<?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="00058851_0001"/>
Carolinian<lb/>
?ee pictures,<lb/>
e special pic-<lb/>
amily or boy-<lb/>
0 pictures of<lb/>
i portfolio! If<lb/>
1 give you free<lb/>
ateur photog-<lb/>
lilable. Please<lb/>
umber, and a<lb/>
it will be ra-<lb/>
il, 4413 Pine-<lb/>
7896-9001 or<lb/>
E-mail hron-<lb/>
jran students!<lb/>
an Church is<lb/>
eran students<lb/>
:all 756-2068<lb/>
iung adult re-<lb/>
ig will be of-<lb/>
d for students<lb/>
vship of Com-<lb/>
:h will be hav-<lb/>
time of minis-<lb/>
s on Saturday.<lb/>
i. with Pastor<lb/>
ering. Cost is<lb/>
vill be held at<lb/>
in Academy.<lb/>
Greenville. All<lb/>
invited. 551-<lb/>
f<lb/>
vinga<lb/>
Jesus is<lb/>
prayer, or<lb/>
one of our<lb/>
numbers:<lb/>
?3315 or<lb/>
ry Outreach<lb/>
:r 7pm.<lb/>
fidential.<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
High: 80<lb/>
Low: 68<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
High: 84<lb/>
Low: 65<lb/>
pyf Online Survey<lb/>
Do you think there are enough minority<lb/>
organizations on campus?<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Shagadelic baby!<lb/>
Seepage4<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 16.1999 VOLUME 74. ISSUE 49<lb/>
Campus organizations<lb/>
offer diverse<lb/>
II R I w P. Storrincs<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
"ECU is a good place for minority<lb/>
groups, however, in order to have more<lb/>
diversity, more effort needs to be placed in<lb/>
having more international students here at<lb/>
ECU said Qiyin Fang, president of the<lb/>
East Carolina Chinese Association.<lb/>
"The population of international stu-<lb/>
dents is small when compared to N.C.<lb/>
State, but overall, ECU is a good place<lb/>
Over 3,000 minority students attend ECU,<lb/>
therefore the university has organized<lb/>
minority associations to help them promote<lb/>
ethnic support.<lb/>
These associations range from Allied<lb/>
Blacks for Leadership and Equality<lb/>
(ABLE) to Sigma Omicron Epsilon?<lb/>
Sisters of Earth, who promote Native<lb/>
American issues. These groups promote<lb/>
ethnic and religious diversity.<lb/>
"ECU is extremely diverse, with repre-<lb/>
sentation from all races and ethnic cultural<lb/>
backgrounds said Na'im Akbar, Vice<lb/>
President of the Adult Student Association<lb/>
and member of the Minority Student<lb/>
Coalition. "There are almost 2500 minority<lb/>
Number of ft<lb/>
NATIVE AMU<lb/>
ASIAN,<lb/>
EBlM<lb/>
NATIVE AMERH<lb/>
ASIAN<lb/>
AFRICAN AMEI<lb/>
HISPANIC<lb/>
RACE UNKNOVt<lb/>
NON-RESIDENT<lb/>
TOTAL<lb/>
students here, with the largest percentage<lb/>
being African?American<lb/>
Akbar feels it is up to organizations to<lb/>
promote themselves. Although, he said it is<lb/>
ECU's responsibility to make minority stu-<lb/>
dents feel comfortable within the ECU<lb/>
family.<lb/>
"ECU is extremely diverse,<lb/>
with representation from all<lb/>
races and ethnic cultural<lb/>
backgrounds<lb/>
Nairn Akbar<lb/>
Vice President. Adult Student Association<lb/>
According to Akbar, interaction between<lb/>
the different minority organizations is<lb/>
through the Minority Student Coalition.<lb/>
They meet to identify issues, research<lb/>
them, determine a position and bring it to<lb/>
the attention of the administration.<lb/>
"The purpose of minority organizations<lb/>
is to increase the sensitivity of the majority<lb/>
population, as well as give minority stu-<lb/>
dents a feeling of belonging, help them<lb/>
deal with issues, or just partake in social<lb/>
activities Akbar said.<lb/>
Some students say they are unaware of<lb/>
the different numbers of minority organiza-<lb/>
tions on campus.<lb/>
"I heard something about a Chinese<lb/>
Club and a little about other minority<lb/>
groups, but not much. ECU is not as<lb/>
diverse as UNCC said Vaughn Roberson,<lb/>
a transfer student from UNCC.<lb/>
"It needs more festivals and other ways<lb/>
to promote different ethnic groups<lb/>
"I was surprised by the diversity of<lb/>
ECU, not only the number of minorities,<lb/>
but the numerous ethnic groups heresaid<lb/>
Trice Hill, a sophomore, and member of<lb/>
the ECU chapter of the NAACP.<lb/>
"While I think that this is a diverse cam-<lb/>
pus, there needs to be some work done to<lb/>
promote other ethnic groups<lb/>
?<lb/>
Local U.S. Cellular center closes<lb/>
Eliminates some<lb/>
students'jobs<lb/>
K r i s t v Daniel<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
In order to expand services to its<lb/>
Southeastern customers, U.S.<lb/>
Cellular announced June 8, it<lb/>
would move its Communications<lb/>
Center in Greenville to a Mid-<lb/>
South Center in Knoxville, Tn.<lb/>
The decision has effected over<lb/>
100 people including recent gradu-<lb/>
ates of ECU and current ECU stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
According to Linda Baker, Vice<lb/>
President of Customer Service, the<lb/>
decision was made to improve the<lb/>
service to the customers. U.S.<lb/>
Cellular officials said that by mak-<lb/>
ing this change, they will be able to<lb/>
serve customers more efficiently<lb/>
for a lower cost.<lb/>
The change will be effective<lb/>
August 15, leaving some without<lb/>
jobs while others have the choice to<lb/>
move to Knoxville or one of U.S.<lb/>
Cellular's other locations.<lb/>
'This realignment will allow us<lb/>
to make vast improvements in the<lb/>
quality, speed and efficiency of our<lb/>
George Hollen of US Cellular<lb/>
works at his desk<lb/>
ROIIH VUCHNICH<lb/>
customer service processes while<lb/>
holding down operating costs<lb/>
which affect pricing said Dave<lb/>
Rivoira, Area General Manager, in a<lb/>
press release.<lb/>
According to a press release pro-<lb/>
vided by U.S. Cellular, they are<lb/>
working with other local companies<lb/>
to assist associates choosing to pur-<lb/>
sue other career opportunities.<lb/>
"All of our Communication<lb/>
Center associates are highly trained,<lb/>
professional and resourceful said<lb/>
Loretta Knight, manager of cus-<lb/>
tomer service, in the press release.<lb/>
U.S. Cellular officials told cur-<lb/>
rent employees they would make<lb/>
every effort possible to insure job<lb/>
opportunities.<lb/>
U.S. Cellular employs a large<lb/>
number of ECU graduates and cur-<lb/>
rent students. Sandy Lambertsen, a<lb/>
1998 graduate in psychology, had<lb/>
been working with them for four<lb/>
months when the announcement<lb/>
was made.<lb/>
SEE U CELLULAR PAGE 2<lb/>
University considers adding<lb/>
pharmacy doctoral program<lb/>
Results of study to<lb/>
be available next year<lb/>
Brian P. Storrincs<lb/>
STAFF ??IIE?<lb/>
A new doctoral-level program may be<lb/>
in the works for ECl I. The feasibility<lb/>
study for a new School of Pharmacy<lb/>
will take place in July by a consultant<lb/>
from the University of Arizona.<lb/>
"The results of the study will be<lb/>
available in the beginning of next<lb/>
year said Dr. James Hallock, dean of<lb/>
the Medical School.<lb/>
"We will then present the results<lb/>
to the board of trustees and examine<lb/>
what funding will be needed to estab-<lb/>
lish this program and whether this<lb/>
program will be here<lb/>
'Pie idea for this new program was<lb/>
generated in a trustees meeting that was<lb/>
examining the future growth of ECl I.<lb/>
"The study will concentrate on<lb/>
three things 1 lallotk said.<lb/>
"First will be a study of the future<lb/>
need for phannacists in North<lb/>
(Carolina<lb/>
'There is absolutely a great need<lb/>
for pharmacists in North Carolina<lb/>
said Kevin Phillips, a pharmacist at<lb/>
CAS Phannacy. "ITierc is a very short<lb/>
supply in this state<lb/>
Phillips, who went to ECl! for two<lb/>
years before transferring to UNC to<lb/>
complete his phannacy training, said<lb/>
that there were many students in his<lb/>
program who came from other<lb/>
schools, including junior colleges.<lb/>
"The other points of the study are<lb/>
examining what kind of resources we<lb/>
have to support a phannacy school.<lb/>
which includes those of the medical<lb/>
school we already have, as well as addi-<lb/>
tional resources we will need Hallock<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We will also smdy whether there<lb/>
will Ix; an adequate supply of students<lb/>
for such a new program<lb/>
'I"he program requires two years of<lb/>
schooling before entering phannacy<lb/>
school, followed by four years at the<lb/>
pharmacy school itself. The other phar-<lb/>
macy program in the state is at<lb/>
Campbell I ;niversity.<lb/>
According m officials at the Pin Gouncy<lb/>
1 lospiral Pharmacy, there arc students from<lb/>
(ampbell and UNC who come for pharma-<lb/>
cy rotations at the hospital for training pur-<lb/>
poses, as well as graduates who do residen-<lb/>
cies at PCMH.<lb/>
For future students, the program<lb/>
would take four years and would, after<lb/>
certification, allow one to be a pharma-<lb/>
cist in either a hospital or dnig store.<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
?je-pjpjpj<lb/>
<pb facs="00058851_0002"/><lb/>
2 WtJuMdiy. Jun? IB, 1999<lb/>
news<lb/>
ANISA (illRAIRI<lb/>
STACK ?llllR<lb/>
Gem Lanier working in his East Carolina University office.<lb/>
PHOTO (V BIH KEITH<lb/>
Professor says goodbye<lb/>
r . . g. He first became interested in<lb/>
Lanier'KlmS after first amendment rights when he<lb/>
. - . became Chair of the Intellectual<lb/>
JOrty yearS Of SerVlCe Freedom Committee, a part of the<lb/>
North Carolina Library Association<lb/>
in 1980. He has served on many<lb/>
Intellectual Freedom Committees<lb/>
including American Library<lb/>
Association, American Association<lb/>
of School Librarians, and the<lb/>
Southeastern Library Association,<lb/>
just to name a few. He has also<lb/>
served as a director, a liaison, a sec-<lb/>
retary, a chairman and a parliamen-<lb/>
tarian to other associations and com-<lb/>
mittees. He has received numerous<lb/>
honors and was profiled in<lb/>
Bookbanning in America: Who<lb/>
Bans Books?and Why.<lb/>
Lanier will give up all posts upon<lb/>
retirement, except he will still chair<lb/>
the state committee until Fall, and<lb/>
he has obligations with the<lb/>
American Library Association until<lb/>
the summer of 2000. He has had<lb/>
invitations to speak around the<lb/>
country after July 1, but has<lb/>
declined. He has also been encour-<lb/>
aged to write a book on his experi-<lb/>
ences as a professor and a speaker,<lb/>
but has no plans to do so.<lb/>
"Writing a book would take too<lb/>
much time. I'm a present and<lb/>
future guy that just wants to relax<lb/>
said Lanier said.<lb/>
After July 1, Lanier will be at the<lb/>
beach, spending time with friends<lb/>
and family, reading novels and<lb/>
watching HBO.<lb/>
After more than 30 years as a pro-<lb/>
fessor of Library Science at ECU,<lb/>
Gene Lanier will retire July 1.<lb/>
Besides living in Conway, N.C<lb/>
where he is originally from, Gene<lb/>
Lanier has spent most of his life at<lb/>
ECU. He received his undergradu-<lb/>
ate degree here in 1955, and went<lb/>
on to receive his masters and doc-<lb/>
torate degrees at UNC- Chapel Hill<lb/>
in 1957. Shortly thereafter in 1959<lb/>
he returned to ECU after serving as<lb/>
a Counterintelligence Specialist in<lb/>
Western Europe for two years.<lb/>
"I've had a lot of offers to teach<lb/>
at other schools throughout the<lb/>
years, but I have found a good place<lb/>
here (ECU), and I decided to stick<lb/>
with it Lanier said.<lb/>
As a strong advocate for First<lb/>
Amendment rights, Lanier has made<lb/>
over 200 speeches and presentations<lb/>
on intellectual freedom to civic and<lb/>
professional groups in North<lb/>
Carolina and over 40 other states.<lb/>
"I feel like I have an obligation<lb/>
to spread the word about the impor-<lb/>
tance of freedom of speech and<lb/>
press Lanier said.<lb/>
Students counsel<lb/>
children at nature camp<lb/>
Kids use creativity to<lb/>
build mock habitats<lb/>
I.kAwk Johnson<lb/>
spa ik wki i !?:?<lb/>
Bugs, bugs and more bugs. This is<lb/>
what the children participating in the<lb/>
Nature Discovery camps at the<lb/>
Student Recreation Center are experi-<lb/>
encing.<lb/>
The camps are a week long, and<lb/>
consist of forty participants that<lb/>
come in half day intervals, with each<lb/>
session having around 20 kids.<lb/>
The first session each day is from<lb/>
9 a.m. until noon, and the second<lb/>
session is from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m.<lb/>
These camps are sponsored by<lb/>
the Adventures Program, and are<lb/>
conducted by ECU students?<lb/>
Virginia Walser, Jon Brandey and<lb/>
Johnny Harris Jr<lb/>
According to one of the counselors,<lb/>
there was one camp held last week,<lb/>
and the second began Monday and<lb/>
will end Friday.<lb/>
"The camps are going great for the<lb/>
first week and a half said Steve<lb/>
Bobbin, Adventure Programs director.<lb/>
The first nature discovery camp is<lb/>
"Plants, Bugs and Slugs<lb/>
During this camp the kids teamed<lb/>
how plants, bugs a"d slugs worked<lb/>
together in nature. The counselors<lb/>
took the kids on walks through ECU's<lb/>
campus looking for different kinds of<lb/>
bugs and plants.<lb/>
As a farewell to the kids they took<lb/>
the children to River Park North to go<lb/>
on another nature walk and to see a<lb/>
museum there.<lb/>
The second nature discovery camp<lb/>
is called "Crazy Animals" During this<lb/>
camp the counselors teach the kids<lb/>
about animal habitats and the different<lb/>
kinds of food that animals eat<lb/>
They are also teaching the kids<lb/>
about the food chain and the place-<lb/>
ment of different animals on the food<lb/>
chain.<lb/>
The counselors said this camp will<lb/>
also be going on a nature walk to view<lb/>
the different animals that are around<lb/>
the ECU campus. They made binoc-<lb/>
ulars with two paper cups strung<lb/>
together, and collected rocks, leaves<lb/>
and sticks to build mock habitats.<lb/>
Friday they will be taking a field<lb/>
trip to River Park North to go on<lb/>
another nature walk.<lb/>
"Its fun working with the kids, and<lb/>
they seem to be having fun too<lb/>
Brandey said.<lb/>
"It's great to spend time working<lb/>
with the kids and teaching them about<lb/>
nature Harris said.<lb/>
The Student Recreation Center<lb/>
will be holding other camps as well<lb/>
throughout the summer for other age<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
US Cellular<lb/>
mummied from page 1<lb/>
"I am not happy about the deci-<lb/>
sion Lambertsen said. "I think it<lb/>
was ridiculous to make a communica-<lb/>
I lions center and then shut it down<lb/>
The U.S. Cellular<lb/>
I Communications Center was a<lb/>
place of employment while some<lb/>
twerc finishing school.<lb/>
Criminal Justice and Computer<lb/>
Science major, Tony Anderson said<lb/>
 he has been working with the com-<lb/>
 pany for eight months, but feels it<lb/>
 was a good experience for him.<lb/>
?.<lb/>
"It's a shock, but good experi-<lb/>
ence Anderson said. "This is how<lb/>
the business market works and it<lb/>
only helps to prepare me for the<lb/>
business world<lb/>
U.S. Cellular is offering sever-<lb/>
ance pay for employees that have<lb/>
been working for the company for<lb/>
more than six months. They are<lb/>
also offering a pay-to-stay bonus for<lb/>
those that stay with the company<lb/>
until August 15.<lb/>
For those that decide to move<lb/>
with the company to one of it's other<lb/>
locations, they are promised they<lb/>
will receive a position, and will also<lb/>
be compensated for the move.<lb/>
acjQ-S s<lb/>
campuses<lb/>
Louisiana State University-<lb/>
Controversy already surrounds the<lb/>
latest proposal by Barnes and Noble<lb/>
to privatize the Louisiana State<lb/>
University Union Bookstore.<lb/>
The plan offered up by the nation-<lb/>
al-chain book retailer, which includes<lb/>
either razing or altering at least one<lb/>
building on the National Register of<lb/>
Historic Places, is not finalized,<lb/>
according to Union Director Shirley<lb/>
Plakidas.<lb/>
But that has not stopped the<lb/>
Foundation for Historical Louisiana<lb/>
from voicing its opposition.<lb/>
Standing in the way of the Barnes<lb/>
and Noble proposal is the historical<lb/>
value of the LSU Honors Center,<lb/>
which was originally the Old<lb/>
President's Home, Plakidas said.<lb/>
The building was one of the first<lb/>
constructed on the present campus<lb/>
and was the original residence of the<lb/>
University's president.<lb/>
Despite all the controversy sur-<lb/>
rounding the proposal, no definite<lb/>
plans have been submitted and<lb/>
Barnes and Noble does not have a<lb/>
contract with the University.<lb/>
The original proposal submitted<lb/>
to the University by Barnes and<lb/>
Noble included three distinct possi-<lb/>
bilities, Plakidas said.<lb/>
The first would be to renovate the<lb/>
current space occupied by the Union<lb/>
bookstore, and building an addition<lb/>
to the back of the Union on top of the<lb/>
current parking lot was the second<lb/>
option.<lb/>
University officials turned down<lb/>
the third option which placed a free-<lb/>
standing structure across the parade<lb/>
grounds from the Union in front of<lb/>
Pleasant Hall.<lb/>
University of Florida-Two<lb/>
years ago, the prospect of a Student<lb/>
Government career made Jocclyn<lb/>
Moore wrinkle her nose in dismissal.<lb/>
"No way University of Florida's<lb/>
student body vice president told<lb/>
Dean of Students Julie Sina in Fall<lb/>
1997.<lb/>
Moore had heard war stories like<lb/>
that of Anita Williams, an enthusiastic<lb/>
young woman active in the Black<lb/>
Student Union and Black History<lb/>
Month.<lb/>
A little more than a year ago,<lb/>
Williams - flashing the infectious<lb/>
smile her friends know so well - told<lb/>
SGP leaders she liked the entertain-<lb/>
ment industry and wanted to help.<lb/>
The cold response made her<lb/>
reconsider.<lb/>
"I didn't really know who they<lb/>
were, and they weren't really recep-<lb/>
tive to who I was recalled Williams.<lb/>
"I basically ended my involvement<lb/>
right there. They didn't want me<lb/>
Today, Williams and Moore are on<lb/>
the other side, urging students, espe-<lb/>
cially those from diverse back-<lb/>
grounds, to join SG. They are trying<lb/>
to change the long-standing tradition<lb/>
of minority students' exclusion - be it<lb/>
real or perceived - from SG.<lb/>
They are tired of minorities leav-<lb/>
ing Senate meetings, wondering why<lb/>
most faces are white.<lb/>
Stuff like Student Senate, or one<lb/>
of SG's 35 cabinets, or SGP or Accent<lb/>
- SG's speakers bureau.<lb/>
Stuff like the Coalition on<lb/>
Minority Affairs, convening for the<lb/>
first time later this summer.<lb/>
Its purpose: to "make SG account-<lb/>
able for the affairs of minorities<lb/>
Moore said.<lb/>
The coalition will collect data on<lb/>
how SG's minority population com-<lb/>
pares to that within UF's student<lb/>
population, about 8 percent of which<lb/>
is African American and 10 percent of<lb/>
which is Hispanic, according to the<lb/>
latest figures from 1997.<lb/>
Iowa State University-After run-<lb/>
ning molecular tests on the world-<lb/>
renowned cloned sheep, Dolly,<lb/>
researchers from the Scottish Roslin<lb/>
Institute found that although Dolly is<lb/>
only three years old, her cells are nine<lb/>
years old.<lb/>
Dolly was cloned from a 6-year-old<lb/>
ewe in 1996, and since then, scientists<lb/>
at Iowa State have been closely fol-<lb/>
lowing the research.<lb/>
Eric Henderson, professor of zool-<lb/>
ogy and genetics, said new develop-<lb/>
ments in cloning are important to<lb/>
future research.<lb/>
"It is really not trivial research he<lb/>
said. "This kind of research has been<lb/>
done before on frogs. This is the first<lb/>
of its kind done on mammal cloning<lb/>
According to a Washington Post<lb/>
article in May, some scientists theo-<lb/>
rize Dolly will die at an early age<lb/>
because her telomcres, genetic mate-<lb/>
rial that shortens as the cells divide<lb/>
and the animal ages, are shortening<lb/>
more rapidly than a normal sheep's<lb/>
telomeres.<lb/>
"I believe that this was a techno-<lb/>
logical challenge but not a new scien-<lb/>
tific breakthrough Henderson said.<lb/>
'The experiment came long after the<lb/>
theories, and this only confirms<lb/>
them<lb/>
The study suggests dividing a cell<lb/>
to form an embryo does not rebuild<lb/>
the telomere when the cell divides,<lb/>
therefore causing the cloned animal<lb/>
to age prematurely.<lb/>
Chris Tuggle, associate professor<lb/>
in animal science, said he is unsure<lb/>
about Dolly's chances of living an<lb/>
average lifespan.<lb/>
TTTTeTSr<lb/>
Wednesday, June 16<lb/>
The Real Crisis Center will be holding a talk about rape prevention at<lb/>
Barnes and Noble. The session will begin at 7:30 p.m. and will feature<lb/>
educated officials.<lb/>
Thursday, June 17<lb/>
The feature movie of the week is "You've Got Mail" featuring Tom<lb/>
Hanks and Meg Ryan. The movie begins at 9 p.m. outside of Mendenhall.<lb/>
Dinner will be served prior to the movie.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Brasswood<lb/>
? Quiet Neighborhood<lb/>
?1 Bedroom $300<lb/>
?2 Bedroom $360<lb/>
? WasherDryer Hookups<lb/>
?Ceiling Fan<lb/>
? Free WaterSewer<lb/>
?Small Pet with fee<lb/>
? Near Malls &amp; restaurants<lb/>
? furnished unit for<lb/>
corporate leasing available<lb/>
? Office on site<lb/>
3216 Brasswood Court 1<lb/>
Phone 252-355-4499 ? Fax 252-355-1554<lb/>
brasswood@greenvillenc.com<lb/>
Brown &amp; Brown<lb/>
TVuthJEqualltyJustice<lb/>
102B East. Victoria Ct.<lb/>
Bedford Park, Greenville<lb/>
RNKYS AT LAW<lb/>
?Speeding Tickets<lb/>
?Driving While Impaired<lb/>
?Under Age Possession<lb/>
?Possession of DrugsParaphenalia<lb/>
?Drinking in Public<lb/>
?Felonies and Misdemeanors<lb/>
?Free Consultation<lb/>
Phone 752-0952 752-0753<lb/>
e-mail - ghb.greenvillenc.com<lb/>
Get P?erC<lb/>
eyebrow,<lb/>
earcaptila9?'<lb/>
navels5<lb/>
to?<lb/>
WewillbeAtany<lb/>
competitor's advertised<lb/>
prices!<lb/>
Largo selection of imported<lb/>
And domestic jewelry!<lb/>
? We do el<lb/>
exotit plerthfs<lb/>
? We spedolxe in tattooing cad<lb/>
body pierdag only<lb/>
? We ere Greenville's only hearth<lb/>
department inspected studio<lb/>
? We nave beta ? business ever 8<lb/>
years with 15 years experience<lb/>
Tuesday-iTiuRsday: 1-9 p.mFriiAy: 1-10 p.rru; Saturday: 12-10 p.m.<lb/>
CALL US! 756-0600<lb/>
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY<lb/>
TATTOOING BY AWARD WINNING ARTISTS!<lb/>
From downtown, go straight down Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
Extension, located at 4685 US Hwy. 13, Greenville.<lb/>
You drank.<lb/>
You danced.<lb/>
Youhadset)<lb/>
ryissi3<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Tests<lb/>
Call Carolina Pregnancy Center 757-0003<lb/>
209-B South Evaiis Street (downtown near Courthouse)<lb/>
Aqua Theatre<lb/>
Thursday, June 17th<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
Outdoor Pool - SRC<lb/>
"THE BEST ROMANTIC<lb/>
COMEDY OF THE YEAR<lb/>
Tom Hanks MeaRyan<lb/>
"The Most Romantic Couple of the '90s<lb/>
ScojjsAaajn<lb/>
"A Fresh. Funny, Heartfelt Comedy-<lb/>
You Never Want It to End<lb/>
"See It With Someone<lb/>
You Love<lb/>
You've Got Mail Rated fg<lb/>
Kathleen Kelly, owner of a little and famous<lb/>
bookstore for childrerfs books, has an affair.<lb/>
Being together with Prank Navasky, a well-<lb/>
known journalist, she betrays him by e-<lb/>
mailing secretly and anonymously with a<lb/>
(also betraying) man whom she met in a<lb/>
chat room. Suddenly, her business gets<lb/>
endangered by the opening of Fox Books<lb/>
discount store just "around the comer She<lb/>
meets Joe Fox, son of the owner, and soon<lb/>
gets annoyed by his arrogant way of man-<lb/>
aging business matters. Although getting<lb/>
advice by her anonymous mail-pal, she has<lb/>
to close down her store. But Joe Fox's life<lb/>
suddenly gets out of control when he learns<lb/>
that his anonymous mail-pal is nobody<lb/>
other than Kathleen Kelly.<lb/>
For a good time call The Student Union<lb/>
Hotline 8 262.328.6004 or visit our<lb/>
website @ www.ecu.eduitudentunion '<lb/>
The Em Cirolinln<lb/>
I<lb/>
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While<lb/>
cigar<lb/>
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OPINIC<lb/>
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zation. As soon<lb/>
of administrator<lb/>
government, tak<lb/>
try to control th?<lb/>
of these areas, it<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
Mostly, two k<lb/>
me: "for your ov<lb/>
laws which try to<lb/>
a majority norm<lb/>
deals with thing<lb/>
sure people we<lb/>
and substance i<lb/>
later type attem<lb/>
living inside som<lb/>
boundary<lb/>
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The Em Cirolinlin<lb/>
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Wednaida, June 18. 1989 3<lb/>
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ourvicw<lb/>
While enjoying a cigar,<lb/>
cigar smokers should<lb/>
often take into considera-<lb/>
tion the preferences of<lb/>
others in the room.<lb/>
Cigars have become one of the trend iest fads on the market today,<lb/>
whether for smoking or other extracurricular activities.<lb/>
Many magazines, CDs and even dinnerware, now have a<lb/>
detailed styled inspired by cigars. Today cigar smoking is at an all-<lb/>
time high, even spreading its influence to smokers who normally<lb/>
smoke only cigarettes. Lately it appears as if this craze has replaced<lb/>
good reason and stopped people from paying attention to the dan-<lb/>
gers that smoking can present.<lb/>
While lighting up a cigar may not be as bad for you as cigarettes,<lb/>
there are still many risks which should be taken into account.<lb/>
Smokers and manufacturers alike clearly point out that the<lb/>
strength of a cigar could be dangerous if inhaled because they were<lb/>
not designed for that purpose. However, some smoke from the<lb/>
cigar will inevitably be drawn into the lungs rendering this experi-<lb/>
ence a hazardous one.<lb/>
While enjoying a cigar, smokers should take into consideration<lb/>
the preferences of others in the room. Many may love the soothing<lb/>
aroma of a stogie, but at the same time others around them might<lb/>
not be as delighted by that lingering scent which clouds up the air<lb/>
far worse than one cigarette. This problem causes concern for those<lb/>
who do not wish to be around the second-hand smoke that results<lb/>
from smokers of any kind.<lb/>
We feel that while many may enjoy this trend, they should act<lb/>
responsibly and take into account the risks about when and where<lb/>
they choose to indulge. Cigar smoking, like any type of smoking,<lb/>
should be enjoyed in the company of others who also like it, the<lb/>
privacy of one's own home or in a bar specially designated for cigar<lb/>
use -not in a crowded restaurant or club where many around may<lb/>
gag at the scent. Remember these people are out just like you try-<lb/>
ing to have a good time, they did not ask to inhale toxic fumes<lb/>
which are considerably more dangerous to the second-hand smok-<lb/>
er than to the person who originally lit up.<lb/>
It may be no one's business if someone chooses to smoke in<lb/>
their own homes or other private places, but once these acts are<lb/>
brought out among crowds it becomes an issue among others who<lb/>
have to put up with the smoke and the health risks.<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
DEMOSTHENES<lb/>
Laws impose silly restraints<lb/>
 agree that seat belts are a<lb/>
good idea and that they save<lb/>
lives and protect against<lb/>
injury. What I do not agree<lb/>
with is that we must wear one<lb/>
under penalty of law.<lb/>
The government's job, on any<lb/>
level, is administration and organi-<lb/>
zation. As soon as this assemblage<lb/>
of administrators, which make up<lb/>
government, takes it on to itself to<lb/>
try to control the behaviors outside<lb/>
of these areas, it is overstepping its<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
Mostly, two kinds of laws bother<lb/>
me: "for your own good" laws, and<lb/>
laws which try to conform people to<lb/>
a majority norm. The former kind<lb/>
deals with things such as making<lb/>
sure people wear their seat belts<lb/>
and substance control, while the<lb/>
later type attempts to keep people<lb/>
living inside some sort of set "moral<lb/>
boundary<lb/>
An example of this type of law<lb/>
are the sexual practice laws in<lb/>
North Carolina and in many other<lb/>
states which decree that oral sex<lb/>
and anal sex are illegal. When I first<lb/>
heard this one, I could not believe<lb/>
my ears, but it gets better. I under-<lb/>
stand that a couple must have<lb/>
intercourse in the missionary posi-<lb/>
tion which would outlaw all other<lb/>
positions including women on top.<lb/>
I will not even start on laws against<lb/>
other sexual orientations.<lb/>
Ridiculous.<lb/>
Another such law deals with the<lb/>
number of females living in a house<lb/>
together. If this number exceeds<lb/>
four, then legally, the house is con-<lb/>
sidered to be a place of prostitution.<lb/>
It makes me sad to think that the<lb/>
next time I want to go visit my<lb/>
friends at 1107, I'll have to leave a<lb/>
tip.<lb/>
I agree that seat belts are a good<lb/>
idea and that they save lives and<lb/>
protect against injury. What I do<lb/>
not agree with is that we must wear<lb/>
one under penalty of law.<lb/>
Also, I can not understand what<lb/>
the idea behind substance control<lb/>
is. People are going to get inebriat-<lb/>
ed; this is a basic biological fact. If<lb/>
you take away their ability to do so<lb/>
under relaxed and orderly circum-<lb/>
stances two things will happen.<lb/>
First they will have to find other<lb/>
ways to play with their brain and I<lb/>
can guarantee these methods are<lb/>
not very sound. How many of you<lb/>
sniffed glue when you were<lb/>
younger, and what was the big deal<lb/>
with magic markers? I missed that<lb/>
one.<lb/>
The second effect of strict sub-<lb/>
stance control is a magnification<lb/>
effect on consumption. People will<lb/>
tend to use more of a substance<lb/>
because they think they are being<lb/>
"bad Binging on anything is defi-<lb/>
nitely the wrong way to do it.<lb/>
The only solution to this dilem-<lb/>
ma is to have loose control over<lb/>
substances and to supplement pun-<lb/>
ishment with education. An open<lb/>
and honest educational policy start-<lb/>
ing at birth regarding substances<lb/>
would create a safe and relaxed<lb/>
atmosphere for people, and it<lb/>
would allow them to make sound<lb/>
decisions about what they really<lb/>
want.<lb/>
Think about what laws govern<lb/>
your lives and if many of them are<lb/>
really necessary. Take care and be<lb/>
free, until we meet again.<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
SCOTT<lb/>
WILKINS<lb/>
Tired of clock watching<lb/>
Try to avoid looking at that<lb/>
clock and just go forth hold<lb/>
and carefree -? oblivious to<lb/>
the infernal hands of rime.<lb/>
Tick 'lock. 1 low slowly move the<lb/>
hands of the clock. We wait, we<lb/>
watch, we wonder ? will it ever be<lb/>
time to go? It seems we are watch-<lb/>
ing a clock always.<lb/>
As we sit in stalled traffic on<lb/>
Greenville Boulevard, late for work<lb/>
and irritable, we anxiously watch the<lb/>
clock in our car. One minute late.<lb/>
Two, Threc.soon it's five and ten<lb/>
minutes late. Thanks, Greenville<lb/>
traffic. As we watch the clock in our<lb/>
car, we play the scenario in our<lb/>
mindthe scowling boss wondering<lb/>
why we are late for work.<lb/>
Once we get to work we watch<lb/>
the clock. Oh the agony! I could be<lb/>
home watching Behind the Music<lb/>
on VIII! I could be lounging by the<lb/>
pool in my apartment complex or<lb/>
even working on that assignment<lb/>
due for my summer school class.<lb/>
Speaking of summer school, there is<lb/>
another clock to be reckoned with<lb/>
as the professor drones and the sec-<lb/>
onds slowly tick by.<lb/>
Even when I am working out on<lb/>
the stair climber, which I made<lb/>
famous last week, I watch the<lb/>
timer, wondering when my twenty-<lb/>
five minutes will be up and I can<lb/>
march to Wendy's for my usual cel-<lb/>
ebratory frosty. (Yes, I do plan to<lb/>
work in the frosty every week)<lb/>
My short and sweet point is this:<lb/>
we spend too much time watching<lb/>
the clock. The other day I recog-<lb/>
nized how much clock watching 1 do<lb/>
and how useless it is. Watching the<lb/>
clock doesn't make the time go by<lb/>
any faster. It's a waste of time and<lb/>
energy. Yes, sometimes watching<lb/>
the clock is unavoidable, it is part of<lb/>
life. Yet whenever possible, try to<lb/>
avoid looking at that clock and just<lb/>
go forth bold and carefree ? oblivi-<lb/>
ous to the infernal hands of time.<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
SUSAN<lb/>
WRIGHT<lb/>
Paying too much to live<lb/>
Sometimes I swear that a dol-<lb/>
lar bill has wings because of<lb/>
the way it flies from my wallet.<lb/>
You have worked hard for twenty<lb/>
hours this week, and you think that<lb/>
maybe you beat your all time record<lb/>
of hamburgers flipped in a clay<lb/>
sometime last Saturday night. Now,<lb/>
it is paycheck time. The boss smiles,<lb/>
and he hands you a check for $100.<lb/>
He says, "You've earned it<lb/>
It's Saturday night, and you have<lb/>
$100 to burn. What do you spend it<lb/>
on? New shoes at $98.99 a pair, an<lb/>
outfit from American Eagle that<lb/>
conies to $89 or maybe you'll take<lb/>
two of your best friends out to din-<lb/>
ner at Lone Star. Any way you<lb/>
spend it, the money goes fast. As a<lb/>
college student. 1 am amazed at<lb/>
how fast the money flies.<lb/>
Sometimes I swear that a dollar<lb/>
bill has wings because of the way it<lb/>
flies from my wallet. Once you<lb/>
break a twenty, you might as well<lb/>
consider that $20 gone. Oh, I have<lb/>
fifteen dollars, I can afford some<lb/>
new shampoo and a toothbrush.<lb/>
Well, I have ten dollars, I can afford<lb/>
a Big Mac meal. Well, I only have<lb/>
four dollars left, but I really need to<lb/>
eat. Goodness, I am hungry, and<lb/>
there the money goes.<lb/>
Not only are there everyday <lb/>
expenses, but there are also those<lb/>
darn bills. I swear that I didn't talk<lb/>
to by best friend in the mountains<lb/>
for an hour and half last night.<lb/>
Nobody has ever talked on the<lb/>
telephone for that long! How can<lb/>
two people have thirteen dollars<lb/>
worth of stuff to say to each other?<lb/>
Electricity is a whole other matter.<lb/>
Why must I use so much power?<lb/>
Some day, I think that I will go<lb/>
without using electric lights. Sun<lb/>
by day, candle by night; that's the<lb/>
life for me!<lb/>
Well, after extensive thought<lb/>
and study, I decided that the cost of<lb/>
good living is just too expensive. '<lb/>
For now, I would advise buying<lb/>
stock in candle wax. Until the glo-<lb/>
rious day of graduation, I get the<lb/>
feeling that I will be using more<lb/>
than my fair share!<lb/>
Write a letter to the editor<lb/>
Got Something to say? Bring your letter to the<lb/>
east Carolinian office located on the second floor<lb/>
of the Student Publications Building<lb/>
:<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058851_0004"/><lb/>
4wedru?diy, Jum IB, 1999<lb/>
features<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Shag me<lb/>
baby, yeah!<lb/>
'Bratscri a.k.a Dr.<lb/>
Evil was the $200<lb/>
winner of the Austin<lb/>
Powers look-alike<lb/>
contest at PB's.<lb/>
PHOTO BY CORY SHEELEB<lb/>
Radio Station 99X hosted<lb/>
Austin Powers party at Panfana Bob's<lb/>
i<lb/>
CORY SlIKKI.K K<lb/>
IT Aft WD ITHI<lb/>
Yeah baby, yeah! Austin Powers mania is sweeping the country,<lb/>
and the public is eating it up in droves.<lb/>
Mike Myers' brainchild, Austin Powers, stars in his second<lb/>
film The Spy Who Shagged Me. The movie couldn't come soon<lb/>
enough for many Greenville residents, and people are getting<lb/>
randy, baby!<lb/>
The radio station 99X WXNR threw a party in the movie's<lb/>
honor at Pantana Bob's on Friday, and even gave away free tick-<lb/>
ets to some of their lucky listeners so they would not be disap-<lb/>
pointed by sold-out screenings of the movie.<lb/>
"We gave away 99 tickets for the 7:30 show on the opening<lb/>
night said Jeff "The Sandblaster" Sanders, 99X disc jockey.<lb/>
"We're also having an after-movie party at P.Bs, and giving<lb/>
away cash prizes for people with the best costumes representing<lb/>
their favorite Austin Powers character<lb/>
A $200 prize was given to a man who was known only as "Dr.<lb/>
Evil for his portrayal of Mike Myers's evil character in the<lb/>
movie. 99X also broadcasted live from P.Bs throughout the<lb/>
night, and had many other giveaways and games.<lb/>
"I was sick of hearing about Star Wars all summer Sanders<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"It was time to do something a little bit different<lb/>
Different was exactly how the movie did at the theater all<lb/>
weekend. In the first Austin Powers installment, International<lb/>
man of Mystery, most of its followers saw the movie via video in<lb/>
the more than 3 million copies that it sold world-wide. This time,<lb/>
however, The Spy Who Shagged Me knocked The Phantom Menace<lb/>
from atop the box office, by pulling in $54 million this weekend<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
So. .what is it about this slapstick, pop-culture-laden comedy<lb/>
that has people so excited? Many students think that it is Myers<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
"Mike Myers is one of the funniest comedians in the<lb/>
business today said Kevin Johnson, senior. "The<lb/>
more times you see his movies, the funnier<lb/>
they get because you're always picking<lb/>
upon something you missed the first<lb/>
time<lb/>
Johnson also noted the Phantom<lb/>
Menace syndrome that many peo-<lb/>
ple have been feeling this sum-<lb/>
mer.<lb/>
"This movie actually man-<lb/>
aged to take attention away from<lb/>
The Phantom Menace. I'm tired of<lb/>
hearing about that movie<lb/>
Some moviegoers thought that<lb/>
the most recent installment of<lb/>
Powers was good, but it couldn't<lb/>
compare to the original movie.<lb/>
"The first film was better said Mike<lb/>
Alberghini, senior.<lb/>
"It's hard to build on a sequel; they had to revert<lb/>
to a lot of jokes from the first<lb/>
movie<lb/>
However, popular<lb/>
opinion seems to be<lb/>
that Austin<lb/>
Powers is here<lb/>
to stay in the<lb/>
'90's and<lb/>
maybe even<lb/>
into the<lb/>
next millen-<lb/>
nium.<lb/>
"I hope<lb/>
they make a<lb/>
third movie<lb/>
Alberghini<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"They're all<lb/>
worth seeing over<lb/>
and over again<lb/>
<lb/>
Ifs<lb/>
Mini-<lb/>
me &amp; Fat<lb/>
Bastard stole the<lb/>
show.<lb/>
-Matt Gullo. senior.<lb/>
<lb/>
the best movie<lb/>
of the summer<lb/>
so far.<lb/>
-Jimmy Carver,<lb/>
freshman<lb/>
??<lb/>
the<lb/>
second time<lb/>
I saw it, (<lb/>
laughed even<lb/>
harder<lb/>
-Taylor Jones, sopho-<lb/>
more<lb/>
Austin Powers<lb/>
look-alike Jason<lb/>
Cone sets shaeadelic<lb/>
with groovy babies.<lb/>
PHOTO BV BILL KEITH<lb/>
Cigar smokers encouraged<lb/>
by new bars in Greenville<lb/>
Gary Parsons, assistant manager at Onix. fires up a cigar in his downtown Greenville store.<lb/>
PHOTO BY BILL KEITH<lb/>
New fad supported<lb/>
by specialized areas<lb/>
Kkvin BkITION<lb/>
.Hlu w Ml I t:n<lb/>
Cigars have long been a sign of sta-<lb/>
tus and wealth, but within the last<lb/>
few years this habit has moved into<lb/>
the mainstream.<lb/>
Due, in part, to megastars such<lb/>
as Arnold Schwarzenegger and<lb/>
Demi Moore who smoke the big<lb/>
stogies in public, cigar smoking has<lb/>
now become more of a fashion<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
Ham's Brew House and Mesh<lb/>
Cafe arc two of Greenville's newest<lb/>
eating establishments that feature<lb/>
"cigar bars<lb/>
"We just turned our cigar bar<lb/>
private said Mel Perez, Mesh<lb/>
owner.<lb/>
"We don't currently have any<lb/>
college students who are mem-<lb/>
bers Perez estimates that around<lb/>
40 percent of his total clientele are<lb/>
college students.<lb/>
"Maybe 20 percent of the peo-<lb/>
ple who use our cigar bar are stu-<lb/>
dents said Brandon Clark, a floor<lb/>
manager at Ham's.<lb/>
"Almost everyone who comes<lb/>
up to play darts has a cigar<lb/>
However, Clark feels that most<lb/>
of the students who purchase cigars<lb/>
at Ham's are one-timers or people<lb/>
who rarely smoke.<lb/>
Now, cigar smokers are starting<lb/>
younger and becoming more<lb/>
numerous. One study of high<lb/>
school students reported that 26.7<lb/>
percent of U.S. students had<lb/>
SEE CIGARS PAGE 5<lb/>
Downtown tries to recover<lb/>
after losing its usual crowd<lb/>
Establishment adjust<lb/>
to slower business<lb/>
Com Siik K 1.1: h<lb/>
S I I I H I I I H<lb/>
It's 10 at night on a Friday, and<lb/>
you're ready to go downtown. I lold<lb/>
on just a minute. Where arc all of<lb/>
the people? Where arc all of the<lb/>
lines? Like most people, you've<lb/>
noticed that the Greenville night<lb/>
life changes in the summer.<lb/>
The downtown establishments<lb/>
are noticeably less crowded in the<lb/>
summer. Greenville is home only<lb/>
to those who are taking summers<lb/>
classes and those who choose to<lb/>
stay and work.<lb/>
"The weekends are when we<lb/>
usually notice the biggest drop-<lb/>
off said Derek Helmik, co-owner<lb/>
of Boli's restaurant.<lb/>
"It's probably due to people<lb/>
going out of town or going to the<lb/>
beach for the weekend<lb/>
While Boli's may have a lull in<lb/>
business over the weekend, that is<lb/>
not the case Tuesday nights at the<lb/>
Fifth Street pizzeria. They have<lb/>
live music and bar specials every<lb/>
SEE DOWNTOWN PAGE !i<lb/>
Austin Powers offers shagadelic fun<lb/>
7 I L L. ' "That's what makes him<lb/>
Yeah Oaby, JUSt (Myers) so awesome said Mike<lb/>
. n jit Thorsby, junior. "He can make you<lb/>
jOfget abOUt Otar WarS laugh so many different ways<lb/>
Pa a Mi II k dk icks<lb/>
SKNIUH RITKR<lb/>
Are you ready to laugh, baby? If<lb/>
you make the wise decision to see<lb/>
Austin Powers The Spy Who Shagged<lb/>
Me, you had better come prepared<lb/>
for side splitting laughter and non-<lb/>
stop antics.<lb/>
At a nearly sold out opening day<lb/>
crowd, almost all in attendance<lb/>
were chuckling non stop.<lb/>
"I just couldn't stop laughing<lb/>
said Timmy Baize, senior.<lb/>
"It was simply hilarious<lb/>
Mike Myers shows off his acting<lb/>
abilities playing several roles<lb/>
including the villains Dr. Evil and<lb/>
Fat Bastard as well as the title role.<lb/>
Michael Myers plays Dr. Evil in Austin<lb/>
Powers The Spy Who Shagged Me.<lb/>
PHOTO COURTESY OF WORLD WIDE WEB<lb/>
The humor in the movie is not<lb/>
purely slapstick comedy. Some of<lb/>
the laughs came from sophisticat-<lb/>
ed, well thought out humor. The<lb/>
blend of the two styles keeps you<lb/>
laughing for hours.<lb/>
"I was laughing after it ended,<lb/>
even on the way home said Cory<lb/>
Phoenix, senior.<lb/>
Austin Powers, like the rest of<lb/>
the world, has been prepared for the<lb/>
Star Wars hype for the entire sum-<lb/>
mer. The ads for the movie quote,<lb/>
"If you see one movie this summer,<lb/>
see Star Wars. But if you see two,<lb/>
see Austin Powers The Spy Who<lb/>
Shagged Me. Many actually think<lb/>
that this movie will take over the<lb/>
Phantom Menace's reign at the num-<lb/>
ber one box office position.<lb/>
If you enjoyed the first movie,<lb/>
this one is an absolute must see.<lb/>
Hey guys, Heather Graham looks<lb/>
absolutely unbelievable in this<lb/>
flick, and for you ladies, uhthere-<lb/>
is a cute little midget. No really, it<lb/>
is a hysterical movie that shouldn't<lb/>
be missed. Don't forget to be pre-<lb/>
pared to laugh, baby.<lb/>
5 Wednesday, Jun<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
? State of th<lb/>
? Pool, tenni<lb/>
? Close to ea<lb/>
? Washers 6<lb/>
? Great Loca<lb/>
?Equal Housin<lb/>
(hones<lb/>
ll<lb/>
T<lb/>
if it's<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
a<lb/>
Al<lb/>
AUTO ANI<lb/>
TICKETS ?<lb/>
ALL DRIVERS<lb/>
LOW RATES<lb/>
AUTO ? MO<lb/>
1 A PAY 0<lb/>
HOURS : 8:31<lb/>
9:0<lb/>
FOP<lb/>
IT<lb/>
F(<lb/>
(SI<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058851_0005"/><lb/>
5 Wednesday, June 16. 1999<lb/>
features<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Greenville's<lb/>
Best Kept Secret<lb/>
CALL<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
? State of the art Fiinesi Canter.<lb/>
? Pool, tennis &amp; volleyball<lb/>
? Closa to campus.<lb/>
? Washers &amp; dryers available<lb/>
. Grea, tocauon 355"2198<lb/>
1,2 &amp; 3<lb/>
Bedroom<lb/>
Apartment<lb/>
Homes<lb/>
airlane<lb/>
'Equal Housing Opportunity' 1510 Bridle Circle<lb/>
Wthe fastest?<lb/>
selling dc comics<lb/>
BARE AT:? <lb/>
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Cigars<lb/>
continued from page 4<lb/>
smoked at least one cigar.<lb/>
Although any high school tobacco<lb/>
use is worrisome, there are no stud-<lb/>
ies suggesting that these students<lb/>
continue to smoke cigars on a regu-<lb/>
lar basis. Although nicotine is high-<lb/>
ly addictive, there are no studies<lb/>
suggesting cigars are addictive.<lb/>
On the other end of the scale,<lb/>
there are restaurants around<lb/>
Greenville that have banned cigar<lb/>
smoking. O'Cool's is one of these.<lb/>
The owners of such establishments<lb/>
feel that cigar smoke is disturbing<lb/>
to customers who may still be eat-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"There were more college stu-<lb/>
dents buying cigars a few years<lb/>
back said Rocky Deem, the assis-<lb/>
tant manager of Onyx Fine<lb/>
Tobacco. Onyx has been in<lb/>
Greenville for three yean, and<lb/>
Deem has been assistant manager<lb/>
for two.<lb/>
"Our customers are mostly<lb/>
"males 20-40 young professionals.<lb/>
If a woman comes in, she's usually<lb/>
buying for a man According to<lb/>
Deem there are a few female cigar<lb/>
smokers, but they tend to smoke<lb/>
smaller, cigarette type cigars.<lb/>
Cigar smoking has been fash-<lb/>
ionable for a few years now, and<lb/>
most of the trend jumpers have<lb/>
moved on. However, the diehards<lb/>
who really enjoy their smoke may<lb/>
be here for a while.<lb/>
Visit www.cigargroup.com for<lb/>
the most comprehensive internet<lb/>
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Downtown<lb/>
continued from page 4<lb/>
Tuesday, and they have an enor-<lb/>
mous crowd there to enjoy the<lb/>
atmosphere and the deals.<lb/>
According to sophomore Matt<lb/>
Noe, the bars that he frequents<lb/>
downtown are not as crowded as<lb/>
they usually are during the fall and<lb/>
spring semesters.<lb/>
"O'Malley's and Corrigan's<lb/>
have an average crowd on the<lb/>
weekend Noe said, "but they're<lb/>
definitely not as crowded during<lb/>
the week as they usually are<lb/>
While O'Malley's and Wrong<lb/>
Way Corrigan's have only an aver-<lb/>
age crowd on the weekend.<lb/>
Manager Mark Fercll does not<lb/>
seem to notice a decline in busi-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
"It's a drop in the summer<lb/>
Ferell said, "but it's not a notice-<lb/>
able one money wise<lb/>
Wrong Way Corrigan's is experi-<lb/>
encing some renovations currently,<lb/>
and Noe thinks that any change<lb/>
will attract a crowd.<lb/>
"I think people will want to<lb/>
check anything out that's differ-<lb/>
ent Noe said.<lb/>
If something different is what<lb/>
you crave, Ham's restaurant is still<lb/>
relatively new to to the Greenville<lb/>
night life scene. They are also run-<lb/>
ning several bar specials this sum-<lb/>
mer, along with live entertainment<lb/>
"We have live bands every<lb/>
Wednesday night on the patio<lb/>
said Sara Fogel, a Ham's employee.<lb/>
"We also have Super Sundays,<lb/>
Mexican Mondays and Tropical<lb/>
Tuesdays, which are bar specials<lb/>
that we will be running throughout<lb/>
the summer<lb/>
Super Sundays offer discounts<lb/>
on domestic beers and pitchers,<lb/>
Mexican Mondays offer discounts<lb/>
on Mexican beers and margaritas<lb/>
and Tropical Tuesdays offer dis-<lb/>
counts on smoothies and tropical<lb/>
drinks. Other bars such as Hooray<lb/>
Harry's, the Elbo, Pantana Bob's<lb/>
and The Sports Pad Complex also<lb/>
run weekend specials, all with the<lb/>
intent of bringing the life back into<lb/>
the Greenville night life.<lb/>
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3305 E. 10th Street<lb/>
From ECU (10th St. side) go left on 10th<lb/>
Street, across Greenville Blvd. we're just past<lb/>
Bojangles on the left. From ECU 5th Street<lb/>
side, take a right and follow 5th to 10th,<lb/>
then follow directions above.<lb/>
32<lb/>
Ik<lb/>
3<lb/>
?M<lb/>
<pb facs="00058851_0006"/><lb/>
Tki Etit Ciroliniin<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Wednesday, June 16, 1889 6<lb/>
If you build it fans will come<lb/>
PirateBaseball'may<lb/>
build new field of dreams<lb/>
CORV SlIKKI.KR<lb/>
STAFF IIITKI<lb/>
After a much heralded season, there is a possibility<lb/>
that the Pirate baseball team may be getting a new or<lb/>
upgraded facility in the near future.<lb/>
According to Jerry Trickie, assistant sports infor-<lb/>
mation director, any project to improve or replace<lb/>
Harrington Field will not be started until ECU's new<lb/>
strength and conditioning center is complete.<lb/>
"It will be about two to three years before the<lb/>
strength and conditioning center is finished Trickie<lb/>
said.<lb/>
While a panel of ECU officials will make the deci-<lb/>
sion, Athletic Director, Mike Hamrick, has a consid-<lb/>
erable amount of input in the decision. While<lb/>
Hamrick was unavailable for comment, Trickie con-<lb/>
firmed that a project to improve the team's facilities<lb/>
is something the Athletic Department would like to<lb/>
particinate in.<lb/>
"It's hoped that down the road something will be<lb/>
done to improve it (Harrington Field), and maybe<lb/>
build something new, but there's nothing concrete<lb/>
right now Trickie said.<lb/>
Any project to build or improve upon any of<lb/>
ECU's sports facilities is usually financed in some<lb/>
part by the Pirate Club. According to the Executive<lb/>
Director of The Pirate Club, Dennis Young, a lot of<lb/>
the responsibility of raising money for such a project<lb/>
would be placed on the Pirate Club.<lb/>
"Most, if not all, of the funding would have to<lb/>
come from the private sector Young said. "I'm<lb/>
assuming that the next fund raising campaign would<lb/>
involve raising money for such a project<lb/>
The Pirates' season was capped off with a trip to<lb/>
the finals of the Southern Regional, as well as a<lb/>
national ranking throughout much of the year ending<lb/>
at 19th in the nation.<lb/>
Young also said that there are some plans being<lb/>
made to at least upgrade Harrington Field.<lb/>
"The baseball team this year has called attention<lb/>
to the program Young said. "In the master plan,<lb/>
there are some plans to upgrade the facility<lb/>
Harrington Field, which was dedicated to the<lb/>
school on May 9, 1971, has been renovated several<lb/>
times throughout it's long history. .Most notably, a<lb/>
new light system was installed so the Pirate's could<lb/>
play night games, which in turn increased attendance<lb/>
at home games. However, the maximum seating<lb/>
capacity is still only 2,500 people. Harrington Field's<lb/>
highest attendance record was set when 3,000 fans<lb/>
came out to see the ECU vs. N.C. State game in<lb/>
1993, which is sparse in comparison to other stadium's<lb/>
attendance records. For instance, University of<lb/>
Miami's Mark Light Stadium, has a seating capacity<lb/>
of over 4,200 people, which allows Miami fans to pack<lb/>
into their stadium every night, and cheer<lb/>
their school on to victory. While the<lb/>
Pirates did walk out of Mark Light<lb/>
Stadium with a win this year, they were<lb/>
not able to obtain the same results in<lb/>
Alex Box Stadium against Louisiana<lb/>
State University in this year's regional<lb/>
final. LSI! played in front of a sell-out<lb/>
crowd of over 7,000 people, which is<lb/>
something the Pirates simply cannot do<lb/>
at Harrington Field.<lb/>
"If the Pirates want the national<lb/>
recognition they deserve, they have to<lb/>
play in a facility that is comparable to<lb/>
HMMMMHNMRMi<lb/>
Baseball brings the hope of improved facilities<lb/>
PHOTO BV ROBIN VUCHNICH<lb/>
Updated facilities coming soon to ECU<lb/>
PHOTO BY ROBIN VUCHNICH<lb/>
Jfc<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
<lb/>
? &amp; r<lb/>
Orioles select<lb/>
Salargo in 20th round<lb/>
Salargo named second<lb/>
team All-American<lb/>
Frank II kndricks<lb/>
HKNIIIR IIITKH<lb/>
The Baltimore Orioles selected<lb/>
Pirate outfielder, Steve Salargo,<lb/>
with the 607th overall pick of this<lb/>
month's draft.<lb/>
The Wilson, N.C. native set<lb/>
ECU's career records in hits (301)<lb/>
and led the Pirates to a Colonial<lb/>
Championship as well as an NCAA<lb/>
birth, where the Pirates were even-<lb/>
tually beaten by Louisiana State<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Salargo set numerous single sea-<lb/>
son records this season including<lb/>
games played (62), at bats (244),<lb/>
doubles (20), RBI (77), and runs<lb/>
scored (70). He also finished one hit<lb/>
(97) and one total base (167) away<lb/>
from those records, held by Pirate<lb/>
great Pat Watkins.<lb/>
Along with his hits record,<lb/>
Salargo set career records for games<lb/>
played (223), at bats (862), doubles<lb/>
(54) and runs scored (198).<lb/>
This year, Salargo finished with<lb/>
base hits in 49 of 62 games. He had<lb/>
a 13 game hitting streak which was<lb/>
the highest among all the Pirates.<lb/>
Salargo also had 27 multiple hit<lb/>
games including six four hit games.<lb/>
Salargo had multiple RBI's in 23<lb/>
games including one in which he<lb/>
drove in five.<lb/>
Throughout Salargo's career, he<lb/>
started and played every game, set-<lb/>
Clayton earns<lb/>
All-American honors<lb/>
Ninth place finish<lb/>
ensures another title<lb/>
Frank II knd ricks<lb/>
SKSIOR WRITER<lb/>
On Wednesday, June 2, Michele<lb/>
Clayton became the third East<lb/>
Carolina women's track performer<lb/>
in history to earn All-America hon-<lb/>
ors when she finished 9th in the<lb/>
hammer throw at the NCAA<lb/>
Championships in Boise, Idaho.<lb/>
Clayton's second throw of 189<lb/>
feet, 11 inches was her best of six<lb/>
throws on the day and enabled her<lb/>
to finish 6th among American<lb/>
women. Clayton had been waiting<lb/>
for this day as long as she can<lb/>
Michele Clayton<lb/>
FILE PHOTO<lb/>
remember.<lb/>
"At the beginning of the season,<lb/>
the one thing I hadn't accomplished<lb/>
was being named All-America<lb/>
Clayton said.<lb/>
" I am excited to have reached<lb/>
that goal, but 1 feel I could have<lb/>
thrown better<lb/>
Clayton's career best throw is<lb/>
194 feet, 3 inches, but the Idaho<lb/>
weather kept that from being dupli-<lb/>
cated.<lb/>
The hammer throw was split<lb/>
into two flights of eleven partici-<lb/>
pants. Each athlete got three<lb/>
attempts for the first round, and the<lb/>
top nine advanced to round two for<lb/>
three more throws. The top eight<lb/>
Americans were given All-America<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
"After her second throw, she was<lb/>
in second place said Choo Justice,<lb/>
head coach for women's track and<lb/>
field.<lb/>
By the end of the first flight,<lb/>
Clayton was in fifth. In the second<lb/>
SEE CLAYTON PAGE 7<lb/>
Senior Stove Salargo flatted every game for the Pirates in his last season.<lb/>
FILE PHOTO<lb/>
ting a school record for consecutive<lb/>
games played at 223.<lb/>
After one of ECU's best individ-<lb/>
ual single season performances in<lb/>
history and arguably the most out-<lb/>
standing career of any Pirate ever,<lb/>
Salargo was rewarded by being<lb/>
named a second-team All-American<lb/>
by the National Collegiate Baseball<lb/>
Writers Association.<lb/>
SEE SALAHB0 PAGE 7<lb/>
Coaches nominate favorite athletes<lb/>
Students encouraged to<lb/>
participate in selection<lb/>
I'KTKR IJAWYOT<lb/>
SPORTS KI1ITOR<lb/>
After a strong season for many of<lb/>
ECU's athletic programs, coaches<lb/>
are given the chance to nominate a<lb/>
standout athlete of the year. The<lb/>
athlete that the coach nominates<lb/>
I cannot be on their team.<lb/>
Nominees are selected for their<lb/>
outstanding achievements and con-<lb/>
tributions to the team on and off<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
Steve Logan, head football<lb/>
coach, was among the many who<lb/>
were impressed with the athletic<lb/>
talents of Michelle Clayton, a ham-<lb/>
mer thrower for women's track and<lb/>
field. Logan saw Clayton as a strong<lb/>
competitor on and off the field, call-<lb/>
ing her a 4.0 student athlete.<lb/>
"She is the real deal all around,<lb/>
student, athlete, everything. She is<lb/>
what I wish every student athlete<lb/>
were, football, baseball, all of<lb/>
them Logan said.<lb/>
Associate Athletic Director<lb/>
Henry VanSant also saw strong<lb/>
promise in Clayton. " She<lb/>
(Clayton) was an All American in<lb/>
track and field. No one else has<lb/>
achieved that status at ECU<lb/>
VanSant said.<lb/>
"She is one of the top finishers<lb/>
in the country<lb/>
Due to its extraordinarily suc-<lb/>
cessful season, the Pirates baseball<lb/>
SEE ATHLETES PAGE 7<lb/>
7 Wednesday, J<lb/>
Ross<lb/>
Coursed<lb/>
by man<lb/>
PINEHURS1<lb/>
99th U.S. Ope<lb/>
to Donald Ros<lb/>
to what has b<lb/>
test of golf.<lb/>
Of the rout.<lb/>
Ross designed<lb/>
was always his<lb/>
first nine hole:<lb/>
of North<lb/>
Carolina in<lb/>
course in 1907<lb/>
last 41 years of<lb/>
feet it.<lb/>
Clearly, Pi<lb/>
stood the test i<lb/>
Sand green<lb/>
grass in 1935,<lb/>
won the PGA<lb/>
next year. Bei<lb/>
first professior<lb/>
the 1940 Non<lb/>
The United S<lb/>
Cup there in<lb/>
the best golfer<lb/>
Paul Azinj<lb/>
Championship<lb/>
What Pine!<lb/>
when the<lb/>
Thursday is an<lb/>
happiness and<lb/>
The hollow<lb/>
that serve as<lb/>
any ball that si<lb/>
est bit offline i<lb/>
called a joyf<lb/>
Scottish course<lb/>
learned the gai<lb/>
According t<lb/>
give the green<lb/>
larity, posing<lb/>
thing to think<lb/>
? R<lb/>
?f r<lb/>
<pb facs="00058851_0007"/><lb/>
16, 1999 6<lb/>
e<lb/>
7 Wednesday, June 16. 1999<lb/>
sports<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Ross legacy found at Pinehurst No.2<lb/>
Course designer feared<lb/>
by many pro golfers<lb/>
PINEHURST, N.C. (AP)The<lb/>
99th U.S. Open is as much a tribute<lb/>
to Donald Ross as it is a testament<lb/>
to what has become the toughest<lb/>
test of golf.<lb/>
Of the roughly 400 golf courses<lb/>
Ross designed, No. 2 at Pinehurst<lb/>
was always his pet. He shaped the<lb/>
first nine holes from the sand hills<lb/>
of North<lb/>
Carolina in 1901, completed the<lb/>
course in 1907 and then spent the<lb/>
last 41 years of his life trying to per-<lb/>
fect it.<lb/>
Clearly, Pinehurst No. 2 has<lb/>
stood the test of time.<lb/>
Sand greens were replaced by<lb/>
grass in 1935, and Denny Shute<lb/>
won the PGA Championship the<lb/>
next year. Ben Hogan earned his<lb/>
first professional victory at No. 2,<lb/>
the 1940 North and South Open.<lb/>
The United States won the Ryder<lb/>
Cup there in 1951. The last time<lb/>
the best golfers set foot on No. 2,<lb/>
Paul Azinger won the Tour<lb/>
Championship in 1992.<lb/>
What Pinehurst is likely to bring<lb/>
when the U.S. Open starts<lb/>
Thursday is an agonizing balance of<lb/>
happiness and trouble.<lb/>
The hollows around the greens<lb/>
that serve as a collection area for<lb/>
any ball that strays even the slight-<lb/>
est bit offline came from what Ross<lb/>
called a joyful memory of the<lb/>
Scottish courses where he lived and<lb/>
learned the game.<lb/>
According to Ross, such hollows<lb/>
give the green "a charming irregu-<lb/>
larity, posing to the player some-<lb/>
thing to think about, and making<lb/>
him use care in handling recovery<lb/>
strokes Oh, they have something<lb/>
to think about, all right.<lb/>
Payne Stewart thought so much<lb/>
about it that he pulled nine clubs<lb/>
from his bag during a practice<lb/>
round on Sunday, from a mid-iron<lb/>
all the way through the bag to his<lb/>
wedges and putter. Tiger Woods,<lb/>
Lee Westwood and others went the<lb/>
opposite direction, preferring to use<lb/>
a 3-wood or 5-wood to roll the ball<lb/>
up toward the pin.<lb/>
Ross didn't have that many<lb/>
options when he was playing - he<lb/>
tied for fifth in the 1903 U.S. Open<lb/>
- since he never carried more than<lb/>
six clubs in his bag.<lb/>
The bunkers, such as the deep<lb/>
pit down the right side of the 18th<lb/>
fairway, were designed to give the<lb/>
best players in the world one last<lb/>
thing to consider before they pull<lb/>
the trigger on a drive that could<lb/>
ultimately determine the champi-<lb/>
onship.<lb/>
"I have evidence in my work at<lb/>
Pinehurst that a course blinkered<lb/>
fairly and scientifically is the most<lb/>
attractive Ross once wrote.<lb/>
"There is no such thing as a mis-<lb/>
placed bunker. Regardless of where<lb/>
a bunker may be, it is the business<lb/>
of a player to avoid it<lb/>
His comments can be found in a<lb/>
book titled, "Golf Has Never<lb/>
Failed Me containing the lost<lb/>
commentaries of one of golfs great-<lb/>
est architects.<lb/>
Ross never fancied himself as a<lb/>
writer.<lb/>
Then again, he never had<lb/>
designs on becoming an architect.<lb/>
A carpenter by trade, his golf<lb/>
club in Dornoch wanted a profes-<lb/>
sional, which in those days meant<lb/>
someone to build clubs and give<lb/>
lessons. Ross trained under Old<lb/>
Tom Morris at St Andrews, spent<lb/>
another year at Carnoustie and took<lb/>
the job at Dornoch in 1893.<lb/>
He also became the greenskeep-<lb/>
er, a task he deplored at the time.<lb/>
"What I really did was to go out<lb/>
in overalls and get down on my<lb/>
hands and knees, and care for the<lb/>
turf and the bunkers and the<lb/>
greens he wrote.<lb/>
"And how I used to hate it. But,<lb/>
as it turned out, that was the best<lb/>
training I could have had for what<lb/>
turned out to be my future<lb/>
The future unfolded when a<lb/>
Harvard professor, Robert Willson,<lb/>
played Dornoch and encouraged<lb/>
Ross to come to America, where he<lb/>
felt the game was ready to take<lb/>
hold. Ross arrived in Boston in<lb/>
1899, and was hired away by James<lb/>
Tufts, who had dreams of a golfing<lb/>
mecca in the pine barrens of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Ninety-two years later, after it<lb/>
first was completed, Pinehurst No.<lb/>
2 will finally stage what is tradition-<lb/>
ally the toughest major champi-<lb/>
onship of them all.<lb/>
Rain may have an impact on<lb/>
scoring, but it won't significantly<lb/>
alter the character of Ross' favorite<lb/>
design, the first course he built<lb/>
from scratch.<lb/>
"I am firmly of the opinion that<lb/>
the leading professionals and<lb/>
golfers of every caliber, for many<lb/>
years to come, will find in the No. 2<lb/>
course the fairest yet most exacting<lb/>
test of their game he once wrote.<lb/>
Great trouble will present itself<lb/>
across the bumps and mounds, in<lb/>
the pits and bunkers and through<lb/>
the contoured, humpback greens.<lb/>
Happiness usually comes only to<lb/>
one man in a U.S. Open, but some-<lb/>
where, Ross will surely be smiling.<lb/>
Athletes<lb/>
continued Irom page 6<lb/>
team has three nominees voted for<lb/>
by different coaches.<lb/>
Devin O'Neil, head coach of the<lb/>
men's soccer team, liked the chem-<lb/>
istry between pitcher Foye Minton<lb/>
and the ECU baseball team.<lb/>
Minton tossed a rare no-hitter early<lb/>
in the season against a formidable<lb/>
N.C. State team.<lb/>
"Foye was instrumental in early<lb/>
wins, after he was hurt it really<lb/>
affected the team during the tour-<lb/>
nament O'Neil said.<lb/>
Other athletes, such as "Iso"<lb/>
Polonius, the third baseman for<lb/>
ECU's softball team, were also<lb/>
among the outstanding athletes of<lb/>
the year nominations. Leonard<lb/>
Klepack, men's track coach, liked<lb/>
the skills which have been shown by<lb/>
Iso in her senior year at ECU.<lb/>
Klepack felt that Polonius was well<lb/>
balanced lxth in the field and at the<lb/>
plate.<lb/>
"She was a central figure with the<lb/>
team and had a good year, she is well<lb/>
balanced on both sides and strong in<lb/>
her position Klepack said.<lb/>
Polonius currently holds almost<lb/>
Athlete of the Year<lb/>
Nominees<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Michelle Clayton<lb/>
Foye Minton<lb/>
"Iso" Polonius<lb/>
Chad Tracy<lb/>
Steve Salargo<lb/>
Grade<lb/>
Sport<lb/>
Senior Women's Track &amp; Field<lb/>
Sophomore Baseball<lb/>
Senior Softball<lb/>
Freshman Baseball<lb/>
Senior Baseball<lb/>
place your vote at www.studentmedia.ecu.edusportssurvey<lb/>
every hitting record in the ECU<lb/>
softball program. She is currently<lb/>
first in career home runs, beating<lb/>
her own record from last year, as<lb/>
well as having a top batting average<lb/>
for the season.<lb/>
Chad Tracy is the only freshman<lb/>
nominated. The first year standout<lb/>
for ECU's baseball program is<lb/>
among the selected for athlete of<lb/>
the year because of his ability to<lb/>
help the team through the season.<lb/>
Dee Gibson, softball head coach,<lb/>
found him to be a strong pace setter<lb/>
for the team.<lb/>
"(Tracy) helped the team have a<lb/>
good year and will be back with<lb/>
most of the other players for a good<lb/>
year next year Gibson said.<lb/>
Along with others from the base-<lb/>
ball team, standout Steve Salargo<lb/>
was also nominated for his excep-<lb/>
tional year. Salargo, a senior, set<lb/>
numerous records in the CAA and<lb/>
ECU's record books. VanSant<lb/>
believes athletes such as Salargo<lb/>
come around only once in a while.<lb/>
"He was a great outfielder who<lb/>
practically rewrote ECU's baseball<lb/>
book VanSant said.<lb/>
Salargo<lb/>
conlinued Irom page 6<lb/>
Salargo became the ninth Pirate<lb/>
in history to be earn All-America<lb/>
honors, and he is the second this<lb/>
season after Chad Tracy was named<lb/>
a Freshman All-America. Salargo is<lb/>
the first upperclassman at ECU to<lb/>
be named an Ail-American since<lb/>
Watkinsin 1993.<lb/>
Salargo's career statistics:<lb/>
YR BA GP AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB-SBA<lb/>
' ,281 46 160 25 45 6 2 2 24 11-16<lb/>
?97 .374 56 219 52 82 14 3 10 44 15-23<lb/>
'98 .322 59 239 51 77 14 3 7 44 11-18<lb/>
'99 .398 62 244 70 97 20 I 16 77 14-15<lb/>
total .344 223 862 198 301 54 9 35 189 51-72<lb/>
Source: ECU Sports Information Department<lb/>
Clayton<lb/>
connnued Irom page 6<lb/>
flight, four passed her but she<lb/>
remained in the top nine to<lb/>
advance to the finals.<lb/>
"I knew I was fifth out of the<lb/>
first flight, so I had to wait it out<lb/>
during the second flight. I was ner-<lb/>
vous until the next to last thrower<lb/>
Clayton said. "The wait was hard<lb/>
because it was so cold. It seemed<lb/>
like forever but it was only 45 min-<lb/>
utes<lb/>
For Clayton, the end result was<lb/>
definitely worth the wait.<lb/>
akaaamMAjc ?? .wfl<lb/>
A R 0 N A f JJ JJ C <lb/>
?<lb/>
I could have<lb/>
icst throw is<lb/>
ut the Idaho<lb/>
n being dupli-<lb/>
ow was split<lb/>
:leven partici-<lb/>
e got three<lb/>
round, and the<lb/>
round two for<lb/>
rhe top eight<lb/>
n All-America<lb/>
throw, she was<lb/>
IChoo Justice,<lb/>
en's track and<lb/>
tie first flight,<lb/>
In the second<lb/>
PAGE 7<lb/>
etes<lb/>
eball, all of<lb/>
tic Director<lb/>
0 saw strong<lb/>
:on. " She<lb/>
1 American in<lb/>
one else has<lb/>
js at ECU<lb/>
e top finishers<lb/>
ordinarily suc-<lb/>
'irates baseball<lb/>
PAGE 7<lb/>
w<lb/>
x<lb/>
www.attic-niqhtclub.com<lb/>
ax.TI ?<lb/>
HC Lmemmtary Nightclub, I "T C O 7QflQ<lb/>
Votmd 1 at ICU and 5?a?- OVO<lb/>
Top 100 Collaga Bar In<lb/>
Mm Nation by Playboy<lb/>
magmzinm October 1997<lb/>
Uptown Greenville<lb/>
209 E. 5th St.<lb/>
$2.00 ADM. 9-9:30 WECU ID<lb/>
t<lb/>
1 Allyn Ball:<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
1.50 Bottled Beer<lb/>
Cold Sweat<lb/>
Rockin' Rhythm &amp; Blues - Ladies Free Admission until 11 p.m.<lb/>
5 1b.<lb/>
Special Guest Mute<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
Special Guest Fuel Love Fury<lb/>
COM.NGSOON .lnoadViJx<lb/>
Thursday June 24<lb/>
h<lb/>
01<lb/>
Special Guest<lb/>
Ultraviolets<lb/>
Saturday, June 26<lb/>
C R A V I N'<lb/>
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ADV. TIX<lb/>
AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
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WASH PUB ? CD ALLEY<lb/>
EAST COAST<lb/>
MUSIC 8. VIDEO<lb/>
Adv.<lb/>
tix<lb/>
www.livewireonline.com<lb/>
ANNIVERSARY SEASON<lb/>
Rodgers and Hammerstein s<lb/>
THE SOUND OF MUSIC<lb/>
June 22-26<lb/>
Mary Chase's timeless comedy<lb/>
HARVEY<lb/>
July 6-10<lb/>
The Fats Waller musical<lb/>
ain't misbehavin'<lb/>
July 20-24<lb/>
Coll 252-328-6829 for ticket information.<lb/>
No Pool At Your Apartments?<lb/>
?<lb/>
PLAYERS CLUB<lb/>
APARTMBNTB<lb/>
Now Leasing ? (252) 321-7613<lb/>
1526 S. Charles Hlvd. ? Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
rd<lb/>
<pb facs="00058851_0008"/><lb/>
?guu<lb/>
t WtdmUiy. June 18. 1999<lb/>
classifieds<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
TORRENT<lb/>
WALK TO ECU - 1 bedroom apt.<lb/>
$295month available now 6 Aug.<lb/>
1st. 706 East 1st St. or 125 Avery<lb/>
Street, near campus. 758-6596.<lb/>
GREAT DEAL for summer! Sublease<lb/>
a 1 bedroom at Wesley Commons<lb/>
North for $40 off a month! Perfect<lb/>
for summer school. Lease expires<lb/>
August 7th. Call 83f6842 or 931-<lb/>
9455.<lb/>
ECU AREA: Five and three bedroom<lb/>
houses available for June and Au-<lb/>
gust. Pets OK. some with fenced in<lb/>
yards. Call 830-9502. leave a mes-<lb/>
sage. <lb/>
1 BLOCK from downtown ? 3rd<lb/>
Street. Call 252-809-1922.<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
2 BR. apartment in Ringgold Tow-<lb/>
ers, fully furnished. 2 bathrooms,<lb/>
rent for Summer only (May-July)<lb/>
$550 per month. Call 355-6707,<lb/>
THREE BEDROOM house two<lb/>
blocks from campus available first of<lb/>
July or August. Prefer responsible<lb/>
students. Pets OK. All major ap-<lb/>
pliances including washerdryer.<lb/>
Call 321-6937.<lb/>
2 BEDROOM, 1 bath duplex. 3<lb/>
miles from campus, city bus avail-<lb/>
able, newly renovated, short term<lb/>
leases. Pets OK with fee.<lb/>
$400month deposit. 1st full<lb/>
month 12 price. 551-3426.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
GOT AN extra room? Laid back,<lb/>
clean, female grad student needs<lb/>
place to live August to December.<lb/>
Need to make plans immediately.<lb/>
Call Kelly. 758-7758. leave message.<lb/>
DO YOU NEED MONEY?<lb/>
WE WILL PAY YOU<lb/>
$CASH$<lb/>
FOR USED MENS SHIRTS, SHOES, PANTS, JEANS, ETC<lb/>
TOMMY HILFIGER TIMBERLAND<lb/>
NAUTICA ABERCROMBIE<lb/>
POLO EDDIE BAUER<lb/>
AND OTHER NAME BRAND MEN'S CLOTHING<lb/>
WE ALSO BUY AND SELL:<lb/>
GOLD &amp; SILVER ? Jewelry &amp; Coins ? Any Condition Gold Pieces<lb/>
? Stereos, (Systems, and Separates) ? TVs, VCRs, ? CD Players -<lb/>
Home, Portable<lb/>
Microwave Ovens ? Dorm Refrigerators<lb/>
QUICK, EASY, HELPFUL<lb/>
STUDENT SWAP SHOP<lb/>
414 S. EVANS (UP THE STREET FROM CUBBIES)<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
TUESDAY - SATURDAY, 10:00 - 5:00<lb/>
(FRONT AND REAR ENTRANCE)<lb/>
ONE OF THE FAVORITE STUDENT STORES FOR YEARS<lb/>
(IF YOU ARE SELLING, ID IS REQUIRED)<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
ROOMMATE(S) NEEDED BEGIN-<lb/>
NING Aug. 1st to share four bed-<lb/>
room townhouse. On bus route. Call<lb/>
365-2827.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share a 3<lb/>
BR. 1 bath house on Student St.<lb/>
with two graduate students. One<lb/>
block to ECU. $133.4mo. Call 328-<lb/>
0133(w) or 329-7137.<lb/>
FEMALE SHARE 3 bedroom town-<lb/>
house near ECU. Furnished wash-<lb/>
erdryer. Beginning Fall '99.<lb/>
$225mo. plus share utilities .<lb/>
phone, cable. Call Mindy 355-2956.<lb/>
Collingdale Court <lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apt. Downtown<lb/>
above Catalog Connection. Half the<lb/>
rent, half utilities. Perfect location for<lb/>
students, washerdryer. Call Robin.<lb/>
561-7889. .<lb/>
MF NONSMOKER for 2 bdrm 1<lb/>
bath apartment 2 blocks from cam-<lb/>
pus on East 3rd. Includes utilities,<lb/>
cable, etc. Available for summer and<lb/>
school year. 752-3769.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 2<lb/>
BR. 1 bath furnished apt. Walking<lb/>
distance to ECU. Large room and<lb/>
closet. $212.5mo. Central AC, heat<lb/>
&amp; hot water included. Call 328-<lb/>
0133(w) or 329-7137 leave message.<lb/>
FEMALE OR male roommate, du-<lb/>
plex. Wyndham Circle, short walk to<lb/>
ECU. on bus route. No pets. Move in<lb/>
August 15. 919-231-0374. leave mes-<lb/>
sage. Call now.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
MOVING, MUST go! Two couches.<lb/>
$20 each, matching end tables. $5<lb/>
each, mauve upholstered chair, $10.<lb/>
nine drawer dresser and mirror, $25.<lb/>
Call Kelly ASAP. 758-9862.<lb/>
'88 VW Cabriolet, red with white<lb/>
convertible top. new clutch. 5 speed,<lb/>
runs great! $3900. 439-1894.<lb/>
the<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
We are now accepting applications<lb/>
for all sections of the paper.<lb/>
? News, Sports, &amp; Features Writers<lb/>
? Opinion columnists<lb/>
? Photographers<lb/>
? Copy Editors<lb/>
? Cartoonists<lb/>
of Lifetime iv<lb/>
Apply at our office on die second floor of die Student Publications Building.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
COMPUTER AND primer for sale.<lb/>
Mac with Hewlett Packard printer,<lb/>
$150, word processing software;<lb/>
also GE TV. color, with stand $50.<lb/>
Call Jennifer at 758-6834 or 830-<lb/>
0648.<lb/>
CONQUEST TSi, has 12K miles on<lb/>
rebuilt engine. Gold with black leath-<lb/>
er int turbo. Ready for quick sale,<lb/>
asking $1500. Call 757-2658. ask for<lb/>
John.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
LOOKING FOR a Summer job? Play<lb/>
at day and work at night. The ECU<lb/>
Telefund is hiring students for the<lb/>
Summer and Fall of 1999 to contact<lb/>
alumni and parents for the ECU An-<lb/>
nual Fund Drive. $5.50hour. Make<lb/>
your own schedule. If interested, call<lb/>
328-4212. M-Th between the hours<lb/>
of 3-6 p.m.<lb/>
CNC COMPUTER programmer for<lb/>
sheet metal fabrication co. Salary<lb/>
will depend on exp. Call for details<lb/>
andor appt 919-734-1700.<lb/>
ATTN: EASTERN Carolina's finest<lb/>
adult entertainment is now hiring.<lb/>
Day and night shifts available. Earn<lb/>
up to $1000 a week. Call Playmates<lb/>
at 747-7686.<lb/>
9 PEOPLE needed to lose weight<lb/>
and earn income. Call Darla for free<lb/>
information at 252-322-7288<lb/>
IKS US IS Tl II<lb/>
' ANSWER<lb/>
If you're having a<lb/>
crisis in life, Jesus is<lb/>
the answer! For prayer, or<lb/>
just to talk, call one of our<lb/>
crisis hot line numbers:<lb/>
Daytime 756-3315 or<lb/>
714-0718 Ministry Outreach<lb/>
anytime after 7pm.<lb/>
321-6012 confidential.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
PRE-SCHOOL Teacher to teach full-<lb/>
time at Harmony Child Care. Must<lb/>
have experience and credentials I &amp;<lb/>
II or a 2-4 year degree in child devel-<lb/>
opment or related. Also, substitutes<lb/>
needed. Call 756-6229. License<lb/>
? 7455138<lb/>
EXOTIC DANCERS $1000-$ 1500<lb/>
weekly, no experience needed. 919-<lb/>
580-7084. Sid's Showgirls, Gold-<lb/>
sboro.<lb/>
THE CITY of Greenville MIS Depart-<lb/>
ment is seeking a part-time PC sup-<lb/>
port person to install applications<lb/>
and troubleshoot issues. Solid ex-<lb/>
perience with PCs and PC applica-<lb/>
tions required. Experience with<lb/>
WordPerfect, Word, Lotus 123, Ex-<lb/>
cel, Lotus Notes Email. Novell and<lb/>
NT servers and networks, hardware<lb/>
(printersmodems) is highly desired.<lb/>
Please send resume and hours avail-<lb/>
able to: Mary Peterson, MIS. City of<lb/>
Greenville. PO Box 7207. Greenville.<lb/>
NC 27835-7207 or fax to 252-329-<lb/>
4399.<lb/>
NOW HIRING adult entertainers<lb/>
and dancers. Up to $1500 weekly.<lb/>
Must be at least 18. have phone,<lb/>
transportation, be drug free. Call<lb/>
758-2737 for information.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
LOSE WEIGHT like crazy! 30<lb/>
pounds or more safe, fast, easy, af-<lb/>
fordable and all natural. Programs<lb/>
start at $39. 95. Call now, 931-7526.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
GET INVOLVED! SGA is looking for<lb/>
students to sit on Summer Commit-<lb/>
tees. If you would like to know what<lb/>
is happening at Your University, then<lb/>
call us today! 328-4726. Experience<lb/>
the Difference You can make!<lb/>
DOES SUMMER School have you<lb/>
stressed? Come on out Thursday<lb/>
night, June 17. at 9 p.m. and relax by<lb/>
the pool at the Student Recreational<lb/>
Center and watch a movie.<lb/>
THE BRYAN Adrian Basketball<lb/>
Camp Final registration is now open<lb/>
for The 21st Annual Bryan Adrian<lb/>
Summer Basketball Camp. Boys and<lb/>
girls ages 5-19 are eligible. Locations<lb/>
include: Hickory. NC; Rocky Mount.<lb/>
NC; Charlotte. NC; Greensboro. NC;<lb/>
Elkin. NC and Raleigh. NC. Included<lb/>
on the camp staff are: Jerry Stack-<lb/>
house(Pro) and Antawn Jamison<lb/>
(Pro). For a free brochure call 704-<lb/>
372-32S6 anytime.<lb/>
NEED A JOB?<lb/>
YOU'RE LOOKING IN THE RIGHT PLACE!<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
It's summertime!<lb/>
You should be surfing!<lb/>
Surf the web over to L<lb/>
www.clubhouse.ecu.edu<lb/>
.<lb/>
The Gross is CUweujs Greener<lb/>
a.<lb/>
Sastbroofe S, Village. Green (tyutmeats!<lb/>
'??fyj '?<lb/>
<lb/>
s?<lb/>
wtments<lb/>
2- &amp; S-BwJreowOfortment Womes<lb/>
Walk-In Closets<lb/>
Free Cable TV, Water &amp;Se?<lb/>
V<lb/>
24-Hour Emerge) Maintenane<lb/>
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QjSfttlttfatlitg<lb/>
j JpurSlte MoMfltMent ?<lb/>
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2-BeaW Flats &amp; Townkotnes<lb/>
Various Flow Plans<lb/>
ICakUTV, Water SSfWj:<lb/>
2 Swimming Pools<lb/>
FreeinTownkomes<lb/>
1<lb/>
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24-Hour 8mwgenw) Maintononee<lb/>
iMfltehMadUBik<lb/>
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,<lb/>
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9 ??:<lb/>
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Campbell w<lb/>
Student He
</div></body></text></TEI>