<?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="00058734_0001"/>
<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
OCTOBER 16.1997<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROUNA<lb/>
ECU police officer accused of improper conduct<lb/>
Chief says internal<lb/>
investigation underway<lb/>
jACQl KI.1NK D. KKI.I.IM<lb/>
NEWS KDII OK<lb/>
An arrest of a fan during Saturday's game<lb/>
turned into an investigation of the arresting<lb/>
officer.<lb/>
ECU closes<lb/>
yet another<lb/>
parking lot<lb/>
Parking lot between Raw! and Austin is soon to<lb/>
become a pedestrian walkway.<lb/>
"PHOTO BY JONATHAN SHEEN<lb/>
Staff lot near Rawl<lb/>
building expected to<lb/>
close soon<lb/>
Ambkr Tatim<lb/>
STU'K WRI IKR<lb/>
Another parking lot "bites the dust<lb/>
Plans.are currently under way to remove<lb/>
the staff parking lot between Rawl and<lb/>
Austin Classroom Buildings.<lb/>
"It'll be down for an extended period of<lb/>
time for installation of an elevator in Rawl<lb/>
followed by the installation of a twin<lb/>
elevator in Austin said Chancellor Richard<lb/>
R. Eakin.<lb/>
As the elevator construction transpires,<lb/>
the parking lot will be used as a construction<lb/>
management site. When the elevator project<lb/>
is completed, the lot will then be turned<lb/>
into a pedestrian walkway.<lb/>
"It's all part of comprehensive facilities<lb/>
for a pedestrian corridor from one end of<lb/>
campus to the other said Layton<lb/>
Getsinger, vice-chancellor for<lb/>
Administration and Financing.<lb/>
According to the Director of Facilities<lb/>
Planning, Design and Construction, Bruce<lb/>
Flye, the lot was supposed to close on<lb/>
Oct 13 however the contractor was not<lb/>
able to show up. Therefore, the date is<lb/>
indefinite.<lb/>
"We (ECU) will lose 40 regular spaces<lb/>
and four handicap spaces said Johnny<lb/>
Eastwood, manager of External Operations!<lb/>
Another parking lot will open to<lb/>
compensate for the loss of these spaces.<lb/>
"The small parking lot on the east side of<lb/>
College Hill will become staff from 7 a.m. to<lb/>
4 p.m Eastwood said.<lb/>
"We (Facilities Planning) are<lb/>
incrementally increasing the number of<lb/>
parking spaces as old ones are removed<lb/>
Flye said.<lb/>
Funding for the project is presently<lb/>
uncertain.<lb/>
"We're into the second phase as funding<lb/>
and issues come together Flye said.<lb/>
Hopes to finally cure the parking blues of<lb/>
ECU students are soon to become a reality.<lb/>
"We are trying to acquire additional<lb/>
property in need of 2,000 more (parking)<lb/>
spaces Getsinger said.<lb/>
Election News<lb/>
As reported by TEC, SGA<lb/>
held a write-in election<lb/>
on Oct. 15 to fill slots<lb/>
ruled invalid in the<lb/>
previous election. Look<lb/>
inside on page 2 for<lb/>
results.<lb/>
"At the time the incident occurred, the<lb/>
officers on the scene felt we needed to<lb/>
investigate said ECU Police Chief Teresa<lb/>
Crocker.<lb/>
Football fan Michael Radford was<lb/>
arrested for second degree trespassing,<lb/>
resisting, delaying and obstructing a public<lb/>
official, according to an ECU police report.<lb/>
The arresting officer, W.C. Peebles,<lb/>
allegedly mistreated Radford during the<lb/>
arrest. ECU police confirmed that they had<lb/>
received complaints, although not from<lb/>
Radford himself.<lb/>
An investigation was begun on the spot<lb/>
for practical reasons. Officers on the scene<lb/>
were concerned that they would not be able<lb/>
to find witnesses to the incident after the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"If you had come back after the fact<lb/>
(after the game), it would have been very<lb/>
difficult to find witnesses Crocker said.<lb/>
It was alleged by witnesses that Radford<lb/>
complained to Peebles about the officer's<lb/>
treatment of a child in Radford's care.<lb/>
Radford was allegedly sprayed in the face<lb/>
with pepper spray and forced out of the<lb/>
Tersea Crocker<lb/>
ECU Police Chief<lb/>
stands by the officer.<lb/>
While Crocker said that<lb/>
she had received no<lb/>
complaints from the<lb/>
alleged victim, the<lb/>
investigation was<lb/>
begun to make sure<lb/>
that all proper<lb/>
procedures were<lb/>
followed.<lb/>
"Anytime you have a<lb/>
situation that might<lb/>
appear as if something<lb/>
happened  that could have ramifications<lb/>
down the road Crocker said.<lb/>
Crocker said that so far the investigation<lb/>
had not confirmed the allegations of<lb/>
improper conduct, but she was not able to<lb/>
divulge any other details of the investigation<lb/>
concerning the officer's actions.<lb/>
"We arc currently conducting an internal<lb/>
investigation Crocker said. "It's a<lb/>
personnel matter. It's not open to the<lb/>
public<lb/>
Neither Radford nor Peebles were<lb/>
available for comment.<lb/>
E<lb/>
LARM<lb/>
Fire prevention steamy<lb/>
subject after Aycock fire<lb/>
T<lb/>
Am.ki. Koemg<lb/>
STHI WKI I IK<lb/>
ihe fire in Aycock Hall last week<lb/>
proved to students that fire<lb/>
prevention and safety goes beyond<lb/>
the "stop, drop and roll" learned at an<lb/>
early age.<lb/>
"Fire prevention is every day of your life and it's<lb/>
for everyone said Captain Michael Branch .<lb/>
Branch, who is the Fire Prevention Specialist Coordinator for<lb/>
Greenville Fire and Rescue, advises that the most important way to be<lb/>
safe with fire is to have a smoke detector or fire alarm system.<lb/>
"The number one thing is that where they live they have a working<lb/>
smoke detector of a fire alarm system which lets everyone know that<lb/>
there is a fire like the one on Aycock Hall Branch said.<lb/>
There are three types of smoke detectors. The first type is electric.<lb/>
"If you are living in a home which was built after 1975, it has to<lb/>
have one (smoke detector) near the sleeping rooms Branch said.<lb/>
Branch said that national statistics show that most deaths from fire<lb/>
occur between 12 a.m. and 6 a.m while people arc sleeping.<lb/>
The second type runs off batteries and is the kind that is<lb/>
commonly bought and installed by the occupants. The third is an<lb/>
ACDC type. This has a battery back-up in case the electricity, which<lb/>
normally runs ir is cut off.<lb/>
Branch advises that people check the smoke detectors once a<lb/>
month.<lb/>
"When you change your clocks, change the battery in your smoke<lb/>
detector Branch said.<lb/>
According to Branch, landlords are required under the landlord<lb/>
code to have a working smoke detector in each apartment unit.<lb/>
"They are required to put one in and have it operational at the<lb/>
time the lease is signed Branch said. "If it is not working at any<lb/>
time, (the resident must let the landlord know<lb/>
Branch said that preventive measures should be taken at all<lb/>
times.<lb/>
"National statistics tell us that once in a lifetime you will<lb/>
be involved in a fire, and we hope you will be prepared for<lb/>
it Branch said.<lb/>
Branch recommends having a fire extinguisher in your<lb/>
home or apartment and car.<lb/>
The fire extinguishers on campus must be checked<lb/>
at least once a year. Manny Amaro, director of<lb/>
university housing services, said that after the fire in<lb/>
Aycock Hall the fire extinguishers were<lb/>
immediately replaced.<lb/>
When buying a fire extinguisher for a<lb/>
rcri.lential area, make sure it is an ABC fire<lb/>
c- ringuisher. This represents the kinds of fires<lb/>
the extinguisher can put out.<lb/>
Resident advisors are trained in how to<lb/>
operate the fire extinguishers which are<lb/>
placed in residence halls on campus,<lb/>
according to Amaro.<lb/>
When buying a fire extinguisher for<lb/>
your car, buy a 1A10BC. This will put<lb/>
out fire of combustible materials, 10<lb/>
SEE FIRE. PAGE 3<lb/>
Fire trucks, like the one at the fire station on Fifth Street, were available to be shown to the public during fir revention week.<lb/>
PHOTO BY CUT BUCK<lb/>
, <lb/>
ABC<lb/>
<lb/>
Firefighter Richard Prttman talks about fire prevention with Jessica<lb/>
Cleaton during fire prevention week at the Plaza Mall.<lb/>
PHOTO BY CLAY BUCK<lb/>
ces repre<lb/>
: kinds'of<lb/>
epreseuts com<lb/>
stible materials<lb/>
nable nqmds<lb/>
as qssolin<lb/>
A red slash through<lb/>
any of these letters<lb/>
means the extin-<lb/>
guisher is not<lb/>
designed to put out j<lb/>
fres of this kind.<lb/>
A yellow fire coat and boots hang in the fire department on Fifth Sflaat,<lb/>
ready for the next emergency fire fighters must go to.<lb/>
PHOTO 8Y ClAY BUCK<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
t partly cloudy<lb/>
 High 64<lb/>
'� ' -A Low 54<lb/>
p"yf<lb/>
 FRIDAY<lb/>
f partly cloudy<lb/>
High 64<lb/>
Low 54<lb/>
??????? (ft?????????????<lb/>
� it&amp;IairV-<lb/>
Did you know that there<lb/>
are only 69 shopping<lb/>
days til Christmas?<lb/>
opinion6<lb/>
Perks unlikely for<lb/>
graduate students<lb/>
lifestyle.<lb/>
Local bikers search for<lb/>
1 perfect trail<lb/>
sports10<lb/>
Twist of fate in ECU,<lb/>
Tulane predictions<lb/>
the east Carolinian<lb/>
STUDENT PUBLICATION BLOG.<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC 27858<lb/>
across from Joyner library<lb/>
Shone<lb/>
28-6366 newsroom<lb/>
328-2000 advertising<lb/>
328-6558 fax<lb/>
on line<lb/>
www.studeotmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0002"/><lb/>
2 Thursday. October 16, 1997<lb/>
w<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
aero<lb/>
the state<lb/>
Two counties choose pilot welfare program<lb/>
Commissioners in Davidson and Alamance counties voted to<lb/>
participate in a new welfare program that gives local authorities greater<lb/>
control over the dispersal of benefits.<lb/>
Davidson County commissioners voted Tuesday to apply for the<lb/>
program, and their counterparts in Alamance County gave unanimous<lb/>
consent to an application Monday.<lb/>
Under reforms approved by the General Assembly, up to 15.5<lb/>
percent of North Carolinians who now receive standard welfare<lb/>
benefits may be covered by plans developed at the county level starting<lb/>
next summer.<lb/>
Counties have until Oct. 31 to choose one of two options � remain<lb/>
a standard county whose welfare eligibility and criteria standards are set<lb/>
by the state, or gain more authority by becoming a pilot county.<lb/>
Counties approved by the state for participation in the pilot program<lb/>
will be given the added freedom to decide who should be eligible for<lb/>
cash benefits, how long people will receive them and the amount<lb/>
recipients will get.<lb/>
In cither scenario, Medicaid and food stamp programs will not be<lb/>
affected.<lb/>
Cohen formally welcomes Gen. Shelton to Pentagon<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) � Gen. Henry Shelton was praised Wednesday<lb/>
as a warrior and statesman during a Pentagon ceremony welcoming the<lb/>
North Carolina native to his post as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of<lb/>
Staff.<lb/>
Defense Secretary William Cohen formally welcomed the former<lb/>
Rrt Bragg commander, saying Shelton demonstrated "courage and<lb/>
flexibility during his command of the U.S. military entry into Haiti in<lb/>
1994, when last-minute negotiations switched the move from a combat<lb/>
invasion to a peaceful entry of troops.<lb/>
The four-star Army general displayed "the sword of the warrior and<lb/>
the statesmanship of a diplomat" during the Haiti mission, Cohen said,<lb/>
attributes he will need aplenty as he serves as the nation's top military<lb/>
officer.<lb/>
The general pledged to work to keep America's soldiers, sailors,<lb/>
airmen and Marines primed to do their duty, saying "readiness will be<lb/>
the cornerstone" of the nation's armed forces under his leadership.<lb/>
Shelton actually took over the job Oct. 1 as the 14th chairman of the<lb/>
Joint Chiefs of Staff.<lb/>
His formal welcoming ceremony, which was to have been held on the<lb/>
Pentagon's parade grounds, was hastily rescheduled indoors at the<lb/>
Pentagon due to wind and rainy weather.<lb/>
Early love for stocks paid off for Nobel prize winner<lb/>
BOSTON (AP) � Rarty on. Robert C. Merron knew he loved the stock<lb/>
market, squeezing in a few hours before graduate classes to trade<lb/>
securities.<lb/>
That effort rewarded him and fellow economist Myron S. Scholes on<lb/>
Tuesday when the two shared the Nobel prize for their work on<lb/>
derivatives, the lucrative but sometimes risky investment.<lb/>
He and Scholes, a professor emeritus at Stanford University, were<lb/>
honored by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for devising a<lb/>
formula for pricing derivatives, such as stock options.<lb/>
The risky investments have brought riches to some but ruin to<lb/>
Britain's oldest bank and California's Orange County.<lb/>
Derivatives arc securities linked to, or derived from, an underlying<lb/>
asset, such as stocks, interest rates or a currency.<lb/>
Scholes, 56, originally developed the theory on how to value<lb/>
derivatives while working with Fischer Black, who died in 1995. After<lb/>
the BJack-Scholes formula on valuing stock options was published in<lb/>
1973, Merton helped apply the work to additional markets.<lb/>
<lb/>
Ten dead in downtown shootout and bombing<lb/>
in Sri Lanka<lb/>
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) � Nine people were killed in a series of<lb/>
bomb blasts in downtown Colombo early Wednesday, and security<lb/>
forces shot a suspected Tamil rebel to death in a gunfight near the<lb/>
presidential office.<lb/>
At least 104 people, including 31 tourists, were wounded in the<lb/>
explosions, which could be heard as far as 15 miles away, said a<lb/>
government minister, AH.M. Fbwzie. The nationalities of the tourists<lb/>
were not immediately known.<lb/>
Police said up to eight rebels were holding several hostages inside<lb/>
the offices of a government publishing company. Earlier in the morning,<lb/>
the sound of automatic gunfire echoed for 20 minutes through the<lb/>
business district as rebels battled with police and soldiers.<lb/>
Two explosions ripped through the parking lot of the Galadari luxury<lb/>
hotel just before the 7 a.m. gunbattle began. At least one of the bombs<lb/>
was concealed in a car.<lb/>
A third explosion was heard some two hours later, followed by more<lb/>
gunfire near Lake House, headquarters of the government-run<lb/>
newspaper publishing house.<lb/>
The ball room of the Galadari Hotel was destroyed and parts of the<lb/>
newly built twin towers of the World Trade Center were damaged,<lb/>
wanesses said.<lb/>
President urges business leaders tc educate<lb/>
workers, poor<lb/>
SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) � Treating business and education as<lb/>
bookends upholding prosperity. President Clinton is urging employers<lb/>
to pout energy into teaching their workers.<lb/>
In an address before Brazilian business leaders today, Clinton was<lb/>
expected to encourage open trade and stress how vital an equitable<lb/>
education system is in this nation of city skyscrapers and hillside slums.<lb/>
Following the speech, Clinton was flying to Rio de Janicro to visit<lb/>
the Mangueira School, a privately funded model project that combines<lb/>
education and sports to uplift children from one of Rio's poorest slums.<lb/>
Clinton planned to tell Mangueira students to take the fullest<lb/>
advantage of educational opportunities � especially those offered by<lb/>
private companies � so they someday can earn an income that supports<lb/>
a better lifestyle.<lb/>
The president hoped this fresh spin on his trade spiel would<lb/>
encourage Latin American nations to shed a cultural tradition in which<lb/>
limited access to education fosters the glaring disparity between rich<lb/>
and poor, said Jim Steinberg, Clinton's deputy national security adviser.<lb/>
Write-in election results<lb/>
Legislature Results<lb/>
Board members<lb/>
troubled by deaths<lb/>
Freshmen Kim Kelly votes for SGA legislature at Mendenhall Student Center during<lb/>
the write-in election while pollster Jack Moore looks on.<lb/>
PHOTO BY AMANDA PROCTOR<lb/>
Senior Class President-<lb/>
Carlton Blanton<lb/>
Day Representatives<lb/>
a Adams<lb/>
Jayteder<lb/>
liie Brewer<lb/>
$&amp;m Sroderick<lb/>
b&amp;fm Causey<lb/>
Q&amp;M Courtcilrnaa<lb/>
Andres Oaviel<lb/>
Mk� Davis<lb/>
SfOofeOiener<lb/>
Faafcfaipiing<lb/>
fer fence Eyias<lb/>
Kuisha fennefi<lb/>
hm Godfrey<lb/>
Vickie Harrin<lb/>
Carrie Herman<lb/>
Diane Hill<lb/>
Melissa Hajimihalis<lb/>
YorgKla Hargrove<lb/>
telly tayff<lb/>
jita Lynch<lb/>
Raymond McGiR<lb/>
Chad Matheuna<lb/>
Nakia Medley<lb/>
John Meriae<lb/>
Sheeda Miles<lb/>
latum Moise<lb/>
Jen O'Connor<lb/>
JakePerry<lb/>
David Presneil<lb/>
Mustafa Rashid<lb/>
Christia Rey<lb/>
Beth Roberson<lb/>
Vterren Sherman<lb/>
Alison Singletary<lb/>
Jared Smith<lb/>
Kate Smith<lb/>
Jerome Sutton<lb/>
Chuck Wendell<lb/>
Shannon Whittington<lb/>
Robin Wilson<lb/>
State board urges<lb/>
alcohol ban on<lb/>
campuses<lb/>
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. (AP) - The<lb/>
Massachusetts Board of Higher<lb/>
Education voted to urge near-total<lb/>
bans of alcohol on state campuses,<lb/>
saying that current<lb/>
policies aren't <lb/>
working.<lb/>
Board members<lb/>
said they were<lb/>
troubled by the<lb/>
deaths last month of<lb/>
a student at the<lb/>
Massachusetts<lb/>
Institute of<lb/>
Technology who<lb/>
collapsed after a<lb/>
fraternity party and<lb/>
another at the<lb/>
University of<lb/>
Massachusetts who<lb/>
fell through a greenhouse roof at the<lb/>
Amherst campus during<lb/>
Homecoming Weekend.<lb/>
The board adopted the measure<lb/>
by a 9-0 vote during a meeting<lb/>
Tuesday on the campus of the<lb/>
Massachusetts College of Liberal<lb/>
Arts.<lb/>
"On campus, we have kind of a<lb/>
winking, blinking, nodding<lb/>
acceptance of the practice that you<lb/>
drink when you're under age board<lb/>
member Aaron Spencer said.<lb/>
The board, which sets policy for<lb/>
the 29 campuses of the state<lb/>
university, state colleges and<lb/>
community colleges, asked the<lb/>
trustees of each campus to adopt the<lb/>
ban on drinking at any age. But the<lb/>
policy also says the trustees may<lb/>
"On campus, we have<lb/>
kind of a winking,<lb/>
blinking, nodding<lb/>
acceptance of the practice<lb/>
that you drink when<lb/>
you're under age<lb/>
Aaron Spencer<lb/>
board member<lb/>
allow exceptions in designated<lb/>
places or for certain events.<lb/>
The measure says violators<lb/>
should be subject to dismissal, but<lb/>
also says the campuses should<lb/>
provide strong alcohol education<lb/>
programs for students.<lb/>
Board member Howard Jacobson<lb/>
said he was sorry it would be<lb/>
impractical to pass a total ban.<lb/>
"I'd like to see no alcohol at all<lb/>
he said. "I think that's impossible for<lb/>
us to do<lb/>
However, it was unclear<lb/>
how much impact even<lb/>
the more limited policy<lb/>
would have.<lb/>
Thomas Aceto,<lb/>
president of the College<lb/>
of Liberal Arts, said he<lb/>
didn't believe his<lb/>
campus of 1,600<lb/>
students needs any<lb/>
major change in its<lb/>
alcohol policies. The<lb/>
school prohibits<lb/>
drinking in the<lb/>
freshman dormitory and<lb/>
does not have any on-campus bars.<lb/>
'The reality is that we're forcing<lb/>
students off campus he said.<lb/>
The state university's flagship<lb/>
Amherst campus was already<lb/>
reviewing its alcohol policies after<lb/>
the death there. Last week, the<lb/>
school banned alcohol at sports<lb/>
tailgating parties.<lb/>
Kay Scanlan, a spokesman for that<lb/>
campus, said Tuesday that the<lb/>
board's proposal would be "difficult<lb/>
to monitor and enforce<lb/>
Jessica Beighley; a freshman at<lb/>
the College of Liberal Arts, said<lb/>
campus alcohol bans would serve<lb/>
little purpose. "I think alcohol is<lb/>
going to be here, no matter what<lb/>
thev do<lb/>
2�jp?<lb/>
�<lb/>
J&amp;E harley Davidson<lb/>
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END OF 1 OTH ST.<lb/>
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Motorcycle Sales<lb/>
and Service � �<lb/>
Apparel'<lb/>
Leather<lb/>
Collectibles<lb/>
Dr. House and Dr. Darwick<lb/>
4� are pleased to announce the relocation of<lb/>
�<lb/>
Animal Hospital<lb/>
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From Greenville Boulevard to our new clinic at 107 TRADE ST.<lb/>
(between Golden Corral dr Parkers Restaurant)<lb/>
�Medicine &amp; Surgery Small Animals � Farm Animals &amp; Horses<lb/>
� Boarding - Air Conditioned<lb/>
r"56-0148 Nights &amp; Emergencies 355-3825<lb/>
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At Discount Prices<lb/>
jtem5� V Tattooing&amp;<lb/>
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mt si' Mkfff&amp;SW 10 off all<lb/>
SxT�m�  Bodv Piercme<lb/>
mm'jMiPS with Student ID<lb/>
TtJ' Expires: 113097<lb/>
gf (919)756-0600<lb/>
ftsliSSS' Autoclave Sterilization<lb/>
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MS 10-6, Sun. 1-5<lb/>
�������������������<lb/>
EL TORO<lb/>
Men's Hair Styling Shoppe<lb/>
Barber &amp; Style<lb/>
Pirate Special<lb/>
2800 E. 10 St.<lb/>
Eaitgate Shopping Center<lb/>
Across From Highway Patrol<lb/>
Behind Stain Glass<lb/>
Mon Fri. �-4<lb/>
Walk-ins Anytime<lb/>
752-33 IB<lb/>
Say Pirates &amp;<lb/>
Get Hair Cut<lb/>
for $7 Every time.<lb/>
Regular $10<lb/>
$7.00<lb/>
Haircut<lb/>
SILVER<lb/>
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 Doors Open: 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
 Stage Time: 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
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Located 5 Nile West of CrwoviU on 364 Alt (Behind Aladdin Limo SerC ice)<lb/>
� �������������������<lb/>
TUESDAY:<lb/>
WEDNESDAY:<lb/>
THURSDAY:<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT:<lb/>
Lingerie Night<lb/>
Amateur Night and Silver<lb/>
Bullet Dancers<lb/>
Country &amp; Western Night<lb/>
Silver Bullet Exotic Dancers<lb/>
10 OR MORE GIRL<lb/>
DANCERS EVERY<lb/>
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�<lb/>
�<lb/>
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don't miss<lb/>
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K<lb/>
)<lb/>
<lb/>
Got alot of<lb/>
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All of these questions have the same answer <lb/>
,a,ob.t oas'carolinian<lb/>
We'll find a way to help you spend your extra<lb/>
time and make money!<lb/>
��� "� �'M 1 W'T" y<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0003"/><lb/>
3 Thursday, October 16, 1997<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
-<lb/>
briefs<lb/>
THE PLACE<lb/>
FOR ALL YOUR<lb/>
PET'S NEEDS<lb/>
3I40A Moseiey Dr.<lb/>
(Behind Parker's BBQ on<lb/>
Greenville BlvdJ 0<lb/>
758-6603 "<lb/>
Mon Sat: II to 7 1<lb/>
Sunday: 1 to 5 I<lb/>
O �'<lb/>
Aquariums &amp; Supplies<lb/>
Saltwater and Freshwater fish<lb/>
Reptiles, Small Animals, and Supplies<lb/>
Live and Frozen Food<lb/>
Tank Maintenance and Leasing Available<lb/>
FRIENDLY ftND KNOWLEDGEABLE STAFF<lb/>
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Music<lb/>
You, Th� Audience<lb/>
Decide Whodunit!<lb/>
The Tony Award<lb/>
Winning Musical<lb/>
Mystery Smash Hit<lb/>
�<lb/>
Thanks<lb/>
for your support<lb/>
Downtown Greenville 758-4298<lb/>
EDWINDROOD<lb/>
Rated: PG<lb/>
October 16. 17.18. 20 and 21.<lb/>
1997<lb/>
at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Ocotbvr 19.1997<lb/>
at 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
General Pubic. 13,0015.00<lb/>
rtM Faculty Staff: 11.0013.00<lb/>
ECO StadenUChilarm: S.0010.00<lb/>
Call-328-6829<lb/>
HcGimls Theatre<lb/>
ECU Main Campus<lb/>
Comer of Fifth and Eastern Streets<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Test<lb/>
While You Wait Free And Confidential<lb/>
Services and Peer Counseling<lb/>
Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
Hours Vary as Needed<lb/>
Appointment Preferred<lb/>
757-0003<lb/>
(Costume<lb/>
For Adults And<lb/>
Children<lb/>
� � � Wigs<lb/>
� Character � Masks<lb/>
�Party Supplies Make-l<lb/>
Decorations � Accessories<lb/>
Greenville's Best Selection!<lb/>
st rtym a ke r s<lb/>
Flowers &amp; Balloons<lb/>
756-8608<lb/>
317 E. Arlington Blvd. � Greenville, NC<lb/>
Open 7 Davs A Week -i<lb/>
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SURPRIZE!<lb/>
No Fiesta Could<lb/>
Than<lb/>
Birthdays, Going-Aways, Welcome<lb/>
Backs, Bridai Showers, Engagements,<lb/>
Girls-Nite-Out, Guys-Nite-Out. Find a<lb/>
reason to party, then grab your Amigos<lb/>
and head for<lb/>
Chico's!<lb/>
Open 7 Days<lb/>
for Lunch,<lb/>
Dinner &amp;<lb/>
Fiestas!<lb/>
Downtown Greenvillefi<lb/>
757-1666 ?<lb/>
America Oniine founder to<lb/>
speak at ECU banquet<lb/>
The impact of the Internet<lb/>
upon the American public will be<lb/>
discussed by James V Kimsey,<lb/>
founder and CEO emeritus of<lb/>
America Online Inc in a banquet<lb/>
address to members of the Friends<lb/>
of Joyner Library on Tuesday Oct.<lb/>
21.<lb/>
Kimsey founded the nation's<lb/>
leading independent provider of<lb/>
interactive online services in 1985.<lb/>
He has also been a leader of such<lb/>
businesses as United Financial<lb/>
Companies, Capital One Bank and<lb/>
Financial Corporation and<lb/>
University Support Services.<lb/>
The 7:30 p.m. event, to be held<lb/>
in the Great Room of ECU's<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, will<lb/>
be preceded by a 6:15 p.m.<lb/>
reception hosted by Chancellor<lb/>
and Mrs. Richard Eakin at the<lb/>
Chancellor's residence on East<lb/>
Fifth Street.<lb/>
Presiding at the Friends<lb/>
banquet will be Dr. David Stevens,<lb/>
president of Friends of the ECU<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
Other board members are Mary<lb/>
Barden of New Bern, Marty<lb/>
Hackney of Blounts Creek, Sarah<lb/>
Rose of Kinston and several<lb/>
Greenville residents.<lb/>
Fire<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
square feet of flammable liquid<lb/>
and energizer electricity.<lb/>
Branch also advises people to be<lb/>
careful when opening the hood of<lb/>
cars.<lb/>
If you do have a fire<lb/>
extinguisher in your car it is<lb/>
important to have it secured so<lb/>
that it will not be damaged while<lb/>
you are driving. Branch advises<lb/>
checking it once a week for<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
It is also important to<lb/>
remember the proper ways to put<lb/>
out other types of fires as well.<lb/>
Grease fires can only<lb/>
be put out with<lb/>
fire<lb/>
Remember,<lb/>
only you can<lb/>
prevent dorm<lb/>
fires<lb/>
extinguisher,<lb/>
pouring baking soda<lb/>
on it or by covering the fire<lb/>
with a lid to a pan. Electrical fires<lb/>
will also not be squelched by<lb/>
having water thrown onto them.<lb/>
"Remember that there are three<lb/>
things that are necessary for a fire;<lb/>
fuel, heat and oxygen and if you<lb/>
can eliminate one you can<lb/>
eliminate the fire Branch said.<lb/>
It is important to remember<lb/>
that getting away from the fire is<lb/>
more important than putting it<lb/>
out.<lb/>
"1 would sav that if vou don'r<lb/>
think you can get to the fire<lb/>
extinguisher and get it out in<lb/>
about 30 seconds, then just get<lb/>
out Branch said. "Leave the big<lb/>
fires to the firemen and use the<lb/>
fire extinguishers on the little<lb/>
fires<lb/>
Another way to stay safe is to<lb/>
have an emergency exit plan. This<lb/>
should include at least two ways to<lb/>
escape from rooms as well as a<lb/>
meeting place for occupants.<lb/>
Branch advises that people always<lb/>
be aware of possible escape routes,<lb/>
especially when in new places.<lb/>
In residence halls, RAs, who are<lb/>
trained in evacuation, are<lb/>
responsible for formulating an<lb/>
escape plan for their residents and<lb/>
posting this information along with<lb/>
a meeting place once outside the<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
The success of these plans was<lb/>
evident in the Aycock Hall fire in<lb/>
which almost 250 people<lb/>
evacuated in less than four<lb/>
minutes and residents met in their<lb/>
designated locations, Amaro said.<lb/>
Another fire risk is halogen<lb/>
lamps.<lb/>
"Those lights have caused many<lb/>
fires because of<lb/>
the heat<lb/>
of the bulbs Branch said.<lb/>
Guards can now be obtained<lb/>
from the stores in which the lamps<lb/>
can be purchased. The guards are<lb/>
placed on the top of the lamp and<lb/>
prevent material from falling into<lb/>
it and catching fire.<lb/>
Students living on campus arc<lb/>
given a list of the safety rules for<lb/>
residence halls with their room<lb/>
assignments. In addition to this,<lb/>
the rules are discussed at the first<lb/>
hall meeting at the beginning of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
Amaro said that each semester<lb/>
the fire systems in each building<lb/>
are tested although they legally<lb/>
only have to be checked once a<lb/>
year. This is done to ensure that<lb/>
the systems are operating properly.<lb/>
Inspections are also made of the<lb/>
electrical systems in the buildings.<lb/>
This year mailers were sent to<lb/>
on-campus residents<lb/>
concerning fire safety.<lb/>
Tampering with the fire<lb/>
extinguishers and equipment<lb/>
is an offense housing officials<lb/>
do not take lightly. If a<lb/>
resident is caught tampering<lb/>
with equipment, they<lb/>
must move out of the<lb/>
residence hall.<lb/>
'They cannot live<lb/>
with us if<lb/>
they're going<lb/>
Tips for preventing fire<lb/>
1- Have an operating smoke detector<lb/>
andor fire alarm system.<lb/>
2- Check the detector and alarm monthly.<lb/>
3- replace the batteries in you smoke, detector every 6<lb/>
months.<lb/>
4- Never leave candles burning unattended.<lb/>
5- Be careful when smoking indoors not to drop ashes in<lb/>
furniture cushions or on carpet.<lb/>
6- Do not leave grease or other foods unattended while<lb/>
cooking.<lb/>
7- Have an emergency evacuation plan that includes<lb/>
two ways to exit and a meeting place for<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
8- Do not leave halogen lamps lit for extended<lb/>
periods of time.<lb/>
9- Keep material such as curtains and<lb/>
bedding away from halogen<lb/>
lamps.<lb/>
to tamper<lb/>
with our<lb/>
system<lb/>
Amaro<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He also<lb/>
said that<lb/>
t h e<lb/>
incidence<lb/>
o f<lb/>
tampering<lb/>
has<lb/>
decreased so<lb/>
far this year.<lb/>
(Presenting<lb/>
pc�Sprin0s Center's<lb/>
Caroftna (BrifafSiow<lb/>
Sunday, October 19,1997<lb/>
2:00-6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Masted (By<lb/>
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500 Aaron Circle, "Highway 43 Worth<lb/>
grunviOt, Worth CaroSna 27834<lb/>
You are cordially invited to join 'Eastern Worth Carolina's most prestigious wedding service<lb/>
providers and hundreds of 1997 and 1998 brides-to-be at Beautiful' S&amp;ck,Springs Center for an<lb/>
afternoon of exciting fashions, foods, and displays.<lb/>
'Featuring:<lb/>
� (bridal'Fashion Shows at 2:30 and4:00pm<lb/>
� Chef'(Demonstrations and'Reception ToodSampGng<lb/>
� Wedding 'Music and'Entertainment - Morse Srawn "Wedding Carriage<lb/>
� JfairstyGng and (Beauty Service (Presentations<lb/>
� (Displays and (Door (Prizes fromfifty of North Carolina's finest wedding service consultants,<lb/>
ready to advise and assist unth pianmng the perfect wedding.<lb/>
'We invite you to attend and have the chance to win:<lb/>
Wedding fashions, music, flowers, cakjs, photography, beauty services, home decor, coohjvare,<lb/>
gown preservation, ice carvings, Bmousine service, catered foods and:<lb/>
-Two mndTrip Tickets to the Cari66ean<lb/>
(or winner's choice of any of 212 other worldwide destinations).<lb/>
"We welcome you to be a part of the most beautiful'weddings, receptions, bridal parties,<lb/>
and honeymoons of 19981<lb/>
front donico- fpcfjpmgs Center grand foyer, 9sckSpmgs Center<lb/>
Tor further information for interestedshow exhibitors, or for information on 6ookjng receptions,<lb/>
luncheons, and dinner parties at XpciSprings Center orqffsiu, please cad Sandra (ham at<lb/>
(919) 752-0385 or Fax(919) 752-9895. lickjt Cost $3.00 per person at thedoor<lb/>
,�<lb/>
;iv<lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0004"/><lb/>
4 Thursday. October 16. 1997<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
comics<lb/>
W If <lb/>
WdsWrtdrcfl<lb/>
Ik . A<lb/>
Everyday Life<lb/>
BY MlCHAKIi LlTWIN<lb/>
jr'SCAU�DBEAVBi�lPAJ y<lb/>
W SB a meoERBH<lb/>
Saw eeK. neEDoFrws1.<lb/>
1<lb/>
A.FM4U, KA.HTS fR�<lb/>
yowatw utwraus Me? veitmmus<lb/>
auo sA(j, v pejuYfftrwrr etawse<lb/>
OF THSPOOH. D�TEHS�l�MMAL.<lb/>
If rr HS&amp; THE OMSK tSficjAKaJHO, Do<lb/>
uoo thiu me Avtoks ucoip fttn<lb/>
.TUiceustKirBftriJc, us ?'<lb/>
mmrHiaMmcAKi<lb/>
Harris<lb/>
Your Neighborhood Food Market<lb/>
Sale Starts<lb/>
sday, Oct.<lb/>
California<lb/>
mai&amp;sa, Wednesday, Oct. ISth<lb/>
It LIKE n ntf OHieoF THOSE<lb/>
?6fl� ftHo MOP 7HEM VA&amp;P<lb/>
m THEfoxesrtsmtiti p&amp;r&amp;rM<lb/>
At)OS�f(oU "CtlSAtlD CODDLu "<lb/>
V ' .4 J � ?<lb/>
Lake Imp USA<lb/>
TAflAR1, l'A &amp;0aWA WiSS<lb/>
ALL TWK. IT'S ALL I<lb/>
CCUffce LAKE IMP<lb/>
run, rcaz'zmeALi-op<lb/>
IT IS priceless Tout-<lb/>
hi or Life net d man<lb/>
SCHOOL UH�H iOU'O 0I�<lb/>
FOE it to ge oveiz.<lb/>
S00N6Z-<lb/>
TMf SOGE W Mt UrMfS<lb/>
sowm be r we onrefc<lb/>
SIDE OF IT?<lb/>
Aiirtte st4(pc�e,<lb/>
19j6 o&amp; Ftepperidge Farm<lb/>
Three Layer<lb/>
Cake<lb/>
IT'S OUR LASf &amp;�� IS ?<lb/>
foursome, cxivE. uye<lb/>
DAHs op THtr thkee ducks<lb/>
AJb A FWG 4�E aEARM,<lb/>
A CtA AlDFWALcT.<lb/>
GOODOLD UkE IMP<lb/>
i do believe rtL aiiss<lb/>
THIS PLiCE, M1UE1C6.<lb/>
MALLOW?AJb TAMZA WVt<lb/>
rboob- Asa markie&amp;<lb/>
COUPLE TUEi'LL A��VCR B6<lb/>
ALWE AFTER UE'v'E<lb/>
SEAbUATEP-<lb/>
1ft4TLEAVES JUST SOU<lb/>
AVD ��, CLIVE-O<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Components<lb/>
6 Crow's cousins<lb/>
10 Wood for<lb/>
shipbuilding<lb/>
U Like a lot<lb/>
15 Cleveland's lake<lb/>
16 She, in Chartres<lb/>
17 Frugal one<lb/>
18 Letter closing<lb/>
20 Govt agents<lb/>
21 Fibbed<lb/>
22 "� Get Your<lb/>
Gun"<lb/>
23 Sauce<lb/>
26 Plus<lb/>
27 Hirt and Pacino<lb/>
30 Break a fast<lb/>
31 Long river<lb/>
33 Water pipes<lb/>
35 Shone<lb/>
39 Month<lb/>
40 Poetic Muse<lb/>
41 Skullcaps<lb/>
44 City's profile<lb/>
46 Raison d' �<lb/>
47 Bind<lb/>
48 Damage<lb/>
49 Crone<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Gone by<lb/>
2 "� Beds"<lb/>
3 Wander<lb/>
4 Fashion<lb/>
5 Preacher's talk:<lb/>
abbr.<lb/>
6 Stops<lb/>
7 Ram<lb/>
constellation<lb/>
8 Circuitous<lb/>
9 Dry. said of wine<lb/>
10 Coastal bird<lb/>
11 Actress Verdugo<lb/>
12 "� the Family"<lb/>
13 Excited (with<lb/>
"up")<lb/>
19 Keen-sighted<lb/>
21 Jacob's wife<lb/>
24 Facts<lb/>
25 Zero<lb/>
27 Melville captain<lb/>
28 Easy gait<lb/>
29 Shore bird<lb/>
32 Man of rank<lb/>
34 Cows,<lb/>
archaically<lb/>
36 Cripple<lb/>
37 Lab burner<lb/>
55 See eye-to-eye<lb/>
57 Went quickly<lb/>
58 Ardor<lb/>
62 Mushroom<lb/>
64 Kitchen item<lb/>
65 Ireland,<lb/>
poetically<lb/>
66 English<lb/>
composer<lb/>
67 Gaseous<lb/>
element<lb/>
C8 Actor Andrews<lb/>
69 Pair<lb/>
70 Trapshooting<lb/>
42 Eagle<lb/>
43 Pertaining to<lb/>
perception<lb/>
44 Hardened<lb/>
45 Type<lb/>
49 Disliked a lot<lb/>
50 Old place ol<lb/>
assembly<lb/>
51 Cereal<lb/>
Soz.<lb/>
Dannon<lb/>
Light Yc<lb/>
1902.<lb/>
Campbells<lb/>
Chunky Soup<lb/>
lOoz. �<lb/>
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SeaPak<lb/>
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In The Bakery<lb/>
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Diet Coke<lb/>
or Coca Cola<lb/>
O 1997 Trtbune Media Services, Ity<lb/>
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With<lb/>
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Prices Effective Through Oct. 21,1997<lb/>
Prices In This Ad Effective Wednesday. October lThrough October 1997 In Our Raleigh Area Staw ,<lb/>
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�i ii <lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0006"/><lb/>
6 Thursday, October T6. 1997<lb/>
as Carolinian<lb/>
AMY L.ROYSTEH Editor<lb/>
CEI.KSTK Wll.SON Minting Editor<lb/>
AMANDA ROSS SponiEditor<lb/>
TRACY l,AtRAC:il Aaisiwi Seam Editor<lb/>
CAROI.K MKIIi.E Hw) Copy Editor<lb/>
JOHN MI'HPHY SuMHuarMor<lb/>
HEATHER BURGESS WntEdrm<lb/>
Sarwij m ECU cnmmra, MM 825. Ai Ear CrotaMi pubMta 0.000 npwwiTluirid tlvs T)�te�d��oriilfii�idMwii�ttit<lb/>
opnon at mt Edrari! 3oM. It En C��ra� rtaiMi Mm a In itfur. tan � HO �ioH�l�diiK��!iwli�diaK��l���tr.TI�t�<lb/>
Cnlmn use m tf� nfa ��fc � up Mm lor puHcnri Mm ana to �� Uran ouMt�t�Srej�imri�ra��ot.i�ii<lb/>
twlmn. PuMcbotEMMat, ECU. &amp;�. B88MB i�n�im.a�9S329S3SB<lb/>
MATT HE(.E Mwflismg Director<lb/>
JACOUEI.INE l. KEI.I.UM KmreEditor<lb/>
AMANDA AUSTIN Asst.KsmEdttor<lb/>
ANDY TURNER Uiayta Editor<lb/>
JOHN DAVIS Assisum LiiestySe Editor<lb/>
opinion<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
oumew<lb/>
Would you take a job at a company knowing that even though the company is the third<lb/>
largest in the state, you'U be paid less than workers at smaller companies and you won't<lb/>
even get benefits?<lb/>
Graduate students at ECU have been asked to do just that.<lb/>
Graduate school is a large, costly undertaking for a student who chooses to pursue<lb/>
education beyond their undergraduate degree. What makes this so large is, unlike<lb/>
undergraduates, graduate students are only eligible for loans; undergraduates get grants<lb/>
and loans. Many make the choice to brave graduate .school without financial aid, without<lb/>
going deeper into debt for their education.<lb/>
Considering that ECU pays only $2,750 to graduate students per semester, this just<lb/>
can't be done. Students are forced to work at least one part-time job along with an<lb/>
assistantship and classes.<lb/>
And without benefits, some graduate students who desperately want to do an<lb/>
assistantship simply cannot afford it. Graduate students can't afford to get sick. Their<lb/>
income has to be so fixed, any unexpected expense can wipe them out.<lb/>
Whether teaching class, conducting a lab or doing legwork for a professor, graduate<lb/>
students are a vital part of the university, they are representatives of the department for<lb/>
which they work � in some cases the only representatives.<lb/>
Departments get much needed help and, in some cases, are able to offer vital services<lb/>
for students, for example, the English department's Writing Center. Graduate assistants<lb/>
are assigned to teach introductory level classes, which means the faculty is available to<lb/>
teach higher level classes. This also allows a department to offer more classes. Students<lb/>
are getting on-the-job experience, but experience doesn't pay the bills.<lb/>
ECU is a growing university, perhaps the formula used to determine how much<lb/>
graduate students are paid needs to be reevaluated. Perhaps ECU should consider<lb/>
offering perks, like staff parking privileges and tuition waivers, or even partially paying<lb/>
for benefits.<lb/>
Perks, unlike fully-funded benefits and a pay hike, don't cost much and would be<lb/>
greatly appreciated by graduate students in the trenches who are being paid minimally<lb/>
to be there.<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
John<lb/>
DAVIS<lb/>
Do mercy, justice apply to politicians?<lb/>
Do we have such Justice and<lb/>
mercy today, in Greenville, at<lb/>
ECU? Is something just<lb/>
simply because it is legal? Is<lb/>
it the action of a merciful<lb/>
public servant to design a law<lb/>
which allows students to be<lb/>
evicted from their homes<lb/>
without warning?<lb/>
� On the Sunday during rail Break, I<lb/>
 found myself standing on the Mall<lb/>
1 in Washirgton, D.C. as the Promise<lb/>
Keepers cleaned up their million-<lb/>
man mess and headed back to their<lb/>
homes all across the nation. At the<lb/>
time. Promise Keepers weren't<lb/>
really on my mind that much; I was<lb/>
in D.C. to relax and see some of the<lb/>
monuments I hadn't seen in a long<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Regardless of my desires, I came<lb/>
face to face with the P.K.<lb/>
phenomenon, and with many<lb/>
Promise Keepers themselves, all<lb/>
who were elated and seemed as if<lb/>
they'd been to heaven rather than<lb/>
the Mall.<lb/>
I couldn't help but notice there<lb/>
were many vocal critics of the<lb/>
Promise Keepers, though few of the<lb/>
critics seemed to get much more<lb/>
across in their complaints other<lb/>
than the fact that they didn't like<lb/>
the Promise Keepers. The National<lb/>
Organization for Women doesn't<lb/>
like the "man as head of household"<lb/>
theology, though it's been reiterated<lb/>
over and over that Promise Keepers<lb/>
consider such leadership as a<lb/>
position of humility and service.<lb/>
Various racial interest groups<lb/>
complained about the P.K.s' lack of<lb/>
attention to the "race question<lb/>
though it seems to be one of the key<lb/>
issues addressed at Promise Keeper<lb/>
rallies.<lb/>
The more I thought about it, the<lb/>
more it nagged me until I came to<lb/>
the conclusion that the thing that<lb/>
makes the Promise Keepers<lb/>
annoying to so many people is that<lb/>
they weren't assembled in DC to<lb/>
appeal to Congress or the President,<lb/>
but rather to something beyond<lb/>
politics, media, and special interest<lb/>
groups. They were there to appeal<lb/>
to their God, and in the eyes of<lb/>
political organizations, that's pretty<lb/>
scary.<lb/>
The end of my Mall trip took me<lb/>
to the Lincoln Memorial, where I<lb/>
was moved to remember the<lb/>
fundamentals our nation was<lb/>
founded on. As I read the words of<lb/>
Lincoln's Gettysburg Address<lb/>
carved in stone, I found that<lb/>
Lincoln felt the rift in his nation<lb/>
very deeply.<lb/>
He wrote, "Now we are engaged<lb/>
in a great Civil War, testing whether<lb/>
that nation, or any nation so<lb/>
conceived, and so dedicated (to the<lb/>
proposition that all men are created<lb/>
equal) can long endure<lb/>
In Lincoln's day, and in the days<lb/>
of the founding fathers, the idea<lb/>
that all men wt s created equal was<lb/>
a radical idea. Moat political<lb/>
thinkers thought the common<lb/>
people were unfit to rule<lb/>
themselves, given to fashion and<lb/>
lack of critical thinking. That our<lb/>
founding fathers trusted us with the<lb/>
rule of this nation was a terrible risk,<lb/>
and looking at the way local politics<lb/>
and our own SGA are run, I'm not<lb/>
sure that I could say it was a<lb/>
success.<lb/>
Lincoln could fight, and even<lb/>
surrender his life for that idea<lb/>
because Lincoln believed in a<lb/>
justice that made him fight for the<lb/>
freedom of the slaves. And he<lb/>
believed in a mercy that allowed<lb/>
him to admit that both the North<lb/>
and South were partners in the<lb/>
horror of the war. It was a mercy that<lb/>
allowed him to pray for the welfare<lb/>
of his enemies.<lb/>
Do we have such justice and<lb/>
mercy today, in Greenville, at ECU?<lb/>
Is somethingyBtf simply because it<lb/>
is legpP. Is the three-person<lb/>
occupancy law Just? When Parking<lb/>
and Traffic Services continually sell<lb/>
parking spaces they don't have, is<lb/>
justice being served? When the last<lb/>
SGA voted themselves tuition<lb/>
waivers, it was perfectly legal. Was it<lb/>
jusrt<lb/>
Once we answer these<lb/>
questions, we must also look at<lb/>
mercy. It may be legal lot Laura Boyd<lb/>
to keep pressing her campaign to<lb/>
eradicate Christian musk from the<lb/>
Rec Center, but is it mercifuP. Is it<lb/>
the action of a merciful public<lb/>
servant to design a law which allows<lb/>
students to be evicted from their<lb/>
homes without warning? Is it a<lb/>
merciful thing to enforce such strict<lb/>
parking laws when there is simply<lb/>
nowhere else to park? In truth, I<lb/>
wish we had some promise keepers<lb/>
in office right now.<lb/>
And so we come back to the<lb/>
Promise Keepers. You may find<lb/>
them disagreeable, but the truth of<lb/>
the matter is that they find<lb/>
themselves subject to something<lb/>
higher than politics or special<lb/>
interests. And somehow, that is<lb/>
making them go home to their<lb/>
families and surrender to them; it is<lb/>
making them become more<lb/>
honorable and trustworthy. Like<lb/>
Abraham Lincoln, they believe in<lb/>
something above and beyond<lb/>
themselves, something that they<lb/>
serve, something that urges them to<lb/>
servanthood. Imagine a world where<lb/>
the SGA, Inez Ridley, and Steve<lb/>
McLawhorn were compelled to be<lb/>
what they in titie are: public<lb/>
servants, serving not us, or<lb/>
themselves, but eternal standards<lb/>
like justice and mercy.<lb/>
"Reading is important � read<lb/>
between the lines. Don't swallow<lb/>
everything<lb/>
Gwendolyn Brooks, poet, 1975<lb/>
MAY yfyr $0M�<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
Keith;<lb/>
COPPER<lb/>
Faculty needs more racial diversity<lb/>
recruitment policies,<lb/>
sometimes convoluted,<lb/>
must suggest creative<lb/>
strategies to attract<lb/>
qualified African-<lb/>
American scholars<lb/>
waiting to be tapped.<lb/>
The administrations of most<lb/>
universities around the country<lb/>
often brag about promoting<lb/>
racialethnic diversity on their<lb/>
respective campuses. Is the<lb/>
definition of diversity an<lb/>
aberration? Specifically, what has<lb/>
ECU done to diversify its faculty?<lb/>
This is an important question<lb/>
because students took for positive<lb/>
faculty role models to emulate and<lb/>
respect. Therefore, they certainly<lb/>
want to sec someone who looks like<lb/>
them. Affirmative Action, by the<lb/>
way, has yet to address, adequately,<lb/>
the lack of appreciable racialethnic<lb/>
diversity on the ECU faculty. There<lb/>
are huge disparities in the<lb/>
representation of African-<lb/>
Americans and whites on the<lb/>
faculty. Let's see what ECU really<lb/>
means by diversity, a relative term,<lb/>
on its faculty.<lb/>
As of the current date, the<lb/>
following appealing status reflect<lb/>
the African-Americans and white<lb/>
faculty count on random<lb/>
departments throughout the<lb/>
campus: Library Science: WH<lb/>
(white) � 27, BL (black) � one;<lb/>
School of Art: WH � 47. BL � 0:<lb/>
Accounting: WH � 14, BL � 0;<lb/>
School of Education: WH � 42.<lb/>
BL� 1; Biology: WH �34, BL�<lb/>
0; Chemistry. WH � 22, BL � 0;<lb/>
English: WH � 61, BL � 3;<lb/>
foreign Language: WH � 29, BL<lb/>
� 0; History: WH � 32, BL � 1;<lb/>
Mathematics: WH� 43, BI1;<lb/>
Philosophy: WH � 12, BL � 0;<lb/>
Political Science: WH � 16, BL �<lb/>
0; Psychology: WH� 38, BL� 3;<lb/>
Sociology : WH � 18, BL � 1;<lb/>
Social Work; WH � 23, BL � 6;<lb/>
Exercise and Sport Science: WH �<lb/>
22, BL � 0; Family Medicine: WH<lb/>
� 58, BL � 3; Medicine-<lb/>
Internal: WH �28, BL � 0;<lb/>
Pediatrics: WH � 28, BL �0;<lb/>
Surgery: WH � 18, BL � 0.<lb/>
The above numbers don't reflect<lb/>
meaningful racial diversity at all.<lb/>
Thus, recruitment policies,<lb/>
sometimes convoluted, must<lb/>
suggest creative strategies to<lb/>
attract qualified African-American<lb/>
scholars waiting to be tapped.<lb/>
Additionally, a faculty-exchange<lb/>
program is one of many innovative<lb/>
ways to encourage faculty diversity.<lb/>
There are many academically<lb/>
competent African-American<lb/>
scholars around America. Many<lb/>
have master's, while other possess<lb/>
PhDs. Such a plethora of talent<lb/>
urgently needs to be recruited.<lb/>
A faculty-exchange program<lb/>
means that the university will send<lb/>
professors to other universities to<lb/>
teach, contractually, in exchange for<lb/>
visiting professors to replace them.<lb/>
This will promote healthy, racial,<lb/>
erudite diversity on the faculty.<lb/>
Furthermore, new nersoectives<lb/>
and backgrounds will enhance an<lb/>
otherwise persnecrive-deficient<lb/>
faculty. 1 might add, if alumni<lb/>
munificent contributions are<lb/>
contingent upon both student and<lb/>
faculty diversity, the university<lb/>
might do the right thing.<lb/>
The above statistics must be a<lb/>
wake-up call to those dogmatic<lb/>
naysayers unconcerned about<lb/>
making racial diversity a reality and<lb/>
a praiseworthy legacy for the next<lb/>
generation of students. A racially<lb/>
homogeneous faculty only feeds<lb/>
student resentment. A house<lb/>
divided is an unhealthy way to<lb/>
move a university into the 21st<lb/>
century.<lb/>
Supporters of racialethnic<lb/>
diversity on the faculty must<lb/>
demand that recruitment programs<lb/>
be fair and geared toward reaching<lb/>
out and touching African-Americans<lb/>
hungry for a fair share of the faculty<lb/>
"pie Indeed, diversity must<lb/>
become the country's and<lb/>
university's greatest strength.<lb/>
I<lb/>
LETTER<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
Campus dining servers need to wear gloves<lb/>
On Friday, Oct. 10, some friends<lb/>
and I were eating at one of our fine<lb/>
dining halls. I had already gone<lb/>
through the line once and was<lb/>
hungry for some tater tots and a<lb/>
grilled cheese sandwich. I returned<lb/>
to get some more food and the<lb/>
grilled cheese sandwiches were<lb/>
cooking. I waited around for them to<lb/>
get done and watched the server do<lb/>
certain unsanitary acts. First, he<lb/>
moved a trash can, which requires<lb/>
touching the inside. He then<lb/>
proceeded to wipe the sweat off his<lb/>
face, using both hands. After doing<lb/>
these acts he then gave me my food.<lb/>
Needless to say, I did not eat any of<lb/>
it. That evening I filled out a<lb/>
comment card and slipped it under<lb/>
the door of dining services. I<lb/>
recommended the use of gloves by<lb/>
the food servers.<lb/>
I have worked at a fast food place<lb/>
in the past and I am familiar with<lb/>
most of the North Carolina<lb/>
Sanitation Laws. What this man did<lb/>
broke these laws. I had to wash and<lb/>
sanitize my hands after touching a<lb/>
broom, the door, my face and money<lb/>
and after using the restroom when I<lb/>
worked at Taco Bell. This man did<lb/>
not even make a conscious effort to<lb/>
wash and sanitize his hands. The<lb/>
ladies to the left and right of him<lb/>
were wearing gloves; why wasn't he?<lb/>
Even the servers at the other dining<lb/>
hall wear gloves.<lb/>
How sanitary are our dining halls<lb/>
and cafes? How clean are the<lb/>
employees' hands? Ask yourselves<lb/>
these questions when you see the<lb/>
person on the other side of the<lb/>
counter making that deli sandwich<lb/>
you had been hungry for since<lb/>
breakfast or anytime you see an<lb/>
employee not wearing any gloves.<lb/>
Think of all the germs and diseases<lb/>
they could be spreading. You do not<lb/>
want their cold or flu, just that<lb/>
delicious sandwich.<lb/>
I returned to the dining hall to<lb/>
see what kind of action had been<lb/>
taken. The same man was serving<lb/>
again, without gloves.<lb/>
Jeremiah Johnson<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Math Education<lb/>
LETTER<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
Opportunities to stay informed of politics i<lb/>
I have read with<lb/>
ongoing discussions<lb/>
�<lb/>
interest the<lb/>
about East<lb/>
Carolina student responsibilities as<lb/>
registered voters. Unfortunately, the<lb/>
focus has not been on what I deem<lb/>
to be their most important<lb/>
responsibility � that of being an<lb/>
informed voter. To actively<lb/>
participate as citizens in this<lb/>
democracy is an important<lb/>
responsibility we all share, however,<lb/>
this means more than just showing<lb/>
up. Yes, I know most people in this<lb/>
country don't even bother to show<lb/>
up to vote, but that does not mean<lb/>
it is appropriate behavior! I would<lb/>
urge all students who have chosen<lb/>
to register to vote to be sure they are<lb/>
knowledgable of the issues facing<lb/>
the towns, cities and skates where<lb/>
they have chosen to become<lb/>
members of a community. The<lb/>
voting community in this cases is<lb/>
not East Carolina's campus, but<lb/>
Greenville or the town in which<lb/>
they reside.<lb/>
To assist local voters become<lb/>
informed the League of Women<lb/>
Voters of Pitt County, a non-partisan<lb/>
organization committed to citizen<lb/>
participation in government,<lb/>
sponsors Candidate Forums to allow<lb/>
voters to ask questions and raise<lb/>
issues they deem important. The<lb/>
Greenville Candidate Forum,<lb/>
cosponsored with the Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce of Greenville-Pitt<lb/>
County, will be held on Tuesday<lb/>
Oct. 28 from 7-9 p.m. in the City<lb/>
Council Chambers at Greenville<lb/>
City Hall on 5th Street. All student<lb/>
voters are welcome. If attendance is<lb/>
a problem, this forum will also be<lb/>
concurrently . a'fed on tne<lb/>
Government Information Cable<lb/>
Channel 9; call-in questions an<lb/>
encouraged. Additionally a tape of"<lb/>
this forum will be aired on Channel<lb/>
9 at noon and 7 p.m. on Wednesday,<lb/>
Oct. 29, Thursday, Oct. 30 anc<lb/>
Sunday, Nov. 2.<lb/>
Greenville, like all small cities in<lb/>
this rapidly changing society, has<lb/>
many challenge to face over the<lb/>
next few years. Decisions will be<lb/>
made which will influence the<lb/>
quality of life for its citizens well<lb/>
into the 21st century. If you plan to<lb/>
vote in Greenville, take advantage of<lb/>
this opportunity to become an<lb/>
informed voter and responsible<lb/>
member of this community.<lb/>
�<lb/>
Elizabeth A. Trought i<lb/>
Voter Services, League of<lb/>
Women Voters of Pitt County<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
l"1�'��<lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0007"/><lb/>
p -<lb/>
7 Thursday, October 16. 1997<lb/>
style<lb/>
�j<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
CD<lb/>
review<lb/>
The Blasters<lb/>
American Music<lb/>
9 OUT OF 10<lb/>
ANDY Tl RNKR<lb/>
UFESTTLE EDITOR<lb/>
Certainly is it appropriate that the<lb/>
Americana and electronica<lb/>
; movements are among the popular<lb/>
; music scenes at the end of the 20th<lb/>
century. One looks back and one<lb/>
looks forward, but they both have the<lb/>
same purpose: to make interesting<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Electronica claims to be the<lb/>
music of the future; the purveyors of<lb/>
this music say it pushes the limits of<lb/>
music farther than it has ever been<lb/>
pushed. Whether electronica<lb/>
actually pushes "limits" anymore<lb/>
than, let's say; hair metal, remains to<lb/>
be seen.<lb/>
Americana music looks to the past<lb/>
for inspiration, to the legends of<lb/>
blues, folk, country, jazz and other<lb/>
'American" music. But do Americana<lb/>
artists take the music anywhere it<lb/>
hasn't already been over and over<lb/>
again?<lb/>
Hightone Records has helped to<lb/>
answer this question with the rc-<lb/>
release of The Bltcr' Amerium<lb/>
Must, their debut album originally<lb/>
released in 1980. This classic album<lb/>
Vill thankfully now be in a few more<lb/>
record collections as only 2,000<lb/>
copies of the original album were<lb/>
manufactured.<lb/>
The Blasters are at their young,<lb/>
blazing best on this album. They tear<lb/>
through 19 songs in a little more than<lb/>
45 minutes with only two songs<lb/>
making it past three minutes. Phil<lb/>
Arvin (vocals), Dave Ahin (guitar),<lb/>
John Bazz (bass) and Bill "Buster"<lb/>
Bateman (drums) were at their<lb/>
toughest and tightest on this one.<lb/>
The band tackles a variety of<lb/>
musk styles on American Music. R &amp;<lb/>
B, rockabilly, hillbilly, blues and<lb/>
cajun. They couldn't have thought of<lb/>
an album title that was more fitting.<lb/>
There are only a handful of<lb/>
original compositions on the album,<lb/>
but the ones that are here are<lb/>
outstanding. "Marie, Marie" and<lb/>
American Music both written by<lb/>
Dave Arvin, are classic rockers. In<lb/>
"Marie, Marie the narrator of the<lb/>
song pines over an unrequited love<lb/>
he imagines to be as lonely as he is.<lb/>
"American Music" is a mission<lb/>
statement for the band. The song,<lb/>
like the album, is a celebration of<lb/>
American music.<lb/>
The album goes from the hillbilly<lb/>
yodel of "Never No More Blues" to<lb/>
the swamp blues of "Buzz Buzz<lb/>
Buzz" without flinching.<lb/>
American Musk is an album that<lb/>
paid tribute to musical styles that<lb/>
were popular more than 20 years<lb/>
before. Its re-release, nearly 20 years<lb/>
later, finds it just as wonderful and<lb/>
vital as it was then and will always be.<lb/>
American Musk is successful because<lb/>
of the honesty and energy evident<lb/>
throughout the entirety of the<lb/>
album. Those two qualities are what<lb/>
make Americana still vital and<lb/>
interesting. And it doesn't hurt that's<lb/>
it's all possible without some<lb/>
darrned computer.<lb/>
IFC organizes charity games<lb/>
Shannon Mkkk<lb/>
STAKK WRITE!<lb/>
It was an unique idea that was inspired by The Revenge of The Nerds.<lb/>
The idea was first thought of as a way for fraternities and sororities to gather for a day of<lb/>
friendly competition and enjoyment, and grew as a way for the societies to have fun but also<lb/>
better the community.<lb/>
On Saturday October 18, nine teams, which consist of two fraternities and one sorority, will<lb/>
participate in the Greek Games. While the amusing events are taking place on Saturday, the<lb/>
most important aspects of the Greek Games will occur in the week before and the week<lb/>
following the actual games. During these weeks, the teams will donate their time and efforts<lb/>
in order to benefit the Greenville community.<lb/>
Throughout the normal school year, each individual fraternity and sorority support their<lb/>
philanthropies, both nationally and locally A major portion of fraternity and sorority life is<lb/>
philanthropy. In fact, they are responsible for a large majority of community service in<lb/>
Greenville. While fraternities and sororities at ECU are primarily social, they do have<lb/>
worthwhile efforts. They are combing these efforts to better the community around them.<lb/>
Sean McManus, SGA vice president, member of Inter-Fraternity Council as well as inventor<lb/>
of the Greek Games, feels that these games will provide ample opportunity to show that<lb/>
members of fraternities are not always portrayed accurately. "Given the negative publicity that<lb/>
we have received, and the unfortunate events at MIT, the Greek Games will provide an<lb/>
unique but more importantly an accurate perspective about what fraternity and sorority life is<lb/>
all about at ECU<lb/>
McManus feels the fraternities and sororities of ECU have a responsibility to bring positive<lb/>
change.<lb/>
Hell of a ride<lb/>
To crash<lb/>
To go over the handlebar<lb/>
Efjafc a tynno-geeK<lb/>
TAemIu Togolhroug<lb/>
real fast<lb/>
Cl�nt Ride a section without<lb/>
putting your<lb/>
foot down. As in "I cleaned that<lb/>
section of trail <lb/>
Did Not Finish<lb/>
DFL: Dead PffVS&amp; Last<lb/>
Txhnk�b Difficult section of trail<lb/>
Rough and rocky<lb/>
People who primarily<lb/>
ride road bikes. See also Fred.<lb/>
Jeremy Conn (above) gets a little air while Chuck<lb/>
Meek heads for the home-stretch.<lb/>
PHOTOS BY SHANNON MEEK<lb/>
Local mountain bike enthusiasts search for the perfect trail<lb/>
Shannon Mkkk<lb/>
STAKK V. KII KII<lb/>
My dad's eyes are shining. In them<lb/>
are the dreams of dancing through<lb/>
the trees, climbing up treacherous<lb/>
hills and flying down mountain<lb/>
sides. He is awake before the light<lb/>
spreads against the sky. He fills up<lb/>
water bottles and puts on tight<lb/>
spandex while most people are<lb/>
rolling over in bed. My dad is a<lb/>
mountain bike racer.<lb/>
The sport was first started by a<lb/>
couple of daredevil philosophers in<lb/>
California. Gary Fisher and other<lb/>
innovative designers wanted to<lb/>
modify bikes so they could be<lb/>
ridden in the treacherous terrain<lb/>
of Mount Tam. They placed fat<lb/>
tires on a bike frame and birched a<lb/>
new sport, one that is exhausting<lb/>
as well as exhilarating.<lb/>
"The thing about mountain<lb/>
biking says Beth Cox, who does<lb/>
public relations for mountain bike<lb/>
racing, "is that it contains a<lb/>
benevolent environment. It<lb/>
incorporates families The people<lb/>
who are serious about the sport,<lb/>
they lead very healthy, drug-free<lb/>
lifestyles<lb/>
It's true. Anyone who attends a<lb/>
mountain bike race will see kids<lb/>
cheering for their daddies, young<lb/>
men getting photographed by<lb/>
their new wives and mothers<lb/>
praising their daughters who glide<lb/>
down the mountain side.<lb/>
There are even<lb/>
races held in <lb/>
Greenville. They<lb/>
take place on a<lb/>
trail that The<lb/>
Bicycle Post<lb/>
maintains and<lb/>
leases. The next<lb/>
two races will be<lb/>
on Occ. 26 and Nov. 16. But<lb/>
anyone can ride this trail located<lb/>
on the outskirts of Greenville and<lb/>
enjoy the thrills and tranquility of<lb/>
the sport. This trail is one of the<lb/>
few places that people in this area<lb/>
"I gotta ride, it<lb/>
keeps me alive"<lb/>
Bicycle Post Mountain Bike Trail<lb/>
8 Mile Loop<lb/>
2nd straightaway<lb/>
From Greenville<lb/>
go north on<lb/>
Highway 43<lb/>
7 miles past<lb/>
Pitt Hospital<lb/>
!l<lb/>
Short Bridge Rd.<lb/>
Sfbi<lb/>
Johnson<lb/>
Stables<lb/>
� Parking<lb/>
Area<lb/>
� Start of<lb/>
3� Trails<lb/>
can ride their bikes. There is a<lb/>
continuous outcry for more trails<lb/>
as the sport's popularity expands.<lb/>
"The sport is great, but there is<lb/>
a lack of trails. We need more<lb/>
involvement and support from<lb/>
organizations such as the Park and<lb/>
Recreational centers Tim<lb/>
Matthews, manager of the Bicycle<lb/>
Post explained.<lb/>
Monica Smith, an East Carolina<lb/>
student, shares in the irritation<lb/>
that there seems to be an absence<lb/>
of trails in this<lb/>
 area.<lb/>
"I don't like it<lb/>
because I have to<lb/>
go to<lb/>
Chochowinity to<lb/>
Chuck Meek �fr m? SP��<lb/>
There is nothing<lb/>
more refreshing<lb/>
than it being fifty degrees outside<lb/>
and have sweat running down your<lb/>
forehead as you pump up a hill<lb/>
Smith said.<lb/>
She loves the vigorous workout<lb/>
that she receives from mountain<lb/>
biking.<lb/>
"There is nothing more<lb/>
refreshing than it being fifty<lb/>
degrees outside and have sweat<lb/>
running down your forehead as<lb/>
you pump up a hill Smith said.<lb/>
Mountain biking is all these<lb/>
things: racers standing on the<lb/>
starting line in their flamboyant<lb/>
jerseys for a glimpse of the taste<lb/>
of victory; young men popping<lb/>
wheelies over fallen trees and<lb/>
huge rocks; amateurs out for a<lb/>
Sunday ride to inhale the sight<lb/>
of nature; and strong men and<lb/>
women riding hard to<lb/>
strengthen their bodies and test<lb/>
themselves. It is a sport with a<lb/>
calm, adventurous and healthy<lb/>
craziness. As my father says, "I<lb/>
gotta ride, it keeps me alive<lb/>
Dinner and<lb/>
murder in<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
MiocMi Smith<lb/>
STM-T 111 I KR<lb/>
Ready for the bad news? Perry Mason's dead. Matlock's getting too old<lb/>
and rusty to solve murder mysteries. Agatha Christie and Sir Arthur Conan<lb/>
Doyle both stopped churning out the good stuff before your grandparents<lb/>
were bom and not even Nancy Drew or the Hardy Boys look quite as<lb/>
appealing anymore.<lb/>
If you're a mystery buff ir's time for some new blood (literally and<lb/>
figuratively speaking), and the good news is that you can get it right here<lb/>
at ECU on October 21 at 7:00 p.m when the Repertory Theatre of<lb/>
America brings Murder by the Book, a suspenseful live murder mystery, to<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
The exciting interactive play will be brought to ECl' in an effort "to.<lb/>
provide the students with something different said Lynn Caverly,<lb/>
Assistant Director of Student Activities. "Our goalis to meet the<lb/>
entertainment (and) cultural needs of the students<lb/>
If your entertainment needs include live action, a suspenseful plot, role<lb/>
playing, audience participation and some great chow, this show's for you.<lb/>
The audience will enjoy the mystery as a dinner theatre at which<lb/>
Caesar salad, Italian grilled chicken breast, sugar snap peas, twice baked<lb/>
potatoes, coffee, tea and dessert will be served.<lb/>
As the plot unfolds, audience members will find themselves interacting<lb/>
with various characters from the show and with each other during dinner,<lb/>
which is actually staged as a banquet for a pair of sisters, Mona and<lb/>
Matilda, a writer and an actress, and MC'd by an ECU student.<lb/>
Two other students will also take part in the play as characters (an arts<lb/>
patron and a businessman). The audience will soon find itself acquaThted<lb/>
with the main characters.<lb/>
When the festivities suddenly include murder, however, the evening<lb/>
will take a dark turn and the audience will find itself caugh- up in the<lb/>
intrigue. Texas Ranger Detective Leslie Lynofire will take over the case as<lb/>
soon as the murder is committed, and it will be up to the audience<lb/>
members, with his help, to find the clues and evidence to identify the<lb/>
The cast of Murder by the Book<lb/>
PHOTO COURTESY OF ALPHA-OMEGA PLAYERS<lb/>
killer in their midst.<lb/>
The audience will receive clues throughout the evening and will be<lb/>
given a chance to identify the killer aftet Detective Lynofire has<lb/>
speculated and once dessert and coffee have been served.<lb/>
Tickets are available in the Mendenhall ticket office ($7 for students)<lb/>
and cannot be purchased the night of the show. Don't miss this chance to<lb/>
participate in a real live murder mystery. It promises to be a night full of<lb/>
surprises, fun, suspense, great entertainment and, most importantly,<lb/>
murder!<lb/>
COncertreyie<lb/>
Primus sucks in Raleigh<lb/>
w<lb/>
Steve Losev<lb/>
MM (IK U HI I I.K<lb/>
Most people turn their noses up at Primus. Despite the<lb/>
opinion of that majority, there are people that will swear<lb/>
Primus is the greatest thing since sliced cheese. On<lb/>
Sunday, Primus showed the crowd that packed the Ritz<lb/>
exactly why they have such a following.<lb/>
The crowd eagerly anticipated the show with shouts<lb/>
of "Primus sucks They erupted into cheers when<lb/>
guitarist Larry LaLonde strode onstage and began the<lb/>
siren intro to "Those Damned Blue-Collar Tweekers<lb/>
from their album Sailing The Seas (Jf Cheese. When bassist<lb/>
and singer Les Claypool began singing, the place<lb/>
exploded.<lb/>
Many of Primus' songs, such as "Tweekers" and<lb/>
"Bob's Party Time Lounge are laid back during the<lb/>
verses, allowing those up front to relax for a minute.<lb/>
D iring the chorus, however, the crowd started to jump<lb/>
and move to the music. Except for a few skinheads<lb/>
furiously moshing, the crowd only wanted to dance and<lb/>
have a good time.<lb/>
This tour serves as the debut for Brain, Primus' new-<lb/>
drummer. Brain replaced long time Primus drummer<lb/>
Herb Alexander last year, with much controversy. Brain<lb/>
was able to play all of the drum parts to the older songs<lb/>
as well as, if not better than, Alexander. In the middle of<lb/>
"Tommy the Cat Claypool stopped piaying and<lb/>
introduced Brain to the crowd. Brain then played a<lb/>
raging drum solo that included blind ngly fast one-<lb/>
handed drum rolls that dropped jaws in the audience.<lb/>
Brain mut have had a bad experience with drums as a<lb/>
child. I've never seen someone beat something so hard.<lb/>
He looked like Animal, the Muppets' drummer, back<lb/>
there. Twice during the solo, Brain threw out his<lb/>
drumsticks, one of which I was lucky enough to catch.<lb/>
LaLonde is a unique guitar player. Not many can find<lb/>
a way to be heard over such an aggressive bassist as<lb/>
Claypool. LaLonde spent the concert alternating<lb/>
between weaving melodic lines and pounding out<lb/>
frenzied chords. Songs like "Jerry Was A Race Car<lb/>
Driver" and "Groundhog's Day" culminated in<lb/>
La'xjnde's frenetic solos and the crowd responded<lb/>
gleefully.<lb/>
Claypool, as always, stole the show from his<lb/>
bandmates. He slapped and plucked his six-string bass,<lb/>
sounding like the illegitimate son of Bootsy Collins. His<lb/>
lyrics range from outright ludicrous, as in "Puddin' '<lb/>
Taine "Vnd if I shank my trousers down I'm hung just '<lb/>
above the knees" to the black comedy of "My Name Is<lb/>
Mud" "We had our words, a common spat So I kissed<lb/>
him upside the cranium with an aluminum baseball '<lb/>
bat<lb/>
Between singing lines in his nasal whine, Claypool �<lb/>
either swaggered around the stage with his peacock<lb/>
strut or kicked his leg up like an old dog. It's no wonder<lb/>
that these were the guys picked tu w rite the theme sung<lb/>
for the cartoon show, South Park. Unfortunately, despite<lb/>
numerous requests, the band didn't play the theme,<lb/>
instead focusing on their older material with a few songs<lb/>
thrown in from The Brovn Abum, their latest CD.<lb/>
The Bron Album is the best recording Primus has put<lb/>
out in a long time. "Puddin Taine" is like early Primus:<lb/>
good grooves, quirky rhythms, and tremendously goofy<lb/>
lyrics. "Bob's Party Time lxunge" is a tale of drug<lb/>
excess at a parry w ith some great jamming at the end.<lb/>
The best song, however, was "Over The Falls For that<lb/>
StE PRIMUS "AGE I<lb/>
mSrnd<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0008"/><lb/>
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Primus<lb/>
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� Check It Out<lb/>
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I i<lb/>
and<lb/>
i<lb/>
L-itiu<lb/>
blindt<lb/>
!<lb/>
7 FRIDAY<lb/>
PIRATE UNDERGROUND<lb/>
denhall Student Center Social Room 8 - 10:45 pm<lb/>
Thursday, October 16, 1997<lb/>
� � . "t i<lb/>
October<lb/>
�� ttMf <lb/>
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL MUSICIANS! FREE LIVE MUSIC, PIZZA, &amp; REFRESHMENTS!<lb/>
-formation see our .veb page at www.ecu.edusrudentunionpirc'eunderground html<lb/>
16 THURSDAY<lb/>
Ih, M � �<lb/>
.<lb/>
rhrir<lb/>
1<lb/>
p.m. i i '<lb/>
Bi<lb/>
13 SATURDAY<lb/>
I<lb/>
II<lb/>
I<lb/>
H<lb/>
. FIMt<lb/>
HENDRIX FILMS<lb/>
Thursday, October 16<lb/>
Be sure to redeem your orange Thirsty Thursday coupon<lb/>
at The Spot for a free 16 oz. drink when you make a purchase.<lb/>
Friday, October 17<lb/>
Saturday, October 18<lb/>
n  iv mi<lb/>
a n t u<lb/>
�v�� n. .k. i 11 ,i.i mi � ���t A" letters to the Editor<lb/>
Yea, Buffy, I totally can t must be 25Q words<lb/>
believe they really printed or ,ess Must include<lb/>
my letter to the editor your name, major, year,<lb/>
and phone . Send to:<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
2nd Floor Student Pub.<lb/>
Building<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27852<lb/>
Like, I heard they want to<lb/>
publish yours too<lb/>
For more information, call the<lb/>
Student Union Hotline at 328-6004.<lb/>
All films start at 8:00 pm unless otherwise noted<lb/>
and are FREE to Students, Faculty, and Staff<lb/>
(one guest allowed) with valid ECU ID.<lb/>
No BackpacksBookbags Allowed in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
I LI I. I A K O B I R I S<lb/>
MY<lb/>
FRIEND'S<lb/>
Jr.<lb/>
comc<lb/>
9<lb/>
old Looks Good In Any Degree<lb/>
Jostens gives the highest degree of:<lb/>
.Quality<lb/>
. Customer Satisfaction<lb/>
.Service <lb/>
.Warranty <lb/>
. Payment Plans <lb/>
:m<lb/>
()STRX<lb/>
Order your collec<lb/>
.)()STEXS<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0009"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
9 Thursday. October 16, 1997<lb/>
IT<lb/>
I i it<lb/>
style<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
It's Showtime<lb/>
continued irom page 1<lb/>
Illbilly Boys at Local 506 in Chapel<lb/>
Hill<lb/>
,19 SUNDAY<lb/>
East Carolina Symphony<lb/>
prchcstra, Douglas Wright<lb/>
conducting, 3 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
Faculty recital, The Chamber<lb/>
JMusic of T.J. Anderson at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall<lb/>
Big Ass Truck, Soul Candy at<lb/>
Local 506 in Chapel Hill<lb/>
20 MONDAY<lb/>
"Laundry" and "Ambulance" read<lb/>
by Susan Onthank Mates, M.D at<lb/>
12:30 p.m. in Brody, room 2s-12<lb/>
Faculty Recital, Mark Ford,<lb/>
percussion at 8 p.m. in Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall<lb/>
21 TUESDAY<lb/>
Live jazz at Firehouse Tavern<lb/>
Old Pike, Los Infernos at Local<lb/>
506 in Chapel Hill<lb/>
22 WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Comedy Zone featuring Ronnie<lb/>
Bullard at The Attic<lb/>
ONGOING<lb/>
"Cajun Music and Zydeco"<lb/>
exhibition at Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
through Nov. 10<lb/>
School of Art Faculty Exhibition<lb/>
(through Oct. 29)<lb/>
Men In Black invade your TV<lb/>
Dai.k Williamson<lb/>
SKMOR I'll I I K<lb/>
m vdlrh TOf n�itM' im ln � jkmv an<lb/>
Wi-iciii. lot �ak h TV. .n-ak TV. liw TV.<lb/>
Uvm�- TV Ia!T(��' kiMN Hut. hal mhi<lb/>
(liihT knrm is llul TV b Hatching �ou<lb/>
�a, �J<lb/>
Communication Majors<lb/>
The ECU Athletics Department's<lb/>
Media Relations Office is seeking to<lb/>
hire enthusiastic student assistants for<lb/>
the current academic year, preferably<lb/>
freshmen and sophomores<lb/>
It's a great opportunity to gain valuable<lb/>
experience in the field of communications.<lb/>
If interested, call the media relations office<lb/>
at 328-4522 to set up an appointment.<lb/>
Friday 17th and Saturday 18th<lb/>
Home Grown<lb/>
Music Festival<lb/>
Friday Saturday<lb/>
Acoustic Bus, moon boot towr<lb/>
, j maturing ww members of j f<lb/>
(purpjo schoobw scnleiciiiO:�<lb/>
J5 j��fnn9 the recipe j<lb/>
WjLnrnu<lb/>
POST JUNCTION �1M!e<lb/>
Hipbone ogunoSu<lb/>
Coming Ocrv 30<lb/>
Edwin<lb/>
McCain<lb/>
25 Off Your Entire Check At Darryl's<lb/>
Just show your ECU student ID at the<lb/>
Darryl's across from campus and get a 25<lb/>
discount on your entire dinner check. Try our<lb/>
famous Saucy Barbecued Pork<lb/>
Ribs, Award Winning Fajitas<lb/>
Grande, New Wood-Fire Grilled<lb/>
Steaks, Fresh Vegetable Pasta,<lb/>
I!<lb/>
RESTAURANT S BAR<lb/>
jmuaniju �tlMH<lb/>
Roadside Chicken Sandwich, Steak and Cheese<lb/>
Sandwich, Spicy Buffalo Wings, or any of our<lb/>
Delicious Desserts. It's all specially priced for<lb/>
ECU students. So stop by tonight<lb/>
and enjoy East Carolina's favorite<lb/>
place for food and fun!<lb/>
Does not include Alcoholic Beverages<lb/>
31<lb/>
800 East 10th Street f 752-1907<lb/>
7 OUT OF 10<lb/>
In the entertainment industry, the key<lb/>
philosophy that keeps the wheel of<lb/>
fortune spinning and the money flowing<lb/>
is if something works once, milk it for all<lb/>
you can.<lb/>
Television fans have accepted the entire idea<lb/>
of the spin-off series (you know, a TV series<lb/>
whose sole existence is inspired from some<lb/>
other successful, popular source) as a necessary<lb/>
evil in the business. The spin-off concept has<lb/>
resulted in a mixed bag of goodies.<lb/>
Thanks to the success of Cheers, the<lb/>
world has been blessed with the sophisticated<lb/>
and intellectual humor of Frasier. However,<lb/>
nobody was laughing when Happy Days<lb/>
spawned the dreaded Joanie Loves Charm.<lb/>
The world of movies has also contributed to<lb/>
the spin-off phenomena. Robert Altman's<lb/>
critically acclaimed film, MASH,<lb/>
eventually resulted in one of the most<lb/>
endearing and enduring sitcoms ever. But does<lb/>
anyone remember a Sandra Bullock vehicle<lb/>
based on the Harrison FbrdMelanie Griffith<lb/>
film, Working Girl?<lb/>
Spin-offs are ingrained into the television<lb/>
mentality. It's a crap shoot, but sometimes a<lb/>
jackpot is won.<lb/>
The latest entry into the gambfing world of<lb/>
spin-off television is slightly different from the<lb/>
rest of the pack in that it's a cartoon based on a<lb/>
blockbuster feature film that was originally<lb/>
inspired from an independent comic book. Men<lb/>
In Black (a title that has almost become a household<lb/>
name) has a longer history than most will give credit,<lb/>
but for the bulk of mainstream America, it is a fairly new<lb/>
trend that began this past summer when Tommy Lee<lb/>
Jones and Will Smith put on their sleek, black shades<lb/>
and fought off "the alien scum of the universe<lb/>
With high hopes that the film's appeal will carry over<lb/>
to television. Men In Black, The Series premiered this past<lb/>
Sunday morning on WGN, and it is surprisingly well<lb/>
done. This is not to say that the show pushes the<lb/>
boundaries of animation or that it even matches the<lb/>
feature film on which it's based. Still, MIB illustrates<lb/>
much promise that may make it a worthwhile addition<lb/>
to WGN's Sunday morning line-up (which is already<lb/>
fueled by such outstanding fare as Superman, Batman,<lb/>
and Animaniacs).<lb/>
For all those new to Earth's solar system, the basic<lb/>
premise of MIB centers around the otherworldly<lb/>
adventures of Mr. J and Mr. K, code names for two<lb/>
agents in the ultra-secret government organizarion<lb/>
known as the Men In Black (Ignore the sexist title;<lb/>
women work here too). The purpose of this<lb/>
organization is to police aliens from outer space who<lb/>
have decided to disguise themselves as humans, dogs or<lb/>
any other earthly form of creature and live on our fair<lb/>
planet. If any alien steps out of line or breaks any of the<lb/>
many established galactic laws, then the MIB have to<lb/>
take action.<lb/>
It's a great concept for any science fiction story. And<lb/>
since the feature film was such a huge hit with children,<lb/>
transforming it into a kid's cartoon is only natural.<lb/>
Even though MIB ultimately is a kid's show, any fan<lb/>
of animation or science fiction should get a kick out of<lb/>
it. The animation isn't exactly fluid, but the character<lb/>
and scenic designs are striking and somewhat unique<lb/>
(The.opening and closing credits alone almost make<lb/>
the show worthwhile). The voice actors, while not quite<lb/>
carrying the wit and sense of timing that made Jones<lb/>
and Smith such a perfect pairing, eventually fit nicely<lb/>
into their characters. And, let's not forget, the writers<lb/>
seem to know their turf.<lb/>
If Sunday's episode is any indication, the MIB plots<lb/>
Men in Black The Series, already?<lb/>
PHOTO COURTESY OF W6N<lb/>
are sure to keep audiences tuning in. The premire<lb/>
episode centered around Mr. J's "unprofessional" ways<lb/>
of handling his job. After accidentally killing a renegade<lb/>
alien, Mr. J is "marked" by the entire alien breed, which<lb/>
means that an entire race of aliens will stop at nothing<lb/>
to hunt down and kill Mr. J for offing one of their own.<lb/>
This may not sound like a story suitable for children,<lb/>
but relax; this show doesn't take it self seriously. It's sole<lb/>
purpose is to have a good time. The show's writers have<lb/>
fun by making this alien breed out to be some sort of<lb/>
intergalactic mafia that the MIB organization just<lb/>
seems to accept, even if this mafia is after one of their<lb/>
own men.<lb/>
The show's humor is pretty much in line with the<lb/>
film, though at times the humor does feel a bit forced<lb/>
or slightly out of sync. Still, the show wins in the end by<lb/>
simply indulging in its own absurdity.<lb/>
As a result of all the hype surrounding the movie.<lb/>
Men In Black The Series was destined to be a hit, even if<lb/>
the show exhibited no talent or thought. Lucky for<lb/>
those of us who care, the show seems to have some solid<lb/>
legs to stand on and should satisfy us GGEs (Geeks<lb/>
Craving Entertainment) until the inevitable sequel to<lb/>
the film arrives in theaters.<lb/>
The ECU Student Union Special Events Committee presents<lb/>
a Dinner Theatre Presentation of<lb/>
An Evening of Comedy, Mystery, and Intrigue<lb/>
Tuesday, October 21, 1997, 7:00 pm<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Multi-Purpose Room<lb/>
Students $7.00<lb/>
Faculty $10.00<lb/>
Public $15.00<lb/>
Tickets available at the Centra!<lb/>
Ticket Office, Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
MonFri 8:30 am - 6:00 pm<lb/>
Murder is on the menu, and the searchlight of suspicion is on you!<lb/>
Advanced ticket purchase required by Oct. 16. For more information,<lb/>
call 919-328-4788 or 1-800-ECU-ARTS. TDD 919-3284736.<lb/>
MastercardVisa accepted. Sponsored by the ECU Student Union<lb/>
Special Events Committee.<lb/>
 <lb/>
i'i� i ' i mi<lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0010"/><lb/>
Ofc<lb/>
10 Thursday. October 16. 1997<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Th� East Carolinian<lb/>
Swimmers ready for annual challenge<lb/>
Intrasquad PurpleGold<lb/>
meet today at 3 p.m.<lb/>
P.l I. K AIM. AN<lb/>
STUF WRITER<lb/>
The men's and women's swim teams arc<lb/>
getting ready for their annual PurpleGold<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
Today the swimmers will be going head<lb/>
to head against each other in their annual<lb/>
intrasquad meet. The meet comes at a time<lb/>
at the end of the athletes most grueling part<lb/>
of the training season, September through<lb/>
mid October.<lb/>
"The Purple-Gold meet gives the<lb/>
Freshman swimmers a chance to get used to<lb/>
the format of meets at the college level<lb/>
said assistant coach McGee Moody. "It also<lb/>
gives all the swimmers on the squad a<lb/>
chance to get a time under a serious<lb/>
competitive atmosphere, and also to get a<lb/>
feeling for what events they will be<lb/>
competing during the upcoming season<lb/>
The ECU Women are returning from a<lb/>
great season. Last year they finished with a<lb/>
record of eight wins and only two losses,<lb/>
topped off by winning the GAA Conference<lb/>
tournament for the third straight year. In<lb/>
addition to those accomplishments the girls<lb/>
won Academic Ail-American honors, with<lb/>
the top 25 cumulative GPA in the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
The men's squad last year had an equally<lb/>
outstanding season, although they did not<lb/>
win the CAA, their record was 9-1 with their<lb/>
only loss coming against UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
"We swim in a very competitive<lb/>
conference, which makes for a lot of very<lb/>
close meets Head Coach Rick Kobe said.<lb/>
Looking beyond the PurpleGold meet<lb/>
and at this upcoming season, the entire<lb/>
coaching staff is very optimistic.<lb/>
"Both the men and women's teams are<lb/>
stronger this year, Moody said. There is<lb/>
much more depth on both teams, and we<lb/>
picked up 12 new swimmers this season �<lb/>
five Guys and seven girls which will help us<lb/>
replace the nine who graduated last year<lb/>
Both teams have a chance to go without<lb/>
a loss this season.<lb/>
"I'm looking forward to this season<lb/>
Moody said. "Both sides have a great chance<lb/>
to go undefeated. All the athletes work well<lb/>
together and their is a lot of excitement and<lb/>
enthusiasm for the upcoming season<lb/>
On the other side of the pool, the ECU<lb/>
divers will look to another strong season.<lb/>
"I am very excited about the upcoming<lb/>
Purple-Gold meet and even more excited<lb/>
about the upcoming season Diving Coach<lb/>
Jon Rose said.<lb/>
Two divers to look out for this season on<lb/>
the boards arc sophomores Ryan Baldwin<lb/>
and Casey Dodge.<lb/>
u Ryan Baldwin has been working very<lb/>
hard and has been looking very good so far,<lb/>
he should be our top male diver Rose said.<lb/>
"Dodge won a silver medal last year at the<lb/>
championships on the one meter board and<lb/>
is expected to be our top female diver<lb/>
Last season the diving squad had two<lb/>
divers in the top 16 in the CAA.<lb/>
The meet begins today at the Minges<lb/>
Pool at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Pirates face<lb/>
test against<lb/>
Tulane<lb/>
Hey<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Football fans!<lb/>
Believe it or not, the season will be<lb/>
closing soon, and once again. ECU will<lb/>
be taking on the NC State Woifpack for<lb/>
one of the most exciting and most<lb/>
anticipated games of the year. As always<lb/>
the team wants nothing more than to<lb/>
look up into the stands and see purple<lb/>
and gold from their loyal fans.<lb/>
The game is scheduled to be held<lb/>
at Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh<lb/>
on November 22nd.<lb/>
Tickets will be available from today<lb/>
until Friday, Oct. 24 and can be<lb/>
purchased for $27 at the ECU<lb/>
Athletic Office.<lb/>
Students must present a current<lb/>
university ID and may purchase only one<lb/>
ticket per person.<lb/>
Tulane surprising<lb/>
conference foes<lb/>
AMANDA ROSS<lb/>
sports eorroR<lb/>
At the beginning of the football<lb/>
season, the buzz was all about ECU.<lb/>
They were picked to win the<lb/>
conference and Tulane was picked to<lb/>
finish last. But what a difference a<lb/>
fewgames makes.<lb/>
Tulane is coming off a 64-33<lb/>
thrashing of Louisville and currently<lb/>
is just behind number one Southern<lb/>
Miss in C-USA standings.<lb/>
For ECU to record a victory,<lb/>
Coach Steve Logan said each week<lb/>
someone new has to step up and<lb/>
make the plays.<lb/>
"I think it has to come from an<lb/>
unexpected source each Saturday<lb/>
and then you'll begin to score points<lb/>
Logan said. "You'll begin to keep<lb/>
people out of the end zone and do<lb/>
the things that arc necessary to win<lb/>
Tulane's offense thrives off the<lb/>
passing game. They have<lb/>
accumulated 1,418 yards in air, while<lb/>
ECU has thrown for 986 yards.<lb/>
ECU quarterback Dan Gonzalez<lb/>
said Tulane wasn't on the minds of<lb/>
too many people at the beginning of<lb/>
the season, but now that they have<lb/>
proven themselves, it's no surprise<lb/>
wrrv they keep notching wins.<lb/>
Going into the season, people<lb/>
weren't saying too much about<lb/>
Tulane Gonzalez said. "It's no<lb/>
surprise why they're winning games.<lb/>
They're playing positive football.<lb/>
They've got a good offensive scheme<lb/>
that suits players well<lb/>
That offense is going to test the<lb/>
ECU defense. Cornerback Tabari<lb/>
Wallace said they must stop the air<lb/>
attack.<lb/>
"We have to stop the pass; that's<lb/>
the first priority Wallace said. "We're<lb/>
back down to another Donovan<lb/>
McNabb and Anthony Wright. He<lb/>
(Shaun King) runs around the pocket<lb/>
and makes things happen<lb/>
Consequently, that will provide a<lb/>
tough challenge to the defensive<lb/>
backs.<lb/>
"This is the db's test right here.<lb/>
We've been waiting for a test all year<lb/>
Wallace said. "We got � tested at<lb/>
Syracuse; we got tested with Wake<lb/>
Forest. This is the biggest test of all.<lb/>
This is the exam<lb/>
How well the Pirates studied for<lb/>
their exam will determine how well<lb/>
they will come out this Saturday. If<lb/>
they can clinch this win, it might<lb/>
mean a whole new outlook on what<lb/>
has been a frustrating season so far.<lb/>
Sibling<lb/>
Rivalry ?<lb/>
Sibling athletes share more than<lb/>
just teammates<lb/>
TRACT M. LAI BACH<lb/>
ASSISTANT SMUTS KDITOR<lb/>
"Off the court, me help<lb/>
each other with our<lb/>
schoolwork. We are<lb/>
not at acompetitive<lb/>
frith each other. We<lb/>
just try to be therefor<lb/>
each other<lb/>
LaKeya Mason<lb/>
You've got your bags packed and you arc off to<lb/>
college. Going off to school usually marks the start of<lb/>
a new life, meeting new people and moving away<lb/>
from those you have<lb/>
known for your entire life.<lb/>
However, this is not the<lb/>
case for four of ECU's<lb/>
athletes. Although sisters<lb/>
Lr.Keya and LuCinda<lb/>
Mason and siblings Niki<lb/>
and Nathan Kreel have<lb/>
moved away from home,<lb/>
they are spending more<lb/>
time than ever before with<lb/>
their family.<lb/>
The Mason sisters are<lb/>
no different from two peas<lb/>
in a pod, as they share a<lb/>
room, a team, and many of<lb/>
the same interests. LaKeya, the older of the two,<lb/>
spent two years at North Carolina A&amp;T and<lb/>
transferred to ECU to join her sister LuCinda on the<lb/>
Pirate volleyball team this year. LuCinda chose to<lb/>
come to ECU for several reasons.<lb/>
"I was impressed with the beautiful campus, and<lb/>
when I met the team, they were all so nice<lb/>
LuCinda said. "Also, I had known Coach Kim Walker<lb/>
from a winter league that I had played on, and she<lb/>
was a very good coach<lb/>
Aside from the desire to attend school with her younger and only<lb/>
sister, LaKeya felt that she could gain a lot more from ECU's volleyball<lb/>
program than she was getting at North Carolina A&amp;T.<lb/>
"1 really felt like I could learn a lot from Coach Walker LaKeya said.<lb/>
The sisters are also big fans of basketball, softball and track, in high<lb/>
school, LaKeya played basketball and ran track, while LuCinda played<lb/>
basketball and was a member of the softball team.<lb/>
"I was actually offered more basketball scholarships than volleyball<lb/>
LaKeya said. "But I just like playing volleyball better<lb/>
Trie ladies began playing volleyball at about the same time, although<lb/>
it was LaKeya who first expressed an<lb/>
 interest in the sport at the age of 11. At<lb/>
that time, LuCinda was nine.<lb/>
UI always wanted to do everything that<lb/>
LaKeya did when I was younger<lb/>
LuCinda said. "When she started playing<lb/>
volleyball, I wanted to do it too<lb/>
Aside from volleyball, the sisters also like<lb/>
a lot of the same movies and music. They<lb/>
work together and help each other out<lb/>
both on and off the court.<lb/>
"On the court, we encourage each other<lb/>
by letting each other know what we arc<lb/>
doing wrong and<lb/>
THE LUCINDA PROFILE<lb/>
(L-fl) LuCinda and LaKeya Mason of the ECU<lb/>
volleyball team.<lb/>
PHOTO BY CLAY BUCK<lb/>
Place of BirthDurham, NC<lb/>
Favorite MovieSet it Off<lb/>
Favorite FoodPasta<lb/>
MajorBiology<lb/>
Began volleyballAge 9<lb/>
Role ModelMother<lb/>
ClassFreshman<lb/>
GraduationSpring 2000<lb/>
THE LAKEYA PROFILE<lb/>
Favorite MovieSet if Off<lb/>
Favorite FoodSeafood, just<lb/>
about anything<lb/>
though<lb/>
MajorBiologyMath<lb/>
MinorEconomics<lb/>
ClassJunior<lb/>
GraduationSummer 1998<lb/>
Started VolleyballAge 11<lb/>
Role ModelMichael Jordan<lb/>
"Even though we have<lb/>
our differences, we get<lb/>
along like friends. No<lb/>
matter what, we always<lb/>
end up okay because<lb/>
nothing gets between us<lb/>
Nathan Kreel<lb/>
what we need co do to make it right LaKeya said. "Off the court, we<lb/>
help each other with our schoolwork. We arc not at all competitive with<lb/>
each other. We just try to be there for each other"<lb/>
Both LaKeya and LuCinda respect their mother and Michael Jordan<lb/>
as their role models.<lb/>
"I like Michael Jordan because he is not a cocky player LuCinda<lb/>
said. "He knows he could be better, and he is a very positive person. My<lb/>
mother always supports us and it was tough for her to raise two kids on<lb/>
her own, but she did it and she did just fine. She has always encouraged<lb/>
LaKeya and I to do whatever we wanted to do<lb/>
Another thing the sisters agree on is what they would be doing with<lb/>
their time if they weren't athletes at ECUslecping longer and<lb/>
studying more.<lb/>
"The study hours that are mandatory for freshman have really<lb/>
helped me out a lot LuCinda said. "When you arc in your dorm, the<lb/>
last thing you want to be doing is studying because there arc so many<lb/>
other distractions. If you are where you have to study and there is<lb/>
nothing else to do, you really get a lot done. I will probably still go to<lb/>
study hours next year<lb/>
In reflecting on the season so far, the ladies agree that it could be<lb/>
better, but by making the team come together more, ail of the<lb/>
problems should be able to be worked out.<lb/>
"We are struggling right now on a four-game losing streak, and it is<lb/>
SEE SIBUN6S, PAGE 11<lb/>
THE NATHAN KREEL PROFILE<lb/>
THE NIKI KREEL PROFILE<lb/>
Hometown<lb/>
Place of Birth<lb/>
Favorite Food<lb/>
Favorite Movie<lb/>
Class<lb/>
Started ojvimming<lb/>
Major<lb/>
Graduation<lb/>
Raleigh<lb/>
Fayetteville<lb/>
Sweet Potatoes<lb/>
Star Wars and Con Air<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Age 5<lb/>
Biology<lb/>
Spring 2000<lb/>
Place of Birth<lb/>
Favorite Movie<lb/>
Favorite Food<lb/>
Major<lb/>
Minor<lb/>
Class<lb/>
Graduation<lb/>
Began Swimming<lb/>
High School<lb/>
Fayetteville<lb/>
Jerry McGuire<lb/>
Pasta<lb/>
Hospitality Management<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
December 1999<lb/>
Age 7<lb/>
Apex High School<lb/>
(L-R) Nathan and Niki Kreel of the ECU<lb/>
Swimming team.<lb/>
PHOTO BY CLAY BUCK<lb/>
Women take<lb/>
break from<lb/>
conference<lb/>
play<lb/>
Lady Woifpack<lb/>
invade Minges for<lb/>
match<lb/>
STKMIKN Sciirwim<lb/>
XTUK tt Kl IKK<lb/>
The first half of the CAA regular<lb/>
season is over for the ECU volleyball<lb/>
team. The Pirates and head coach<lb/>
Kim Walker hope to regain control of<lb/>
a season derailed by injury and<lb/>
inexperience.<lb/>
The season's early results looked<lb/>
promising for the Pirates.<lb/>
"We started off pretty strong the<lb/>
first couple weeks of the season<lb/>
Walker said. "Senior leadership was<lb/>
definitely something we had in the<lb/>
beginning<lb/>
The Pirates jumped out to an 8-2<lb/>
record before disaster struck.<lb/>
During a match at the Pirate<lb/>
Invitational in September, senior Kari<lb/>
Koenning fractured her left arm in a<lb/>
collision with a teammate.<lb/>
"We had one of our senior leaders<lb/>
get hurt and we've been struggling to "<lb/>
get our feet back under us, WalkeC I <lb/>
said. ; I<lb/>
The injury to Koenning began aj li<lb/>
stretch where the Pirates went 4-9. <lb/>
Another factor in the volleyball! � <lb/>
team's skid is their lack of offensive! 3<lb/>
productivity. I <lb/>
"Our problem is that we're nop ��$<lb/>
generating any offense Walker said Zf<lb/>
We have got to find a way to scored 23<lb/>
We get the ball back well, but we! Eg<lb/>
can't score points J ;<lb/>
The Pirates' rocky season has not; J <lb/>
been without bright spots.<lb/>
"Our blocking and defense is! "<lb/>
picking up" Walker said<lb/>
The ECU blocking is ranked first <lb/>
in the conference. ���<lb/>
Another bright spot is the play of; <lb/>
the freshmen. In ECU's loss to <lb/>
conference leader James Madison on! ; I;<lb/>
Friday, Sarah Kary, a freshman, led the! -I<lb/>
team in kills, and fellow freshmen; g j<lb/>
Cinta Claro and Liz Hall have also<lb/>
played well this season. The- j<lb/>
abundance of talented freshmen<lb/>
bodes well for the future of ECU" M<lb/>
volleyball. . t<lb/>
"The future looks real bright. It's; I;<lb/>
just a matter of growing through it<lb/>
and that's a little tough Walker said.<lb/>
Next week the Pirates resume<lb/>
their conference schedule.<lb/>
"Our focus right now is winning<lb/>
conference games because we need<lb/>
to position ourselves more to advance<lb/>
in the conference tournament at the<lb/>
end of the year Walker said.<lb/>
Before ECU can play for CAA<lb/>
redemption in the second half of<lb/>
conference games, they host area rival<lb/>
Friday night ;<lb/>
���<lb/>
i<lb/>
North Carolina State,<lb/>
Oct. 17 at 6 p.m.<lb/>
"It's always fun to play ACC<lb/>
schools Walker said. "It's getting to<lb/>
the point where our conference can<lb/>
compete with the ACC<lb/>
1<lb/>
Women's tennis season packed with wins<lb/>
Players netting wins<lb/>
for team<lb/>
STKVK LOSKV<lb/>
SIMCIR WTKITKK<lb/>
The ECU women's tennis team has been<lb/>
delivering one solid performance after<lb/>
another in tournaments in the North<lb/>
Carolina area. Most recently, an excellent<lb/>
performance two weekends ago yielded more<lb/>
victories for ECU's tennis players.<lb/>
The women's tennis team played a<lb/>
tournament at UNC-Wilmington Oct. 3-4.<lb/>
ECU was one of four schools that sent teams<lb/>
to compete. The other schools that showed<lb/>
up were the College of Charleston, Coastal<lb/>
Carolina, and the home team, UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
"The College of Charleston was our only<lb/>
real competition said Women's Assistant<lb/>
Head Coach Brian Jackson. "They played<lb/>
very well. We match up very evenly against<lb/>
them<lb/>
Each team had eight players come to the<lb/>
UNC Wilmington tournament. They<lb/>
competed in four different categories, called<lb/>
flights, that ranged in levels from A to D.<lb/>
The tennis team was hampered by the<lb/>
unavailability of their best player, due to<lb/>
family matters.<lb/>
"We had to shuffle around our players<lb/>
because of that, but we still did great<lb/>
JjLkMjn said.<lb/>
Despite that setback, several players took<lb/>
crucial victories. Freshman Maggie Meginnis<lb/>
won the C flight, turning in quite an<lb/>
exemplary performance for her first season of<lb/>
college athletics. Senior captain Mona Eek<lb/>
took fourth place in the A flight. Junior Asa<lb/>
Ellbring, a transfer student and native of<lb/>
Sweden, won third place in the A flight.<lb/>
"We've been doing very well this season<lb/>
Jackson said. "There have only been three<lb/>
tournaments that we have played in so far,<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
and we've done very well in all of them<lb/>
One of those three tournaments was<lb/>
hosted at ECU Sept. 26-28. The women's<lb/>
tennis team took advantage of playing at<lb/>
home and soundly defeated all the other<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
For the tennis team, the fall season is<lb/>
really more of a warmup. Instead of<lb/>
competing as a team, individual players<lb/>
representing schools play and win by<lb/>
themselves. The spring season is when the<lb/>
matches become very intense and the players<lb/>
seriously concentrate on the tennis court.<lb/>
Next the women's tennis team plays a<lb/>
SEE TENNIS. PAGE tt<lb/>
'III<lb/>
41<lb/>
4<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
-�<lb/>
m<lb/>
�4<lb/>
'�-�W<lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0011"/><lb/>
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s<lb/>
)01tS<lb/>
Thursday, Octobtf 18, 1997 11<lb/>
Stressed?<lb/>
� We can help!<lb/>
Sponsored By<lb/>
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and the Division of<lb/>
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featuring Marie Ingram from "The HUMOR Project"<lb/>
Wednesday, October 22, 1997<lb/>
2:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
"Tickets now on sale at the Mendenhall Student Center Central Ticket office<lb/>
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Fall tournaments test golfers<lb/>
Coach looking for<lb/>
solid play<lb/>
JKRKMY ANDKRSOS<lb/>
ST.UF WRITER<lb/>
Consistency.<lb/>
That is the one word ECU Golf<lb/>
Coach Kevin Williams would like to<lb/>
sec become a reality for his golf<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"We just aren't consistent<lb/>
Williams said.<lb/>
Although they have not been<lb/>
consistent as a team, the Pirates(26-<lb/>
21) have posted some good<lb/>
individual scores, this fall.<lb/>
Sophomore Marc Miller has played<lb/>
especially well placing in the top ten<lb/>
in the last two tournaments,<lb/>
including a ninth place finish at the<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington Belvedere<lb/>
Intercollegiate.<lb/>
"1 didn't play spectacular, but I<lb/>
played pretty consistent both days<lb/>
Miller said.<lb/>
Williams would like to see the<lb/>
rest of the team rise to Miller's level<lb/>
of play.<lb/>
"Our two, three, four players play<lb/>
good and then have one bad round<lb/>
every tournament Williams said.<lb/>
They need three consistent solid<lb/>
rounds. We need to help Marc out<lb/>
The Pirates finished eighth in<lb/>
the 17 team event held at Belvedere<lb/>
Plantation in Wilmington. Williams<lb/>
would like to see his team finish<lb/>
closer to the top of the pack to make<lb/>
a better case for postseason play<lb/>
"We've really put ourselves in a<lb/>
hole Williams said. "Wfc have<lb/>
piaywell in the spring<lb/>
These tournaments now, allow<lb/>
the Pirates to gear up for conferc<lb/>
matches, which are worth<lb/>
conference championship.<lb/>
The Pirates are current<lb/>
competing Adams Cup of Ncwpoi<lb/>
Williams is confident his team w<lb/>
do well.<lb/>
"We are real excited. Robby Perry<lb/>
and Kevin Miller have been<lb/>
struggling with there putting. Both<lb/>
have improved in practice Williams<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The tournament field that will<lb/>
challenge the Pirates this week in<lb/>
Rhode Island includes two top 25<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
"We have the toughest schedule<lb/>
that we've had since I've been<lb/>
here Williams said.<lb/>
SPORTS INFORMATION DEPARTMENT<lb/>
Last<lb/>
women's soccer team<lb/>
The Pirates of ECU made a second<lb/>
attempt at a school-record eighth<lb/>
win of the season here Tuesday, but<lb/>
a hot Virginia Commonwealth squad<lb/>
stopped ECU, scoring in the 63rd<lb/>
minute for a 1-0 CAA win. With the<lb/>
victory, VGU improved to 5-8-1,2-3-<lb/>
1 in the CAA; while ECU fell to 7-7,<lb/>
2-3 in the CAA, with this defeat.<lb/>
The first half was a defensive<lb/>
showcase as both teams were unable<lb/>
to crack the scoreboard in the 45-<lb/>
minute frame. At the intermission,<lb/>
the Pirates had registered four shots<lb/>
on goal to nine for the Lady Rams.<lb/>
ECU sophomore keeper Amy<lb/>
Horton (Raleigh, NC) tallied three<lb/>
first-half saves; while VCU senior<lb/>
keeper Nicole Bauguss had notched<lb/>
two saves at the half.<lb/>
. In the second half, Va.<lb/>
Commonwealth scored the game-<lb/>
winner when it redirected a ball<lb/>
back into the goal box, and freshman<lb/>
defender Traci ruhrmann knocked<lb/>
in a header from five yards out at the<lb/>
62:42 mark. Lady Ram sophomore<lb/>
forward Annie Sullivan recorded the<lb/>
assist on the play.<lb/>
For the match, ECU tallied eight<lb/>
shots, led bv sophomores Jill Davis<lb/>
(Pinehurst, NC) and Chrisy<lb/>
Bernabe (Burke, Va.) who had two<lb/>
apiece. VCU recorded 10 shot<lb/>
attempts with Sullivan providing<lb/>
four. Horton notched six saves,<lb/>
anchoring the back, line for the<lb/>
Pirates for the entire 90 minutes.<lb/>
Bauguss registered three saves for<lb/>
the Lady Rams.<lb/>
"It was an evenly-played match<lb/>
said ECU head coach Neil Roberts.<lb/>
"We got off to a rocky start to open<lb/>
the contest, but we were able to<lb/>
settle down and get our composure.<lb/>
In the second half, VCU was able to<lb/>
put some solid pressure on us which<lb/>
prevented us somewhat from<lb/>
generating any quality scoring<lb/>
chances. It was unfortunate to lose<lb/>
this one, but we arc still not out of<lb/>
the conference race. Well regroup<lb/>
and be ready for this weekends<lb/>
match at JMU<lb/>
The Pirates return to action on<lb/>
Sunday, Oct. 19, at JMU and will<lb/>
again be striving for a school-record<lb/>
eighth win of the season, first touch<lb/>
is scheduled for 1 p.m.<lb/>
Tennis<lb/>
continued from page 10<lb/>
Siblings<lb/>
continued from page 10<lb/>
realrv frustrating LuCinda said.<lb/>
"But we are really good, and I know<lb/>
that if we pull together on the court,<lb/>
we can turn things back around in<lb/>
the right direction and play like we<lb/>
did at the beginning of the season<lb/>
The sibling swimmers share just<lb/>
about everything that the Mason<lb/>
sisters share other than a room.<lb/>
Nathan Kreel began swimming at<lb/>
the age of five, following in the<lb/>
footsteps of both of his older sisters.<lb/>
"Niki and I are only 14 months<lb/>
apart, so we have always swam<lb/>
together and done a tot of things<lb/>
together Nathan said. "Even<lb/>
chough we have our differences, we<lb/>
get along like friends. No matter<lb/>
what, we always end up okay<lb/>
because nothing gets between us<lb/>
Niki agrees that having part of<lb/>
her family at ECU is an advantage-<lb/>
"We really 'enjoy each other's<lb/>
tournament hosted by Charieston<lb/>
Southern this weekend. It will likely<lb/>
be a much larger tournament than<lb/>
the ones hosted by IFNC<lb/>
Wilmington or ECU. Around seven<lb/>
or eight teams are expected to show<lb/>
up.<lb/>
"We've done great against them<lb/>
in the past Jackson said. "We<lb/>
plaved them at the ECU<lb/>
tournament. We're quite a bit<lb/>
stronger than they are.<lb/>
company Niki said. "We are<lb/>
competitive with each other but<lb/>
more so outside of swimming. He<lb/>
understands what I am going<lb/>
through and 1 can do the same for<lb/>
him. It is nice to have him here for<lb/>
when 1 need someone to talk to or<lb/>
when I am feeling homesick<lb/>
The Kreels' older sister Ten<lb/>
swam at Carolina for two years.<lb/>
Nathan said that if he could thank<lb/>
one and only one person for their<lb/>
support through his career as a<lb/>
swimmer, it would definitely be her.<lb/>
Niki refers to Teri as her role model.<lb/>
"The idea to quit has crossed my<lb/>
mind many times, but Ten has<lb/>
always been there to encourage me<lb/>
and bring me up when I am feeling<lb/>
down Nathan said. "She really<lb/>
pushes me to keep going<lb/>
Nathan had his heart set on<lb/>
attending Florida State University<lb/>
until a recruiting trip persuaded him<lb/>
to attend ECU.<lb/>
"Everyone that I met at ECU was<lb/>
really nice, and I saw how much<lb/>
Niki liked it here, so I decided that<lb/>
this was the best place for me to go<lb/>
Nathan said.<lb/>
Niki based her decision to come<lb/>
to ECU on the fact that it was close<lb/>
to home, and the people here were<lb/>
so nice that she felt at home. Her<lb/>
scholarship offering is what helped<lb/>
her make her final decision among<lb/>
other schools including NC State<lb/>
and UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
Nathan enjoys volunteering and<lb/>
said that if he were not involved in<lb/>
swimming, he would spend a lot of<lb/>
his time helping out with the<lb/>
Special Olympics.<lb/>
When not in the pool, Niki<lb/>
enjoys being involved with other<lb/>
sports and spending time with<lb/>
friends. If swimming were not a part<lb/>
of her life, she would dedicate more<lb/>
time to being involved with clubs<lb/>
and other school-related activities.<lb/>
Both Niki and Nathan arc breast<lb/>
strokers, so throughout their<lb/>
swimming career, they have always<lb/>
been on the side of the pool<lb/>
cheering each other on.<lb/>
"Growing up, it always worked<lb/>
out that she would swim and then I<lb/>
would or the other way around, so<lb/>
we were always on the boards<lb/>
together Nathan said.<lb/>
The Fire<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Kernal<lb/>
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�' -rf . i'<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058734_0012"/><lb/>
tmm<lb/>
12 Thursday. October 16. 1997<lb/>
Oi Lb<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
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Legislative panel<lb/>
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ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) � It's<lb/>
looking more and more like<lb/>
lawmakers will return to the<lb/>
Capitol for a special legislative<lb/>
session next week a long way from<lb/>
agreement on how to deal with the<lb/>
Twins stadium issue.<lb/>
But even though prior<lb/>
agreement appears unlikely,<lb/>
legislative leaders are now saying<lb/>
they're inclined to limit the<lb/>
session to a few days rather than<lb/>
take advantage of the Nov. 30<lb/>
deadline Twins owner Carl Pohlad<lb/>
has imposed with his deal to sell<lb/>
the team to North Carolina<lb/>
businessman Don Beaver.<lb/>
House Speaker Phil Carruthers<lb/>
said Tuesday there aren't enough<lb/>
votes to pass a stadium bill, and he<lb/>
sees no movement that would<lb/>
justify extending the session.<lb/>
"I'm not sure it makes a<lb/>
difference if we're talking a few-<lb/>
days or a few weeks he said.<lb/>
What is arguably the most<lb/>
popular funding option, a<lb/>
recommendation to pay for a<lb/>
stadium with lottery and slot<lb/>
machine money, wasn't rejected<lb/>
outright by a key committee<lb/>
Tuesday, but it was smothered in<lb/>
alternative proposals.<lb/>
The Legislative Commission<lb/>
on Planning and Fiscal Policy is the<lb/>
first committee to take up a task<lb/>
force recommendation that the<lb/>
state contribute S250 million to a<lb/>
stadium from a combination of<lb/>
user fees, lottery proceeds and<lb/>
money from slot machines at<lb/>
Shakopee's Canterbury Park-<lb/>
Although the commission<lb/>
didn't dismantle the<lb/>
recommendation, it spent<lb/>
considerable time discussing other<lb/>
ideas � everything from lawsuits<lb/>
to community ownership of the<lb/>
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The owners had initially-<lb/>
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Instead, voters in June approved a<lb/>
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NFL commissioner Paul<lb/>
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The Super Bowl will be played<lb/>
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bath duplex, cable TV, washerdryer<lb/>
hook-up, refrigerator with ice maker,<lb/>
S400month, pet fee, $500 deposit. Call<lb/>
&amp;J30-1491.<lb/>
W<lb/>
�<lb/>
r<lb/>
APT. FOR RENT: TWO bedroom, one<lb/>
bath, dote to campus. Pets allowed.<lb/>
$350 rent Call 752-3333.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
ASAP to share great 3 bedroom town-<lb/>
house. Rent $205.00month plus 13<lb/>
utilities. Call Apple or Jenl at 754-8157.<lb/>
Please leave message.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED TO<lb/>
sublease 3 bedroom in Witson Acres,<lb/>
$230 a month. Call Tracy, 758-9245.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED,<lb/>
8 PLAYERS Club Apts. 14 of rent and<lb/>
expenses. Call todaY, 321-7613.<lb/>
TWO OR THREE FEMALES needed<lb/>
to take over lease ASAP. $220 per<lb/>
.ijsnonth, 14 utilities. Please contact<lb/>
 Sheila, Yuka, or Lauren at 353-2471 or<lb/>
jave a message.<lb/>
I TO TAKE OVER LEASE, one bed-<lb/>
room spacious apartment extra nice,<lb/>
; washer and dryer hook up, basic cable,<lb/>
 water and sewage included. Call for<lb/>
� more Information, 752-8085.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED FOR TWO<lb/>
f fbedroom apartment Female or male.<lb/>
Z fCiose to campus. Rent $197.50. Call tor<lb/>
imore information, 757-1274<lb/>
FEMALE NEEDED ASAP TO sub-<lb/>
- Sees� 2 bedroom apt. $212.50mo 12<lb/>
- utilrties. Call Amy, 752-7838.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED TO FILL one<lb/>
� ibedroom, one bath in upstairs of<lb/>
 house. $187.50 per month plus utilities<lb/>
 (deposit needed). Close to campus.<lb/>
I Call 830-4943.<lb/>
 MALE ROOMMATE WANTED-<lb/>
 PLAYERS Club Apts. 14 of rent and<lb/>
i expense. Call today, 321-7613.<lb/>
t TWO BEDROOM. OCTOBER-JULY.<lb/>
J Washerdryer, hook-up, celling fans,<lb/>
- pets allowed with fee. Very dose to<lb/>
v campus, only $325 a month. Call 752-<lb/>
: 0277 or 413-0978.<lb/>
FUJI TAHOE MT. BIKE, all Shimano<lb/>
components, Onza bar ends. Call Fred,<lb/>
353-6228.<lb/>
A PAIR OF 12" 400 watt Pioneer sub-<lb/>
woofers in Q Logic fiberglass box. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition. Must see! Only $250.<lb/>
Call or leave message for Lamont, 754-<lb/>
0981.<lb/>
LIGHT COLORED SOFA IN good<lb/>
condition - $50. Like new TV stand on<lb/>
wheels. $15 OBO. Call Susan, 758-7358<lb/>
before 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
FREE MOTOROLA PAGER, AVAIL-<lb/>
ABLE options include voice mail e-<lb/>
mail services. Call 1-800-784-6452<lb/>
ld1675167 or write to free pagers, PO<lb/>
Box 4112, Greenville, NC 27836-2112.<lb/>
SOFA BED FOR SALEII Seats<lb/>
3sleeps 2 comfortably. Great condi-<lb/>
tion. Great for dorm or home. $55. Call<lb/>
353-3138, leave a message.<lb/>
CANNONDALE DELTA V500<lb/>
MOUNTAIN bike. Front end suspen-<lb/>
sion. Hardly used. Paid $1000, asking<lb/>
$700 OBO. Includes Rhode Gear rack.<lb/>
Trek helmet. 757-3475.<lb/>
1995 MAXIMA, DARK GREEN. 5-<lb/>
speed, exc. condition, loaded, non-<lb/>
smoker, 1-owner. Very sporty. For<lb/>
more details, call 830-4731.<lb/>
LOVESEAT MADE BY THIS End Up<lb/>
in very good condition. Asking $120<lb/>
but Is negotiable. Phone Babs at 754-<lb/>
2944 and leave massage.<lb/>
FREESTYLE BIKES BY HARO, Mon-<lb/>
gocse, Huffman, and Diamond<lb/>
Back. Check out our freestyle ac-<lb/>
cessories. Call 355-8050, ask for<lb/>
Derrick or Benny.<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
ON LINE<lb/>
COLLECTIONS<lb/>
Part time HANDYMAN 3 hours<lb/>
daily. ONLINE Information services<lb/>
seeks a person to help with cleaning<lb/>
leaves off lot, keeping windows<lb/>
clean, going to get mail and other<lb/>
minor errands.<lb/>
M-F 7AM-10PM<lb/>
Call Henry Parker at 757-2151<lb/>
For Sale 1<lb/>
BEAUTIFUL SOFA. LOVESEAT,<lb/>
COFFEE table, two end tables, assort-<lb/>
ed paintings, lamps and dresser. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition.Very cheap, must<lb/>
sell ASAP. Call Mahr at 551-1841, leave<lb/>
message, make offer.<lb/>
RED 1988 SUBARU DL, great get-<lb/>
around car for student. 95K miles.<lb/>
Good condition. Must sell. $750 or will<lb/>
take beet offer. Call 756-8458.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1995 HYUNDAI Accent<lb/>
purple, tinted windows, AC, CD play-<lb/>
er, keyless entry, new tires. Must sell!<lb/>
Will let go cheap! Chris, 757-2037.<lb/>
THE CATERING DEPARTMENT AT<lb/>
ECU is now taking applications for<lb/>
Banquet attendants. We offer flexible<lb/>
work schedules and competitive pay.<lb/>
Please pick up applications at the Cam-<lb/>
pus Dining Office, Mendenhail Student<lb/>
Center. EOE.<lb/>
SEASONAL HELP NEEDED<lb/>
(THROUGH Christmas). Hallmark<lb/>
Creations, University Commons, 3040<lb/>
So. Evans St Stop by ASAP<lb/>
8 TELEMARKETERS NEEDED. DO<lb/>
you like talking on the phone? If so, we<lb/>
have the )ob for you. Hours: 5:30-<lb/>
9p.m Monday-Thursday; 4:30-8p.m.<lb/>
Sunday. Hourly pay plus bonuses. Ap-<lb/>
ply in person, 4:30-8p.m� Energy Sav-<lb/>
ers Windows and Siding, Inc Winter-<lb/>
green Commercial Park, Suite 0, Fire-<lb/>
tower Road, Greenville.<lb/>
EARN<lb/>
$750-$1500 WEEK<lb/>
Raise all the money your group<lb/>
needs by sponsoring a VISA<lb/>
fundraiser on your campus.<lb/>
No investment &amp; very little time<lb/>
needed. There's no obligation, so<lb/>
why not call for information today.<lb/>
Call 1-800-323-8454 x 95.<lb/>
PRODUCTION ASSISTANT �DU-<lb/>
TIES INCLUDE the engraving and as-<lb/>
sembling of plaques, trophies and oth-<lb/>
er awardgift items. Highly developed<lb/>
fine motor skills, the ability to align<lb/>
and proof for quality, and being com-<lb/>
fortable with computers is required.<lb/>
Experience with Corel Draw (or a simi-<lb/>
lar graphics package), and in layout,<lb/>
design and assembly is preferred. This<lb/>
person will need to be a team player<lb/>
who can prioritize according to the<lb/>
various processes involved in the<lb/>
items on schedule. This person will<lb/>
also be standing and walking for long<lb/>
periods of time. This position involves<lb/>
15-25 hours per week (including 5<lb/>
hours for one Saturday each month).<lb/>
Wage rate during the 3 week proba-<lb/>
tionary period will be $5.75 per hour. If<lb/>
employment continues after proba-<lb/>
tion, the wage rate will be $7.00 per<lb/>
hour. Call 756-4355, ask for Teresa.<lb/>
PART-TIME HELP NEEDED. Need<lb/>
someone to work Sundays. Contact<lb/>
Warren's "Hot" Dogs, 1938 North<lb/>
Memorial Drive.<lb/>
BRODY'S SEEKS FASHION FOR-<lb/>
WARD individuals who can provide<lb/>
friendly, courteous service. Work with<lb/>
the fashions you love to wear: Ju-<lb/>
niorsMisses, and Young Men's. Flexi-<lb/>
ble schedules for the "early birds"<lb/>
(10a.m. -2p.m.) or "night owls"<lb/>
(12p.m9p.m. or 6p.m9p.m.). All po-<lb/>
sitions include weekends. Merchan-<lb/>
dise discount offered. Applications ac-<lb/>
cepted Monday-Thursday, Brody's,<lb/>
The Plaza.<lb/>
PAID MARKETINGMANAGEMENT<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS. THE ColorWorks is<lb/>
currently recruiting on campus for a<lb/>
limited number of summer '98 man-<lb/>
agement positions. Gain Hands-on ex-<lb/>
perience and build Your resume. Last<lb/>
summers average earnings $7,223. For<lb/>
more information and to schedule an<lb/>
Interview call 1-800-477-1001.<lb/>
MALE STUDENT SEEKING PER-<lb/>
SONAL care attendant on Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday mornings. Only requires<lb/>
minimum assistance. Preferably male.<lb/>
Contact Shawn at 328-3139.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE PERSON TO WORK<lb/>
part time or full time 2-3 days per week<lb/>
10-30 hours a week. $10 per hour.<lb/>
Must pass credit check, criminal and<lb/>
drug test. Send resume to PO Box 493,<lb/>
Tarboro, NC 27886.<lb/>
NOW HIRING PLAYMATES MAS-<lb/>
SAGE Mm great money. Confi-<lb/>
dential employment. Call today,<lb/>
747-7686.<lb/>
SALES ASSISTANT- DUTIES IN-<lb/>
CLUDE assisting customers, writing<lb/>
up, pricing and scheduling orders,<lb/>
proofing work-in-process and finished<lb/>
products, assisting with production<lb/>
and accounts as needed. This position<lb/>
requires basic math skills, legible<lb/>
handwriting, a friendly personality, a<lb/>
helpful attitude, the ability to work un-<lb/>
der pressure, standing and walking for<lb/>
long periods of time. Position will in-<lb/>
clude 15-25 hoursweek (including 5<lb/>
hours for one Saturday each month).<lb/>
Training pay is $5.25 during 3 week<lb/>
probationary period, if employment is<lb/>
continued after probation, wages will<lb/>
be $6.00 per hour with regularly<lb/>
scheduled reviews for increase. Cus-<lb/>
tomer service experience preferred.<lb/>
Call 756-4355, ask for Teresa.<lb/>
TUTORS NEEDED: THE DEPART-<lb/>
MENT of Athletics, Office of Student<lb/>
Development is currently hiring full-<lb/>
time ECU undergrad and graduate<lb/>
students to tutor student-athletes in<lb/>
the following subject areas: ACCT<lb/>
2401; ASIP 2311, 3220, 4300; BIOL<lb/>
1060; BIOS 1500; ECON 2133, 3030,<lb/>
3960; FINA 3724; JUST 2000; MATH<lb/>
1066, 2283, 3307; PHYS 1050; RCLS<lb/>
2000; SOCW 1010, 3401. Also interest-<lb/>
ed in graduate students with strong<lb/>
background in PSYC, SOCW, andor<lb/>
CDFR. Minimum 3.0 GPA required. Call<lb/>
328-4550.<lb/>
HELP NEEDED NOW TO prep and<lb/>
paint in furniture painting studio. Ap-<lb/>
prox. 5 to 10 hours per week. Painting<lb/>
experience is helpful. Call Mark at 754-<lb/>
8030.<lb/>
Services<lb/>
COSTUMESI WIDE SELECTION OF<lb/>
rentals and custom-made. Many ac-<lb/>
cessories available. Frani Boberg,<lb/>
Farmvllle, 753-4009.<lb/>
Need help?<lb/>
TSuttitif Cntdi ' Stodutm � Akudttut<lb/>
Pnftuietud ami huxptnsn<lb/>
(919) 931-0022<lb/>
Personals<lb/>
� �'<lb/>
LADIES: GIVE ME YOUR sore, ach-<lb/>
ing muscles. Amateur masseur would<lb/>
like to practice on your back. 1-800-<lb/>
484-8546 (code 2465) or Brian, POB<lb/>
8663. Greenville 27835.<lb/>
Greek Personals<lb/>
CAREGIVER NEEDED IN MY home<lb/>
for five year old with mild lung disease<lb/>
from 12:00-5:00p.m. Monday, Wednes-<lb/>
day Friday. Must have own transpor-<lb/>
tation, references. Criminal check.<lb/>
Leave message after 5:00 p.m. 830-<lb/>
9082.<lb/>
eastcarolinian<lb/>
AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON. OUR tra-<lb/>
dition continued this past weekend as<lb/>
our families enjoyed a day of tallgating<lb/>
and socializing. Thanks, guys. Love,<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
TO GAMMA SIGMA. GREAT time<lb/>
had at the toga party and thanks for all<lb/>
the support for Cardboard Village. The<lb/>
Gentlemen of Pi Lambda Phi<lb/>
TAU KAPPA EPSILON, THANKS<lb/>
for the pre-downtown at Peasant's last<lb/>
Wednesday night We had a blast!<lb/>
Let's do it again soon! Love, the sisters<lb/>
of Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
PI DELTA, ONCE AGAIN we had a<lb/>
great time dancing the night away.<lb/>
Can't wait for the next social. The Gen-<lb/>
tlemen of Pi Lambda Phi<lb/>
PHI TAU-PARENTS WEEKEND was<lb/>
the best. Thanks for showing our par-<lb/>
ents a great time. Lefs get together<lb/>
again soon. Love, the sisters of Alpha<lb/>
XI Delta<lb/>
THE MU PLEDGE CLASS of Gamma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma is proud of our Pledge<lb/>
Mom. Thanks JLove for all your hard<lb/>
work. We love you! Love, the pledges<lb/>
THANK YOU ALPHA PHI for partid-<lb/>
pating in the soda), it was a blast. We<lb/>
hope it was as much fun for you all as<lb/>
it was for us. The brothers of Theta Chi<lb/>
GOOD LUCK ALECIA PAGE and<lb/>
Sage Hunihan on your National Award<lb/>
Nominations. Love, your Sigma sisters<lb/>
DELTA ZETA BIG SIS'S you thought<lb/>
you had us fooled last week, but we<lb/>
will see who is fooled at the Big Sis<lb/>
Party! Love, the new members.<lb/>
THANK YOU SIGMA SIGMA Sigma<lb/>
and Tau Kappa Epsilon for volunteer-<lb/>
ing your time! Much appreciated,<lb/>
Greenville Area Preservation Associa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
THANKS ZETA TAU ALPHA for at-<lb/>
tending the social last Thursday. It<lb/>
was a blast and we can not wait until<lb/>
the next one. The brothers of Theta Chi<lb/>
TAU KAPPA EPSILON. THANKS<lb/>
For showing our parents a good time<lb/>
at the tailgate. We all had a good time<lb/>
and we're looking forward to getting<lb/>
together again, love, the Delta Zeta<lb/>
sisters and new members<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA - THANKS FOR the<lb/>
pre-downtown last Thursday night<lb/>
We had a great time, lefs do it again<lb/>
soon. Love, the sisters and new mem-<lb/>
bers of Alpha XI Delta<lb/>
CONGRATS TO PI LAMBDA PHI. 5<lb/>
years Today! Greeks come celebrate<lb/>
with us at our Band Party on Saturday<lb/>
night after Greek Games.<lb/>
DELTA ZETA BIG SISTERS: Thanks<lb/>
for spoiling us last week. You guys are<lb/>
the best. Love, your Little Sisters.<lb/>
THE END OF YOUR SEARCH<lb/>
FOR A FRIENDLY CHURCH<lb/>
RED OAK CHRISTIAN<lb/>
CHURCH<lb/>
1827 Greenville Blvd. SW<lb/>
756-3526<lb/>
Services: Worship 11 a.m<lb/>
Sunday School 9:45 a.m<lb/>
Vespers 6 p.m. Wednesday<lb/>
WHERE GOD IS PRAISED.<lb/>
LIVES ARE CHANGED &amp;<lb/>
FRIENDS ARE MADE<lb/>
GREENVILLE CHURCH<lb/>
OF CHRIST<lb/>
1706 Greenville Blvd. SE<lb/>
752-6376<lb/>
Services: 9 a.m 10:15 a.m 6<lb/>
p.m. Sunday. 7 p.m. Wednes-<lb/>
day<lb/>
WE WELCOME YOU! LET US<lb/>
BE YOUR CHURCH AWAY<lb/>
FROM HOME<lb/>
UNIVERSITY CHURCH<lb/>
OF CHRIST<lb/>
Corner of Crestline Blvd. &amp;<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-6545<lb/>
Services: Bible School 10 a.m<lb/>
morning worship 11 a.m<lb/>
evening worship 6 p.m.<lb/>
REACHING OUT TO<lb/>
GREENVILLE WITH THE<lb/>
CLAIMS OF CHRIST<lb/>
FIRST FREE WILL<lb/>
BAPTIST CHURCH<lb/>
2426 S. Charles St. (Hwy. 43)<lb/>
756-6600<lb/>
Services: Sunday School 9:45<lb/>
a.m Worship 11 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.<lb/>
JOIN OUR COLLEGE SUNDAY<lb/>
SCHOOL CLASS AT 9:45 AM<lb/>
EACH SUNDAY<lb/>
THE MEMORIAL<lb/>
BAPTIST CHURCH<lb/>
1510 Greenville Blvd. SE<lb/>
756-5314<lb/>
Services: Sunday 11 a.m<lb/>
Wednesday 6:30 p.m. (dinner<lb/>
at 5:45 p.m.)<lb/>
COME JOIN MANY OTHER<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR AWESOME<lb/>
WORSHIP AND A RELEVANT<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
KOINONIA CHRISTIAN<lb/>
CENTER CHURCH<lb/>
408 Hudson Street<lb/>
752-1898<lb/>
COME JOIN US FOR<lb/>
WORSHIP a SUNDAY<lb/>
SCHOOL CONVENIENT TO<lb/>
ECU CAMPUS<lb/>
ST. JAMES UNITED<lb/>
METHODIST CHURCH<lb/>
2000 E 6th Street<lb/>
752-6154<lb/>
Services: Worship-Sunday<lb/>
8:30 a.m 11 a.m Sunday<lb/>
School 9:45 a.m.<lb/>
A LIBERAL RELIGIOUS<lb/>
ORGANIZATION DRAWING ON<lb/>
A VARIETY OF TRADITIONS<lb/>
FOR INSPIRATION<lb/>
UNITARIAN UNIVER-<lb/>
SALIST CONGREGA-<lb/>
TION OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
131 Oakmont Drive<lb/>
355-6658<lb/>
Services: 10:30 a.m. each<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
A CHURCH GROWING IN<lb/>
CHRIST. CARING FOR PEOPLE.<lb/>
PROCLAIMING THE WORD<lb/>
GREENVILLE CHRIS-<lb/>
TIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
1411 S. Evans Street<lb/>
752-2100<lb/>
Services: 10 a.m. Sunday<lb/>
SINGLE VISION-PBCS<lb/>
EXCITING CAMPUS MINISTRY;<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS B SINGLES<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
PEOPLE'S BAPTIST<lb/>
CHURCH<lb/>
1621 Greenville Blvd. SW<lb/>
756-2822<lb/>
Services: Sunday 9:45 a.m<lb/>
10:45 a.m 6:30 pjn<lb/>
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
COME AND JOIN US IN<lb/>
PRAISING THE LORD!<lb/>
SYCAMORE HILL<lb/>
MISSIONARY BAPTIST<lb/>
CHURCH<lb/>
226 W. 8th Street<lb/>
758-2281<lb/>
Services: Every Sunday<lb/>
For information about being included in our Church Directory call 328-6366.<lb/>
DO YOU NEED MONEY?<lb/>
$ G A S H .nd.ho.ri Good J�.<lb/>
FOR USED MENS SHIRTS, SHOES, PANTS, JEANS, ETC<lb/>
TOMMY HILFIGER, NAUTICA, POLO. LEVI, GAP. ETC.<lb/>
We also buy: GOLD k. SILVER � Jewelry 4: Coins � Also Broken Gold Pieces<lb/>
� Stereos, (Systems, and Separates) � TV's, VCR's, CD Players � Home, Portable<lb/>
DOWNTOWN WALKING MALL 414 EVANS ST<lb/>
HRS. THURS-FRI 10:00-12:00,2:00 -5:00 &amp; SAT FROM 10:00-1:00<lb/>
Come into the partdng lot in front of Wachovia downtown, drive to back door &amp; ring buzzer<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/>
"jflp<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00058734_0014"/><lb/>
14 Thursday, October 16, 1SS7<lb/>
JLCtkjO<lb/>
V.t East Carolinian<lb/>
Other<lb/>
QOVT FORECLOSED HOMES<lb/>
FROM pennies on SI. Delinquent tax,<lb/>
Repo's. REO's. Your Area. ToM Free<lb/>
1,800-218-9000 Ext H-3726 for current<lb/>
listings.<lb/>
LADIES, ATTRACT THE RIGHT<lb/>
man! Get dates, attention, love. Sensa-<lb/>
tional techniques, call for FREE Wom-<lb/>
en's Health and Fitness Series Catalog,<lb/>
ECI Libraries 454-0039 ext 1.<lb/>
STOOO'S POSSIBLE TYPING PART-<lb/>
time. At Home. Toll Free (1)800-218-<lb/>
9000 Ext T-3726 for Listings.<lb/>
SEIZED CARS FROM $175. Pomh-<lb/>
es, Cadillacs, (Rievys, BMW's, Cor-<lb/>
vettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your Area.<lb/>
Toll Free (1)800-218-9000 Ext A-3726<lb/>
for current listings.<lb/>
WOMEN, WANT THE PERFECT rela<lb/>
tionahip, healthdiet? Our Women's<lb/>
Health and Fitness Series shows ycu<lb/>
how! Call for our FREE report ECI<lb/>
Books, 454-0039, ext 1.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
DOES YOUR ORGANIZATION<lb/>
LACK fun and energy? Student Lead-<lb/>
ership Development Programs hat the<lb/>
games for youl! Thursday, October 18-<lb/>
4p.m. at 109 Mendenhat! - Steve Bob-<lb/>
bit Adventure Program Director, will<lb/>
organize games that can re-energize<lb/>
and motivate your members. Call 328-<lb/>
4796 to register.<lb/>
ADVANCED CLIMBING SESSION<lb/>
II: Come join us every Wednesday<lb/>
starting Oct. 15 through Nov. 19, Reg-<lb/>
istration has already passed. Deot. of<lb/>
Rec Services 328-6387<lb/>
A HAUNTED FOREST. The Recrea-<lb/>
tion and Leisure Studies Department<lb/>
at East Carolina University in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with Plggly Wiggly is sponsoring<lb/>
"A Haunted Forest on October 28. 29<lb/>
and 30th from 6 to 10 p.m. The event Is<lb/>
to be held rain or shine at the Frlsbee<lb/>
Golf Course on East Carolina's cam-<lb/>
pus. Admission is $2.00 for adults and<lb/>
$1.00 for children under 10. Special<lb/>
Guests for this event will include the<lb/>
Governor's Program and Power of<lb/>
One.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
SCHOOL of Medicine Readers Thea-<lb/>
ter Company presents "Laundry" end<lb/>
"Ambulance" two stories about prac-<lb/>
ticing medicine by Susan Onthank<lb/>
Mates, M.D author of The Good Doc-<lb/>
tor. A discussion will follow the perfor-<lb/>
mances. Brody Medical Sciences<lb/>
Building, Room 2s-12, 12:30 p.m<lb/>
Monday. October 20, 1997. Free and<lb/>
Open to the Public. For further infor-<lb/>
mation contact Department of Medical<lb/>
Humanities, 816-2797.<lb/>
THURSDAY. OCT. 18, SENIOR Red-<lb/>
tal, Chris Whitehurst, percussion, A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hail. 9:00 p.m. Satur-<lb/>
day, Oct 18 - Clarinet Quartet, Nathan<lb/>
Williams, Director. A.J. Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall. 7:00 p.m. Sunday, Octo. 19 - East<lb/>
Carolina Symphony Orchestra, Doug-<lb/>
las Morrison, Conductor, Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium, 3.00 p.m. Sun. Oct. 19 - Facul-<lb/>
ty Rectal, "The Music of T.J. Ander-<lb/>
son Mark Taggart, saxophone, Lou-<lb/>
ise Toppin, soprano, John B. O'Brien,<lb/>
piano with guest artists William<lb/>
Brown, tenor and James Dargan, vio-<lb/>
lin, A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall, 8:06 p.m.<lb/>
Monday, Oct 20 - Faculty rectal, Mark<lb/>
Ford, percussion. A.J. Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hail, 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
BACKPACKING-CRANBERRY Wit-<lb/>
DERNESS, WV: Backpacking at Cran-<lb/>
berry Wilderness, WV starts Oct. 17-<lb/>
19. Registration has already passed.<lb/>
Dept. of Rec Services 328-6387<lb/>
FREE WEIGHT TRAINING: TAKE ad-<lb/>
vantage of the free training Oct 18 at<lb/>
10:30 a.m12:30 p.m. The session will<lb/>
be held at the Student Recreation Cen-<lb/>
ters Fitness Area. Dept of Rec Servic-<lb/>
es 328-6387<lb/>
THE SOCIETY FOR ADVANCE-<lb/>
MENT of Management (SAM) will<lb/>
hold its 3rd Annual Yard Sale Satur-<lb/>
day, October 18. Rain or shine, it will<lb/>
take place next to Parker's BBQ on<lb/>
Memorial Drive. Contact 756-2816 to<lb/>
offer any donations to this fundraiser.<lb/>
PSI CHI OFFICERS WILL meetWed-<lb/>
nesday, October 22, at 5:00 p.m. in the<lb/>
Pel Chi library. '<lb/>
LAST CHANCE: IRONMAN REGIS-<lb/>
TRATION extended! The fitness chal-<lb/>
lenge requires completion of 26 mites<lb/>
on the track, 2 miles In the pool, and<lb/>
116 miles on the tectrix bike. Competi-<lb/>
tors are eligible for prizes In addition<lb/>
to the distinction of conquering the<lb/>
multi-skill event Last date for register-<lb/>
ing is now thru Friday, October 17. Fur-<lb/>
ther information is available at the<lb/>
SRC Main Office 328-6387.<lb/>
CLIMBING-LINVULE GORGE: THE<lb/>
climbing expedition of Unville Gorge<lb/>
begins Oct. 17-19. Registration has al-<lb/>
ready paseed. Dept of Rec Services<lb/>
328-6387<lb/>
E.C.U. LAW SOCIETY WILL hold its<lb/>
next meeting on Thursday, October<lb/>
16th In Rawi Room 130. Join us as we<lb/>
discuss what It takes to get into law<lb/>
school, and what being a lawyer is all<lb/>
about! Open to all majors!<lb/>
LIFEGUARD TRAINING: TRAIN TO<lb/>
be a lifeguard Oct. 20 through Nov. 12<lb/>
at the Student Recreational Center's<lb/>
pool. It will be held at 6:30 -9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Dept of Rec Services 328-6387<lb/>
LADIES, GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
presents Plck-A-Pirate at the Attic<lb/>
Tuesday, October 21, 1997 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Doors open at 7.00 p.m. with all pro-<lb/>
ceeds benefiting TEDI BEAR: Child Ad-<lb/>
vocacy Center. Bring your wallet. Buy<lb/>
a Date<lb/>
YOGA CLASSES: YOGA CLASSES<lb/>
will be offered by Recreational Servic-<lb/>
es at East Carolina University. The<lb/>
classes wilt meet Oct. 13-Nov. 5 Mon-<lb/>
day and Wednesday nighrs from 5:15<lb/>
p.m6:30 p.m. These das&amp;es, instruct-<lb/>
ed by Debi Neswander, ar open to the<lb/>
general public. Cost of the classes is<lb/>
$15 for SRC members and $25 for non-<lb/>
members. For more Information<lb/>
please call 328-6387.<lb/>
-I'VE GOT THE TIME. Do you? The<lb/>
Key is Time Management! Learn to fit<lb/>
ait of your activities into one week.<lb/>
Stephen Gray, Assoc. Director Uni-<lb/>
versity Unions will present this pro-<lb/>
gram Monday, October 20 at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
in MSC Multi-Purpose Room. Call<lb/>
Student Leadership Development Pro-<lb/>
grams at 328-4796 for details.<lb/>
SWIM STROKE CLINIC: THIS is a<lb/>
class for intermediate swimmers who<lb/>
want to improve stroke efficiency and<lb/>
speed, turn technique and develop an<lb/>
effective training program. Classes<lb/>
meet Tues. and Thure. from 6:30p.m<lb/>
7:30 p.m. October 14-23. Register at<lb/>
ECU Recreational Services. Call 328-<lb/>
6387 for more information.<lb/>
COMMUNITY CHRISTIAN<lb/>
CHURCH WILL be sponsoring a<lb/>
Men's Conference on Friday, October<lb/>
17 at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday, October<lb/>
18 beginning at 8:30 a.m. Ait men 13<lb/>
and older) are invited to attend. Break-<lb/>
fast and lunch will be served. There is<lb/>
not an admission or registration fee.<lb/>
The Conference will be held at Com-<lb/>
munity Christian Academy located at<lb/>
2009 Highway 33, Greenville, NC on<lb/>
Old Pactoius Road. Pastor James D.<lb/>
Corbett will be ministering along with<lb/>
special guest Van Crouch. For more in-<lb/>
formation please call the church at<lb/>
752-5683.<lb/>
NO HOLDS BARRED1: BE prepared<lb/>
to be pushed to new levels. This class<lb/>
combines elements of Intensive aerob-<lb/>
ics and resistance training. Join us<lb/>
Oct 20 through Nov. 16 every Mon. &amp;<lb/>
Thu. at 6:30-9:30 p.m. in the Student<lb/>
Recreational Center's Studio 238. Dept.<lb/>
of Rec Services 328-6387<lb/>
COME JOIN US AT The Wesley<lb/>
Foundation for fellowship missions,<lb/>
worship and fun. For the rest of the<lb/>
semester we wilt be holding a Sunday<lb/>
night worship service at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the chapel at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center (on 5th Street) across from Gar-<lb/>
ret Han. We also hold a Wednesday<lb/>
night meeting from 6p.m7p.m. to'<lb/>
plan activities throughout the semes-<lb/>
ter on October 22 and November 19.<lb/>
We will be having dinner at these<lb/>
meetings for free!<lb/>
STRESSED? WE CAN HELP! "Hu-<lb/>
mor &amp; Stress Management: Tickling<lb/>
Stress Before It Tackles You Wednes-<lb/>
day, October 22. 2p.m6p.m. In MSC.<lb/>
Presented by Margie Ingram of the Hu-<lb/>
mor Project. Seating' limited. Buy<lb/>
tickets st MSC Centra! Ticket Office.<lb/>
Sponsored by Student Leadership De-<lb/>
velopment Programs &amp; Division of<lb/>
Student Life. 328-4796<lb/>
WEIGHT-TRAINING CLINIC: LEARN<lb/>
how to build those muscles properly<lb/>
by joirjing us Thursday, Oct 16. The<lb/>
Clinic will be held at 6:30-7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the Fitness Area. Dept. of Rec Services<lb/>
328-6387<lb/>
AEROBICS SESSION II: COME join<lb/>
us for our aerobics session beginning<lb/>
Oct 13. This program is $20 and can<lb/>
be purchased in the Student Recrea-<lb/>
tional Center office from 9tf0 a.m6:00<lb/>
p.m. Bring Student ID. The sessions<lb/>
will be in Rooms 238, 239, 240 in the<lb/>
Student Recreational Center. Dept. of<lb/>
Rec Services 3286387<lb/>
ADULT BEGINNER TENNIS LESS-<lb/>
ONS: learn forehand, backhand, serve<lb/>
and game rules In this beginner tennis<lb/>
classes offered by Recreational Servic-<lb/>
es. This program is open to SRC mem-<lb/>
bers and the general public for a fee of<lb/>
$20 and $35 respectively. Lessons are<lb/>
held Tuesday and Thursday nights<lb/>
from 8:00 p.m9:30 p.m. from October<lb/>
14th to October 30th. Register at the<lb/>
Student Recreation Center between<lb/>
9:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Call 328-6387<lb/>
for more information.<lb/>
ECU FMAINVESTMENT CLUB<lb/>
MEETING on Wednesday, October<lb/>
22nd at 4p.m. in GCB1007 featuring an<lb/>
in-depth discussion of Licensing and<lb/>
Designation. This meeting is proudly<lb/>
sponsored by Professor O'Cool's.<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS. POLISH<lb/>
UP your skills in developing a profes-<lb/>
sional resume to use in your Job<lb/>
search. Learn th  latest techniques in<lb/>
making it technology friendly. Gradu-<lb/>
ating students will need resumes for<lb/>
career days, interviews on campus,<lb/>
mailing and faxing to employers, and<lb/>
putting them on file with Career Serv-<lb/>
ices. Workshops will be held in Career<lb/>
Service, Room 103, 701 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
on Wed. Oct 15 at 4:00 and Tue. Oct<lb/>
21 at 2:00 p.m. Resume Critique ses-<lb/>
sions will be held Wed. Oct 15 at 10:00<lb/>
for those who would like to have their<lb/>
already-prepared resumes reviewed<lb/>
by a staff member.<lb/>
INTERVIEW LIKE A PRO) Find out<lb/>
how to sell yourself in an employment<lb/>
Interview at Career Services on Thur.<lb/>
Oct 16 at 3:00 or Wed. Oct. 22 at 4:00.<lb/>
Learn the "Three Ps" of Interviewing -<lb/>
Preparation, Packaging and Presenta-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
PSI CHI WILL SPONSOR a ORE<lb/>
practice exam on Saturday, October 18<lb/>
from 2 p.m. until 6 p.m. in R130. All<lb/>
majors welcome! There will be a $5<lb/>
fee to participate.<lb/>
CAREER SERVICES ORIENTATION.<lb/>
SENIORS and graduate students<lb/>
graduating in December 1997 or<lb/>
SpringSummer 1998 are invited to<lb/>
register with Career Services for help<lb/>
In your job search! Come to our Orien-<lb/>
tation on one of the following dates:<lb/>
Tue. Oct 21 at 2:00 p.m. or Learn how<lb/>
to use the many services available to<lb/>
you such as interviews on campus, re-<lb/>
sume referral to employers, reference<lb/>
(credentials) file, Internet job search-<lb/>
ing, job listings and much more.<lb/>
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AWARE-<lb/>
NESS MONTH Activities: Interfaith<lb/>
Breakfast - Thursday, October 16, at<lb/>
the Church of God, 7:30-9:00 a.m. This<lb/>
breakfast will involve leaders from<lb/>
many faiths, religious groups, and<lb/>
concerned citizens discussing how to<lb/>
end violence against women and their<lb/>
children. 1 Year Anniversary Sale - Sat-<lb/>
urday, October 25 makes 1 year My<lb/>
Sister's Closet has been operating.<lb/>
There will be a bag sale from 9:00 a.m.<lb/>
to 1:00 p.m. Candlelight vigil &amp; T-Shirt<lb/>
Display - Thursday, October 30 at the<lb/>
Percolator Coffee Shop from 6:00-7:30<lb/>
p.m. On display will be T-shirts with a<lb/>
message concerning the impact that<lb/>
domestic violence.has had on sur-<lb/>
vivors. The vigil is to honor women<lb/>
who have lost their lives at the hands<lb/>
of an intimate partner. To register for<lb/>
these events call New Directions at<lb/>
758-4400.<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
���EARN FREE TRIPS&amp;CASH!���<lb/>
CLASS TRAVEL needs students to<lb/>
promote Spring Break 1998! Sell 15<lb/>
fips and travel free! Highly motivated<lb/>
students can earn a free trip and over<lb/>
$10,000! Choose Cancun, Bahamas.<lb/>
Mazattan, Jamaica or Florida! North<lb/>
America's largest student tour opera-<lb/>
tor! Call Now! 1-800-838-6411.<lb/>
AAAAI SPRING BREAK CANCUN<lb/>
&amp; Jamaica $379! Book Early-Save $50!<lb/>
Get A Group-Go Free! Panama City<lb/>
$129! South Beach (Bars Close 5AM!)<lb/>
$129! 3Dringbreaktravel.com 1-800-<lb/>
678-6386.<lb/>
AAAAI SPRING BREAK BAHA-<lb/>
MAS Party Cruise! 6 Days $279! In-<lb/>
cludes Meals, Free Parties, Taxes! Gist<lb/>
a Group-Go Free! Prices Increase<lb/>
Soon-Save $50! springbreaktrav-<lb/>
el.com 1-800-678-6386.<lb/>
PAID MARKETINGMANAGEMENT<lb/>
INTERNSHIPS.<lb/>
The Colorworks is currently recruiting on<lb/>
campus for a limited number of summer<lb/>
'98 management positions. Cain Hands-on<lb/>
experience and build your resume. Last<lb/>
"summers average earnings 7,223.<lb/>
Minimum CPA 2.0. For more information<lb/>
and to schedule an inierview<lb/>
Call 1-600-477-1001.<lb/>
Uphold<lb/>
your 1 st<lb/>
amendment<lb/>
right:<lb/>
Freedom of<lb/>
the press!<lb/>
Apply for a job<lb/>
at<lb/>
eastcarolinian<lb/>
today!<lb/>
It's easy to advertise in<lb/>
 the I � �<lb/>
eastcarolinian<lb/>
classifieds!<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Fill in the blanks and<lb/>
select a category.<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
Date<lb/>
Student ID <lb/>
Category (check one)<lb/>
? For Rent For Sale<lb/>
D Services Personals<lb/>
? Greek PersonalsOther<lb/>
? Help Wanted<lb/>
D Lost &amp; Found<lb/>
Write your ad on the<lb/>
lines.<lb/>
10<lb/>
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Circle the date(s) you<lb/>
want the ad to run<lb/>
819<lb/>
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Bring this form and<lb/>
your payment before<lb/>
the deadline to The<lb/>
East Carolinian office<lb/>
RATES DEADLINES<lb/>
25 wtrjs or fewer 4 p.m.FRIDAY for next<lb/>
Students$2 Tuesdays edrtfon<lb/>
Non-students$3 4 p.m. MONDAY for next<lb/>
Each word over 25, add5$ Thursday's edition<lb/>
For bold, add$1 2 p:m. MONDAY for ail Summer<lb/>
For ALL CAPS, add�$1 issues<lb/>
Ail ads must be pre-pad. All Greek organizations must be spelled out - no abbreviations. The East<lb/>
Carolinian reserves the right to reject any ad tor libel, obscenity andor bad taste.<lb/>
Support student-mil media<lb/>
eastcarolinian<lb/>
To receive TEC,<lb/>
check the subscription desired<lb/>
complete your name, address,<lb/>
and send in a check or money<lb/>
Older to: circulation dept<lb/>
Q First class mail$40 IEC; � . �, .<lb/>
Student Pubs Bldg<lb/>
Li Second elate mail$110.00 �CU<lb/>
suMcniKion. iMgin vnth m. fM pap� mm nd tun Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
T<lb/>
m<lb/>
� i"<lb/>
���j'<lb/>
.
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