<?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="00058722_0001"/>
<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 2. 1997<lb/>
ie<lb/>
caro mian<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
State Legislature approves budget<lb/>
Two-year plan includes<lb/>
3 percent tuition increase<lb/>
Jacqueline D. kki.i i m<lb/>
NEWS RDITOH<lb/>
A two year state budget plan has been approved bv the<lb/>
North Carolina House of Representives and the Senate.<lb/>
This budget includes a three percent tuition increase for<lb/>
in-state students at all UNC system schools.<lb/>
"They decided to go up three percent on the tuition.<lb/>
That amounts to SI3 per semester and S'6 per year. They<lb/>
elected at this time not to go up on out-of-state tuition<lb/>
University Ca.shier Michael Balko said.<lb/>
Two UNC schools are the exception to the choice not to<lb/>
increase out-of-state tuition. Those schools were N.C.<lb/>
State and U( Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Kmmctt Floyd is the Assistant to the Chancellor for<lb/>
(Constituent Relations and works to represent ECU's inter-<lb/>
ests in the State Assembly. According to him, the two year<lb/>
budget also includes a plan to increase tuition for the next<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
"Next ear. there will be a two percent increase for all<lb/>
students, in-state and out-of-state said Floyd.<lb/>
This vear's tuition increase will be retroactive to the<lb/>
current semester. Students will be billed for the difference.<lb/>
Faculty are getting a four percent increase in their pay.<lb/>
along with all other state employees. This pay increase will<lb/>
either be retroactive to July 1st at the four percent rate or<lb/>
will begin September 1 at a five percent rate, according to<lb/>
Balko.<lb/>
"That's still not in stone, but what we are hearing is that<lb/>
it will be retroactive to July 1st Balko said.<lb/>
The General Assemblv reevaluates the tuition even'<lb/>
year, along with many other budget<lb/>
considerations, and decide whether or<lb/>
not to increase tuition, based partially<lb/>
on recommendations.<lb/>
"I'm sure they get recommendations<lb/>
from the Fiscal Research Staff Floyd<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Fiscal Research Staff, according<lb/>
to Floyd, investigate financial matters<lb/>
in whatever area the General<lb/>
Assembly requests, collects data, and<lb/>
makes their recommendations<lb/>
accordingly.<lb/>
The General Assembly reconsiders the tuition every<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"The Legislature looks at it every year. Historically, it<lb/>
increases about three to five percent each year. But, then<lb/>
again, we're still in the bottom third of the nation in the<lb/>
cost of education Balko said.<lb/>
Dr. Emmett Floyd<lb/>
In addition to the tuition and salary increases, the<lb/>
.Assembly also voted for several allocations to fund new and<lb/>
ongoing projects at ECU. Over S9 million was allocated for<lb/>
construction projects;an additional S7 million will be used<lb/>
to complete the stadium, $2 million for the planning of the<lb/>
science and technology building, and $500,000 to investi-<lb/>
gate the possibility of a third floor addition to the Rivers<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Day-to-day operating expenses were given a budget of<lb/>
$85,275,602 for the main campus and $41,088,406 for the<lb/>
medical school campus.<lb/>
This operating budget is meant for things such as utili-<lb/>
ties and salaries for police, grounds crew and housekeeping<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
An additional $5 million was designated for repairs and<lb/>
renovations. This is a separate fund from the money desig-<lb/>
nated for specific construction projects.<lb/>
The General Assembly will meet again in May in what<lb/>
is known as the short session to reconsider the budget.<lb/>
Students<lb/>
eligible for<lb/>
tax credit<lb/>
Dr. Joseph M<lb/>
Hagan<lb/>
Amwim AUSTIN<lb/>
vssisrwt M-tts union<lb/>
In early August. President Bill Clinton and<lb/>
Republicans in Congress adopted a spending<lb/>
and tax plan that may make tax returns hun-<lb/>
dreds of dollars larger.<lb/>
The spending and<lb/>
tax plan includes sever-<lb/>
al features that will<lb/>
benefit L'NC students<lb/>
and their families. The<lb/>
benefits include tdx<lb/>
credits for tuition and<lb/>
deductions on student<lb/>
loans.<lb/>
"It will reduce the<lb/>
cost of education, in<lb/>
that by incurring these<lb/>
expenses, there will be<lb/>
a reduction in the income<lb/>
tax law, which will reduce the overall cost,<lb/>
which should make getting an education<lb/>
more affordable said Dr. Joseph M. Hagan,<lb/>
assistant professor in the School of<lb/>
Accounting.<lb/>
The law has many features and is ver<lb/>
broad.<lb/>
"Some of the major features of it are a<lb/>
reduction of tax on the capital gains, an edu-<lb/>
cational credit, a tuition credit and several<lb/>
other major features said Hagan.<lb/>
In 1996-97 in-state tuition for undergrad-<lb/>
uates was $1,386. If tuition were to stay the<lb/>
same, parents of a freshman or sophomore<lb/>
who make less than $80,000 per year would<lb/>
receive a tax credit of up to $1,193. Parents of<lb/>
an in-state junior or senior could take home a<lb/>
possible $278.<lb/>
Tuition paid by out-of-state students in<lb/>
1996-97 was $9,918. Parents, if they do not<lb/>
earn more than $80,000. with a freshman or<lb/>
sophomore could take a credit of $1500.<lb/>
Parents of a junior or se.iior could take $1000.<lb/>
The tuition credit is actually broken up<lb/>
into two separate categories.<lb/>
"There are two different credits. There is<lb/>
the Hope Scholarship Credit which is up to<lb/>
$1500 and and is applicable to tuition costs in<lb/>
the first two years. The Lifetime Learning<lb/>
Credit is for anyone taking classes at an eligi-<lb/>
ble institution and is up to $1000 said<lb/>
Hagan.<lb/>
The Hope Credit is for a person who is<lb/>
claiming a student as a dependent, so it is<lb/>
primarily for the parents.<lb/>
"The things that qualify for ihe credit you<lb/>
have to spend are tuition and tint on-related<lb/>
expenses said Hagan.<lb/>
Tuition-related expenses do not include<lb/>
any type of sports games or hobbies. Student<lb/>
fees, student activity fees, books, room and<lb/>
lxard, athletic fees and construction expens-<lb/>
es would not be included as tuition-related<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
The tuition credit is higher for those stu-<lb/>
dents who are classified as a freshman or<lb/>
sophomore and lower for upperclassmen.<lb/>
"The reason is, if you included juniors and<lb/>
seniors, that would lower revenue projection<lb/>
SEE TAX PAGE 3<lb/>
PERKING UP<lb/>
Marsha Howell.jright) and Katy Meehan take advantage of their last few hours of relaxtion before<lb/>
their long Labor Day weekend is over Monday at the Percolator<lb/>
PHOTO BY AMANDA PROCTOR<lb/>
Parking decal theft a concern<lb/>
I) AWN K R N T K l N<lb/>
STAFF VV R I f 1 K<lb/>
There have been several reports of parking decal andor hang tag thefts<lb/>
on campus this year. Lieutenant Stan Kittrell of the ECU Mice<lb/>
Department stated there had been at least three of these incidents<lb/>
reported during his shift.<lb/>
No particular parking lot on campus is subject to the recent thefts.<lb/>
One incident was reported at Mingesjust last week<lb/>
"This is a crime of opportunity Kittrell said.<lb/>
Kittrell also commented that the nature of these crimes makes it dif-<lb/>
ficult for arrests to be made.<lb/>
Two types of thefts have occurred. The first type of theft is of the<lb/>
parking decal itself or larceny of a vehicle. The sticker is often scraped<lb/>
off the car bumper or rear windshield. Often times, the sticker will not<lb/>
Hang Tag Theft Prevention Tips:<lb/>
1) Be sure that your car is secure. Lock all doors and keep<lb/>
convertible tops up.<lb/>
2) Park in a well-lit area if possible.<lb/>
3) Keep all valuables in the trunk or in your houseresidence<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
4) If possible, get an adhesive hang tag which can be applied<lb/>
directly to the back of the rear view mirror of your car.<lb/>
Senior Will Stutts, a musical theatre major, and Officer Virgil Leggett<lb/>
discuss the theft of parking decals.<lb/>
PHOTO BY AMANDA PROCTOR<lb/>
come off in one piece, making it difficult for rhe thief to use it for his<lb/>
own purposes. Torn stickers are also more identifiable to police who can<lb/>
check to see if the sticker is in fact stolen or not.<lb/>
A more serious crime is the theft of a parking hang tag. Hang tags<lb/>
must be displayed in plain view by the rear-view mirror. Theft of hang<lb/>
tags is considered breaking and entering of a vehicle, a felony crime<lb/>
All reported incidents are kepr on file at both the police department<lb/>
as well as Parking and Traffic.<lb/>
"This is not a major crisis Kittrell said.<lb/>
Had there been three or four incidents per week, Kittrell said it<lb/>
would be called a "crime wave Major problems with theft on campus<lb/>
involve stolen bicycles and car stereos.<lb/>
There have been no arrests made. Unfortunately, it is difficult for<lb/>
police to catch people committing these crimes.<lb/>
"The best that we can do is get fingerprints, if possible, from the<lb/>
interior of the car Kittrell said.<lb/>
The penalty for stealing a parking sticker involves being charged<lb/>
with a misdemeanor larceny with a maximum sentence of two years<lb/>
imprisonment. If the person charged is a student, he will have to appear<lb/>
before the Dean of Students, pay a fine to the University, and will like-<lb/>
SEE PARKING PAGE 3<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
y TUESDAY<lb/>
4 , Pvr<lb/>
. High 84<lb/>
i Ml 73<lb/>
k.A WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Mostly Cloudy<lb/>
 High 80<lb/>
Low 11<lb/>
w<lb/>
In 1974, the four-<lb/>
j year School of<lb/>
Medicine wa&amp;<lb/>
established at ECU.<lb/>
opinion3<lb/>
Students shouldn't have<lb/>
i pay more just because<lb/>
in� Legislature was<lb/>
tin ring late.<lb/>
lifestyle6<lb/>
Are the media partially<lb/>
to blame for Princess<lb/>
Diana's death?<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Physicians<lb/>
open office<lb/>
Cindy Dickson. Amy Smith, and Hope<lb/>
McLawhorn at the new ECU Physicians on<lb/>
Firetower Road<lb/>
PHOTO BY AMANDA PROCTOR<lb/>
J�:OlELINE D. KELLl'M<lb/>
NEWS F.DITOH<lb/>
ECU Physicians is preparing to open a new<lb/>
medical office on Firetower Road.<lb/>
According to several of those involved, it<lb/>
will hopefully provide medical care at a more<lb/>
convenient location for Greenville residents.<lb/>
"Rather than patients having to find their<lb/>
way through the medical center, we're going<lb/>
closer to where the patients are said Dr.<lb/>
Derek Prentice, the medical director of ECU<lb/>
Physicians. "The emphasis is on high-quality-<lb/>
patient care and high-quality patient ser-<lb/>
vice<lb/>
Dr. Michael Coyle is the lead physician at<lb/>
the new medical office and will oversee the<lb/>
other doctors and the medical affairs of the<lb/>
office.<lb/>
"We felt as a school of medicine that there<lb/>
was a need for a particular type of primary<lb/>
care to be offered in the community Coyle<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Coyle has been involved since the begin-<lb/>
ning of the project, which has been 18<lb/>
months in the planning.<lb/>
According to Elaine Harrison, administra-<lb/>
tor of the office, they are already receiving<lb/>
indications that the new office will be a wel-<lb/>
come addition to the area.<lb/>
"We're already getting patient calls, so we<lb/>
know there is a need for this in the commu-<lb/>
nity Hatterson said.<lb/>
There will be four full time physicians<lb/>
working at the clinic, and all of them are<lb/>
members of ECU Physicians.<lb/>
"ECL Physicians is the multi-specialty<lb/>
practice of faculty physicians of the School of<lb/>
Medicine Prentice said.<lb/>
The four full-time staffers represent the<lb/>
areas of internal medicine, pediatrics and<lb/>
family medicine.<lb/>
"All of the physicians out here are excel-<lb/>
lent. I feel extremely proud to be working<lb/>
with this group of people Hatterson said.<lb/>
The medical office will also be able to<lb/>
draw on the expertise of many others.<lb/>
"We do have immediate access to many of<lb/>
the sub-specialties at the medical school<lb/>
Coyle said.<lb/>
Laboratory work and x-rays will be done<lb/>
at Pitt County Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
SEE MED. PAGE 3<lb/>
sports.<lb/>
Pirate football kidks oft<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
the east Carolinian<lb/>
STUDENT PUBLICATION BlOG.<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC 27858<lb/>
across from Joyner library<lb/>
phone<lb/>
328-6366 newsroom<lb/>
328-2000 advertising<lb/>
328-6558 fax<lb/>
e-mail<lb/>
uutececuvm cis.ecu edu<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0002"/><lb/>
2 Tuesday. September 2. 1S97<lb/>
news<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
University responds to stadium troubles<lb/>
AMANDA ATSTIN<lb/>
SSISTNT NFWS EDITOR<lb/>
ECU officials are looking at a new deadline for<lb/>
the completion of the Dowdy-Rckl�n Stadium<lb/>
expansion � over a month after the original dead-<lb/>
line.<lb/>
The stadium, which was supposed to be com-<lb/>
pleted by ECU's Sept. 13 game against Wake<lb/>
Forest, will not be complete because of faulty<lb/>
beams and an array of problems.<lb/>
A new completion date has been set by con-<lb/>
struction company Davidson Jones Beers. The<lb/>
company is guaranteeing the upper deck will be<lb/>
completed by Oct. 16.<lb/>
Though Oct. 16 is the official deadline,<lb/>
Davisdson Jones Beers is determined to have the<lb/>
stadium ready by the Oct. 11 game against<lb/>
Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
The expansion of Dowdy-Flcklen Stadium has<lb/>
been a long and rocky parh, but a number of peo-<lb/>
ple have worked together to bring the project to<lb/>
completion.<lb/>
"The way it worked is we have a number of<lb/>
different people working with the project. The<lb/>
architect is one person who is responsible for<lb/>
supervising; another is the construction company<lb/>
� their responsibilities are not only the design of<lb/>
the project, but they are monitoring the project as<lb/>
it's built to make sure it is built to specifications<lb/>
said Dr. Richard Eakin. chancellor of ECU.<lb/>
When concerns about the deck were<lb/>
expressed by Wallace Bagley, a consultant who<lb/>
walked off the project, the university took imme-<lb/>
diate action.<lb/>
"As this went along and concerns were<lb/>
expressed, we were certainly aware of them and<lb/>
we were expressing our own concerns. All of us<lb/>
were trying to work together with the contractor,<lb/>
the architect, the university and construction<lb/>
workers. All of us on a continuing basis worked<lb/>
together to get to resolve any difficulties said<lb/>
Eakin.<lb/>
There was a factor of concern expressed about<lb/>
the safety of the upper deck if contractors con-<lb/>
tinued to rush for a deadline.<lb/>
"We decided that the schedule was not that<lb/>
important. We would rather have them stop, not<lb/>
proceed further, get everything in order and then<lb/>
go on with the project said Eakin.<lb/>
Representatives from the Office of State<lb/>
Construction have frequented the construction in<lb/>
past weeks to keep up with progress.<lb/>
"I was generally pleased; there was a good deal<lb/>
of progress since the last time I was on the site<lb/>
said Bert Neily, an engineer from the Office of<lb/>
State Construction who has been monitoring the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
.Although safety has been a factor related to<lb/>
the completion of stadium, it is nqt the greatest<lb/>
factor with which the university must deal. The<lb/>
university's greatest concern is how long the sta-<lb/>
dium will withstand the test of time.<lb/>
"I would say that the main concerns at this<lb/>
point, as far as I understand, are not safety; They<lb/>
are concerns that have to do with the fact that<lb/>
this project needs to last 100 years or so said<lb/>
Eakin.<lb/>
Everyone involved with the production is con-<lb/>
fident the upper deck will be a wonderful addi-<lb/>
tion to Dowdy-Rcklen Stadium as well as a reli-<lb/>
able and safe structure. The structure should be<lb/>
around for years and years to come.<lb/>
DO YOU HAVE<lb/>
AN OPINION?<lb/>
All LETTERS TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
must be typed, 250 words or<lb/>
less, and must include your<lb/>
name, major, year, and phone <lb/>
h:<lb/>
Students voice opinions on stadium delays<lb/>
Tamela Payne<lb/>
AMANDA BRIGOS<lb/>
STAFF WHITER<lb/>
Repairs on the new deck expansion<lb/>
on Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium are<lb/>
leaving students concerned and<lb/>
disappoint-<lb/>
ed. Due to<lb/>
these<lb/>
unseen<lb/>
delays, the<lb/>
s tad ium<lb/>
will not be<lb/>
ready for<lb/>
the Wake<lb/>
Forest or<lb/>
the South<lb/>
Carolin<lb/>
games.<lb/>
"This<lb/>
seems to be<lb/>
a waste of time. The university<lb/>
promised the students during orien-<lb/>
tation that the stadium would be<lb/>
finished for the Wake Forest game.<lb/>
Now, we have to cut down on the<lb/>
amount of f.ipih memhc we can<lb/>
take to the - me. Not � rift ;im i<lb/>
disappointed, so is my family said<lb/>
Tamela<lb/>
Payne, a<lb/>
freshman<lb/>
English edu-<lb/>
cation major.<lb/>
The major<lb/>
and most<lb/>
obvious<lb/>
delay was<lb/>
caused by<lb/>
the removal<lb/>
of one of the<lb/>
major sup-<lb/>
port beams.<lb/>
Raker beam<lb/>
16 had to be torn down after an<lb/>
ultrasound test showed major<lb/>
defects.<lb/>
seems<lb/>
waste<lb/>
Paul Ghesquiere<lb/>
The stadium<lb/>
expansion<lb/>
like a<lb/>
of<lb/>
Imoney now,<lb/>
Isince there<lb/>
�have been so<lb/>
�many mis-<lb/>
jtakes. If you<lb/>
(are going to do<lb/>
someching<lb/>
right, do it<lb/>
right the<lb/>
first time.<lb/>
You should try to foresee these kind<lb/>
of mistakes, and correct them<lb/>
before they happen said Amy<lb/>
Corman, a junior and a business and<lb/>
marketing major.<lb/>
Even with the problems with the<lb/>
raker beams, smaller problems<lb/>
arose. The other problems seemed<lb/>
to be more focused with the con-<lb/>
tractors. These problems ranged<lb/>
from concrete being poured on an<lb/>
afternoon with 99-degree weather,<lb/>
to debris falling from the site and<lb/>
injuring masonry workers. P:iul<lb/>
dliesquicc<lb/>
se 'ior ni.ii nn<lb/>
in finance and<lb/>
marketing<lb/>
works for the<lb/>
athletic depart<lb/>
ment and is not<lb/>
pleased with<lb/>
the problems<lb/>
Amy Corman<lb/>
Chris Washburn<lb/>
arising with the<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
"The sta-<lb/>
dium and its<lb/>
delays are<lb/>
the responsi-<lb/>
bility of the contractor. Due to the<lb/>
short-sightedness of the contractor,<lb/>
these delays look bad on the univer-<lb/>
sity and the athletic department<lb/>
said Ghesquiere.<lb/>
At the current time, the major<lb/>
concern is getting the stadium fin-<lb/>
ished and finished correctly. No<lb/>
one wants to take on the responsi- .<lb/>
bility of risking safety in order to get<lb/>
the stadium done quicker. Even<lb/>
though many of East Carolina's stu-<lb/>
dent are disappointed with the fact<lb/>
that the stadium is not done, they<lb/>
agree that they rather be safe than<lb/>
have an accident occur.<lb/>
Scarlett Smith, a junior decision<lb/>
science major, and Chris Washburn,<lb/>
a junior chemistry major, are just<lb/>
glad the project has been started<lb/>
and that the university is taking<lb/>
time to make sure the students are<lb/>
�safe.<lb/>
"It is a shame<lb/>
�the stadium is<lb/>
�not ready in<lb/>
Itime for the<lb/>
upcoming<lb/>
gamas, but the<lb/>
university<lb/>
should take as<lb/>
much time as<lb/>
needed to<lb/>
irutkc it safe<lb/>
said Smith.<lb/>
"At least the<lb/>
stadium<lb/>
expansion has been started.<lb/>
Hopefully, no one will get hit by a<lb/>
falling beam coming from the upper<lb/>
deck during the Wake Forest game.<lb/>
I am glad that the university is tak-<lb/>
ing safety measures on the new-<lb/>
expansion. When the university<lb/>
found out about the problems they<lb/>
should have put extra shifts onto<lb/>
the project in order to get the work<lb/>
done. I hope that there is no more<lb/>
delays, I would like to have the sta-<lb/>
dium finished in time for the<lb/>
Cincinnati game said Washburn.<lb/>
Students have been waiting for<lb/>
results since the beginning of the<lb/>
project that started last November.<lb/>
Other students also expressed<lb/>
George Bacon<lb/>
They deserve a<lb/>
Scarlett Smith<lb/>
mixed emo-<lb/>
tions about the<lb/>
expansion.<lb/>
"The universi-<lb/>
ty has done a<lb/>
lot of work on<lb/>
the stadium.<lb/>
You cannot<lb/>
fault them for<lb/>
doing their<lb/>
work. They<lb/>
are taking<lb/>
the time to<lb/>
be safe,<lb/>
hand; they are<lb/>
doing a good job said George<lb/>
Bacon, a freshman.<lb/>
"ECU should have planned bet-<lb/>
ter so these delays would not have<lb/>
happened.<lb/>
A lot of<lb/>
people are<lb/>
depending<lb/>
on going to<lb/>
these<lb/>
games<lb/>
said Renee<lb/>
Rose, a<lb/>
�sophomore<lb/>
biology<lb/>
major.<lb/>
Renee Rose<lb/>
50 Off<lb/>
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Lots of Good Stuff!<lb/>
Ule haue sundresses,<lb/>
shorts, tanks, some Fall<lb/>
Clothes too, and<lb/>
Jewelry, Jewelry,<lb/>
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YOU DEMAND POWER,<lb/>
SPEED, AND MOBILITY.<lb/>
North Carolinians mourn death<lb/>
of Britain's beioved princess<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) � People across<lb/>
North Carolina joined with others<lb/>
throughout the world to mourn<lb/>
Princess Diana, a woman most<lb/>
knew only through the media �<lb/>
the very media that some blame for<lb/>
her death.<lb/>
From the moment the shy, doe-<lb/>
eyed teenager stepped onto the<lb/>
world stage in 1980 as the fiancee<lb/>
of Prince Charles, the highs and<lb/>
lows of her life � from her marriage<lb/>
and the birth of her two sons to her<lb/>
messy divorce � were served up<lb/>
daily to a voracious worldwide audi-<lb/>
ence through books, magazines,<lb/>
newspapers and television.<lb/>
The relentless exposure, cou-<lb/>
pled with a natural grace that no<lb/>
camera lens could distort, bred a<lb/>
kind of familiarity that led so many<lb/>
to relate to Diana and be fascinated<lb/>
by her.<lb/>
"She was young, vivacious, ener-<lb/>
getic, and always such a presence in<lb/>
Europe and America said Orrie<lb/>
Crews. 28, a curator with the<lb/>
Natural Science Center of<lb/>
Greensboro. "Now the story has<lb/>
tragically and suddenly ended, for<lb/>
really no good reason any more than<lb/>
someone wanted to take a picture<lb/>
of her<lb/>
The Rev. Billy Graham spoke for<lb/>
many other North Carolinians on<lb/>
Sunday when he remembered<lb/>
Princess Diana as much more than<lb/>
a celcnritv.<lb/>
"Princess Diana set a wonderful<lb/>
example for all of us by her concern<lb/>
for the poor, the oppressed, the<lb/>
hurting and the sick Graham said<lb/>
in a release from his Montreat<lb/>
home. "She easily could have cho-<lb/>
sen to withdraw from public life,<lb/>
but she made this world a better<lb/>
place by her smile of encourage-<lb/>
ment and her support for dozens of<lb/>
worthy causes. Princess Diana was<lb/>
one of our first public figures (to<lb/>
tackle the worldwide danger of land<lb/>
mines or hold a man with AIDS or<lb/>
touch a leper, and no person was too<lb/>
lowly or too handicapped for her<lb/>
attention<lb/>
"This tragedy should remind us<lb/>
again of how fragile life is, and how<lb/>
we should be ready to enter eterni-<lb/>
ty and meet God at any moment<lb/>
Graham said.<lb/>
Salisbury native Elizabeth Dole,<lb/>
the head of the American ReH<lb/>
Cross and an acquaintance of<lb/>
Diana's, also praised the princess'<lb/>
humanitarian work around the<lb/>
globe.<lb/>
"She was just like a ray of sun-<lb/>
shine, with a wonderful sense of<lb/>
humor Mrs. Dole told the<lb/>
Salisbury Post. "It was just a real joy<lb/>
to know her.<lb/>
"She just had something. 1 think<lb/>
people want hope and she gave<lb/>
people hope. She made a lot of peo-<lb/>
ple respect her<lb/>
Like mourners elsewhere in the<lb/>
world, people here expressed the<lb/>
s.ime mi of emotions � deep sad-<lb/>
ness over the ioss of Diana J<lb/>
deep revulsion for the possible<lb/>
cause of her death.<lb/>
"I felt like she had such a hard<lb/>
role, being stalked by the press,<lb/>
who picked up every awful detail of<lb/>
her life and publicized it all over<lb/>
the world said Mary Holden of<lb/>
Black Mountain, who lived in<lb/>
France from 1981 to 1993. "I<lb/>
thought she to be so brave, so<lb/>
courageous<lb/>
Hendersonville resident Tony<lb/>
Slovacek said the motorcycle-riding<lb/>
paparazzi chasing Diana's car<lb/>
through the streets of Paris to get a<lb/>
picture of her are not the only ones<lb/>
to blame for her death in a car<lb/>
crash.<lb/>
"By the same token, the public<lb/>
that buys those rags are just as<lb/>
responsible he said. "If the British<lb/>
people put all the blame on those<lb/>
freelance photographers, I think<lb/>
that's wrong because they share the<lb/>
blame for reading that garbage<lb/>
Rena Platt of Cary, national<lb/>
president of the U.S. chapter of the<lb/>
Daughters of the British Empire,<lb/>
wrote a sympathy letter Sunday to<lb/>
the royal family on behalf of her<lb/>
group, a charitable organization<lb/>
made up of British women.<lb/>
"I suppose we feel very close to<lb/>
them she said of the royals. "It<lb/>
feels like family. It's part of our her-<lb/>
itage<lb/>
The Liverpool native is now<lb/>
calling on the 5,088 members of her<lb/>
group to join in two minutes ot<lb/>
silent praer at nonrrnext Sunda<lb/>
A me norul is also be i j,<lb/>
planned by the British Wives Club<lb/>
in Jacksonville.<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0003"/><lb/>
?�<lb/>
Tuesday, September 2, 1997<lb/>
news<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Parking<lb/>
Continued trom page<lb/>
;itcarolinian<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Sports Writers<lb/>
Appty at our office<lb/>
on the second floor<lb/>
of the Student Pub<lb/>
Building<lb/>
parking privileges for an unspeci-<lb/>
fied length of time.<lb/>
"The theft of a hang tag is a<lb/>
more serious crime Kittrell said.<lb/>
Hang tag thefts occur more<lb/>
often on campus than decal thefts.<lb/>
If there is an arrest made, it<lb/>
involves a more lengthy process.<lb/>
Persons caught will be arrested and<lb/>
jailed for the felony of breaking and<lb/>
entering, have to post bond, and<lb/>
appear in court. Students charged<lb/>
will have to meet with the Dean.<lb/>
Typical sentencing for this crime is<lb/>
probation and a fine. However, a<lb/>
judge could hand down sentencing<lb/>
of an excess of two years imprison-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
WfVt GOT YOUR FAVOWTF<lb/>
DC COMICS ANUMORf'<lb/>
.NOSTALGIA NEWSTANO<lb/>
The Comic Book Store<lb/>
919 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
(919)758-6909<lb/>
�TM00teM��1tM<lb/>
I:<lb/>
Two Dozen<lb/>
Glazed<lb/>
Krispy Kremc Doughnuts Co.<lb/>
open 24 hours<lb/>
300 E roth'Strep'<lb/>
(including tax)<lb/>
offer good 827-9397<lb/>
Local government officials say building rules costing<lb/>
taxpayers money<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - When Cumberland County school officials fired a gener-<lb/>
al contractor building an elementary school in 1994, they knew they were<lb/>
opening a Pandora's box of potential lawsuits.<lb/>
Within weeks, the school system was sued by the plumbing contractor,<lb/>
the electrical contractor and trie heating and air conditioning contractor.<lb/>
Tim Kinlaw, who oversees the school system building, doesn't blame the<lb/>
contractors. He knows the delays - created both by the general contractor<lb/>
and the subsequent firing - cost the smaller contractors.<lb/>
He places the blame squarely on North Carolina's building rules.<lb/>
Since the 1920s, North Carolina has required state agencies and local<lb/>
governments to negotiate with separate general contractors, plumbers, elec-<lb/>
tricians and air conditioning contractors when thev embark on a large build-<lb/>
ingprqjett.<lb/>
The multi-prime contracting rules � designed to save money � are<lb/>
actually increasing the cost of public buildings and leading to construction<lb/>
delays, critics say.<lb/>
Faircloth stalls private mortgage insurance bill<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - Only eight companies make up the nation's $500 billion<lb/>
mortgage insurance market, and four of them are in North Carolina.<lb/>
No wonder that Sen. Lauch Faircloth, R-N.C, who sits on the Senate<lb/>
Banking Committee, has made sure that a bill clamping down on private<lb/>
mortgage insurance doesn't advance.<lb/>
Nationally, about five million borrowers are required to pay for private<lb/>
mortgage insurance, usually because they put less than 20 percent down<lb/>
when they bought their houses. The cost of the coverage varies greatly,<lb/>
depending on the location and the price of the home, but most borrowers<lb/>
pay between $200 and $800 a year.<lb/>
The House has overwhelmingly approved a bill requiring automatic can-<lb/>
cellation of the insurance when mortgage-holders hit a prescribed equity<lb/>
level. But four months later, the bill hasn't even reached the Senate floor.<lb/>
The eight companies that write such insurance have thrived under the<lb/>
current rules. They earned $1 billion last year, with GE Mortgage of Raleigh<lb/>
- a unit of General Electric Co. � alone clearing $250 million.<lb/>
Tax<lb/>
 830-1525<lb/>
Continued irom page 1<lb/>
to the point they would not have<lb/>
been able to balance the state bud-<lb/>
get. That i the moti' .ition wh you<lb/>
need to put j limit snniev here said<lb/>
Hagan, adding that, "The idea is to<lb/>
help families in those first two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Starting in 1998 students who<lb/>
have incurred student loans will<lb/>
have the opportunity to deduct<lb/>
interest up to $1000. This change<lb/>
will save some graduates around<lb/>
5200 a year.<lb/>
"Those students vW are now<lb/>
incurring student loins, when they<lb/>
net out of school and they do start<lb/>
paying that interest, the interest will<lb/>
be deductible. In the past it was not<lb/>
deductible said Hagan.<lb/>
Man saves child, washed away in boating mishap<lb/>
PORT MAHON, Del. (AP) � A man boating on Delaware Bay was missing<lb/>
today after diving into the water to save one of three young passengers who<lb/>
had fallen overboard.<lb/>
Jcrald Kcndricks, 43, of Wilmington, Del jumped from the 19-foot boat<lb/>
late Sunday to save the 10-year-old girl, VS. Coast Guard petty officer David<lb/>
St. Pierre said. He was able to help her back on board.<lb/>
But the two other children - the girl's 10-year-old twin sister and her 15-<lb/>
year-old brother - then lost sight of Kcndricks. a family friend.<lb/>
Adrift a mile from land and unsure how to operate the boat, one of the chil-<lb/>
dren used a cellular phone to dial 911.<lb/>
St. Pierre said the children could not describe where they were, so the<lb/>
Coast Guard and telephone company tracked down Kcndricks' phone number<lb/>
in Wilmington.<lb/>
His mother gave rescuers an idea of where to look, but another boater had<lb/>
already towed the drifting boat back to shore.<lb/>
Kcndricks was not wearing a life jacket and wore a black shirt, making the<lb/>
rescue attempt more difficult, St. Pierre said.<lb/>
Aging baby boomers driving increase in RV sales<lb/>
MANASSAS, Va. (AP) - At 47, a hardworking family man like Lon Farris could<lb/>
be forgiven if he gave in to an urge to buy something sleek, fast and impracti-<lb/>
cal. A two-seater, perhaps.<lb/>
Instead, Farris bought an RV with bunk beds.<lb/>
He is among the growing number of baby boomers buying recreational<lb/>
vehicles, those rolling living rooms usually associated with their parents' gen-<lb/>
eration.<lb/>
With two young children and a busy schedule as a judge, Farris is a far cry<lb/>
from a fogy. But he is not as keen as he once was to pitch a tent in the woods<lb/>
far from plumbing and groceries.<lb/>
Among the estimated 31 million people traveling by road this Labor Day<lb/>
weekend, chances are that more baby boomers arc traveling by RV than ever.<lb/>
Retirees are still the mainstay of the RV market. But industry figures from<lb/>
last year show that 9 million RV owners, nearly 40 percent of the total, were<lb/>
between 35 and 54. And the percentage of younger owners is growing.<lb/>
The RV means no hassles with motels or airports and fewer headaches<lb/>
packing the gear required for kids, said Farris and his wife, Becky, 30.<lb/>
For families with small children<lb/>
there is now the opportunity to sec<lb/>
money aside in an IRA without<lb/>
being taxed.<lb/>
"For younger children, brothers<lb/>
and sisters at home you can start<lb/>
putting money aside in an educa-<lb/>
tional IR. Any income that is<lb/>
earned in trut IRA will not be rased<lb/>
and when you pull the money nti it<lb/>
will not l)c taxed said I Iu$in.<lb/>
The money in an educational<lb/>
IRA will not be taxed as long as it<lb/>
used solely for educational purposes.<lb/>
Included in the new federal bud-<lb/>
get is also the funding for more Ml<lb/>
Grants.<lb/>
These tax credits are not avail-<lb/>
able until next year. The Hope<lb/>
Scholarship Credit will take effect in<lb/>
January 1998, and the Lifetime<lb/>
I .earning Credit will go into effect in<lb/>
Juh WM. Hagan encourages anyone<lb/>
interested in these tux credits to<lb/>
seek advice from a tax professional.<lb/>
EL TORO<lb/>
Men's Hair Styling Shoppe<lb/>
Barber &amp; Style<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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MonM.t-<lb/>
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iMiia<lb/>
Say Pirates &amp;<lb/>
Get Hair Cut<lb/>
for $7 Every time.<lb/>
Regular $10<lb/>
$7.00<lb/>
AUCE CHAN<lb/>
Formerly of Far<lb/>
East Restaurant<lb/>
Washington, NC<lb/>
355-7168<lb/>
Dine In � Take Out<lb/>
Lunch Specials $2.95 Before 4 PM<lb/>
Steam Cooking No Extra Oil or Fat<lb/>
Open 7 Days a Week � Mon-Sat 11-10 � Sun 12-9<lb/>
Across from Carolina East Mall<lb/>
In Pier One Shopping Center,<lb/>
Hwy 11 South, Greenville<lb/>
�<lb/>
A unique Boutique<lb/>
Designer shoes, clothing accessories<lb/>
Nicole Miller � Kw Spade bags<lb/>
Kenneth Cole � Cole-Haan<lb/>
Cynthia Rowley � Charles Jourd�n<lb/>
joiin Hrdy Jewelry<lb/>
Super Sale 92-96<lb/>
Mon � Fri 10 -5:30 Final Markdown of the Season<lb/>
Sa. io 5 oo All Remaining Shoes $40$55<lb/>
511 F Red Banks Road gg $15$30<lb/>
Clothing $50$85<lb/>
Accessories $10$30<lb/>
Lynndale Shops II<lb/>
919 - 355 � 6910<lb/>
Med<lb/>
Continued from page I<lb/>
The Rretower medical office<lb/>
will be open extended hours in an<lb/>
attempt to better provide services<lb/>
to their patients. The hours will be<lb/>
8 a.m7 p.m. Monday through<lb/>
Friday, 9a.m lp.m. Saturday, and<lb/>
1-5 p.m. Sunday.<lb/>
"(Our goal is to) meet the<lb/>
patients' needs and exceed their<lb/>
expectations Prentice said.<lb/>
In addition to the primary care<lb/>
services offered, the medical office<lb/>
will also be offering endocrinology<lb/>
starting Oct. 1, and a division on<lb/>
allergy and immunology will open<lb/>
on Sept. 10.<lb/>
The office will have all of their<lb/>
medical records on the computer<lb/>
in an attempt to save on the costs<lb/>
of paper.<lb/>
"We are doing things to provide<lb/>
comprehensive care in a cost-effi-<lb/>
cient manner Coyle said.<lb/>
An open house will be held at<lb/>
the new office, 1204 Rretower<lb/>
Road, on Sunday from 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
HOT TUB<lb/>
RENTALS<lb/>
2 - 4 AND 6 PERSON<lb/>
SPAS AVAILABLE BY<lb/>
THE DAY, THE WEEK<lb/>
OR WEEKEND.<lb/>
All prices include<lb/>
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5 S 0 4 S (<lb/>
"rm<lb/>
� � �<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0004"/><lb/>
� r<lb/>
. ��- ��<lb/>
4 Twtdsy, Sspttmbtr 2. 1997<lb/>
opinion<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
(<lb/>
asti�arolinian<lb/>
AMY IROYSTKR UH<lb/>
Cei.f.stk Wilson Mimjmtiw<lb/>
Matt Hkgk immmnllumt Amanda Ross SpraMm<lb/>
jAC.gi'fii.iNE D. KRLLIM ttmUtm TRACY Ul'SAOH tamwiSpMiMtux<lb/>
AMANDA A1STIN AM RWMHilK DAVID .Sol THK.RI.ANO fctducw MiMf<lb/>
ANDY TlRNKR UMfbMW CAROI.K MKHI.K HitfCowtW<lb/>
JOHN DAVIS AOTUMLll�EM JOHN MVtFHV SaltHtuWHOf<lb/>
Hkather Bt'RGRS.s VKaUkot<lb/>
S�ii�B�t��ii��i��iiiC�i���lUI�o<lb/>
i�i���iimi�iiiRw�.n�&amp;itCjiiMn� iHiiii wmumtmmiummm.mmii�m'n�im<lb/>
i tot SmMk. IW49 f��<lb/>
oimew<lb/>
Just when you thought all of your bills and fees were paid, the N.C. State Assembly finally decid-<lb/>
ed to pass the budget (two months late) and what do you know, we have to pay $13 more per<lb/>
semester for tuition. �<lb/>
Let's just think for a minute about how much it will cost the school to send us another bill.<lb/>
At $.325 per envelope for 17,000 students it will cost the University $5,440 just to mail us the<lb/>
bill, not including the hours spent printing the bills and the time spent stuffing the envelopes.<lb/>
Is it really worth it?<lb/>
Of course the University probably doesn't use stamps the way you or I do for each envelope.<lb/>
More than likely they have those prepaid envelopes for educational institutions. Still somebody,<lb/>
somewhere paid for those bills to go through the post office and be sent to us.<lb/>
You may ask, "Why are they billing us again?" Well, we at TEC are also pondering that ques-<lb/>
tion. We think it is ridiculous. If they wanted us to pay more tuition then maybe they should<lb/>
have passed the budget in time. W the taxpayers of North Carolina, are paying these people<lb/>
to do a job and obviously they are not doing it. If so, we would probably have had the budget<lb/>
passed a long time ago. So now we, the students, have to pay more money after we have already<lb/>
spent all of our financial aid and wc are just realizing exactly how broke we are.<lb/>
Not that $26 is a big deal to the state legislators who p-t paid bin bucks to sperd too much<lb/>
time to decide on a budget. These legislators are used to dealing with large sums of money like<lb/>
the day-to-day operating expenses of running ECU's campus, $85,275,602, and the medical<lb/>
school, $41,088,406. A measly $26 dollars more a year doesn't sound like much to them and<lb/>
maybe it doesn't seem like much to some students but to the rest of us who are paying for col-<lb/>
lege through scholarships or on our own, Twenty-six dollars is money that we have to fork over,<lb/>
' money that we didn't budget to pay.<lb/>
 It's not that we weren't expecting an increase in our tuition, it is just the fact that it came two<lb/>
 months late and one month after our original tuition bill arrived. Most students have already<lb/>
S allotted their financial refunds to other things, and more than likely, others are on a tight bud-<lb/>
! get and $13 is worth a night downtown, not late tuition. What arc they going to do with this<lb/>
I money anyway?<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
�' Jeff<lb/>
BERGMAN<lb/>
Polluters make us live with their mistakes<lb/>
i<lb/>
My question to you is, "What<lb/>
are we doing?"<lb/>
Sewage is being released into<lb/>
the river, as was the<lb/>
ease with Kinston and now<lb/>
Raleigh<lb/>
What we are doing is allowing<lb/>
our rivers, oceans, land<lb/>
and air to be raped.<lb/>
The sun had not yet risen. Dawn had<lb/>
just begun and I was up. The time<lb/>
was unimportant.<lb/>
I arose from- my bed rather early.<lb/>
The night had been unusually restful.<lb/>
I was hit with a sudden realization: I<lb/>
was awake before the Percolator was<lb/>
open.<lb/>
1 decided to go for a walk. The<lb/>
morning is always a favorite of mine,<lb/>
everything seems new. A new day, a<lb/>
new start on life.<lb/>
I started my walk to the Tar River<lb/>
as the sun was just beginning to show<lb/>
her bright, radiant face, Cats, birds<lb/>
and other such local fauna played<lb/>
their life and death game all around.<lb/>
The morning always breathes new<lb/>
life into me. As I made my way to the<lb/>
Tar River, the dew on the grass found<lb/>
its way onto my sandal-laden feet,<lb/>
always a refreshing feeling.<lb/>
My destination achieved, I<lb/>
reached the Tar River. The mist was<lb/>
just beginning to rise. I had seen this<lb/>
happen numerous times and on many-<lb/>
different rivers. Trees along the oppo-<lb/>
site side of the river made the scene<lb/>
picturesque.<lb/>
Then I saw it. A sight that dis-<lb/>
gusted me. A sight that is happening<lb/>
more and more often. A tire was half<lb/>
in the river and haif on the bank.<lb/>
Trie "moment" had more to it<lb/>
than just that. A nice oil slick was<lb/>
making its way slowly down the river.<lb/>
My question to you is, "What are<lb/>
we doing?" Sewage is being released<lb/>
into the river, as was the case with<lb/>
Kinston and now Raleigh. Hog farms<lb/>
are overflowing at semi-regular inter-<lb/>
vals.<lb/>
What wc are doing is allowing our<lb/>
rivers, oceans, land and air to be<lb/>
raped. Eating fish from some rivers in<lb/>
this state has become a game of<lb/>
Russian roulette.<lb/>
I ask again, "What are we doing?"<lb/>
Does it make sense to you that rivers<lb/>
that have existed for centuries are<lb/>
unsafe to fish?<lb/>
I hope one day to look at future<lb/>
generations and watch them enjoy<lb/>
the wilderness, the water, everything<lb/>
this state has to offer. I do not want w<lb/>
be an old man and tell the children o<lb/>
tomorrow that I. we. you allowed tht<lb/>
corporate owned hog farms, chemica<lb/>
plants, sewage systems and the gen<lb/>
era! populace's casual dumping o<lb/>
chemicals to put our land into a cata<lb/>
ton'c -tate.<lb/>
With thi in mind, I propose a law<lb/>
a simple law. The law would be aimet<lb/>
at the polluters. Those who choose a<lb/>
make our rivers giant blobs of floatinj<lb/>
feces will not be punished with rela<lb/>
tively small tines that major corpora<lb/>
rions can appeal to be reduced or eas<lb/>
ily afford to pay. Nor will this law le<lb/>
these criminals get zero jail time.<lb/>
The law comes down to two choic<lb/>
es: serious jail time or forcing pol<lb/>
luters to drink and bathe in the river<lb/>
they pollute, both come with heav<lb/>
fines.<lb/>
Some might call this law cruel am<lb/>
unusual punishment. My theory i<lb/>
that the polluters force us to live witl<lb/>
their mistakes, therefore we shouli<lb/>
force them to live with their own.<lb/>
I ask you yet again, "What are w<lb/>
doing?" Are we doing something or di<lb/>
we sit idly by and allow this land to bi<lb/>
changed into an unrecognizable wast�<lb/>
dump?<lb/>
Shall we look back one day and sa<lb/>
we should have done something, any<lb/>
thing. The chance and time is "now<lb/>
The government should not be rui<lb/>
by swine and chemical plant lobby<lb/>
ists. Unless you iike to glow afte<lb/>
swimming.<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
William S.<lb/>
COC Hf AN<lb/>
Letter to the Edito<lb/>
Love should be part of Gen X's American Dream McLawhom will act in interest of students concerning parking<lb/>
America seems a country that<lb/>
either prides itself on its<lb/>
abuse of itself or is com-<lb/>
pletely asinine in its<lb/>
knowledge of itself<lb/>
Just where is the happy<lb/>
median, that once was<lb/>
"The American Dream"?<lb/>
Women are highly underrated. So too,<lb/>
the value of a meaningful relationship<lb/>
in our post Generation-X lives has<lb/>
been denigrated.<lb/>
For many, college is the time when<lb/>
we find our one and only love. My<lb/>
parents met each other on the mall in<lb/>
1961. And somehow, they've stood<lb/>
the test of time: three sons, two<lb/>
grand kids, two near divorces, 36 years<lb/>
together. Sometimes it's hard to fath-<lb/>
om.<lb/>
In a culture where the divorce rate<lb/>
hovers near SO percent and the holis-<lb/>
tic value of a lifelong commitment, is<lb/>
poured on our youth (that would be<lb/>
you and me) between reruns of Beavis<lb/>
andBaatrod, and MTV's SmgttdOut<lb/>
it's a wonder it's not higher.<lb/>
America seems a country chat<lb/>
either prides itself on its abuse of<lb/>
itself (see gangsta rap, Marilyn<lb/>
Manson) or is completely asinine in<lb/>
its knowledge of itself (see Bill<lb/>
Cosby, Michael Jackson, Hanson),<lb/>
just where is the happy median, that<lb/>
once was "The American Dream"?<lb/>
And don't think that just because<lb/>
you were born between 197- �<lb/>
1980 that somehow vou're exempt<lb/>
from this part of life. Just what is our<lb/>
American Dream in the year 1997?<lb/>
Generation X has attacked the<lb/>
workforce with more ambition and<lb/>
vigor than any previous generation.<lb/>
Unemployment is the lowest it's<lb/>
been in 34 years. Inflation literally<lb/>
decreased for five months�some-<lb/>
thing it hasn't done since mid-centu-<lb/>
ry. Rebellion is passe. Many of us<lb/>
have grown stone-cold indifferent<lb/>
about the political situation in this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
And somewhere amidst this sea of<lb/>
media-labeled post-generation-slack-<lb/>
ers there still exists a core of human<lb/>
desires and needs, chiefly among<lb/>
them love, friendship and a desire to<lb/>
be something, to be somebody, to be<lb/>
recognized as something other than<lb/>
one of the herd.<lb/>
Perhaps love is that refuge. More<lb/>
likely than not the American Dream<lb/>
still has its same basic principles<lb/>
(chiefly, love, marriage, kids, a<lb/>
home). It has just had a major face-<lb/>
lift and several Versace alterations.<lb/>
It has become interwoven around<lb/>
acerbicaliy sarcastic comedy and frus-<lb/>
traringly manic music. Pop culture<lb/>
hat always been the anti-hero that<lb/>
��ushes the envelope on America's<lb/>
accepted herd values.<lb/>
I suppose there's some truth in<lb/>
that.<lb/>
.At any rate, I don't want to belea-<lb/>
guer the point. When you begin to<lb/>
feel like you're gasping for your last<lb/>
breath of air amidst the comlexity<lb/>
that is 1997, perhaps the safest hand<lb/>
to grab hold of is the oldest four let-<lb/>
ter word around: love. You tell me.<lb/>
I am writing to express my concern<lb/>
about the terrible parking situation<lb/>
surrounding East Carolina University.<lb/>
I graduated from ECU in 1994, but<lb/>
my parking woes continue. It seems<lb/>
like every week another friend or<lb/>
acquaintance tells me of a citation<lb/>
they received or that they could not<lb/>
park around their home.<lb/>
Since ECU has recently reported<lb/>
the addition of new parking spaces,<lb/>
let me be the first to say that it's<lb/>
about time and long overdue. I have<lb/>
also learned that my old friend, Mr.<lb/>
Steve McLawhom, lias made parking<lb/>
one of his key issues in this year's city-<lb/>
council race for District 3.<lb/>
Has anyone stopped to wonder<lb/>
why the parking has gotten worse year<lb/>
after year? Why has Inez Fridley been<lb/>
unable or unwilling to alleviate this<lb/>
burden on the homeowners and stu-<lb/>
dents during her 12 years in office? It<lb/>
is my opinion that the millions of dol-<lb/>
lars in revenue deirved by the ECU<lb/>
administration and the Greenville eity<lb/>
govemment each year from fines and<lb/>
fees may be the culprit. As long as the<lb/>
city and university administration are<lb/>
making millions of dollars, there is no<lb/>
real incentive to improve the situa-<lb/>
tion. .As a matter of fact, destroying<lb/>
parking while continuing to sell too<lb/>
many stickers may actually increase<lb/>
revenues from fines. I especially worn<lb/>
about the fact that the administration<lb/>
has recently planted flower beds over<lb/>
parking spaces near the cashier's<lb/>
office.<lb/>
I believe that we need a city coun-<lb/>
cil representative in District 3 who<lb/>
does not receive a paycheck from the<lb/>
ECU adminsiration. That way we will<lb/>
not have to worry about any possible<lb/>
conflicts of interest. I believe that<lb/>
Steve McLawhom w ill act in the best<lb/>
intc-est of the homeowners and stu-<lb/>
dents in his district on the issue ol<lb/>
parking and I hope that your readers<lb/>
will support his candidacy-<lb/>
Jason Williams<lb/>
ECU graduate<lb/>
" Last words are for fools<lb/>
who haven't said enough.<lb/>
Kari Marks, philosopher, 1883<lb/>
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6 Tinsday. September 2, 1997<lb/>
comics<lb/>
The Eait Carolinian<lb/>
Wackbd-Otjt Sam<lb/>
immmmmsmmmm<lb/>
by Wally Lamb<lb/>
STMaJW, STARBftw: PWST<lb/>
STAR! XI TMIWT.t WISH<lb/>
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Got To ee atimaacs i r w tho�g�T ,<lb/>
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JjeT AW�-f WTHTME X<lb/>
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01997 Tribune Media Semcee, Inc.<lb/>
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ACROSS<lb/>
1 Cleanse<lb/>
5 Eat and eat and<lb/>
eat<lb/>
10 Furry feet<lb/>
14 Dilettantish<lb/>
15 Chinese, e.g.<lb/>
18 The Beehive<lb/>
State<lb/>
17 Slipped<lb/>
18 Inclined ways<lb/>
19 Fiddling despot<lb/>
20 Soft food<lb/>
22 Story ol old<lb/>
24 English queen<lb/>
25 Swiss river<lb/>
26 "Wuthering<lb/>
Heights" author<lb/>
29 Made headway<lb/>
33 Attic<lb/>
34 Scoundrel<lb/>
36 Brass instru-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
37 Ump's cry<lb/>
38 Loudness: abbr.<lb/>
39 Nonsense<lb/>
40 Arch<lb/>
42 Poem division<lb/>
44 �quanon<lb/>
45 In one's mind<lb/>
47 Artificial birds<lb/>
49 Yale students<lb/>
50 Circular motion<lb/>
51 Simon �<lb/>
54 Collections of<lb/>
weapons<lb/>
58 Golf club<lb/>
59 Flaring stars<lb/>
61 Mr. Kazan<lb/>
62 1492 vessel<lb/>
63 Social group<lb/>
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65 Ship part<lb/>
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DOWN<lb/>
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3 Commotion<lb/>
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23 Time <lb/>
25 Grown-up<lb/>
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27 A cosmetic<lb/>
28 Many times<lb/>
29 The � and the<lb/>
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30 Strange thing<lb/>
31 Black wood<lb/>
32 Sticky fruits<lb/>
35 Ellipses<lb/>
41 Never-ending<lb/>
42 Patrons<lb/>
43 Work by Homer<lb/>
44 Landscape<lb/>
46 Bar drink<lb/>
48 Before,<lb/>
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50 Seizes<lb/>
51 Part of a chain<lb/>
52 Buffalo's<lb/>
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53 Departed<lb/>
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8 T�m4tr.3amitar2, ��?<lb/>
lifestyle<lb/>
The East CarcJinian<lb/>
Waiters Reading Series offers diversity<lb/>
ANDY TUtlNE<lb/>
LIFESTYLE EDITOR<lb/>
T3ie Writer's Reading Sonet has been<lb/>
iswaiuabte to Greenville arid ia sur-<lb/>
rounding men. It has brought in count-<lb/>
less writers who otherwise may have<lb/>
never came tJaa close to eastern North<lb/>
Carotin.<lb/>
Once again, the series boasts an<lb/>
impressive list of writer's lined up for<lb/>
the faJi semester. Writers Ranciseo<lb/>
Goldman (S�pt, IS), Ellen Bryant<lb/>
Voigt (Oct. 1) and AHce Fulton and<lb/>
Kathleen Hahne (Nov. 3 will mate<lb/>
their way to the Emerald City before<lb/>
semester's end.<lb/>
On the days they are stated to visit<lb/>
Greenville, OoJAnan and Vaigt will be<lb/>
at the GteeAvffie Museum of Art at 3<lb/>
p.m. and at WiBas Building Auditorium<lb/>
at -7 pm for a reading followed by a<lb/>
boatoigning and reception. Hilton and<lb/>
Hajme witt be in MendenhaH Student<lb/>
Center, room 244, at 3 p.m. and at the<lb/>
WiBis Building Auditorium at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The Writer's Reading Series, was<lb/>
created in 1995 to bring MghHtaiatay<lb/>
writers of various backgrounds to<lb/>
Eastern Notth Carolina m order to<lb/>
give local residents a closer lodk at<lb/>
contemporary literature. A simitar pro-<lb/>
gram existed before that under a dif-<lb/>
ferent name.<lb/>
Over the years, the programs have<lb/>
brought a considerable number of<lb/>
noted writers a� the ECU campus.<lb/>
Past guests include Rita Dove, A.R.<lb/>
Ammons, Philip Gerard, Margaret<lb/>
Randall, Jay Wright, Kate Daniels,<lb/>
Randall Kenan and AJkn Gurganus.<lb/>
Series coordinator Julie Fay, an<lb/>
associate professor in the English<lb/>
department, is enthusiastic about this<lb/>
year's state of writers.<lb/>
"They've been selected because of<lb/>
the high quality of their writing, as<lb/>
well as nheir desire to meet their audi-<lb/>
ence she said. "They are looking for-<lb/>
ward to meeting their reader in<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Fay said the series has been welt-<lb/>
received in its three years of exis-<lb/>
tence.<lb/>
"I really wanted to enhance the<lb/>
cultural life of ECU students and the<lb/>
surrounding community she added.<lb/>
"It's (the literary arts) an important<lb/>
part of the cultural life of any area<lb/>
Goldman's most recent novel. Tie<lb/>
Ordinary Stvmm, released earlier this<lb/>
year, has already enjoyed tremendous<lb/>
critical praise, including an enthusias-<lb/>
tic response from the WasUnffm Past,<lb/>
Who called the book a "credit to the<lb/>
novelistic form, yielding up mysteri-<lb/>
ous worlds, seldom seen but always<lb/>
there<lb/>
Similarly, Goldman's 1992 debut<lb/>
novel, TkLtmgN&amp;of White CMdens,<lb/>
received much critical acclaim. The<lb/>
novel tended Goldman a spot as a<lb/>
finalist for the PENFaulkner Award.<lb/>
He currently serves as a contribut-<lb/>
ing editor of Harper's magazine.<lb/>
Goldman's work, both short fiction<lb/>
and journalism, has appeared in<lb/>
numerous prominent magazines,<lb/>
including the New TArirr, Esquire and<lb/>
Playboy.<lb/>
Francisco Goldman (Sept. 16). Alice FurtonlNov. 3). Ellen Bryan Voigl (Oct. 1 j and Kathleen Halms (Nov. 3)<lb/>
are coawtg to 6renvitls this fall as part of the Writer's Reading Series<lb/>
PHOTO CC1HITESY OF WRITES KEAOMH SEMES<lb/>
Voigt is recognized as one of the<lb/>
bc3t poets of her generation. She is<lb/>
the author of five collections of poetry;<lb/>
Her most recent collection, Kyrie,<lb/>
reflects on an carry 20th century<lb/>
worldwide pandemic that claim the<lb/>
lives of 25 million people, half a mil-<lb/>
lion in the United States alone. The<lb/>
book led Tie Notion to proclaim that<lb/>
the book "made the forgotten unfor-<lb/>
gettable Voigt, they said, "holds a<lb/>
mirror to the mouths of the dying and<lb/>
we see our own far-s reflected<lb/>
Voigt. a native Virginian, has taught<lb/>
at Iowa Wesleyan College, Goddard<lb/>
College and MIT. She currently<lb/>
directs the writing program at VVarren<lb/>
Wilson College in Asheville.<lb/>
Fulton is an award-winning writer<lb/>
of poetry and short fiction. Pailadwm, a<lb/>
book of her poetry, won Fulton the<lb/>
1985 National Ftetry Scries and the<lb/>
1987 Society of Midland Authors<lb/>
Award. Fulton's work has been includ-<lb/>
ed in five editions of the Best America<lb/>
Poetry series.<lb/>
Her most recent collection of poet-<lb/>
ry, Sensual Mali, has been widely<lb/>
praised. Tie Yak Retriev called Fulton's<lb/>
work "maximalist poetry, exploding<lb/>
beyond its boundaries<lb/>
Halme is a former student of<lb/>
Fulton's. Her collection of poetry. The<lb/>
Everlasting Universe of Things, won the<lb/>
1994 North Carolina Writers' Network<lb/>
Harperprints Competition. Her most<lb/>
recent collection, Every Substance<lb/>
Clothed, was published in 1995 by the<lb/>
University of Georgia Press<lb/>
Contemporary Fberry Series. She is<lb/>
currently an associate professor in the.<lb/>
creative writing program at UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
The list of sponsors for the Writer's<lb/>
Residing Series has increased as the<lb/>
series enters its third year. Sponsors<lb/>
for the scries are the Lannan<lb/>
Foundation, the North Carolina Arts<lb/>
Council, ECU's Department oi<lb/>
English, Ethnic Studies Program.<lb/>
Women's Studies Program. Latin<lb/>
American Studies Program, the vice-<lb/>
chancellor for research and graduate<lb/>
studies, Accucopy of Greenville,<lb/>
Stindt Photographic, Sheppard<lb/>
Memorial Library, Friends of<lb/>
Sheppard Memorial Library, Barnes<lb/>
and Noble, the Greenville Museum of<lb/>
Art and area arts councils.<lb/>
For more information about the<lb/>
series, contacr Julie Fay at 328-6003.<lb/>
Holy Land gets two takes in new exhibits<lb/>
M1CCAH SMITH<lb/>
mrr write<lb/>
The Wellington B. Gray Gallery at<lb/>
die ECU School of Art will present<lb/>
two dramatically different views of<lb/>
the IWy Land in two new caJifbto<lb/>
that wilt he on display from Sept. 5<lb/>
Sept. 14.<lb/>
One of the exhibits, entitled the<lb/>
"North Carolina to Israel<lb/>
Photographic Project, is the result<lb/>
of two months spent in Israel by<lb/>
�ach of few prretoewhere frewi<lb/>
North CaroHni who photographed<lb/>
the Israeli landscape from their own<lb/>
unique arid American perspectives.<lb/>
The efforts of six Israeli photog-<lb/>
rsphers to capture the images of<lb/>
sheir homeland in their own person-<lb/>
al ways comprise the second exhibit,<lb/>
�A Delicate Balance<lb/>
Both of the exhibits stem from<lb/>
rhe "IsraelNorth Carnltm Culniral<lb/>
Exchange a governor's initiative<lb/>
between Israel and North earolina<lb/>
which was passed through the NC<lb/>
Department of Culture and which is<lb/>
directed by John Coffey. Other exhi-<lb/>
bitions featuring a variety of artists<lb/>
and media have also resulted from<lb/>
this international program.<lb/>
"We are very proud to be recog-<lb/>
nized as one of the major exhibition<lb/>
spaces in North Carolina says<lb/>
Gilbert Lecbriek, director of Gray<lb/>
Gallery.<lb/>
The North Carolina photogra-<lb/>
phers address such'issues as family<lb/>
roots, the peaceful coexistence of<lb/>
different cultures, female roles in<lb/>
Israeli history and culture and mod-<lb/>
ern Israel's use of technology in the<lb/>
pursuit of better living.<lb/>
The Israeli photographers make<lb/>
me of personal artifact, landscapes<lb/>
and the abstract to subtly convey a<lb/>
sense of-political and cultural con-<lb/>
cern.<lb/>
"It is always interesting to see<lb/>
how someone else views the world, if<lb/>
you are a questioning personI<lb/>
think the questions asked by the<lb/>
exhibitions are very real questions<lb/>
and very important questions says<lb/>
Lcebrick, who urges East Carolina<lb/>
students to, take time to come and<lb/>
view the exhibits.<lb/>
The two exhibits were brought<lb/>
to Gray Gallery by the North<lb/>
Carolina Arts Council, the Ughr<lb/>
Factory and the Asheville Art<lb/>
Museum. A lecture scheduled for<lb/>
the day of the opening in Speight<lb/>
Auditorium will begin at 5 p.m. and<lb/>
will include presentations by the<lb/>
North Carotins photographers fea-<lb/>
rured in the exhibit. Jenn<lb/>
McLaughlin of the North Carolina<lb/>
Arts Council and John Coffey of the<lb/>
North Carolina Museum of Art will<lb/>
preside over the program, to which<lb/>
the public is invited. Following the<lb/>
lecture will be a reception in Gray<lb/>
Gallery.<lb/>
The gallery, which is accessible to<lb/>
the handicapped, is open from 10<lb/>
a.m. until 5 p.m. Mondays through<lb/>
Fridavs and until 8 p.m. on<lb/>
Thursdays. Weekend hours are<lb/>
Saturdays from 10 a-m. until 3 p.m.<lb/>
For more information, contact Gray<lb/>
Gallery at 328-6336,<lb/>
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Mangold carries his<lb/>
weight in Heavy<lb/>
Dale Williamson<lb/>
SENIOR WSITKK<lb/>
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TV journalism kills Princess Diana<lb/>
JOHN DAVIS<lb/>
ASSISTANT LIFESTYLE EDITOR<lb/>
. -�, wide awake at 2:30 a.m. Sunday morning What was I doing up at such an<lb/>
ungodly hour? I was doing ungodly things. 1 was channel surfing.<lb/>
My roommate recently bought s satellite dish and we now have access to 999<lb/>
channels. Granted, some of them are pay-per-view,( but we have them all.<lb/>
Channel surfing is so much more fulfilling when you have all the channels, and<lb/>
you can end your search knowing that there is really nothing good on, anywhere.<lb/>
There was something on at 2:30 though. It managed to permeate every chan-<lb/>
nel in a sinister way I thought only possible by Coca Cola, Inc. It was, of course,<lb/>
news of the death of Britain's Princess Diana, who passed away eariy that morn-<lb/>
ing after a high speed chase in Rrance. I was awake and fortunate enough to be<lb/>
plugged in. Every channel had their bit about Princess Di, and I'm not kidding<lb/>
here. kids. ESPN had a bit. The Comedy Channel had a bit. MTV had a bit.<lb/>
Everyone was getting in on a piece of the action. �� .<lb/>
By now we all know what happened. Di and her new love were being hound-<lb/>
ed, as per usual, by paparazzi in a restaurant. The couple left the restaurant and<lb/>
were chased at high speeds by journalists on motorcycles. The chase ended in a<lb/>
runnel when Di's driver made a bad move and then, of course, the paparazzi gpt<lb/>
their hot news break.<lb/>
Later on that morning, CNN showed teary-eyed (shall I say t;)fam of ui<lb/>
weeping over the toss of their superstar Princess. My roommate cynically point-<lb/>
ed out that those same mourners were no doubt the very people who buy the<lb/>
magazines produced by the paparazzi, who murdered the Princess.<lb/>
I've always known that the media, and journalists, especially, haw little to no<lb/>
morals. Being a member of rhut beloved section of society, (I'm prolublv a<lb/>
member of the Illuminati and I don't even kn. m it.) I c. attest to the fact that<lb/>
the truth rarely matters, while money, not getting sued, and nut getting tireJ do<lb/>
matter. Selling papers matters. Selling ads matters. The truth? That s for ethics<lb/>
professors and churchgoers. Big fat juicy Iks, or half-lies sell more, and you peo-<lb/>
ple cat it up. How many of you turned right to this article because of the head-<lb/>
line? , .  w<lb/>
While it's true that 1 hold the power of words in my hands, it is also true that<lb/>
I wouldn't if no one let me. It's more likely than not that every person who reads<lb/>
this has never met Di personally. She exists only as an imap: on a blue screen or<lb/>
a photo in the ten items or less line. She's a virtual person, and we feel little to<lb/>
no remorse at her death. The sad thing is, those crazies who think we never<lb/>
landed on the moon could be right. What if the whole thing was staged in<lb/>
James Mangold is an overnight suc-<lb/>
cess. At the moment, his name is a<lb/>
buzz word in Tinseltown simply<lb/>
because this relatively unknown direc-<lb/>
tor has accomplished the impossible,<lb/>
something even the major Hollywood<lb/>
players couldn't do - he made Sylvester ,<lb/>
Stallone a respectable actor once again.<lb/>
Mangold is the one responsible for<lb/>
doing plastic surgery to Stallone's<lb/>
career and image by casting the man<lb/>
best known as Rocky and Rambo in a<lb/>
small, independent, plot-driven drama<lb/>
called Cap Land. The critical reaction<lb/>
has been mixed. Some maintain that<lb/>
Mangold is competent but nothing<lb/>
extraordinary, no Martin Scorsese.<lb/>
Otliers have placed Mangold on a cin-<lb/>
ematic pedestal next to the likes of<lb/>
Orson Wells.<lb/>
Critics aside. Mangold did manage<lb/>
to trim much of the fat our of Stallone's<lb/>
cliched image, which has for the past . <lb/>
10 years been representative of all that is wrong with modern movies. Instead,<lb/>
Mas-old focuses less on image and more on human emotion<lb/>
Human emotion, however, is no stranger to Mangold. He grabbed the cnti-<lb/>
cal community bv the throat last year with a small, quietly tragic human drama,<lb/>
a film that did not feature such heavy-weight box office champions as Stallone<lb/>
or Robert DeNiro but was still very much a winner.<lb/>
Heavy was not the kind of film that pulls in millions of movie fans across the<lb/>
nation. Its stvle and tone did not carry the flashy hipness of Men In Bhrt nor trie<lb/>
energy of Air Force One. What it did carry was a disarming peek into the lonely<lb/>
lives of fully realized characters, which (if given the chance) can be as thnllmg<lb/>
and hypnotizing anv alien invasion or terrorist takeover. .<lb/>
And now that Mangold's triumph is available on video, there s nothing to<lb/>
stop us locals from taking a break from the cinematic norm.<lb/>
Heavy is not powered by a strictly linear narrative. The basic premise centers<lb/>
around an isolated, overweight short-order cook named Victor (played to per-<lb/>
S�� HEAVY PAGE 10<lb/>
Liv Tyler isn't the only reason to watch<lb/>
Heavy.<lb/>
PHOTO COURTESY OF UV TUER PHOTO 6ALLERT<lb/>
Princess Diana could net escape being hounded by the press.<lb/>
photo courtist or i Tims vws p�be<lb/>
Arizona? Did Di ever really exist? You believe she did because you have faith in<lb/>
mv vision, the vision of the media, the television.<lb/>
"Mv roommate is right: Di - bqsjes fans are no doubt responsible tor her<lb/>
death just as much as the nosv filthy reporters are. Your television is a deadly<lb/>
weapon, and if you use it properlv vou have the power to wreak havoc on soo-<lb/>
cty and possibly even indirectly assassinate someone. Interactive television is<lb/>
here folks. The "mute" button has a whole new meaning. Di isn't talking much<lb/>
these days, and maylw it was unintentional, a mistake made by the clumsy han-<lb/>
dling of a weapon you didn't know you had.<lb/>
Fortunately we didn't watch much of it at our house. The remote, man s<lb/>
newest weapon of deadly force, was in my roommate's hands. With 999 chan-<lb/>
nels, we have access to one of the wotld's most valuable resources of informa-<lb/>
tion. One of the best things about television is that whenever anything really<lb/>
important is happening, you can always change the channel There was a<lb/>
Notorious B.I.G. video on M2.<lb/>
liv Tyler and Pruitt Taylor Vince strike in pose in James Magold's Heavy.<lb/>
photo courtesy of Columbia pictures<lb/>
?<lb/>
�<lb/>
��<lb/>
� �r<lb/>
�-<lb/>
" . ,<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0009"/><lb/>
9 Tuesday, September 2, 1997<lb/>
jrr<lb/>
style<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Don't be a weiner, watch the hot dog movie<lb/>
Do m la cri <lb/>
nsoc itki i-m ss wKirm<lb/>
JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) - Its parr of<lb/>
America's history, a touchstone of the<lb/>
national culture. And it's tasty.<lb/>
It is the hot dog. the subject of a<lb/>
documentary being cooked up by two<lb/>
twenty-something New Jersey film-<lb/>
makers. The idea behind "Footlong<lb/>
said producer Getty Beyer, is simple:<lb/>
"To understand America, you must<lb/>
look at the hot dog<lb/>
Bever's enthusiasm goes way-<lb/>
back, back to when he chose a hot<lb/>
dog stand fot his high school gradua-<lb/>
tion dinner. Now he and lifelong hot<lb/>
dog-eating pal Chris Patak are dig-<lb/>
ging deep into the world of frank-<lb/>
furters and the nation's "hot dog sub-<lb/>
culture<lb/>
Thev talk to street vendors and<lb/>
track down hot dog etiquette (it's<lb/>
always "dress the dog not the bun).<lb/>
Bever even entered the 82nd annual<lb/>
Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating<lb/>
(lontest at Coney Island in New York<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
"I felt dizzy afterward - and nau-<lb/>
seous Beyer said, having eaten 10<lb/>
dogs in 12 minutes to finish thitd<lb/>
from last. The winner, 135-pound<lb/>
Hirofumi Nakajima of Japan, ate 24<lb/>
12 in the same time.<lb/>
The film spotlights famous hot<lb/>
dog stands, like the celebrity hangout<lb/>
Pink's Chilidogs in Los Angeles and<lb/>
the first Oscar Meyer WienerMobile.<lb/>
a 13-foot hot dog on wheels that<lb/>
lx;gan cruising rhe streets of Chicago<lb/>
in 1936.<lb/>
The filmmakers make the<lb/>
required pilgrimage to Coney Island,<lb/>
where Nathan Handwerker opened<lb/>
what is believed to be the first hot<lb/>
dog stand in America in 1916. He<lb/>
borrowed $320 from Eddie Cantor<lb/>
and Jimmy Durante.<lb/>
The dog itself was first intro-<lb/>
duced to .America at the 1904 World's<lb/>
Fair in St. Louis, though it went by a<lb/>
different name.<lb/>
That changed in 1906, so the<lb/>
story goes, when cartoonist Tad<lb/>
Dorgan saw vendors at a baseball<lb/>
game selling the slim sausages and<lb/>
calling out "Get your red hot dachs-<lb/>
hund sandwiches Dorgan, sketch-<lb/>
ing a wiener with mustard, couldn't<lb/>
spell dachshund.<lb/>
Hot dog it became. And hot dog it<lb/>
has been.<lb/>
Americans purchased 752 million<lb/>
pounds of hot dogs in 1995 accord-<lb/>
ing to the National Cattlemens Beet<lb/>
Association. That is 7.6 pounds of hot<lb/>
dog and SI2.25 per American house-<lb/>
hold.<lb/>
"The hot dog is a great American<lb/>
treasure said Frank Webster, who<lb/>
publishes . "The Frankfurter<lb/>
Chronicles, the Newsletter with<lb/>
Relish "It's distinctly American<lb/>
Patak and Bever hope to have<lb/>
their two-hour film ready sometime'<lb/>
next year and are working on raising'<lb/>
more monev and finding a sponsor,<lb/>
Patak sees their work as part of a<lb/>
lifelong endeavor: '1 will eat wieners '<lb/>
and be merry, because that is who I<lb/>
am  that is what I was born to do<lb/>
Photographers wanted<lb/>
Must supply own camera and have a good eye<lb/>
for photographic situations. Apply at our<lb/>
(The East Carolinian) office on the second<lb/>
floor of the Student Publications building<lb/>
(across from Joyner).<lb/>
fbfc SMITHING m k iWr<lb/>
Jjr Every Thursday 7:00pm<lb/>
�3 GCB Room 1028<lb/>
Fun, Friendship, and Bible Study<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair<lb/>
tyxeetvCUe � 25 tyeaxz<lb/>
Out Specialty d. Sale &amp;<lb/>
WeenZefMUx.<lb/>
 �'<lb/>
CNRXSTXAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
99<lb/>
3193 A East 10th St.<lb/>
Next to the Merita Bread Outlet<lb/>
Phone 758-0204<lb/>
Mon-Fri 7:30am - 6pm<lb/>
Sat 9am - 2pm<lb/>
We Have Dress and Western Style<lb/>
Belts to Sell!<lb/>
i Hswft<lb/>
5 at Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
3L<lb/>
<lb/>
� � <lb/>
r<lb/>
COUNT DOVN<lb/>
Just ten days until the World Famous Count Basie Orchestra comes to town.<lb/>
Student tickets are now available at the Central Ticket Office for $10. All<lb/>
tickets purchased at the door are $20.<lb/>
FRIDAY, SEPT. 12 AT 8 P.M. IN WRIGHT AUDITORIUM.<lb/>
VBPKTXJVL vacation<lb/>
Use your ECU ID to take a free virtual vacation to the Benelux Countries -<lb/>
Netherlands, Belgium, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg in a Travel-Adventure<lb/>
film. TUESDAY, SEPT. 16 AT 4 OR 7:30 P.M. IN HENDRIX THEATRE. An all-u-<lb/>
can-eat theme dinner is served at 6 p.m. for just $12. Dinner tickets must be<lb/>
reserved by Thursday, Sept. 11 with meal cards, cash, check, or credit card.<lb/>
8CRKNSCENE<lb/>
Mike Myer's Austin Powers (PG-13) will screen in Hendrix Theatre SEPT.4-6<lb/>
AT 8 P.M. Your student I.D. get you a guest in for free.<lb/>
Basest BaNdS<lb/>
Catch the latest up-and-coming bands for free in The Pirate Underground<lb/>
EVERY THURSDAY AT 8 P.M. IN THE MSC SOCIAL ROOM.<lb/>
This week: Duality and Redalia<lb/>
WORTH A LOOK<lb/>
Check out the Art Exhibition: Complex Gifts in the MSC Gallery<lb/>
Artist Reception on Thursday, Sept. 11 from 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
BE A KINGPIN<lb/>
Name Our Center Contest - If you can come up with just the right name for<lb/>
our bowling center, you will win a free bowling ball and bag and alhhe<lb/>
prestige and press that goes along with being a kingpin. Pick up your entry<lb/>
form at the bowling center. Deadline for entry is Sept. 30. Call 328-4740.<lb/>
ALL U CAN BOWL<lb/>
Unlimited bowling every 2nd and 4th Saturday of each month from 8-11 pm.for<lb/>
just $5 (includes shoe rental). Come hungry for free pizza and drinks from 8-9 p.m.<lb/>
MONDAY MADNESS<lb/>
Give your Monday a boost from 1-6 p.m. with 50C bowling (shoe rental included).<lb/>
ONE BUCK BOWLING<lb/>
Make Wednesday and Friday discount days by rolling 10 frames for just $1 (shoe<lb/>
rental included) between 1-6 p.m.<lb/>
209 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
NC's Legendary<lb/>
light Club for<lb/>
26 years!<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
5 piece Disco Band From Ohio<lb/>
Receive Free Pass<lb/>
to next Tuesday<lb/>
before 1 1p.m.<lb/>
Funk u Town<lb/>
Ladies Free until 11 pm<lb/>
� $1 Bottle Busch Lite �<lb/>
wm<lb/>
adm. for<lb/>
members<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Todd Yohn<lb/>
Mi.<lb/>
'u'Sioouvx&amp; ilMksarasaR Bmv$m<lb/>
COMiedY s<lb/>
Hall Of Fame<lb/>
$1.50 Busch light<lb/>
bottles<lb/>
adm. with<lb/>
ECU I.D<lb/>
9-9:30<lb/>
J<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
u m o s fills "��-�'<lb/>
adm. for<lb/>
members<lb/>
$ 1.50 Hi-balls<lb/>
$ 1.50 bottled beer<lb/>
JlMJTdOST<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Elephant Boy<lb/>
1.26 Hi-balls<lb/>
$1.26 bottled beer<lb/>
Attic 26th May Party Series<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER � "Your Center of Activity"<lb/>
SERVICES: Central Ticket Office � Bowling � Billiards � Video Games � Student Locator Service<lb/>
� ATMs � Food � Computer Lab � TV Lounge � RidesRiders Board � Art Gallery<lb/>
HOURS: Mon - Thurs. 8 a.m11 p.m Fri. 8 a.ml 2 a.m Sat. 12 p.ml 2 a.m Sun. 1 p.m11 p.m.<lb/>
The Back Doors<lb/>
The Shocking Reincarnation of Jim Morrison and The Doors<lb/>
ttpam<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0010"/><lb/>
10 Tuesday. September 2. 1997<lb/>
5;SS<lb/>
tvie<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
SCHOOL OF MUSIC SEPTEMBER SCHEDULE<lb/>
(HART 1)<lb/>
21 Sunda'<lb/>
Voice students of Louise Toppin, John B. O'Brien, harpsichord, 3 p.m. at the Music House, 408<lb/>
West Fifth Street.<lb/>
25 ThursdaT<lb/>
Symphonic Wind Ensemble and Concert Band, Scott Carter and Christopher Knighten, conduc-<lb/>
tors, 8 p.m. at Wright Auditorium<lb/>
26 Frida'<lb/>
Jazz at Night, Carroll V. Dashiell Jr director, 8 p.m. at the Great Room in Mendenhall.<lb/>
28 Sunda'<lb/>
Fall Scholarship Benefit of the Friends of the School of Music. Lawn concert featuring Panama<lb/>
Steel, Mark Ford, director, 4 p.m. on the lawn.<lb/>
29 MondaT<lb/>
Faculty Recital: Song Cycles of Life and Love, Sharon Munden, mezzo-soprano; John D. O'Brien,<lb/>
piano, 8 p.m. at A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
�<lb/>
All members will meet on<lb/>
Tuesday, September 9th at 5:00<lb/>
in General Classroom<lb/>
Building Room 1032<lb/>
HENDRIX FILMS<lb/>
<lb/>
M1KI<lb/>
International Man Of Myihry<lb/>
I ut' - NEW LINE CISEMaI<lb/>
pc 13 w- wm �<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 4-6<lb/>
ALL FILMS START AT 8PM<lb/>
UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED<lb/>
AND ARE FREE FOR STUDENTS<lb/>
FACULTY AND STAFF MEMBERS.<lb/>
(ONE GUEST ALLOWED) WITH<lb/>
VALID ECU ID.<lb/>
Complex Gifts: Introducing the Artists of Signature Home<lb/>
August 18 - September 12<lb/>
Artist Reception: Thursday, Sept. 11, 7-9 pm<lb/>
See the art and meet the artists behind<lb/>
Signature, the country's only home for<lb/>
artistically gifted adults who are challenged by<lb/>
disabilities. The four artists featured in this<lb/>
exhibit are painters Harold Crowell, Brooks<lb/>
Yeoman, and Ricky Needham, and vocalist<lb/>
Charlene Sawyer. Come and support these<lb/>
artists in SignatureStudio XI's first ever tour.<lb/>
The Student Union Popular Entertainment Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
THe Pirate -tfii<lb/>
Free live music! W Thursdays, 8-10:45pm<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Social Room (Across from WZMB)<lb/>
Duality<lb/>
Thursday,Sept. 4,1997<lb/>
Heavy<lb/>
Continued from page 8<lb/>
Section by I'ruitt Taylor Vmce), who<lb/>
becomes strangely obsessed with a<lb/>
new waitress named Connie (played<lb/>
b the always exceptional Liv Tler).<lb/>
While this somewhat standard idea<lb/>
does take up the larger part of the<lb/>
film, the film is much more than an<lb/>
examination of obsession.<lb/>
Victor is not a stalker, nor is he any<lb/>
real danger (although a brooding vio-<lb/>
lence does seernto linger within<lb/>
him). Victor is a lost soul among other<lb/>
lost souls. He is a grown man who<lb/>
works in his mother's diner and still<lb/>
lives with her at home. His life is<lb/>
filled with meaningless moments that<lb/>
include trips to the grocery store,<lb/>
walking the dog, fantasizing about<lb/>
Connie, and eating food.<lb/>
Victor is an obese man, and that<lb/>
fact bother him more than those<lb/>
around him. Connie dues not judge<lb/>
him based on appearances. She sees<lb/>
the good within him. Vc, Victor can-<lb/>
not help but continually stand on the<lb/>
seale and watch the numbers soar<lb/>
towards the 250 mark.<lb/>
Obesity is not something Mangold<lb/>
makes light of. He does not tr to por-<lb/>
tray Victor as the jolly funn fat man.<lb/>
He is a very sad person who turns to<lb/>
food when there is nothing else to<lb/>
depend on. Mangold uses the theme<lb/>
of obesity equaling weakness not to<lb/>
mock but to address what may very<lb/>
well be an illness resulting from<lb/>
severe depression.<lb/>
VictDf is a prisoner of his both and<lb/>
his circumstance. Mangold transforms<lb/>
the rural, southern countryside (com-<lb/>
plete with crickets and drunken red-<lb/>
necks) into a prison cell much in the<lb/>
same way that he transforms the city<lb/>
of Cop IjiiiiI into a symbol for being<lb/>
trapped. Running awas to a better life-<lb/>
is not alwas a solution for his charac-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
Mangold is a solid storyteller,<lb/>
though he does not qualify as being a<lb/>
visionary. While such directors as<lb/>
Scorsese and Oliver Stone have suc-<lb/>
ceeded in their narratives with swoop-<lb/>
ing cameras that create the action as<lb/>
much as they follow the action.<lb/>
Mangold's approach is much softer.<lb/>
His camera barely moves.<lb/>
Instead. Mangold progresses his<lb/>
film w ith countless static shots edited<lb/>
together, thus creating a story that<lb/>
moves slowIv yet deliberately. Add on<lb/>
top of this long moments of silence<lb/>
(no dialogue, no explosions, no noth-<lb/>
ing), and you have a viewing experi-<lb/>
ence that demands attention and<lb/>
patience.<lb/>
Vet, once you open yourself to<lb/>
Mangold's world, it won't release you.<lb/>
You learn to care for his characters.<lb/>
ou understand them and their pains.<lb/>
You identify with them. That, my<lb/>
friend, is a raritv in modern cinema.<lb/>
Peenuckle<lb/>
GH INVOLVED!<lb/>
The ECU Student Union Board of Directors is now occepting applications for the day student representative<lb/>
for the 1997 "98 term. Qualifications: Full time student, resides off campus, independent<lb/>
Responsibilities: Selecting the Student Union President, approving committee chair<lb/>
CjNV). r 04, persons approving the Student Union budget, setting policy for the Student Union.<lb/>
JO -Deadline to apply is Friday, September 12,1997. Applications can be picked up at<lb/>
S the Student Union Office - Room 236 in Mendenhall Student Center. For more info,<lb/>
 call the Student Union at 328-4715.<lb/>
WvtS<lb/>
letEafeern<lb/>
A Nifitit<lb/>
Tuesday 2nd<lb/>
Nebulous<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Far From Near<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
IrinKlfrneciaK<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Back porch Circle<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sun.iywheat<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
si 1 ticket<lb/>
en I SS<lb/>
IV IB Y<lb/>
1UUCSDAY, IQIDAY. SATU&amp;DAY<lb/>
Da M(l 10 01 Mil<lb/>
UPSUIBS<lb/>
Tuesdays<lb/>
wine tasting &amp;<lb/>
ONIX Cigar<lb/>
TastingDisplay<lb/>
Wednesdays<lb/>
$1.75 imports<lb/>
Thursdays<lb/>
$1.00 domestics<lb/>
<lb/>
 yiFri &amp; Sat Beer tub specials<lb/>
Sunday 32 02. Domestic<lb/>
Draft $1.50 14 oz. Domestic<lb/>
wZMDraft 75 Sunday<lb/>
" 1 AvMl ticket tn 1 S<lb/>
t IXMonday Football 75 Southpaw<lb/>
GtttnhtiU'i<lb/>
atyarfafPar<lb/>
RUSH HOUR FRIDAYS<lb/>
Best in ClajPRock &amp; Hot New Rock<lb/>
from 8:30Til 11:30 Every Friday<lb/>
Bottle Beer &amp; Drink Specials Every Week <lb/>
FREE Admission for rpembers unp 10:30<lb/>
Plus twice monthly Hot New Uv Loqal Acts Play The Best Party<lb/>
Music to Kick devourweekend<lb/>
SATURDAY 6th<lb/>
FALL BIKINI CLASSIC with THEXA CHl 8:30 til 11:00,<lb/>
Ladies call 758-4591 to sign up<lb/>
$250.00 Firsjft Prijg<lb/>
$2.50 Teas &amp; Sex on the Bichid $2.00 Cosmopolitan:<lb/>
HI. . All DiJL �� r, vk; 41, COM<lb/>
:ll<lb/>
Plus All<lb/>
ISO<lb/>
-�<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0011"/><lb/>
11 Thursday, September 2. 1997<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Pirates counting days until season kicks off<lb/>
AMANDA ROSS<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
All the hard work the football team has put in<lb/>
during the off season will be tested on<lb/>
Saturday as the Pirates travel up to<lb/>
Morgantown for their season opener with the<lb/>
West Virginia Mountaineers.<lb/>
Last season the Pirates left West Virginia<lb/>
with a bitter taste in their mouth, losing by<lb/>
one point in a failed two-point conversion<lb/>
attempt. The Pirates had trimmed the lead to<lb/>
10-9, when quarterback Marcus Crandell got<lb/>
the call to go for two, after he had hit LaMont<lb/>
Chappell for the touchdown pass. The<lb/>
attempt failed and they lost by one.<lb/>
Head Coach Steve Logan said Monday in<lb/>
his weekly press conference that he hopes<lb/>
this year's team can get to the point of being<lb/>
that close to winning the game.<lb/>
"I'd give anything to be in that situation<lb/>
again because it will be tough to get to that<lb/>
1996 Averages<lb/>
West VirginiaEast Carolina<lb/>
42.0Joints28.7<lb/>
331.0Total Yards438.2<lb/>
217.0Rushing Yards181.0<lb/>
43.0Rushing Attempts37.7<lb/>
5.0Yards Per Carry4.8<lb/>
114.0Passing Yards257.2<lb/>
22.0Passing Attempts38.2<lb/>
10.4Yards Per Completion12.5<lb/>
31.0Points Allowed19.5<lb/>
381.0Total Yards Allowed338.1<lb/>
115.0Rushing Yards Allowed148.8<lb/>
4.3Yards Per Carry3.7<lb/>
266.0Passing Yards Allowed189.3<lb/>
14.0Yards Per Completion11.3<lb/>
point Iogan said.<lb/>
A young offensive line and injuries have<lb/>
bombarded the Pirates the past couple of<lb/>
weeks. Split-end Larry Shannon can only<lb/>
watch his teammates go for the victory due to<lb/>
a sprained ankle last week and suffered a bro-<lb/>
ken fibula, which will keep him in a cast for at<lb/>
least two weeks.<lb/>
Logan noted other players with injuries.<lb/>
"Brian Ray tore his ACL, so he'll be out for<lb/>
the season Logan said. "The bad news right<lb/>
now is that we are light in the numbers of<lb/>
linebacker positions. Jeff Ken-<lb/>
broke his hand. It looks like we'll<lb/>
be able to play him with a cast on<lb/>
his handDanny Moore is nurs-<lb/>
ing a sore back right now<lb/>
West Virginia's offensive threat<lb/>
will come again from tailback<lb/>
.Amos Zereoue, who ran for 111<lb/>
yards last year against ECU.<lb/>
Logan said it will be hard for his<lb/>
team to prepare for the 250<lb/>
pounder in practice.<lb/>
"The bad news there for us is<lb/>
that West Virginia is going to<lb/>
have a 250 pound fullback com-<lb/>
ing in on those linebacker<lb/>
Logan said. "We're not going to<lb/>
be able to simulate that too well<lb/>
in practice. Over the summer, all<lb/>
the work he's done and against<lb/>
Marshall last Saturday, he's a<lb/>
great back<lb/>
The talk since the spring has<lb/>
been the progress of the offen-<lb/>
sive line. With one lone returning<lb/>
starter in center Danny Moore.<lb/>
logan has placed his players in<lb/>
rhe positions he feels will suit<lb/>
them best.<lb/>
"I Think our right tackle<lb/>
spot, Stacey Whitehead, is<lb/>
solid Logan said. "We've<lb/>
moved Sherwin Iice to left<lb/>
tackle and we think we've<lb/>
probably got him in the best<lb/>
spot. Our left guard position<lb/>
has been secured by Mondell<lb/>
Corbett. Our right guard<lb/>
position is the one that has<lb/>
been unsettled. Anthony<lb/>
Nobles and Corey Russell<lb/>
have been fighting out<lb/>
there<lb/>
Scott Harley will look for<lb/>
better numbers in this year's<lb/>
contest, only rushing for 53<lb/>
yards lasr year against the<lb/>
Mountaineers.<lb/>
"We didn't get him the<lb/>
ball enough against West<lb/>
Virginia Logan said. "We're<lb/>
going to need to be patient<lb/>
and let Scott get his 25<lb/>
touches and see if he can't<lb/>
give us some good plays<lb/>
When the new college<lb/>
overtime was implemented<lb/>
last season. Ix)gan preached<lb/>
he wouldn't go for overtime if<lb/>
they were in a position to win<lb/>
the game. That situation<lb/>
came up and he practiced<lb/>
what he preached. And does<lb/>
he share the same thoughts<lb/>
for this season?<lb/>
"I'm not going to go for an<lb/>
overtime<lb/>
Travis Garden makes a big hit during last season. Garden and the rest of<lb/>
the team are getting fired up for the start of the season this Saturday.<lb/>
FILE PHOTO<lb/>
Kelly prepares to<lb/>
tackle new job<lb/>
CHKIS (i ENTRY<lb/>
.STVFK ttKITKK<lb/>
What's the same answer everyone<lb/>
gives when asked about how the<lb/>
Pirate football team will do this year?<lb/>
"We should do all right if the offen-<lb/>
sive line can hold up<lb/>
Enter Chuck Kelly. Kelly is in his<lb/>
first year as the offensive line coach at<lb/>
ECU and is ready for the challenge.<lb/>
"Yes, we are young Kelly said.<lb/>
"But wc are also bigger, stronger and<lb/>
faster than ever<lb/>
The Pirates have experience on<lb/>
offense with the nation's leading<lb/>
returning rusher, Scott Harley, quar-<lb/>
terback Dan Gonzalez and wide<lb/>
receivers Larry Shannon and Jason<lb/>
Nichols. But the offensive line lacks<lb/>
experience and cohesiveness. Danny<lb/>
Moore, who started all 11 games last<lb/>
season, will accompany Stacy<lb/>
Whitehead, who played sparingly last<lb/>
year, and a group of freshmen. Kelly<lb/>
remains optimistic, despite the youth<lb/>
and inexperience factors.<lb/>
"We know we're going to see a lot<lb/>
of pressure, but we'll just have to han-<lb/>
dle it. The bullets will be flying (at<lb/>
Gonzalez and Harley). We're going to<lb/>
have to protect them Kelly said.<lb/>
Kelly is a native of Mississippi and<lb/>
resides in Greenville, M.S. His first<lb/>
coaching job was in 1980 as an assis-<lb/>
tant high school coach in Shreveport,<lb/>
La. He then took a head coaching<lb/>
position at Glenbrook High School in<lb/>
Minden, LA for two years. Kelly<lb/>
spent 1983-1984 as a graduate assis-<lb/>
tant with the Rebels of Ole Miss.<lb/>
From there, Kelly spent nine years as<lb/>
the offensive line coach at Liberty<lb/>
Chuck Kelly<lb/>
University in<lb/>
Lvnchburg, Va.<lb/>
He gained<lb/>
valuable expe-<lb/>
rience under<lb/>
Morgan Hout<lb/>
and former<lb/>
NFL coach<lb/>
S a m<lb/>
Ru t igl iano.<lb/>
Kelly was the<lb/>
offensive line<lb/>
and running<lb/>
back coach at the University of South<lb/>
Carolina for the past three years<lb/>
before joining the Pirates in March.<lb/>
Kelly says he is ready and excired<lb/>
about this upcoming season and<lb/>
admits the offensive line will need a<lb/>
few games under their belt to be<lb/>
effective and learn to play as a unit.<lb/>
"Our defensive front seven have a<lb/>
lot of experience and will keep us in<lb/>
ballgames Kelly said. "Hopefully<lb/>
that will make my guys want to get<lb/>
better<lb/>
In addition to gaining playing time<lb/>
and a sense of togetherness, Kelly<lb/>
wants his line to gain knowledge as<lb/>
well. Kelly's objective is for his line to<lb/>
understand the concept behind each<lb/>
play and act as a unit accordingly.<lb/>
Despite the question marks at the<lb/>
offensive line, Kelly has prepared<lb/>
them for battle this weekend against<lb/>
West Virginia. Maybe the lingering<lb/>
memory of the failed two-point con-<lb/>
version a year ago will be enough to<lb/>
fuel their fire.<lb/>
"You'd better believe that's in the<lb/>
back of their minds Kelly said. "It's<lb/>
going to be a war<lb/>
WE ARE 1 HE CHAMPIONS<lb/>
Football team suffers more injuries<lb/>
East Carolina sophomore Brian Ray, who was slated to start at inside line-<lb/>
backer for the Pirates this season, is now expected to miss the 1997 cam-<lb/>
paign after tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee in<lb/>
Thursday's practice.<lb/>
Ray, a 6-2,230-pound Raleigh, N.C. native (Millbrook High School), saw<lb/>
limited action last season as a true freshman. Ray; along with kickers<lb/>
Brantley Rivers and Andrew Bayes, were the only true freshman to play for<lb/>
East Carolina in 1996.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the news on fellow inside linebacker Jeff Kerr's injury was<lb/>
better. Kcrr suffered a fracture of the third metacarpal bone in his left hand<lb/>
in Thursday's practice. He sat out Saturday morning's workout which con-<lb/>
sisted of mainly substitution drills, but is expected to resume practice<lb/>
Monday. The 6-4, 230-pound Kerr. a Salisbury, N.C. product, was scheduled<lb/>
to start inside alongside Ray.<lb/>
Kerr suffered a season-ending knee injury early in the first game last fall<lb/>
against East Tennessee State on a kickoff return. He was red-shirted in<lb/>
1995.<lb/>
Moving up on the depth chart and now scheduled to start in place of Ray<lb/>
at inside linebacker in red-shirt freshman Eric Reyes (6-2. 225) of<lb/>
C Cheltenham. Md Red-shirt freshman Put Coleman (6-2. 220) will back up<lb/>
k rr while red-shirt fres1 in w.uoi jriits (kl.oa (h-1. 220) <lb/>
( enville, N.C. (lavs le J K.vc . �' � -d-s;iirt freshman, J.il<lb/>
Smart, becomes the No. 5 inside linebacker.<lb/>
"Thivwill be interesting said ECU head coach Steve Ligan. "We have<lb/>
five players at the position who have never plaved linebacker in a college<lb/>
football game<lb/>
Center Danny Moore, a preseason AII-(Conference I SA selection and the<lb/>
only returning start on the Pirates offensive line, has missed the past two<lb/>
days of practice after srraining his lower back Thursday. Logan is hopeful to<lb/>
have the junior back at practice in a few days.<lb/>
The Pirates will take Sunday off before resuming practice Monday in<lb/>
preparation for the 1997 opener Sept. 6 as West Virginia (12:30 p.m. ESPN).<lb/>
(For more information: (Contact Norm Rcillv. Assistant ADSports<lb/>
Information Office at 919-328-4522 or home 919-321-9229.<lb/>
ECU'S varsity cheerleaders were recently voted Best All Around and Most Collegiate at the NCA College Cheerleading Camp in Myrtle Beach last month They received a bid<lb/>
to the national competition in March in Daytona Beach. Florida to air nationally on CBS<lb/>
PHOTO COURTESY OF PAUU CORBETT<lb/>
Irates play ultimate sport to win<lb/>
AMANDA ROSS<lb/>
M'OKTS H1ITOK<lb/>
Not every student can be a varsity<lb/>
athlete, but every student can play a<lb/>
sport at ECU.<lb/>
ECU's ultimate frisbee team, the<lb/>
Irates, offers a sport that is a cross<lb/>
between football, soccer and basket-<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
The Irates are an accomplished<lb/>
team, as they have been crowned<lb/>
national champions in ultimate fris-<lb/>
bee in 1994 and 1995. Last season the<lb/>
Irates finishedrhird in the country.<lb/>
Presently the Irates consist of 30<lb/>
plavers. Team co-captains Mike<lb/>
Wicgand and Josh Boucher talked<lb/>
about this year's team.<lb/>
"We probably have about 30 kids<lb/>
Poucher said. "Probably half of them<lb/>
really don't have much experience at<lb/>
all. which is okay because we can<lb/>
tench them. The core player i;J<lb/>
be Wicgand. nv self. Jeff Pier re id<lb/>
Johnson, Britt Thomas, Warren<lb/>
Eadus, (Courtney Dellinger. Derrick<lb/>
Dail. Greg Hulcher<lb/>
The fall season pits the Irates<lb/>
against other clubs playing rhe sport.<lb/>
while the spring season sees them in<lb/>
action against other college teams.<lb/>
The club teams rhey compete against<lb/>
in the fall are usuallv more skilled<lb/>
since thev combine plavers who have<lb/>
lots of experience.<lb/>
"This is our club season, so we<lb/>
don't do as well Wegand said. "We<lb/>
play teams that are older, like club<lb/>
would come afrer your college playing<lb/>
years. So we're playing teams that<lb/>
have been playing together for years<lb/>
The tougher schedule does have<lb/>
its advantages.<lb/>
"You're playing against better peo-<lb/>
ple, so that makes you better<lb/>
Wegand said. "We don't expect to do<lb/>
as well this semester, but like I said<lb/>
before, our season is in the spring. So<lb/>
we encourage people to come out<lb/>
now, to get your throws and the game<lb/>
down now. so when we plav in the<lb/>
spring you can plav quality minutes<lb/>
Poucher hopes this sear's team<lb/>
will again rise to the occasion to the<lb/>
Irates' winning<lb/>
was.<lb/>
"I think we've got some lietter<lb/>
athletes than we've had Poucher<lb/>
said. "So. hopefully that will help us<lb/>
out. We lost a couple core plavers. but<lb/>
we have a couple coming back. "<lb/>
1 Irimare is nothg new to I" I<lb/>
The ultimate frisbee ream has been<lb/>
in existence for about 14 years and<lb/>
the sport has been around for 19<lb/>
years.<lb/>
A winning tradition is what the<lb/>
rates are building and Wegand<lb/>
expects nothing but the best from<lb/>
trie team.<lb/>
"We expect to win Wegand said.<lb/>
"We work ourselves hard<lb/>
Thev say practice makes perfect<lb/>
and the Irates practice three times a<lb/>
Liam Doran of the Irates catches a score over two Stanford players during semi-final '<lb/>
competition at college nationals, while Fuller Reeves looks on.<lb/>
PHOTO COURTESY Of MIKE WIEGANG<lb/>
week at the ' nttom of liege Hul.<lb/>
The co-capt. is said anyone is wel-<lb/>
come to come out .nid participate<lb/>
with the Irates.<lb/>
"We practice Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays � 3:30 p.m at the bot-<lb/>
tom of rhe hill; also on Sunday at 1<lb/>
p.m. behind the stadium Poucher<lb/>
said. "nvnne is welcome to come<lb/>
out<lb/>
Poucher said thev have fun. but<lb/>
thev take their sport seriously.<lb/>
"It's for fun. but we're pretty seri-<lb/>
ous about it Hiuchcr said.<lb/>
ige fortcr<lb/>
me o it<lb/>
"We definitely enu<lb/>
high schw athletes<lb/>
WnJ said.<lb/>
There are no curs, so anyone who<lb/>
comes our and sticks with the team is<lb/>
welcome to participate.<lb/>
With the tield space limited, the<lb/>
Irates don't expect to host anv tour-<lb/>
naments this fall, but thev hope to in<lb/>
the spring.<lb/>
For more information, call rec ser-<lb/>
 ices at 328-6387<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0012"/><lb/>
12 Tuesday, September 2. 1997<lb/>
spoil<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Soccer teams split wins, volleyball team competes in tourney<lb/>
MEN'S SOCCER<lb/>
East Carolina freshman forward<lb/>
Scott Pokorney (Charlotte) scored<lb/>
on a header in the match's final<lb/>
minute, propelling the Pirates to a 2-<lb/>
1 comc-from-behind win over Eton<lb/>
College in their season opener at<lb/>
Bunting Field. Pokorney played a<lb/>
pass from ECU junior Wyatt Panos<lb/>
(Swansboro, N.C.) inside the goal<lb/>
box and knocked it past Eton goal-<lb/>
keeper Brian Wfest (Wmston-Salem,<lb/>
N.C.) and into the right side of the<lb/>
net at the 89:15 mark<lb/>
Eton opened the game's scoring<lb/>
at 9:33 in the first period when for-<lb/>
ward Jason Curilla (Pittsburgh) fired<lb/>
a shot into the back of the net from<lb/>
15 yards out off of a loose ball. After<lb/>
its early goal, Eton was unable to gen-<lb/>
erate hardly any additional quality<lb/>
scoring chances for the remainder of<lb/>
the contest. ECU's defense was<lb/>
anchored by sophomore sweeper<lb/>
Brett Waxer (East Meadow, N.Y.).<lb/>
The Pirates were able to tic the<lb/>
contest at 1-1 just before the half<lb/>
when freshman midfielder Chris<lb/>
Walker (Cary) booted one in from<lb/>
eight yards out at the 40:54 mark.<lb/>
Sophomore forward A.J. Gray<lb/>
(Jacksonville) and junior midfielder<lb/>
Mike Holtoway (Jacksonville) assist-<lb/>
ed on the play.<lb/>
"To tie the match in the final five<lb/>
minutes of the first period was very<lb/>
important for us said ECU head<lb/>
coach Will Wiberg. "It established<lb/>
some momentum for us going into<lb/>
the second half<lb/>
For the first 45 minutes, ECU<lb/>
registered nine shot attempts to six<lb/>
for the Fighten' Christens. Pirate<lb/>
goalkeeper Jay Davis (Wilson, N.C.)<lb/>
had five saves in the first period;<lb/>
while West notched seven for Eton.<lb/>
Both teams put on a defensive<lb/>
showcase in the second half with<lb/>
most of the play concentrated in the<lb/>
Pirates' attacking third. The match<lb/>
seemed destined for overtime until<lb/>
Pokorney and Panos connected for<lb/>
the game-winning goal.<lb/>
"1 am very proud of the way we<lb/>
won the match Wiberg said. "This<lb/>
is the first time in my three years as<lb/>
hi id coach here thai we hjvc been<lb/>
al : to come from behind for a victo-<lb/>
ry. We played much better in the sec-<lb/>
ond half. We started to play our<lb/>
games and were able to generate<lb/>
some better scoring opportunities.<lb/>
Jay Davis played very well for us in<lb/>
goal and Brett Waxer did extremely<lb/>
well in the backfield for us<lb/>
The Pirates will return to action<lb/>
Thursday when they travel to The<lb/>
Citadel in Charleston. The match is<lb/>
scheduled to begin at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
WOMEN'S SOCCER<lb/>
East Carolina and the L-ady<lb/>
Flames of Liberty University put on<lb/>
a defensive showcase for nearly 80<lb/>
minutes before Liberty forward<lb/>
Dana Giani (Newport) scored on a<lb/>
head-in at the 79:40 mark off of a<lb/>
crossing pass from midfielder Cheryl<lb/>
Williams (Tracy, Calif.) to edge to<lb/>
Pirates, 1-0 at Bunting Field.<lb/>
For the match, ECU recorded 26<lb/>
shots on goal to just four for Liberty,<lb/>
but the Pirates were unable to knock<lb/>
one passed Lady Flame goalkeeper<lb/>
Shannon Hutchinson (Chesterfield,<lb/>
Va.) who registered 15 saves.<lb/>
In the season-opening contest for<lb/>
each, both teams played very conser-<lb/>
vative in the first period. At the half.<lb/>
East Carolina had registered nine<lb/>
shot attempts, while Liberty had<lb/>
only one.<lb/>
"In the first half, I felt our level of<lb/>
play was acceptable for it .being the<lb/>
first game of the season said ECU<lb/>
head coach Neil Roberts. "We<lb/>
thought that if we could increase our<lb/>
defensive pressure in the second<lb/>
period, it would generate some addi-<lb/>
tional chances in the attack<lb/>
The majority of play in the sec-<lb/>
ond period was concentrated in the<lb/>
Pirates' attacking third due to their<lb/>
increased pressure. In the final 45<lb/>
minutes, ECU had numerous scoring<lb/>
opportunities, tallying 17 shots, but<lb/>
were unable to capitalize. In the sec-<lb/>
ond period alone. Hutchinson<lb/>
notched 11 saves for Liberty. For the<lb/>
match, ECU freshmen midfielders<lb/>
Lcanne Mclnnis (Raleigh) and Erin<lb/>
Cann (Bordentown, N.J.) recorded<lb/>
five shot attempts apiece. Senior<lb/>
midfielder Courtney Jurcich<lb/>
(Spnivfield. Vu.) added four shots.<lb/>
V � crc ,ille t�. -it a lot ofprcs-<lb/>
- � mi them, but thc-v were able to<lb/>
stay with us Roberts said. "Their<lb/>
keeper, Hutchinson, played awe-<lb/>
some. Obviously, I'm not pleased<lb/>
with the result, but we didn't play<lb/>
poorly. Leanne Mclnnis played<lb/>
extremely well. We are going to need<lb/>
to solve some problems in the attack<lb/>
in order to create some better-quali-<lb/>
ty goal-scoring chances before our<lb/>
next match<lb/>
The Pirates will return to action<lb/>
on Wednesday when they travel to<lb/>
play Barton College in Wilson. The<lb/>
match is scheduled to begin at 4:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
After opening the ECU Classic<lb/>
with a pair of wins, the East Carolina<lb/>
University volleyball team suffered<lb/>
its first defeat of the season Saturday,<lb/>
dropping a tough 12-15, 13-15,9-15<lb/>
decision to Campbell University.<lb/>
The loss came despite ECU having a<lb/>
better attack percentage (.185 183)<lb/>
through the match.<lb/>
"We were pleased to be in the<lb/>
championship game of our own tour-<lb/>
nament, but it's always a disappoint-<lb/>
ment when you come in second<lb/>
place said head coach Kim Walker.<lb/>
"For the first tournament of the sea-<lb/>
son, there were quite a few positives.<lb/>
We played well when we were fresh<lb/>
(on Friday) and, although we looked<lb/>
tired on Saturday morning, we still<lb/>
found a way to win. Then in the<lb/>
championship game, we just came<lb/>
up short<lb/>
In the final match of the week-<lb/>
end, ECU (2-1) was again ted by a<lb/>
pair of freshmen as Cinta Claro and<lb/>
Liz Hall continued to shine. Claro<lb/>
recorded 13 kills in the champi-<lb/>
onship to lead both teams, white<lb/>
Hall added II kills and 13 digs. For<lb/>
their efforts, Claro and Hall, along<lb/>
with teammate LaKeya Mason, were<lb/>
named to the ECU Classic All-<lb/>
Tournament Team.<lb/>
"I was supriscd at the perfor-<lb/>
mances by Claro and Hall, and the<lb/>
level they took us to Walker said.<lb/>
"With them in the lineup, we raise<lb/>
our level of play a notch. It's the<lb/>
same with LiKla i. as she has plavcd<lb/>
rwo years of .t)iice volleyball ��� ' re<lb/>
coming here and knows what k n�c<lb/>
to be on the court<lb/>
Earlier in the day, the Pirates won<lb/>
their second in a row, as they<lb/>
downed Howard University 15-8, 9-<lb/>
15, 15-11, 15-6. Shannon Kaess and<lb/>
Hall ted the charge against the Bison<lb/>
(0-3) with a combined 10 kills and<lb/>
10 digs, while junior Kristen Warner<lb/>
added 25 assists.<lb/>
"Kaess, WarneT and Kari<lb/>
Koenning provided the leadership<lb/>
all weekend and had a solid tourna-<lb/>
ment Walker said. "We are still<lb/>
young, but with leadership and the<lb/>
younger players helping out, we<lb/>
should be okay<lb/>
Along with the three Pirates,<lb/>
Michelle Vandrovec (Winthrop),<lb/>
Brianna Sandburg (Campbell) and<lb/>
Tinsley Gordon (Campbell) were<lb/>
named to the all-tournament squad,<lb/>
with Vandrovec recieving MVP hon-<lb/>
ors.<lb/>
The Pirates will next be in action<lb/>
September 5-6 as they participate in<lb/>
the Coastal Carolina Invitational.<lb/>
cvV c<lb/>
Come see what service and sisterhood is all about!<lb/>
FALL RUSH<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 2-4<lb/>
TUESDAYMSC UNDERGROUND<lb/>
WEDNESDAYGC 1003<lb/>
THURSDAYMSC UNDERGROUND<lb/>
DRESS IS CASUAL. ALL MEETINGS WILL BEGIN AT 8:00 P.M. YOU MUST<lb/>
ATTEND ONLY ONE SESSION.<lb/>
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WOULD LIKE FURTHER INFORMATION,<lb/>
PLEASE CONTACT JENNY LOVE AT 328-7889.<lb/>
I<lb/>
PA<lb/>
OPTOMeiWC<lb/>
�Y�GAR�C�K!�R?<lb/>
Dr. David L. Fitzgerald � Optician Gary M. Hams<lb/>
Carolina East Mall 601 S.E. Greenville Brvd<lb/>
Highway 11 Greenville, NC<lb/>
Greenville, NC � 756787 7564204<lb/>
Gary M. Harris.<lb/>
Optician<lb/>
915 W. 13th Street<lb/>
Washington, NC<lb/>
975040<lb/>
77USHwy64E<lb/>
Plymouth Market Center<lb/>
Plymouth. NC 793-2103<lb/>
Dr. David L.<lb/>
Fitzgerald<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
INTERFRATERNITY<lb/>
AX<lb/>
AIO<lb/>
AI4<lb/>
KI<lb/>
KA<lb/>
AXA<lb/>
DKF<lb/>
OKT<lb/>
nKA<lb/>
Council<lb/>
Announces<lb/>
Fall Rush Dates<lb/>
September 8-11,1997<lb/>
8:00 p.m 11:00 p.m.<lb/>
nKO<lb/>
riAO<lb/>
iae<lb/>
IN<lb/>
IDE<lb/>
in<lb/>
ITT<lb/>
TKE<lb/>
ex<lb/>
For more Information Contact the IFC<lb/>
Office at 328-4706.<lb/>
Experience The Best Kind Of Life ECU<lb/>
Has To Offer: Greek Life!<lb/>
A Map of all Rush Locations will be printed in the 94 Edition of the<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
1<lb/>
'����"�<lb/>
 '<lb/>
<lb/>
 4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0013"/><lb/>
bm � mmoBsmm m �<lb/>
13 Tuesday, September 2, 1997<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Intramural volleyball registration meeting tonight<lb/>
The 1997 Intramural Volleyball<lb/>
season will be "set" off with a regis-<lb/>
tration meeting on Tuesday. Sept. 9 at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, Room 244. Registration for<lb/>
league play will take place the follow-<lb/>
ing dav on Wednesday Sept. 10 from<lb/>
10:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in 128<lb/>
Student Recreation Center. Any indi-<lb/>
viduals interested in registering a<lb/>
team should attend this meeting.<lb/>
Those individuals who have not yet<lb/>
joined a team but would like to be<lb/>
"recruited" should attend as well for<lb/>
assistance in placement on a team. Six<lb/>
players are needed to form a team and<lb/>
leagues will be offered on a variety of<lb/>
playing dates and times. Several divi-<lb/>
sions of skill are available in order to<lb/>
accommodate to diverse interests of<lb/>
all participants.<lb/>
Divisions offered will include<lb/>
Fraternity Gold and Purple, Men's<lb/>
Independent Gold and Purple. Men's<lb/>
HUNGRY, PIRATE?<lb/>
Go to CHICO's and get a HUNGRY<lb/>
PIRATE! It's the biggest burrito you've<lb/>
ever seen! And you won't have to dig<lb/>
into your treasure chest-it's only $3.95.<lb/>
MonFri. 2-5 and Sat &amp; Sun. 11 -5.<lb/>
JilL<lb/>
Wet Your Whistle<lb/>
With One Of These:<lb/>
m SANGRIAS $1.75<lb/>
BLOODY MARY'S $2.25<lb/>
MON. 12 PRICE PITCHERS<lb/>
OF DRAFT<lb/>
TUES. LIME MARGARITAS $2.50<lb/>
WE). MEXICAN IMPORTS $1.75<lb/>
THURS. PINK MARGARITAS $2.75<lb/>
HI-BALLS $1.99<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS FOR<lb/>
LUNCH, DINNER &amp; FIESTAS!<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENV � <lb/>
(ACROSS FROM USE)<lb/>
757-1666<lb/>
Residence Hall. Women's<lb/>
Independent Gold and Purple,<lb/>
Women's Residence Hall, Sorority<lb/>
and Co-Rec. Gold leagues are<lb/>
designed for participants who have<lb/>
experience in competitive play and<lb/>
wish to participate at a higher level<lb/>
of skill, while Purple leagues are<lb/>
more recreational in nature. All<lb/>
teams will play a four game round-<lb/>
robin regular season and may quali-<lb/>
fy' to advance to a single elimination<lb/>
tournament within their division<lb/>
and all-campus finals. Regular sea-<lb/>
son play will begin on Monday,<lb/>
Sept. 15 and all games will be held<lb/>
in the Student Recreation Center.<lb/>
The rules of USA Volleyball will be<lb/>
in effect with ECU Intramural<lb/>
Sports modifications.<lb/>
Prior to the beginning of the reg-<lb/>
ular season, teams will also have the<lb/>
opportunity to test their skills in<lb/>
competition in the Volleyball<lb/>
Preview which will be held on<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 11 and Sunday,<lb/>
Sept. 14. The Preview provides the<lb/>
medium for teams entering the reg-<lb/>
ular season to play shortened<lb/>
matches against several opponents<lb/>
in one night thereby allowing them<lb/>
to practice under game conditions<lb/>
and refine skills and strategies for<lb/>
upcoming league play. Preview reg-<lb/>
istration will be available to a limit-<lb/>
ed number of teams and will be<lb/>
conducted at the same times as the<lb/>
normal volleyball registration. Pool<lb/>
play times will be available on<lb/>
either Thursday or Sunday.<lb/>
The 1996 season featured par-<lb/>
ticipation by 65 teams battling for<lb/>
the distinction of wearing the<lb/>
prized "Intramural Champion t-<lb/>
shirt For further information,<lb/>
please contact Allison Kemp or<lb/>
David Gaskins at Recreational<lb/>
Services at 328-6.587 or visit the<lb/>
Student Recreation Center.<lb/>
SCORES FROM THIS WEEKEND<lb/>
Thursday, Aug. 28<lb/>
Cincinnati 34 Tulsa 24<lb/>
Saturday, Aug. 30<lb/>
(15) Alabama 42 Houston 17<lb/>
Kentucky 38 Louisville 24<lb/>
Mississippi State 13 Memphis 10<lb/>
1) Florida 21 Southern Miss 6<lb/>
Syracuse stunned by loss to North Carolina State<lb/>
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) � Syracuse tight end Roland Williams stood tall<lb/>
and tried to answer that all-too-familiar question: Why?<lb/>
He tried, but tears welled up in his eves and he just walked away.<lb/>
One week after they transformed Wisconsin's Ron Dayne into just<lb/>
another running back, the Syracuse Orangemen now have to wonder if<lb/>
they're just another team after Saturday's stunning 32-31 overtime loss to<lb/>
North Carolina State, a 25-point underdog.<lb/>
The raves had poured in when Syracuse humbled the speedy 260-<lb/>
pound Dayne and Wisconsin in the Kickoff Classic, winning 34-0 and hold-<lb/>
ing one of the premier running backs in the nation to 46 yards on 13 car-<lb/>
ries. The victory boosted the Orangemen four spots to No. 13 in the rank-<lb/>
ings. . '<lb/>
But against the Wolfpack, the Orangemen couldn't stop shifty Jamie<lb/>
Bamette, the 199-pound sophomore quarterback of a team coming off con-<lb/>
secutive 3-8 seasons, and lost. In one afternoon, Syracuse went from<lb/>
unbeaten to unranked.<lb/>
"Football, like life, is about 10 percent what happens and 90 how you<lb/>
react to it Syracuse coach Paul Pasqualoni said in the dreary aftermath.<lb/>
"It's going to be important now to see how we react. That's what's gping<lb/>
to be really important<lb/>
Fortunately, or maybe unfortunately, the Orangemen have plenty of<lb/>
experience to fall back on. Only last year they began the season ranked No.<lb/>
10 and quickly lost their first two games � to North Carolina and<lb/>
Minnesota.<lb/>
Gordon wins third straight Southern 500,<lb/>
Winston Million<lb/>
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) � Jeff Gordon saves his amazing accomplish-<lb/>
ments for the race track. At home, he's just like you and me.<lb/>
"I live a normal life. Just like you, just like the fans said Gordon, who<lb/>
captured the Winston Million on Sunday by winning is third straight<lb/>
Southern 500 - two of his sports' most unique feats.<lb/>
Yet. whenever he's introduced these days, there are as many boos as<lb/>
hurrahs. The public sees him as privileged and spoiled, with a covergirl<lb/>
wife and a charmed existence.<lb/>
"I wish everybody could spend a week with us Gordon said, "fcople<lb/>
need to understand, we do laundry, we pay bills. It's just on a different<lb/>
scale<lb/>
A very different scale, unless you're a 26-year-old who has earned more<lb/>
than S13 million in just c.er five years on the Winston Cup circuit. And<lb/>
that figures to grow even greater when Gordon hits his prime.<lb/>
"Brooke and I have a great life and everything he says, "but to say it's<lb/>
perfect, I don't know what that is<lb/>
Let's help figure that out, at least on the track. No racer in history had<lb/>
won the Southern 500 three years in a row � not The Silver Fox, David<lb/>
Pearson; not The Intimidator, Dale Earnhardt; not The King, Richard<lb/>
Petty.<lb/>
Only Bill Elliott had won the Winston Million bonus before, way back<lb/>
in 1985. A driver could make a Hall of Fame career out of Gordon's resume<lb/>
- 28 victories and a Winston Cup title.<lb/>
Comets make history, WNBA looks to future<lb/>
HOI 'STON (AP) � At rhe same time rhe Houston Comers were making<lb/>
history by becoming the first WNBA champion, the league was already<lb/>
looking to the future.<lb/>
- The Comets beat the New York Liberty 65-51 Saturday to win the title,<lb/>
capping a successful first season for the women's league that is considering<lb/>
expanding from eight to 10 teams for the 1998 season.<lb/>
"Years from now when women's basketball is going great and they have<lb/>
one of those trivia questions about who won the first title, they'll say the<lb/>
Houston Comets Comets coach Van Chancellor said. "Nobody else can<lb/>
ever say they won the first WNBA title<lb/>
Houston began the season without star Sheryl Swoopes, who didn't join<lb/>
the team until late July after giving birth June 25. Cynthia Cooper, who had<lb/>
25 points in the title game, earned the league's MVP trophy and was the<lb/>
only unanimous all-WNBA selection.<lb/>
The Comets won when it counted, and so did the WNBA in its first sea-<lb/>
son. President Val Ackerman said before Saturday's title game that the<lb/>
league's only surprises were good ones.<lb/>
Looking to next season, Ackerman said she hopes there will be a longer<lb/>
schedule and more teams.<lb/>
"It's my hope that when the NBA Board of Governors meets in its<lb/>
entirety in November in New York, that we're going to be able to recom-<lb/>
mend to them that we expand by two teams next season Ackerman said.<lb/>
She wouldn't say where the teams would be located, but said several<lb/>
NBA teams were interested in adding WNBA franchises.<lb/>
Redskins 24, Panthers 10<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) � It's looking like 1996 all over again for<lb/>
Washington's Terry Allen. The Carolina Panthers wish they could say the<lb/>
same thing about the way their year has started.<lb/>
Allen, who set a franchise record with 1,353 yards rushing last year and<lb/>
led the NFL with 21 touchdowns, ran for 141 yards and two scores to<lb/>
power the Redskins to a 24-10 victory over error-prone Carolina on Sunday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
"Teams are going to have to key on Terry because he is going to be a<lb/>
force quarterback Gus Frerotte said after Washington saddled the<lb/>
Panthers with their first loss in the 10-game history of Ericsson Stadium.<lb/>
"It wasn't easy said Allen, who rushed 25 times. "Once you get up on<lb/>
a team, then you're able to come out and run the ball more, and that's what<lb/>
we wanted to do � finish the game running the ball<lb/>
Carolina allowed just one touchdown in the second half all last season<lb/>
at Ericsson, but Washington doubled that total Sunday night, when the<lb/>
Panthers had four turnovers. The Redskins converted three of those into<lb/>
17 points on the way to snapping the Panthers' seven-game regular-season<lb/>
winning streak.<lb/>
"We weren't as sharp as we need to be coach Dom Capers said. "The<lb/>
kev is always how you respond to these things<lb/>
Carolina had the third-best turnover differential in the NFL last year,<lb/>
helping the Panthers win the NFC West and advance to the NFC champi-<lb/>
onship game in just the franchise's second year.<lb/>
not "banking<lb/>
If you've got better things to do at night than wrestle with<lb/>
your checking account, the College Account from Wachovia<lb/>
is for you. We make it easy, with free checking and a<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058722_0014"/><lb/>
14 Tuesday. September 2, 1397<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
FREE PREGNANCY TEST<lb/>
While you wait<lb/>
Free &amp; Confidential<lb/>
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757-0003<lb/>
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wemm<lb/>
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RECREATIONAL<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Pick -up your<lb/>
Fall program guide<lb/>
(Intramurals)<lb/>
Volleyball officials meeting - Sept. 4<lb/>
Volleyball meeting - Sept. 9<lb/>
Tennis singles deadline - Sept. 16<lb/>
Co-Rec Basketball meeting - Sept. 23<lb/>
Super Bali doubles Golf deadline - Sept. 23<lb/>
Adventure Center<lb/>
Set the edge!<lb/>
Climbing Weekend - Sept. 5-7 � call<lb/>
Rafting Sea Kayaking Canoe:<lb/>
Raft the Gauley, WV - Sept. 26-27 � Reg. Sept. 12<lb/>
Sea Kayak Sand Dollar - Sept. 14 � Reg. Sept. 5<lb/>
Canoe the Tar River - Sept. 1024 � call<lb/>
King and Queen of the Halls<lb/>
September 4th � 4pm to 6pm - College Hill<lb/>
World's Largest Slip-in-Slide � Free drinks<lb/>
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Balloon Battle � Much More <lb/>
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<pb facs="00058722_0015"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
: ���'<lb/>
MM<lb/>
Student Email @ ECU<lb/>
Student Email<lb/>
tS-xU:S�Sl<lb/>
Bii<lb/>
Beginning Fall 97 ECU Students will receive NEW e-mail accounts as a<lb/>
part of an initiative to enhance campus electronic communication.<lb/>
M The new mat service is free and begins August 20, 1997.<lb/>
You do IflfM need to apply for this account, one will be generated<lb/>
for you automatically.<lb/>
The new service based on Microsoft Exchange will be phased in while ECUVM,<lb/>
ECUVAX, &amp; ECUSUN based e-mail will be gradually phased out.<lb/>
Exchange mail can be accessed from anywhere (home, dorm, campus lab, etc) that you<lb/>
have access to a web browser. Just surf to the following URL:<lb/>
http:www.mail.ecu.eduexchange<lb/>
Your 5J0 will be your legal initials followed by the month &amp; day<lb/>
you were born. For example, James T. Kirk, born March 4 would<lb/>
have a userid of JTK0304. If there are two people with the same<lb/>
initials and birthday, then a "D" will be added to the end of the<lb/>
userid.<lb/>
You can search for and confirm your userid from the ECU home page (http:<lb/>
www.ecu.edu) by clicking on Telephone &amp; E-Mail Information under About ECU or at:<lb/>
http:www3.ecu.eduemailemaiLcfm<lb/>
�� Your J2HS3B Wl" k� e last six digits of your social security<lb/>
number. You should change this the first time you use your account<lb/>
by clicking on Options on the left side of your Exchange screen.<lb/>
Then click on Change Exchange Password. Change your password to<lb/>
that you can remember but one that is not easily guessed.<lb/>
Your e-mail address will be your userid followed by @mail.ecu.edu .<lb/>
For on-line help, go to the ECU home page (http:www.ecu.edu) and click on<lb/>
Telephone &amp; E-Mail information under About ECU. Then click on On-line help for<lb/>
Exchange Web Access.<lb/>
If you have any questions, or problems using your account, stop by<lb/>
Austin 208 or call 328-0077.<lb/>
Cv:�x<lb/>
�MMWS<lb/>
S<lb/>
m " mm rfi �<lb/>
&amp; fc �<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0016"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
16 TiMsdty. Stptsmbtr 2. 1997<lb/>
classifieds<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED TO SHAM<lb/>
two bedroom at Treybrooke Apts.<lb/>
able A!AM tall WU-U33A<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED TO<lb/>
share 3 bedroom house 1 mile from<lb/>
campus. 13 rent, utilities and cable<lb/>
Nice neighborhood. CaH Kim, 758-<lb/>
2800. after 8PM. 830-9038.<lb/>
FEMALE STUDENT TO SHARE two<lb/>
bedroom apartment. Clean and in<lb/>
good location. Must be responsible<lb/>
and concerned about school. $225<lb/>
per month phis utilities. Call 353-<lb/>
9412.<lb/>
SERIOUS MALE OR FEMALE need-<lb/>
ed ASAP, for 2 bedroom apt. close<lb/>
to Plaza on ECU BusBne. Cad Phil to-<lb/>
day for further info 321-2813.<lb/>
MALI ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
A.S.A.P. to share 3 bedroom apart-<lb/>
ment in Wilson Acres. Smokers, so-<lb/>
cial drinkers OK. Must be neet also<lb/>
Rent is $230mo and 13 utilities<lb/>
Cable, pool, tennis included. Please<lb/>
contact 413-0384. ask for Chris or Jo-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED TO SHARE<lb/>
2 bedroom townhouse. Grad student<lb/>
preferred. Non-smoker. $290 plus<lb/>
12 utilities 353-8190.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED ASAP TWO<lb/>
Mocks from campus and downtown<lb/>
and just a skip away from City Mar<lb/>
ket. Call us. leave a message. 561-<lb/>
8178.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED TO shore spacious home 3<lb/>
blocks from campus. Washerdryer,<lb/>
drshwether. gas heat. For more info<lb/>
leave message for Kevin et 830-<lb/>
8828.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
ASAP for Players Club Apartments.<lb/>
Rent is $220 monthly 14 utilities.<lb/>
Includes pool, tennis, washerdryer.<lb/>
Please contact Jessica at 758-7539.<lb/>
FREE UTILITIES. 1 BEDROOM, 12<lb/>
block from camps on HoHy St. Cats<lb/>
allowed with deposit. Rent $305 a<lb/>
month. 757-9387.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTEDI12<lb/>
BLOCK FROM campus. Own room<lb/>
and bath. $230 per month plus 13<lb/>
utilities Cell 752-8118. Josh. Btaine or<lb/>
Derek.<lb/>
RETRO SLEEPER SOFA FOR sole.<lb/>
$50 or best offer. CaH Dana at 758-<lb/>
5783.<lb/>
IGUANA AND SALE-PIN DRAGON.<lb/>
both 1 12 years old. Separately<lb/>
$40 apiece, both for $70. Includes<lb/>
water bowl, heet rock and other ac-<lb/>
cessories. Cage not included. Call<lb/>
Scott 353-2488, leave message.<lb/>
PEPPER SPRAY STUN GUNS AND<lb/>
ALARMS. Take responsibility for<lb/>
your security. For a free brochure e-<lb/>
meM FlrHnsec�eol.com or write First<lb/>
Line Security. PO Box 287. Greenville.<lb/>
NC 27835.<lb/>
INKJET PRINTER DIGITAL<lb/>
DECWRITER 1001. prints block only.<lb/>
Manual, driver disk, and cable includ-<lb/>
ed. $75. Cell 355-2548.<lb/>
KING-SIZE WATERBED WITH six<lb/>
drawers; large headboard with mir-<lb/>
ror, shelves and overhead light: and<lb/>
mattress with baffles for minimal<lb/>
movement. CaH 758-2971 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
WANTED: SOCCER OFFICIALS<lb/>
WITH knowledge of Soccer, will<lb/>
train. Must have transportation. Work<lb/>
on Saturdays only. Car) Rita at 830-<lb/>
4218.<lb/>
NOW HIRING PART-TIME. HELP<lb/>
needed, flexible hours. Sberros. Pla-<lb/>
za Mall. 355-5155.<lb/>
MALE DIVERS NEEDEDI ECU<lb/>
Swim Team needs guys who like to<lb/>
flip and twist. Call Coach Rose. ext.<lb/>
0010 or come to Minges Pool Office.<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
Semaj Entertainment<lb/>
New York City DJ offering<lb/>
Unda-Ground House,<lb/>
Reggae, Hip Hop and<lb/>
R&amp;B. Contact J. Arthur<lb/>
at (919) 524-4442.<lb/>
Also Special rates for<lb/>
Fraternities, Sororities and all<lb/>
Organizations.<lb/>
For Sale<lb/>
HELP I WE HAVE RUN out of room.<lb/>
Bluegray queen sleeper sofa for<lb/>
sale. Good condition. $85 obo Cell<lb/>
758-7734.<lb/>
IBM THINKPADS AND OTHER lap-<lb/>
tops. 100H financing available Stud-<lb/>
ent discounts. Finance for less than<lb/>
$35.00 a month. Can Alfred at<lb/>
(919)355-7057. Free carrying case.<lb/>
DORM FRIDGE. WORKS GREAT.<lb/>
$40. Block fold-out chair. $20. Smalf<lb/>
ironing board, $10. TVVCR cart.<lb/>
$20. Call 758-3783. All things great<lb/>
for your dorm room!<lb/>
THE RONALD MCDONALD<lb/>
HOUSE is hiring public relations in-<lb/>
terns for the Fell Semester! Interns<lb/>
will assist us with our biggest in-<lb/>
house fundraiser of the yeer. "Light e<lb/>
Luminary. In addition, they may<lb/>
write press releases and use Page-<lb/>
maker tosdevelop our newsletter. You<lb/>
win need two available afternoons<lb/>
per week end et least one Saturday<lb/>
per month. The position is unpaid,<lb/>
but you will gam valuable experience!<lb/>
for more informetion. please contact<lb/>
JP. Wortey at 830-0082.<lb/>
KARATE INSTRUCTOR: RECREA-<lb/>
TION COMPANY seeks part-time<lb/>
help. Evenings. Greet $. Cell 919-319-<lb/>
1228.<lb/>
PART-TIME JOBS AVAILABLE.<lb/>
Joan's Fashions, a local Women's<lb/>
Clothing store, is now filling pert-time<lb/>
positions. Employees ere needed for<lb/>
Saturdays andor weekdays between<lb/>
10:00 em. and 8:00 p.m. The posi-<lb/>
tions ere for between 7 and 20 hours<lb/>
per week, depending on your sched-<lb/>
ule and on business needs. The jobs<lb/>
are within walking distance of the<lb/>
university end the hours ere flexible.<lb/>
Pay is commensurate wlti your ex-<lb/>
perience and job performance and is<lb/>
supplemented by en employee dis-<lb/>
count. Apply in person to Store Men-<lb/>
eger, Joan's Fashions. 423 S. Evans<lb/>
Street. Greenville (on the Downtown<lb/>
Mall)<lb/>
NON-SMOKING CAREGIVER<lb/>
NEEDED for four yeer old with mild<lb/>
lung disease. Own transportation,<lb/>
references, criminal check. Hours are<lb/>
12-5:00 p.m. Monday. Wednesday.<lb/>
Friday. May also need someone on<lb/>
luesdays and Thursdays. CaH 830-<lb/>
9082 after 5:00 p.m. and leave mes-<lb/>
sage<lb/>
PART-TIME CHILDCARE NEEDED<lb/>
two days per week for my 3 end 8-<lb/>
year old sons. Need experienced,<lb/>
fun-loving, energetic student with re-<lb/>
liable transportation. Please call 353-<lb/>
7446.<lb/>
PART-TIME INTERIOR DESIGNER<lb/>
needed to work in wallpaper, wind-<lb/>
ow treatments and carpet depart-<lb/>
ment. Students please cell 758-2300<lb/>
to set up e time for en interview.<lb/>
UNITED METHODIST STUDENT<lb/>
WANTED for work with Bethel UMC<lb/>
Youth group. Applicent must have e<lb/>
strong Christien faith. Youth meet<lb/>
from 5:00p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Sunday<lb/>
evenings. Pays $30.00 per week.<lb/>
Cell 825-8041.<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS. WELCOME<lb/>
BACK I Begin the new school year<lb/>
and the fall semester with a part-time<lb/>
position with Brody's or Brady's<lb/>
Men's Stores. Work whit the hottest<lb/>
end newest styles for the upcoming<lb/>
fall season. Part-time hours available<lb/>
in Juniors Sportswear. Young Men's<lb/>
apparel, and customer Service Flexi-<lb/>
ble morning, eftemoon. or evening<lb/>
hours. All positions include weekend<lb/>
hours. Applications accepted at Cus-<lb/>
tomer Service. Brody's. The Ploza.<lb/>
EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA'S<lb/>
FASHION leeder is seeking an Assis-<lb/>
tant Buyer. It's e great opportunity for<lb/>
individuals with a retail or visual mer-<lb/>
chandising background. Perform ad-<lb/>
ministrativeclerical duties while<lb/>
learning about the fashion buying. A<lb/>
full time position that requires day-<lb/>
time availability It's a wonderful and<lb/>
exciting opportunity to explore the<lb/>
fashion industry while obtaining valu-<lb/>
able work experience. For informe-<lb/>
tion. celt Angela Roberson. Brody's.<lb/>
The Plaza. 758-3140<lb/>
FREE T-SHIRT<lb/>
$1000<lb/>
Credit Card fundraisers for<lb/>
fraternities, sororities 6<lb/>
groups. Any campus<lb/>
organization can raise up<lb/>
to $1000 by earning a<lb/>
whopping $S.OOVISA<lb/>
application. Call<lb/>
1-600-932-0528 ext. 65.<lb/>
Qualified callers receive<lb/>
FREE T-SHIRT<lb/>
THE WINTERVILLE RECREATION<lb/>
DEPARTMENT needs Soccer<lb/>
CoachesReferees for the upcoming<lb/>
soccer season. The games will be<lb/>
played on Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
evenings and practices wiii be deter-<lb/>
mined by the Coaches. For mere in-<lb/>
formation, contact Jay Johnson at<lb/>
the Winterville Recreation Depart-<lb/>
ment. 756-2221.<lb/>
ONLINE COLLECTIONS IS CUR-<lb/>
RENTLY hiring part-time telephone<lb/>
collectors. Applicants must be con-<lb/>
fident, aggressive, self-motivated,<lb/>
and possess excellent communica-<lb/>
tion skills. If interested, contact<lb/>
Chuck Dew at 757-2132. after 4:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
TUTORS NEEDED: THE DEPART-<lb/>
MENT of Athletics. Office of Student<lb/>
Development is currently hiring full-<lb/>
time ECU students and graduate<lb/>
students to tutor student-athletes in<lb/>
ell subject areas Minimum 3.0 GPA<lb/>
required. CaH 328-4550.<lb/>
TEMPORARY JOBS AVAILABLE:<lb/>
BRODY'S is accepting applications<lb/>
for sales warehouse positions. All<lb/>
hours needed up to 40 hours per<lb/>
week. Ideal for students sitting out of<lb/>
school, or for individuals presently<lb/>
between jobs. Positions could lead to<lb/>
long term employment. Warehouse<lb/>
areas require some lifting. Applica-<lb/>
tions accepted at Customer Service.<lb/>
Brody's. The Plaza.<lb/>
PART-TIME JOB POSITIONS avail-<lb/>
able. Greenville Recreation 6 Parks<lb/>
Department. FALL YOUTH SOCCER<lb/>
COACHES. The Greenville Recrea-<lb/>
tion 8 Parks Department is recruiting<lb/>
for 12 to 16 part-time youth soccer<lb/>
coaches for the fall youth soccer pro-<lb/>
gram. Applicants must possess some<lb/>
knowledge of the soccer skills and<lb/>
have the ability and patience to work<lb/>
with youth. Applicants must be able<lb/>
to coach young people ages 5-15. in<lb/>
soccer fundamentals. Hours are from<lb/>
3:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m. with some<lb/>
night and weekend coaching. Flexi-<lb/>
ble with hours according to data<lb/>
schedules.This program will run<lb/>
from September to mid November.<lb/>
Salary rates start at $5.15 per hour.<lb/>
For more information, please call Ben<lb/>
James or Micheel Daly at 830-4550<lb/>
after 2:00 pjn.<lb/>
NEED A JOB? PLAY at day and<lb/>
make money at night! Work nights<lb/>
andor weekends and have your<lb/>
days free with The ECU Telefund.<lb/>
Make your own schedule! $5.50hr.<lb/>
plus bonuses! Stop by the Rawl An-<lb/>
nex. Room 5 between 3-6PM for<lb/>
more info.<lb/>
JOIN THE BBC - Join the Buffalo<lb/>
Brew Crew. BW-3 is now hiring kitch-<lb/>
en, cashier, and door staff for Fall Se-<lb/>
mester. Apply within M-F. 1-5PM. 114<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
NOW HIRING PLAYMATES MAS-<lb/>
SAGE earn great money. Confi-<lb/>
dential employment. Call today.<lb/>
747-7688.<lb/>
Greek Personals<lb/>
ORDER OF OMEGA'S FIRST meet-<lb/>
ing Tuesday. September 2nd at 8PM<lb/>
in MSC Great Room. Come and find<lb/>
out about all the great things<lb/>
planned.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI NEW MEMBERS if<lb/>
you girls thought bid night was excit-<lb/>
ing, get ready for Pref because it's<lb/>
going to be unforgettable! Love, the<lb/>
sisters of Alpha Phi<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO JULIE<lb/>
ON your engagement and JD on<lb/>
your lavalier! We ere all so happy for<lb/>
you! Love, the sisters and new mem-<lb/>
bers of Alpha Omicron Pi.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI WOULD LIKE to wel-<lb/>
come our new members: Jenn Cole.<lb/>
Brienne Faircloth. Kelli Fields. Andrea<lb/>
Gillispie. Angle Greene, Julie Guy.<lb/>
Becky Gunn. Lise Landis. Kendra<lb/>
Latham. Julie Lowe. Katie Mardis. Ka-<lb/>
tie Muench. Corie Norton. Jelty Orte.<lb/>
Tiffany Person. Amende Roberts. Gin-<lb/>
ny Stanley. Angie Sterder. Melanie<lb/>
Warren. Mary WiHiford. and Lisa<lb/>
Pearson. Congratulations girts! Love,<lb/>
the sisters of Alpha Phi!<lb/>
THE SIGMAS WANT TO thank Kap-<lb/>
pa Sigma for hosting our Pref Night!<lb/>
The New Members loved it! The DJ<lb/>
was awesome and the limo was a<lb/>
great touch!<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR<lb/>
NEW Officers: President- Holly Kun-<lb/>
kel. Vice President of Administration-<lb/>
Megan Simpson. Vice President of<lb/>
Education- Meri Spencer. Corre-<lb/>
sponding Secretary- Tanya Fowler.<lb/>
Recording Secretary- Lindsay Amdt.<lb/>
House Treasurer- Amy Hinnant.<lb/>
Chapter Treasurer- Tina Justice. New<lb/>
Member Educator- Mindy Schaefer.<lb/>
Social Chair- Heater Otto. Chapter<lb/>
Relations- Heather Newmen. Keeper<lb/>
of the Ritual- Joy Pugh, Property<lb/>
Manager- Michelle Gottschalk. Rush<lb/>
Chair- Jessica Orsini. Scholarship<lb/>
Noell Eliingsworth. Public Relations-<lb/>
Chassidy Miilsap. FundraiserPhilan-<lb/>
thropy- Tracy McLendon. Historian-<lb/>
Kirsta Clagett. Penhellenic Delegate-<lb/>
Gina Larson. Intramurals- Tawni<lb/>
Hines, and Alumni Relations- Allision<lb/>
Krissell. Good kick this year) Love,<lb/>
the sisters and new members of Al-<lb/>
pha Omicron Pi.<lb/>
SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA WOULD<lb/>
like to thank Jaime High for a great<lb/>
rush) Lee Jordan. Christy Johnson<lb/>
and Jennifer Miller, you did a great<lb/>
job as Rho-Chi's. Thanks for repre-<lb/>
senting Sigma!<lb/>
SIGMA WANTS TO CONGRATU-<lb/>
LATE Our new members: Sarah Bar-<lb/>
bour. (President) Carrie Brewer. Shan-<lb/>
na Copperwalte. Sabrina Denhardt.<lb/>
Lynsey Durshin, (Treasurer) Lauren<lb/>
Ennis. GabrieHe Kantrowitz. Kim Kel-<lb/>
ly, Allison Knotts. Jessica Knowles.<lb/>
(Secretary) Jennifer Lanier. Elizabeth<lb/>
Miller. Liz Miranda. Julie Patton. Dar-<lb/>
la Pridgen. (Public Relations) Misty<lb/>
Shirley. (Public Relations) Taryn Sik-<lb/>
keme. We love you guys!<lb/>
ZETA TAU ALPHA WOULD like to<lb/>
Welcome our New Members! Taryn<lb/>
Cavaco. Christ a Jewell. Stephanie<lb/>
Shlfler. Meredith Brown. Beth Wolf-<lb/>
gang. Amanda Austin. Nikki Frith.<lb/>
Deidre Smith. Cora Smith. Jennifer<lb/>
flight sell, Sarah McConnell. Melissa<lb/>
Parks. Sara Amesen. Katie Caffrey.<lb/>
Donna Cooper. Emily Poe. Kristen<lb/>
Hunnell. Lort Cobb. Jennifer Bryant.<lb/>
Casey Rushton. and Lauren Bicanish.<lb/>
Congratulations and we ere looking<lb/>
forward to a great semester! Love,<lb/>
the Sisters of Zeta Teu Alpha.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
THE NEXT MEETING OF the Pitt<lb/>
County Chapter of the American<lb/>
Diabetes Association will take place<lb/>
on Monday. September 8. 1997. at<lb/>
7pm at the Leslie-Gaskins Building at<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital. This<lb/>
months topic is "Food, Folks, and<lb/>
Fun and will include speakers from<lb/>
the North Carolina American<lb/>
Diabetes Association headquarters in<lb/>
Raleigh, plus a "Healthy Eating Tip of<lb/>
the Month Refreshments and door<lb/>
prizes will be available.<lb/>
BACKPACKING: JOIN US FOR<lb/>
backpacking in Mr. Mitchell on Sept.<lb/>
12-14. Be sure to register by Sept. 5<lb/>
in the Student Recreation Canter<lb/>
main office. Dept. of Rec. Services.<lb/>
RUSH GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
National Service Sorority Sept. 2-4<lb/>
at 8:00 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday.<lb/>
MSC Underground. Wed. GC1003.<lb/>
Casual dress. You must only attend<lb/>
one meeting. Come see what service<lb/>
end sisterhood is ell about! Please<lb/>
call 328-7889 for more information.<lb/>
THE ECO SCHOOL OF Anything<lb/>
Goes Anime returns with high-quality<lb/>
Japanese Animation for the Green-<lb/>
ville area) You need not be a member<lb/>
to attend our second meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday. September 3 at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. In Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Room 221.<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL OFFICIALS MEET-<lb/>
ING: SEPT. 4 at 9:00 p.m. in the<lb/>
Student Recrei Room<lb/>
202. Dept. of Rr<lb/>
THE HOSPITALITY MANAGE-<lb/>
MENT ASSOCIATION wiH be hold-<lb/>
ing its first meeting on September 3.<lb/>
at 3:30 in the Rivers Building Dining<lb/>
Room. There wHI be refreshments<lb/>
and a prize.<lb/>
D.A.N.S.E COME FIND OUT what<lb/>
the D.A.N.S.E. aerobic elate is all<lb/>
about on Sept. 5 from 4:O0-5:30pn.<lb/>
at the Student Recreation Center.<lb/>
Dept. of Rec. Services.<lb/>
FRI. SEPT. 3 FACULTY RECITAL.<lb/>
Duo recital of Works by Beethoven.<lb/>
Schumann and Shostakovich. Kelley<lb/>
Mikkelsen. cello and Paul Tardif.<lb/>
piano. A.J. Fletcher Recital Hal. 8:00<lb/>
PM.<lb/>
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SEMINAR7<lb/>
GRIFTON Police Department.<lb/>
Place: Grtfton Town Hall<lb/>
Date: Sept. 19. 1997<lb/>
Time: 7:00-9:00 pm.<lb/>
This is to educate the public on why<lb/>
abusers abuse end steps you could<lb/>
take to protect yourself, also to be<lb/>
aware of Grifton Police Domestic<lb/>
Violence Program. If question,<lb/>
please call 524-4181 or 524-4208.<lb/>
Domestic Violence Hotline.<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
SPRING BREAK '98- sell trips, earn<lb/>
cash and go free Student Travel<lb/>
Services is now hiring campus<lb/>
repsgroup organizers. Lowest rates<lb/>
to Jamaica, Mexico 8 Florida. Call 1 -<lb/>
800-848-4849.<lb/>
Northwestern Natal uKT<lb/>
Sales iBtmshl Available<lb/>
Rated in Top 10 Internship Programs<lb/>
by Princeton Review<lb/>
Contact<lb/>
Jeff Mahoaty at<lb/>
"DtheT<lb/>
CLASSIC ROCK GUITARIST SING-<lb/>
ER looking for drummer bass keys<lb/>
lead to form a band. Experience and<lb/>
vocals a plus. CaH Patrick today. 355-<lb/>
9568.<lb/>
Looking for what's<lb/>
happening on campus<lb/>
this weekend? Point<lb/>
your browser to:<lb/>
Searching for a way to<lb/>
publicize your group's<lb/>
activities? Point your<lb/>
browser to:<lb/>
Stuck on campus and<lb/>
looking for something<lb/>
to do? Point your<lb/>
browser to:<lb/>
With the help of everyone who plans and schedules activities on campus.<lb/>
we're compiling the most complete calendar of campus events available.<lb/>
IF you're planning an event, go to our web site and submit it to our calendar.<lb/>
If you're wondering what's happening, go to our web site to find out.<lb/>
Campus Calendar - it's just another service of eastcarolinian<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0017"/><lb/>
Welcome to JOMR LIBRARY<lb/>
1997-1998<lb/>
Introducing the East Carolina University Libraries<lb/>
East Carolina University has three<lb/>
library facilities. Joyner Library the<lb/>
Music Library, and the Health Sciences<lb/>
Library. All university students, faculty,<lb/>
and staff are welcome to use any or all<lb/>
of these facilities. Current university<lb/>
identification is needed to check out<lb/>
materials at any of the libraries. The<lb/>
libraries are also open to the public.<lb/>
Joyner Library, located on the west end<lb/>
of the main campus, is the main<lb/>
campus library. It holds over a million<lb/>
volumes and has many electronic<lb/>
resources. It supports undergraduate<lb/>
and graduate study as well as faculty<lb/>
research and teaching.<lb/>
The Music Library, a branch of Joyner, is<lb/>
located on the first floor of the Fletcher<lb/>
Music Building on the east edge of the<lb/>
main campus. The Music Library<lb/>
supports the music and music-related<lb/>
programs (in campus with books,<lb/>
scores, recordings, and electronic<lb/>
resources.<lb/>
The Health Sciences Library is the<lb/>
library of the medical campus. It is<lb/>
located on the first floor of the Brody<lb/>
Building, adjacent to Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital. It has a variety of<lb/>
book and electronic resources that<lb/>
support die health science fields,<lb/>
including nursing and medical educa-<lb/>
tion, social work, and criminal justice.<lb/>
Table of Contents<lb/>
Joyner Library1<lb/>
Public Service Departments 3<lb/>
A Place to Study6<lb/>
This and That7<lb/>
Quick Guide8<lb/>
Frequently Asked Questions 8<lb/>
Maps9<lb/>
How to find10<lb/>
Music Library12<lb/>
Health Sciences Library13<lb/>
Joyner Library Building Project: "And the Move Goes On"<lb/>
As Fall Semester 1997 begins, Phase II<lb/>
of the Joyner Library Building Project<lb/>
remains on schedule. If you have been<lb/>
away for the summer, you will notice<lb/>
several changes that have taken place in<lb/>
the past three months. These changes<lb/>
were made in anticipation of the<lb/>
completion of Phase II, which is<lb/>
scheduled for the end of 1997.<lb/>
While you were away, the collections<lb/>
that were located on the second and<lb/>
third floors of the west wing (old<lb/>
building) have been moved to one of<lb/>
two places. Books and journals from<lb/>
1990 to the current date have been<lb/>
shifted to the third floor new building.<lb/>
Journals older than 1990 have been<lb/>
transported to off-campus storage for<lb/>
the duration of the building project.<lb/>
The relocation of these parts of the<lb/>
library's collections will cause some<lb/>
inconvenience to students, faculty, and<lb/>
staff. We apologize in advance for the<lb/>
inconvenience but had no choice, as<lb/>
the library temporarily loses about one-<lb/>
third of its space while Phase III<lb/>
renovation takes place.<lb/>
Steps have been taken to facilitate<lb/>
access to the journals that have been<lb/>
relocated to off-campus storage. A<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0018"/><lb/>
liiwnii<lb/>
The new entrance to Joyner<lb/>
(on the east aide, opposite the new<lb/>
dock tower) will open with the<lb/>
start of spring semester 1996.<lb/>
courier makes twice-a-day trips to the<lb/>
warehouse to bring back materials.<lb/>
Where possible, copies of journal<lb/>
articles will be faxed to offices or to the<lb/>
library's circulation desk for pick-up.<lb/>
Finally, when patrons have long runs of<lb/>
journals to work with, they may make<lb/>
arrangements to go to the storage<lb/>
facility. Individuals needing items in<lb/>
storage should present their requests to<lb/>
WELCOME TO<lb/>
JOYNER UBRARY<lb/>
Editor: Nancy P. Shires<lb/>
Editorial Board: Don Lennon,<lb/>
Ken Marks, Mary Frances Morris<lb/>
Contributors: Peter McCracken, Maliha<lb/>
Farhadi, Claudia Arendell, Janet<lb/>
Kilpatrick. Judy Moore, Michael Cotter,<lb/>
Dawn Flye, Pam Burton, Gary<lb/>
Weathersbee, Gail Munde, Mary<lb/>
Boccaccio, Anna Daugherty, Gordon<lb/>
Barbour, Ann Manning, Roberta<lb/>
Chodacki, Karen Crowell<lb/>
Photographer: Lynette Lundin<lb/>
Proofreaders: Martha Elmore,<lb/>
Lorrie Vause<lb/>
the library's circulation desk.<lb/>
Another change you may notice is the<lb/>
closing of the microcomputer lab that<lb/>
was located on the third floor west<lb/>
wing. This facility closed at the end of<lb/>
second summer session in preparation<lb/>
for the Phase II move. There will be no<lb/>
microcomputer lab in the library during<lb/>
Phase III renovation. When the Joyner<lb/>
Library Building Project is completed,<lb/>
services previously available through<lb/>
the microcomputer lab will be available<lb/>
in a different manner.<lb/>
Although the summer has been spent<lb/>
on a variety of activities preparing for<lb/>
the move into Phase n renovated space,<lb/>
much of the work will occur toward<lb/>
the end of Fall Semester. Every effort<lb/>
will be made to minimize the disrup-<lb/>
tion and inconvenience to patrons that<lb/>
may occur but some persons will<lb/>
inevitably be disturbed by the activity.<lb/>
library patrons may find that access to<lb/>
the third floor west wing (old building)<lb/>
is closed. The reason for this measure is<lb/>
that some space is needed to stage<lb/>
equipmentfurni-<lb/>
ture that is going to<lb/>
be placed in Phase<lb/>
II space.<lb/>
When the university<lb/>
accepts the Phase II<lb/>
space as meeting<lb/>
the specifications<lb/>
and requirements of<lb/>
the building<lb/>
contract, there will<lb/>
be a ninety day<lb/>
move-in period to<lb/>
occupy the Phase U<lb/>
space and vacate<lb/>
Phase in space. This<lb/>
means that there will be a substantial<lb/>
amount of work taking place in a<lb/>
concentrated period. A number of<lb/>
deliveries of furniture, equipment, and<lb/>
shelving will take place during this<lb/>
period. While some of these deliveries<lb/>
will be made to the library's receiving<lb/>
dock, others may be made through the<lb/>
existing library entrance. Every effort<lb/>
will be made to minimize inconven-<lb/>
ience to library patrons and provide for<lb/>
their safety.<lb/>
Three library units and one non-library<lb/>
service will relocate as part of Phase II.<lb/>
Library administrative offices will be<lb/>
the first to move, as their transfer will<lb/>
not interfere with patron use of the<lb/>
collections or services. The Reference<lb/>
and Library Systems Departments will<lb/>
move after the end of Fall Semester's<lb/>
finals week. The relocation of the<lb/>
Copiserv service will take place at the<lb/>
end of the semester, too.<lb/>
Joyner Library will be closed from the<lb/>
end of Fall Semester finals week until<lb/>
the day before Spring Semester classes<lb/>
begin. The reason for closing is to<lb/>
enable the move to be completed and<lb/>
service restored before the start of<lb/>
spring semester. During a portion of<lb/>
this period the university will be closed<lb/>
for the holidays. The Music Library will<lb/>
be open those days the university is<lb/>
open and patrons will be able to have<lb/>
materials retrieved from Joyner for<lb/>
them. During some portion of this<lb/>
period the online catalog and other<lb/>
electronically based resources will be<lb/>
inaccessible as the library's Systems<lb/>
Department will be moving equipment.<lb/>
When Spring Semester 1998 begins,<lb/>
there will be some immediate and<lb/>
77i� new entrance to Joyner Library takes shape.<lb/>
Books on the second and third floors<lb/>
of the old west wing have been moved<lb/>
to the third floor of the new addition<lb/>
or stored. Ask for assistance If you<lb/>
cant find the book you need.<lb/>
obvious changes. First, the public<lb/>
entrance to the library will have moved<lb/>
from its location on the north side ol<lb/>
the building to the new entry on the<lb/>
east side of the building. Library<lb/>
patrons coming from the campus mall<lb/>
will pass through the library columns<lb/>
on their way through the library plaza<lb/>
to access the new entrance. Library<lb/>
patrons coming from Tenth Street will<lb/>
use the new entrance to campus that<lb/>
leads to the library plaza and the<lb/>
library's entrance.<lb/>
Phase in of the Joyner Library Expan-<lb/>
sion and Renovation Project is sched-<lb/>
uled to begin in early January 1998 and<lb/>
be completed by summer 1998. The<lb/>
beginning of the end is at hand.<lb/>
The current entrance to Joyner will be closed<lb/>
at the end of fall semester 1997.<lb/>
S<lb/>
i l�ni'Jl ��"��"<lb/>
n "e '� i "i  � ; "�-�'�ipi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0019"/><lb/>
SMW"<lb/>
M<lb/>
!<lb/>
Library Public Service Departments<lb/>
Center for Academic<lb/>
Communication<lb/>
The Center for Academic<lb/>
Communication (CAC)<lb/>
offers the faculty, stu-<lb/>
dents, and staff of ECU<lb/>
access to certain elec-<lb/>
tronic and visual media<lb/>
and equipment. The<lb/>
department houses the<lb/>
core campus North<lb/>
Carolina Research and<lb/>
Education Network (NC-<lb/>
REN) and North Carolina<lb/>
Information Highway<lb/>
teleconference facilities.<lb/>
These facilities enable users to have<lb/>
real-time interactive teleconferences<lb/>
and seminars as well as satellite down-<lb/>
links. Students should be aware of this<lb/>
service, since some may take their<lb/>
classes over the network or be invited<lb/>
to sit in on seminars and downlinks.<lb/>
The center lends students equipment,<lb/>
such as overhead projectors, slide<lb/>
protectors, opaque projectors, audio-<lb/>
cassette playerrecorders, 16 mm film<lb/>
projectors, and filmstrip projectors.<lb/>
Various additional services are offered<lb/>
to faculty members. These include<lb/>
videotaping and tape duplication;<lb/>
printing from computer files to 35 mm<lb/>
slides or color transparencies; and<lb/>
varied support for multimedia projects.<lb/>
There is a charge for the materials used,<lb/>
and some services involve additional<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
LOCATION: new addition, first floor<lb/>
HOURS: Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE: 328-4866<lb/>
HOME PAGE: http:www.lib.ccu.edu<lb/>
CACcac.html<lb/>
CirculationReserve<lb/>
If you want to borrow, renew, or return<lb/>
something from the library, the Circula-<lb/>
tion Department is the place to go.<lb/>
Also, if your professor has placed class<lb/>
material on reserve, this is the place to<lb/>
come and read it.<lb/>
Most of the general collection in the<lb/>
library can be checked out. To borrow<lb/>
something, you will need a valid ECU<lb/>
The Center tor Academic Communication leta students<lb/>
participate in interactive teleconferences and aamtnara.<lb/>
identification card. The loan period for<lb/>
undergraduates is twenty-eight days.<lb/>
Faculty and graduate students may<lb/>
borrow material for a semester.<lb/>
Renewals can be made by phone or at<lb/>
die desk if the borrower has no out-<lb/>
standing fines or overdue items and if<lb/>
another borrower has not requested the<lb/>
item. The library can recall a book<lb/>
immediately to place it on reserve.<lb/>
The Reserve collection includes books,<lb/>
reprints, and other items in high demand<lb/>
by students in order to meet course<lb/>
requirements. These materials can be<lb/>
borrowed for up to two hours but must<lb/>
be used in the Reserve Reading Room.<lb/>
No more than three reserve items may be<lb/>
borrowed at a time.<lb/>
Books can be returned to die Circulation<lb/>
desk or placed in the book returns<lb/>
outside die library after hours. Overdue<lb/>
fines add up twenty-five cents a day and<lb/>
can be paid at the Security<lb/>
desk, beside the Circula-<lb/>
tion desk.<lb/>
LOCATION: new addi-<lb/>
tion, first floor, next to<lb/>
Interiibrary Services<lb/>
HOURS: Monday -<lb/>
Thursday, 8 a.m. - 1 a.m.<lb/>
Friday, 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, 1 p.m - 1 a.m.<lb/>
PHONE: 3284285<lb/>
(library hours)<lb/>
328-6518, 3286690, 328-<lb/>
4176 (CirculationReserve<lb/>
desk and phone renewals)<lb/>
HOMEPAGE: http:www.<lb/>
lib.ecu.eduCirculationcirc.html<lb/>
DocumentsMaps<lb/>
The DocumentsMaps Department<lb/>
provides access to and information<lb/>
about materials published by the United<lb/>
States government. As a member of the<lb/>
Depository Library Program of the U.S.<lb/>
Government Printing Office, the<lb/>
department receives about 80 percent<lb/>
of the tides offered to libraries. The<lb/>
collection includes Congressional<lb/>
hearings, printed records, brochures,<lb/>
reports, handbooks, journals, newslet-<lb/>
ters, federal laws, regulations of federal<lb/>
agencies, CD-ROMs, and maps. The<lb/>
department is also a depository for the<lb/>
Federal mapping programs and has<lb/>
some 91,000 sheet maps.<lb/>
Only 25 percent of the materials in this<lb/>
collection are in the<lb/>
library catalog (Horizon).<lb/>
Most must be located<lb/>
through GPO on<lb/>
SilverPiatter, a CD-ROM<lb/>
database that is available<lb/>
on the library's net-<lb/>
worked computers.<lb/>
The department offers<lb/>
reference service;<lb/>
assistance in answering<lb/>
research questions and<lb/>
locating research materi-<lb/>
als; instruction on how to<lb/>
use government publica-<lb/>
tions: and instruction to<lb/>
classes. At tax time, it<lb/>
Department can be borrowed accord-<lb/>
ing to regular library policy. Reference<lb/>
and legal publications CANNOT be<lb/>
checked out.<lb/>
LOCATION: new addition, second<lb/>
floor, next to MediaTeaching Resources<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
Monday -Thursday, 8 a.m. -10 pjn.<lb/>
Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, 10 p.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, 6 p.m. - 10 p.m.<lb/>
Note: hours apply to the service<lb/>
desk�shelves are accessible all hours<lb/>
the library is open; maps are kept in a<lb/>
closed area.<lb/>
PHONE: 320238 (service desk);<lb/>
3286533 (staff).<lb/>
HOMEPAGE: http:www.lib.ecu.edu<lb/>
GOVDOCgovl.html<lb/>
The DocumentsMaps Department can locate information<lb/>
pubttohed by the U.3. government Staff member Litlie<lb/>
Parker (retired) waits tor questions.<lb/>
offers federal and state tax forms.<lb/>
Most materials in the DocumentsMaps<lb/>
The Circulation staff checks out and renews books.<lb/>
The Reserve Reading Room is visible on the toft<lb/>
Ask at the Circulation Desk tor reserve items.<lb/>
Intertibrary Services<lb/>
Interlibrary Services is responsible for<lb/>
intcrlibrary loans, the cooperative<lb/>
delivery service with the Health<lb/>
Sciences Library and Music Library, the<lb/>
cooperative card service for the UNC<lb/>
system, and information about holdings<lb/>
Gf other libraries.<lb/>
The department obtains library material<lb/>
not available at ECU and loans materials<lb/>
from Joyner Library and the Music<lb/>
Library to other libraries around the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Instead of travelling to the ECU medical<lb/>
campus, you can request that material<lb/>
at the Health Sciences Library be<lb/>
delivered by courier service to Joyner<lb/>
or Music for you to pick up.<lb/>
�<lb/>
�r<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0020"/><lb/>
The department also<lb/>
issues coop cards to ECU<lb/>
students and faculty.<lb/>
These cooperative cards<lb/>
offer access to other<lb/>
libraries in the UNC<lb/>
system. If you borrow<lb/>
something from another<lb/>
UNC library, you can<lb/>
return it to Interlibrary<lb/>
Services, and ILS will<lb/>
return it to the lending<lb/>
library.<lb/>
Request forms for inter-<lb/>
library loans are available<lb/>
at the ILS desk and online through the<lb/>
library's home page. Materials owned<lb/>
by ECU libraries are generally not<lb/>
available through interlibrary loan.<lb/>
Check first in the library's online<lb/>
catalog, called Horizon, to see if ECU<lb/>
owns what you are looking for. During<lb/>
peak times, a limit of ten requests per<lb/>
patron may be imposed. You will be<lb/>
notified by telephone or mail when the<lb/>
materials you requested arrive.<lb/>
LOCATION: new addition, first floor,<lb/>
next to CirculationReserve<lb/>
HOURS. Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE: 326068.<lb/>
HOME PAGE: http:www.lib.ecu.edu<lb/>
ILSservices.htmp<lb/>
Library Security Office<lb/>
The security office accepts fines and<lb/>
fees for overdue items, lost books, and<lb/>
area resident cards. It also accepts<lb/>
theses and dissertations for binding.<lb/>
Look here for lost and found items.<lb/>
This office employs the security guards<lb/>
who monitor the building every hour<lb/>
the library is open. If you have been<lb/>
the victim of a theft or other crime,<lb/>
please tell one of these guards. The<lb/>
guards can also arrange for you to be<lb/>
accompanied to your car at night.<lb/>
LOCATION: new addition, first floor,<lb/>
next to CirculationReserve<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
Monday -Thursday, 8 a.m. - 10 p.m.<lb/>
Friday. 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, 12 p.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday. 2 p.m. - 10 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE: 328-4156<lb/>
Interlibrary Services obtains books and articles not<lb/>
owned by ECU. Staff member Jackie Cannon helps a<lb/>
student fill out the necessary form.<lb/>
MediaTeaching<lb/>
Resources<lb/>
The Media and Teaching Resources<lb/>
Center provides audiovisual materials<lb/>
for the university and supports all<lb/>
courses in the School of<lb/>
Education and courses<lb/>
in children's literature.<lb/>
The center provides<lb/>
audiovisual materials<lb/>
and the equipment for<lb/>
in-library viewing:<lb/>
audiocassettes, laser<lb/>
discs, school television<lb/>
programs, CD-ROMs,<lb/>
and videotapes.<lb/>
The collection includes<lb/>
the North Carolina<lb/>
Standard Course of Study<lb/>
and Teacher Handbooks;<lb/>
North Carolina state-<lb/>
adopted textbooks for<lb/>
grades K-12; supple-<lb/>
mentary textbooks for<lb/>
grades K-12; children's<lb/>
and young adult fiction<lb/>
and nonfiction books;<lb/>
curriculum guides;<lb/>
activity books; refer-<lb/>
ence books appropriate<lb/>
for children's and young<lb/>
adult collections; and<lb/>
the Kraus Curriculum<lb/>
Collection on micro-<lb/>
fiche.<lb/>
All children's and young adult books, as<lb/>
well as all teaching materials, circulate<lb/>
for fourteen days. The following do<lb/>
NOT circulate: North Carolina Stan-<lb/>
dard Course of Study and Teacher<lb/>
Handbooks. North Carolina state-<lb/>
adopted (basal) textbooks for grades K-<lb/>
12, and reference books.<lb/>
LOCATION: new addition, second<lb/>
floor, next to DocumentsMaps<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
Monday -Thursday, 8 a.m. - 10 p.m.<lb/>
Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, 1 p.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, 1 p.m -10 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE: 328-6076<lb/>
HOME PAGE: http:www.lib.ecu.edu<lb/>
Mediamedia.html<lb/>
Staff member Dawn Flye helps a student in the Media and<lb/>
Teaching Resources Department Teachers and education<lb/>
students will find good resources here.<lb/>
Audiovisual materials<lb/>
circulate for two days with a one-dollar<lb/>
fine for each day the item is overdue.<lb/>
Faculty may borrow materials for seven<lb/>
days. MTRC equipment does not<lb/>
circulate.<lb/>
You can view videos in the Media and Teaching<lb/>
Resources Department.<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Collection<lb/>
The North Carolina Collection collects,<lb/>
preserves, and makes available both<lb/>
printed and non-print material pertain-<lb/>
ing to North Carolina. It provides<lb/>
access to current information about the<lb/>
state and rich resources for historical<lb/>
research. An emphasis is placed on<lb/>
materials pertaining to eastern North<lb/>
Carolina�counties east of Interstate 95.<lb/>
Included in the collection are electronic<lb/>
resources, books, pamphlets, periodi-<lb/>
cals (magazines and journals), state<lb/>
documents, maps, and broadsides, as<lb/>
well as an extensive vertical file and up-<lb/>
to-date newspaper clipping file. Micro-<lb/>
film holdings include state newspapers<lb/>
dating from the eighteenth century to<lb/>
the present, census records for all<lb/>
North Carolina counties (1790-1920),<lb/>
and Sanborn Insurance Company maps.<lb/>
In the online library catalog, called<lb/>
Horizon, materials in the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Collection have these designations:<lb/>
Joyner NC Stacks (Circulating Collec-<lb/>
tion); Joyner NC Reference (Reference<lb/>
Collection); Joyner NC Documents<lb/>
(State documents on microfiche); and<lb/>
Joyner NC Rare (Rare Books). Most<lb/>
broadsides and maps do not appear in<lb/>
Horizon. Those that do have the<lb/>
designation Joyner NC Broadsides or<lb/>
Joyner NC Maps.<lb/>
The collection produces the North<lb/>
Carolina Periodicals Index, mounted on<lb/>
the library's home page, which pro-<lb/>
vides quick access to articles in over<lb/>
forty periodicals published in the state.<lb/>
Staff can generate customized data<lb/>
reports through the LINC system and<lb/>
search major state newspapers through<lb/>
DataTimes. Patrons interested in<lb/>
statutes, court cases, administrative law,<lb/>
and other legal sources can obtain<lb/>
assistance using North Carolina Law on<lb/>
Disc.<lb/>
The staff offer term paper clinics,<lb/>
providing in-depth assistance to<lb/>
students whose papers focus on North<lb/>
Carolina-related topics. They also teach<lb/>
classes and. when possible, develop<lb/>
customized handouts for class assign-<lb/>
ments. They have prepared a variety of<lb/>
handouts to help you find information.<lb/>
Books in the North Carolina stacks can<lb/>
be checked out. North Carolina<lb/>
reference materials, maps, microforms,<lb/>
y i � i��<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0021"/><lb/>
!<lb/>
rare books, periodicals,<lb/>
and vertical file material<lb/>
do NOT circulate.<lb/>
LOCATION: new<lb/>
addition, third floor<lb/>
HOURS: Monday -<lb/>
Thursday, 8 a.m. - 10 p.m.<lb/>
Friday, 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, 1 p.m. -10 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE: 32S6601<lb/>
HOME PAGE:<lb/>
http:www.lib.ecu.edu<lb/>
SpcPCollNCCoBncc.html<lb/>
Wttfmmmm Q� maihltm a student fmd Information<lb/>
about North Carolina In the North Carolina Collection.<lb/>
PeriodicalsMicroforms<lb/>
To get articles in current periodicals<lb/>
(magazines, journals, or newspapers)<lb/>
for reading or photocopying, go to the<lb/>
PeriodicalsMicroforms Department.<lb/>
The department houses nearly 4,200<lb/>
titles of recent issues of periodicals to<lb/>
which the library currently subscribes.<lb/>
The periodicals are arranged on open<lb/>
shelves to alphabetical order of their<lb/>
titles.<lb/>
Note: Periodically, issues of some titles<lb/>
are commercially bound together, to<lb/>
book form, given a call number, and<lb/>
then shelved to the stacks along with<lb/>
books to the same<lb/>
subject area. In some<lb/>
cases, instead of being<lb/>
bound, titles are com-<lb/>
mercially microfilmed<lb/>
Twenty-three newspa-<lb/>
pers are also kept to the<lb/>
department. Newspa-<lb/>
pers are held for one<lb/>
month and are then<lb/>
recycled. Back issues of<lb/>
seven major newspaper<lb/>
tides are received on<lb/>
microfilm.<lb/>
Copy machines are located conve-<lb/>
niently nearby. Microform information<lb/>
can be printed out on machines<lb/>
designed to do this All printing<lb/>
requires the use of a prepaid copy card.<lb/>
LOCATION: new addition, second floor,<lb/>
near DocumentsMaps<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
Monday -Thursday, 8 a.m10 p.m.<lb/>
Friday, 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, 1 p.m. -10 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE: 326293 or 328-6800<lb/>
HOME PAGE: http:www.lflj.ecu.edu<lb/>
permic.html<lb/>
Tha Periodical Department haa currant<lb/>
The department also houses microform<lb/>
material and readerprinters. Micro-<lb/>
form refers to small-scale photographic<lb/>
copies of printed information. The<lb/>
photographic process greatly reduces<lb/>
the size of the original document,<lb/>
thereby decreasing the space needed to<lb/>
store it.To read it, you must use a<lb/>
machine that enlarges the image.<lb/>
Current periodicals and microforms<lb/>
CANNOT be checked out. Printed<lb/>
material, however, can be copied.<lb/>
journals and newspapers.<lb/>
Reference Department<lb/>
The Reference Department is the<lb/>
question-and-answer department.<lb/>
Where are the encyclopedias? What's<lb/>
my senator's address? What percentage<lb/>
of wetlands were lost in the U.S. in the<lb/>
last decade? Did the president really<lb/>
say How does this CDROM<lb/>
work? How do I find a book on the<lb/>
Asian economy? This is the place to<lb/>
ask.<lb/>
The staff also helps students with term<lb/>
papers by suggesting appropriate<lb/>
indexes and CD-ROMs; recommending<lb/>
sources for complex topics; and<lb/>
assisting with research questions that<lb/>
require an exhaustive search of library<lb/>
materials. The department has style<lb/>
guides for writing term papers, such as<lb/>
MLA and Turanian.<lb/>
A number of handouts which list the<lb/>
major reference works on various<lb/>
subjects are available to a kiosk near the<lb/>
desk. There are also handouts on<lb/>
special topics, like career information<lb/>
or biographical information.<lb/>
The Reference Department has a large<lb/>
collection of print and electronic<lb/>
reference sources. It resembles an<lb/>
electronic data center with many CD-<lb/>
ROMs, the library catalog (Horizon),<lb/>
and Internet access.<lb/>
CD-ROMs that must be used at stand-<lb/>
alone workstations can be checked out<lb/>
from the Reference desk. These may be<lb/>
periodical indexes or compilations of<lb/>
data, such as company annual reports,<lb/>
or fuU-text works, such as historical<lb/>
documents and encyclopedias.<lb/>
ProQuest (general, business, social<lb/>
science) and InfoTrac are two popular<lb/>
periodical indexes to the collection.<lb/>
You can sign up for ProQuest stations at<lb/>
the desk, if you want to reserve time to<lb/>
work here.<lb/>
Reference books in die collection include<lb/>
general and specialized encyclopedias,<lb/>
dictionaries, bibliographies, indexes,<lb/>
yearbooks, almanacs, manuals, directories,<lb/>
biographical sources, and atlases.<lb/>
The department also offers instruction to<lb/>
classes on library use and resources for<lb/>
various disciplines.<lb/>
Materials in the Reference<lb/>
Department CANNOT be<lb/>
checked out.<lb/>
LOCATION: west wing,<lb/>
first floor, next to the<lb/>
main lobby<lb/>
HOURS: Monday-<lb/>
Thursday, 8 a.mlO p.m.<lb/>
Friday, 8 a.m 6 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, 10 a.m 6 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, 1 p.m 10 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE: 326677<lb/>
HOME PAGE:<lb/>
http:www.lib.ecu.edu<lb/>
Referencerefdept.html<lb/>
Special Collections<lb/>
The Special Collections Department<lb/>
consists of five research collections:<lb/>
The East Carolina Manuscript Collec-<lb/>
tion, the University Archives, North<lb/>
Carolina Collection, Hoover Collection<lb/>
on International Communism, and Rare<lb/>
Book Collection.<lb/>
The Manuscript Collection contains<lb/>
unpublished letters, diaries, scrap-<lb/>
books, photographs, and other original<lb/>
documentation from 1800 to the<lb/>
present. The materials emphasize<lb/>
North Carolina topics, U. S. naval and<lb/>
maritime history, military affairs,<lb/>
missionary life around the world, and<lb/>
tobacco history.<lb/>
The University Archives is responsible<lb/>
for preserving the university's history<lb/>
by f�Mfaitaining its official records and<lb/>
providing for its historical, administra-<lb/>
tive, legal, and records management<lb/>
needs. Materials available for research<lb/>
include campus newspapers, year-<lb/>
books, catalogs, and other university<lb/>
publications.<lb/>
Most manuscript and archival material<lb/>
is NOT currently included to the online<lb/>
library catalog, called Horizon. Special<lb/>
Collections maintains a vast array of<lb/>
special finding aids in its search room<lb/>
to help you find useful sources and<lb/>
information.<lb/>
See the separate entry on the North<lb/>
Carolina Collection.<lb/>
The Hoover Collection is a unique<lb/>
research collection of books, journals,<lb/>
newspapers, pamphlets, and ephemeral<lb/>
materials related to international<lb/>
Communism. The Rare Book Collec-<lb/>
The Reference Department Is the question- and- answer<lb/>
place. Staff members can also help students use the many<lb/>
CD-ROM resources now available.<lb/>
�vv<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0022"/><lb/>
6�<lb/>
�,<lb/>
tion, presently in an<lb/>
earty suge of develop-<lb/>
ment, contains rare and<lb/>
fragile publications on a<lb/>
variety of topics,<lb/>
emphasizing slaver)<lb/>
maritime topics, and<lb/>
voyages of exploration.<lb/>
The department is<lb/>
active in preserving and<lb/>
repairing valuable<lb/>
historical materials.<lb/>
Materials in the<lb/>
Manuscript Collection,<lb/>
University Archives,<lb/>
Hoover Collection, and Rare Book<lb/>
Collection do NOT circulate and can be<lb/>
used only in the departmental search<lb/>
room. Limited photocopying by the<lb/>
staff is available at ten cents per page.<lb/>
Class and individual orientation sessions<lb/>
are encouraged. Staff will assist<lb/>
students In locating sources for term<lb/>
papers and theses.<lb/>
LOCATION: new addition, fourth floor,<lb/>
follow the purple ceiling light on third<lb/>
floor to the back elevator outside of<lb/>
the North Carolina Collection; this<lb/>
elevator is the only access to the fourth<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
HOURS: Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. 5 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.<lb/>
PHONE: 326671<lb/>
HOME PAGE: http:www.lib.ecu.edu<lb/>
SpclCoUspecial.html.<lb/>
A Place to Study<lb/>
A student prepares to register to use me Special Collec-<lb/>
tions reading room. Special CoUectlona has many primary<lb/>
resources, such as letters, diaries, and scrapbeoks.<lb/>
Other Library<lb/>
Departments<lb/>
Administration,<lb/>
old west wing, second floor, 328-6514 -<lb/>
Accepts applications for student jobs.<lb/>
Cataloging,<lb/>
new addition, first floor, 328-6692 -<lb/>
Catalogs new material and adds it to the<lb/>
collection.<lb/>
Collection Development,<lb/>
new addition, first floor, 328-0295 -<lb/>
Orders new materials and builds the<lb/>
collection to support ECU'S programs.<lb/>
Faculty members can submit orders<lb/>
through their departmental library<lb/>
representatives.<lb/>
Mail Services,<lb/>
new addition, first floor, 328-6604 -<lb/>
Distributes the library's mail.<lb/>
PreservationConservation,<lb/>
new addition, first floor, 328-6673 -<lb/>
Repairs and preserves library materials,<lb/>
fixes damaged materials, and works to<lb/>
prevent loss of materials.<lb/>
Publications,<lb/>
new addition, third floor, 328-6838 -<lb/>
Creates newsletters, brochures, and<lb/>
other publications about the library.<lb/>
Systems,<lb/>
old west wing, third floor, 3284353 -<lb/>
Maintains the library's computers and<lb/>
systems.<lb/>
Many handout are available at all ECU<lb/>
libraries and In many of their depart-<lb/>
ments. At Joyner, look for Welcome to<lb/>
Joyner-A Quick Guide to Where Things<lb/>
Are" and "What's New at Joyner?"<lb/>
Before the current building and renovation project began, Joyner Library seriously<lb/>
lacked space for students and faculty to study and do research. The new addition<lb/>
and renovated east wing improve that situation considerably. There are many carrels<lb/>
and tables now that provide quiet places for study and research. Many of these are<lb/>
on the second and third floors of the new addition.<lb/>
Also, eight group<lb/>
study rooms axe<lb/>
available in the new<lb/>
addition: five on the<lb/>
second floor at both<lb/>
ends of the floor and<lb/>
three on the third floor<lb/>
at the east end. De-<lb/>
signed for use by four<lb/>
to eight people, they<lb/>
are available on a first-<lb/>
come, first-serve basis<lb/>
and cannot be re-<lb/>
served. Groups of<lb/>
three or fewer can find<lb/>
tables for quiet group<lb/>
projects in various areas<lb/>
around the library. The group study rooms are not soundproofed or intended for<lb/>
class instruction; furniture or equipment should not be moved into or out of these<lb/>
rooms; and the library's no4bod-and-drink policy applies to the study rooms.<lb/>
Graduate students may apply for the use of special carrels designed specifically<lb/>
for their needs. These carrels have drawers that can be locked and an electric oudet<lb/>
for laptop computers. Priority is given to graduate students enrolled full-time in<lb/>
graduate degree programs. The need for proximity to library materials is also<lb/>
considered. Assignments are made at the beginning of each semester and are<lb/>
generally not renewable. A refundable key deposit of ten dollars is required.<lb/>
Interested graduate students should fill out an appi: ation at the Circulation Desk on<lb/>
the first floor.<lb/>
Faculty studies are available to ECU faculty, with riority given to tenure-track<lb/>
faculty working on terminal degrees or publications necessary for reappointment<lb/>
and tenure. The need for proximity to library materials is also considered. Faculty<lb/>
studies are assigned each September on an annual basis or for the length of time<lb/>
required for a project, if less than a year. Assignments are generally not renewable.<lb/>
A refundable key deposit of twenty-five dollars is required. Interested faculty should<lb/>
fill out an application at the Circulation Desk.<lb/>
Quiet places to study are now available througtK�jt<lb/>
me library. Above, two students hit the books<lb/>
on the second floor of the new addition.<lb/>
Joyner Library Building Hours<lb/>
Monday -Thursday, 8 a.m. -1 a.m.<lb/>
Friday, 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, 1 p.m. - 1 a.m.<lb/>
Note: Library hours will vary during holidays, breaks, and exams.<lb/>
'af<lb/>
 v<lb/>
�<lb/>
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�mm<lb/>
mil in. 'i I"<lb/>
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�ffW<lb/>
THIS AHD THAT<lb/>
pTrVwil Safety<lb/>
LlJlsecuinisoA to ensure the safety of library patrons and<lb/>
onneTTa O-S-f<lb/>
JrToldu all open hours. Additional guards patrol the building<lb/>
in the day and evening.<lb/>
Please report any unsafe building conditions or "�<lb/>
otTdo NOT leave personal items, sucb aspurses or bookbags, uruu-<lb/>
tenaed. Report any tbeft immediately to a guard.<lb/>
Security guards also respond when building evacuation becomes necessary.K<lb/>
kLnmediate evacuation of the building is q<lb/>
rcompTwith all request, from security guards and library personnel<lb/>
during evacuation.<lb/>
ti y ptmction of Horary Mate rials<lb/>
Norlcarenerfltl<lb/>
STcable as a Class 1 misdemeanor or a Class H felony, depend-<lb/>
ofthematerl.�<lb/>
Nation of the ECU Student Code, and violators are referred to the ECU Judicial<lb/>
Tsmdents involved in these crimes are �HT<lb/>
crlibiary,n�ay lose library p<lb/>
fcTLdent life. Violators not �<lb/>
pXfbr criminal prosecution. joyner 1 and the Music library s<lb/>
enforce the North Carolina Statute and ECU StudentCode.<lb/>
fu� tood or Prink<lb/>
�So7ptted in public areas of the "TSTbe<lb/>
materials and epn such as books, Z<lb/>
bylicorfoodspmedondn. <lb/>
� roaches and sirverfish, which to turn damage paier inaterials. Poor samtary<lb/>
cornta trash also result from food and drinlt. Security guards and<lb/>
�3pL help keep the library clean, attractrve, and usable by not<lb/>
bringing in food or drink.<lb/>
Prp the incrcr�tpfo� Renovation<lb/>
JS be completed in October 1997. Phase m T<lb/>
poJ-u<lb/>
tion work unfortunately will cause occasional periods of excessive noise.<lb/>
Abo it has been necessary to move part of ti rxx m the stacto to storage<lb/>
AWOn � ��, a���od of time while the old west wingis renovated.<lb/>
Sd -Kerf P caU e Cl. �T'l'9<lb/>
Z�� you cant find e mwlals joota looktog 1 ask a �aS mottKr for<lb/>
assistance.<lb/>
PKose note tbot it may take a Utae longer to obtain some materials so aBow<lb/>
some extra time to do your research.<lb/>
outm mm ehmmd�llbabook.Tmi owner want me<lb/>
photo long wHhmochm lorthe<lb/>
Joyner Library Building<lb/>
and Renovation Project<lb/>
Universe Construction Bond Referenda<lb/>
Ground broken for the new addition May 1994.<lb/>
New addition (Phase I) opened August 1996.<lb/>
Renovation (Phase II) scheduled to be completed January 1998- <lb/>
During this phase, the east wing of the old Hteary wiU be irnovated.<lb/>
Renovation (Phase HD scheduled to be completed faU 1998<lb/>
During this final phase, the west wing of the old library will be<lb/>
renovated. V<lb/>
Changes Made in Summer 1997<lb/>
Computer lab (3rd Floor) closed permanently.<lb/>
More library materials put in storage.<lb/>
Upcoming (<lb/>
New entrance to library (opposite dock tower) wffl open January 1998.<lb/>
Oneard system will go into effect probably in January 1998.<lb/>
Several library departments win move into the renovated east wing<lb/>
January 1998: Reference, Systom,Administiation.<lb/>
1<lb/>
��� iiUJumija<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0024"/><lb/>
J I�1<lb/>
A Quick Guide to Where<lb/>
Things are in Joyner Library<lb/>
Administration�2nd floor�32865143286065<lb/>
Hours: M-F 8 a.m 5 p.m.<lb/>
Center for Academic Communication�1st floor�3284866<lb/>
Hours: M-F 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
CirculationReserves� 1st floor� 328-6518328-6690<lb/>
Hours: same as building<lb/>
Library-wide hours (recorded message): 3284285<lb/>
Phone renewal: 3286518<lb/>
Computer Lab. Closed permanently.<lb/>
CopiServ Copy Center� 1st floor�328-0458<lb/>
Curriculum Lab�sec Media ft leaching Resources<lb/>
Government Documents (DocumentsMaps)�2nd floor�3284)238<lb/>
Hours: Su 6 p.m10 p.m M-Th 8 a.m10 p.m F 8 a.m 5 p.m<lb/>
Sa 12 p.m 4 p.m.<lb/>
InterUbrary Services� 1st floor�3286068<lb/>
Hours: M-F ba.m5p.m.<lb/>
Library Security Office� 1st floor�328-4156<lb/>
Hours: Su 2 p.m10 p.m M-Th 8 a.m10 p.m F 8 a.m 5 p.m<lb/>
Sa 12 p.m 6 p.m.<lb/>
Media ft Teaching Resources (Curriculum Lab)�2nd floor�3286076<lb/>
Hours: Su 1 p.m10 p.m M-Th 8 a.m10 p.m F 8 a.m5 p.m<lb/>
Sa 1 p.m 6 p.m.<lb/>
North Carolina Collection- 3id floor�3286601<lb/>
Hours: Su 1 p.m10 p.mM-Th 8 a.m10 p.m F 8 a.m 6 p.m<lb/>
Sa 10 a.m 6 p.m.<lb/>
PeriodicalsMicroforms� 2nd floor�3286293<lb/>
Hours: Su 1 p.m10 p.m M-Th 8 a.m10 p.m F8 a.m 6 p.m<lb/>
Sa 10 a.m 6 p.m.<lb/>
Reference�1st floor�3286677<lb/>
Hours:Su 1 p.m10p.mM-Th 8a.m-10p.mF8a.m.6p.m<lb/>
Sa 10 a.m.6 p.m.<lb/>
Special Collections (Archives, Hoover, Manuscripts, Rare)�4th floor�<lb/>
32866713286679<lb/>
Hours: M-F 8 a.m 5 p.m Sa 10 a.m2 p.m.<lb/>
Note: North Carolina Collection is part of Special Collections but has its own hours.<lb/>
Whom Do I Contact Fort<lb/>
Scheduling a library instruction class? (ECU only)<lb/>
Reference Department 3286677<lb/>
Reserving Faculty ft Graduate Carrels?<lb/>
Circulation 32865183286690<lb/>
Tour Information? (for on- and off-campus groups)<lb/>
Ann Manning 3286223<lb/>
Special needs arrangements?<lb/>
Kim Nanton 3284353'<lb/>
� � :<lb/>
Joyntf Library Hone hjt<lb/>
http:www.lib.ecu.edu<lb/>
Frequently Asked Questions<lb/>
Borrow books from other libraries?<lb/>
InterUbrary Services, 1st floor near Circulation, can get books and<lb/>
articles that ECU does not own for ECU students, staff, and faculty.<lb/>
Elevators?<lb/>
On each floor as indicated on the maps.<lb/>
Get change?<lb/>
Library Security Office, 1st floor near Circulation.<lb/>
Group study rooms?<lb/>
Located on 2nd and 3rd floors as indicated on maps. First come, first<lb/>
Instruction Lab (Room 104)?<lb/>
Located on 1st floor in the Reference area.<lb/>
Library carder<lb/>
The first time you check out a book, you will be registered in the<lb/>
system and a bar code wiB be added to your ID card. For additional<lb/>
information, check with the Circulation Desk.<lb/>
Haste Collection?<lb/>
Located intheAJ. Fletcher Music Building at<lb/>
See campus map or phone 3286250.<lb/>
edge of campus.<lb/>
For information on current parking areas and conditions, please<lb/>
phone Parking &amp; Traffic Services at 3286294.<lb/>
Paw fines?<lb/>
Library Security Office, 1st floor near Circulation. Payable by cash or<lb/>
check. Fines accrue $.2!a day for books, $1 a day for videos. Spedai<lb/>
materials may have larger fines.<lb/>
Located on 1st floor near Circulation.<lb/>
On each floor as indicated on maps.<lb/>
Rush cataloging of a new book or retrieve a book from<lb/>
, Request forms are available at the Circulation desk.<lb/>
sen-serve pnosooopaersr<lb/>
, Each floor has a copy room (see maps). Copies are $.08 each. A<lb/>
prepaid copy card is required. Purchase catds at the CopiServ desk.<lb/>
Copy cards cost $1 (Including $.70 in copies) and are reusable.<lb/>
Student Job Postings?<lb/>
Student applications are accepted in the library Administration Office<lb/>
during regular business hours. They are held for three months and<lb/>
reviewed whenever there is an opening.<lb/>
View videos?<lb/>
Media &amp; Teaching Resources has video equipment.<lb/>
3" "<lb/>
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ff. ii.imiL iiI' 'i�'��<lb/>
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How to Find a Book<lb/>
1. If you are looking for a specific book, use the ECU Library Catalog to find the<lb/>
call number. The library catalog, called Horizon, is available on computers<lb/>
throughout the library under the ECU Library Catalog icon. In Horizon select<lb/>
'Title Alphabetical" or "Author Alphabetical To find books on a particular<lb/>
subject, try looking for the subject word or words using the "Tide Keyword<lb/>
"Subject Alphabetical or "Subject Keyword" selections. The call number is<lb/>
shown near the top of the catalog record and will tell you where the book is<lb/>
located in the library.<lb/>
2. Write down the call number and notice whether Horizon identifies the book<lb/>
as being in the regular circulating collection (Joyner Stacks) or if it is in a particu-<lb/>
lar collection, such as Reserve, Reference, North Carolina Collection, or Curricu-<lb/>
lum (abbreviated Curr). Notice also if the book is checked out right now. If the<lb/>
book is in the stacks, refer to the guides found by the elevators to tell you where<lb/>
in the stacks your call number can be found. Once you're in the stacks, look for<lb/>
call numbers on the ends of the stacks to guide you. Note: some books are being<lb/>
shifted because of renovation. If you can't find the range of call numbers where<lb/>
your book is located, please ask a staff member to assist you.<lb/>
Books are organized by subject according to the Library of Congress classifica-<lb/>
tion scheme. You may find other books relevant to your topic in the same<lb/>
section as your book. The Library of Congress classification scheme breaks<lb/>
down into these areas:<lb/>
A<lb/>
B<lb/>
C<lb/>
D<lb/>
E-F<lb/>
G<lb/>
H4TJ<lb/>
HM-HX<lb/>
J<lb/>
K<lb/>
L<lb/>
a<lb/>
N<lb/>
P<lb/>
Q<lb/>
R<lb/>
s<lb/>
T<lb/>
U-V<lb/>
z<lb/>
General Works (such as encyclopedias)<lb/>
Philosophy, Psychology, Religion<lb/>
Auxiliary Sciences of History<lb/>
History: General and Old World<lb/>
History: America (Western Hemisphere)<lb/>
Geography, Maps, Anthropology, Recreation<lb/>
Social Sciences: Economics<lb/>
Social Sciences: Sociology<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Law<lb/>
Education<lb/>
Music (in Music Library)<lb/>
Fine Arts<lb/>
Languages and Literature<lb/>
Includes PN (General literature),<lb/>
PS (American Literature)<lb/>
Science<lb/>
Medicine (see also Health Sciences Library)<lb/>
Agriculture<lb/>
Technology<lb/>
Military and Naval Science<lb/>
Bibliography, Library Science<lb/>
3. If you want to check out the book you have found, take it to the Circulation<lb/>
Desk on the first floor of the new addition. To check out a book, you will need<lb/>
your ECU H with a current enrollment sticker on it. At the time of check-out,<lb/>
ask about loan periods and renewal policies. The library has different loan<lb/>
periods for different types of materials and borrowers. Note: If you have over-<lb/>
due books or fines to be paid, you must take care of these obligations before you<lb/>
can check out additional books. Fines accrue twenty-five cents per day for<lb/>
books and one dollar per day for videos.<lb/>
4. If you need help at any time in finding an appropriate book or a specific<lb/>
book, please ask a staff member for help. The Reference staff can recommend<lb/>
bibliographies and search techniques. The Circulation staff can help track down<lb/>
a book that should be on the shelves. They will be glad to assist you.<lb/>
How to Find an Article<lb/>
1. tf you want to find an article in a periodical (a magazine, journal, or newspaper),<lb/>
you need to search first in an index for what has been published on your subject.<lb/>
Indexes provide bibliographic citations or references to articles and may also<lb/>
include abstracts or brief summaries. Joyner Library has a vast array of indexes in<lb/>
both print and electronic formats. Indexes in CD-ROM format are now available in<lb/>
most disciplines. Some journals and indexes are available on the Internet.<lb/>
Many of die CD-ROM periodical indexes are available throughout the library on<lb/>
networked computers. Others must be used on standalone workstations. These stand-<lb/>
alone or non-networked CD-ROMs can be obtained from various departments: Refer-<lb/>
ence, Government Documents, and Music Library. Handouts listing what CD-ROMs are<lb/>
available and instructions on how to use them are provided in these departments.<lb/>
Some popular CDROM indexes are ERIC (education); Reader's Guide (for articles from<lb/>
popular magazines); PsycINFO (psychology); MIA (language and literature); and the<lb/>
General Science Index (biological and physical sciences). InfoTrac offers both a<lb/>
general periodicals index and the National Newspaper index (covers five major U.S.<lb/>
newspapers for about the last three years).<lb/>
Three types of ProQuest indexes arc available on different workstations in the<lb/>
Reference Department: general, social sciences, and business. From ProQuest you<lb/>
can print out the full image (text and illustrations) of many, although not all, of the<lb/>
articles included. You may reserve time to use certain ProQuest workstations by<lb/>
signing up at the Reference Desk.<lb/>
New electronic resources: new this fall arc several online sources of journal articles.<lb/>
JSTOR offers full-image articles from twenty-six scholarly journals in the fields of<lb/>
ecology, education, finance, history, mathematics, political science, and population<lb/>
studies. MUSE offers full-text articles from forty-four scholarly journals in the<lb/>
classics, education, film, theater, and performing arts, history and cultural studies,<lb/>
Judaic studies, literary theory, mathematics, philosophy and political science. PQD<lb/>
(ProQuest Direct) offers access to full-text articles from General Periodicals Online<lb/>
(Research II Edition) and ABIInform (Business Periodicals Online Global Edition).<lb/>
REVEAL is an automated service that delivers the tables of contents of periodicals.<lb/>
STAT-USA gives access to business and economic data from the U. S. Department of<lb/>
Commerce. These are available at any networked workstation in the library or any<lb/>
workstation connected to the campus network.<lb/>
2. Write down the citations that interest you. The citation includes the author and title<lb/>
of the article, the journal the article is in (tide, date, volume number), and the page<lb/>
numbers. Or print the citations out on some of the CD-ROM and online products.<lb/>
3. Determine if joyner Library owns the periodical by checking in the ECU Library<lb/>
Catalog, called Horizon. In Horizon, seach under the "Title Alphabetical" selection.<lb/>
Use the name of the journal you're looking for, not the title of the article. Press<lb/>
"Enter You might also want to check in one of the ProQuest and online products<lb/>
described above for the full article.<lb/>
The screen you receive first indicates briefly if the library has the title. Press"Enter"<lb/>
again to receive fuller information: the volumes and years owned by the library,<lb/>
whether the library has a current subscription, and so on. Current periodicals are<lb/>
shelved alphabetically in the Current Periodicals Room and the North Carolina<lb/>
Collection. Older periodicals may be bound and given a call number, like books, or<lb/>
be available in a microform format, such as microfilm. Horizon tells you the call<lb/>
number, collection, and format in which the periodical can be found. Write down<lb/>
the appropriate information. Handouts listing what periodicals Joyner currently<lb/>
subscribes to in various subject areas are available in the Reference Department.<lb/>
4. Consult the Quick Find Guides and other signs to locate the periodical you need.<lb/>
Photocopies can be made on self-serve copiers placed throughout the library. Note:<lb/>
a prepaid copy card is required. Copy cards cost one dollar (includes seventy cents<lb/>
in copies) and are reusable. If you have any trouble locating the periodical you<lb/>
need, please ask a staff member for assistance.<lb/>
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warn.<lb/>
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How to Find Government Documents and Maps<lb/>
The staff of the Documents Maps Department can help you find United States<lb/>
government documents and maps. Joyner Library receives about 80 percent of the<lb/>
items available to depository libraries, many of which are in the DocumentsMaps<lb/>
Department. (Until the building renovation is complete, however, most of the<lb/>
documents received before August 1996 are in storage and may be recalled upon<lb/>
twenty-four-hour notice.)<lb/>
Also, staff and patrons may search for documents using a CD-ROM database, GPO on<lb/>
SilverPlatter, which is available at any workstation on the library s CD-ROM network.<lb/>
Note: The library's on-line catalog, Horizon, does not generally include U. S. govern-<lb/>
ment documents, although the Ubrary plans to begin doing so later this year. Some<lb/>
types of materials, such as laws and regulations, census publications, and Congres-<lb/>
sional hearings and reports, may be readily located by asking for help at the Docu-<lb/>
ments service desk.<lb/>
Other types of documents, such as statistics and court decisions, may be located by<lb/>
asking in the Reference Department. Many government documents are becoming<lb/>
available on the Internet, which is accessible from any public workstation in the<lb/>
library.<lb/>
North Carolina state government documents are cataloged in Horizon; most of them<lb/>
are in the North Carolina Collection. Documents from other states are not generally<lb/>
collected by joyner Ubrary, although some types of documents, such as statistics and<lb/>
education reports, may be located by asking at the Reference Desk.<lb/>
Documentary material such as diaries, corporation records, and family records may be<lb/>
found in the Special CoUecttons Department. Census records for North Carolina are in<lb/>
dw North Carolina Collection; the 1870 United States Census is on mfcrofflm in the<lb/>
DocumentsMaps Department.<lb/>
Topographic and geologic sheet maps for the United States and many foreign coun-<lb/>
tries are to the DocuinentsMaps Department. Atlases are located in the Reference<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
How to Search the Internet<lb/>
The Internet is a worldwide network of computers that are corrected to each other. The<lb/>
cost of this large network is shared by aH the onjanizattons who are members. Once<lb/>
you're connected to the Internet, you can access documents, images, and sounds.<lb/>
Joyrier Lfcrary provkles access to n� fater<lb/>
throughout the library and ihe Musk: Library. Ttewortatattom are eojpedwim Netscape<lb/>
browser software running from the �xaiys network. Using Jetscape, or any otr�<lb/>
browser, you can search the world for iriformatkm on a variety of topics.<lb/>
Although the Internet is not truly indexed, the way the online catalog (Horizon) is,<lb/>
there are a few search engines and index services which can help you sort through the<lb/>
abundance of information to find what you want. Some of the most popular search<lb/>
engines and indexes are Alta Vista, Excite, InfoSeek, Lycos, Metacrawler, WebCrawier,<lb/>
and Yahoo, links to these are available on the library's web site.<lb/>
Basically what search engines do is to use a rough keyword search to retrieve all<lb/>
occurrences of the keyword) you type in. Many search engines then count the<lb/>
number of occurrences of the word and assign a relevancy ranking to the sites found.<lb/>
Such searches can be highly misleadingespeciaily if a site has deliberately placed<lb/>
certain words on their site to "catch" such keyword searches.<lb/>
Index services provide a thesaurus of siibjmterim for searching. Sites indexed in this way will<lb/>
retrieve a more relevant list than the strict keywoTO searching rxovided by weboawkrs.<lb/>
If you are having difficulty weeding through trivia and non-relevant material on the<lb/>
Net, ask in the Reference Department for searching techniques and appropriate sites.<lb/>
Also, the library's home page (web site) provides directed links to some pertinent<lb/>
subject sites, as well as government sites and bibliographies.<lb/>
Beginning fcll semester 1997, the new URL for Joyner Library is: http:www.Hb.ecu.edu<lb/>
How to find Primary Sources<lb/>
Using primary sources to do research is an integral part of the university learning<lb/>
experience. Many courses, particularly upper and graduate level courses in<lb/>
history, English, and communications, require projects that involve the use of<lb/>
primary sources.<lb/>
Primary sources are letters, diaries, reports, minutes, photographs, and other<lb/>
materials created contemporaneously with the events they record. They provide<lb/>
first-hand accounts and discuss events as they are taking place. Thus, they<lb/>
provide documentation for the subsequent study of these events.<lb/>
Keep in mind that primary sources may be printed: documentary volumes, in<lb/>
which original letters and other documents are published verbatim, are consid-<lb/>
ered primary sources and would qualify to meet research requirements. News-<lb/>
papers and microfilm reproductions of the original sources are also primary <lb/>
sources.<lb/>
Documentary volumes are located in the general stacks and in the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Collection. Microfilm sources and newspapers are located in Periodicals<lb/>
Microforms and in the North Carolina Collection.<lb/>
The most rewarding class assignment, however, may involve the use of original<lb/>
unpublished letters, diaries, photographs, scrapbooks, reports, and other<lb/>
materials available only in Special Couections (Manuscripts, University Archives,<lb/>
North Carolina Collection, Hoover Collection, and Rare Books). If your project<lb/>
involves any aspect of East Carolina Umversity's rwst rou can find a great mass of<lb/>
formation availabte m the Umv If your topic pertains to life in<lb/>
the United States during the nineteenth or twentieth centuries, be sure to see<lb/>
what the East Carolina Manuscript Collection has to offer, exciting original<lb/>
documents pertaining to slavery, the Civil War and every modern war in which<lb/>
America has participated, economic and political issues, women's and minority<lb/>
studies, and many other subjects. The Special Collections staff is available to<lb/>
assist you in the use of a variety of finding aids.<lb/>
The Special Collections Department is located on the fourth floor of the new<lb/>
addition. Go to the third floor and follow the purple neon ceiling light to the<lb/>
back elevator near the North Carolina Collection (in the circular drum area of<lb/>
the new addition). Take the elevator to the fourth floor - tbis elevator provides<lb/>
the only access to Ok fourth floor and Special Collections.<lb/>
How to Tind Reserve Materials<lb/>
Faculty sometimes place books, copies of articles, or other materials on reserve<lb/>
for their classes to use. The purpose is to guarantee access to the items by a<lb/>
large number of students within a certain time period. To find reserve items:<lb/>
In the library online catalog (Horizon), click on one of these selections:<lb/>
professor's name or course name.<lb/>
Type in the appropriate information, for example: Smith, John or ACCT 3420.<lb/>
Qjckon'OK<lb/>
Highlight the item(s) you want and dick on "Show Detail ,�<lb/>
The call number is given in the upper left corner. Write it down and ask for it at<lb/>
the CirculationReserve desk.<lb/>
If an item is on Reserve by multiple professors or courses, the item wffl be<lb/>
displayed only once. If your search is unsuccessful, please come to the Circula-<lb/>
tionReserve desk for assistance.<lb/>
Copies of articles can be used for two hours in the reading room or can be<lb/>
checked out for iihlibrary use for two hours only- All books can be checked out<lb/>
for rwohour use in the library, and some books are designated to be checked<lb/>
out overnight (an hour before closing) or for a week. Current ECU identification<lb/>
is needed to check out reserve items.<lb/>
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Music Library<lb/>
tflMH<lb/>
The Music Library is the resource<lb/>
facility for music information and<lb/>
materials at East Carolina University.<lb/>
Its collection includes over 55,000<lb/>
books, scores, periodicals, and sound<lb/>
recordings that represent all types and<lb/>
periods of music. A branch of Joyner<lb/>
.Library, the Music Library offers the<lb/>
same services as the main library,<lb/>
including reference assistance, com-<lb/>
puter searching of bibliographic<lb/>
databases, delivery service, card-<lb/>
operated copy machine, and reader-<lb/>
printers for microforms. Its media<lb/>
center has computer workstations and<lb/>
playback equipment for LPs, compact<lb/>
discs, audfocassettes, videocassettes,<lb/>
laserdiscs, and interactive CD-ROMs.<lb/>
Reproduction of commercially pro-<lb/>
duced recordings is prohibited. The<lb/>
library enforces a no taping policy.<lb/>
Undergraduates may borrow<lb/>
library materials according to the<lb/>
following schedules:<lb/>
Books and scores: 28 days<lb/>
Media materials: 1 day<lb/>
Reserve materials: 2 hours<lb/>
(for use in Library only)<lb/>
Graduate students may borrow<lb/>
books and scores for 28 days<lb/>
Media materials: 3 day<lb/>
Reserve materials: 2 hours<lb/>
(for use in Library only)<lb/>
Materials in the Reference Collec-<lb/>
tion, bound periodicals, and the<lb/>
Collected Works do not circulate<lb/>
without special permission.<lb/>
Graduate assistants with teaching<lb/>
responsibilities may obtain extended<lb/>
media privileges if their unit sends the<lb/>
'library an appropriate note.<lb/>
Faculty library cards allow an<lb/>
extended circulation period for most<lb/>
materials, but materials borrowed by<lb/>
faculty may be recalled at any time for<lb/>
the Reserve Collection and, after a<lb/>
period of 28 days, for another user.<lb/>
The Music Library does not allow<lb/>
patrons to charge materials out with<lb/>
another patron's library card.<lb/>
Materials on reserve for course<lb/>
assignments are housed at the circula-<lb/>
tion desk. Listings of reserve materials<lb/>
by course number and fiiculty name are<lb/>
kept at the circulation desk and on the<lb/>
Library's online catalog, called Horizon.<lb/>
Certain items on reserve may be<lb/>
checked out overnight.<lb/>
The Music Library acts as a liaison<lb/>
with Joyner's Interiibrary Services<lb/>
Department. It accepts requests for<lb/>
interiibrary loan for materials not<lb/>
owned by the Music Library.<lb/>
Fines for overdue materials are<lb/>
assessed at the following rates:<lb/>
Books and scores: 1.25day<lb/>
Media and Reserve media materials:<lb/>
$2.00day<lb/>
Other Reserve materials: $.25day<lb/>
Fletcher Music Building (cast edge<lb/>
of campus), first floor.<lb/>
MonThur8a.m-10p.ai.<lb/>
Friday8a.m5p.m.<lb/>
Saturday12p.m5p.m.<lb/>
Sunday2p.m10p.m.<lb/>
3286250<lb/>
HOMEPAGE:<lb/>
http:www.lib.ecu.edtj<lb/>
MusicLibmusic.html<lb/>
Music Library staff members Roberta Chodadd and Michael Boswell help<lb/>
student find Information and check out materials.<lb/>
MMKMHMHIiiimi iiw ii<lb/>
WWISiiiw ���WftSISMIMli<lb/>
mum' ii i� lijgi.iBMj<lb/>
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WekoM to the WHta L Laupus Heatth Sdeimtoi ItayHouB<lb/>
The Health Sciences Library, located in<lb/>
the Brody Medical Sciences Building on<lb/>
ECU'S West Campus, serves as the<lb/>
primary information center for stu-<lb/>
dents, faculty, and staff in the Division<lb/>
of Health Sciences and the School of<lb/>
Social Work. The library has a collec-<lb/>
tion of approximately 69,500 book<lb/>
volumes and currently subscribes to<lb/>
1,670 journals The HSL has a staff of<lb/>
14 librarians and 275 support staff to<lb/>
serve your information needs.<lb/>
The ECU Health Sciences L2wary(HSL)<lb/>
home page can be an excellent starting<lb/>
point for your adventures out onto the<lb/>
Worldwide Web and a valuable source<lb/>
of information regarding library ser-<lb/>
vices and news. Our Internet<lb/>
address is http:www.hst.ecu.edu and<lb/>
can be accessed using any WWW text<lb/>
or graphics based browser.<lb/>
The HSL home page contains informa-<lb/>
tion concerning services and depart-<lb/>
ments within the Hbrzry. Each library<lb/>
department has a page describing<lb/>
services and providing phone numbers<lb/>
for a contact person. A schedule and<lb/>
list of classes offered by HSL, updated<lb/>
each semester, is available along with<lb/>
registration information. There are<lb/>
links to information about Greenville<lb/>
and maps including directions to<lb/>
Greenville, ECU, and HSL Beginning<lb/>
September 1st, there wg be electronic<lb/>
forms available where faculty, staff, and<lb/>
students can request intertibrary<lb/>
loans(ILL) and submit applications for<lb/>
e-mail accounts. Information On-<lb/>
Health Sdences Ubrary Department<lb/>
Wsl, j�U I.Mi Jl2maooo.l2M midnight<lb/>
soon be accessible as wefl. Monday-Thnrsday7:30 am-120<lb/>
The librarians at HSL have compiled a �midnight<lb/>
list of frequently used and subject Friday7:30 am - 90 pm<lb/>
related Internet sites and created links Saturday90 am - 90 pm<lb/>
to these sites. The Medkal Resources<lb/>
page includes links to CDC, N1H, WHO, hthnmn Librarian ok My<lb/>
and Harvard. Links to Joyner � . - i" <lb/>
. .  Friday7:30 am - 50 pm<lb/>
Medicine and other departmental home I w.<lb/>
 �T Saturday9:00 am - 50 pm<lb/>
pages, are aiso listed. We have devel-<lb/>
oped an ongoing process to continually<lb/>
evaluate new sites for relevancy,<lb/>
currency, and accuracy. In the future, Sunday120 noon -110 pm<lb/>
we plan to create a page of evaluated Monday-Thursday 7:30 am-110 pm<lb/>
Knks for each school we serve. If your Friday730 am-90 pm<lb/>
department would like to submit a link Saturday 90 am - 90 pm<lb/>
for addition to our borne page, please<lb/>
contact: Linda Turner, Chairperson 'TtboTZJJ�rmfiiaTKlm<lb/>
holidays; call 816-2222 �w i<lb/>
Webpage Committee at 816-2258. M and Sprio�wi�crhie�to, hours oT<lb/>
I-816-2212<lb/>
Director Dorothy A. Spencer, PhD, AHB�;e�Ji<lb/>
- oversees afl ferny function a a on of the university<lb/>
tnlcnedo<lb/>
- 816-2232<lb/>
Department Head: Samantha Goat, MLS; email: sammihsl.hsi.ccu.edu<lb/>
- acquire, maintains, and circulates audiovisual materials<lb/>
operates the microcomputer lab<lb/>
- provides assiatance and consultation in using a variety of computer-based applications<lb/>
Department Head: Patricia Greemtein, MLS; e-mail: patgreh�l.hsl.ecu.edu<lb/>
- orders, processes, and organize material purchased by the Horary<lb/>
1-816-3064<lb/>
Department Head: Elizabeth Winstead, MLS, MPA, AHIP: e-mail: betwin�hsl.hsl ecu.edu<lb/>
-oversees circulation of Horary materials<lb/>
- rjrtrrtdes document dcSvery services including fax, totertflxaiy loan, arid rotocopy services<lb/>
- operates a reserve collection for course support<lb/>
- provides Horary materials to off-campus students<lb/>
Coaarau�rvliamiaiMlpn1lcWI)leay -816-3921<lb/>
Department Head: Susie Speer. MSLS, MSEH, AHIP; e-mail: sus�pe�hsl.n�l ecu edu<lb/>
- support Horary staff computing<lb/>
- implements and maintain library automation project<lb/>
1-816-2242<lb/>
librarian for Outreach Education and Systems: Janet Bangma, MLIS; 816-2066; email: anoantHwlJwi.ecti.edu<lb/>
Outreach Coordinator. Evangeline Norfleet, BSLS; e-mail: vannor�hsl.nsl ecu edu<lb/>
- provides information services to health professionals throughout eastern North Carolina and to other<lb/>
North Carolina Area Health Education Centers in the state<lb/>
Reference - 816-2258<lb/>
- provides assistance in using information resources by phone and in the library<lb/>
- provide innovative assistance in meeting information needs of library clients<lb/>
- provides consultation services on library education and curriculum support<lb/>
- oversees educational activities for the library<lb/>
- conducts library educational activities<lb/>
, -816-2234<lb/>
Department Head: Melissa Nasca, MSLS, MBA, AHIP; e-mail: mdnas0hsl.hsl.ecu.edu<lb/>
- selects, orders, processes, and maintains journals purchased by the Horary<lb/>
PARKING<lb/>
S Staff<lb/>
V Visitors<lb/>
SV Staff &amp; Visitors<lb/>
 r<lb/>
Health Sciences Library<lb/>
( � I -S<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0030"/><lb/>
mttm<lb/>
mtm<lb/>
HSL<lb/>
First Floor<lb/>
Quick Reference<lb/>
Guide to the Library<lb/>
Where is it?<lb/>
Circulation1st floor<lb/>
Reserves1st floor<lb/>
Medline and other<lb/>
databases1st floor<lb/>
Current journals1st floor<lb/>
Reference books1st floor<lb/>
Audiovisual and<lb/>
Informatics2nd floor<lb/>
Microcomputer Lab2nd floor<lb/>
Bound journals2nd floor<lb/>
Books2nd floor<lb/>
Quiet study areas2nd floor<lb/>
Where do IcaH?<lb/>
General Information816-2222<lb/>
Renew books,<lb/>
check on fines816-3064<lb/>
lid out if the library t3 wns<lb/>
specific items8162258<lb/>
Request purchase<lb/>
of a book816-2221<lb/>
Request purchase<lb/>
of a journal816-2234<lb/>
Reference assistance816-2258<lb/>
-<lb/>
HSL<lb/>
Second<lb/>
Floor<lb/>
<lb/>
' mimm m .u�i<lb/>
 t-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058722_0031"/><lb/>
i ��<lb/>
�<lb/>
Kational Library of<lb/>
Medicine (HIM)<lb/>
Classification<lb/>
Predhtical Sciences<lb/>
Circulation Policies<lb/>
OSHuman Anatomy<lb/>
OTPhysiology<lb/>
QUBiochemistry<lb/>
QVPharmacology<lb/>
QWMicrobiologyImmunology<lb/>
QXParasitology<lb/>
QYClinical Pathology<lb/>
QZPathology<lb/>
Medicine and Related Subjects<lb/>
w<lb/>
WA<lb/>
WB<lb/>
WC<lb/>
WD 100<lb/>
WD 200<lb/>
WD 300<lb/>
WD 400<lb/>
WD 500<lb/>
WD 600<lb/>
WD 700<lb/>
WE<lb/>
WF<lb/>
WG<lb/>
WH<lb/>
WJ<lb/>
WK<lb/>
WL<lb/>
WM<lb/>
WN<lb/>
WO<lb/>
WP<lb/>
WQ<lb/>
WR<lb/>
ws<lb/>
nniTtmtrW11 � qlMlt . . : �. .<lb/>
Oients must present a library card with appropriate identification each time to<lb/>
borrow or renew items. Items must be brought to either the Circulation or Audiovt<lb/>
sual and Informatics Desk for checkout. Clients are responsible for all uses of their<lb/>
card. Clients are responsible for all fines and fees accrued on their card<lb/>
Faculty clients must provide written permission for another person to borrow<lb/>
materials with their card. It is the responsibility of the client to notify the Circula-<lb/>
tion Department if their Ubrary card is lost or stolen. It is also the responsibility of<lb/>
the client to Inform the library of any address changes. Incorrect address<lb/>
information is not grounds for waiving fines or fees.<lb/>
MfM lowing Pfi vltCQCS<lb/>
North Carolina residents 16 years of age and older may receive an area resident<lb/>
library card for use in the Health Sciences library, loan periods are:<lb/>
Books all clients, except Faculty until end of current semester<lb/>
Boots Faculty untu end of Spring Semester each year<lb/>
Journals Faculty and Staff only 3 days<lb/>
Audiovisuals all clients 7 days<lb/>
WU<lb/>
WV<lb/>
WW<lb/>
WX<lb/>
WY<lb/>
WZ<lb/>
Medical Professions<lb/>
Public Health<lb/>
Practice of Medicine<lb/>
Communicable Diseases<lb/>
Nutrition Disorders<lb/>
Metabolic Diseases<lb/>
Immunologic and Collagen<lb/>
Diseases. Hypersensitivity<lb/>
Animal Poisons<lb/>
Plant Poisons<lb/>
Diseases and Injuries caused<lb/>
by Physical Agents<lb/>
Aviation and Space Medicine<lb/>
Musculoskeletal System<lb/>
Respiratory System<lb/>
Cardiovascular System<lb/>
Hemic and Lymphatic<lb/>
Systems<lb/>
Digestive System<lb/>
Urogenital System<lb/>
Endocrine System<lb/>
Nervous System<lb/>
Psychiatry<lb/>
Radiology. Diagnostic Imaging<lb/>
Surgery<lb/>
Gynecotogy<lb/>
Obstetrics<lb/>
Dermatology<lb/>
Pediatrics<lb/>
Geriatrics. Chronic Disease<lb/>
Dentistry. Oral Surgery<lb/>
Otolaryngotogy<lb/>
Ophthalmology<lb/>
Hospitals and Other Health<lb/>
Facilities<lb/>
Nursing<lb/>
History of Medicine<lb/>
Document<lb/>
Delivery Services<lb/>
Tab of Contents<lb/>
The Health Sciences Library provides<lb/>
copies of tables of contents for current<lb/>
journal issues. Faculty who subscribe<lb/>
to this service receive a copy of the<lb/>
nbfe of contents for the journals they 9<lb/>
have identified. Copies can be faxed<lb/>
directly or delivered within 24 hours of<lb/>
the receipt of the journal by the library.<lb/>
An item may be renewed if another client does not have a hold on it. Items may be<lb/>
brought in to the Circulation or Audiovisuals and Informatics Desk for renewal.<lb/>
Renewals may also be done by phone (for 5 items or less) and tetter.<lb/>
Hnkh Mftf Recalls<lb/>
Items checked out by another client may be recalled. Forms are available in a<lb/>
variety of locations throughout the library to recall an item. A tetter is nuuted to the<lb/>
client who has the item checked out stating that the item is due in one week. The<lb/>
client who has the item is given a minimum of two weeks to use the item. Once the<lb/>
material has been returned to the library and is available, it will be held at the<lb/>
Circulation Desk for one week. Items not checked out by the requesting chent<lb/>
withto7dayswmbereshetved. Clients are responsible for returning recalled items<lb/>
even if they are not in the geographic vicinity of the library.<lb/>
An overdue notice is sent to the client if the item is not returned within 5 days of<lb/>
theduedate A second overdue notice is mailed for items not returned within 2<lb/>
weeks. An invoice for the replacement cost of the item, plus a processing fee, is<lb/>
mailed after the item is more than one month overdue.<lb/>
Fine! for non-recalled items are charged at a rate of1 00 per item per dayjines for<lb/>
readied items are charged at the rate of $2.00 per item per day. Fines may be paid m<lb/>
cash or by check.<lb/>
Ubrary privileges are suspended for clients with overdue books or unpaid fines.<lb/>
Student university records will be tagged online prior to registration for students<lb/>
with overdue books or fines.<lb/>
client is charged the list price plus a $30.00 processing fee. The list price for tost<lb/>
books is refundable if the book is later returned in usable condition. Clients are<lb/>
responsible for all damages to materials. Damaged books are a danger to other<lb/>
books in the collection.<lb/>
LockSare available in the Ubrary. Locker applications are accepted until the first<lb/>
day of classes for the current semester. Locker assignments are made within one<lb/>
week of the application deadline. Locker keys are due at the end of the current<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
Faculty may also request titles to be<lb/>
automatically routed to their offices.<lb/>
These titles are routed after they have<lb/>
been in the library 30 days. The<lb/>
combined total of the journals received<lb/>
through automatic journal loan and the<lb/>
table of contents service may not<lb/>
exceed 30.<lb/>
rJlPtocopying<lb/>
The Circulation staff will photocopy<lb/>
materials for faculty, medical residents,<lb/>
and third- and fourth-year racu-cal<lb/>
students. Photocopies done by library<lb/>
staff are $1.50 per article. Requests are<lb/>
accepted by telephone, mail, fax or<lb/>
walk-in. Materials are routinely deliv-<lb/>
ered within 24 hours of the request.<lb/>
The library's request forms must be<lb/>
used in order to comply with copyright<lb/>
laws.<lb/>
The Health Sciences Library provides<lb/>
courier service between this campus<lb/>
and Joyner Library. Materials from any<lb/>
campus Ubrary may be deUvered to or<lb/>
returned to any campus Ubrary location<lb/>
for your convenience.<lb/>
IntJTJhrary Loan<lb/>
Items not available at the Health<lb/>
Sciences Library (or Joyner Library) may<lb/>
be borrowed through interUbrary loan.<lb/>
There is a minimum charge of $6.00 per<lb/>
item, and deUvery takes an average of<lb/>
ten days. Electronic mail andor<lb/>
telefacsimile can be used for rush<lb/>
requests at an additional charge.<lb/>
 <lb/>
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Computerized Resources<lb/>
available at the Health Sciences Library<lb/>
Microcomputer<lb/>
Lab<lb/>
The Health Sciences Library at East Carolina University has computerized resources that are available for information searching on the first floor cf the library.<lb/>
t�ALTMMEOKAL<lb/>
MEMINEi A Woraedical database produced by the National Library of Medicine Its print counterparts arc Index Median, International Nursing<lb/>
ruse, and Index to Dental Literature. Coverage is 1966 to the present. International in scope and updated monthly, this database includes citations<lb/>
to journal articles, editorials, and letters to the editor from over 3,600 journals.<lb/>
� � GTNAHLt A nursing and allied health database produced by CINAHL Information Systems. Its print counterpart is Cumulative Index to Nursing and<lb/>
Allied Health literature. Coverage is 1982 to the present. Updated monthly, it includes citations to journal articles, the publications of theAmerican<lb/>
Nurses Association and the National League for Nursing, nursing dissertu�is, selc�ed conference proceedings, stancUirds of professional practice<lb/>
beginning in 1992, educational software in nursing.<lb/>
FwycINFO: A database covering all areas of psychology and related fields produced by theAmerican Psychological Association (APA). Its print<lb/>
counterpart is Psycbosocial Abstracts. Coverage is 1984 to the present. International in scope and updated monthly, this database includes biblio-<lb/>
graphic citations to technical reports, dissertations, over 1.400 periodicals, and other sources.<lb/>
HAP1: Health and Psychological Instruments is produced by Behavioral Measurement Database Services. It includes citations to descriptions of<lb/>
infonnation on instruments of use in assessing the health and behavior of infants, children, adolescents, adults, and the elderly. It also includes title,<lb/>
author, publication resource, development date, publication date, subjects, description, and reliability factor of the cited instrument.<lb/>
Health Reference Center: A consumer health oriented database produced by Infonnation Access Company. Coverage is for three roiling years. Updated<lb/>
monthly, it includes full-text coverage for 100 titles on health, fitness, nutrition and medicine as well as indexing to citations in over 150 titles.<lb/>
HeahhSTAR: Focuses on both the clinical and non-clinical aspects of health care delivery. Produced cooperatively by the National library of Medicine and<lb/>
the American Hospital Association.The database contains citations and abstraas when avaUable. to joumaJ articles, nwrragraphs, technical reports. me�<lb/>
abstracts and paper, book chapters, government documents, and newspaper articles from 1975 to the present.<lb/>
 SAM-CT A database containing the full text of Scientific American Medicine produced by Scientific American. Inc. Coverage is the current year.<lb/>
Updated quarterly, it provides coverage of developments in clinical medicine.<lb/>
Statl-Ref: Provides complete text, tables, and references from selected textbooks, updated quarterly.<lb/>
SOCIAIWORK<lb/>
Social Work Abstracts: A database including all aspects of social work and social policyproduced by the National Association of Social Workers. Its<lb/>
print eounterpa- is Social Work Abstracts Coverage is 1977 to the present. International in scope and updated quarterly, it includes citations to journal<lb/>
articles and doctoral dissertations It also contains Tbe Register of Clinical Social Workers, a list of registered clinica! social wortrcrs, including the type of<lb/>
practice, and educational and employment background.<lb/>
CMMMAL JUSTICE<lb/>
Criminal Justice AbatracM: A database indexing most of the major journals in criminology. Coverage is 1968 to the present. International in scope, it is<lb/>
updated monthly.<lb/>
Mlcrotnetfex or COS (Computerized Clinical Information System) A drug database for PCMH and ECU professionals Updated quarterly, it<lb/>
contains reliable and current infonnation on toxicology, drug therapy, and acute care<lb/>
MTERMT<lb/>
Access to die Internet, using Netscape, is available on all Reference Floor workstations. A number of useful Internet sites have been bookmarked in<lb/>
Netscape for easy access.<lb/>
RfMOTE ACCESS TO OVID DAXARASCS<lb/>
The library's OVTD databases are accessible remoter by a variety of methods. Access to OV ID databases will allow you to search MEDLINE, CINAHL,<lb/>
PsycINFO, and HeahhSTAR. Only ECU faculty, staff and students.University Medical Center employees, and healthcare providers in the Eastern AHEC<lb/>
region are allowed access You must register with the HSL to obtain a login name and password.<lb/>
A number of different access methods arc available, including Novell Network, World Wide Web, telnet, and dial access. The method you choose will<lb/>
depend on your computer and network connections Contact the library for more information, or see our home page on the World Wide Web at<lb/>
http:www.hsl.ecu.edu.<lb/>
The library's microcomputer laboratory provides<lb/>
a variety of hardware and software in a net-<lb/>
worked environment.<lb/>
Hours: CFall and Spring Semesters)<lb/>
Monday-Thursday 7:30am-10:45pm<lb/>
Friday 7:30am:45pm<lb/>
Saturday 9:00am-8:45pm<lb/>
Sunday 12:00pm- 10:45nm<lb/>
Hardware:<lb/>
August 1.1997<lb/>
60 PCs<lb/>
13 Macintoshes<lb/>
25 multimedia workstations<lb/>
Software: Includes, but is not limited to<lb/>
MS Word<lb/>
Excel<lb/>
Harvard Graphics<lb/>
SPSS<lb/>
PowerPoint<lb/>
150 Computer-assisted programs in basic<lb/>
and clinical sciences, nutrition, and<lb/>
basic skills<lb/>
19 interactive videoCD-ROM programs<lb/>
Instruction:<lb/>
Basic assistance with the software we provide is<lb/>
available at an hours the lab is open.<lb/>
Ln-depth instruction m the software we provide is<lb/>
available to individuals by appointment.<lb/>
Classes arc limited to students, faculty, and staff in<lb/>
the Division of Health Sciences and the School of<lb/>
Social Work. Classes are taught to groups of 3 or<lb/>
more by appointment or at the request of a<lb/>
faculty member. Classes are available in a wide<lb/>
range of areas, including MS Word, Excel, Power<lb/>
Point, DOS, and Using the Internet.<lb/>
Fntrctny<lb/>
Clients may print out all documents on a laser<lb/>
printer, up to 50 pages. Only one final copy of<lb/>
any document is allowed.<lb/>
Scanning:<lb/>
The lab houses two Hewlett Packard scanners: a<lb/>
Scanjet Hex for PCs and a Scanjet 4C for Macs.<lb/>
Clients may scan text or graphics into a digital<lb/>
form to be used by MS Word or in another<lb/>
application- The scanner scans in monochrome<lb/>
or color.<lb/>
Color printing<lb/>
A color printer is available for output from any of<lb/>
the software programs which support it. There is<lb/>
a per page charge for color printing.<lb/>
!<lb/>
Students, faculty and staff in the Division of<lb/>
Health Sciences and the School of Social Work<lb/>
may obtain a password for Internet mail through<lb/>
the Microcomputer Lab.<lb/>
Anyone may access the Internet using Netscape in<lb/>
the computer lab. This allows full access through<lb/>
the World Wide Web.<lb/>
Individuals with disabilities who require accommodation<lb/>
in order to participate in any event at ECU are encouraged to contact the Department for Disability Support Services at 919-328-4802 OWceTTD) forty-right hours prior to the start of the program.<lb/>
16,000 copies of this public document were printed at an approximate cost of $1666.00, or $.104 per copy.<lb/>
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