is out<lb/>
on the<lb/>
coast<lb/>
Justice said.<lb/>
"I think<lb/>
people are<lb/>
going<lb/>
'where did<lb/>
you get her<lb/>
from?' Only<lb/>
a couple of<lb/>
schools<lb/>
recruited<lb/>
her super<lb/>
hard<lb/>
The CAA<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
Rookie of<lb/>
ih Year was<lb/>
a Pirate who<lb/>
also had an<lb/>
outstanding<lb/>
year, Darrick<lb/>
Ingram.<lb/>
This Athlete-of-the-Meet during the CAA<lb/>
Championships for his victories in the 200 and<lb/>
400 meter sprints, is a native of Lumberton, N.C<lb/>
and attended Lumberton High School. He was a<lb/>
member of the 4x400 relay foursome and earned<lb/>
All-American honors as the team placed fifth at<lb/>
the NCAA Outdoor Track and Held<lb/>
Championships in a school record time of 3:04.12.<lb/>
At the IC4A Outdoor Championships Ingram<lb/>
was an All-East husiorce with the relay group due<lb/>
won the 4x400 with an IC4A meet record time of<lb/>
3:04.36. The 4x400 relay team set three different<lb/>
school records and Ingram also qualified for the<lb/>
SEE TRACK. PAGE 7<lb/>
WORKING OUT, WORKING HARD<lb/>
Uft Chris Sible Terry Everhart. Sandra VarrOrsuw and Bobby Rackly enjoy a friendly game of volleyball. Right. Scott WtartonP?P W "is arm muscles in th. weight<lb/>
' ' V ro0m. All. except for VanOrsuw. are Summer Ventures students here for special programs.<lb/>
PHOTOS BY AMANDA PROCTOR<lb/>
Players bat around idea of home run records<lb/>
Nuts for sports? The East Carolinian is hiring<lb/>
sports writers for the summer and fall. We are also<lb/>
looking for someone to take charge of the fall and<lb/>
spring sports tabloids. Apply in person at our office<lb/>
in the Student Publications Building on the second<lb/>
floor. (Across from Joyner Library.)<lb/>
PARKVIEW<lb/>
at Kingston Condos<lb/>
? Unfurnished, 2 bedroom<lb/>
STILL AVAILABLE FOR<lb/>
AUGUST<lb/>
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CLEVELAND (AP) - Tony Gwynn and Ken<lb/>
Griffey Jr. have their opinions, just like every<lb/>
other fan.<lb/>
So how about it, guys. When it comes to hit-<lb/>
ting, which of baseball's most hal- <lb/>
lowed numbers - 61, .400 or 56 - will<lb/>
be the hardest to break?<lb/>
"I will say the home runs<lb/>
Griffey said Monday. "If they don't<lb/>
pitch to you, you can't do it.<lb/>
Everything has to lie perfect with<lb/>
the swing. It's not like a single,<lb/>
where you can bloop it in<lb/>
Gwynn sees a different side.<lb/>
"Of the three of them, I would<lb/>
say 56 is the most difficult he said.<lb/>
"Even, at-bat you don't net a hit, the<lb/>
pressure builds<lb/>
Either way this is the time to be<lb/>
talking about such things. Because<lb/>
all of the plovers with the Ik-si<lb/>
chance m maktnu hhtton - otherwise<lb/>
known as challenging the marks of<lb/>
Roger Maris. Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio -<lb/>
were on display last night at the Ail-Star game.<lb/>
There's Mark McGwire with 3! home runs<lb/>
and Griffey with 30. They're pursuing Maris. who<lb/>
had 33 homers at the All-Star break in 1961 and<lb/>
finished with 61.<lb/>
"The only time you guys should bring it up is<lb/>
if you're at 50 home runs in September, the first<lb/>
of September McGwire said. "Then a guy has a<lb/>
pretty good chance of doing it<lb/>
But, the chase has caught the interest of<lb/>
Randy Johnson, the starting pitcher for the AL.<lb/>
"If they don't<lb/>
pitch to you,<lb/>
you ran t do it.<lb/>
Everything has to<lb/>
be perfect with<lb/>
the swing. It's not<lb/>
like a single,<lb/>
where you can<lb/>
bloop it in<lb/>
Ken Griffey Jr.<lb/>
"1 wouldn't mind seeing both getting a chance<lb/>
to break it instead of just one he said. "It would<lb/>
be great to get into September and have both of<lb/>
them close.<lb/>
"They would pick up the paper each<lb/>
morning and look at the other boxs-<lb/>
core and say, 'He got another one<lb/>
Maybe they wouldn't do that, I<lb/>
don't know. But I think both would<lb/>
be driven by what the other guy was<lb/>
doing he said.<lb/>
Williams was the last player to break<lb/>
the .400 barrier, hitting .406 in 1941.<lb/>
That season, he was batting .405 at<lb/>
the All-Star break.<lb/>
Urrv Walker is at .398, Gwynn is at<lb/>
.394!<lb/>
"I think everybody thinks it will be<lb/>
done, but we're finding out that it's<lb/>
not that easy Gwynn said.<lb/>
"Hitting .400. you've got to do it<lb/>
every d.iv I was hitting .402 one day,<lb/>
went 2-for-5 and went down to .401.<lb/>
So it's tough. You've got to get in a groove and just<lb/>
stav there he said.<lb/>
DiMaggio hit in 56 straight games in 1941. He-<lb/>
happened to be at 48 at the break.<lb/>
Sandy Alomar is at 30 and counting.<lb/>
"1 think it's actually helped me concentrate on<lb/>
every at-bat lately he said. "Hopefully, going for<lb/>
the streak doesn't hurt the team<lb/>
For at least a dav or two, Alomar doesn't need<lb/>
to vvorrv. The Cleveland catcher can focus on hav-<lb/>
ing fun, calling pitches for Johnson and hitting<lb/>
against NL starter Greg Maddux.<lb/>
H<lb/>
The NL has won three straight, and leads the<lb/>
series 40-26-1.<lb/>
Thanks to interleague play, Maddux has<lb/>
alreadv pitched this season to five players in the<lb/>
AL starting lineup - Cal Ripken, Roberto Alomar<lb/>
and Brady Anderson of Baltimore and Tino<lb/>
Martinez and Paul O'Neill of the New York<lb/>
Yankees. ?<lb/>
"I don't think that takes away from anything,<lb/>
the .Atlanta ace said.<lb/>
Johnson, on the other hand, may finally get to<lb/>
face Walker. The Colorado slugger sat out when<lb/>
the Rockies recently played Johnson and the<lb/>
Seattle Mariners.<lb/>
Johnson provided an All-Star highlight in 1993<lb/>
when he threw a fastball way over the head of<lb/>
John Kruk, prompting the Philadelphia hitter to<lb/>
pat his heart.<lb/>
Walker and Johnson were once teammates in<lb/>
Montreal's minor league system. That friendship,<lb/>
though, may not spare Walker, whose 479-foot<lb/>
shot was the longes' in Monday's home run derby<lb/>
"1 don't remember receiving a Christmas card<lb/>
from him lohnson said.<lb/>
Roger Clemens and Pedro Martinez also are<lb/>
likely to pitch early in the game. When Albert<lb/>
Belle will bat, however, remains to be seen.<lb/>
Belle is back at Jacobs Field for the first time<lb/>
since June, when Indians fans booed him non-<lb/>
stop. Belle responded with an obscene gesture.<lb/>
He showed up late in the AL clubhouse and did<lb/>
not take part in the optional workout on Monday.<lb/>
No matter that Belle did not talk about the<lb/>
SEE BAT. PAGE 7<lb/>
'<lb/>
7<lb/>
t wmw<lb/>
<pb facs="00058715_0007"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
Wednesday. July 9. 1997<lb/>
sports<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Track<lb/>
continued from page 6<lb/>
200 and 400 meter races in the<lb/>
IC4A.<lb/>
Men's Head Coach Bill Carson<lb/>
could not be reached for comment,<lb/>
but Justice was able to comment on<lb/>
Ingram and his running abilities.<lb/>
"Darrick is very talented<lb/>
Justice said. "He doesn't have a clue<lb/>
how good he is. He is so talented.<lb/>
Vk knew he was going to be that<lb/>
good when he came out of high<lb/>
school. As he gets more experience,<lb/>
he could be one of the top guys in<lb/>
the country<lb/>
Just like Barrow, Ingram has a<lb/>
good attitude he conveys to his<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"He has a good attitude, hard<lb/>
working Justice said. "All the<lb/>
things you want in an athlete. Kids<lb/>
like that are easy to coach. That's<lb/>
the thing about Darrick, he's easy to<lb/>
coach. You don't have any problems<lb/>
out of him - just like Rasheca, no<lb/>
problems out of her<lb/>
Athletes like these are any<lb/>
coach's dream.<lb/>
"They make our jobs so easy, so<lb/>
that's a compliment to them<lb/>
Justice said.<lb/>
The Pirates will look to dominate<lb/>
on the track next year, and Justice<lb/>
sees only a bright future ahead of<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"Before, when I recruited, I had<lb/>
to explain who we were, who we had<lb/>
on the team and what we were<lb/>
about, and now people know what<lb/>
we are about Justice said. "We're<lb/>
not the unknown team trying to<lb/>
prove ourselves anymore. It's like we<lb/>
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SRC Outdoor Pool<lb/>
Come enjoy a cool dip in<lb/>
the pool with your friends!<lb/>
Music, Food, and Fun<lb/>
Sponsored by Recreational Services,<lb/>
Dining Services, and Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Adventure Program<lb/>
Backpacking Basics<lb/>
July 16<lb/>
Register by July 14<lb/>
Free to SRC members<lb/>
Lifestyle Enhancement Program<lb/>
Learn to Rollerblade<lb/>
Program Date: July 16<lb/>
Registration by: July 11<lb/>
Time: Wednesday<lb/>
5:30 p.m7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Location: SRC Brickyard<lb/>
Cost: $5<lb/>
$10 own equipmentmember<lb/>
$10 non-memberown equipment<lb/>
$20 non-memberequipment provided<lb/>
601 <lb/>
40<lb/>
2013<lb/>
arc starting to become the hunted<lb/>
instead of being the hunter. We<lb/>
don't have to take a back seat to any-<lb/>
one anymore, which feels good to<lb/>
get to the point<lb/>
With the sport of track on the<lb/>
rise and with the success of the<lb/>
Americans at the Olympics in<lb/>
Atlanta, does Justice foresee any of<lb/>
his proteges running for the gold?<lb/>
"It's always possible: for most of<lb/>
them it's so far away because they<lb/>
get out of college and they still have<lb/>
three or four more years to get their<lb/>
peak Justice said.<lb/>
But one day you may see a former<lb/>
Lady Pirate running against the<lb/>
world's best.<lb/>
"I got a couple of girls who, in the<lb/>
long run, could potentially be<lb/>
there Justice said. "But I'd like to<lb/>
think down the road it would be<lb/>
possible if we keep on recruiting<lb/>
well<lb/>
TRIVIAtime<lb/>
Name the baseball team with the most appearances<lb/>
in the World Series. Also name how many times<lb/>
have they been there, how many wins have they<lb/>
recorded, and when was the last time they won the<lb/>
World Series?<lb/>
?jvriisvj<lb/>
Suvq jsvj 9tj 'smij ?Z uosn pup sxmDjmfdv<lb/>
p? dpDut dewu tiuj swquvA 3jojl mtfi zyj<lb/>
Bat<lb/>
continued from page 6<lb/>
likes of Maris, Williams and<lb/>
DiMaggio. Plenty of people were on<lb/>
hand to do that.<lb/>
"What I get a crank out of is all<lb/>
this 'on-pace' stuff Johnson said.<lb/>
"Like a guy hits three home runs in<lb/>
one game and he's on pace to hit<lb/>
500<lb/>
Walker, meanwhile, is one hit<lb/>
away from being at .400, is leading<lb/>
the NL with 25 home runs and is<lb/>
among the league leaders with 68<lb/>
RBIs.<lb/>
Hey, Larry. Which of the big<lb/>
numbers is the toughest?<lb/>
"I'd probably say winning the<lb/>
triple crown is the hardest of all he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
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BURGERS<lb/>
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Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
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Open 7 Days a Week<lb/>
Reservations Welcomed!<lb/>
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with ECU student ID<lb/>
Join Us<lb/>
Tuesday <lb/>
UVC JAZZ<lb/>
Wednesday 9<lb/>
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Thursday 10<lb/>
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Coloring Lessons<lb/>
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dance with<lb/>
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wine tasting<lb/>
?ui- ???;?? ??$.Wednesdays<lb/>
$1.75 imports<lb/>
Thursdays<lb/>
$1.00 domestics<lb/>
Fri &amp; Sot<lb/>
Beer tub specials<lb/>
A Sports Bar<lb/>
Intramural Program<lb/>
1-on-1 Basketball Deadline<lb/>
TODAY Before 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
in the SRC Main Office!<lb/>
Golf Singles Deadline<lb/>
July 15 by 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
in the SRC Main Office<lb/>
Frisbee Golf Doubles<lb/>
July 16-17 3:00-6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Frisbee golf Course<lb/>
For more information on any of our programs please<lb/>
contact Recreational Services at 328-6387.<lb/>
For incredible income opportunity, WZMB is accepting<lb/>
applications for the following positions:<lb/>
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Deadline July 18th For All Applications<lb/>
Those interested should come to the station in the basement of<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058715_0008"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
 .<lb/>
8 WMnudiy. July 9. 1997<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
lassifieds<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
ONE BEDROOM, ALL UTILI-<lb/>
TIES included. 12 block from<lb/>
campus on Holly St. $305.00 a<lb/>
month. Call 757-9387. Available<lb/>
now. Cats only.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANIfcD Hi<lb/>
NINO AUGUST 1. Eastbrook<lb/>
Apartments. $l90month; on ECU<lb/>
bus line. 2 miles from campus.<lb/>
Call Mickey at 758-9157.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE FEMALE<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED. House<lb/>
located behind Pitt Community<lb/>
College. $325.00 rent and half util-<lb/>
ities. Deposit negotiable if neces-<lb/>
sary. Call 355-2705 or leave mes-<lb/>
sage.<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
TO share 2 br 1 12 bath town-<lb/>
house. $225.00 12 utilities 12<lb/>
phone, on ECU bus route. Call<lb/>
Laura at 756-7128.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT. One block<lb/>
from campus. 302 Lewis St 3<lb/>
bdrm, 1 bath, garage, off-street<lb/>
parking, wd hookup, ac. No<lb/>
Petal $750mo. 919-504-2052.<lb/>
Leave message.<lb/>
ATTN: FRATERNITY S BED-<lb/>
ROOMS2 bath house. Private<lb/>
12 acre wooded tot, fenced. Also<lb/>
for sale or lease purchase. Ideal<lb/>
for frat house. 8757-9387<lb/>
Peony Gardens<lb/>
Free Cable<lb/>
Stove<lb/>
2 bedroom<lb/>
1 12 bath<lb/>
$375month<lb/>
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SEIZED CARS FROM $175.<lb/>
Porsches, Cadillacs, Chevys,<lb/>
BMW's, Corvettes. Also Jeeps,<lb/>
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218-9000 ext. A-3726 for current<lb/>
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BY OWNER: DOUBLEWIDE,<lb/>
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$58,900.00 Call anytime 752-5935<lb/>
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4 BR3BA unit. No security depos-<lb/>
it. $220mo14 utilities. Call Kris-<lb/>
ten 9 353-0988 or Melissa Jonas<lb/>
@ 321-7813.<lb/>
CYPRESS<lb/>
NEED A NEW PAD? Roommate<lb/>
wanted to share 2 bedroom, 2<lb/>
bath duplex, walking distance<lb/>
from campus. Lots of extras. Non-<lb/>
smoker requested. $250 month<lb/>
plus 12 bills. Call 758-2232.<lb/>
NON-SMOKING QUIET FE-<lb/>
MALE roommate needed to share<lb/>
2 bdrm, 1 12 bath apartment.<lb/>
Washer &amp; dryer. $175month and<lb/>
12 utilities, phone. Cr.ll 754-2419.<lb/>
GARDENS<lb/>
apartments on 10th<lb/>
street. Free basic cable, water and<lb/>
sewer also ?releasing for the fall<lb/>
$415.00. Call Wainright Property<lb/>
Management 758-6209.<lb/>
1 BEDROOM HOUE $275.00 a<lb/>
month. 2 bedroom duplex $350.00<lb/>
and $400.00 a month, all within<lb/>
walking distance of ECU.<lb/>
Pets OKI Call 830-9502.<lb/>
BIO 3 BEDROOM HOUSE within<lb/>
walking distance of campus. Just<lb/>
remodeled, big rooms, screened-<lb/>
in back porch and washerdryer in-<lb/>
cluded. Pets OK! Call Melissa Tit-<lb/>
ley at 830-9502.<lb/>
CANNON COURT AND CEDAR<lb/>
Court two bedroom 1 12 bath<lb/>
townhouses. On ECU bus route<lb/>
$400-$415. Call Wainright Proper-<lb/>
ty Management 756-6209 proteas-<lb/>
ing for fall also.<lb/>
MALE PERSONAL CARE AT-<lb/>
TENDANT wanted for a fresh-<lb/>
man who is a wheelchair user. Fall<lb/>
semester 1997. Call 703-435-1630<lb/>
for details.<lb/>
WANTED: PART-TIME WARE-<lb/>
HOUSE and delivery. License re-<lb/>
quired. Apply in person at Larry's<lb/>
Carpetland, 3010 E. 10th Street,<lb/>
Greenville, NC.<lb/>
ATTENTION! ASSISTANT<lb/>
WANTED to help with male fresh-<lb/>
man who has cerebral palsy for<lb/>
the fall semester 1997. Minimal<lb/>
assistance required. Hours and<lb/>
payment to.be determined. Call<lb/>
919-732-4748 for an interview.<lb/>
NEED A SUMMER JOB7 Play at<lb/>
day 8t make money at night! Work<lb/>
nights andor weekends and have<lb/>
your days free with The ECU Tele-<lb/>
fund. Make your own schedule!<lb/>
$5.00hr. plus bonuses! Stop by<lb/>
the Rawl Annex, Room 5 between<lb/>
2-6pm for more info.<lb/>
Other<lb/>
GOVT FORECLOSED HOMES<lb/>
FROM pennies on $1. Delinquent<lb/>
tax, Repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll<lb/>
Free 800-218-9000 Ext. H-3726 for<lb/>
current listings.<lb/>
"SELLING IS WHAT THEY Don't<lb/>
Teach You At Harvard Business<lb/>
School says Mark H. McCormic.<lb/>
Gain valuable sales experience<lb/>
through our internship. Call Jeff<lb/>
Ma honey at 355-7700.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CLIMBING WALL WORKSHOP:<lb/>
Join us on July 10 for the climbing<lb/>
wall workshop. Be sure to register<lb/>
for this workshop by July 8 at<lb/>
6:00pm in the Student Recreation<lb/>
Center main office. The cost is $5<lb/>
for members.<lb/>
LEARN TO ROLLERBLADE: If<lb/>
you are interested in learning the<lb/>
basics in rollerblading, then reg-<lb/>
ister for the workshop on July 16<lb/>
from 5:30-7:00pm in the Student<lb/>
Rec Center brickyard. Be sure to<lb/>
register by July 11 in the main of-<lb/>
fice of the SRC. The cost will be<lb/>
$10 for members and $20 for non-<lb/>
members.<lb/>
RESUME WRITING WORK-<lb/>
SHOP: CAREER services will<lb/>
present workshops on resume<lb/>
writing on Thursday, July 10 at<lb/>
2:00 pm and Wed July 16 at 3:00<lb/>
pm. Participants will ieam about<lb/>
format, content, and production of<lb/>
a professional resume. This work-<lb/>
shop is open to anyone interested,<lb/>
but is recommended for graduat-<lb/>
ing students.<lb/>
INTERVIEW SKILLS WORK-<lb/>
SHOP: INTERVIEWING with no<lb/>
success? Want to learn the latest<lb/>
techniques in employment inter-<lb/>
viewing? ECU students or gradu-<lb/>
ates are invited to attend an inter-<lb/>
view skills workshop on Mon. July<lb/>
14 at 3:00 or Wed. July 23 at 2:00<lb/>
pm. Sponsored by Career<lb/>
Services, the workshops will be<lb/>
held at Career Services, 701 E. 5th<lb/>
St. No pre-registration is<lb/>
required.<lb/>
CAREER SERVICES ORIENTA-<lb/>
TION: SENIORS and graduate<lb/>
students graduating in the<lb/>
Summer or December 1997 may<lb/>
register with Career Services for<lb/>
help in your job search! Come to<lb/>
our Orientation on Wed. July 9 at<lb/>
10:00 am or Thur. July 17 at 3:00<lb/>
pm. Learn how to ust the many<lb/>
services available to you such as<lb/>
interviews on campus, resume<lb/>
referral to employers, reference<lb/>
(credential) file, internet job<lb/>
searching, job listings and much<lb/>
more. A tour of the Career Center<lb/>
on the corner of 5th and Jarvis St.<lb/>
is also available.<lb/>
ONE-ON-ONE BASKETBALL<lb/>
ENTRY DEADLINE: The entry<lb/>
deadline for 1-on-1 basketball will<lb/>
be 5:00pm in the main office of the<lb/>
Student Recreation Center on July<lb/>
9.<lb/>
TAR RIVER CANOE: If you en-<lb/>
joy canoeing, then join us on July<lb/>
9 for a trip to Tar River. Be sure to<lb/>
register by July 3 in the Student<lb/>
Recreation Center main office by<lb/>
6:00pm. The cost of me trip is $5<lb/>
for members.<lb/>
RACQUETBALT<lb/>
TRY DEADLINE: Anyone inter-<lb/>
ested in racquetball, the entry<lb/>
deadline is July 2 at 5:00pm in me<lb/>
main office of me Student Recrea-<lb/>
tion Center.<lb/>
BACKPACKING BASICS: Join<lb/>
us to learn me basics of backpack-<lb/>
ing on July 16. Be sure to register<lb/>
by July 14 in the Student Recrea-<lb/>
tion Center main office. The cost<lb/>
is free for members.<lb/>
sports<lb/>
writers<lb/>
wanted<lb/>
Appiy at our<lb/>
office on the sec-<lb/>
ond floor of the<lb/>
Student Pub<lb/>
Building<lb/>
GOLF SINGLES ENTRY DEAD-<lb/>
LINE: For anyone interested in<lb/>
playing golf intramurals, the dead-<lb/>
line is July 15 at 5:00pm in the<lb/>
Student Recreation Center main<lb/>
office.<lb/>
Let us do the Work Advertise wilh US!<lb/>
.Jffi eastcarolinian<lb/>
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? ??.??? E? MIH1MRT7?<lb/>
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SUMMER DEADLINE<lb/>
2 pm Monday for next Wednesday's edition<lb/>
Rates<lb/>
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Students $2<lb/>
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Each word over 25, add 5<lb/>
For bold, add $1<lb/>
For ALL CAPS, add$1<lb/>
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FOR USED MBU'S SHBTS. SHOES. PANTS. JCAMS. ETC.<lb/>
TOMMY HILFIGER, NAUTICA, POLO, LEVI, GAP, ETC<lb/>
We also buy: GOLD &amp; SILVER ? Jewelry Coins ? Abo Broken Gold Pieces<lb/>
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All Istters to the Editor must be typed &amp; 250 words or<lb/>
less. Must include your name, maor,year, and phone .<lb/>
Send to:<lb/>
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Think!<lb/>
comics<lb/>
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