<?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="00058740_0001"/>
THURDAY<lb/>
NOVEMBER 6.1997<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Officer cleared after<lb/>
incident at stadium<lb/>
1. Officer presence<lb/>
2. Verbal commands-<lb/>
communication<lb/>
OC (pepper) spray<lb/>
Physical contact<lb/>
Expandable baton<lb/>
Deadly force<lb/>
Arrested fan goes to<lb/>
court Nov. 17<lb/>
Jacqueline D. Kellum<lb/>
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
Officer William C. Peebles of the ECU<lb/>
Police Department, who was the subject of<lb/>
an internal investigation following an arrest<lb/>
he made at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium, has<lb/>
been cleared of any wrongdoing.<lb/>
"There has been an investigation and it<lb/>
has been the<lb/>
University's<lb/>
determination that the<lb/>
officer acted in<lb/>
accordance with the<lb/>
Department of Safety's<lb/>
use of force policy<lb/>
said Benjamin G Irons<lb/>
III, university attorney<lb/>
and spokesman for the<lb/>
university on the<lb/>
investigation.<lb/>
Allen Thomas Sr<lb/>
attorney for the<lb/>
arrested fan, disagrees<lb/>
with the university's<lb/>
findings on Officer<lb/>
Peebles.<lb/>
"I am at a loss about how they arrived at<lb/>
that decision because they interviewed<lb/>
many of the same witnesses I did Thomas<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The incident in question occurred on<lb/>
Oct. 11 during the ECUSouthern<lb/>
Mississippi game.<lb/>
ECU alumnus and president-elect of the<lb/>
Wilson County Pirate Club Michael Radford<lb/>
was watching the game with a child later<lb/>
identified as his son.<lb/>
Radford's son was waving a Pirate flag<lb/>
Stadium rules do not allow flags during<lb/>
games as they obstruct the view for other<lb/>
fans and are potentially dangerous.<lb/>
"Officer Peebles approached Mr. Radford<lb/>
and asked him to allow him (Peebles) to<lb/>
take and keep the flag during the game and<lb/>
he Radford) refused Irons said.<lb/>
When Radford refused to cooperate,<lb/>
Peebles used Oleorcsin Capsicum (OC)<lb/>
spray, commonly known as pepper spray.<lb/>
Peebles then escorted Radford out of the<lb/>
stadium. ?<lb/>
"As they were apparently exiting the<lb/>
stadium, Mr. Radford unfortunately slipped<lb/>
and fell Irons said.<lb/>
Radford was removed from the stadium<lb/>
Source: ECU Police<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION<lb/>
the east Carolinian<lb/>
ONLINE<lb/>
www.studentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
in an ambulance and treated at Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
"Mr. Radford was treated and released,<lb/>
and to my knowledge there were no serious<lb/>
injuries Irons said.<lb/>
Several of the witnesses to whom<lb/>
Thomas referred expressed their opinion<lb/>
that the officer's methods were excessive.<lb/>
One fan wrote a letter to<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin in<lb/>
support of Radford.<lb/>
However, Irons points<lb/>
out that Peebles was<lb/>
enforcing stadium policy<lb/>
and that his initial<lb/>
request to Radford was<lb/>
refused.<lb/>
"The officer was faced<lb/>
with the choice of<lb/>
ignoring the rules or<lb/>
enforcing the rules<lb/>
Irons said.<lb/>
The Police Department's<lb/>
use of force policy reads<lb/>
in part: "Police officers will use only the<lb/>
amount of force necessary and reasonable<lb/>
under the circumstances to control a<lb/>
situation, effect an arrest, or defend<lb/>
themselves or others from harm. Every<lb/>
officer is charged with the responsibility of<lb/>
weighing all other reasonable means of<lb/>
apprehension and control before resorting<lb/>
to the use of force<lb/>
Thomas commented that he has not read<lb/>
the University Police Iepartmertt's use of<lb/>
force policy, but questions whether Peebles'<lb/>
actions truly fall within the accepted limits.<lb/>
"I would be shocked if that were the<lb/>
policy. If that is the policy, it needs to be<lb/>
changed Thomas said.<lb/>
The case against Radford, in which<lb/>
he is charged with second degree<lb/>
trespassing, resisting arrest and obstruction<lb/>
and delav, will go to court in Greenville on<lb/>
Nov. 17.<lb/>
Thomas says that he and Radford will be<lb/>
prepared for the trial, in which the judge<lb/>
will act as jury.<lb/>
"We're confident that Mr. Radford has<lb/>
done nothing wrong Thomas said.<lb/>
Although Thomas believes the charges<lb/>
against his client are unjustified, no<lb/>
SEE OFFICER. PAGE 2<lb/>
One Card replaces multi-card format<lb/>
Students like these eating lunch in Mendenhail Dining Hall will soon have to switch to the One Card.<lb/>
PHOTO BY AMANDA PROCTOR<lb/>
Dining card, activity card,<lb/>
library card, ID combine<lb/>
ANGELA KOENK,<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The wallets of ECU staff and students are<lb/>
going to be a little lighter next semester.<lb/>
The ECU 1 Card will officially replace<lb/>
the multi-card system currently used on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The card will be a combination library,<lb/>
dining, and activity card and will include a<lb/>
debit account. (<lb/>
According to Jennifer Sutton, director of<lb/>
ECU One Card Systems, the university<lb/>
decided to switch to this system to make<lb/>
things easier for people while on campus.<lb/>
"It's more convenient to just put money<lb/>
on account rather than having to carry cash<lb/>
around Sutton said.<lb/>
The debit account, called the Golden<lb/>
Key Account, can be set up allowing<lb/>
SEE ONE CARD PAGE 2<lb/>
Sonic plaza plans<lb/>
underway<lb/>
Students get to aid in<lb/>
project that will bring<lb/>
blast of technology<lb/>
AMBER TATUM<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Construction on Joyner Library goes to<lb/>
a higher plane as plans for the sonic<lb/>
plaza are set underway.<lb/>
"This will make for a public space<lb/>
that is lively and interesting and ever-<lb/>
changing. There won't be another<lb/>
place like it anywhere in the world<lb/>
said Christopher Janney, the project<lb/>
artist from PhenomenArts, Inc.<lb/>
Also working on this project along<lb/>
with Janney are art students like Drew<lb/>
Saraizl.<lb/>
"It helps make it more personalized<lb/>
than having someone come in who has<lb/>
no real attachments to the school<lb/>
said Saraizl, a senior graduate student<lb/>
in the School of Art.<lb/>
The sonic plaza will consist of four<lb/>
elements that are the primary artwork<lb/>
for the the library expansion. These<lb/>
include the Ground Cloud, the Sonic<lb/>
Gates, the Percussive Wall and the<lb/>
Media Glockenspiel.<lb/>
According to a release sent out by<lb/>
the news bureau, the Ground Cloud is<lb/>
a 12-foot circle of water mist over a<lb/>
grate. It will be designed to "dance<lb/>
according to the whim of the wind, at<lb/>
times static, at times furious<lb/>
At the north side of the plaza will<lb/>
be the Sonic Gates, actually the<lb/>
columns that have been a part of the<lb/>
library since the original structure was<lb/>
built. They will be outfitted with<lb/>
photo-electric cells that will chime<lb/>
whenever movement is sensed.<lb/>
As Janney said, "The tones will be<lb/>
scored to be in consonant harmony,<lb/>
but change in pitch and timbre<lb/>
throughout the day. The more people,<lb/>
the more active the sound. You'll<lb/>
never hear the same sound twice<lb/>
The 15-foot x 40-foot Percussive<lb/>
Wall has 64 water jets that are arranged<lb/>
to play a series of ever-changing<lb/>
patterns of water mist. A sound score<lb/>
will also coincide with this feature.<lb/>
"When no one is there, the fountain<lb/>
will be quiet, asleep. As people pass by.<lb/>
it will wake up and start to dance<lb/>
Janney said.<lb/>
Last, but certainly not least, is the<lb/>
Media Glockenspiel. This is the big<lb/>
clock tower that has recently been<lb/>
completed.<lb/>
Within the face of the clock tower is<lb/>
a circular ring of a dozen, 20-inch video<lb/>
monitors centered around a set of<lb/>
three-foot doors from which various<lb/>
elements will emerge four times a day<lb/>
at twelve feet above the ground.<lb/>
"There is a whistle, a rooster, a<lb/>
moon and a joker Saraizl said. "The<lb/>
exact times are sunrise, noon, sunset<lb/>
and midnight<lb/>
This she, part of the Joyner Library expansion, will soon resonate with soothing sounds.<lb/>
PHOTO BY AMANDA PROCTOR<lb/>
The rooster is<lb/>
supposedly going to come<lb/>
out of the clock tower at<lb/>
sunset and act like a big<lb/>
"cuckoo clock<lb/>
"Actually, the concept<lb/>
was developed about seven<lb/>
years ago before funding<lb/>
Saraizl said.<lb/>
The design won an<lb/>
award for design in 1991.<lb/>
Funds from this project<lb/>
come from half of one<lb/>
percent of the total $30<lb/>
million of the library<lb/>
expansion money.<lb/>
Student workers in this<lb/>
plan receive credits for<lb/>
their time.<lb/>
"It will help me down<lb/>
the road and with<lb/>
references and my resume<lb/>
Saraizl said.<lb/>
ChristopherJanney,<lb/>
WorldClassArchitect<lb/>
? Spanish enous in teps<lb/>
? Ml : 'InterriMtioial Airport<lb/>
tn.ipa ;? i to he Mviys in es thi 1998n and P,ir ipletion q1 ti ? nc<lb/>
Med school dean<lb/>
Hallock named to<lb/>
liaison committee<lb/>
Prestigious group reviews<lb/>
medical schools<lb/>
Amanda Briggs<lb/>
S'MFF WRITF.R<lb/>
Dr. James A. Hallock, ECU vice chancellor for health and<lb/>
sciences and dean of the School of Medicine, has been<lb/>
appointed to a Liaison Committee on Medical Education<lb/>
(LCME).<lb/>
The LCME is a group that represents the Association<lb/>
of .American Medical Colleges (AAMC) and American<lb/>
Medical Association.<lb/>
SEE DEAN. PAGE 2<lb/>
Pitt County<lb/>
lection Results<lb/>
rfc3<lb/>
: Friday S96<lb/>
ve McUrwhorn 420<lb/>
WrfeHm 2<lb/>
tct4<lb/>
Browa 249<lb/>
? Forties 883<lb/>
Ramey 669<lb/>
l-rict 5<lb/>
Mary Aisentzer 848<lb/>
ArieHe Morris 6.SS<lb/>
Mayor<lb/>
Nancy Jenkins 4,980<lb/>
Write-ins 9<lb/>
At Large<lb/>
Chuck Autry 3,222<lb/>
Jack Waif 2,tG2<lb/>
District 1<lb/>
Mildred Council 509<lb/>
"Mite Ruff 54<lb/>
District 2<lb/>
RurTus Huggins 475<lb/>
Write-ins 8<lb/>
Total msaadber of people who Voted 5,609<lb/>
Total siM' of people registered to vote<lb/>
33MM2<lb/>
Saws Wt Cavity Board of d?tiur.?<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
sunny<lb/>
High 64<lb/>
Low 49<lb/>
TOMORROW<lb/>
rainy<lb/>
High 60<lb/>
Low 49<lb/>
m M<lb/>
Did you know that<lb/>
early registration<lb/>
begins Monday<lb/>
November 10th.<lb/>
opinion5<lb/>
Too Much for food?<lb/>
lifestyle.<lb/>
Percolator serving up the<lb/>
caffeine fix<lb/>
sports.<lb/>
10<lb/>
Fall tennis wraps up<lb/>
the east Carolinian<lb/>
STUDENT PUBLICATION BLDG.<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC 27858<lb/>
across from Joyner library<lb/>
phone<lb/>
328-6366 newsroom<lb/>
328-2000 advertising<lb/>
328-6558 fax<lb/>
on line<lb/>
www.siudentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
 ? . m<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0002"/><lb/>
2 Thursday, November 6, 1997<lb/>
W"<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
 I w- &amp;??" m 33P<lb/>
jj across<lb/>
he state<lb/>
DOT to add stoplight<lb/>
on dangerous bypass<lb/>
ELIZABETHTOWN (AP)<lb/>
Following complaints about safety<lb/>
on the new N.C. 87 bypass, the<lb/>
state DOT says it will install a<lb/>
traffic signal at one dangerous<lb/>
intersection.<lb/>
Since it opened in September,<lb/>
there have been at least eight<lb/>
accidentsir.v-olving injuries on the<lb/>
bypass.<lb/>
Last week, 13-year-old<lb/>
Stephanie Richardson of Clarkton<lb/>
died of injuries she received in an<lb/>
Oct. 9 accident on the bypass.<lb/>
Along with the traffic light at<lb/>
Airport Road, state officials will<lb/>
also addflags to warning signs<lb/>
along roads intersecting the<lb/>
bypass as well as newpavement<lb/>
markings they say will help<lb/>
drivers negotiate through<lb/>
thecrossings.<lb/>
Elizabethtown Police Chief<lb/>
Michael Royston said the light<lb/>
should help.<lb/>
Billionaire's gift<lb/>
helps community<lb/>
SALISBURY (AP) Billionaire<lb/>
Julian Robertson and his sisters<lb/>
have given the Salisbury<lb/>
community, not the government,<lb/>
a gift of $15 million to improve<lb/>
social problems in their<lb/>
hometown.<lb/>
The gift was announced last<lb/>
month by the 65-year-old<lb/>
financier, who founded the $10<lb/>
billion Tiger Fund, and his sisters,<lb/>
Wyndham Robertson and Blanche<lb/>
Bacon. Robertson is listed on the<lb/>
Forbes annual ranking of richest<lb/>
Americans at No. 148 with a net<lb/>
personal worth of $1 billion.<lb/>
The town's mayor and eight<lb/>
others were named to a board of<lb/>
directors for the Robertson<lb/>
Foundation, which will oversee<lb/>
the gift.<lb/>
across<lb/>
11 h e nation<lb/>
Government awards<lb/>
$19.6 million in<lb/>
AIDS grants<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) Federal<lb/>
grants totaling $19.6 million have<lb/>
been issued to provide support to<lb/>
low-income people in Minnesota<lb/>
and 19 other states who are<lb/>
infected with the AIDS virus.<lb/>
Housing Secretary Andrew<lb/>
Cuomo said Monday the grants<lb/>
will help 11,000 people who have<lb/>
tested positive for HIY including<lb/>
those with full-blown AIDS,<lb/>
remain in their homes or be<lb/>
provided with housing if they are<lb/>
homeless.<lb/>
The grants, which were<lb/>
awarded to community<lb/>
organizations on a competitive<lb/>
basis, represent 10 percent of a<lb/>
$196 million program. The larger<lb/>
share of the money earlier was<lb/>
awarded to states and cities<lb/>
according to a formula based on<lb/>
the number of AIDS cases<lb/>
reported.<lb/>
The $19.6 million in grant aid<lb/>
is being made available to<lb/>
communities in Alabama, Alaska,<lb/>
Arizona, California, Connecticut,<lb/>
Hawaii, Florida, Kentucky, Maine,<lb/>
Maryland, Massachusetts,<lb/>
Minnesota, New Jersey, New<lb/>
York, New Mexico, North<lb/>
Carolina, Rhode Island, Texas,<lb/>
Washington and Wyoming.<lb/>
DEA watches for<lb/>
intoxicating drug<lb/>
MILWAUKEE (AP) The U.S.<lb/>
Drug Enforcement<lb/>
Administration has initiated at<lb/>
least four investigations in<lb/>
Wisconsin to determine if an<lb/>
intoxicant known as the "club<lb/>
drug" was used on rape victims.<lb/>
GHB (gamma<lb/>
hydroxvbutyrate) is a colorless<lb/>
drug which, if used to spike<lb/>
someone's drink, can leave the<lb/>
person unconscious and<lb/>
vulnerable to crimes like rape or<lb/>
robbery.<lb/>
John Riley, a Milwaukee DEA<lb/>
agent, said two investigations are<lb/>
underway in southern Wisconsin<lb/>
and two are underway upstate.<lb/>
He declined to provide details<lb/>
about assaults that may be under<lb/>
investigation.<lb/>
The drug was once used to<lb/>
treat narcolepsy. Health stores<lb/>
sold it as a sleeping aid.<lb/>
About six years ago, the<lb/>
government forbade<lb/>
nonprescription sales.<lb/>
No manufacturing of GHB is<lb/>
known in Wisconsin, but gallons<lb/>
of GHB have been confiscated in<lb/>
Chicago. Rilcy said.<lb/>
One Card<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
students to deposit money, and<lb/>
then use the funds when<lb/>
purchasing athletic and event<lb/>
tickets, paying library fines and<lb/>
making other transactions on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Small monetary increments<lb/>
can also be added to use copiers<lb/>
and vending machines. These<lb/>
deposits can be made in the One<lb/>
Card office which is located in<lb/>
Dowdy Student Stores.<lb/>
Within approximately the next<lb/>
year, the cards will also be used in<lb/>
place of outer door keys to<lb/>
residence halls, according to<lb/>
Sutton. Freshmen and transfer<lb/>
students obtained their cards<lb/>
during orientation sessions last<lb/>
summer, but have only used them<lb/>
as meal cards when dining on<lb/>
campus and to set up accounts<lb/>
with financial aid money that can<lb/>
be used in the student store.<lb/>
These students were also given<lb/>
the currently used ID cards which<lb/>
were used as activity cards.<lb/>
Under the one-card system,<lb/>
this will ail be done electronically.<lb/>
"Basically it (the computer<lb/>
system) gives you an activity and<lb/>
as you use that activity it blocks<lb/>
that space Sutton said.<lb/>
Students and faculty who have<lb/>
not had cards made will be<lb/>
required to have them made<lb/>
between Nov. 8-21 in the student<lb/>
store.<lb/>
Nov. 13 and Nov. 19 are<lb/>
designated faculty and staff days.<lb/>
Student cards will not be made on<lb/>
these days, but faculty can have<lb/>
their cards made on any day.<lb/>
Anyone who cannot have their<lb/>
card made during these dates will<lb/>
have to have it done in the One<lb/>
Card office before the end of the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
There is no cost for the first<lb/>
card but replacement cards will<lb/>
cost $15. Students need to bring<lb/>
their current identification card or<lb/>
driver's license and social security<lb/>
card when getting their<lb/>
replacement done.<lb/>
The cards will not be given<lb/>
during the re-carding event and<lb/>
according to Sutton it has not<lb/>
been decided yet when they will<lb/>
be distributed.<lb/>
Dean<lb/>
continued from page<lb/>
"This is a great honor for me<lb/>
personally and for the university.<lb/>
It is a great responsibility to serve<lb/>
on the board of the LCME since<lb/>
the organization is charged with<lb/>
accrediting all medical schools in<lb/>
America Hallock said.<lb/>
Dr. Jordan Cohen, president of<lb/>
the Association of American<lb/>
Medical Colleges appointed<lb/>
Hallock on this 17-member board<lb/>
for a three year term. Hallock was<lb/>
chosen from the deans of 125 U.S.<lb/>
and 16 Canadian medical schools.<lb/>
"This is a tremendous<lb/>
achievement; this has positive<lb/>
effect on Dean Hallock and for<lb/>
the university. Dean Hallock was<lb/>
chosen above deans from 141<lb/>
medical schools said Jeannine<lb/>
M. Hutson, with Medical Center<lb/>
News and Information.<lb/>
The LCME surveys medical<lb/>
schools and accredits these<lb/>
schools for M.D. programs. This<lb/>
is a select 17-member board<lb/>
consisting of public members,<lb/>
administrators, medical educators,<lb/>
practicing physicians and medical<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The LCME conducts site<lb/>
visits to 20 to 30 institutions<lb/>
annually. The LCME also reviews<lb/>
written reports and survey data<lb/>
from the nation's medical schools<lb/>
and their parent universities.<lb/>
Appointment to the Liaison<lb/>
Committee is gaining extensive<lb/>
recognition for Dean Hallock and<lb/>
the School of Medicine.<lb/>
Officer<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
countersuits against ECU have<lb/>
been filed.<lb/>
"He cares very deeply for<lb/>
ECU. He is not looking to get<lb/>
anything from ECU Thomas<lb/>
said.<lb/>
However, the investigation of<lb/>
Peebles' actions has been<lb/>
concluded, and the university<lb/>
considers the matter closed.<lb/>
"There was no action taken<lb/>
against Officer Peebles. He<lb/>
remains an officer in good<lb/>
standing Irons said.<lb/>
The parking lot located<lb/>
east of the Hawl Building<lb/>
and west of the Austin<lb/>
Building will be closed<lb/>
beginning Monday,<lb/>
Nov. 10, 1997.<lb/>
UNDERWATER<lb/>
Jamaican Restaurant &amp; Bar<lb/>
511 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
(919) 754-2207<lb/>
Lunch Special<lb/>
Beef, Chicken, or Veggie<lb/>
Patty with tossed salad<lb/>
and Free Tea.<lb/>
$3.50 plus tax.<lb/>
Dinner Special<lb/>
Any Chicken<lb/>
entree' and free<lb/>
tea.<lb/>
-???<lb/>
l &amp;<lb/>
Uk<lb/>
? Doors Open: 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
 Stage Time: 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
11.25 plus tax<lb/>
expires 11897<lb/>
'A Touch Of Class'<lb/>
756-6278<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/>
7<lb/>
le Dincm "2.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
10 OR MORE GIRL y<lb/>
DANCERSEVERV jjg<lb/>
Located 5 Milet W?st of Cre?oviU? on 264 AlL (Behind Aladdin Limo Service)<lb/>
<lb/>
BmiffiH<lb/>
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6<lb/>
Be sure to redeem your orange Thirsty Thursday coupon at<lb/>
The Spot for a free 16 oz. drink when you make a purchase.<lb/>
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7<lb/>
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8<lb/>
For more information, call the Student<lb/>
Union Hotline at 328-6004. All films start<lb/>
at 8:00 pm unless otherwise noted and<lb/>
are FREE to students, faculty, and staff<lb/>
(one guest allowed) with valid ECU ID.<lb/>
No backpacks allowed in the theatre.<lb/>
"A WILDLY <lb/>
ORIGINAL,<lb/>
FIERCELY<lb/>
FUNNY TREAT<lb/>
 jgnn vdii<lb/>
 "THEBEST<lb/>
 MOVIE OF THE<lb/>
SUMMER SO<lb/>
FAR,BYFAR<lb/>
MR. JONES<lb/>
MR. SMITH<lb/>
MEN IN BLACK<lb/>
COLUMBIA<lb/>
PICTURES .<lb/>
Important<lb/>
Information<lb/>
ALL <lb/>
ECU Students,<lb/>
Staff, and Faculty!<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
AS?<lb/>
CA<lb/>
oiA<lb/>
3TSV<lb/>
VESI"<lb/>
&amp;?&amp;&amp;?-<lb/>
GusWtson<lb/>
D00RPRI2E<lb/>
EACH DAY!<lb/>
Get your name in early<lb/>
f for a chance to win<lb/>
each day! <lb/>
Visit the ECU I Card web page,<lb/>
linked from "Business Services'<lb/>
on the ECU home page:<lb/>
www.ecu.edu<lb/>
MANDATORY<lb/>
REGARDING EVENT FOR ALL<lb/>
STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF<lb/>
TO NAVE NEW PHOTO I.D.<lb/>
CARDS MADE<lb/>
Students, staff and faculty who have already been through<lb/>
the ECU One Card recording process need not participate.<lb/>
The ECU One Card will be required as of January I,<lb/>
1998 for all Campus Libraries, Recreation Center access,<lb/>
Campus Dining, Student Activities, Financial Aid Defer-<lb/>
ment accounts, and everything you needed an ECU I.D.<lb/>
card for in the past!<lb/>
To produce your new identification<lb/>
Current ECU ID card OR Driver's<lb/>
November 8- 21, 1997<lb/>
Location: One Card Office<lb/>
ECU Student Stores, Wright Building<lb/>
Monday -Thursday<lb/>
9:00 am - 12 noon &amp; 1:00 pm - 7:00 pm<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
9.00 am - I 2 noon &amp; 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm<lb/>
Saturday, November 8, 1997 ONLY<lb/>
10.00 am -3:00 pm<lb/>
NOTE: Thursday, Nov. 13 &amp;<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 19<lb/>
STAFFFACULTY ONLY<lb/>
9:00 am - 12 noon &amp; I 00 pm - 7:00 pm<lb/>
Stafffaculty also welcome any other<lb/>
date &amp; time listed above.<lb/>
card you must bring with you:<lb/>
license and social security card<lb/>
Questions should be directed to the ECU One Card System Office,328-20IS,located inside Dowdy Student Stores,Wright Building.<lb/>
mmm?.<lb/>
jy r<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0003"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
w<lb/>
Thursday. November 6. 1997 3<lb/>
UL<lb/>
Presbyterian<lb/>
Campus Ministry<lb/>
Looking for a place for fellowship,<lb/>
friendship, and dinner?<lb/>
Then come join us<lb/>
First Presbyterian Church<lb/>
Every Tuesday 6pm - 8jm<lb/>
Bring S3 to cover cost of dinner<lb/>
Future events planned:<lb/>
Various Speakers<lb/>
Weekend Retreats<lb/>
Mission Trip to Haiti<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
call Nancy al 758-1901<lb/>
Campus dining prices fair as possible<lb/>
Prices competitive<lb/>
compared to<lb/>
restaurants<lb/>
Natasha Phillips<lb/>
s 1 1 1 ?l!l?<lb/>
Many ECU students complain<lb/>
about on-campus food expenses,<lb/>
but not every ECU student is<lb/>
aware of the various steps involved<lb/>
in determining food prices.<lb/>
Fred Bissinger is the resident<lb/>
districr manager of Aramark.<lb/>
ECU's food distributor, and<lb/>
explained how prices arc-<lb/>
determined.<lb/>
"A lot of work noes into setting<lb/>
food prices. We do a market<lb/>
survey, which evaluates and<lb/>
compares local food prices.<lb/>
ftcrward. we compare prices and<lb/>
products of equal or lesser value.<lb/>
Then we submit those prices to<lb/>
the university. They can either<lb/>
approve r deny acceptance<lb/>
Bissinger said.<lb/>
"In order to figure out how-<lb/>
much to charge, wc have to figure-<lb/>
out what the cost of doing<lb/>
business is and place retail prices<lb/>
appropriately. This allows vou to<lb/>
remain competitive said Frank<lb/>
Salamon, director of ECU Dining<lb/>
Services.<lb/>
Salamon said Aramark tries to<lb/>
keep prices low enough to satisfy<lb/>
the customer and make a decent<lb/>
profit.<lb/>
"We get into difficulty when<lb/>
people take us out of market. The<lb/>
food places on-campus are<lb/>
restaurants, not grocers' stores.<lb/>
When people see the wide variety<lb/>
of food we offer. they<lb/>
automatically think of a grocery<lb/>
store. It's not fair and we suffer for<lb/>
that Salamon said.<lb/>
"We know that if the students<lb/>
aren't satisfied, we won't be here-<lb/>
next ear Bissinger said.<lb/>
While prices in ECl 's dining<lb/>
facilities may seem high when<lb/>
compared to grocery stores.<lb/>
bothBissinger and Salamon believe<lb/>
they are competitive when<lb/>
compared to off campus<lb/>
restaurants.<lb/>
"It's difficult to determine if<lb/>
our prices are too high. It's<lb/>
subjective. I think when you<lb/>
compare us to a grocery store.<lb/>
we're high; however, when you<lb/>
compare us to a restaurant, we're<lb/>
low. It's hard to say. We try to<lb/>
offer the most to students and still<lb/>
make a profit Bissinger said.<lb/>
"Places like McDonald's and<lb/>
Wendy's don't have the variety and<lb/>
flexibility of our services. lor<lb/>
example, the average cost of a<lb/>
meal on the 14 meal plan is $3.40.<lb/>
With that plan, you're guaranteed<lb/>
14 meals a week. Most<lb/>
importantly, you can eat all you<lb/>
want Salamon said.<lb/>
The flexibility and reliability of<lb/>
ECU's Dining Services are the<lb/>
qualities that both representatives<lb/>
believe make a meal plan worth<lb/>
while, although the comparisons to<lb/>
other establishments' prices are<lb/>
inevitable.<lb/>
"No one can beat the<lb/>
competition's prices every time. If<lb/>
you were to compare our prices to<lb/>
someone else's. I would be totally<lb/>
comfortable Salamon said.<lb/>
"We're here for the students.<lb/>
That's Aramark's main goal<lb/>
Bissinjier said.<lb/>
rZ<lb/>
Thursday, November 6,1997<lb/>
PIRATE UNDERGROUND<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Social Room, 8 -10:45 pm<lb/>
ssa<lb/>
,op.Eiy<lb/>
Miriam Tyson<lb/>
??,<lb/>
Balance<lb/>
tptttf<lb/>
m . Jkum i k i<lb/>
LISTEN TO WZMB FOR BAND INTERVIEWS BEFORE THE SHOW<lb/>
SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL MUSICIANS! FREE UVE MUSIC, PEZA &amp; REFRESHMENTS<lb/>
Cubbie's<lb/>
Monday-Thursday<lb/>
"Food 101 nightly special at Cubbies"<lb/>
5-9pm<lb/>
?2 dogs $1!<lb/>
?Free fries with any Cubbies size<lb/>
sandwich!<lb/>
 Only at downtown location with college ID<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
?$1 long neck beer<lb/>
limit 3<lb/>
x Only available at downtown location with<lb/>
student ID<lb/>
501 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
 (919) 752-6497 or<lb/>
a1 600 E. Arlington<lb/>
fl Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
(919)321-8091<lb/>
?<lb/>
758-459752-47 I 5 For more info visit our website at, WWW.netmar.comuserselbo<lb/>
The Elbo is available for private parties Call 758-4591 or 752-4715<lb/>
for available dateiifcries plus price packages<lb/>
TUESDAY NIGHT LIVE<lb/>
Cooyrtght 1997 Kroger Mid-Attanttc. items &amp; Prices good In CreenvWe. We reserve the right to limit quantities. None sold to dealers<lb/>
ltems&amp; Prices Good Thru Nov. 8,1997 wgj. 5 Thur 6 I 7 Sat 81<lb/>
Caffeine Free Diet Pepsi,<lb/>
Mountain Dew<lb/>
$1.25<lb/>
PPP<lb/>
ecial guest<lb/>
le Area<lb/>
Night Long<lb/>
WEDNESDAY CLASSICS NIGHT<lb/>
FOOD &amp; DRUG<lb/>
Always Good.<lb/>
Always Fresh.<lb/>
Always Kroger.<lb/>
Your Total<lb/>
Value Leader.<lb/>
Diet Pepsi or<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
1Specials.<lb/>
The Best in Classiei<lb/>
all the current hits<lb/>
Beer &amp;<lb/>
jlnd Dan(<lb/>
lent si<lb/>
ecials<lb/>
70's, 80's and<lb/>
ttle beers and<lb/>
Thirsty Thurs. LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
$1.<lb/>
.50 cents Draft ar<lb/>
Plus the<lb/>
m<lb/>
WA Nite Long<lb/>
25 M?!<lb/>
8 Varieties<lb/>
Kroger<lb/>
Cereal<lb/>
13.75-20-oz.<lb/>
Four 2-Ltr. Btls. Per Customer At This Price Please<lb/>
3$<lb/>
4-Compartment Assorted Varieties; ?Ai-<lb/>
Swanson<lb/>
Dinners<lb/>
9.5-11.75-oz.<lb/>
l$5<lb/>
?;<lb/>
RUSH HOUR FRIDAYS<lb/>
Best in ClaSfcTRock &amp; Hot New Rock<lb/>
from 8:30 Til 11:30 Every Friday<lb/>
1 cent Draft and $1.00 Shot Specials All Nite<lb/>
Don't miss our new brarjds on tap efery Friday<lb/>
Frozen<lb/>
ice Cream<lb/>
Bars<lb/>
12-CL<lb/>
Buy One Get One<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
Frozen<lb/>
Patio<lb/>
Burritos<lb/>
:<lb/>
<lb/>
In Store Baked<lb/>
Traditional or "New"<lb/>
Cream Cheese<lb/>
Iced Cinnamon<lb/>
Rolls &amp;<lb/>
$"n<lb/>
6-Ct.<lb/>
3<lb/>
Corn, Peas or<lb/>
Stokelys<lb/>
Creen Beans<lb/>
14.25-15.25-oz. Can<lb/>
3<lb/>
$!<lb/>
SATURDAY DANCE FACTORY H VourKrogerDeli Proudlv lnlroduces "Delicious New<lb/>
Our New Format Non-Stop Top JO Party Music<lb/>
Plus All Nite $3.00 Double Hibplls at?l .00 Bottle Beer<lb/>
Specials Plus AfrPUxhersT5rily $3.00"<lb/>
Bring your E.C.U. Ticket Stub after every h&amp;pe (JameKJ :iet $1.00 oft Admission<lb/>
Buffalo Style Chicken Wings!<lb/>
25<lb/>
only<lb/>
f Choose From 4 Mouth Watering Varieties:<lb/>
MILD WILD FIRE<lb/>
HOT CARLIC BBQ SWEET HONEY BBQ<lb/>
Available Only in Stores With DelLPastry Shoppes<lb/>
Snack Time, Dinner Time.<lb/>
Game Time, Party Time,<lb/>
Any Time<lb/>
Each<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0004"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
iCTiWi<lb/>
4 Thursday. November 6. 1997<lb/>
v J A1A A y 3<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Lake Imp USA<lb/>
TftE lOtlici ivrvHtCirrr<lb/>
,1MB: BR6W&amp;R v ?ccs<lb/>
I uisH i uses. AUooowiac.<lb/>
Oft, 4 MMbAtU). THE1 MM<lb/>
SUCH BEAUTiFUUPUitM&amp;E<lb/>
UBAUiC LH VfGdS 0aI<lb/>
vkz wai, THr ?<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Big ? theory<lb/>
5 Golf stroke<lb/>
9 File markers<lb/>
13 Baseball family<lb/>
name<lb/>
14 Concerning<lb/>
15 Under<lb/>
16 Religious fel<lb/>
owship<lb/>
18 Certain Arabian<lb/>
19 Pays attention to<lb/>
20 Seizing authority<lb/>
22 Post-game<lb/>
summary, briefly<lb/>
25 Born as<lb/>
26 Chase away<lb/>
29 Mountain nymph<lb/>
31 Boutique<lb/>
35 Food fish<lb/>
37 Invigorate<lb/>
39 Had a meal<lb/>
40 Doctrine<lb/>
41 ?Magnon<lb/>
42 Inlet<lb/>
43 Boat race<lb/>
45 Apart<lb/>
47 Thick slice<lb/>
48 Stage whisper<lb/>
50 Elusive<lb/>
51 Jilfian or Blyth<lb/>
53 Gave out cards<lb/>
55 Russian ?<lb/>
59 Essential ol<lb/>
63 Sanction<lb/>
64 31A employee<lb/>
67 Angle<lb/>
68 At the summit<lb/>
69 Indian<lb/>
70 Window part<lb/>
71 First name In<lb/>
country<lb/>
72 Polka ?<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Johann<lb/>
Sebastian ?<lb/>
2 Medicinal plant<lb/>
3 City on Norton<lb/>
Sound<lb/>
4 Candy store<lb/>
offering<lb/>
5 Brooch<lb/>
6 One: pref.<lb/>
7 Theatrical<lb/>
company<lb/>
8 Certain biBs<lb/>
9 Uproar<lb/>
10 Jai ?<lb/>
11 German city<lb/>
12 Gulp<lb/>
15 Drill<lb/>
17 Put to work<lb/>
21 Ukeasub<lb/>
23 Unchanging<lb/>
24 Bakery<lb/>
byproducts<lb/>
26 Prepares for the<lb/>
match<lb/>
27 Convention<lb/>
locale<lb/>
28 End of the<lb/>
alphabet<lb/>
30 Race for games<lb/>
32 Multitude<lb/>
33 Bay window<lb/>
34 North Pole<lb/>
explorer<lb/>
36 River Island<lb/>
38 Old French coin<lb/>
44 Gastropod<lb/>
46 Vexed<lb/>
49 Conceive<lb/>
Skim.1, or 1296<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
LowfatMilk<lb/>
 Jk With<lb/>
Washington State 's<lb/>
Larcre Sweet g?3 it)<lb/>
Gala Apples?Zj<lb/>
24 et Caplets or Tablets<lb/>
Exceorin <lb/>
Pain Relief I<lb/>
12 gallon Harris Teeter<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
orYc<lb/>
12 oz. Frozen<lb/>
Harris Teeter<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
25 ct<lb/>
Robttussin<lb/>
Cough Props<lb/>
Erink Feature<lb/>
In THe Bakery<lb/>
2 liter<lb/>
Diet Coke<lb/>
or Coca. Cola<lb/>
O IN? Tribune Media Services<lb/>
All right Nteived.<lb/>
52 Salamander<lb/>
54?Vegas<lb/>
55 Coarse file<lb/>
56 Stew pot<lb/>
57 ? Bator<lb/>
58 Ruler<lb/>
60 Poi source<lb/>
61 Mine entrance<lb/>
62 Bread and<lb/>
whiskey<lb/>
65 Toss<lb/>
66 Ecol. org.<lb/>
s h a dHb assI Is e l lj<lb/>
E A V eIa GAT 7Be L 1 E<lb/>
EVEpIv OjDJ E lIn A M E<lb/>
MERIT SHE L E A N O R<lb/>
? VAT SB PASTl<lb/>
D E TjE GAT E ISji T 0 T A L<lb/>
A V AiiS T A S IeRODE<lb/>
TAP SlE N T E RS T O A<lb/>
E 0 S E Jj lEGO splE R N<lb/>
R E E V eHmIe A L -TiTm E S<lb/>
? E T T AD Y E OB<lb/>
d eT'a r s i rHp r e aIc'h<lb/>
R 1 D EllN 1 t'r 0A R E A<lb/>
ARE sis N A 1 lIl 1 N T<lb/>
G E N t EMM YS ATE<lb/>
Fresh Baked<lb/>
Crusty Round<lb/>
With<lb/>
VIC Card<lb/>
Price Effective Through Nov. 11, 1997<lb/>
$tore?'<lb/>
r<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
V<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0005"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
5 Tuesday, November 4, 1997<lb/>
opinion<lb/>
The East<lb/>
eastcarolinian<lb/>
AMY IROYSI KB Editor<lb/>
CELKSTK WILSON Managing Editor<lb/>
Matt Hkor MMnsiiijOutcw<lb/>
AMANDA SUN NaarsEdiior<lb/>
jACyt'Kl.INK D. KELLilM Asi Ne? EdMOt<lb/>
ANDY Tl'RNKR Li(?a?taEditor<lb/>
JOHN Davis Assistant Liftstvte Editor<lb/>
AMANDA ROSS Sports Editor<lb/>
TRACY LftttlACH Assistant Sports Edrwr<lb/>
CAROI.K MKHi.R Head Cop, Editor<lb/>
JOHN MURPHY Soft Illustrator<lb/>
Heather Burgess wire Edna<lb/>
SarteajitECU wmamsm ?25. the Eea Carota m n.ttaats 12.000copmim kesdayandThuntar.Thefeedastwuf?iladiesttnonit d<lb/>
retro dttetaionatBoarTt Tea taCargtmaRiNlaiiro The East<lb/>
Cen?an rcsenes rte ngtit re edn orrein tatans tor pubacataai Al tews roust be sejned tellers should be addressed tt. epnon eraror. the East<lb/>
Caretman. Puokalions BuMmn. ECU. Greeiw. 2785M353 ntonwoi. cat 319 328.6366<lb/>
oumcw<lb/>
Aramark, the company that provides on-campus dining services, claims its main goal is to satisfy<lb/>
students. But more than a few students are not satisfied with the Aramark's food prices ? and<lb/>
rightly so. The prices at the company's on-campus "fast-food" style restaurants are much higher<lb/>
than other local fast-food restaurants and convenience stores.<lb/>
The company maintains that the two dining halls offer fair prices and a wider selection of<lb/>
food than places such as McDonald's and Wendy's. This is true. When compared to these two<lb/>
places (and similar fast-food restaurants), the dining halls do offer the better deal. The prices<lb/>
at the dining halls probably compare with or are even slightly less than most local restaurants<lb/>
who offer "all-you-can-eat buffets<lb/>
Aramark admits its prices are high compared to grocery stores. This is understandable, and<lb/>
students realize it; food bought in bulk quantities is always cheaper than individual dishes<lb/>
purchased at restaurants.<lb/>
But if you compare McDonald's, Wendy's, Burger King, etc. to the places on campus such as<lb/>
The Wright Place and The Spot, Aramark's prices are certainly much higher. Better deals on<lb/>
hamburgers, cheeseburgers, chicken sandwiches, etc. will be found at the outside<lb/>
establishments.<lb/>
The Wright Place and The Spot offer more of a variety than most fast-food restaurants. This<lb/>
is also true. The on-campus places serve more as convenience stores, providing students with a<lb/>
wider food choice. However, even when compared to convenience stores, Aramark's prices on<lb/>
many food and drink products still come up considerably higher. Aramark cannot deny this. It<lb/>
can't be expected to always have lower prices, but it can be expected to have reasonable and<lb/>
comparable prices.<lb/>
Students with declining balances may not notice the differences as much. But persons who<lb/>
pay with cash certainly notice the difference.<lb/>
Perhaps if Aramark had direct on-campus competition, its prices would come down. That<lb/>
often does the trick.<lb/>
Maybe we're paying for convenience, but, regardless, we're paying too much.<lb/>
EDITOR!<lb/>
. Amy L<lb/>
ROYSTER<lb/>
n Chief<lb/>
All officers need adequate training<lb/>
Do you want to go to jail?<lb/>
Do I want to go to jail? Who<lb/>
wants to go to jail? How<lb/>
would you respond to this<lb/>
intelligent question?<lb/>
My roommate and I were headed to<lb/>
the concession stand for peanuts<lb/>
after the first quarter of the<lb/>
Homecoming game when we saw a<lb/>
youngwoman in front of us collapse<lb/>
onto Dowdy Ficklen's cement floor.<lb/>
My roommate checked to make sure<lb/>
the woman was breathing and ran<lb/>
for help while I crouched down next<lb/>
to the woman, unsure of what to do.<lb/>
Help came in the form of a<lb/>
uniformed police officer who<lb/>
immediately looked at my<lb/>
roommate and myself and said, "Do<lb/>
either of you know CPR? Can<lb/>
anyone check her pulse?"<lb/>
My roommate pushed the<lb/>
incompetent officer's hand out of<lb/>
the way and took the young<lb/>
woman's pulse herself. Hovering<lb/>
helplessly over the stranger, the only<lb/>
thing I could do was move her long<lb/>
red curls off of her face and tell her<lb/>
she would be OK. Help arrived<lb/>
several minutes later when<lb/>
emergency medical technicians<lb/>
took the young woman to the<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
Back in the stands my roommate<lb/>
and I discussed our amazement over<lb/>
the responding officer's lack of<lb/>
training, wondering what would<lb/>
have happened if the young woman<lb/>
had not been breathing and neither<lb/>
of us were certified in CPR.<lb/>
With the subject of patrol officers<lb/>
on our minds, we noticed five<lb/>
officers on the student side, busy<lb/>
ejecting three students and two<lb/>
middle-aged fans for alcohol<lb/>
violations. Before ejecting one<lb/>
student, an officer asked him what<lb/>
was in his cup and, before he had a<lb/>
chance to repond, yelled, "Do you<lb/>
want to go to jail?"<lb/>
This question seems to be a<lb/>
popular phrase among officers<lb/>
patroling the games. Maybe they<lb/>
practice it in the mirror or in group<lb/>
chants; the week before at the<lb/>
Southern Mississippi game, Officer<lb/>
William Peebles used the same<lb/>
phrase when he ejected Mike<lb/>
Radford, the president of the Wilson<lb/>
County Pirate Club. Radford was<lb/>
ejected from the game because, as<lb/>
reported in the Oct. 30 edition of<lb/>
TEC, his son was obstructing the<lb/>
view of other fans by waving a flag.<lb/>
The ECU Police Department<lb/>
says they have investigated what<lb/>
v itnesses have called brutality on<lb/>
the part of Officer Peebles and have<lb/>
found no misconduct on the<lb/>
officer's part. Still, fans who<lb/>
witnessed the event say Peebles<lb/>
incited Radford by yelling at him<lb/>
and asking him if he wanted to be<lb/>
taken to jail, despite Radford's<lb/>
promise to control his child's flag<lb/>
waving. Ultimately, Peebles<lb/>
engaged Radford in what one fan<lb/>
described as a head lock and<lb/>
removed him, leaving his child<lb/>
crying in the stands.<lb/>
Certainly, 20, 000 to 30,000<lb/>
screaming, often intoxicated, fans<lb/>
need policing; so who are these<lb/>
officers patrolling the football<lb/>
games? Are they qualified to provide<lb/>
emergency medical attention to a<lb/>
young woman who has passed out<lb/>
cold? Should they have the<lb/>
authority to threaten citizens with<lb/>
taunts such as, "Do you want to go<lb/>
to jail?"<lb/>
Do you want to go to jail? Do I<lb/>
want to go to jail? Who wants to go<lb/>
to jail? How would you respond to<lb/>
this intelligent question? How<lb/>
would you respond when help<lb/>
arrived to the scene of the<lb/>
unconsious fan and the officer said<lb/>
to you, "Do you know CPR? Can<lb/>
you take a pulse?"<lb/>
The officer who responded to<lb/>
the young woman looked like a<lb/>
golice officer. He had on a uniform,<lb/>
ut. Assistant Chief Tom Younce<lb/>
explained that he may or may not<lb/>
actually have been a sworn officer.<lb/>
According to Younce, the ECU<lb/>
Police Department employs sworn<lb/>
reserve officers who assist with<lb/>
patrol on game days. These officers<lb/>
have completed basic training,<lb/>
which includes CPR certification.<lb/>
However, there are also a number of<lb/>
students who wear a version of a<lb/>
uniform and carry radios who are not<lb/>
sworn officers, do not carry weapons<lb/>
and are not certified in any<lb/>
emergency medical training.<lb/>
The ECU Police Department<lb/>
needs these students and reserve<lb/>
officers to help handle the<lb/>
numerous fans, but the citizens and<lb/>
fans deserve officers who are well-<lb/>
prepared for the job. All officers on<lb/>
patrol during game days should be<lb/>
prepared to deal with intoxicated<lb/>
fans who may be sarcastic and<lb/>
disrespectful. They should be<lb/>
trained in CPR and basic emergency<lb/>
medical assistance to help both a<lb/>
drunk freshman who may pass out<lb/>
from too many beers and an 80-year-<lb/>
old Pirate Club member who may<lb/>
suffer a heart attack. All officers<lb/>
should be prepared and trained to<lb/>
manage people without loosing<lb/>
control.<lb/>
It is my humble suggestion that<lb/>
the training for all sworn officers,<lb/>
reserve officers and student patrols<lb/>
be reviewed. The people working to<lb/>
keep game day safe should have<lb/>
updated training in basic crowd<lb/>
management and emergency<lb/>
medical techniques.<lb/>
The press, by nature, is rarely beloved<lb/>
nor should that be its aim<lb/>
William Henry, writer and critic 1983<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Keith<lb/>
COOPER<lb/>
Columnist<lb/>
Presidents who try to help get hurt<lb/>
Too many people with economic<lb/>
and political clout have<lb/>
impeded the ambitions and<lb/>
progress of blacks in America.<lb/>
Seemingly, . when American<lb/>
presidents made appreciable,<lb/>
meaningful efforts to appeal to<lb/>
blacks, they were assassinated,<lb/>
denied a second term or<lb/>
aggressively pressured and pestered<lb/>
by the establishment. Too many<lb/>
people with economic and political<lb/>
clout have impeded the ambitions<lb/>
and progress of blacks in America.<lb/>
After slavery officially ended with<lb/>
the Thirteenth Amendment in<lb/>
1865, blacks still had hard times.<lb/>
Whites consistently fought hard to<lb/>
stifle progress made by blacks.<lb/>
During Reconstruction (1865-<lb/>
1877?), black politicians were<lb/>
intimidated and harassed<lb/>
throughout the South. Whites<lb/>
formed "white man's parties" and<lb/>
clubs to challenge the successes of<lb/>
blacks. By the way, since George<lb/>
White (last black vestige of the<lb/>
Reconstruction period) was chased<lb/>
from office in 1902,1 maintain that<lb/>
Reconstruction ended that year,<lb/>
despite the fact that most historians<lb/>
prefer 1877 (when federal troops<lb/>
left the South as part of a deal<lb/>
invilvong the controversial 1876<lb/>
Presidential race between<lb/>
Rutherford Hayes and Samuel<lb/>
Tilden).<lb/>
Abraham Lincoln (1861-1865)<lb/>
was willing to free the slaves to<lb/>
preserve the Union . Privately,<lb/>
Lincoln wanted to send blacks to<lb/>
Nicaragua. In any event, it took<lb/>
20,000 black recruits to turn the<lb/>
tide for the Union forces. Prior to<lb/>
the Civil War, southern states<lb/>
threatened to secede from the<lb/>
Union if Lincoln didn't change his<lb/>
views on the slavery question. To<lb/>
Southerners, slavery was an<lb/>
economic necessity. Therefore,<lb/>
abolitionists like Frederick<lb/>
Douglass, Henry David Thorcau<lb/>
and others were detested by those<lb/>
who wanted to preserve the status<lb/>
quo. About five days after the end of<lb/>
the Civil War (also called the War of<lb/>
Secession, War Between the States,<lb/>
etc.), Lincoln was assassinated.<lb/>
John Kennedy (1961-1963)<lb/>
accentuated themes of honesty and<lb/>
integrity in government. Among the<lb/>
innumerable changes, he<lb/>
challenged Americans to eradicate<lb/>
disease, conquer the deserts and<lb/>
cherish ethnic, racial diversity as our<lb/>
greatest strength. Although<lb/>
Kennedy was initially wishy-washy<lb/>
on civil rights, he later became a<lb/>
major proponent of rights for<lb/>
Negroes. He vociferously<lb/>
condemned racial bigotry and<lb/>
prejudices in America. In Dallas,<lb/>
Texas in 1963, Kennedy's life was<lb/>
snuffed out. Shortly before the<lb/>
assassination, Kennedy had planned<lb/>
to sign what became the Civil<lb/>
Rights Act of 1964.<lb/>
Jimmy Carter (1977- 1981)<lb/>
appointed more African-Americans<lb/>
to federal positions than any of his<lb/>
predecessors. Carter, a Southern<lb/>
Baptist, condemned racism. A man<lb/>
of peace, Carter promoted racial<lb/>
harmony and reconciliation, . He<lb/>
urged tolerance and mutual<lb/>
understanding. Carter, sometimes,<lb/>
is regarded as weak on foreign policy<lb/>
despite his successful Camp David<lb/>
Accords and a host of other global,<lb/>
humanitarian accomplishments.<lb/>
Carter's defeat was more<lb/>
complicated than the failed<lb/>
American hostage rescue attempt,<lb/>
often used as the main explanation<lb/>
for Carter's loss. Most reelccted<lb/>
American presidents were not<lb/>
foreign policy heroes.<lb/>
Bill Clinton has been grappling<lb/>
with Whitewater, charges of<lb/>
presidential improprieties, sexual<lb/>
harassment allegation, etc.<lb/>
Nevertheless, during the Million<lb/>
Man March in 1995, Clinton in<lb/>
Austin, Texas, said, "Racism is a<lb/>
black man's burden and a white<lb/>
man's problem Clinton abhors<lb/>
racial tensions exacerbated during<lb/>
the Rodney King and O.J Simpson<lb/>
aftermath, Clinton, a brilliant<lb/>
politician, became a political<lb/>
centrist in the 19 Presidential<lb/>
race. This allowed him to attract<lb/>
moderate and conservative voters<lb/>
key to Clinton's reelection.<lb/>
He didn't appear to be too liberal<lb/>
or too African-Amcrican-oriented.<lb/>
Yet, his remarkable record speaks for<lb/>
itself. For example, he has the<lb/>
record for having appointed the<lb/>
most African-Americans to federal<lb/>
positions. The combined records<lb/>
(of African-American<lb/>
appointments) of Clinton's and<lb/>
Carter's, far exceed those of their<lb/>
combined predecessors.<lb/>
The aforementioned presidents<lb/>
are only a few of the many American<lb/>
presidents who were ridiculed and<lb/>
criticized for the propensities<lb/>
toward African-Americans. The<lb/>
status quo had a shrewd way of<lb/>
pressuring those presidents and<lb/>
making it difficult for those leaders<lb/>
to govern. This is why Clinton is<lb/>
being "accused of practically every<lb/>
sin in the book. There is even talk<lb/>
about possible impeachment of<lb/>
Clinton. In terms of scandals,<lb/>
Republican presidents (i.e. Grant,<lb/>
Harding, Nixon, Ford, Reagan,<lb/>
Bush) should be inducted in the<lb/>
"hall of shame Through<lb/>
perserverance and a deep-rooted<lb/>
concern for humanity, Clinton will<lb/>
triumph in the end.<lb/>
UETTER<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
Student questions clubs admittance policy<lb/>
On Oct. 25, some friends of mine<lb/>
were enjoying a night downtown.<lb/>
They had frequented the clubs<lb/>
before and decided the Cellar was<lb/>
the best one for the night. They had<lb/>
stood in line for a while and finally<lb/>
made their way through to pay. "Joe"<lb/>
paid his money and entered the<lb/>
club. Then "James" was getting<lb/>
ready to pay when someone stopped<lb/>
him and told him they had reached<lb/>
their quota and he could not get in<lb/>
unless he had a membership. He<lb/>
said he did not have one and<lb/>
requested to buy one. Once again,<lb/>
they said no, so my friends left.<lb/>
However, Joe stuck around for a<lb/>
couple of minutes. The people<lb/>
behind James and me were allowed<lb/>
to enter the club without a<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
Why did this happen? It<lb/>
happened because James is black.<lb/>
He was denied access to a club<lb/>
because of the color of his skin. Joe<lb/>
and the people behind him were all<lb/>
white and could get in.<lb/>
Why did such a popular club<lb/>
revert to a 1960's concept? What<lb/>
this club did broke almost every civil<lb/>
rights law. I have heard many stories<lb/>
similar to this from my roommate.<lb/>
Ravers, African-Americans and other<lb/>
minorities were denied access to<lb/>
clubs downtown because of who<lb/>
they are. These types of behavior<lb/>
and actions are sending out negative<lb/>
connotations about North Carolina<lb/>
and the south. They say the south is<lb/>
still stuck in the pre-Civii Rights<lb/>
movement era. Do not support<lb/>
these rumors and sayings, but<lb/>
instead tear them down. Do not see<lb/>
each other as blacks, whites, ravers,<lb/>
headbangers, but instead as human.<lb/>
Jeremiah Johnson<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Math Ed.<lb/>
LETTER<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
Moral deterioration means pay first<lb/>
My first treat of the day is to drive to<lb/>
a local doughnut shop on my way to<lb/>
school (and the infamous ECU<lb/>
parking space hunt) to retrieve one<lb/>
chocolate iced cream filled<lb/>
doughnut that costs 48 cents,<lb/>
including tax. I often have the exact<lb/>
change or close to it, which requires<lb/>
change (two cents).<lb/>
Recently, the smiling attendant<lb/>
started to hand me my precious bag<lb/>
of doughnut when suddenly a look<lb/>
of duty crossed her face and out<lb/>
thrust her hand for my MONEY<lb/>
FIRST. I began to wonder if she<lb/>
thought I was planning to play the<lb/>
"gotcha game whereby I grab the<lb/>
bag and take off in a whirlwind of<lb/>
doughnut dust, screaming down the<lb/>
boulevard, laughing hysterically as I<lb/>
disappeared into the traffic ?<lb/>
without paying.<lb/>
Then I began to realize and recall<lb/>
that most fast food drive-up<lb/>
windows take the money first ?<lb/>
and then give you your food. I<lb/>
suppose the "crash the diner"<lb/>
syndrome has hit the fast food drive-<lb/>
through scene, making us all suspect<lb/>
in the eyes of the fast food boards of<lb/>
directors who apparently have<lb/>
implemented this policy of pay first.<lb/>
Is this a sign of a morally<lb/>
deteriorating society or merely a<lb/>
"chicken-egg" argument (as in<lb/>
which comes first)? I mean, come<lb/>
on, girl; it's only a doughnut ? or is<lb/>
it?<lb/>
Cynthia Willis<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
ASIP<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0006"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
I ?MHt<lb/>
What's your<lb/>
favorite?<lb/>
?<lb/>
We're looking for your favorites in<lb/>
our first Reader's Choice survey.<lb/>
Just complete the survey form printed<lb/>
here and drop it by our office or put<lb/>
it in campus mail to us.<lb/>
Or point your browser to our website<lb/>
at www.studmtmedkeou.edu and fill<lb/>
out the survey on-line.<lb/>
Either way you choose, enter only<lb/>
once Jut do it before 5 pm, Nov. 7.<lb/>
Once you enter, well throw your name<lb/>
in with everyone else who responds<lb/>
and draw out a WINNER at random.<lb/>
That person will take home a Casio<lb/>
hand-held color TV. Could winning be<lb/>
any easier?<lb/>
Then, look for the Readers Choice<lb/>
favorites featured in a tabloid special<lb/>
edition on Tuesday Nov. 18.<lb/>
I the l ? ?<lb/>
eastcarolinian<lb/>
PLEASE PRINT CLEARLY. WHEN COMPLETED. CLIP AND SJJBJJOJTHEAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
I<lb/>
What's the best place to get breakfast after a late night?<lb/>
Readerscw<lb/>
? <lb/>
What's the best place for lunch between classes?<lb/>
What's the best place to take a date for dinner?<lb/>
What's the best place to get a good pizza?<lb/>
What's the best place to live off-campus?<lb/>
Who has the best game-day picnic to qo?<lb/>
Whose fries stay the hottest all the way home?<lb/>
What's the best place to buy a keg?<lb/>
What's the best place to dance all night?<lb/>
What's the best place to buy CDs?<lb/>
What's the best place to get a haircut?<lb/>
 - - ?? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
What's the best place to park illegally on campus and get<lb/>
away with it?<lb/>
What's the best reason to skip class?<lb/>
What grocery store best fits student's budget?<lb/>
What's the best place to have your car repaired?<lb/>
What cab company has the friendliest drivers?<lb/>
What laundry won't eat your socks?<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Phone.<lb/>
L.<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
MWM<lb/>
?i &amp;e&amp; ?<lb/>
M<lb/>
? r<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0007"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
7 Thursday. November 4. 1997<lb/>
CD<lb/>
review<lb/>
The Replacements<lb/>
All For Nothing,<lb/>
Nothing For All<lb/>
9 12 OUT OF lO<lb/>
ANDY TURNER<lb/>
UHsmF.EDmm<lb/>
I<lb/>
The nickname said it ail ? The<lb/>
'Mats, short for placemats. There<lb/>
were sides. You were cither with<lb/>
The Replacements or you were the<lb/>
ones who stepped on them, who<lb/>
ignored them, who they enjoyed<lb/>
pissing off at an costs. At times, it<lb/>
seemed as if they stepped on<lb/>
themselves, preventing the band<lb/>
from achieving further "success" in<lb/>
the music industry.<lb/>
But all of that is documented by<lb/>
writers, friends and fans (it's hard<lb/>
to tell them apart) of the band in<lb/>
the liner notes to Reprise Records'<lb/>
Replacements retrospective, All<lb/>
For Nothing, Nothing For All. Most<lb/>
importantly, the two-CD<lb/>
retrospective shows that, beyond<lb/>
their reputation as pure-hearted-<lb/>
drunken-poetic-bastard losers, The<lb/>
Replacements at their peak were<lb/>
one of the best dum rock and roll<lb/>
hinds ccr.<lb/>
The first CD consists of songs<lb/>
from the band's tour albums on<lb/>
Sire Records. B-sides, alternate<lb/>
takes and other material previously<lb/>
only available only on bootlegs<lb/>
grace the second CD. Both CDs<lb/>
make it painfully apparent that<lb/>
The Replacements should have<lb/>
landed both feet in the music<lb/>
industry door, not as "I Don't<lb/>
' Know" proclaims, "one foot in the<lb/>
door, the other one in the gutter<lb/>
I But such is the price (or reward) of<lb/>
unflinching, bullheaded integrity.<lb/>
"Shouida been" hits dominate<lb/>
the first CD. You couW call hit "I'll<lb/>
Be You" hit (Top 40 and MTV<lb/>
briefly humored them) Paul<lb/>
Westerberg's tremendous ability as<lb/>
a songwriter is proven song after<lb/>
song. The abrasive, anthemic<lb/>
"Bastards of Young" offers, "The<lb/>
ones who love us best are the ones<lb/>
we lay to rest and visit their graves<lb/>
on holidays at bestThe one's who<lb/>
love us the least arc the ones we'll<lb/>
die to please If it's any<lb/>
consolation. I don't begin to<lb/>
understand He may be a bastard,<lb/>
Westerberg sings convincingly, "it<lb/>
beats pickin' cotton and waitin' to<lb/>
be forgotten<lb/>
Bob Stinson's wild-ass ghost (he<lb/>
died in 1995) haunts "Bastards of<lb/>
Young Sure, he played most gigs<lb/>
in a dress and was almost always<lb/>
drunk or drugged, but the guitar<lb/>
was his red-headed stepchild, one<lb/>
that he liked, but still treated like a<lb/>
red-headed stepchild.<lb/>
The Replacements were able to<lb/>
do the rough and rowdy songs and<lb/>
tender, reflective songs just as well.<lb/>
Westerberg wears his liver on his<lb/>
sleeve on the tear (in your beer)<lb/>
jerker, "Hear Comes a Regular<lb/>
Opportunity knocks once and<lb/>
then the door slams shutAll 1<lb/>
know is I'm sick of everything that<lb/>
my money can buy A fool who<lb/>
wastes his life, God rests his guts<lb/>
The rhythm section of Chris<lb/>
Mars and Tommy Stinson show off<lb/>
their stuff on Alex Chilton" and<lb/>
"Can't Hardly Wait "Alex<lb/>
Chilton especially, shows how<lb/>
SEE REPLACEMENTS WE I<lb/>
"What a life a mess<lb/>
can be<lb/>
Uncle Tupelo<lb/>
John Davis<lb/>
ASSISTANT LIFESTYLE EDITOR<lb/>
Coffee has been with us humans for<lb/>
quite a while now. The first<lb/>
recorded encounter with coffee is<lb/>
from the middle ages. An Arabian<lb/>
goat herder noticed that when his<lb/>
goats ate the beans from a certain<lb/>
plant, they got a little jittery. Back<lb/>
in those days, they didn't have all<lb/>
the wonderful pepper-uppers that<lb/>
we have. They pretty much had<lb/>
beer and wine, and people of<lb/>
Muslim faith abstain from alcoholic<lb/>
beverages. So coffee was probably<lb/>
an exciting prospect. Or maybe that<lb/>
guy always ate the stuff his goats<lb/>
ate.<lb/>
At any rate, he eventually tried to<lb/>
make a drink out of it, and before<lb/>
you- could say "iced double mocha<lb/>
skinny lattc coffee had caught on<lb/>
in lands Middle Eastern. The<lb/>
Muslims were more advanced than<lb/>
us Europeans back then (this was<lb/>
before OPEC) and they invented<lb/>
coffee houses rather quickly.<lb/>
Nowadays we know that, because<lb/>
caffeine is a diuretic, it's probably<lb/>
not a great thing to drink in a<lb/>
desert, but they didn't know that,<lb/>
A brief history of coffee:<lb/>
Coffee purveyors in Greenville<lb/>
The Percolator- open since 1994, this is the only remaining<lb/>
coffeehouse in Purpletown. See main article.<lb/>
Starbucks- corporate coffee. Yuck. Located inside Barnes and Noble<lb/>
The Bean Bag- ooen from 1994-1997 this was a popular hangout for<lb/>
deadheads and smokers, which spelled trouble for the business<lb/>
when they imposed a "no smoking" rule.<lb/>
Cuppacino's- open for spring semester 1996, this was possibly the<lb/>
best coffeehouse to grace Greenville. Great variety, social<lb/>
atmosphere and killer house coffee.<lb/>
The Java Shop- a ritzy, yuppie kinda place, open from 1993-1994. The<lb/>
latte's were the best this town has ever seen.<lb/>
Matt Dull- a former art student, he was known for carrying two coffee<lb/>
makers (an espresso machine and a Mr. Coffee) to drawing class<lb/>
with him.<lb/>
Krispy Kreme, Denny's, Perkins- these are not really coffeehouses, but<lb/>
they do serve something that looks and tastes like coffee and they<lb/>
are open 24 hours, which is an advantage after 11 p.m.<lb/>
Butterfield's- a handy (but pricey) place in the Plaza mall to buy your<lb/>
very own espresso machine and other coffee paraphernalia.<lb/>
The Wright Place- a campus fast food joint Under no circumstances<lb/>
should you trust their coffee. If rfs realty coffee, that is<lb/>
and besides, would you want to face<lb/>
and angry nomad if he'd not had his<lb/>
coffee that morning?<lb/>
We still have coffee houses today,<lb/>
even here in the quaint little town<lb/>
of Greenville. Of course, it's taken<lb/>
many coffeehouses for the idea to<lb/>
stick, but in the face of many<lb/>
obstacles (mostly a lack of<lb/>
consumer interest) one coffeehouse<lb/>
has tenuously taken hold: The<lb/>
Percolator.<lb/>
Located downtown, next to the<lb/>
buck-fifty theater, The Percolator is<lb/>
testament that even cool things can<lb/>
happen in Greenville. Yeah, sure,<lb/>
the Arabs didn't drink, and we have<lb/>
our bars and pubs, but there's<lb/>
something to be said for the<lb/>
aesthetic of a coffeehouse. I like<lb/>
places I can go where everybody<lb/>
knows my name and is always glad I<lb/>
came. I'm not fond of bars though,<lb/>
which smell like stale beer and<lb/>
locker room, and are filled with a<lb/>
bunch of drunk people that aren't<lb/>
really glad I came anyway.<lb/>
The Percolator, rather than being<lb/>
filled with drunk people, is filled<lb/>
with stories. The old wooden<lb/>
floorboards tell stories of a time<lb/>
when the Percolator used to be a<lb/>
bat (It's since joined AA and is<lb/>
celebrating untold years of<lb/>
sobriety.) The yellow walls tell tales<lb/>
of the countless cigarettes smoked<lb/>
by countless nervous medical<lb/>
students studying away.<lb/>
Watch the people. The<lb/>
employees tell a story as they make<lb/>
coffee, chat with regulars, take<lb/>
smoke breaks and bus tables. Watch<lb/>
the regulars. You know who they are<lb/>
because they put napkins under<lb/>
their coffee mugs, they know the<lb/>
tables are wobbly and the coffee will<lb/>
spill; they bus their own tables.<lb/>
The theatre majors rehearse<lb/>
lines. The english majors read books<lb/>
and scribble on spiral notebooks.<lb/>
The cops relax and hobnob with the<lb/>
locals. The high school students<lb/>
pretend to be college students.<lb/>
Employees of other downtown<lb/>
businesses drift in on their breaks.<lb/>
Scores of pretty ladies get their<lb/>
coffee to go. They know and fear<lb/>
the desperation of single men in<lb/>
coffeehouses.<lb/>
Some art major has hung his blue<lb/>
pastel drawings on the wall,<lb/>
drawings of people with squished<lb/>
heads and pensive looks on their<lb/>
faces. They watch the people going<lb/>
about their days, congregating,<lb/>
enjoying solitude, laughing with<lb/>
friends, reading the paper. Someone<lb/>
is reading this article while sitting in<lb/>
the Percolator, sipping a coffee<lb/>
beverage. (If you're reading this in<lb/>
the Percolator, tip the employees.<lb/>
Minimum wage is no fun.)<lb/>
The moral of this story is, well,<lb/>
there's not really a moral. But<lb/>
Danial Rowe serves urn up in The Percolator (top), while The Percolator crowd<lb/>
relaxes and gets their caffeine fix (below).<lb/>
PHOTOS BY JOHN DAVIS<lb/>
Renovations promise<lb/>
bolder, better Mendenhall<lb/>
MICCAH SMITH<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
If you haven't been to Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center lately, or if you just<lb/>
haven't ventured downstairs, you<lb/>
may not<lb/>
know about<lb/>
the changes<lb/>
that are<lb/>
gradually<lb/>
taking place<lb/>
there.<lb/>
The 23-<lb/>
year-old<lb/>
building<lb/>
was never<lb/>
quite the<lb/>
hub of<lb/>
student life<lb/>
the<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Union<lb/>
wished it to<lb/>
be, what<lb/>
with strict<lb/>
policies<lb/>
about food,<lb/>
drinks and<lb/>
not<lb/>
stretching<lb/>
out on the<lb/>
furniture to<lb/>
take naps,<lb/>
b u t<lb/>
University<lb/>
Unions Marketing Director Carol<lb/>
Woodruff said that these old policies<lb/>
were just recently done away with in<lb/>
an effort to make Mendenhall more<lb/>
homelike.<lb/>
"I wanted to get more students<lb/>
using the building explained Bill<lb/>
Clutter, Director of University<lb/>
Unions for the past one and a half<lb/>
years, about the various ways in<lb/>
which Mendenhall is being<lb/>
Check out the new stuff in Mendenhall<lb/>
PHOTO BY JONATHAN GREEN<lb/>
improved.<lb/>
Some of you may be familiar<lb/>
with the grossly inadequate<lb/>
computer lab downstairs. Clutter is<lb/>
implementing a plan to improve the<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
"I identified (the TV lounge<lb/>
behind the lab) as space where we<lb/>
could exoand<lb/>
the lab he<lb/>
said. The new,<lb/>
widened area<lb/>
will become a<lb/>
"computer<lb/>
lounge with<lb/>
areas for<lb/>
studies, music,<lb/>
relaxing,<lb/>
hanging out<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Mcndenhall's<lb/>
resident<lb/>
technical<lb/>
genius Josh<lb/>
Hoover, this<lb/>
will include a<lb/>
separate TV<lb/>
lounge, a<lb/>
meeting room<lb/>
with furniture,<lb/>
art posters,<lb/>
jazz and mood<lb/>
music and a<lb/>
central<lb/>
computer lab<lb/>
with a 44-unit<lb/>
capacity. He<lb/>
called it, "a 30's<lb/>
cafe with a 90's swing<lb/>
The rest of Mendenhall could<lb/>
use some sprucing up as well, so<lb/>
plans are being made to move the<lb/>
first-floor rug and furniture<lb/>
underneath the stairs by the<lb/>
gameroom on the basement level<lb/>
and to add a big-screen TV to create<lb/>
a kind of living-room.<lb/>
"We are talking about doing<lb/>
SEE MENOENHALL. PAGE ?<lb/>
there'll come a time when you're<lb/>
weary of staggering home, puking<lb/>
your guts out. You'll get bored with<lb/>
not remembering if the girl you<lb/>
flirted with was pretty or not. You'll<lb/>
begin to thirst for multisyllabic<lb/>
conversations. Hangovers get less<lb/>
enjoyable as time progresses. Coffee<lb/>
is so much more pleasant to spill on<lb/>
yourself than beer.<lb/>
When the early sunlight pours<lb/>
through the storefront windows at<lb/>
Some films never make it<lb/>
lo ike Emerald City.<lb/>
Some an too<lb/>
ronlroversutl. Some are<lb/>
too small. Whatever ike<lb/>
reason, sejnst never pi<lb/>
to see some mifkty good<lb/>
movies<lb/>
on ikeUgsrreen.<lb/>
When ikej kit video,<lb/>
koaever, tkey're imrs for<lb/>
Ike taking. Tkis series uiJI<lb/>
look at some of Ike films<lb/>
Mat d'idn' make Ike<lb/>
Greenville ail.<lb/>
seven in the morning, hitting the<lb/>
floorboards, lighting up the dust,<lb/>
casting a halo around the steam<lb/>
rising from your latte and through it<lb/>
you glimpse the face of that<lb/>
intriguing person you met yesterday<lb/>
morning, you'll understand what a<lb/>
coffeehouse is for. Maybe there's<lb/>
more to life than getting plastered<lb/>
in between homework assignments<lb/>
Maybe there's a good reason why<lb/>
Muslims stay sober.<lb/>
Traveller makes its way to Greenville<lb/>
ANDY TURNER<lb/>
LIFESTYLE EDITOR<lb/>
Hunky and dory don't always hook<lb/>
up in the old Emerald City. Take, for<lb/>
example,7f?i?!irr, a movie about<lb/>
rural con men starring Bill Paxton,<lb/>
recently released on video. The<lb/>
movie was filmed in Wilmington<lb/>
and is set in rural North<lb/>
Carolina. Throughout<lb/>
Traveller, Greenville is<lb/>
mentioned. Despite all<lb/>
these connections, the<lb/>
movie never made it to the<lb/>
theaters in town. They<lb/>
missed a great movie.<lb/>
Sometimes Paxton can be<lb/>
the best thing about the<lb/>
movies he appears in<lb/>
(Trespass, Tbister). However,<lb/>
there are so many good<lb/>
things about Traveller that<lb/>
it's hard to nail down the<lb/>
best thing.<lb/>
The story centers around<lb/>
a group of Irish-American<lb/>
con men who, through<lb/>
various scams, dupe country folk out<lb/>
of their money. If you're not one of<lb/>
them, you're ripe for the pickin<lb/>
The son of a former clan member,<lb/>
Pat O'Hara (Mark Wahlberg),<lb/>
returns to town with his father's<lb/>
body for burial. Pat wants to join up<lb/>
with the gang, but the group's<lb/>
leader. Boss Jack (Luke Askew)<lb/>
doesn't want him. Boss Jack is still<lb/>
sore that Pat's father married<lb/>
outside of the clan. However, Bokky<lb/>
(Paxton) decides he'll risk taking<lb/>
Pat under his wing. And, off Bokky<lb/>
and Pat go to the back roads of<lb/>
Carolina, looking for fools to cheat.<lb/>
When one of their victims, a juicy<lb/>
Luke Askew and Bill Paxton drink up in Traveller.<lb/>
PHOTO COURTESY OF OCTOBER FILMS<lb/>
bar maid named Jean, played by<lb/>
E.?s Julianna Marguiles, falls for<lb/>
their devious dupe, Bokky takes<lb/>
pity and returns her money. She<lb/>
rewards him with an all-night shag<lb/>
session. But, alas, there are more<lb/>
fools to be had, so Bokky and Pat go<lb/>
back on the road. They meet up<lb/>
with Double D (James Gammon)<lb/>
and plan a scam involving<lb/>
counterfeit money with some big<lb/>
time hustlers in Kentucky. The<lb/>
boss. Bimbo (Vincent Chase), is no<lb/>
hick fool. Money makes his dirty<lb/>
heart beat.<lb/>
Excellent performances are to be<lb/>
found all around. Chase, a veteran ot<lb/>
only a handful of films, is<lb/>
simply excellent. He has<lb/>
evil down pat. He'd make<lb/>
Ahnold wet his britches<lb/>
Paxton, as usual, does a<lb/>
strong job. He's a cheating<lb/>
criminal, but, goddurn,<lb/>
he's still a nice guy deep<lb/>
down. Marky Mark shows<lb/>
he has a lot more talent<lb/>
than those ads with him<lb/>
dancing around in his<lb/>
draws would have led us<lb/>
to believe. With the good<lb/>
reviews coming from his<lb/>
performance in Hoodie<lb/>
Nights, he's white hot in<lb/>
Hollywood.<lb/>
The'film is the directorial<lb/>
debut of Jack Green. The Oscar-<lb/>
winning Green has served as<lb/>
cinematographer of numerous ('linr<lb/>
Eastwood flicks. He does a superb<lb/>
job with Traveller, as does writer Jin.<lb/>
SEE TRAVELLER PAGE 9<lb/>
r y<lb/>
?? I ii Kiwi '?<lb/>
?m<lb/>
5P<lb/>
i<lb/>
T<lb/>
??" T.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0008"/><lb/>
8 Thursday. November 6, 1997<lb/>
llostyle<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
November<lb/>
6 THURSDAY<lb/>
Men in Black at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Hendrix<lb/>
Theater (runs<lb/>
through Nov.8.)<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Underground from<lb/>
8-10:45 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Percussion<lb/>
ensemble, Mark<lb/>
Ford, director at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Fletcher Recital Hall<lb/>
Mike Mesmer "Eyes" at The<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
The Excentrics at Firehouse<lb/>
Tavern<lb/>
Paul Tardiff (live jazz) at Stacatto<lb/>
Robert Earl Keen and Robbie<lb/>
Fulks at Cat's Cradle in Chapel Hill<lb/>
Robert Earl Keen<lb/>
PHOTO COURTESY OF ARISTA<lb/>
7 FRIDAY<lb/>
Jazz Ensemble Carrol Dasheill,<lb/>
director, at 8 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
Too Skinnie J's at The Attic<lb/>
Kernal Goat at<lb/>
Firehouse Tavern<lb/>
8 SATURDAY<lb/>
Balance B at The Attic<lb/>
Kelly Bell Band at<lb/>
Firehouse Tavern<lb/>
Gran Torino at Cat's<lb/>
Cradle in Chapel Hill<lb/>
11 TUESDAY<lb/>
Travel-Adventure Film:<lb/>
Jerusalem- Sacred and Prof one at 4 and<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in Hendrix Theater<lb/>
Live jazz at Firehouse Tavern<lb/>
Ben Folds Five at Cat's Cradle in<lb/>
Chapel Hill<lb/>
12 WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ECU Steel Orchestra,<lb/>
Mark<lb/>
Ford, director, 8 p.m Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall.<lb/>
The Jesus Lizard at Cat's Cradle<lb/>
in Chapel Hill<lb/>
ONGOING<lb/>
"Cajun Music and Zydeco"<lb/>
exhibition at Mendenhall Gallery<lb/>
through Nov. 10<lb/>
SEND US INFO!<lb/>
Do you have an upcoming event<lb/>
that you'd like listed in our It's<lb/>
Showtime column? If so, please<lb/>
send relevant information (a<lb/>
schedule would be nice) to:<lb/>
It's Showtime<lb/>
co Lifestyle Editor<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Publication Bldg.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Safe sex can be erotic, author says<lb/>
JENNIFER TAFE<lb/>
STAFF WRITF.H<lb/>
Safe sex. In a time of HIV, AIDS and<lb/>
other sexually transmitted diseases,<lb/>
safe sex is no longer an option. It is<lb/>
a necessity.<lb/>
Aside from the usual pro-condom<lb/>
Trojan commercials on MTV and<lb/>
the occasional safe sex public<lb/>
service announcement, people are<lb/>
pretty much left on their own to<lb/>
determine what exactly safe sex<lb/>
means. And let's face it, health class<lb/>
lectures are pretty dry as far as<lb/>
tails go.<lb/>
Often safe sex information is<lb/>
dispensed wirh much technical<lb/>
information and little imagination.<lb/>
Eroticizing Safe Sex, the Student<lb/>
Union Lectures Committee's latest<lb/>
sentation, aims to change this.<lb/>
ic lecture will discuss and<lb/>
demonstrate various ways to engage<lb/>
mutually satisfying safe sex<lb/>
tices.<lb/>
On Monday Nov.10, at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
River Huston, author of HIV, AIDS,<lb/>
and The Single Person, will be talking<lb/>
about the more interesting, erotic<lb/>
aspects of safe sex in the 90s.<lb/>
Huston's presentation will focus<lb/>
on the wide range of erotic<lb/>
possibilities one has while still<lb/>
maintaining a safe sex life.<lb/>
Huston, herself diagnosed with<lb/>
HIV in 1990, explains that she has<lb/>
enjoyed an erotic, satisfying<lb/>
relationship with her partner for<lb/>
years without infecting him with<lb/>
the virus.<lb/>
Lecture Committee members<lb/>
are excited about this presentation.<lb/>
The most popular lectures usually<lb/>
focus on sex. Past shows by Dr. Ruth<lb/>
and Susan Landolphi have been<lb/>
among the best attended lectures.<lb/>
"Sex always seems to be a<lb/>
popular topic said Assistant<lb/>
Director of Student Activities J.<lb/>
Marshall. This lecture offers a<lb/>
different perspective than the<lb/>
speakers of earlier presentations.<lb/>
"She's a woman that's living with<lb/>
AIDS Marshall said. "She's been<lb/>
involved with the same partner for<lb/>
six or seven years without infecting<lb/>
him. She must know something that<lb/>
we don't<lb/>
According to Huston, the only<lb/>
sex acts that can be defined as<lb/>
"safe" are those in which there is no<lb/>
exchange of body fluids. Eroticizing<lb/>
Safe Sex will explore and discuss all<lb/>
of the possibilities that fall under<lb/>
this definition.<lb/>
The topics covered in Ervtuizmg<lb/>
Safe Sex definitely stray from the<lb/>
usual dull, informational formats of<lb/>
health classes and commercials.<lb/>
Huston will discuss sex toys,<lb/>
fantasy, simulated oral sex and many<lb/>
other things in addition to more<lb/>
traditional topics like condoms and<lb/>
dental dams. Eroticizing Safe Sex is a<lb/>
presentation based on useful,<lb/>
practical information.<lb/>
Students and ECU staff can get<lb/>
their free tickets in advance at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center with a<lb/>
valid ID. Admission for the general<lb/>
public is S3 in advance and $5 at the<lb/>
door.<lb/>
?? ? ?<lb/>
Bringing Back the Fun<lb/>
Monday, November 10,1997, 8:30 pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theater<lb/>
Admission1<lb/>
ECU Students, Faculty, and Staff<lb/>
FREE advance tickets available upon presentation of valid<lb/>
ECU ID at Mendenhall Student Center Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Public<lb/>
$3.00 in advance, $5.00 at the door<lb/>
LL BODY SVIASSAG<lb/>
HUGQIN<lb/>
ATION<lb/>
s?t?r<lb/>
PRESENTED BY THE STUDENT UNION LECTURE COMMITTEE. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL OUR<lb/>
HOTLINE AT 328-6004, OR VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT www.ecu.eduStudentUniotvTHEHOMEPAGE.html.<lb/>
Wmduati with dsabdrtas who requira accommodation m order to paroopata at any want ECU an ancouaged to contact the Oaoartmtni tor Dtubaty Support Sarvtcet<lb/>
pt 91-328 4802 fVorcaTOD) torTv?9? hourt prior to iht start o( tt program Mo data funds wart ueed m tht punting of this material Prtntad on racydad paper<lb/>
EXPLORE<lb/>
OTHER CULTURES,<lb/>
OTHER PLACES<lb/>
D&amp;partmont<lb/>
Anthropology<lb/>
Brewster<lb/>
A-214<lb/>
ANTH 2016<lb/>
SPRING SEMESTER 1998<lb/>
ANTH 1000 Introduction to Anthropology<lb/>
ANTH 2000 Archaeology Around the World<lb/>
ANTH 2010 Societies Around the World<lb/>
ANTH 2015 Introduction to Biological<lb/>
Anthropology<lb/>
Biological Anthropology<lb/>
Laboratory<lb/>
Cultures of East Asia<lb/>
Cultures of South Pacific<lb/>
Ethnographic Field Methods<lb/>
Archaeological Methods<lb/>
Archaeological Laboratory<lb/>
Women's Role in Cross-Cultural<lb/>
Perspective<lb/>
ANTH 4050 Pschological Anthropology<lb/>
ANTH 4260 Cultural Ecology<lb/>
ANTH 5010 Advanced Archaeological Methods 6<lb/>
Theory<lb/>
ANTH 5015 Advanced Ethnographic Methods 6<lb/>
Theory<lb/>
ANTH 6101 Core Course: Archeology<lb/>
ANTH3002<lb/>
ANTH3004<lb/>
ANTH3050<lb/>
ANTH3075<lb/>
ANTH3076<lb/>
ANTH3200<lb/>
Relationships in the 90s.<lb/>
Mission Impossible?<lb/>
Wednesday, November 19,1997,8:00pm<lb/>
Hendrix Theater, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Host Dwayne Featuring: Fabian<lb/>
Why dont women Bee nloe guys?<lb/>
Do you tank aM men are dogs?<lb/>
East Carolina's 1 Live Talk Show! FREE!<lb/>
.the<lb/>
dwajgK<lb/>
Or are you Just a superfreak?<lb/>
Why do black men data white woman?<lb/>
Where have all the good men gone?<lb/>
For further info, about becoming a panelist, contact: ctvvayrieslxyw@hotrnail.corn.<lb/>
?$2fe<lb/>
Sponsored by the ECU Student Union Cultural Awarenecs ConwTfclttBe. For more information,<lb/>
ce!32a4715,orch?xoutourwebpaqe<lb/>
-<lb/>
,<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0009"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
i ? c<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
style<lb/>
Thursday. November 6. 1997 9<lb/>
Replacements<lb/>
continued from page 7<lb/>
tight the duo were. The<lb/>
tightness often gave way to<lb/>
inebriated, yet spirited,<lb/>
sloppiness during the The<lb/>
Replacements' live shows.<lb/>
"Achin" To Be "Talent Show"<lb/>
and "Nobody from the band's<lb/>
final two albums, are also very<lb/>
good songs. They may lack the<lb/>
energy and togetherness of the<lb/>
early songs, but they are still<lb/>
interesting, well-written and<lb/>
performed songs.<lb/>
The second CD offers up<lb/>
some semi-rare Replacements'<lb/>
jewels. Particularly interesting is<lb/>
the early version of "Can't Hardly<lb/>
Wait The earlier version is a lot<lb/>
wilder and looser, but not<lb/>
necessarily better. "Beer for<lb/>
Breakfast "Till We're Nude<lb/>
"We Know the Night" and<lb/>
"Portland" are standouts.<lb/>
"Like a Rolling Pin a parody<lb/>
of Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone<lb/>
is hilarious, especially because<lb/>
Mr. Bob happened to be in the<lb/>
studio while the song was being<lb/>
recorded, unbeknownst to<lb/>
Westerberg.<lb/>
Sadly, the retrospective only<lb/>
tells part of The Replacements'<lb/>
story. The sometimes wonderful,<lb/>
sometimes sloppyawful<lb/>
(different from plain awful)<lb/>
albums the group made for<lb/>
Minneapolis based label Twin<lb/>
Tone are not represented at all. A<lb/>
complete and fair representation<lb/>
of the band has to include songs<lb/>
from those albums.<lb/>
The retrospective also<lb/>
includes bonus multi-media<lb/>
material. As part of the bonus<lb/>
material, the video for "Bastards<lb/>
of Young" is included. This was<lb/>
the band's first foray into the<lb/>
world of music video. It was a<lb/>
medium they did not particularly<lb/>
care for, as indicated by the video.<lb/>
It is shot in black and white, and<lb/>
it largelly consists of a closeup of<lb/>
a stereo speaker, with the song<lb/>
blaring gloriously out. The lone<lb/>
shot of the speaker gives way to<lb/>
the speaker and a partial shot of a<lb/>
guy smoking. At the end of the<lb/>
song, he gets up and kicks over<lb/>
the speaker. That pretty much<lb/>
sums up The Replacements.<lb/>
They did it their way, and when<lb/>
they had to do it someone else's<lb/>
way, they still did it their way.<lb/>
atalog<lb/>
Connection<lb/>
Everything in the Store<lb/>
Sb'J<lb/>
Tattooing &amp;<lb/>
Body Piercing<lb/>
10 off all<lb/>
Body Piercing<lb/>
with Student ID<lb/>
Expires: 113097<lb/>
(919)756-0600<lb/>
Autoclave Sterilization<lb/>
4685 Suite A US Hwy 13 Greenville NC<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
continued from page 7<lb/>
some upgrading in the billiards<lb/>
area as well Woodruff claimed.<lb/>
Glow Bowling made its dchut<lb/>
this past weekend at Midnight<lb/>
Madness. This was the first time<lb/>
the blacklights, with the help of<lb/>
special phosphorescent ball and<lb/>
murals, were used to take bowling<lb/>
as we know it into a realm beyond<lb/>
tackiness that can only be called<lb/>
"cool<lb/>
Now might be a good time to<lb/>
give Mendenhall a chance. You'll<lb/>
be surprised by how much better<lb/>
things are looking.<lb/>
Traveller<lb/>
continued from page7<lb/>
McGlynn. Hints of Eastwoodian<lb/>
themes are evident through this<lb/>
small, rwisting film. The eternal<lb/>
Eastwood questions plays heavy:<lb/>
What is the truth? And whose<lb/>
truth is it?<lb/>
Rent Traveller and be prepared<lb/>
for a wonderful little film with a<lb/>
familiar local background. Let the<lb/>
Greenville theaters wait for<lb/>
Monkey Trouble i. or some movie<lb/>
with Steven Segal and phony<lb/>
kung-fu. I'll take this one.<lb/>
I Know What tops the<lb/>
box office for third week<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Richard<lb/>
Gere's murder mystery "Red<lb/>
Corner" got nipped by the low-<lb/>
budget thriller "I Know What You<lb/>
Did Last Summer which topped<lb/>
the box office charts for the third<lb/>
straight weekend.<lb/>
Three movies ? including two<lb/>
new films ? opened in national<lb/>
release. Gere's "Red Corner<lb/>
which is so critical of the Chinese<lb/>
that it could not be shot in the<lb/>
actual locations, made its debut in<lb/>
second place. The adult film story<lb/>
"Boogie Nights moving into<lb/>
wide distribution after two<lb/>
weekends in selected cities, was<lb/>
fourth. Danny Glover's serial killer<lb/>
drama "Switchback" opened<lb/>
poorly in eighth.<lb/>
"Devil's Advocate" ranked No.<lb/>
3. Playing in Canada only, "Bean"<lb/>
performed well.<lb/>
A Life Less Ordinary" plunged<lb/>
51 percent in its second weekend.<lb/>
1. "I Know What You Did Last<lb/>
Summer Sony-Columbia, $9.4<lb/>
million, 2,524 locations, $3,727<lb/>
average, $45.3 million, three<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
2. "Red Corner MGM, $7,403<lb/>
million. 2.244 locations, $3,299<lb/>
average, $7,403 million, one week.<lb/>
3. "Devil's Advocate Warner<lb/>
Bros $7.37 million, 2,404<lb/>
locations, $3,065 average, $37.3<lb/>
million, three weeks.<lb/>
4. "Boogie Nights New Line,<lb/>
$4.7 million, 907 locations. $5,162<lb/>
average, $8.8 million, four weeks.<lb/>
5. "Kiss the Girls Paramount,<lb/>
$3.5 million, 2,354 locations,<lb/>
$1,492 average, $51.4 million, five<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
6. "Seven Years in Tibet Sony,<lb/>
$3.3 million, 2,103 locations,<lb/>
$1,559 average, $31 million, four<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
7. "Fairytale: A True Story<lb/>
Paramount, $2.9 million, 1,278<lb/>
locations, $2,271 average, $7.1<lb/>
million, two weeks.<lb/>
8. "Switchback Paramount,<lb/>
$2.7 million, 1,128 locations,<lb/>
$2,398 average, $2.7 million, one<lb/>
week.<lb/>
9. "Gattaca Sony, $2.6<lb/>
million, 1,279 locations, $2,022<lb/>
average, $8.2 million, two weeks.<lb/>
10. "In &amp; Out Paramount,<lb/>
$1.7 million, 1,659 locations,<lb/>
$1,042 average, $59.2 million,<lb/>
seven weeks.<lb/>
ECU Ring Event<lb/>
DOWNTOWN ONLY<lb/>
3 DAYS ONLY<lb/>
Friday, Nov. 7th 10-6<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 8th 10-6<lb/>
Sunday, Nov. 9th 1-5<lb/>
Now Open at Arlington<lb/>
Village - And soon to<lb/>
be back downtown<lb/>
with a bigger and<lb/>
better store!<lb/>
ARTQ1RV E D<lb/>
 CQLLetSP JEWELRY<lb/>
Nov. 10th<lb/>
Nov. 11th<lb/>
Nov. 12th<lb/>
Nov. 13 th<lb/>
Nov. 14th<lb/>
10am-4pm<lb/>
10am-4pm<lb/>
10am-4pm<lb/>
10am-7pm<lb/>
10am-4pm<lb/>
Special Hours: 10am-7pm on the 13th<lb/>
"Officially Licensed East Carolina Ring Dealer"<lb/>
Student Stores<lb/>
1RTQ1RVED<lb/>
V COLL?G? JEWELRY<lb/>
BE<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
UNTVEHsmr<lb/>
iE&amp; HH jjjjfi<lb/>
'Special Payment Plans Available<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
INIVERSITY<lb/>
NCs Legendary Nightclub,<lb/>
Voted 1 of ECU and<lb/>
fop f 00 College Bars hi the<lb/>
Nation by Playboy magazine<lb/>
October 1997<lb/>
;<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
Mike Mesmer "Eyes<lb/>
'The World's Most Powerful Hypnotist" "<lb/>
if<lb/>
ADVANCE TiX AVAIL-<lb/>
ABLE AT<lb/>
CD ALLEY ? SgUrS<lb/>
EAST COAST MUSIC<lb/>
&amp; VIDEO<lb/>
WASH PUB ? ATTIC<lb/>
Two Big Nights, Two Big Shows!<lb/>
i<lb/>
Friday Nov. 7'<lb/>
Tod Skinnee JS<lb/>
Capricorn Recording Artist<lb/>
special guest:<lb/>
Almighty Senators<lb/>
ADVANCE TIX AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
CD ALLEY ? SKULLY'S<lb/>
EAST COAST MUSIC &amp; VIDEO<lb/>
WASH PUB ? ATTIC<lb/>
?<lb/>
Saturday Nov. 8<lb/>
free admission<lb/>
with Too Skinee J's<lb/>
ticket stub<lb/>
Coming Next Week<lb/>
<lb/>
Cravin Melon<lb/>
Sat. Nov. 15<lb/>
Special Guest:<lb/>
The Ultraviolets<lb/>
ADVANCE TIX AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
CD ALLEY ? SKULLY'S<lb/>
EAST COAST MUSIC &amp; VIDEO<lb/>
WASH PUB ? ATTIC<lb/>
H<lb/>
25 Off Your Entire Check At Darryl's<lb/>
Jusr show your F.CLi student ID at the<lb/>
DarryTs across from campus and get a 25<lb/>
discount on your entire dinner check. Try our<lb/>
Famous Saucy Barbecued Fork<lb/>
Ribs. Award Winning Fajitas<lb/>
Grande, New Wood lire Grilled<lb/>
Steaks. Fresh Vteeetable Pasta,<lb/>
RESTAURANT &amp; BAR<lb/>
V I I I f I I I ? lllll<lb/>
800 East 10th Street ? Z52-1907<lb/>
Roadside Chicken Sandwich, Steak and Cheese<lb/>
Sandwich, Spicy Buffalo Wings, or any of our<lb/>
Delicious Desserts It's .til specially priced for<lb/>
ECU students. So stop by tonight<lb/>
and enjoy East Carolina's favonte<lb/>
place for food and lun'<lb/>
' i ? ? .<lb/>
w? I<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0010"/><lb/>
10 Thursday. November 6, 1997<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Tennis teams await final tourneys<lb/>
JEREMY ANDERSON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
For the ECU Men's and<lb/>
Women's Tennis Teams, it has<lb/>
been a long fall season of<lb/>
individual tournaments.<lb/>
Although the Pirates have not<lb/>
competed as a team, Coach Bill<lb/>
Moore has seen some good<lb/>
tennis that he hopes will carry<lb/>
over into the spring season.<lb/>
"Both teams will do well in<lb/>
the spring. Exactly where we<lb/>
will finish in the conference,<lb/>
I'm unable to say Moore said.<lb/>
The ECU Women have<lb/>
competed in several<lb/>
tournaments this fall which<lb/>
included the Lady Pirate<lb/>
Invitational here in Greenville.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are led by<lb/>
their only senior, Mona Eek.<lb/>
The Pirate netters gained<lb/>
much needed experience this<lb/>
fall. Seven different players<lb/>
competed in singles<lb/>
competition, while six different<lb/>
doubles jg combinations<lb/>
competed. Freshman Maggie<lb/>
Maginp.es was the most<lb/>
in singles play<lb/>
9-1 record and<lb/>
successful<lb/>
posting i<lb/>
winning<lb/>
singles championship at the<lb/>
UNCW Invitational. Maginr.es<lb/>
teamed with sophomore Asa<lb/>
Ellbring to compile a 4-3<lb/>
doubles record. The team of<lb/>
junior Catherine Morgan and<lb/>
sophomore Michelle Martin<lb/>
also posted a doubles record of<lb/>
4-3.<lb/>
The Pirates will be an<lb/>
extremely young team this year<lb/>
and Moore will have his work<lb/>
cut out for him.<lb/>
"It has been fun breaking in<lb/>
the new girls. They have done<lb/>
very well Moore said.<lb/>
The ECU men's squad<lb/>
boasts all upperclassmen in the<lb/>
lineup this season. However,<lb/>
the Pirate men have been<lb/>
hampered by injuries this fall.<lb/>
Two Pirates who have played<lb/>
strong this fall arc Seniors<lb/>
Roope Kalajo and Nils Alomar.<lb/>
As the only two seniors on the<lb/>
team, the duo has traveled to<lb/>
tournaments in North Carolina,<lb/>
South Carolina, and Georgia.<lb/>
Kalajo and Alomar have<lb/>
already qualified for the main<lb/>
draw in singles play at this<lb/>
week's Rolex Championships in<lb/>
Chapel Hill. This tournament<lb/>
will be the toughest<lb/>
competition the Pirates have<lb/>
faced this fall.<lb/>
the Flight Three<lb/>
Remaining Schedule<lb/>
Woman<lb/>
Nov. 7-9 Southern Collegiate Championships Columbia. S.C.<lb/>
Fall Season Complete<lb/>
Junior Kenny Kirby polishes his game up during a recent practice. The women's and men's fall season will<lb/>
conclude this weekend.<lb/>
Nov. 5-8 Rolex Championships<lb/>
Fall Season Complete<lb/>
Chapel Hill. N.C.<lb/>
PHOTO BY CUT SUCH<lb/>
Men'sRoster<lb/>
Name Nils AlomarYear Sr.Hometown Mallorca, Spain<lb/>
Roope KalajoSr.Kokkola, Finiand<lb/>
Wes KinterJr.Lancaster, Pa.<lb/>
Kennv KirbvJr.Wilminaton. N.C.<lb/>
Brett RowleyJr.Lighthouse Point Fla.<lb/>
Stephen SiebenbrunnerJr.Gunskirchen, Austria<lb/>
Derek SlateJr.Mt. Airy, N.C<lb/>
Women'sRoster<lb/>
Name Mona EekYear Sr.Hometown Nesbru, Norway<lb/>
Catherine MorganJr.Washington, N.C.<lb/>
Anne-Birgitte SvaeJr.Oslo, Norway<lb/>
Asa EllbringSo.Norrahammar, Sweden<lb/>
Maggie MeginnisFr.Clemmons, N.C.<lb/>
Michelle MartinSo.Lynchburg, Va.<lb/>
Kersten SchachingerSo.Defray Beach, Fla.<lb/>
Jennie WardFr.Richmond, Va.<lb/>
Women's soccer knocks off ranked team<lb/>
Overtime goal ensures<lb/>
home playoff game<lb/>
AMANDA ROSS<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Win. Upset. Victory. Whatever you want to call<lb/>
it, that's what the women's soccer team<lb/>
achieved Friday afternoon.<lb/>
It was the biggest win of their brief four year<lb/>
history, knocking off conference foe George<lb/>
Mason, who was also the number 22 ranked<lb/>
team in the country.<lb/>
With the victory, ECU gains the number<lb/>
four seed in the CAA Women's Soccer<lb/>
Championship tournament. But more<lb/>
importantly, they host their first round match<lb/>
with Old Dominion on Wednesday, Nov. 5 at 2<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have won a record 10<lb/>
games this year (10-9), and are currently 4-4 in<lb/>
the conference, which marks the most<lb/>
conference wins they have ever had. ECU is<lb/>
currently on a three game winning streak and<lb/>
has won nine of its last four games.<lb/>
Freshman forward Jennifer Bush booted in<lb/>
the goal in the sudden death overtime, which<lb/>
marked the first time ECU has beaten a top 25<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Head Coach Neil Roberts feels this victory<lb/>
is a stepping stone for his team.<lb/>
"To beat George Mason was really great for<lb/>
our team; it was a great team effort Roberts<lb/>
said. They did exactly what I asked them do<lb/>
that night and it worked out for us<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have never made it past<lb/>
the first round of play and actually tied ODU<lb/>
for fourth place in the tournament but ECU<lb/>
owns the tie-breaker since they defeated<lb/>
ODU in head-to-head competition, 1-0, back<lb/>
on September 24 in Greenville.<lb/>
Roberts knows tournament play essentially<lb/>
means a whole new season.<lb/>
"Now it's a new season Roberts said. To<lb/>
host a home playoff game is something we are<lb/>
really excited about.<lb/>
According to Roberts the credit goes to the<lb/>
players who have stuck together and played<lb/>
their hearts out in the remaining weeks.<lb/>
"I have to credit the players in the last two<lb/>
weeks of the season they really stuck together<lb/>
and established some solidarity, and really just<lb/>
made it a point to have agood time playing the<lb/>
game Roberts said. "That's half the battle<lb/>
right now<lb/>
The Lady Pirates match is tomorrow (Wed.<lb/>
Nov. 5) at 2 p.m. at Bunting Track. Tickets are<lb/>
$1 with a student ID.<lb/>
Swimmers<lb/>
lap up "pool"<lb/>
of wins<lb/>
Team picks up another<lb/>
impressive victory<lb/>
The Lady Pirate soccer team suffered a disappointing 3-0 loss to the Lady<lb/>
Monarchs in round one of the CAA tournament. ECU finished the season 10-10 .4<lb/>
in the CAA, the best finish the team has seen in history.<lb/>
PHOTO BY CLAY BUCK<lb/>
Pirates look for third straight conference victory<lb/>
Football team hoping<lb/>
to keep streak alive<lb/>
AMANDA ROSS<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Right now ECU is on a winning streak<lb/>
and they hope to keep it going when<lb/>
they plav at Houston this Saturday.<lb/>
ECU (3-5, 2-2) is coming off their<lb/>
first two conference wins, while the<lb/>
Cougars (3-5,2-1) have won two of their<lb/>
last three conference games.<lb/>
Last Saturday's win marked the<lb/>
second time this season, the Pirates had<lb/>
to come from behind to seal a win. The<lb/>
defense played a major part in that win<lb/>
when Dwight Henry ignited a second<lb/>
half rally that led to 31 unanswered<lb/>
ECU points. Henry's 98-yard<lb/>
interception return for a touchdown and<lb/>
Forrest Foster's 13-yard touchdown<lb/>
marked the second week in a row the<lb/>
defense scored two touchdowns.<lb/>
"We're real confident atxut the way<lb/>
we were able to come back<lb/>
Quarterback Dan Gonzalez said. "I<lb/>
think we were more confident in the<lb/>
area that our defense was able to score<lb/>
two touchdowns. It was a welcomed<lb/>
surprised and hopefully we're able to<lb/>
get it going offensively to help them out<lb/>
a little bit<lb/>
ECU career leader in touchdowns<lb/>
Larry Shannon, who caught his first<lb/>
touchdown of the season last week to<lb/>
give him 21, said the offense has to pay<lb/>
back the defense.<lb/>
"We need to pay them back<lb/>
Shannon said. "We need top go out<lb/>
there and score early and get ahead and<lb/>
not make it hard on everybody. If we can<lb/>
play with the lead we can play with a lot<lb/>
more confidence<lb/>
Offensively the Cougars get it done<lb/>
through the air, with 1,748 total passing<lb/>
yards, and 1,050 on the ground. In<lb/>
comparison, ECU has 1,670 passing<lb/>
yards and 511 rushing yards.<lb/>
Defensive tackle Brian Johnson said<lb/>
they have to be ready for every kind of<lb/>
offensive plays. Johnson said last week<lb/>
the defense almost got burned because<lb/>
they thought the Cards would pass the<lb/>
ball more, instead of running the ball.<lb/>
"They're pretty even on the run and<lb/>
pass, so we have to be ready for<lb/>
anything Johnson said. "Last week we<lb/>
thought they (Louisville) were going to<lb/>
pass a lot and they gut us with the run<lb/>
early so we have to be ready for<lb/>
everything<lb/>
Coach Steve Logan said Houston is a<lb/>
team that is searching for some self-<lb/>
identification.<lb/>
They're finding themselves in<lb/>
several different positions trying to find<lb/>
out who and what they are right now<lb/>
Logan said. "The quarterback situation<lb/>
seems to have settled on one guy. They<lb/>
started with three quarterbacks believe<lb/>
it or not. They're trying to find out a lot<lb/>
of things and they haven't found a way<lb/>
to put it all together in a package just<lb/>
yet<lb/>
The quarterback they have settled<lb/>
on is red-shirt freshman Jason<lb/>
McKinley. After eight games, McKinley<lb/>
has completed 105 of 1 passes with<lb/>
seven interceptions and seven<lb/>
touchdowns, for 1,384 yards. He is<lb/>
averaging 173.0 yards per game.<lb/>
The Pirates kick off the game at 2:30<lb/>
p.m. (central time). The game will be<lb/>
televised locally on WNCT-TV<lb/>
STEVE LOSEY<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
The ECU swimming team had an explosive meet<lb/>
on Saturday. The Pirates soundly defeated the<lb/>
American University Eagles in swimming<lb/>
matches on Saturday and continued what is<lb/>
shaping up to be a great season.<lb/>
Both the men's and women's swimming teams<lb/>
are now 3-0. The men's team beat the Eagles<lb/>
120-85 and the women's team won 135-89.<lb/>
"Wc won both meets convincingly said Head<lb/>
Coach Rick Kobe. "Wc dominated both teams<lb/>
On the women's team, several freshman<lb/>
turned in impressive performances. Samantha<lb/>
Perry won the 200 breaststrokc in 2:24.59. Perry's<lb/>
time is the fourth fastest in Pirate history. It was<lb/>
the second time in two weeks Perry broke 2:25.<lb/>
In ECU history, only three other Pirates have<lb/>
broken 2:25 in such a short rime span. So far.<lb/>
Perry is undefeated in the breaststrokc.<lb/>
Freshman Brooke Wise won the 200 butterfly<lb/>
in 2:10.50 and is undefeated in the 200 butterfly.<lb/>
Casey Sloan, ECU's top freestyle swimmer, won<lb/>
the distance freestyle in 5:06.69. Holiie Butler<lb/>
won the 100 and 200 freestyle. Butler is also<lb/>
undefeated in each of her categories. Senior<lb/>
Amanda Atkinson won the backstroke.<lb/>
There are probably 12 more that I could<lb/>
name that are just as impressive Kobe said.<lb/>
"We've got a lot of talent on this team<lb/>
Senior Brandon Tilley, co-captain for the<lb/>
men's team, chalked up another victory for his<lb/>
undefeated record in the 200 IM with a time of<lb/>
1:57.89. Tilley went on to win the 200<lb/>
breaststroke in 2:08.18. Tilley is the highest<lb/>
ranked breaststroker in the conference and holds<lb/>
the school record for the 200 breaststroke.<lb/>
Senior Lee Hutchens, the other captain of the<lb/>
men's team, won the distance freestyle.<lb/>
Sophomore Matt Jabs got two victories under his<lb/>
belt Saturday. He first won the 50 freestyle with<lb/>
a time of 21.56 and then won the 100 freestyle in<lb/>
48.11. Paul Pinther won the 200 backstroke with<lb/>
a time of 1:55.95.<lb/>
"As with the women's team, 1 could name 12<lb/>
SEE SWIM. PAGE tt<lb/>
Ankle injury<lb/>
doesn't mean<lb/>
end of career<lb/>
Men's tennis player<lb/>
continues to impress<lb/>
on the court<lb/>
STEVE LOSEY<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Roope Kalajo<lb/>
Junior Roope Kalajo has traveled<lb/>
all the way across the Atlantic to<lb/>
play tennis for ECU, and we<lb/>
should be glad that he did. Since<lb/>
he has started playing in America,<lb/>
he has become one of the best<lb/>
players on the team.<lb/>
While at a youth tennis<lb/>
academy, he won numerous<lb/>
championships, including the<lb/>
Scandinavian Championship. ATP, the worldwide<lb/>
ranker of tennis players, recently ranked Kalajo<lb/>
886th out of all the tennis players in the world.<lb/>
In high school, Kalajo played ice hockey. He<lb/>
gave up that sport, however, when he was 15 to<lb/>
concentrate on his talents in tennis.<lb/>
Kalajo's tennis career suffered what could have<lb/>
been a drastic setback in the spring season. He<lb/>
twisted his ankle during a match and was<lb/>
recovering for a long time. Over the summer, he<lb/>
returned to Finland for surgery and therapy He<lb/>
was unable to practice all summer.<lb/>
"I'm getting bettei Kalajo said. "But I'm still<lb/>
not 100 percent yet<lb/>
He is going to have therapy all year in order to<lb/>
make a full recovery<lb/>
Despite his injury, Kalajo has been an integral<lb/>
part of the tennis team this season. Most recently,<lb/>
he was one of four players chosen to compete at<lb/>
the University of South Carolina Region II Fall<lb/>
Invitational last weekend. After the other three<lb/>
were knocked out of the tournament, Kalajo was<lb/>
still alive in the consolation bracket.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the USC tournament was plagued<lb/>
by intermittent rain that weekend and the<lb/>
consolation bracket was eliminated due to time<lb/>
constraints.<lb/>
"Our team has had a lot of injuries this<lb/>
semester Kalajo said. "We're just getting ready for<lb/>
spring I really think that the spring semester will<lb/>
be our big chance<lb/>
Kalajo is a business major and is still undecided<lb/>
about what he wants to do after graduation, but is<lb/>
thinking about staying in America to play tennis.<lb/>
He has high aspirations for his performance this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"I think that this season will be one of my best<lb/>
yet said Kalajo. "Last year was my first in the<lb/>
VS and if I stay healthy, I'll have another good<lb/>
season<lb/>
&amp;??? .<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0011"/><lb/>
3E<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
S<lb/>
pori<lb/>
s<lb/>
Thursday. November6, 1997 11<lb/>
Volleyball team<lb/>
continues to struggle<lb/>
Don't let an unpaid parking ticket stop you from<lb/>
registering! Be sure you have paid all university<lb/>
debts, including parking fines, prior to waiting in<lb/>
line for Spring registration.<lb/>
DID YOU KNOW you can find the<lb/>
latest parking lot changes on the WEB?<lb/>
From the ECU Home Page (www.ecu.edu) link to "Parking Lot<lb/>
Adjustment Notices" listed under the Intranet Or if you are off-<lb/>
campus, look for it on the Parking &amp; Transportation Services web site,<lb/>
or Business Services web site.<lb/>
You'll find more than you want to know about PARKING at ECU! If<lb/>
you have any questions, you may send an "electronic postcard" from<lb/>
this web site.<lb/>
RawllAustin Parking<lb/>
Lot Closing I III0197<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
drop eighth<lb/>
conference loss<lb/>
Pall Kaplan<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The ECU women's volleyball team<lb/>
fought hard through another loss<lb/>
against a more powerful American<lb/>
University team. The Pirates were<lb/>
defeated by the Eagles in three<lb/>
games, 15-8, 15-5 and 15-10. ECU<lb/>
has fallen to a record of 12 wins and<lb/>
17 losses overall, and two wins and<lb/>
eight losses in the conference.<lb/>
American improved their record to<lb/>
23-3 and 7-2 in the conference.<lb/>
LaKeya Mason, a junior transfer,<lb/>
helped the Pirates in the first game<lb/>
with three block assists in a row.<lb/>
She finished the match with five<lb/>
block assists, seven kills and three<lb/>
digs. Cinta Claro had nine kills and<lb/>
seven digs, Claro is now nearly fifth<lb/>
place on the all-time top 10 list<lb/>
with 361 kills so far this season.<lb/>
Kristin Warner, who had 29 assists<lb/>
and four digs, now has 912 assists<lb/>
to rank fourth.<lb/>
"We had problems hitting the<lb/>
ball and we had problems passing<lb/>
the ball<lb/>
Coach Kim Walker said about<lb/>
the defeat on Sunday.<lb/>
.Almost as soon as senior captain<lb/>
Kari Koenning came back into the<lb/>
lineup from an early season broken<lb/>
arm, freshman Liz Hall went on<lb/>
the disabled list with<lb/>
mononucleosis. Hall is expected to<lb/>
return next weekend to the lineup.<lb/>
Hopefully with the return of<lb/>
Koenning, the Pirates will be able<lb/>
to get some numbers up in the "W<lb/>
column. With Koenning on the<lb/>
court, ECU is 8-4 and only 4-13<lb/>
with out her.<lb/>
"We're working to just win the<lb/>
matches, they're all tough matches.<lb/>
If you don't play on a given day,<lb/>
they'll beat you Koenning said<lb/>
when asked about her outlook on<lb/>
the remaining games left in the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The women's volleyball team<lb/>
will be back on the court at home<lb/>
Friday Nov. 7 against Elon College<lb/>
and Saturday Nov. 8 versus James<lb/>
Madison University.<lb/>
Parking Meters<lb/>
PARKING METERS are located in several areas of campus for the<lb/>
convenience of temporary parking. Metered parking is .25 for 30<lb/>
minutes. Meters near the Rec Center may be fed for up to two hours<lb/>
of parking, while on other areas of campus, the maximum time to be<lb/>
paid for at once is 30 minutes. In an effort to assist students and<lb/>
visitors, some of the 30 minute meters will be changed in the near<lb/>
future to allow for a greater amount of time before needing to add<lb/>
quarters.<lb/>
The parking lot located east of the Rawl Building and<lb/>
west of the Austin Building will be closed beginning<lb/>
Monday, November 10,1997. Facilities Services and<lb/>
contractors require this lot for equipment and materials<lb/>
storage related to elevator installations in the Rawl<lb/>
Building and the Austin Building. Following these<lb/>
projects, the parking lot will be closed permanently in<lb/>
keeping with the University's Master Plan.<lb/>
209-B S.Evans S<lb/>
Pittroan Building<lb/>
neat courthouse<lb/>
Greenville. NC<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/>
WE'VE GOT YOUR FAVORITE<lb/>
DC COMICS AND MORE!<lb/>
NOSTALGIA NEWSSTAND<lb/>
The Comk Book Store<lb/>
919 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
(919)758-6909<lb/>
Indoor Climbing Wall Vertical Tour<lb/>
All tours begin at 7pm at the<lb/>
Adventure Program Center.<lb/>
November 6<lb/>
Outdoor living Skill Seminars<lb/>
Dressing for the Outdoors ??<lb/>
November 12<lb/>
Climbing<lb/>
Pilot Mountain Trip 2<lb/>
November 15<lb/>
Reg. by Nov. 7<lb/>
RECREATIONAL<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
Climbing Seminars<lb/>
Climbing Safety Rescue<lb/>
November 10<lb/>
Beginner Climbing<lb/>
and Belaying Workshops<lb/>
Learn the techniques that will<lb/>
make you a confident climber.<lb/>
November 17<lb/>
For more information call 328-6387<lb/>
?<lb/>
?i"li ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0012"/><lb/>
12 Thursday. November 6. 1997<lb/>
01<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Pirate ChaseTurkey<lb/>
Trot 1997<lb/>
5K1.5 M Road Race and Walk<lb/>
Saturday, November 8, 1997 ? 10 a.m.<lb/>
Schedule of Events? 10 a.mECl Rec<lb/>
Services 1.5 mile run<lb/>
10:30 a.mPulse Athletic Club 5K Run<lb/>
11:15 a.mTBA Invitational 5K Run<lb/>
11:45 a.mTBA Post Race Parry and Awards Presentation<lb/>
Location? Registration and<lb/>
rewards located at ECU Rec Center<lb/>
StartFinish lines located on Main ECU campus<lb/>
Race Director? Charlie "Choo"<lb/>
Justice-Head Coach ECU Women's cross country and track<lb/>
and field-(919) 328-4611 or 328-4622 .Assistance Race<lb/>
Director-Cliff Ogburn 328-1567<lb/>
reregister? Preregister in person<lb/>
at ECU Rec. Services<lb/>
Race Day Registration? Begins at 8:30 a.m. at<lb/>
ECU Rec. Services<lb/>
Entree Fees?<lb/>
Prcregistered SI 2.00, on race day $14.00<lb/>
ECU students S5.00 before, S7.00 on race day (must present<lb/>
valid ECU student ID)<lb/>
All registered participants will receive a race packet, and will<lb/>
be eligible for door prizes.<lb/>
T-shirts guaranteed to the first 200 tegistered, available on a<lb/>
limited basis afterwards<lb/>
Participants may pick up their packets beginning at 8:30 a.m.<lb/>
on race day<lb/>
Awards?<lb/>
5K: Awards will be given in the following categories<lb/>
(No duplication of awards)<lb/>
Top 3 overall males and females<lb/>
Top 3 ECU students (m &amp; 0<lb/>
Top 2 ECU facultystaff (m &amp; 0<lb/>
Top 2 ECU alumni (m &amp; f)<lb/>
Top 2 males and females in the following age groups:<lb/>
12 &amp; under, 13-19, 20-29, 30-39, 40-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70 &amp;<lb/>
over<lb/>
Turkey Trot: 1.5 mile: Top 2 ECU students (m &amp; 0<lb/>
Top 2 ECU facultystaff (m &amp; f)<lb/>
1.51<lb/>
mile<lb/>
Studm Rscrtiion Ctumr<lb/>
smst.<lb/>
Swim<lb/>
continued from page 10<lb/>
and led the Pirates to a<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
???.<lb/>
??<lb/>
EL TORO<lb/>
Exclusive Men's Hair Styling Shoppe<lb/>
Est 1968 - Specializes in AmericanEuropean cuts<lb/>
Say Pirates &amp;<lb/>
Get Hair Cut<lb/>
for $7 Every time.<lb/>
Regular $10<lb/>
PIRATE SPECIAL<lb/>
2800 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
Across From Highway Patrol<lb/>
Behind Stain Glass<lb/>
Mon Fri. 9-6<lb/>
k33iS8Anytime Full Line Professional Hair Care Products<lb/>
$7.00<lb/>
Haircut<lb/>
OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET<lb/>
Catalog :3?JJS5$?:<lb/>
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355-1644 642 E. Arlington Blvd. MS 10-6 Sun. 1-5<lb/>
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LADIES PANTS<lb/>
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All-you-can-eat dinner menu: fresh squash<lb/>
soup with orzo and red peppers, vindaloo<lb/>
(pork and potato stew), grilled lime and<lb/>
curry chicken, eggplant caponata, Shanghai<lb/>
noodles with mung beans and zucchini,<lb/>
flatbread, cinnamon rice pudding. Tea, coffee,<lb/>
and water included.<lb/>
Tuesday, November 11, 1997 Hendrix Theatre, 4 pm &amp; 7:30 pm<lb/>
IT DOESN'T<lb/>
MATTER HOW<lb/>
YOU GET THERE<lb/>
Films are free to student ith a current, valid ECU ID. Dinner tickets at 112 each<lb/>
To esrve your ctinnet ticket, come to the C10 n KendennaH Student Center<lb/>
by Thursday. November 7. 1997 and pay itn cash, a meal card, or your declining<lb/>
balance. Dinner will be served at 6:00 pm in the Great Room<lb/>
CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE HOURS Monday - Friday 8:30am to 6:00pm<lb/>
919 328 478S or 1 .800.ECU.ARTS;<lb/>
TOD access foi deafhearing impaired call 919.JZ8.4716<lb/>
ETSU<lb/>
East Tennessee State University<lb/>
JOIN OVER 2,200 GRADUATE STUDENTS ENROLLED AT ETSU!<lb/>
WE OFFER OVER 35 PH.D ED.D ED.S.<lb/>
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WAIVERS AND ASSISTANTSHIPS, INCLUDING<lb/>
ASSISTANTSHIPS FOR AFRICAN-AMERICAN STUDENTS. ARE<lb/>
AVAILABLE.<lb/>
For more informuion, contact us at:<lb/>
School of graduate Studies<lb/>
East Tennesse State University<lb/>
Johnson City, Tennesse<lb/>
(423) 439-6149<lb/>
(423) 439-5624 fax<lb/>
E-Mail: gradschfaetsu-tn.edu<lb/>
When repsonding, please refer to 002<lb/>
Visit ETSV Online at<lb/>
http:ictviv.etsu-tn edit<lb/>
more great swimmers Kobe said.<lb/>
ECU's divers also easily beat the<lb/>
Eagles diving team. Casey Dodge<lb/>
and Ryan Baldwin had impressive<lb/>
scores<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
"We obviously were a better<lb/>
team Kobe said. "We just had a lot<lb/>
more talent<lb/>
The swimming team competes<lb/>
Saturday and Sunday. Saturday they<lb/>
swim against Old Dominion<lb/>
University at 2 p.m. and on Sunday<lb/>
at 1 p.m. they swim against William<lb/>
and Marv.<lb/>
"Old Dominion is one of our<lb/>
toughest meets Kobe said. "It<lb/>
could go either way. We may be<lb/>
slightly favored against William and<lb/>
Mary<lb/>
Kobe has high hopes for the team<lb/>
this season. His goal is to go<lb/>
undefeated, and after the first three<lb/>
matches, it seems to be a very<lb/>
realistic goal.<lb/>
GIVE US TIME<lb/>
TO REPAY<lb/>
YOUR LOAN.<lb/>
After just three years in<lb/>
the Army, your college loan<lb/>
could be a thing of the past<lb/>
Under the Army's Loan<lb/>
Repayment program, each<lb/>
year you serve on active<lb/>
duty reduces your indebt-<lb/>
edness by one-third or<lb/>
$1,500, whichever amount<lb/>
is greater, up to a $65,000<lb/>
limit.<lb/>
This offer applies to<lb/>
Perkins Loans, Stafford<lb/>
Loans and certain other<lb/>
federally insured loans<lb/>
which are not in default<lb/>
And this is just the first of<lb/>
many benefits the Army<lb/>
will give you. Get the<lb/>
whole story from your<lb/>
Army Recruiter.<lb/>
756-9795<lb/>
ARMY.<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.9<lb/>
www.goarmy.com<lb/>
The Fireheuse Tavern<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Treading Evans<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
KemalGoat<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Laughing<lb/>
Coiois<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Sunny Wheat<lb/>
tyMMJftff<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
Free<lb/>
all day<lb/>
4pm Panther Came<lb/>
Live Remote with<lb/>
99X.1st drawing for<lb/>
Superbowl Tix<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Thursday, Friday,<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Dance to Dj Mad<lb/>
Mike upstairs<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
Thursdays<lb/>
$1.00 Domestics<lb/>
Fri 8 Sat<lb/>
Beer Tub Specials<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
32 ox. Domestic Draft<lb/>
S1.S0<lb/>
14 oz. Domestic Draft<lb/>
7SC<lb/>
FREE FOOD<lb/>
NFL<lb/>
Ticket<lb/>
on DSS<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
Football<lb/>
75 c Southpaw<lb/>
Tuesdays<lb/>
wine tasting &amp;<lb/>
Onix Cigar<lb/>
TastingDisplay<lb/>
VJ<lb/>
L Sports Bar<lb/>
Get the Credit You Deserve<lb/>
with the East Carolina<lb/>
University Credit Card!<lb/>
as?<lb/>
Apply for<lb/>
the East Carolina<lb/>
University? Visa? or<lb/>
MasterCard? and show your<lb/>
support for ECU?! It's the credit card<lb/>
with a low competitive annual rate, and<lb/>
there's no annual fee ever, as long as<lb/>
you use your card at least once per<lb/>
year. PLUS, every time you use your<lb/>
ECU credit card 3&amp;&amp;J will pay a royalty<lb/>
to the university.<lb/>
You'll be proud to display your ECU<lb/>
Visa or MasterCard while enjoying<lb/>
the full benefits of a credit card.<lb/>
Use it for school supplies, traveling<lb/>
and emergency cashand<lb/>
it's a<lb/>
great<lb/>
way to<lb/>
establish<lb/>
good credit!<lb/>
? Low Annual Percentage Rate<lb/>
? No Annual Fee<lb/>
C 3<lb/>
uu<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
To apply for your ECU Visa or<lb/>
MasterCard, call toll-free ?<lb/>
1-600-476-4223, Monday<lb/>
through Friday, 7:00 a.m.<lb/>
to 11:00 p.m Saturday<lb/>
9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Show your school<lb/>
spirit - call today!<lb/>
'Must use Hit- card a! least once annually or $20.00 fee is assessed.<lb/>
Come by Todd Dining Hall Nov. 10th and<lb/>
11th from 10 AM to 1 PM to complete your<lb/>
application and receive a free T-Shirt<lb/>
?-<lb/>
-?i<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0013"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
classifieds<lb/>
Thursday, November 6, 199713<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
i<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom 8<lb/>
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ROOMMATEf NEEDED AT 107-A<lb/>
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' $120per month. Five blocks from cam-<lb/>
J pus off Meade Street Call 758-4124,<lb/>
? ask for Tom, please leave phone<lb/>
?number.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED ASAP: TWO<lb/>
; blocks from campus, one block from<lb/>
downtown. New apartment, only $173.<lb/>
?Must be fun, outgoing, ECU student<lb/>
: preferred. Call 758-3684<lb/>
4 BEDROOM AVAILABLE AT Play-<lb/>
? !ers Club Apts. 6-month lease begin-<lb/>
i ;ning Jan. Call Melissa at 321-7613.<lb/>
 FEMALE NEEDED ASAP TO sub-<lb/>
? Mease 2 bedroom apt $212.507mo. plus<lb/>
I 12 utilities. Call Amy, 353-4153.<lb/>
j<lb/>
? WALK TO ECU. 3 Bedroom, 1 12<lb/>
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ONE BLOCK TO CAMPUS &amp; New<lb/>
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Coffeehouse $500.a month! Both avail-<lb/>
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required! Call Yvonne at 758-2616<lb/>
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NON-smoker, studious, to share 3<lb/>
bedroom, 2 12 bath townhouse on<lb/>
ECU Bus route. Fully furnished, 13<lb/>
utilities. No pets. Call Lesley, 754-2942.<lb/>
FEMALEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED - Players Club Apts. 14 of<lb/>
rent and expenses. Call Melissa at 321-<lb/>
7613.<lb/>
FEMALE NON-SMOKER<lb/>
MATE needed for apt 3 blocks from<lb/>
campus, $255 a month and 12 utili-<lb/>
ties. Call 752-1652.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
FOR 4 bedroom house 5 min. walk<lb/>
from campus. $182.50mo 14 utili-<lb/>
ties. Call Elizabeth @ 752-7325.<lb/>
1 Si 2 bed-<lb/>
room condos on 10th Street Free ca-<lb/>
ble and water sewer. Half month free<lb/>
to ECU students on new one-year con-<lb/>
tract Call Wainright Property Manage-<lb/>
ment 756-6209.<lb/>
CANNON COURT. 2 BEDROOM<lb/>
townhouses on ECU bus route. Free<lb/>
cable. Half month free to ECU students<lb/>
on new one-year contract. Call Wain-<lb/>
right Property Management, 756-6209.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FREE MOTOROLA PAGER, AVAIL-<lb/>
ABLE options include voice mail, e-<lb/>
mail services. Call 1-800-784-6452 Id<lb/>
1675167 or write to Free Pagers, PO<lb/>
Box 4112, Greenville, NC 27836-2112.<lb/>
RALEIGH COMMUTER BIKE, SHI-<lb/>
MANO grip shift, 21 speed, lock, 1<lb/>
year old, top condition, sell for $150.<lb/>
Call Burkhard 551-9069.<lb/>
GUITARS-WILL SELL OR Trade my<lb/>
collection starting $150 to $2,000. Call<lb/>
919-637-6550.<lb/>
1997 JEEP WRANGLER-SE. White<lb/>
with black softtop. Immaculate condi-<lb/>
tion, only 6K miles. 18 months left on<lb/>
factory warranty. Many options.<lb/>
$15,000. Call Rick 816-4423(w) 355-<lb/>
0888(h).<lb/>
CHOCOLATE BROWN SECTIONAL<lb/>
SOFA, great condition. Getting new<lb/>
furniture, must sell immediately. $95<lb/>
or best offer. Call 975-7372 days or<lb/>
355-3118 evenings.<lb/>
STUN GUNSI SAFE AND easy to<lb/>
use. 919-946-6830.<lb/>
FREESTYLE BIKES BY HARO,<lb/>
Mongoose, Hoffman, and<lb/>
Diamond Back. Check out our<lb/>
freestyle accessories. Call 355-<lb/>
8080. Ask for Derrick or Benny.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<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 interview<lb/>
Call 1-800-477-1001.<lb/>
?WWHleJBS! ffaH-ffaT <lb/>
(99) 930028<lb/>
EDWARDS PHARMACY IN AY-<lb/>
DEN, location 7 minutes from cam-<lb/>
pus, needs hard working, honest per-<lb/>
son to work 20-30 hours par week run-<lb/>
ning registers, cooking at grill, putting<lb/>
up stock, helping fill prescriptions.<lb/>
Phone 746-3126.<lb/>
EXOTIC DANCERS AND EXOTIC<lb/>
Bartenders - $1,000-$ 1,500 weekly.<lb/>
Sid's, 919-580-7084 Goldsboro.<lb/>
WANTED: INDIVIDUALS TO<lb/>
SHARE thair story at an information<lb/>
booth on how tobacco has impacted<lb/>
their life. Suggested topics might in-<lb/>
clude heart disease and lung disease.<lb/>
Please contact Nicole at Health Promo-<lb/>
tions &amp; Weil-Being at 328-6793 by Nov.<lb/>
13,1997.<lb/>
CRUISE SHIP S LAND-TOUR Em-<lb/>
ployment- Learn about nationalinfl<lb/>
Cruise Lines and Land-Tour compa-<lb/>
nies. World Travel (Hawaii, Mexico,<lb/>
Caribbean). Excellent benefits bo-<lb/>
nuses! We can help you make the con-<lb/>
nection. 517-336-0574 Ext. C53621.<lb/>
??BASKETBALL OFFICIALS NEED-<lb/>
ED THE Greenville Recreation and<lb/>
Parks Department is still looking for in-<lb/>
dividuals interested in officiating in the<lb/>
printer adult basketball league, posi-<lb/>
tion pays $12-515 a game. Clinics will<lb/>
be held to train new and experienced<lb/>
officials. However, a basic knowledge<lb/>
and understanding of the game is nec-<lb/>
essary. The next meetings will be held<lb/>
Monday, November 3 &amp; 9,1997 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. at Elm Street Gym. Experience re-<lb/>
quirements, clinic schedule, and game<lb/>
fees will be discussed. For more infor-<lb/>
mation, please call the Athletic Office<lb/>
at 830-4550 between the hours of 2:00<lb/>
p.m7:00 p.m Monday thru Friday.<lb/>
NOW HIRING PLAYMATES MASSAGE<lb/>
earn great money. Confidential em-<lb/>
ployment. Call today, 747-7686.<lb/>
COURIER TO WORK PART-time for<lb/>
busy medical practice. Make deliver-<lb/>
ies, run errands, do filing. Applicants<lb/>
must be able to work 9.00 a.m1:00<lb/>
p.m. Monday through Friday and have<lb/>
a good driving record along with reli-<lb/>
able transportation. Interested applic-<lb/>
ants should send their resume or ap-<lb/>
plication to Pitt Surgical, P.A. 905<lb/>
Johns Hopkins Drive, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27834.<lb/>
EARN MONEY AND FREE Trips<lb/>
Absolute best Spring Break Packages<lb/>
available Individuals, student Organ-<lb/>
izations, or small Groups wanted Call<lb/>
Inter-Campus Programs at 1-800-327-<lb/>
6013 or http:www.icpt.com<lb/>
PART St FULL TIME positions avail-<lb/>
able am or pm. Cooks, dishwashers,<lb/>
servers. Applications accepted 9:00-<lb/>
5:00, Ramada Plaza Hotel. Above aver-<lb/>
age wage with experience.<lb/>
EARN $7B0-$1 SOOWEEK RAISE<lb/>
ALL the money your group needs by<lb/>
sponsoring a VISA fundraiser on your<lb/>
campus. No investment and very little<lb/>
time needed. There's no obligation, so<lb/>
why not call for information today. Call<lb/>
1-800-323-8454x95.<lb/>
WANTED: NURSING STUDENTS:<lb/>
INDIVIDUALS interested in helping<lb/>
the Dept. of Health Promotion &amp; Weil-<lb/>
Being to join us at an information table<lb/>
for the ECU campus on Nov. 20, 1997<lb/>
for Great American Smokeout Day. For<lb/>
more information call Nicole at 328-<lb/>
6793. Please respond by Nov. 13,1997.<lb/>
Also in need of Visual Demonstrations<lb/>
such as model of smokers heart or<lb/>
lung.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVIC-<lb/>
ES. MA-English. Fast turnaround, rea-<lb/>
sonable rates. Most1.50pp. Reports,<lb/>
term papers, thesis, etc. Windows 95.<lb/>
Call Jamie at 758-1161 day or 758-4567<lb/>
eve.<lb/>
GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
SISTER OF THE WEEK: Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi-Shannon Schmidt, Megan Packard.<lb/>
Alpha Phi-Karyn Newill, Kim Lewis. Al-<lb/>
pha Xi Delta-Alayne McNeil, Jen Boyd.<lb/>
Chi Omega-Meri Hines, Jamie Hand.<lb/>
Delta Zeta-Lisa Waterfield, Brandy<lb/>
Nichol. Sigma-Jennifer Miller, Maya<lb/>
VanDyken. Zeta Tau Alpha-Amy Bergn-<lb/>
er, Christy Lee. Pi Delta-Leslie Garris,<lb/>
Ashley Dix.<lb/>
CONGRATS TO ZETA TAU Alpha's<lb/>
new Executive Council. PresSara Lea-<lb/>
hy; VPI-Kate Clay; VPII-Alison Gurga-<lb/>
nus; TresCarrie Rogers; Sec-Wendy<lb/>
Melton; Mem Megan Guthrie; Ritual-<lb/>
Kristin Mayer; Historian-Erin Riley;<lb/>
PanhTricia Shepardson<lb/>
TO THE BROTHERS OF Pi Kappa Phi,<lb/>
thanks for showing our Big Sisters a<lb/>
great time at our Big Sis Party. We al-<lb/>
ways have a good tie with you guys.<lb/>
Love, the little sisters of Delta Zeta<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO JILL ALT-<lb/>
FEDER ON your lavalier from Brent<lb/>
We love you. Your Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
sisters.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO ZETA<lb/>
TAU Alpha's volleyball players. Every-<lb/>
one did a great jobi Good luck to our<lb/>
soccer players. Blair, next time wear<lb/>
tennis shoes!<lb/>
ALPHA PHI STRANGER MIXER on<lb/>
Halloween was quite a sight! The<lb/>
Spartans cheers rang through the<lb/>
night From gangsters and flappers to<lb/>
Jack and Jill, we all had quiet a thrill.<lb/>
The night was packed with fun by-<lb/>
the-way, who was that pregnant nun?<lb/>
ZETA BABIES, ARE YOU prepared<lb/>
for Friday? your future sisters area. We<lb/>
love you! Have a great week! Love,<lb/>
Zeta Tau Alpha!<lb/>
GAMMA SIGMA MU PLEDGES<lb/>
You're doing a great job- Keep up the<lb/>
hard work. Hang in there- inductions<lb/>
are just around the corner! Love, your<lb/>
Pledge Mom'<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO ALPHA<lb/>
XI Delta for winning the volleyball<lb/>
championship. You girls are awe-<lb/>
some. Love, all your sisters<lb/>
THANKS TO ALL THE guys who<lb/>
come to our Halloween Stranger Mix-<lb/>
er on Friday. As always, it was the best<lb/>
time. All your costumes were great<lb/>
Love always. Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
THANKS. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON<lb/>
for the pre-downtown last Thursday at<lb/>
Harry's. We all had a blast. Can't wait<lb/>
to get together again soon. Love, Al-<lb/>
pha Xi Delta<lb/>
THANK YOU, TAU KAPPA Epsilon<lb/>
for the social on Saturday. Lefs do it<lb/>
again soon. Love, Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
DELTA ZETA BIG SISTERS would<lb/>
like to thank our little sisters for giving<lb/>
us the best Big Sis Party. We love our<lb/>
Little Sisters. Love, your Big Sisters<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI, WE may not have<lb/>
won but we had a blast working on the<lb/>
float with all. let's hang out some<lb/>
more! Love always, Sigma Pi<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS TO ALPHA<lb/>
XI Delta for winning the volleyball<lb/>
championship. You girls are awesome.<lb/>
Love, all your sisters<lb/>
LOST&amp; FOUND<lb/>
COAT FOUND, DESCRIBE<lb/>
ACCURATELY and I'll return it Call<lb/>
328-7799 and leave a message.<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
DO YOU NEED MONEY?<lb/>
We Need Timberland boots<lb/>
and thoett Good Jeans.<lb/>
WE WILL PAY YOU<lb/>
$CASH$<lb/>
FOR USED MENS SHIRTS, SHOES, PANTS, JEANS, ETC<lb/>
TOMMY HILFIGER, NAUTICA, l'OLO, LEVI, GAP, ETC.<lb/>
We also buy: GOLD &amp; SILVER ? Jewelry &amp; 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 parking lot in front of Wachovia downtown, drive to back door It ring buzzer.<lb/>
I I) 1 I S W A 1' S II () I'<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
7 Nights Air&amp;Hotel - Save $150 on Food &amp; Drinb<lb/>
Florida $119<lb/>
South Rsoch, Panama City, Daytona, Cocoa Beoch<lb/>
Spring Break Travel ? Our 11th Year!<lb/>
1-800-678-6386<lb/>
"AAAAiSPRING BREAK '98 Guar-<lb/>
anteed best prices to Cancun, Jamai-<lb/>
ca, Bahamas, &amp; Florida. Group dis-<lb/>
counts &amp; daily free drink parties! Sell<lb/>
trips, earn cash, &amp; go free! 1-800-234-<lb/>
7007. http:www.endlesssummer-<lb/>
tours.com<lb/>
ik<lb/>
C9riCUn ton aw<lb/>
NOW HIRING REPS!<lb/>
http:www.andiesasummartours.com<lb/>
Book Today<lb/>
VisaMCAmexDisc<lb/>
1-800-234-7007<lb/>
"?ACT NOW! CALL LEISURE Tours<lb/>
for Spring Break packages to South<lb/>
Padre, Cancun, Jamaica and Florida.<lb/>
Reps neededTravel free and earn<lb/>
commissions. Group discounts for 6 or<lb/>
more people. 800-838-8203 or<lb/>
www.leisuretours.com<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
GET PAID TO SHOP, eat out and<lb/>
morel Free details. Send self-ad-<lb/>
dressed stamped envelope to Busi-<lb/>
ness Basics, PO Box 97-SP, trVest Ber-<lb/>
lin, NJ 08091-0097.<lb/>
810008 POSSIBLE TYPING PART<lb/>
Time. At home. Toll free 1-800-218<lb/>
9000 ext T-3726 for listings.<lb/>
FREE CASH GRANTS! COLLEGE.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS. Business. Medical<lb/>
bills. Never Repay. Toll Free 1-800-218-<lb/>
9000 ext. G-3726.<lb/>
GOVT FORECLOSED HOMES<lb/>
FROM pennies on $1. Delinquent Tax,<lb/>
Repo's, REO's. Your area. Toll Free 1-<lb/>
800-218-9000 ext H3726 for current<lb/>
listings.<lb/>
SEIZED CARS FROM 8175. Porsch-<lb/>
es, Cadillacs, Chevys, BMW's, Cor-<lb/>
vettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area.<lb/>
Toll Free 1-800-218-9000 ext. A-3726.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
NOTE-TAKING WORKSHOPS:<lb/>
MONDAY from 11:00 a.m12:00 noon<lb/>
and Tuesday from 3:30-4:30 p.m. The<lb/>
Center for Counseling and Student De-<lb/>
velopment will be offering these pro-<lb/>
grams the week of November 10th. If<lb/>
you are interested in any of these<lb/>
workshops, contact the Center at 328-<lb/>
6661.<lb/>
-HOW TO APPLY FOR and Fund<lb/>
Graduate School ? Dr Lorraine Ara-<lb/>
gon will present instruction on appli-<lb/>
cation procedures, testing, and identi-<lb/>
fying funding sources for students in-<lb/>
terested in attending graduate school.<lb/>
The seminar will be held on Nov. 13,<lb/>
3:30 p.m. at Career Services, Room<lb/>
103.<lb/>
ARISEADAPTED RECREATION:<lb/>
LEARN racquetball! Clinic offered at<lb/>
the SRC. Class begins Nov. 9. Call 328-<lb/>
6387.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI WILL meet Tues-<lb/>
day, Nov. 11 at 5:00 p.m. in Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center Room 244<lb/>
JOB SEARCHING ON THE Internet<lb/>
Career Services and Joyner Library<lb/>
staff will provide instruction to stud-<lb/>
ents on how to use the Internet for job<lb/>
searching and career information on<lb/>
Thur. Nov. 13 and Wed Nov. 19 at 3:00<lb/>
in Joyner 104. Since seating is limited,<lb/>
please sign up at Career Services or<lb/>
call 328-6050.<lb/>
THIS SATURDAY AT 10:00 A.M.<lb/>
plan on competing at the Fall Tourna-<lb/>
ment of Games: Spades, Chess, Sega<lb/>
Football, and Two-Man Volleyball are<lb/>
being hosted at the Baptist Student<lb/>
Union located on 10th Street next to<lb/>
Wendy's. Mission trip fundraiser. Call<lb/>
752-4646.<lb/>
THE RCLS SOCIETY WILL be hav-<lb/>
ing a Bake Sale on Wed Nov. 5th from<lb/>
9:00-2:00 and will have a Car Wash on<lb/>
Nov. 8th from 10:00-2:00 at Trade Mart<lb/>
(Greenville BlvdHth St). Hope to see<lb/>
you at BW-3's for our social at 9:30 on<lb/>
Nov. 6th.<lb/>
TUE. NOV. 4-SENIOR RECITAL, So-<lb/>
nia Aicaia, soprano, A.J. Fletcher Reci-<lb/>
tal hall, 7:00 p.m. Wed Nov. 5-Sym-<lb/>
phonic Wind Ensemble And Concert<lb/>
Band, Scott Carter and Christopher<lb/>
Knighten, Conductors, Wright Auditor-<lb/>
ium, 8:00 p.m. Thurs. Nov. 6-Percus-<lb/>
sion Ensemble, Mark Ford, Director,<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. Fri.<lb/>
Nov. 7-Jazz Ensemble A, Carroll V.<lb/>
Dashiell Jr Director, Wright Auditori-<lb/>
um, 8:00 p.m. Sat. Nov. 8-Senior Reci-<lb/>
tal, Abigail Cockrell, flute, A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall, 4:00 p.m. Sat, Nov. 8-Sen-<lb/>
ior Recital, John E. Chapney, trumpet<lb/>
and Jason Barclift, horn, A.J. Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hall, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
PILOT MOUNTAIN: ONE DAY climb<lb/>
at the State Park. Register by Nov. 7 for<lb/>
Nov. 15 trip. Call 328-6387 for details.<lb/>
ADVENTURE WORKSHOP: OUT-<lb/>
DOOR LIVING: Dressing for the Out-<lb/>
doors. Seminar on Nov. 12. Call 328-<lb/>
6387 for information.<lb/>
220,000 Titles!<lb/>
www. lstmusic.com7ecu<lb/>
Great Discounts!<lb/>
ECU'S ADULT EDUCATION PRO-<lb/>
GRAM is offering Putting your Course<lb/>
Online: A How-to For Faculty Novem-<lb/>
ber 13th, 2:30 p.m in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Co-sponsoring the<lb/>
PBS Adult Learning Satellite course<lb/>
are the School of Education Office of<lb/>
School Services, and Division of Con-<lb/>
tinuing Studies. The one-hour broad-<lb/>
cast will take a hands-on approach to<lb/>
putting your course online, and be fol-<lb/>
lowed by a question and answer ses-<lb/>
sion with a panel of experts. The pro-<lb/>
gram will benefit faculty, deans, divi-<lb/>
sion chairs, and public school person-<lb/>
nel who are interested in online in-<lb/>
struction. Cost is $5.00. for further in-<lb/>
formation or registration, please con-<lb/>
tact Dr. Vivian W. Mott at 328-6177 or<lb/>
edmott@eastnet.ecu.edu.<lb/>
BADMINTONSQUASH CLINIC:<lb/>
DEADLINE FOR registration Nov. 11.<lb/>
Dept. of Rec. Services 328-6387<lb/>
TURKEY TROT: TEAMS UP with the<lb/>
Pirate Chase on Nov. 8. Last Day to<lb/>
register: Nov. 6. Contact Dept of Rec.<lb/>
Services 328-6387 for more info.<lb/>
STRESS MANAGEMENT WORK-<lb/>
SHOP Thursday from 3:30-5:00 p.m.<lb/>
The Center for Counseling and Stud-<lb/>
ent Development will be offering this<lb/>
program the week of November 10th.<lb/>
If you are interested in this workshop,<lb/>
contact the Center at 328-6661.<lb/>
ABSOLUTELY UNBELIEVABLE<lb/>
FREE TUTORING sessions available<lb/>
for all ECU students offered by ECU<lb/>
Professors every Monday, Tuesday,<lb/>
and Thursday starting at 4:00 p.m. at<lb/>
the Ledonia Wright African-American<lb/>
Cultural Center. Math tutoring on Mon-<lb/>
day and Tuesday, Math and Science<lb/>
tutoring on Thursday.<lb/>
TEST-TAKING WORKSHOP: WED-<lb/>
NESDAY from 3:30-4:30 p.m. The<lb/>
Center for Counseling and Student De-<lb/>
velopment will be offering this pro-<lb/>
gram the week of November 10th. If<lb/>
you are interested in this workshop,<lb/>
contact the Center at 328-6661.<lb/>
A SPECIAL THANKS GOES to<lb/>
Smith's Red &amp; White, Speech Therapy<lb/>
East, CRF Speech Services, Mrs. Shel-<lb/>
ton's 4th grade class at Wahl-Coates<lb/>
School, Pitt County Preschool Speech<lb/>
Services, Furniture Fair, Mary Kay Cos-<lb/>
metics, Emerald City Grill, and Bostic<lb/>
Suggs for all the donations and sup-<lb/>
port during Homecoming.<lb/>
CLIMBING WALL CONTEST: HOW<lb/>
well do you conquer the wall? Regis-<lb/>
tration deadline Nov. 13. Contact the<lb/>
Dept. of Rec. Services 328-6387 for de-<lb/>
tails.<lb/>
CLIMBING SEMINAR: SAFETY<lb/>
RESCUE Nov. 10. Know what to do in<lb/>
times of danger. Contact Dept. of Rec.<lb/>
Services 328-6387 for further informa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
ECHO MEETING NOV.<lb/>
lobby of Fleming Hall<lb/>
6, 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY.<lb/>
h<lb/>
THE END OF YOUR SEARCH<lb/>
FOR A FRIENDLY CHURCHjjl<lb/>
RED OAK CHRISTIANj??<lb/>
CHURCHml ?? IaRbIb<lb/>
1827 Greenville Blvd. SWM Ski 111<lb/>
756-3526 Services: Worship 11 e.mTOW<lb/>
Sunday School 9:45 a.m Vespers 6 p.m. Wednesday<lb/>
COME JOIN US FOR<lb/>
WORSHIP &amp; SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENIENT TO<lb/>
WHERE GOD IS PRAISED.<lb/>
LIVES ARE CHANGED &amp;ECU CAMPUS<lb/>
FRIENDS ARE MADEST. JAMES UNITED<lb/>
GREENVILLE CHURCHMETHODIST CHURCH<lb/>
OF CHRIST2000 E. 6th Street<lb/>
1706 Greenville Blvd. SE752-6154<lb/>
752-6376Services: Worship-Sunday<lb/>
Services: 9 a.m 10:15 a.m 68:30 a.m 11 a.m Sunday<lb/>
p.m. Sunday; 7 p.m. Wednes-School 9:45 a.m.<lb/>
day<lb/>
A LIBERAL RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATION DRAWING ON<lb/>
WE WELCOME YOU! LET US<lb/>
BE YOUR CHURCH AWAYA VARIETY OF TRADITIONS<lb/>
FROM HOMEFOR INSPIRATION<lb/>
UNIVERSITY CHURCHUNITARIAN UNIVER-<lb/>
OF CHRISTSALIST CONGREGA-<lb/>
Corner of Crestline Blvd. &amp;TION OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
Greenville Blvd.131 Oakmont Drive<lb/>
756-6545355-6658<lb/>
Services: Bible School 10 a.mServices: 10:30 a.m. each<lb/>
morning worship 11 a.mSunday<lb/>
evening worship 6 p.m.<lb/>
A CHURCH GROWING IN CHRIST. CARING FOR PEOPLE.<lb/>
REACHING OUT TO<lb/>
GREENVILLE WITH THEPROCLAIMING THE WORD<lb/>
CLAIMS OF CHRISTGREENVILLE CHRIS-<lb/>
FIRST FREE WILLTIAN FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
BAPTIST CHURCH1411 S. Evans Street<lb/>
2426 S. Charles St. (Hwy. 43)752-2100<lb/>
756-6600Services: 10 a.m. Sunday<lb/>
Services: Sunday School 9:45<lb/>
a.m Worship 11 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.<lb/>
SINGLE VSONPBCS<lb/>
EXCITING CAMPUS MINISTRY;<lb/>
JOIN OUR COLLEGE SUNDAYECU STUDENTS 8 SINGLES<lb/>
SCHOOL CLASS AT 9:45 AMWELCOME<lb/>
EACH SUNDAYPEOPLE'S BAPTIST<lb/>
THE MEMORIALCHURCH<lb/>
BAPTIST CHURCH1621 Greenville Blvd. SW<lb/>
1510 Greenville Blvd. SE756-2822<lb/>
756-5314Services: Sunday 9:45 a.m<lb/>
Services: Sunday 11 a.m10:45 a.m 6:30 p.m<lb/>
Wednesday 6:30 p.m. (dinnerWednesday 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
at 5:45 p.m.)<lb/>
COME JOIN MANY OTHERCOME AND JOIN US IN<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR AWESOMEPRAISING THE LORD!<lb/>
WORSHIP AND A RELEVANTSYCAMORE HILL<lb/>
WORDMISSIONARY BAPTIST<lb/>
KOINONIA CHRISTIANCHURCH<lb/>
CENTER CHURCH226 W. 8th Street<lb/>
408 Hudson Street758-2281<lb/>
752-1898Services: Every Sunday<lb/>
For information about vsing includedin our Church Directory call 328-6366.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?y?mii ii<lb/>
; ?' :? v.<lb/>
??<lb/>
<pb facs="00058740_0014"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
?sa<lb/>
Do it for ECU<lb/>
Or for a portable CD player, whichever floats your boat.<lb/>
The administration has said they1 re<lb/>
looking fpr a new university sym-<lb/>
bol, something other than VeeVee Pirate,<lb/>
We at The Bast Carolinian would like to<lb/>
help them in their deliberations.<lb/>
Send us your idea for a new ECU logo<lb/>
before our Nov. 28 deadline.<lb/>
We'll pick our favorite and give that per-<lb/>
son a portable CD player. Then well run<lb/>
all of serious logos we receive in the Dec.<lb/>
4155ue of the paper and on our website at<lb/>
www.studentmedU.ecu.edu.<lb/>
Here s your big chance to help the ECU<lb/>
administration and show your school<lb/>
spirit (or how badly you really want a<lb/>
portable CD player).<lb/>
Bring your entries to our offices in the<lb/>
Student Publications Building.<lb/>
-1 ? lK<lb/>
r<lb/>
Put onyour<lb/>
thinking cap<lb/>
send us<lb/>
logo ide.<lb/>
<lb/>
?.<lb/>
zmrm<lb/>
jM jl Vf" X  ??<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>