<?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="00058891__tn_0001"/>
J!<lb/>
<lb/>
3ns in<lb/>
ESS<lb/>
BALL<lb/>
to represent<lb/>
Knoxville,<lb/>
lall Student<lb/>
find out!<lb/>
. 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
uter Limitz<lb/>
ling Center<lb/>
len's Divisions)<lb/>
Dm<lb/>
m Divisions)<lb/>
at the<lb/>
ng Center<lb/>
of the<lb/>
nformation.<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
eastcarolinian<lb/>
Volume 74, Issue 83<lb/>
LATIN BAND HEATS UP NIGHT pg. 6<lb/>
Mandorico brings new flavor to G-villi<lb/>
<lb/>
47 days to go until Spring Break<lb/>
NEWS BRIEFS<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
Last Thursday's issue stated Mark<lb/>
Saieed was the owner of Pantana Bob's<lb/>
when in fact he is the owner of The Cellar.<lb/>
Bernett LaPrade is the owner of Pantana<lb/>
Bob's. Mark Farrell is the general manager<lb/>
of Pantana Bob's and was not able to be<lb/>
contacted.<lb/>
Trustees Retreat<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees will meet in<lb/>
a retreat at The Sanderling Inn near Duck,<lb/>
NC Friday Jan. 28 to Sunday Jan. 30. They<lb/>
are meeting to discuss facilities funding,<lb/>
campus facilities master plan, trustee by-<lb/>
laws and athletics.<lb/>
Blood Drive<lb/>
A blood drive will take<lb/>
place at Mendenhall from<lb/>
noon-6 p.m. Wednesday<lb/>
and Thursday.<lb/>
Graduation<lb/>
Today is the last day<lb/>
to apply for May gradua-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Best-Selling Author<lb/>
Connie Mason, a historical romance fic-<lb/>
tion writer, will<lb/>
visit<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Thursday and<lb/>
Friday Feb. 3-<lb/>
4 to discuss<lb/>
her work and<lb/>
to help build<lb/>
awareness<lb/>
and raise<lb/>
money for Lit-<lb/>
eracy Volun-<lb/>
teers of America of Pitt County (LVA-PC).<lb/>
The Jockey Club will have a fundraising<lb/>
luncheon for LVA-PC at 11:30 a.m. on Feb.<lb/>
3. A writer's forum will also be held at the<lb/>
Willis Building at 7:30 p.m on Feb. 4. A<lb/>
book signing will be held at Barnes &amp; Noble<lb/>
Booksellers at 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 4.<lb/>
Christenbury Visits Campus<lb/>
World famous artist and photographer<lb/>
William Christenbury will be discussing his<lb/>
works and accomplishments tonight at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the Jenkins Art Building, in Room<lb/>
1220.<lb/>
Lecture<lb/>
Dr. Raymond A. Dombroski, associate<lb/>
professor of obstetrics and gynecology will<lb/>
present a lecture entitled "Pre-natal Diagno-<lb/>
sis of Cystic Fibrosis" from 1-2 pm on<lb/>
Thursday in the Pitt County Memorial Hos-<lb/>
pital auditorium.<lb/>
Cancer Screening<lb/>
Free colorectal educational session and<lb/>
screening at 9 am in the Leo W. Jenkins<lb/>
Cancer Center on Saturday.<lb/>
ONLINE SURVEY<lb/>
Vote online at tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
Do you think scurvy is just for<lb/>
sailors?<lb/>
The results of last week's question:<lb/>
Is there reason to suspect the po-<lb/>
lice of misreporting crimes?<lb/>
78 YES 22 NO<lb/>
PIRATES OUTLAST SEAHAWKS pg. 8<lb/>
Men's basketball team snaps 3-game losing<lb/>
streak<lb/>
TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 2000<lb/>
TODAY'S WEATHER<lb/>
Partly cloudy, high of 38<lb/>
and a low of 25<lb/>
Master's in criminal justice now offered<lb/>
New program an<lb/>
option for graduates<lb/>
Carolyn Herold<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The criminal justice field of<lb/>
study will soon have a new<lb/>
master's program.<lb/>
The program will offer two<lb/>
concentrations within the field:<lb/>
one dealing with practice within<lb/>
the criminal justice field and one<lb/>
dealing with administration and<lb/>
policy.<lb/>
Students will have to com-<lb/>
plete 39 semester hours, and the<lb/>
program is open to anyone who<lb/>
is interested.<lb/>
The idea for the program<lb/>
came about ten years ago, and<lb/>
was a part of the strategic plan<lb/>
for the university for the 1993-<lb/>
199S and 1995-2000 years.<lb/>
"Starting a program like this<lb/>
is not done in isolation said Dr.<lb/>
Linner Griffin, interim dean of<lb/>
the School of Social Work and<lb/>
Criminal Justice. "It was done in<lb/>
cooperation with local agencies<lb/>
like the police department,<lb/>
sheriff's department and the pe-<lb/>
nal system<lb/>
For a university to start any<lb/>
new degree program, there are a<lb/>
series of steps that must be fol-<lb/>
lowed. First, the need for such a<lb/>
program must be assessed. Once<lb/>
the initial assessment is com-<lb/>
plete, an advisory committee is<lb/>
formed to oversee the rest of the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
"The committee looks at the<lb/>
curriculums at other schools and<lb/>
then makes a formal request to<lb/>
the Faculty Senate and the chan-<lb/>
cellor. If it is approved by them<lb/>
it goes to the UNC System Gen-<lb/>
eral Assembly. If they approve<lb/>
it, then the program becomes<lb/>
official Griffin said.<lb/>
In the past years, there has<lb/>
been a lot of interest expressed<lb/>
in a program of this sort. As part<lb/>
of the decision making process,<lb/>
an advisory group met made up<lb/>
of people from the community<lb/>
in the criminal justice field.<lb/>
"This program was requested<lb/>
by students, the community,<lb/>
practitioners, faculty and others<lb/>
in the field as a whole Griffin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
cherold@itudentmedia.ecu.edu.<lb/>
Pirates sail over Seahawks I Hll SeaSOn ill fill! blOOlTl<lb/>
New drugs offer relief for sufferers<lb/>
Terra Steinbeiser<lb/>
NEWS EDfTOR<lb/>
Senior Guard Garrett Blackwelder scores a quick two points for the<lb/>
Pirates while forward Steven Branch looks on. For full story, see page<lb/>
9, (photo by Emily Richardson)<lb/>
While it appears that Pitt County is experienc-<lb/>
ing a more active flu season than last year's, ECU<lb/>
Student Health has reported only an average num-<lb/>
ber of flu cases.<lb/>
"We usually do clinical diagnoses based on the<lb/>
symptoms of the patient instead of doing a full flu<lb/>
culture that takes two to three weeks to get the<lb/>
results said Dr. Beta Aneja of Student Health.<lb/>
"We've had.five cases confirmed by a flu culture,<lb/>
12-15 clinical diagnoses and about 100 other viral<lb/>
infections that may be the flu or flu-related<lb/>
Aneja said this number if cases is about aver-<lb/>
age for this time of year.<lb/>
However, doctors and nurses in other clinics<lb/>
around the county are reporting an increase of in-<lb/>
fluenza, said Tammy Quinn, the communicable<lb/>
disease nursing supervisor at the Pitt County<lb/>
Health Department.<lb/>
"Adults over the age of 65 and children with<lb/>
respiratory diseases are most at risk for contract-<lb/>
ing the illness Quinn said.<lb/>
There are two recently FDA-approved drugs on<lb/>
the market that weaken the virus and reduce the<lb/>
number of days of sickness. Relenza and Tamiflu<lb/>
are inhibitor drugs that offer relief from the clas-<lb/>
sic flu symptoms, including fatigue, body aches,<lb/>
loss of appetite and fever.<lb/>
"The new drugs don't take the flu away, but<lb/>
they shorten the time that you feel sick by one or<lb/>
two days Aneja said.<lb/>
Both medicines are administered by way of an<lb/>
inhaler, similar to those used to treat asthma suf-<lb/>
ferers. According to a Tamiflu Web site, when the<lb/>
patient inhales using the inhaler, the medicine,<lb/>
which is in the form of a fine, dry powder goes<lb/>
directly into the lungs, which is the primary site<lb/>
of infection and where the virus replicates.<lb/>
Both Tamiflu and Relenza must be prescribed<lb/>
by a doctor within 48 hours of the first symptoms<lb/>
for the treatment to be effective in shortening the<lb/>
The Relenza Diskhaler deposits medteine into the lungs,<lb/>
weakening the virus, (photo from World Wide'Web)<lb/>
run of the illness.<lb/>
Physicians at the Student Health Center are of-<lb/>
fering the new drugs as an option for students suf-<lb/>
fering from the illness.<lb/>
"We are giving out prescriptions for Relenza and<lb/>
Tamiflu, but they are not available in our phar-<lb/>
macy and they are fairly expensive Aneja said.<lb/>
The best way to avoid contracting the virus is<lb/>
to avoid crowded areas and people you know are<lb/>
sick. A flu vaccination is also a viable option for<lb/>
preventing illness and is recommended for adults<lb/>
over the age of 65 and children with respiratory<lb/>
diseases, Quinn said. �<lb/>
Although the vaccination is no longer available<lb/>
at the Student Health Center, the Pitt County<lb/>
Health Department is still offering them by ap-<lb/>
pointment.<lb/>
"If you do get sick, see your physician, get<lb/>
plenty of rest and drink lots of fluids Quinn said.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@s tudentmedia. ecu. ecu.<lb/>
ECU Dining Services sponsors 'Scurvy Awareness Week'<lb/>
Program targets<lb/>
poor eating habits<lb/>
Angela Harne<lb/>
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
Sunkist and nutritional infor-<lb/>
mation comes to university din-<lb/>
ing halls just in time for Scurvy<lb/>
Awareness Week.<lb/>
From 11 a. ml :30 p.m. today<lb/>
in Todd Dining Hall and Thurs-<lb/>
day in Mendenhall Dining Hall,<lb/>
Sunkist will be supplying fresh<lb/>
oranges, health tips and informa-<lb/>
tion on the need for vitamins in<lb/>
the everyday diet.<lb/>
Manning Selvage St Lee Com-<lb/>
pany said Sunkist will be remind-<lb/>
ing students that oranges pro-<lb/>
vide a full day's worth of vitamin<lb/>
C.<lb/>
Campus Nutritionist Laura<lb/>
Hartung will be there providing<lb/>
additional information.<lb/>
"We will be giving away free<lb/>
T-shirts and orange peelers<lb/>
Hartung said. "To be eligible for<lb/>
the giveaways, students just need<lb/>
to fill out a survey on vitamin C<lb/>
knowledge. We hope to increase<lb/>
students' knowledge of good<lb/>
health techniques and how vi-<lb/>
tamin C can help reduce the risk<lb/>
of cancer while increasing their<lb/>
immune system<lb/>
John Eddings, manager of<lb/>
Mendenhall, said promotion of<lb/>
health tactics is a good idea.<lb/>
1<lb/>
"This is a great event<lb/>
Eddings said. "Students need to<lb/>
be know that the continuous in-<lb/>
take of oranges and vitamins will<lb/>
help them remain healthy<lb/>
ECU is part of a network of<lb/>
colleges across the country pro-<lb/>
moting the importance of a bal-<lb/>
anced diet and essential vitamin<lb/>
intake through whole foods like<lb/>
oranges.<lb/>
On-campus dining halls and<lb/>
cafes serve fresh fruits daily.<lb/>
"Everyone needs three to five<lb/>
servings of fresh fruit a day said<lb/>
Amy Hartman, marketing man-<lb/>
ager of Dining Services. "It's im-<lb/>
portant for students to know that<lb/>
fresh fruits are available in the<lb/>
dining halls and at all five cafes<lb/>
Sunkist will be educating stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty on how to<lb/>
avoid the debilitating disease,<lb/>
scurvy.<lb/>
According to Manning Sel-<lb/>
vage fir Lee, scurvy is not just<lb/>
something sailors used to get<lb/>
when they ran out of fruit on<lb/>
long voyages. In fact, last year<lb/>
two college students in Arizona<lb/>
contracted scurvy, a condition<lb/>
characterized by general weak-<lb/>
ness, gum disease or gingivitis<lb/>
and skin hemorrhages resulting<lb/>
from a lack of vitamin C in the<lb/>
diet.<lb/>
Manning Selvage fir Lee said<lb/>
scurvy is debilitating but com-<lb/>
pletely avoidable with proper a<lb/>
diet.<lb/>
A recent study revealed that<lb/>
college-age<lb/>
students<lb/>
would con-<lb/>
sume more or-<lb/>
anges if they<lb/>
were reminded<lb/>
that they are<lb/>
powerful anti-<lb/>
oxidants, con-<lb/>
taining 130<lb/>
percent of the<lb/>
daily value for<lb/>
vitamin C as<lb/>
well as fiber,<lb/>
folic acid and<lb/>
phytochemkals.<lb/>
Based on<lb/>
this statistic,<lb/>
Sunkist created<lb/>
the Scurvy Boy<lb/>
campaign ex-<lb/>
clusively for<lb/>
college cam-<lb/>
puses.<lb/>
"We are<lb/>
proud to bring<lb/>
quality fruit<lb/>
and vital<lb/>
health infor-<lb/>
mation to the<lb/>
ECU campus,<lb/>
Winands, Sunkist spokesperson.<lb/>
"This year's crop is abundant and<lb/>
the oranges are delicious. Eating<lb/>
right has never tasted as good<lb/>
Manning Selvage fit Lee said<lb/>
free oranges, samples and Sunkist<lb/>
Snackers, easy-to-use orange<lb/>
peelers, will be distributed with<lb/>
Scurvy Boy brochures and nutri-<lb/>
tional sheets all week.<lb/>
Junior Shauna McCann takes an orange from the fruit stand at Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Oranges, a source of vitamin C, are one of the fruits that can be eaten to prevent scurvy (photo<lb/>
by Emily Richardson)<lb/>
said Gee<lb/>
To add to the fun, Scurvy Boy<lb/>
T-shirts and posters will be<lb/>
raffled and students will be in-<lb/>
troduced to the latest install-<lb/>
ment of the imaginative<lb/>
scurvyboy.com Web site.<lb/>
Scurvyboy.com revolves<lb/>
around Scurvy Boy, the green-<lb/>
haired kid who does not eat his<lb/>
oranges and ends up getting into<lb/>
all sorts of jams as a result. The<lb/>
4<lb/>
site is designed in Flash anima-<lb/>
tion as a virtual television set<lb/>
with three cable channels: The<lb/>
Scurvy Boy News Network, Name<lb/>
That Spew, the "Orange-inal"<lb/>
Game Show and" VJ Scurv" as the<lb/>
host on the music television sta-<lb/>
tion, SBTV.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
aharne@studentmedia. ecu. edu.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058891__tn_0002"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
Court reviews gun liability<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)�Setting<lb/>
the stage for a major battle over gun<lb/>
liability, the state Supreme Court<lb/>
has agreed to review an appeal by<lb/>
the maker of semiautomatic pistols<lb/>
that were used to slaughter eight<lb/>
people in a San Francisco highrise.<lb/>
Six of the seven justices, all but<lb/>
Stanley Mosk, voted Wednesday to<lb/>
set aside the nation's first appellate<lb/>
ruling that would have allowed a<lb/>
gun manufacturer to be held re-<lb/>
sponsible for a criminal shooting.<lb/>
The high court will decide the issue<lb/>
after a hearing, which has not yet<lb/>
been scheduled.<lb/>
Before this case, every state and<lb/>
federal appellate court to consider<lb/>
suits against gun manufacturers has<lb/>
ruled that makers of legal, non-de-<lb/>
fective guns cannot be sued for their<lb/>
criminal misuse.<lb/>
But the state's 1st District Court<lb/>
of Appeal ruled last September that<lb/>
families of the victims in the San<lb/>
Francisco shooting were entitled to<lb/>
a trial on their claims that the<lb/>
Florida manufacturer of the TEC-<lb/>
DC9 marketed it to appeal to crimi-<lb/>
nals and should have foreseen that<lb/>
it would be used in a massacre.<lb/>
The manufacturer, Navegar Inc<lb/>
"had substantial reason to foresee<lb/>
that many of those to whom it<lb/>
made the TEC-DC9 available would<lb/>
criminally misuse it to kill and in-<lb/>
jure others said Presiding Justice<lb/>
J. Anthony Kline in the 2-1 ruling.<lb/>
The case could affect suits<lb/>
against gunmakers by Los Angeles,<lb/>
San Francisco and 10 other Califor-<lb/>
nia cities and counties, claiming<lb/>
faulty design, manufacture and dis-<lb/>
tribution of firearms. At least 16<lb/>
similar suits have been filed by lo-<lb/>
cal governments elsewhere.<lb/>
The case dates from July 1993,<lb/>
when Gian Luigi Ferri, a mentally<lb/>
disturbed man with a grudge against<lb/>
lawyers, entered the 101 California<lb/>
St. skyscraper and opened fire in a<lb/>
law office with two TEC-DC9s and<lb/>
a revolver. He killed eight people<lb/>
and wounded six before killing him-<lb/>
self.<lb/>
Copies of Soldier of Fortune and<lb/>
similar magazines, in which<lb/>
Navegar commonly advertised the<lb/>
TEC-DC9, were found in Ferri's<lb/>
apartment in the Los Angeles sub-<lb/>
urb of Woodland Hills.<lb/>
The TEC-tiC9, a high-capacity<lb/>
pistol easily converted to fully au-<lb/>
tomatic fire, was one of the guns<lb/>
used by two students to kill 12 fel-<lb/>
low students and a teacher in<lb/>
Littleton, Colo last April. The ap-<lb/>
peals court quoted Navegar's former<lb/>
marketing director as saying in 1992<lb/>
that sales went up when the gun was<lb/>
used in a notorious crime.<lb/>
A Superior Court judge dis-<lb/>
missed the damage suit, saying there<lb/>
was no evidence that Navegar's<lb/>
marketing practices had influenced<lb/>
Ferri or helped to cause the killings.<lb/>
But the appeals court said a jury<lb/>
should decide whether Navegar's<lb/>
overall promotion of theTEC-DC9,<lb/>
its sale of the pistol to the general<lb/>
public and the gun's ready use for<lb/>
spray fire caused deaths and inju-<lb/>
ries that otherwise would not have<lb/>
occurred.<lb/>
Nature Bo<lb/>
for Governor<lb/>
Charlotte, NC (AP)�Wrestler Ric "Nature<lb/>
Boy" Flair wants to follow the lead of Jesse "The<lb/>
Body" Ventura, now Minnesota's governor, and<lb/>
run for governor of North Carolina.<lb/>
Flair, a 50-year-old platinum-maned pro<lb/>
wrestler said last week on the Live with Regis<lb/>
and Kathie Lee TV show that he might run as<lb/>
an independent candidate.<lb/>
"I'm putting together a team, and I'm going<lb/>
to take a shot at it Flair said after the show.<lb/>
The subject arose when host Regis Philbin<lb/>
asked Flair whether he had ever thought about<lb/>
the governor's job.<lb/>
"Unofficially, I am going to run for gover-<lb/>
nor myself Flair said. "This is the unofficial<lb/>
official announcement<lb/>
The last time a celebrity tried his hand in<lb/>
North Carolina politics was in 1996, when<lb/>
NASCAR driver Richard Petty lost his bid to be<lb/>
elected secretary of state.<lb/>
"Actually. I have been asked to run for office<lb/>
a lot over the last ten years. Jesse's proved that<lb/>
anything can happen Flair said. "He is a char-<lb/>
ismatic guy. I think the political system is open<lb/>
to a lot of opportunities right now<lb/>
YAKIMA, Wash. (AP)�Fourteen years ago, a pair of<lb/>
rare medals handed out to friendly Indians by<lb/>
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark were stolen from<lb/>
a museum in the Columbia River Gorge. Now, with<lb/>
the bicentennial anniversary of the Corps of Discov-<lb/>
ery expedition just a few years away, Maryhill Museum<lb/>
is renewing its efforts to find the valuable pieces.<lb/>
"They have a great deal of historical value said<lb/>
Lee Musgrave, spokesman for the museum, which over-<lb/>
looks a section of the river route the two explorers took<lb/>
to the Pacific Ocean in 1804-1805.<lb/>
The monetary value of the medals is less definite,<lb/>
but insurance documents from the time of the theft<lb/>
estimated the pair to be worth about17,000.<lb/>
The two coins are the same: not quite two inches<lb/>
in diameter, with a depiction of a man sowing grain<lb/>
on one skte and the words "Second Presidency of Geo.<lb/>
Washjngfbrf MDCCXCVI" on the other.<lb/>
Lejwis and Clark carried 55 of these "Washington<lb/>
season medals" with them on their expedition, along<lb/>
with larger and more prestigious Jefferson peace med-<lb/>
als, said the Rev. Francis Paul Prucha, an American his-<lb/>
tory professor retired from Marquette University.<lb/>
Historic Lewis, Glark medals missing<lb/>
There were three "season" designs: a man sowing,<lb/>
a woman spinning and a man with cattle and sheep.<lb/>
Prucha, reading from his book, "Indian Peace Med-<lb/>
als in American History said there were 700 season<lb/>
medals ordered from England, 500 in silver and 200 in<lb/>
copper. The medals arrived in the United States in June<lb/>
1798, after Washington's second term of office had<lb/>
ended and John Adams was president, Prucha said.<lb/>
The practice of giving peace medals to tribal lead-<lb/>
ers began in the Washington administration and con-<lb/>
tinued into the 1880s, according to the National Park<lb/>
Service.<lb/>
The presidential peace medals showed an image of<lb/>
the president on one side and, on the other side, two<lb/>
hands clasped in friendship with a crossed peace pipe<lb/>
and tomahawk above them.<lb/>
The peace medals were presented to Indian leaders<lb/>
with great ceremony.<lb/>
"They were a sign of allegiance almost between the<lb/>
Indians and the federalgovernment Prucha said.<lb/>
The season medals probably would have been a<lb/>
somewhat lesser offering than the presidential medals,<lb/>
although "they're numismatically quite important.<lb/>
People will pay a lot of money for them because there<lb/>
aren't very many he said.<lb/>
The two missing medals had been given to two fami-<lb/>
lies of the Upper Chinook Band and were donated to<lb/>
the museum in the 1940s by the Underwood family,<lb/>
who were descendants of Chief Chenowuth of the Cas-<lb/>
cade Tribe.<lb/>
In 1986, the medals, suspended on a single leather<lb/>
thong with glass trade and shell beads, were on display<lb/>
as part of a special exhibit. They were shown on a sculp-<lb/>
ture stand, under a plastic-glass cover.<lb/>
. A thief removed the security screws in the cover,<lb/>
and took the medals, which are said to be a bronze-like<lb/>
color. A docent noticed their disappearance within 24<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
"1 would say that they seemed targeted Musgrave<lb/>
said. "It would have been possible to steal other things<lb/>
in that same display<lb/>
The theft was reported to the Klickitat County<lb/>
Sheriff's Office in nearby Goldendale and the FBI, but<lb/>
the medals were never recovered. There was also no<lb/>
clue as to who might have done it since the museum<lb/>
averages 10,000 a visitors a month, Musgrave said.<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
news@studentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
CRIME SCENE<lb/>
Jan. 21<lb/>
Damage to Property�A staff member reported, '<lb/>
that two brick display walls, located southwest of<lb/>
GCB, were damaged.<lb/>
Suspicious Activity�A staff member reported that ,<lb/>
there was a clicking noise at the front door of Suite '<lb/>
9 in the Medical Pavilion. The staff member was<lb/>
advised to fill out a maintenance report.<lb/>
Damage to Property�A student reported that her<lb/>
vehicle had a small dent in the hood. She was un- <lb/>
sure If the damage happened on or off campus. Her.<lb/>
car is usually parked between Aycock and Scott<lb/>
Halls.<lb/>
Larceny�A student reported that clothing Items <lb/>
were stolen from a dryer in the second floor laun-<lb/>
dry room at Tyler Hall.<lb/>
Jan. 22<lb/>
Provisional Driving While Impaired�A student<lb/>
was issued a Campus Appearance Ticket (CAT) and<lb/>
state citation for provisional DWI after he was<lb/>
stopped for exceeding the speed limit. His vehicle<lb/>
was secured at the scene and he left on foot.<lb/>
Assault�A student reported that an unknown<lb/>
male struck her in the face, bruising her eye, while<lb/>
she was at an off-campus location. Assistance was<lb/>
requested from the Dean's Office.<lb/>
Provisional Driving While Impaired�A student<lb/>
was issued a state citation for provisional DWI af- '<lb/>
ter he was stopped for running a stop sign at the<lb/>
intersection of Dowell and Faculty Way. His vehicle'<lb/>
was secured at the scene and a friend picked him'<lb/>
up.<lb/>
Involuntary Commitment Order� An involuntary '<lb/>
commitment order was served on a non-student' '<lb/>
who was staying with his girlfriend in Jones Hall.<lb/>
The subject was transported to Pitt County Memo-<lb/>
rial Hospital (PCMH) and banned from all ECU <lb/>
property.<lb/>
Jan. 23<lb/>
Suspicious Person�A student was issued a CAT '<lb/>
after repeatedly knocking on a female's door in'<lb/>
Aycock Hall.<lb/>
Tuesday, Ja<lb/>
www.tec.eci<lb/>
ACRC<lb/>
DukeUniv<lb/>
sponse from n<lb/>
any indicatio<lb/>
NAACP's touri<lb/>
Carolina will <lb/>
dents away frc<lb/>
May.<lb/>
Although s<lb/>
the boycott at<lb/>
vor, others ins<lb/>
keep them awi<lb/>
and sand after<lb/>
Protesting I<lb/>
flying above t<lb/>
National Asso<lb/>
vancement c<lb/>
(NAACP), led i<lb/>
Mfume, has ca<lb/>
South Carolina<lb/>
islature agrees<lb/>
Although tl<lb/>
troversy lies in<lb/>
many student (<lb/>
als have a vesti<lb/>
sue.<lb/>
Duke N<lb/>
Kameron Matth<lb/>
said that the D<lb/>
its part to persi<lb/>
dents to suppoi<lb/>
"We will be<lb/>
Co<lb/>
BLOOMINGTC<lb/>
Jared Fogle stands j<lb/>
a Subway shop nea<lb/>
Indiana Universit<lb/>
�mployee assemble<lb/>
etable sub that he 1<lb/>
The two exchai<lb/>
talk and share a la<lb/>
gotten to know ea<lb/>
I well, what with Fog<lb/>
nothing but low-c<lb/>
sandwiches from tht<lb/>
j year and sheddi<lb/>
:rom his 6-foot-2 fr;<lb/>
:ess.<lb/>
Fogle went from<lb/>
ounds to a much<lb/>
rounds on his unus<lb/>
iubway executives j<lb/>
emarkable weight-I<lb/>
For a good time call the ECU Student Union Hotline at: 252.328.6004<lb/>
or bookmark our web site at: www.ecu.edustudent union<lb/>
a7<lb/>
denhall<lb/>
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MXLL L3JUJJL&amp;LMtL�X<lb/>
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meed ticket pick-up from<lb/>
II other tickets are $2.50<lb/>
SVr'8Xv29th ,Opm<lb/>
Ground Floor Mendenhall<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
M E N D E N H A L L<lb/>
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Wed. @ 7:30 p.m. &amp; Thur. at 10:00 p.m.<lb/>
JAM 26 &amp; 27<lb/>
OPPOSITE<lb/>
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For additional information contact the: Central Ticket<lb/>
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VTTY 252.328.4736, 8:30 a.m. - 6p.m Monday -<lb/>
Friday. Individuals who require accommodations<lb/>
under ADA should contact the Department for<lb/>
Disability Support Services at 252.328.4802 forty-<lb/>
eight hours prior to the start of the program.<lb/>
Wicked Wednesday<lb/>
Mercury Cinema: Opposite of Sex mi<lb/>
7:30pm Hendrix<lb/>
Thirsty Thursday<lb/>
Blockbuster Film: Fight Club mi<lb/>
7:30pm Hendrix<lb/>
Mercury Cinema: Opposite of Sexm.<lb/>
10pmHendrix<lb/>
Fabulous Friday<lb/>
Blockbuster Film: Fight Club mi<lb/>
7:30pm Hendrix<lb/>
Jazz at Night<lb/>
8pm MSC Great Room<lb/>
Sensational Saturday<lb/>
Blockbuster Film: Fight Club mi<lb/>
7:30pm Hendrix<lb/>
Heart for JesusChristian Rock<lb/>
10pmPirate Underground<lb/>
��wllirirs :n lllli)<lb/>
Super Sunday<lb/>
Blockbuster Film: Fight Club m<lb/>
3pmHendrix<lb/>
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Join oi<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058891__tn_0003"/><lb/>
Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
tmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
�$<lb/>
ember reported<lb/>
ed southwest of.<lb/>
x?r reported that<lb/>
nt door of Suite '<lb/>
iff member was<lb/>
sport.<lb/>
sported that her<lb/>
od. She was un<lb/>
off campus. Her.<lb/>
cock and Scott<lb/>
t clothing items ,<lb/>
ond floor laun-<lb/>
red�A student<lb/>
lcket(CAT)and,<lb/>
rI after he was<lb/>
nit. His vehicle<lb/>
t on foot.<lb/>
it an unknown<lb/>
! her eye, while<lb/>
Assistance was<lb/>
red�A student'<lb/>
sional DWI af-<lb/>
top sign at the<lb/>
Vay. His vehicle'<lb/>
nd picked him'<lb/>
Vn involuntary<lb/>
a non-student'<lb/>
I in Jones Hall,<lb/>
bounty Memo<lb/>
from all ECU<lb/>
�issued a CAT<lb/>
nale's door in'<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
The East Carolinian 3<lb/>
news@studentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
ACROSS OTHER CAMPUSES<lb/>
Duke University�If the early re-<lb/>
sponse from many Duke students is<lb/>
any indication, the power of the<lb/>
NAACP's tourism boycott in South<lb/>
Carolina will keep some Duke stu-<lb/>
dents away from Myrtle Beach this<lb/>
May.<lb/>
Although students who support<lb/>
the boycott are doing so with fer-<lb/>
vor, others insist the issue will not<lb/>
keep them away from Myrtle's surf<lb/>
and sand after finals week.<lb/>
Protesting the Confederate flag<lb/>
flying above the state capitol, the<lb/>
National Association for the Ad-<lb/>
vancement of Colored People<lb/>
(NAACP), led nationally by Kweisi<lb/>
Mfume, has called for a boycott of<lb/>
South Carolina until the state's leg-<lb/>
islature agrees to remove the flag.<lb/>
Although the source of the con-<lb/>
troversy lies in a neighboring state,<lb/>
many student groups and individu-<lb/>
als have a vested interest in the is-<lb/>
sue.<lb/>
Duke NAACP President<lb/>
Kameron Matthews, a Trinity senior,<lb/>
said that the Duke chapter will do<lb/>
its part to persuade university stu-<lb/>
dents to support the boycott.<lb/>
"We will be asking others to se-<lb/>
riously consider canceling their<lb/>
Myrtle Beach plans for May<lb/>
Matthews said.<lb/>
Although the president of Delta<lb/>
Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc declined<lb/>
to comment, other leaders of<lb/>
Duke's black fraternities and sorori-<lb/>
ties were eager to voice support for<lb/>
the boycott. Delta Sigma Theta is<lb/>
the only national Greek organiza-<lb/>
tion currently listed on the NAACP<lb/>
Web site as officially supporting the<lb/>
boycott.<lb/>
Trinity junior Carliss Chatman,<lb/>
president of Sigma Gamma Rho<lb/>
Sorority, Inc declared that her so-<lb/>
rority would unequivocally follow<lb/>
the boycott.<lb/>
"If the boycott is still going<lb/>
during Myrtle week, our chapter<lb/>
won't go Chatman said.<lb/>
The controversy has prompted<lb/>
some to take an active role in the<lb/>
protest. Stefan France, a Trinity se-<lb/>
nior and president of Phi Beta<lb/>
Sigma Fraternity, Inc said that his<lb/>
fraternity would try to put pressure<lb/>
on the South Carolina legislature by<lb/>
doing more than just foregoing<lb/>
Myrtle week.<lb/>
"Our national organization, in<lb/>
conjunction with the NAACP, has<lb/>
organized groups 6f people to pro-<lb/>
test and boycott in order to address<lb/>
this issue France said.<lb/>
However, some students felt that<lb/>
the boycott would not dissuade<lb/>
them from vacationing at Myrtle<lb/>
Beach with other Duke students.<lb/>
"Myrtle week is obviously a Duke<lb/>
tradition, and 1 look forward to it<lb/>
every year said Trinity sophomore<lb/>
Carla Rothenberg. "It's too bad that<lb/>
South Carolina still flies the Confed-<lb/>
erate flag above the capitol, but I still<lb/>
plan on going<lb/>
Others took issue with the boy-<lb/>
cott itself.<lb/>
"It's unfair to make the whole<lb/>
state suffer said Trinity junior<lb/>
Dania Ermentrout, who likened the<lb/>
boycott against South Carolina to<lb/>
current United States economic<lb/>
sanctions against Cuba. "South<lb/>
Carolina is a poor state, and flying<lb/>
the Confederate flag is the fault of<lb/>
the legislators, not the small busi-<lb/>
ness owners<lb/>
The fact remains that many stu-<lb/>
dents and organizations have yet to<lb/>
deliberate over the controversy, and<lb/>
how it pertains to Myrtle week.<lb/>
Thousands gather in<lb/>
Madrid, protest bombing<lb/>
MADRID, Spain (AP)� Clamoring for an end to<lb/>
political killings, about 100,000 people marched<lb/>
through central Madrid on Sunday to express anger<lb/>
at a car-bomb attack blamed on Basque separatists.<lb/>
Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar and former pre-<lb/>
miers Felipe Gonzalez, Adolfo Suarez and Leopoldo<lb/>
Calvo Sotelo led the demonstration, carrying a gi-<lb/>
ant banner that read: 'For Peace and Liberty. Terror-<lb/>
ism No<lb/>
Crowds packed a nearly two-kilometer (one-mile)<lb/>
stretch through the city to show that they oppose<lb/>
what many fear could be a renewed campaign by<lb/>
separatists<lb/>
Many of the crowd the clapped rhythmically as<lb/>
they walked while others carried banners with slo-<lb/>
gans that read 'ETA No in reference to the armed<lb/>
separatist group believed responsible for Friday's<lb/>
morning rush-hour attack that killed an army colo-<lb/>
nel.<lb/>
In a speech at the rally, Basque actor Imanol Arias<lb/>
said "the terrorists must be forced to lose any hope<lb/>
of getting anywhere by killing innocent people.<lb/>
"That's enough. No more killing he shouted to<lb/>
the applause of thousands packing Puerta del Sol in<lb/>
the heart of Madrid.<lb/>
Initial police estimates put the crowd attendance<lb/>
at 100,000.<lb/>
All mainstream Spanish parties were represented<lb/>
at the rally except for the Basque Nationalist Party,<lb/>
which has been heavily criticized in recent months<lb/>
for maintaining ties with Herri Batasuna, a party<lb/>
linked to the separatist gunmen.<lb/>
Similar, although smaller, rallies were held Fri-<lb/>
day and Saturday in cities and towns across Spain.<lb/>
Meanwhile, ETA supporters were blamed for a<lb/>
Molotov cocktail attack on a Civil Guard building<lb/>
in the northern Basque city of San Sebastian.<lb/>
No one was injured in the violence. Molotov<lb/>
cocktail attacks have become a regular feature of<lb/>
weekend violence in the Basque region in recent<lb/>
years.<lb/>
ETA, whose name stands for Basque Homeland<lb/>
and Freedom, has not claimed responsibility for<lb/>
Friday's attack. However, many say the bomb attack<lb/>
bore the group's hallmark.<lb/>
ETA, which has killed nearly 800 people in a<lb/>
three-decade campaign for independent Basque na-<lb/>
tion, had warned Dec. 3 that the cease-fire it declared<lb/>
in Sept. 1998 was over and attacks would resume.<lb/>
Its last killing was in June 1998.<lb/>
College student says he lost 245 pounds eating Subway subs<lb/>
?,N?1�N: Jnd! (AP) - P� a commercial now be- that our low-fat sandwich ��h �. �� 'I . � J<lb/>
Bl.OOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)<lb/>
Jared Fogle stands at the counter of<lb/>
a Subway shop near the campus of<lb/>
Indiana University, watching an<lb/>
employee assemble a foot-long veg-<lb/>
etable sub that he has ordered.<lb/>
The two exchange some small<lb/>
talk and share a laugh. They have<lb/>
gotten to know each other pretty<lb/>
 well, what with Fogle eating almost<lb/>
nothing but low-calorie, low-fat<lb/>
sandwiches from the shop for nearly<lb/>
i year and shedding 245 pounds<lb/>
rom his 6-foot-2 frame in the pro-<lb/>
:ess.<lb/>
Fogle went from a colossal 425<lb/>
ounds to a much slimmer 180<lb/>
ounds on his unusual diet. When<lb/>
ubway executives got word of his<lb/>
emarkable weight-loss story, they<lb/>
put him in a commercial now be<lb/>
ing aired around the country.<lb/>
The 30-second spot was filmed<lb/>
on a sunny December day in Pasa-<lb/>
dena, Calif. It begins with a picture<lb/>
of the old Jared Fogle, then cuts to<lb/>
images of the new Jared Fogle<lb/>
cheerfully ordering a Subway sand-<lb/>
wich and eating it on a park bench.<lb/>
"We're not saying that his diet<lb/>
is right for you. You should talk to<lb/>
your doctor first the announcer<lb/>
says. "But it is food for thought<lb/>
A year of veggie subs is not the<lb/>
dream diet for everyone.<lb/>
Michele Klotzer, a spokes-<lb/>
woman for Milford, Connbased<lb/>
Subway, concurs.<lb/>
"We're very proud of Jared's ac-<lb/>
complishment, and we're pleased<lb/>
that our low-fat sandwiches could fit<lb/>
into his meal plan, but it's not a diet<lb/>
that we endorse by any means she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Nelda Mercer, a registered dieti-<lb/>
tian with Health Media Inc. in Ann<lb/>
Arbor, Mich and a spokeswoman<lb/>
for the American Dietetic Associa-<lb/>
tion, said Fogle ate "relatively<lb/>
healthy" during his diet because sev-<lb/>
eral food groups are represented in<lb/>
the sandwiches. She said he prob-<lb/>
ably should have included skim milk<lb/>
or yogurt to ensure he was getting<lb/>
enough calcium.<lb/>
She added that most people<lb/>
probably would become bored<lb/>
quickly by Fogle's repetitive meal-<lb/>
time regimen and gone off the diet.<lb/>
Instead of quick-fix diets, the ADA<lb/>
recommends lifestyle changes: eat-<lb/>
ing the right foods, consuming<lb/>
fewer calories and exercising.<lb/>
Fogle, 22; a senior in business<lb/>
management at Indiana University,<lb/>
started steadily gaining weight<lb/>
when he was in the third or fourth<lb/>
grade and continued to do so<lb/>
throughout high school, despite fre-<lb/>
quent warnings from his father, In-<lb/>
dianapolis'physician Norman Fogle.<lb/>
"I never listened, you know the<lb/>
younger Fogle said in an interview.<lb/>
"It went in one ear and out the<lb/>
other. It didn't cause me to change<lb/>
my ways. It had to be me who<lb/>
wanted to do that<lb/>
At IU, Fogle's weight skyrocketed<lb/>
and he became dangerously obese.<lb/>
He wore size XXXXXXL shirts, the<lb/>
largest sold by big-and-tall men's<lb/>
stores and pants with 60-inch<lb/>
waists. He often fell asleep in class<lb/>
and found himself short of breath<lb/>
after walking one or two blocks.<lb/>
Worried about his health and<lb/>
unhappy about his appearance, he<lb/>
found salvation at the Subway shop<lb/>
next door to his off-campus apart-<lb/>
ment. One evening in mid-March<lb/>
1998, he suddenly decided to live<lb/>
on a steady diet of the franchise's<lb/>
low-fat subs.<lb/>
From then until late February<lb/>
1999, he followed virtually the same<lb/>
mealtime routine every day. He<lb/>
skipped breakfast. He had a 6-inch<lb/>
turkey breast sub, small bag of baked<lb/>
Lays potato chips and Diet Coke for<lb/>
lunch. He downed a foot-long<lb/>
veggie sub and a Diet Coke for din-<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
Total daily dietary intake: about<lb/>
1,000 calories.<lb/>
"The biggest question people<lb/>
would ask me was, 'Did you ever get<lb/>
sick of it?' and I never did Fogle<lb/>
said. "Every time I would come in<lb/>
here, I would sort of be excited<lb/>
about it, knowing I was going to get<lb/>
to eat this sandwich. I don't know<lb/>
why<lb/>
Only a few meals, usually dur-<lb/>
ing holidays or other special occa-<lb/>
sions, didn't include a Subway sand- �<lb/>
wich. At those times, he always was<lb/>
careful to eat small portions of low-<lb/>
fat foods.<lb/>
�<lb/>
roclTx<lb/>
3 ;<lb/>
i Ticket<lb/>
ma<lb/>
Start the semester<lb/>
off on the right<lb/>
foot!<lb/>
When you wish upon a star<lb/>
You could wind up a winner in<lb/>
the 2000-2001 REACH FOR THE STARS<lb/>
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Join other ECU student leaders for this entertaining and<lb/>
motivational presentation by a nationally known speaker.<lb/>
Humorist and motivational speaker Michael Broome has addressed more<lb/>
, than 2,700 audiences from Fortune 500 companies to student leaders.<lb/>
He states his presentations are like "baths: the effects don't last forever,<lb/>
but everyone needs one<lb/>
January 26 - 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hcndrix Theater, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
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This is just the first phase of the 2000-2001 reach<lb/>
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February 21-25. A" sign-up participants become eli-<lb/>
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S &amp;. If you receive a winning Wish Upon a Star game card, be<lb/>
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UNIVERSITY HOUSING AND CAMPUS DINING SERVICES � TELEPHONE: ECU-HOME; ECU-FOOD<lb/>
<pb facs="00058891__tn_0004"/><lb/>
, Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
The East Carolinian 4<lb/>
news@studentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
Battle of th<lb/>
Ha:<lb/>
s<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THIS PROGRAM AND OTHERS<lb/>
SPONSORED BY RHA, CALL THE RHA OFFICE AT 328-1679.<lb/>
y<lb/>
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�51<lb/>
Terra Steir<lb/>
Susan Wri<lb/>
Emily Rich<lb/>
Daniel E. C<lb/>
We have<lb/>
proper char<lb/>
and begged t<lb/>
Chancellor E:<lb/>
work hard.<lb/>
don't take<lb/>
university. All wi<lb/>
LETTEI<lb/>
Safety<lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
I am writing<lb/>
Our View, Jan. 2i<lb/>
town.<lb/>
To begin wit<lb/>
referred to that c<lb/>
in should be rec<lb/>
allowing certain<lb/>
to ask for that f<lb/>
when going dow<lb/>
out respect, ther<lb/>
act that way.<lb/>
For a matter<lb/>
the ladies than i<lb/>
certain rule to bt<lb/>
racial. Women ai<lb/>
against for the wa<lb/>
of you have seen<lb/>
and immediately<lb/>
men � the "ba<lb/>
weapon.<lb/>
Secondly, for<lb/>
worked in a bar b<lb/>
opiNior<lb/>
Ryan-D<lb/>
Well here we i<lb/>
dab on the welcor<lb/>
people come up to<lb/>
not to mention fri<lb/>
is going to do to<lb/>
even though techi<lb/>
will truly affect me<lb/>
is going to happer<lb/>
cause I know you'l<lb/>
discussing it My i<lb/>
I've thought at<lb/>
minutes, and I thii<lb/>
you and yours�-wl<lb/>
1. March 23,20<lb/>
Jimmy Hoffa will i<lb/>
gether on an icebei<lb/>
research. They will I<lb/>
left it: eating 12 fr<lb/>
ting, planning gen<lb/>
Hoffa did before th<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
2. March 23, 20<lb/>
�evil ones) of Helsin<lb/>
to cover the hole in<lb/>
the Hubble telesco<lb/>
re-entry.<lb/>
3. March 23, 2C<lb/>
Five and Tom Gre(<lb/>
<pb facs="00058891__tn_0005"/><lb/>
rolinian 4<lb/>
nedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
s<lb/>
�-�� .<lb/>
'��'��'��'�'��?����<lb/>
WBmmt&amp;mKKUmHm&amp;<lb/>
Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
The East Carolinian �<lb/>
opinion@studentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
o;i Carolinian<lb/>
 Holly G. Harris, Editor<lb/>
Terra Steinbeiser, News Editor Stephen Schramm, Sports Editor<lb/>
Susan Wright, Features Editor Melyssa Ojeda, Head Copy Editor<lb/>
Emily Richardson, Photography Editor Joey Ellis, Staff Illustrator<lb/>
Daniel E. Cox, M�0 rffeft ?pcoa janet Respess, Ad Manager<lb/>
NEWSROOM252-328-6366<lb/>
ADVERTISING252-328-2000<lb/>
lM252-328-6558<lb/>
E-MAILIec@studentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
Serving the ECU community since 1925, The East Carolinian<lb/>
pnnts 11,000 copies every Tuesday and Thursday during the<lb/>
regular academic year. The lead editorial in each edition is the<lb/>
opinion of the majority of the Editorial Board and is written in<lb/>
turn by Editorial Board members. The East Carolinian welcomes<lb/>
letters to the editor, limited to 250 words (which may be edited<lb/>
for decency or brevity at the editor's discretion). The East Caro-<lb/>
linian reserves the right to edit or reject letters for publication.<lb/>
All letters must be signed and include a telephone number.<lb/>
Letters may be sent by e-mail to editor@studentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
or to The East Carolinian, Student Publications Building<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27858-4353. For additional information call<lb/>
252-328-6366.<lb/>
to<lb/>
o<lb/>
We have pestered through all the<lb/>
proper channels. We have pleaded<lb/>
and begged and whimpered Please,<lb/>
Chancellor Eakin, give us a sign! We<lb/>
work hard We obey the rules We<lb/>
don't take much money from the<lb/>
university. All we want is a stupid sign.<lb/>
Is thai so much to ask?<lb/>
OURVIEW<lb/>
PARiolor, srdDEfJrs are Forced<lb/>
To<lb/>
to<lb/>
o<lb/>
50<lb/>
' ��<lb/>
00<lb/>
Have you ever tried to tell anyone how to get to TEC's office?<lb/>
The directions always come out something like, "It's in the Stu-<lb/>
dent Publications Building, somewhere between Joyner Library's old<lb/>
entrance and Mendenhall, in the same building as the post office but<lb/>
on the other side of the building, but not the same side as Financial<lb/>
Aid<lb/>
So not only is it the hardest building on campus to locate but now<lb/>
it doesn't have a sign. It looks like the back door to some unimportant<lb/>
administration office.<lb/>
There used to be a sign outside that said, "Student Pubs a particu-<lb/>
larly mtsleading title for optimistic freshmen. And while Expressions<lb/>
I he Rebel, TEC and the Media Board don't quite serve fish and chips'<lb/>
at least the building had a name. People could find us.<lb/>
Then came the aesthetic renovation of campus, and we lost our<lb/>
sign. Everybody else got a new one, and they all looked really pretty<lb/>
When the Cashier's Office moved in downstairs, even they got their<lb/>
own sign. But when our turn came around, we were told we should be<lb/>
satisfied with a slot on the directory inside-the building. Including<lb/>
your student publications on any proper type of sign is apparently too<lb/>
much clutter. One of the most important student functions on cam-<lb/>
pus has been reduced to what university officials call "sign pollution "<lb/>
We give you this as another example of bureaucracy in action<lb/>
People run around all day at Expressions and the Rebel, and especially<lb/>
at the Media Board Office; they're doing their jobs, keeping the ECU<lb/>
public in the know, all the while forlorn at their loss of place in the<lb/>
world. We've seen them. They looked dazed. But not half as dazed as<lb/>
the people who try to bring their Letters to the Editor to the Financial<lb/>
Aid Office.<lb/>
The voice of ECU has been stuffed upstairs in an unnamed build-<lb/>
ing like the redheaded stepchild the school wishes it never had Maybe<lb/>
they think "if you can't see us, we can't see you<lb/>
Why does the university hate us? Why take away our wonderful<lb/>
"Student Pubs" sign and not replace it? Why deny us our identity'<lb/>
Why, why, why? <lb/>
We have pestered through all the proper channels. We have pleaded<lb/>
and begged and whimpered. Please, Chancellor Eakin, give us a sign'<lb/>
We work hard. We obey the rules. We don't take much money from<lb/>
the university. AH we want is a stupid sign. Is that so much to ask?<lb/>
It is our one great dream that one day we may say: "Oh yeah, TEC?<lb/>
That's over by Mendenhall. There's a sign outside the building. You<lb/>
can't miss it<lb/>
OPINION COLUMN<lb/>
No Espanol spoken here<lb/>
Patrick McMahon<lb/>
OPINION WRITER<lb/>
LETTERT0 THE EDITOR<lb/>
Safety measures misinterpreted as discrimination<lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
I am writing in response to the article written in<lb/>
Our View, Jan. 20, 2000 discussing racial bias in down-<lb/>
town.<lb/>
To begin with, the so-called "excuses" that were<lb/>
referred to that do not allow some people from getting<lb/>
in should be recognized as legitimate reasons for not<lb/>
allowing certain people in. I do not think it is too much<lb/>
to ask for that people dress in a respectable manner<lb/>
when going downtown. If you want to be treated with-<lb/>
out respect, then by all means � please � dress and<lb/>
act that way.<lb/>
For a matter of fact, this rule is upheld more for r<lb/>
the ladies than it is for the men. 1 would believe this<lb/>
certain rule to be more as gender discrimination than<lb/>
racial. Women are far more likely to be discriminated<lb/>
against for the way they dress than the men. How many<lb/>
of you have seen a girl in a skimpy skirt and tank top<lb/>
and immediately thought she was easy? And for the<lb/>
men � the "baggy pants" could easily conceal a<lb/>
weapon.<lb/>
Secondly, for those of you who have obviously not<lb/>
worked in a bar before � the rules are not only looked<lb/>
to for customers but also for staff. I'm sure that I'antana<lb/>
Bob's has cracked down on letting some people in, but<lb/>
that is for safety � not for discrimination. I had friends<lb/>
injured in the fight there last May when a young man<lb/>
brought in a knife and decided to start cutting people<lb/>
after his friend had been kicked out. You've got to be<lb/>
naive or stupid to think they would allow anyone in<lb/>
that they even remotely believed could cause trouble.<lb/>
If I owned a downtown business I would be the same<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Thirdly � the membership policy is not to keep<lb/>
out minorities, it is enforced to keep ECU students �<lb/>
all who frequent downtown � safe. That is the sole<lb/>
reason any of these rules is enforced.<lb/>
Remember that it is a privilege to be allowed into<lb/>
any of these establishments and that privilege can be<lb/>
revoked at any time. If you do want to be let in, then<lb/>
dress and act in an appropriate manner because if you<lb/>
don't respect yourself it's a safe bet you will not re-<lb/>
ceive any respect or special treatment from the door-<lb/>
men.<lb/>
Leigh Richards<lb/>
own humble opinion, I think if people come here to<lb/>
work then they should know the language. If I went<lb/>
off to France to study and work, then I would make<lb/>
Why, oh great dean of college education must I have damn sure that I could speak the language well enZh<lb/>
ZTT �f,Pani u l� grad?,e WUh a" Eng,iSh t0 ensure mv "velihood wasn't beinfcheatbythose<lb/>
Education degree? Isn't that a paradox? Answer me this, damn Frenchmen<lb/>
oh great swami, why is it that all the while I'm study- The Spanish requirement is ludicrous. If a student<lb/>
ing famous writers like Thoreauand Wright must I learn comes to the U.S. from Mexico or anywhere else for<lb/>
what bailamos and "living la vida loca" mean? that matter, give them ESL (English as a Second Lan-<lb/>
Some degree programs here at ECU require four se-guage) before putting them into situations where<lb/>
mesters of Spanish to graduate. English Education, one knowledge of the English language becomes a neces-<lb/>
of the most popular majors, has the Spanish require- sity. The problem with that, however, is that many of<lb/>
ment. While I understand the necessity for Spanish to the students can speak some English while the parents<lb/>
be spoken by someone majoring in public relations, I cannot. My father is a principal and tries to instill in<lb/>
can see no need for myself as an English major to have my head the need for Spanish. He tries to tell the kid<lb/>
four units of it. something to tell the parent, but being a typical kid, it<lb/>
I want to learn about great writers and literary tra- gets twisted around to fit the kid's own interests. For<lb/>
dition not how to conjugate the verb "ser I plan on that I understand but the parents should know English<lb/>
using this knowledge in a classroom setting by teach- before they enter our work force<lb/>
ing English to high school students. How am I sup- Maybe I'm just pissed because I'm so ignorant when<lb/>
posed to spend time reading and absorbing important it comes to knowing and studying Spanish that I'm sub-<lb/>
works of l.terature so I can get into upper division when consciously trying to tear down the requirements I<lb/>
I m busy studying for a Spanish I test (which I failed know I may need it for ten minutes out of every months<lb/>
miserably last semester.) Dut for mC the On (fifteen now since I failed Span-<lb/>
The main argument for the studying of the Span- ish I) semester hours 1 use and pay for to take the classes<lb/>
ish language is that with North Carolina's growing His- is more valuable than that. That is full-time tuition to<lb/>
panic community, the need is there for teachers (the take something that most likeiv I'll just end up passing<lb/>
boat I m in) to be able to communicate with students and not learning. Maybe that is what it all boils down<lb/>
and parents as to their progress in the classroom set- to. Money,<lb/>
ting. But the reality is that if they cannot speak En-<lb/>
glish how are the.y to learn how English works? In my Thfs writer con be contacted at<lb/>
pmcmahon@studentmedia. ecu. edu.<lb/>
OPINION COLUMN<lb/>
Ryan-Dogg makes predictions for new millennium<lb/>
OPINION COLUMN<lb/>
Millennium hype was way overrated<lb/>
� i<lb/>
t ,i.<lb/>
Ryan Kennemur<lb/>
OPINION WRITER<lb/>
Well here we are, just the two of us, right smack<lb/>
dab on the welcome mat of a new millennium. Many<lb/>
people come up to me and say, "Ryan-Dogg, I'm scared,<lb/>
not to mention frightened of what the next 100 years<lb/>
is going to do to affect me and my way of life. And<lb/>
even though technically only the next 50 or so years<lb/>
will truly affect me, I'd still like to know what you think<lb/>
is going to happen for the whole amount of time be-<lb/>
cause I know you'll want to use a lot of column space<lb/>
discussing it My reply to this is, "Hey, thanks, dude<lb/>
I've thought about this really hard for the last few<lb/>
minutes, and I think I may have some predictions for<lb/>
you and yours�-whoever yours is:<lb/>
1. March 23,2021�Elvis Presley, Adolph Hitler and<lb/>
Jimmy Hoffa will all be spotted at the same time to-<lb/>
gether on an iceberg, thereby ruining a half-century of<lb/>
research. They will then re-enter civilization just as they<lb/>
left it: eating 12 fried banana sandwiches at one sit-<lb/>
ting, planning genocide and doing whatever it is that<lb/>
Hoffa did before they went on their ice-fishing expedi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
2. March 23, 2013�The good scientists (not those<lb/>
evil ones) of Helsinki, Finland will devise a Teflon tarp<lb/>
to cover the hole in the ozone. This attempt will fail as<lb/>
the Hubble telescope tears through it during a forced<lb/>
re-entry.<lb/>
3. March 23, 2005�The Backstreet Boys, N-Sync,<lb/>
Five and Tom Green are sling-shot directly into the<lb/>
sun (which back in the 1900s was thought to be a star)<lb/>
in order to prevent future generations from making<lb/>
such ghastly mistakes. No one seems to notice their<lb/>
absence.<lb/>
4. March 23, 2096�The immortal David Crosby<lb/>
will surpass the Wayans Brothers' dad's record by fa-<lb/>
thering his 1000th child. He celebrates with a good<lb/>
stiff shot of moonshine from his own still.<lb/>
5. March 23, 2037�Pauly Shore comes back with<lb/>
a vengeance, wreaking havoc on the Home Shopping<lb/>
Network, right smack dab in the middle of the "Big<lb/>
Scary Knife" show. He wounds two camera lenses and<lb/>
one key grip laughs himself into a coma as he witnesses<lb/>
that Pauly can't look menacing eveh with a 2-foot long<lb/>
blade in his hand. Pleading insanity because of his old<lb/>
age, he's sent to WCW and becomes Ric Flair's whip-<lb/>
ping boy.<lb/>
6. March 23, 2069�Earth Is saved in the zero hour<lb/>
by appeasing the alien invaders by giving up the now<lb/>
"geriatric but still looks like he's fifteen" Leonardo<lb/>
DiCrapio as a sacrifice. Good deal, Earth!<lb/>
7. March 23, 2010�"Ryan Dogg's Morning Show"<lb/>
(now on WZMB from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday) finally goes off the airwaves after 10<lb/>
fabulous years. Ryan Dogg cuts his losses and comes<lb/>
back to graduate school at ECU where many of his old<lb/>
friends are finally graduating. He resumes his original<lb/>
; work at The East Carolinian and actually writes an ar-<lb/>
ticle worth reading.<lb/>
Well, that's about it for this week. Just call me<lb/>
Ndstradamus. Until next week, Ryan-Dogg-Aholics!<lb/>
Demosthenes<lb/>
OPINION WRITER<lb/>
1 remember when the hype was just beginning, and<lb/>
everyone was advising me to make plans early for the<lb/>
celebration of the approaching millennium, century<lb/>
and year as the Western World's calendar turned from<lb/>
1999 to the spectacular 2000. Apparently, hotels in most<lb/>
major global cities had already been booked solid and<lb/>
available airline tickets for the hot date were becoming<lb/>
an extinct commodity.<lb/>
The humorous part of all of this is, not only was<lb/>
there no excess of celebration by individuals, but many<lb/>
were discouraged by the hype and by travel agencies<lb/>
jacking up rates two to three times the norm.<lb/>
What were people doing if they weren't standing<lb/>
shoulder-to-shoulder at Times Square you might ask?<lb/>
They were spending the turn of the millennium with<lb/>
their families.<lb/>
A majority of people chose to be near loved ones<lb/>
rather than on some all out vacation or cruise, and this<lb/>
says an important thing to me: Family comes first. Af-<lb/>
ter all, when it comes to the bottom line, who should<lb/>
you really be able to rely on?<lb/>
The general feeling regarding this event was one of<lb/>
uncertainty and concern as is the case with every new<lb/>
year's introduction; only magnified by the factor of a<lb/>
thousand.<lb/>
Probably the greatest contributing element to this<lb/>
year's hysteria was the much talked about Y2K com-<lb/>
puter bug. When something like this occurs, it makes<lb/>
you wonder what could happen if machines had wider<lb/>
control of human functions.<lb/>
Even though this event was coordinated by a cal-<lb/>
endar which is not observed by the entire world, it<lb/>
seemed as though there was a general feeling of peace<lb/>
among nations. The spectacle around the Great Pyra-<lb/>
mid at Giza was especially impressive since it had al-<lb/>
ready seen six millennia in its time.<lb/>
Another glitch in all the hype is the ongoing con-<lb/>
troversy of which year constitutes the new millennium.<lb/>
Nowhere in the bible do you see the phrase, "In the<lb/>
year 0 of our Lord  " This makes me laugh at the<lb/>
silliness of it all.<lb/>
I am glad to see that as a majority, people were not<lb/>
caught up in the hysteria, which forced the travel agents<lb/>
and airlines to slash prices due to low booking. This<lb/>
was the pay-back for their greed.<lb/>
Myself, I had a wild New Year's Eve, and I spent it<lb/>
with my family. I hope yours was as satisfying, and I<lb/>
wish you the best in the coming year. I also feel sorry<lb/>
for the poor saps with Y2K shelters in their backyards.<lb/>
So be safe and keep collecting those canned goods for<lb/>
the next millennium, until we meet again.<lb/>
' This writer can be contacted<lb/>
demosthenes@studentmedia. ecu. edu.<lb/>
at<lb/>
<pb facs="00058891__tn_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
6 The East Carolinian<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
FEATURES BRIEFS<lb/>
Finding the shoe<lb/>
that fits your fancy<lb/>
OUTDOOR<lb/>
Women's New Balance<lb/>
WO680OL<lb/>
This is a light-weight com-<lb/>
fortable shoe that is made for<lb/>
trail and off-trail activities. The<lb/>
rubber toe and heel provide an<lb/>
added protection and improved<lb/>
mid-sole performance while the<lb/>
leathermesh cover offers com-<lb/>
fort and breathability.<lb/>
Men's New Balance<lb/>
MO680GR<lb/>
This multipurpose outdoor<lb/>
shoe is perfect for hiking or ev-<lb/>
eryday use. The rugged upper<lb/>
leather provides great support,<lb/>
while maintaining a comfort-<lb/>
able feel. The non-marking car-<lb/>
bon rubber outsoles provide<lb/>
long-wearing durability for<lb/>
those who are hard on their<lb/>
shoes.<lb/>
TRAINER<lb/>
Women's Adidas Blur<lb/>
This shoe specializes in sup-<lb/>
port. The elastic material con-<lb/>
trols the natural motion of the<lb/>
foot to offer more stability and<lb/>
flexibility. The.body itself con-<lb/>
tains lightweight cushioning,<lb/>
giving it breathable comfort.<lb/>
TENNIS �<lb/>
Adidas Thruster<lb/>
For those on the tennis<lb/>
court, Adidas offers this light-<lb/>
weight entry-level shoe that fea-<lb/>
tures a progressive design<lb/>
formed for comfort, cushion<lb/>
and breathability. Its herring<lb/>
bone construction is perfect for<lb/>
hard and clay court play.<lb/>
RUNNER'<lb/>
Women's Puma Superfly<lb/>
A shoe designed with the<lb/>
performance runner in mind.<lb/>
This comfortable, high mileage<lb/>
running shoe offers a light-<lb/>
weight design, but also provides<lb/>
superior cushioning and stabil-<lb/>
ity. PUMA eCELL technology<lb/>
is visibly featured in both the<lb/>
heel and arch.<lb/>
Men's Puma Pryde<lb/>
A high mileage training shoe<lb/>
built to satisfy the performance<lb/>
runner looking for a good blend<lb/>
of stability and cushioning.<lb/>
These benefits are the result of<lb/>
the iCELL &amp; ldCELL technolo-<lb/>
gies incorporated to provide su-<lb/>
perior functionality and com-<lb/>
fort.<lb/>
WALKING<lb/>
Women's Reebok's Leader<lb/>
DMX2x<lb/>
DMX 2X is comfort technol-<lb/>
ogy plus more. Cushioning at<lb/>
heel strike gives greater shock<lb/>
absorption. Lower profiles en-<lb/>
hance walking stride. A unique<lb/>
posting system keeps your foot,<lb/>
from rolling in. And for safety<lb/>
and visibility, there is a 3M<lb/>
Scotchlite.<lb/>
Reebok Men's Leader DMX<lb/>
2X Wide<lb/>
The Men's Leader offers ex-<lb/>
cellent cushioning. Its Hydro-<lb/>
Shield outsole provides a du-<lb/>
rable, water-resistant walking<lb/>
shoe. This shoe provides excep-<lb/>
tional fore- and rearfoot flexibil-<lb/>
ity for an enhanced stride and a<lb/>
stable, exceedingly comfortable<lb/>
ride. A removable sockliner also<lb/>
allows you to insert orthotics.<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2000 !<lb/>
Pets provide companionship, warmth<lb/>
Animals have<lb/>
therapeutic effects<lb/>
Ryan Kennemur<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Pets are truly members of the<lb/>
American family.<lb/>
Today, approximately 60 percent<lb/>
of all households have at least one<lb/>
dog, cat, bird or other companion<lb/>
animal. Pets are popular with all<lb/>
ages because they provide compan-<lb/>
ionship, unconditional love and a<lb/>
sense of safety for their owners. The<lb/>
biggest question prospective pet<lb/>
owners face remains: What kind of<lb/>
pet is best suited for me?<lb/>
Karen Honeycutt, a veterinarian<lb/>
- from Raleigh, sheds some light on<lb/>
the subject.<lb/>
"You have to realize that the pet<lb/>
will become your daily responsibil-<lb/>
ity Honeycutt said. "People like to<lb/>
go out and get the first puppy that<lb/>
catches their eye or the latest status-<lb/>
symbol pet that they can show off<lb/>
at backyard barbecues. Then when<lb/>
they bring their new pet home, (hey<lb/>
find out that they have bitten off<lb/>
more than they can chew<lb/>
Different people have different<lb/>
tastes regarding pets, and vice versa.<lb/>
According to Petopia.com, dogs are<lb/>
very interactive, trainable and need<lb/>
an owner who can play with them<lb/>
often. Cats, however, take up little<lb/>
space and are able to entertain them-<lb/>
selves. They can also be left alone<lb/>
Before buying a pet, consider this:<lb/>
1. Do you have room for a pet?<lb/>
2. What activities do you en joy and can your pet en joy them with you?<lb/>
3. How do you spend your day and what can you do with your pet<lb/>
during long absences?<lb/>
4. Is there a "No-Pet" clause in your lease?<lb/>
5. How much will your pet cost?<lb/>
6. Are there vets or animal hospitals nearby?<lb/>
longer than most dogs.<lb/>
There are 59 million cats and 52.91'<lb/>
million dogs in the United States<lb/>
.Even though cats have the,higher<lb/>
population, dogs can be found in 4.2'<lb/>
million more households. Even-<lb/>
though both cats and dogs are unri<lb/>
valed in popularity, a recent survey!<lb/>
done over the past seven years by The;<lb/>
American Veterinary Medical Associa-<lb/>
tion (AVMA) shows a dramatic in-<lb/>
crease in the sales of birds, fish, small,<lb/>
mammals and rabbits.<lb/>
"People buy pets for one main<lb/>
reason: to make themselves .feel bet-<lb/>
ter said Dr. Paul Classman, a psy-<lb/>
chology professor from the Univ'er<lb/>
See PETS, page-7<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
The Nike Air Zoom Match Fit<lb/>
meets all of your off-field and<lb/>
on-field training needs. The soft,<lb/>
ultra-light KNG-100G offers ul-<lb/>
timate ball touch. Cooler mesh<lb/>
in the quarter vents lets your<lb/>
feet breathe while resisting wa-<lb/>
ter. The lining in the vamp and<lb/>
quarters is made of moisture-<lb/>
managing Dri-FIT. With Zoom<lb/>
Air speed cushioning in the fore-<lb/>
foot, this boot helps you train<lb/>
in superior comfort with un-<lb/>
matched versatility.<lb/>
Altruistic alumni enlist in Peace Corps<lb/>
ECU ranks among top<lb/>
producers of volunteers<lb/>
. The Peace Corps sends workers to<lb/>
exotic locations. (World Wide Web<lb/>
photo)<lb/>
Nina M.Dry<lb/>
ASSISTANT FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
A sense of pride engulfs Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Cornwell as they think of their<lb/>
daughter, Kendra.<lb/>
"We are so proud of what she's<lb/>
vdoing said Karin Cornwell. "Al-<lb/>
though the eight-week training was<lb/>
difficult, Kendra never gave up and<lb/>
remained focused<lb/>
Kendra is one of the manyECU<lb/>
alumni who have volunteered their<lb/>
services in the Peace Corps.<lb/>
According to Paige Kisser, Peace<lb/>
Corps' public affairs specialist, there<lb/>
have been a total of 102 volunteers<lb/>
from ECU since the Peace Corps'<lb/>
establishment in 1961; currently<lb/>
there are 10 ECU graduates serving<lb/>
overseas. r<lb/>
So, why oin the Peace Corps?<lb/>
According to campus recruiter Tara<lb/>
Komano, there are many reasons<lb/>
why people choose to volunteer.<lb/>
"Some of the main reasons are<lb/>
Jfor people to use their creativity<lb/>
and resourcefulness in real life ex-<lb/>
periences and to gain the interna-<lb/>
tional experience while traveling<lb/>
komano said.<lb/>
� ipor students leaving college,<lb/>
Romano sees it as chance to take<lb/>
what was learned in the classroom<lb/>
and apply it to a more hands-on<lb/>
situation, thus gaining more expe-<lb/>
rience.<lb/>
Peace corps volunteers are lo-<lb/>
cated in approximately 80 coun-<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
There are six assignments in<lb/>
which volunteers can be placed:<lb/>
agriculture, education, environ-<lb/>
ment, community development,<lb/>
business development and health<lb/>
and nutrition.<lb/>
"A person placed in health and<lb/>
nutrition may work with pregnant<lb/>
women on prenatal care and teach<lb/>
them.the importance of vaccina-<lb/>
tions Romano said. "Or they could<lb/>
become involved with public health<lb/>
issues or having a safe drinking wa-<lb/>
ter supply<lb/>
The Peace Corps looks at the<lb/>
whole person when screening po-<lb/>
tential volunteers. To be eligible,<lb/>
one must be at least 18 years old, a<lb/>
U.S. citizen, have some prior vol-<lb/>
unteering experience and have bal-<lb/>
anced motivation:<lb/>
"The person must want to do<lb/>
something positive, but we also<lb/>
want them to see it as an experi-<lb/>
ence Romano said.<lb/>
"Also, one must have cross-cul-<lb/>
tural skills. Traveling to another<lb/>
part of the world requires some ad-<lb/>
aptations. This was the perfect way<lb/>
for her to follow her dream<lb/>
Kendra currently lives in<lb/>
Gambia, a small country on the<lb/>
western coast of Africa, where she<lb/>
is a teacher-trainer.<lb/>
"She helps teachers create les-<lb/>
son plans and shows them how to<lb/>
follow a pattern of teaching stu-<lb/>
dents Cornwell said.<lb/>
Kendra is the first teacher-<lb/>
trainer to ever visit this area, al-<lb/>
though other Peace Corps volun-<lb/>
teers have assisted in Gambia in<lb/>
other capacities.<lb/>
For those interested in joining<lb/>
the Peace Corps, Romano suggests<lb/>
Peace Corps workers teach students<lb/>
more than just reading, writing and<lb/>
arithmetic (World Wide Web photo)<lb/>
that one.should go on the Web site,<lb/>
www.peacecorps.gov and fill out an<lb/>
application. Information is also avail-<lb/>
able at Career Services on 5th street.<lb/>
For more information, contact tara<lb/>
Romano at (919) 515-5340. <lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
ndry@studentmedia. ecu. edu.<lb/>
Mandorico spices up Greenville nightlife with Latin flavor<lb/>
Jesse Launcella. lead vocalist for Mandorico.stands in Peasant's where he and his band performed Friday night (photo by<lb/>
OUoull VvHUHl)<lb/>
Exclusive with Jesse<lb/>
iauricella, lead vocalist<lb/>
for Mandorico<lb/>
Susan Wright<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
Initially, Mandorico was a small<lb/>
name in Greenville that had little<lb/>
crowd response. After performing<lb/>
around town a couple of times over<lb/>
the past year, the size of their fol-<lb/>
lowers has steadily grown.<lb/>
With fans screaming out song<lb/>
lyrics like "cada vez que te veo el<lb/>
hermano, cada vez que te veo asi<lb/>
it was apparent Friday night that<lb/>
Mandorico's popularity in<lb/>
Greenville has definitely increased.<lb/>
The lead singer, Jesse I.auricella, is in<lb/>
it for love of the music. I.auricella sat<lb/>
down with us and shared his experi-<lb/>
ences as well as his thoughts on<lb/>
music, success and the fans that fol-<lb/>
low Mandorico.<lb/>
TEC: How did you get started<lb/>
with the Latinska music that you<lb/>
play?<lb/>
JI I lived in Mexico. I used to<lb/>
have a ska band in Atlanta, and I<lb/>
moved to Mexico for six months and<lb/>
I got turned on to a lot of the Latin<lb/>
music down there. My band at home<lb/>
kind of disintegrated, and I got with<lb/>
the guitar player Mark, and we sat<lb/>
down and talked about Latin bands.<lb/>
We realized that we didn't know any-<lb/>
thing about Latin music so basically<lb/>
we started off more ska-oriented<lb/>
and then we began mixing in more<lb/>
of the Latin, rock, hip-hop and stuff<lb/>
like that, and it got to where it is<lb/>
today.<lb/>
TEC: Who is one of your fa-<lb/>
vorite Latin American artists?<lb/>
JL: Los Fabulosos Cadillacs.<lb/>
TEC: What kind of music do<lb/>
they play?<lb/>
JL: Basically, a real across the<lb/>
board mix, like really folkloric Latin<lb/>
to punk, ska, samba. They do a<lb/>
bunch of everything, but the thing<lb/>
that I liked about them was that<lb/>
they did some of everything, and<lb/>
they did it all really well. That's<lb/>
probably my favorite band.<lb/>
TEC: How do you dance to<lb/>
your music?<lb/>
JL: However you want really.<lb/>
I've seen people come out and<lb/>
dance salsa, and I've seen people<lb/>
come out and just jump around.<lb/>
A lot of Latin music has a distinct<lb/>
step, but music like reggae doesn't.<lb/>
Once you get familiar with the<lb/>
rhythm, you can just go back and<lb/>
forth.<lb/>
TEC: Where did you get your<lb/>
name from?<lb/>
JL: It came from a short story<lb/>
from Puerto Rico. I was studying<lb/>
Spanish literature at Georgia State,<lb/>
and one of the stories that we read<lb/>
was called "Pico Rico Mandorico<lb/>
and it's from a Puerto Rican writer.<lb/>
Mark and I were talking about<lb/>
names for the band, and I threw<lb/>
that out half kidding, and he<lb/>
thought that was cool, and it just<lb/>
kind of stuck from there.<lb/>
TEC: Are you fluent in Span-<lb/>
ish?<lb/>
JL: Yes. I studied Spanish litera-<lb/>
ture in college, and I lived in<lb/>
Mexico. That made it happen; I<lb/>
had no choice. It was either learn<lb/>
the language or don't eat.<lb/>
TEC: How long have you<lb/>
been playing?<lb/>
JL: With this band, three years.<lb/>
TEC: Do you all want to keep<lb/>
getting bigger, or do you want<lb/>
to stay more of a local band?<lb/>
JL: It's funny because we talk<lb/>
about that all the time, and I think<lb/>
that one of the things that I don't<lb/>
know if people realize is that when<lb/>
you are operating on a certain<lb/>
business level, you know it might<lb/>
be comfortable for the fans to<lb/>
come see you at certain venues<lb/>
with 200 other people. But, finan-<lb/>
cially, when you have as big a band<lb/>
as we do, with eight members, it<lb/>
gets to a point where you can only<lb/>
play so much for the amount of<lb/>
money that you're making.<lb/>
I'd like to see the band get<lb/>
more successful, and get better<lb/>
venues; possibly go overseas. Not<lb/>
only for the reasons that I'd like<lb/>
to get it out to more fans and stuff,<lb/>
but it would make doing this as a liv-<lb/>
ing, you know, making music, a lot<lb/>
easier, a lot less stressful. It's fun to<lb/>
play at the small shows at the clubs<lb/>
and stuff, but there is a reality factor.<lb/>
TEC: What's your favorite city<lb/>
to play in?<lb/>
JL: We really dig Greenville a lot.<lb/>
It's a really supportive city. We've<lb/>
been through here like two or three<lb/>
times over the past two years. It has<lb/>
been a really weird city for us because<lb/>
for our first year, we got absolutely<lb/>
no reaction at all. When that happens<lb/>
three or four times, you tend not to<lb/>
go back. You have other cities that<lb/>
you have been working on.<lb/>
Last year, like every time we came<lb/>
through, we got a real nice crowd,<lb/>
and people started buying our<lb/>
records. That really makes all the dif-<lb/>
ference for the band because people<lb/>
know that they're enjoying your<lb/>
music, and they appreciate what thev<lb/>
are bringing you.<lb/>
It's not terribly easy to do. Even<lb/>
before we walk in the door, we have<lb/>
put $500-600 in even before we play.<lb/>
That's not including paying ourselves<lb/>
or anything.<lb/>
TEC: How much time do you<lb/>
spend practicing?<lb/>
JL: None. This is the least practic-<lb/>
ing band that we've ever been in. A'<lb/>
lot of that is due to the fact that we've i<lb/>
been traveling so much lately. I don't<lb/>
think that people understand. They<lb/>
see that Mandorico is coming, and<lb/>
they say that they'll catch the band<lb/>
next time. For all the people that<lb/>
don't show up for a concert, that<lb/>
translates into financially a bad show<lb/>
or moral-wise. People don't realize<lb/>
the impact of even one person com-<lb/>
ing out. If you're really digging some-<lb/>
thing, it's important to get out there<lb/>
and support it.<lb/>
TEC: How much do you make<lb/>
per show?<lb/>
JL: Like each of us? Anywhere<lb/>
from nothing to nothing. If you look<lb/>
See MANDORICO page 7<lb/>
cu<lb/>
SPR<lb/>
(Subjt<lb/>
You mi<lb/>
date ir<lb/>
these o<lb/>
tion D<lb/>
info<lb/>
employ!<lb/>
Nortel<lb/>
IBM Recer.<lb/>
DSCJ Car<lb/>
Fair<lb/>
Ind. &amp; Te<lb/>
Career Fs<lb/>
Education C<lb/>
Day<lb/>
Penn Marks<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
First Citize<lb/>
Bank<lb/>
Pizzagall<lb/>
Constructs<lb/>
Ferguson<lb/>
Enterprise<lb/>
Northweste<lb/>
Mutual Lil<lb/>
Price Pflsti<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
Edward Joni<lb/>
Sherwin<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
Crescent Elec<lb/>
Co<lb/>
Arthur Anders<lb/>
Bureau of<lb/>
Census .<lb/>
Precision Fabr<lb/>
Apex System<lb/>
Jefferson Pile<lb/>
Financial<lb/>
Fuji Silysia<lb/>
Chemical<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Penske Truck<lb/>
Rental &amp;<lb/>
Leasing<lb/>
Grainger<lb/>
John Hancock<lb/>
Financial<lb/>
Maxim<lb/>
Healthcare<lb/>
Oyster Point<lb/>
Construction<lb/>
State Farm<lb/>
Insurance<lb/>
Collins &amp;<lb/>
Aikman<lb/>
Sprint-Mid<lb/>
Atlantic Telecor<lb/>
Burlington<lb/>
Industries<lb/>
Underwriters<lb/>
Laboratories<lb/>
IBM<lb/>
IBM<lb/>
IBM<lb/>
Circuit City<lb/>
Stores<lb/>
Olde Discount<lb/>
Stockbrokers<lb/>
Consolidated<lb/>
Elec.<lb/>
Distributors<lb/>
Hackney &amp; Sons<lb/>
Enterprise Rent<lb/>
A Car<lb/>
Greater Carolina<lb/>
Group<lb/>
Western<lb/>
Southern Life<lb/>
<pb facs="00058891__tn_0007"/><lb/>
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!� If you look<lb/>
page 7<lb/>
www.ecu.edui<lb/>
CAREER SERVICES<lb/>
SPRING ACTIVITIES SCHEDULE<lb/>
AS OF 12100<lb/>
(Subject to change - other organizations and programs<lb/>
will be added throughout the semester)<lb/>
You must be connected with Career Services by the<lb/>
date in the 3rd column to be able to interview with<lb/>
these organizations. You must click "Submit Registra-<lb/>
tion Data To Career Services" any time you change<lb/>
information in your demographics or resume.<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
R- rated movies banned<lb/>
in state training schools<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
features@studentmedia.ecu.pdu<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
from page 6<lb/>
EMPLOYERS<lb/>
Nortel<lb/>
IBM Reception<lb/>
POSITION TO BE<lb/>
FILLED<lb/>
Various positions<lb/>
- See CO-OP<lb/>
DSCI Career<lb/>
Fair<lb/>
Ind. &amp; Tech.<lb/>
Career Fair<lb/>
Education Career<lb/>
Day<lb/>
Penn Marketing<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
Info. Session<lb/>
A variety of<lb/>
positions<lb/>
A variety of<lb/>
positions<lb/>
"SUBMIT<lb/>
REGISTRATION<lb/>
DATARESUME<lb/>
TO CAREER<lb/>
SERVICES"<lb/>
THROUGH<lb/>
WEBSITE BY:<lb/>
Have resume<lb/>
for event<lb/>
6-8pmMSC<lb/>
Have resume<lb/>
for event<lb/>
A variety of<lb/>
positions<lb/>
Marketing<lb/>
Representative<lb/>
BU&amp;T<lb/>
Management,<lb/>
CommercialRetai<lb/>
Have resume<lb/>
for event<lb/>
Have resume<lb/>
for event<lb/>
LAST DAY TO<lb/>
SUBMIT<lb/>
RESUME TO<lb/>
EMPLOYER<lb/>
THROUGH<lb/>
WEBSITE BY:<lb/>
EVENT:<lb/>
Feb 2, 2000<lb/>
EVENT:<lb/>
Feb 10,2000<lb/>
EVENT:<lb/>
Feb II, 2000<lb/>
Jan. 24, 2000<lb/>
First Citizens<lb/>
Bank<lb/>
Pizzagalli<lb/>
Construction<lb/>
Ferguson<lb/>
Enterprises<lb/>
Northwestern<lb/>
Mutual Life<lb/>
Price Pfister<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
Management,<lb/>
Trust and Ins.<lb/>
Serv<lb/>
Banker Dev.<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Entry Level<lb/>
Project Manager<lb/>
Sales<lb/>
Management<lb/>
Training Program<lb/>
Jan 25,2000<lb/>
Jan 25,2000<lb/>
Jan 25,2000<lb/>
EVENT<lb/>
Feb 24, 2000<lb/>
EVENT<lb/>
Feb 25,2000<lb/>
Jan. 26, 2000<lb/>
Jan 27,2000<lb/>
Jan 27, 2000<lb/>
DETROIT (AP)�The state Fam-<lb/>
ily Independence Agency has de-<lb/>
cided to ban the showing of R-rated<lb/>
movies with sexual and violent con-<lb/>
tent to juvenile offenders in<lb/>
Michigan's training schools.<lb/>
Plymouth attorney Evelyn But-<lb/>
ler complained last week that mov-<lb/>
ies Tike "Basic Instinct" and "9 12<lb/>
Weeks" had been show to juvenile<lb/>
offenders at the W.J. Maxey Train-<lb/>
ing School near Whitmore Lake for<lb/>
years. She asked state Attorney Gen-<lb/>
eral Jennifer Granholm to stop the<lb/>
practice.<lb/>
Friday, FIA treatment centers<lb/>
were given word by phone of the<lb/>
new policy, said the agency's deputy<lb/>
director, Mark Jasonowicz. A com-<lb/>
plete written policy is being devel-<lb/>
oped.<lb/>
"We made a small dent in a big<lb/>
problem Ms. Butler told the De-<lb/>
troit Free Press for a story Saturday.<lb/>
"The R-rated movies only exemplify<lb/>
the hostile atmosphere" at the train-<lb/>
ing school, she said.<lb/>
Jasonowicz said R-rated movfes<lb/>
have been used at the training<lb/>
schools as a way to spark discussions<lb/>
about violence and sexuality. In a<lb/>
staff meeting this week, Jasonowicz<lb/>
said James Beougher, the FIA's head<lb/>
of child and family services, lobbied<lb/>
to keep the movies.<lb/>
Beougher said some R-rated<lb/>
movies, such as Steven Spielberg's<lb/>
heralded Holocaust movie<lb/>
"Schlndler's List are useful in<lb/>
teaching values to youths who have<lb/>
victimized other people.<lb/>
"I'm not a social worker, but to<lb/>
the lay person, I have a hard time<lb/>
agreeing with that philosophy<lb/>
Jasonowicz said. "We don't really<lb/>
think there are enough (R-rated)<lb/>
movies out there that have redeem-<lb/>
ing value as part of treatment<lb/>
 Ms. Butler said she had discov-<lb/>
ered Maxey records from the early<lb/>
1990s that indicated R-rated mov-<lb/>
ies were regularly shown to youths<lb/>
age 13 to 20. She said she found logs<lb/>
that documented the movies shown<lb/>
at Maxey while working on a law-<lb/>
suit on behalf of Kurt Synnestvedt.<lb/>
His wife, Barbara, was murdered at<lb/>
Maxey's Green Oak Center in 1993.<lb/>
Butler said she was prompted to<lb/>
go public about the movies after<lb/>
Oakland County Probate Judge Eu-<lb/>
gene A. Moore sentenced 14-year-<lb/>
old Nathaniel Abraham to Maxey<lb/>
on Jan. 13.<lb/>
at what I've put into it and what I've<lb/>
got out of it, I'm probably $10,000<lb/>
upside down. We don't do it for the<lb/>
money. I'm not talking about put-<lb/>
ting money into my pocket or their<lb/>
pocket, but we do it for the music.<lb/>
TEC: Do you do it because you<lb/>
love the music?<lb/>
JL: You have to love it. If you<lb/>
don't, you'll quit in two months. Af-<lb/>
ter playing 20 shows with five<lb/>
people, unless you like what you're<lb/>
doing and you believe in what<lb/>
you're doing, you're not going to<lb/>
last at all. What you lack in your<lb/>
pocket book is made up by what you<lb/>
have in your heart and in the band.<lb/>
TEC: What do you love most<lb/>
about your job?<lb/>
JL: The freedom. Knowing that<lb/>
from whatever day to whatever day,<lb/>
I'm doing what I love. Knowing that<lb/>
I don't have to answer to people and<lb/>
be somewhere at a certain time.<lb/>
You're running your own business,<lb/>
and you are pretty much in charge<lb/>
Launcella gives his heart and soul to the<lb/>
' audience through his music, (photo<lb/>
from World Wide Web)<lb/>
at that point. More than that, I like<lb/>
the response from people. Some-<lb/>
times, you'll just be having the<lb/>
worst week in the world, and some<lb/>
people will come up to you and say,<lb/>
we bought your record and we loved<lb/>
it. I know it sounds really cheesy,<lb/>
but it makes you feel like you're not<lb/>
an idiot, and you're doing the right<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
feotures@studentmedia. ecu, edu.<lb/>
PETS<lb/>
Jan 27, 2000<lb/>
Feb 5,2000<lb/>
Jan 27,2000<lb/>
Life Insurance<lb/>
A Kent<lb/>
Bli&amp;l<lb/>
Edward Jones<lb/>
Sherwin<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
Direct Sales<lb/>
Representative<lb/>
Management,<lb/>
Trust and Ins.<lb/>
Serv<lb/>
Management,<lb/>
CommercialRetai<lb/>
I<lb/>
Crescent Electric<lb/>
Co<lb/>
Arthur Anderson<lb/>
Bureau of<lb/>
Census .<lb/>
Precision Fabrics<lb/>
Apex Systems<lb/>
Jefferson Pilot<lb/>
Financial<lb/>
Fuji Silysia<lb/>
Chemical<lb/>
Investment<lb/>
Representative<lb/>
Manager Trainee <lb/>
Technical Sales<lb/>
Jan 27,2000<lb/>
Feb 10,2000<lb/>
Feb. 10, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 1,2000<lb/>
Feb. 1,2000<lb/>
Jan 30,2000<lb/>
Jan 30,2000<lb/>
Jan 30,2000<lb/>
Jan 30, 2000<lb/>
Management<lb/>
Trainee<lb/>
Audit &amp; Tax<lb/>
Accountants<lb/>
Math, Comp.<lb/>
Spce. &amp;<lb/>
Economist<lb/>
Jan 30, 2000<lb/>
Feb 1,2000<lb/>
Feb. 14,2000<lb/>
frdm'page 6<lb/>
Feb. 2, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 2, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 2, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 3, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 3, 2000<lb/>
Feb 1,2000<lb/>
Manufacturing<lb/>
Mgt. Trainee<lb/>
Feb. 4, 2000<lb/>
sity of Southern California. "Pets are<lb/>
very therapeutic. Many people suf-<lb/>
fering from loneliness and depres-<lb/>
sion are given dogs to look after and<lb/>
take care of.<lb/>
People like cats and rabbits be-<lb/>
cause they're cute and fuzzy, and<lb/>
that feeling of warmth brings about<lb/>
a calming peace. Also, studies have<lb/>
shown that watching fish, either<lb/>
fresh or saltwater, can help lower<lb/>
one's blood pressure<lb/>
But with all the good things that<lb/>
WWW<lb/>
come with owning a pet, there are<lb/>
also down sides. Owners must take<lb/>
on the responsibility of feeding the<lb/>
pet regularly, which includes buy-<lb/>
ing food on a weekly basis, keeping<lb/>
a clean living environment and<lb/>
cleaning up after the pet.<lb/>
"My rabbit has a tendency of<lb/>
gnawing on absolutely everything<lb/>
in the house, be it a table leg or a<lb/>
human one said sophomore Randi<lb/>
Clark.<lb/>
Owning a pet can be a highly re-<lb/>
warding experience to everyone, re-<lb/>
gardless of age, sex or race. In ex-<lb/>
change for a place to sleep and regu-<lb/>
lar feedings, pets can provide safety,<lb/>
entertainment and a sense of impor-<lb/>
tance to their owner. In some'cases,<lb/>
they can even help one's love life.<lb/>
"All you have to do is take a<lb/>
puppy to the park with you and all<lb/>
the girKcome running said gradu-<lb/>
ate student Jack Meadows.<lb/>
This writer canbe contacted at<lb/>
rkennemur@studentmedia. ecu. edu<lb/>
U.S. Hot Rod Monster Jam<lb/>
rocks Raleigh's Sports Arena<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP)�It's too loud to It's pure testosterone said<lb/>
scream above, then it gets louder. A<lb/>
rumble in your chest vibrates to the<lb/>
ends of your fingers and toes. It<lb/>
sounds like fireworks far a few sec-<lb/>
onds, then diesel exhaust fills the<lb/>
nose.<lb/>
The volume�that must be the<lb/>
appeal of monster trucks. That's<lb/>
why thousands of fans flocked to<lb/>
Raleigh's Entertainment and Sports<lb/>
Arena recently for the U.S. Hot Rod<lb/>
Monster Jam, nearly filling the<lb/>
place.<lb/>
"I want noise yelled Brian<lb/>
Smith, 25, a computer salesman<lb/>
from Holly Springs, at the start of<lb/>
the show.<lb/>
But the thirst for noise does not<lb/>
explain the popularity of Monster<lb/>
Jam shows on TV, or Crash Madness<lb/>
videos, Web sites, mini remote-con-<lb/>
trolled trucks, T-shirts. Or why ear<lb/>
plugs and headphones protected<lb/>
many of the ears in the audience.<lb/>
Male hormones offer a better<lb/>
explanation.<lb/>
Kevin Zakrzewski, 24, also a com-<lb/>
puter salesman, who lives in<lb/>
Durham. "This is men getting their<lb/>
aggression out on a bunch of mud<lb/>
Four monster trucks showed up<lb/>
Saturday night�5-ton beasts with<lb/>
1,600-horsepower engines atop gi-<lb/>
ant wheels that leap over four<lb/>
junker cars at once. Zakrzewski's<lb/>
group hollered their approval in<lb/>
monosyllables, between gulps of<lb/>
beer in plastic cups, waving fists<lb/>
high.<lb/>
"Oh, yeah screamed Pat Bar-<lb/>
ber, 26, from Hope Mills.<lb/>
'Boo yelled Smith.<lb/>
'Boo this man Zakrzewski<lb/>
hollered. "Boo<lb/>
The Grim Reaper, a "street war-<lb/>
rior" truck that was smaller than the<lb/>
monsters, was not man enough for<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"He slowed down at the jumps<lb/>
Zakrzewski said. "He didn't have<lb/>
enough acceleration; he was not<lb/>
See HOT ROD, page 8<lb/>
Feb. 4, 2000<lb/>
Feb I, 2000<lb/>
Sales Associate <lb/>
Recruiter<lb/>
Feb 3,2000<lb/>
Sales Rep.<lb/>
Mgt. Trainee<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Sales &amp;<lb/>
Marketing<lb/>
Representative<lb/>
Retail Banking<lb/>
Feb 4,2000<lb/>
Feb 4, 2000<lb/>
Feb 6, 2000<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Penske Truck<lb/>
Rental &amp;<lb/>
Leasing<lb/>
Grainger<lb/>
John Hancock<lb/>
Financial<lb/>
Information<lb/>
Services<lb/>
Feb 6, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 4, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 7, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 8, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 8, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 9, 2000<lb/>
Banking<lb/>
Operations<lb/>
Systems<lb/>
Operations<lb/>
Management<lb/>
Trainee<lb/>
Field<lb/>
Development<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Feb 6,2000<lb/>
Feb 6,2000<lb/>
Feb 20,2000<lb/>
Feb 11,2000<lb/>
Feb. 9, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 9, 2000<lb/>
Furniture Fair<lb/>
is Hiring!<lb/>
� Furniture Sales<lb/>
� Electronic Appliance Sales<lb/>
� Warehouse Technician<lb/>
� Part time - 29 hrs. a week<lb/>
� Apply in person - ask for Dot.<lb/>
131 South West � Greenville Boulevard � 756-9050<lb/>
Alfredo's; Home of t,<lb/>
Alfredo's Daily I<lb/>
Bomb Special j<lb/>
2 large 1 topping pizzas <lb/>
$8.99 i<lb/>
Good 5-10 p.m. daily<lb/>
i Large New fork Slices<lb/>
ECU'S Favorite<lb/>
Lunch Special<lb/>
j 2 slices with 1 topping and a drink<lb/>
$3.30<lb/>
Good 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. daily<lb/>
Location: Downtown East 5th Street 752-3880<lb/>
Feb. 9,2000<lb/>
t Above Tanning Salon<lb/>
Feb. 23, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 15,2000<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
Mon-Sat 8-9<lb/>
Sun 1-6<lb/>
Maxim<lb/>
Healthcare<lb/>
Oyster Point<lb/>
Construction<lb/>
State Farm<lb/>
Insurance<lb/>
Marketing<lb/>
Representative<lb/>
Sales Recruiter <lb/>
Mgt. Trainee<lb/>
Project Mgt. &amp;<lb/>
Estimating<lb/>
Feb 11,2000<lb/>
Feb 13,2000<lb/>
Collins &amp;<lb/>
Aikman<lb/>
Sprint-Mid<lb/>
Atlantic Telecom<lb/>
Burlington<lb/>
Industries<lb/>
Underwriters<lb/>
Laboratories<lb/>
IBM<lb/>
IBM<lb/>
Claims Rep.<lb/>
Underwriting or<lb/>
Stockbroker<lb/>
Trainees<lb/>
Management<lb/>
Trainee<lb/>
First Level<lb/>
Engineer<lb/>
Manufacturing<lb/>
Trainee<lb/>
Engineer<lb/>
Personal Systems<lb/>
Feb. 25,2000<lb/>
Feb. 13,2000<lb/>
Feb. 27,2000<lb/>
Feb. 15,2000<lb/>
Feb. 16,2000<lb/>
Feb. 29, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 16,2000<lb/>
Mar 1,2000<lb/>
Feb. 13,2000<lb/>
Feb. 13, 2000<lb/>
Feb. 15,2000<lb/>
IBM<lb/>
Networking<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Circuit City<lb/>
Stores<lb/>
Olde Discount<lb/>
Stockbrokers<lb/>
Consolidated<lb/>
Elec.<lb/>
Distributors<lb/>
Hackney &amp; Sons<lb/>
Enterprise Rent<lb/>
A Car<lb/>
Greater Carolina<lb/>
Group<lb/>
Corporate<lb/>
Accounting<lb/>
Feb. 15,2000<lb/>
Feb. 15,2000<lb/>
Feb. 15,2000<lb/>
Store Managers<lb/>
Stockbroker<lb/>
Trainee<lb/>
Feb. 21,2000<lb/>
Feb. 21,2000<lb/>
Management<lb/>
Trainee<lb/>
Product Line<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
Management<lb/>
Trainee<lb/>
Sales Associate<lb/>
Western<lb/>
Southern Life<lb/>
Sales<lb/>
Representative<lb/>
Feb 27,2000<lb/>
Mar 22, 200(1<lb/>
Mar 22,2000<lb/>
Mar 17,2000<lb/>
Mar 22,2000<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Lovelines FORM<lb/>
Messages will appear in the Feb. 10 issue of The East Carolinian<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
ID<lb/>
Address<lb/>
0 N l �f 1B S TNAMESOR IN1 TA L SWL IBUSED<lb/>
I234i<lb/>
78St1011IS<lb/>
13lllb16IS<lb/>
192021222321<lb/>
2526272a2930<lb/>
$2 for 25<lb/>
words or<lb/>
fewer<lb/>
10t each for<lb/>
each word<lb/>
over 25<lb/>
All ads must<lb/>
be prepaid<lb/>
Drop off the<lb/>
form at Messages may be rejectededited on the basis of decency. Only first<lb/>
rvlendenhall names or initials will be used in an ad. The paper reserves the right to<lb/>
5 our office reject any ad deemed objectionable, obscene or misleading.<lb/>
DEADLINE<lb/>
FEB. 7 @ 5 P.M.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058891__tn_0008"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
features@studentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
86-year-old man becomes tree sculptor<lb/>
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) � For<lb/>
60 years, its willow branches shel-<lb/>
tered their lakeside domain, offer-<lb/>
ing shade and a sense of perma-<lb/>
rience with each turning of the sea-<lb/>
Sons.<lb/>
i(- But then a fierce wind blew<lb/>
across Lake Madison three or four<lb/>
ears back, snapping the gentle old<lb/>
giant in Art and Erma Arshem's back<lb/>
yard.<lb/>
The big willow had grown to 50<lb/>
or (50 feet tall since they first planted<lb/>
it in 1937. And now it was reduced<lb/>
to 18 feet of stripped, shattered<lb/>
wood.<lb/>
"What to do?<lb/>
After three years of pondering<lb/>
the question, Art Arshem came up<lb/>
with two possibilities. He could cut<lb/>
the rest down and haul it away. Or<lb/>
he could find a new purpose for an<lb/>
old friend.<lb/>
'He chose the latter. And this is<lb/>
where the story really gets interest-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
, At age 86, Arshem decided to<lb/>
pursue a new hobby. Something he<lb/>
never had time for in all those years<lb/>
he was running the Arshem Broth-<lb/>
ers filling station on First Avenue in<lb/>
downtown Sioux Falls, across from<lb/>
the Shriver Building. Something he '<lb/>
just couldn't fit in, either, during 20<lb/>
,years of operating Sioux Cab in<lb/>
Sioux Falls.<lb/>
" He decided to become a chain-<lb/>
saw sculptor.<lb/>
That's right, a Michelangelo of<lb/>
the whirring, ripping blades. He<lb/>
looked at that old willow and de-<lb/>
cided there was a Viking inside it.<lb/>
And in the course of about three<lb/>
months, that's exactly what has<lb/>
taken shape on the southeast side<lb/>
of Lake Madison.<lb/>
Using two different saws - with<lb/>
8- and 16-inch blades - Arshem<lb/>
hacked and cut and trimmed. He<lb/>
lopped off the top 10 feet of the tree<lb/>
to get it down to a workable height.<lb/>
And halfway through the project, he<lb/>
managed to lop off one of the<lb/>
Viking's hands, too.<lb/>
"I was trying to extend his saber<lb/>
down to the base, and 1 accidentally<lb/>
hit the hand he says. The memory<lb/>
brings a hearty laugh. "So I'm work-<lb/>
ing around it<lb/>
Good artists do that, you know.<lb/>
And as it turns out, Arshem is a<lb/>
pretty good artist, especially for a<lb/>
guy whose background in wood-<lb/>
working amounts to making end<lb/>
tables, kitchen cabinets and one<lb/>
fairly respectable boat.<lb/>
From the willow has emerged a<lb/>
7-foot Norseman he calls Lars.<lb/>
"That was my dad's name<lb/>
Arshem explains, "Dad loved the<lb/>
lake. So I named him after my dad<lb/>
I.ars has horns and a helmet. He<lb/>
has a long saber at his left side. And<lb/>
when the artist finishes his work<lb/>
this spring and summer, he will<lb/>
have a mail suit hanging from his<lb/>
shoulders.<lb/>
"I've got about 15, 20 hours left<lb/>
of work on him Arshem says as he<lb/>
sits in the kitchen of his Sioux Falls<lb/>
home on South Grange Avenue. "I<lb/>
have to finish his eyes, and 1 haven't<lb/>
finished around his chin or the top<lb/>
of his boots. But I'm getting there<lb/>
As you might imagine, old Lars<lb/>
has become quite a conversation<lb/>
piece around the lake. People have<lb/>
parked along the private access road<lb/>
and stared at the emerging figure.<lb/>
Some have walked into the yard to<lb/>
check him out.<lb/>
"I never dreamed it would be<lb/>
anything like this Arshem says.<lb/>
"What would be all the attraction<lb/>
on it in this part of the country? I<lb/>
don't know. But people sure seem<lb/>
interested in it<lb/>
So interested, it turns out, that<lb/>
the snow in the backyard of their<lb/>
lake cabin has revealed footprints<lb/>
coming right up next to Lars this<lb/>
winter.<lb/>
Arshem says he chose a Viking<lb/>
because of his own Norwegian heri-<lb/>
tage.<lb/>
"I'm Scandinavian, so I'm a Vi-<lb/>
king he says. "My friends send me<lb/>
cards about being Norwegian, and<lb/>
some get kind of hostile. But I don't<lb/>
mind it. We Norwegians are pretty<lb/>
easygoing people<lb/>
Pretty talented, too, it turns out.<lb/>
Thanks to the warm days of the ex-<lb/>
tended autumn, Arshem was able to .<lb/>
prove that as he whacked away with<lb/>
his chain saw and carved away on<lb/>
the finer details with his chisel.<lb/>
He figures he put in about 1MJ<lb/>
hours on the sculpture, much of<lb/>
that on a ladder so he could reach<lb/>
the top of Lars. The work ended for<lb/>
the season around Thanksgiving. It<lb/>
will continue again when spring<lb/>
comes around.<lb/>
IaUk<lb/>
kM A<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
National Co-Ed Service Fraternity<lb/>
Invites you to attend<lb/>
Informational Meetings<lb/>
When: Tuesday &amp; Wednesday,<lb/>
January 25th &amp; 26th at 5:00 - 6:30<lb/>
Where: Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Pirate Underground<lb/>
For More Information please contact<lb/>
Erin Ryan @ 758-8283<lb/>
HO I nOU from page<lb/>
aggressive<lb/>
Still, testosterone does not ex-<lb/>
plain why toddlers sat, barely<lb/>
squirming, through the entire show.<lb/>
Or why two 8-year-old girls squealed<lb/>
over their15 stuffed monster truck<lb/>
toys. It must be the circus atmo-<lb/>
sphere, the bright paint jobs and the<lb/>
announcer's staccato voice�all<lb/>
mesmerizing to short attention<lb/>
spans.<lb/>
"Thev can do all kinds of tricks<lb/>
7 said Zelle Creech, whose bangs were<lb/>
caught in dainty ponytails off her<lb/>
forehead.<lb/>
"They got neat colors on them<lb/>
and stuff said Madison Hairr, wear-<lb/>
ing a bright pink vest.<lb/>
If it's not just a guy thing, mon-<lb/>
ster trucks may simply offer vicari-<lb/>
ous fun. Permission for road rage.<lb/>
When trucks were.not gunning<lb/>
engines or catching air, the crowd<lb/>
grew bored. During one such lull, a<lb/>
woman applied lipstick. A boy up<lb/>
front half-heartedly waved a check-<lb/>
ered flag. Dads' eyes glazed over as<lb/>
if they were watching the Home<lb/>
Shopping Network.<lb/>
They all livened up again when<lb/>
a quad racer on the Tar Heel team<lb/>
smashed the winning trophy over<lb/>
the Wolfpack racer's head.<lb/>
"Hit 'em with your helmet said<lb/>
Jamie Lunsford, 16, a junior at Riv-<lb/>
erside High School in Durham.<lb/>
NOWHIRING<lb/>
Orientation Assistants for 2000-2001<lb/>
Orientation &amp; the First-Year Experience 214 Whichard - 328-4173<lb/>
For more information, �<lb/>
contact the Office of Orientation<lb/>
and the First-Year Experience<lb/>
Applications are now available in 214<lb/>
Whichard Building!<lb/>
Deadline forcompleted applications is February 4,2000 at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
<lb/>
0<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
V<lb/>
Jfc<lb/>
JAN. 24-27; 8-11<lb/>
'At<lb/>
Anwi retreat to spy Rock<lb/>
Tor Rides or information, Call:<lb/>
shannon @ 754-2433<lb/>
or<lb/>
Ryan @ 329-8731<lb/>
schedule<lb/>
of Events<lb/>
Dates:<lb/>
janua<lb/>
jersey Mikes<lb/>
Annual 70's social with AAYl<lb/>
Monday, January 24, 2000<lb/>
ifJau<lb/>
<lb/>
Tuesday, January 25, 2000<lb/>
shrimy &amp; Oyster Roast<lb/>
Wednesday, January 26, 2000<lb/>
Chick-Fil-A<lb/>
Thursday, January 27, 2000<lb/>
Pia Pickin'<lb/>
� Friday, January 28, 2000<lb/>
Band Parly<lb/>
Saturday, January 29, 2000<lb/>
Bid Night w AZ<lb/>
" -a X cpKT ZTA :<lb/>
Downtown5th St.<lb/>
;Downtown<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
<lb/>
www.tec.e<lb/>
SP0F<lb/>
The St. I<lb/>
Will square 0<lb/>
earned their<lb/>
pars in the A<lb/>
Alltel Stadiur<lb/>
10 second qi<lb/>
the third time<lb/>
The Ram<lb/>
since 1979, t<lb/>
neers 11-6.1<lb/>
down strike fi<lb/>
4:44 remainir<lb/>
Chiefs' 1<lb/>
Kansas Cit<lb/>
was injured in<lb/>
Thomas lost ct<lb/>
patch. The car<lb/>
nesses say it fl<lb/>
killed one of Tr<lb/>
other.<lb/>
Thomas is!<lb/>
injuries. Specifi<lb/>
leased.<lb/>
"It's devastc<lb/>
Cunningham, C<lb/>
football aspect<lb/>
and this organi;<lb/>
with<lb/>
Thomas wai<lb/>
has played for I<lb/>
the NFL.<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
fron<lb/>
No. 3 seed<lb/>
the Australian O<lb/>
Likhovtseva, 6-3<lb/>
Open Champion<lb/>
"There's no e<lb/>
Williams. "I just c<lb/>
the match<lb/>
Noles'j<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Janikowski, was<lb/>
legedly trying to I<lb/>
and some compc<lb/>
hassee nightclub<lb/>
were refused ent<lb/>
Janikowski's corr<lb/>
the two-time All-<lb/>
to a Tallahassee<lb/>
Bribing a polic<lb/>
Janikowski was r<lb/>
$1,000 bail.<lb/>
Janikowski is<lb/>
ing for the NFL di<lb/>
Yank<lb/>
The New Yon<lb/>
they would resigi<lb/>
who went 14-111<lb/>
season, will ink ?<lb/>
worth as much a<lb/>
Pettite was a<lb/>
of last season as<lb/>
The deadline car<lb/>
In pinstripes. He<lb/>
pitcher, leading tl<lb/>
postseason run t<lb/>
<pb facs="00058891__tn_0009"/><lb/>
Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
SPORTS BRIEFS<lb/>
Super Bowl is set<lb/>
The St. Louis Rams and the Tennessee Titans<lb/>
yvill square off in Super Bowl XXXIV. The Titans<lb/>
earned their spot by beating the Jacksonville Jag-<lb/>
gars In the AFC Championship game, 33-14 in<lb/>
Alltel Stadium, Sunday. The Titans overcame a 14-<lb/>
10 second quarter deficit to defeat the Jaguars for<lb/>
the third time this season.<lb/>
The Rams won their first NFC Championship<lb/>
since 1979, by beating the Tampa Bay Bucca-<lb/>
neers 11-6. The Rams won with a 30 yard touch-<lb/>
down strike from Kurt Warner to Ricky Proehl with<lb/>
4:44 remaining.<lb/>
Chiefs' Thomas injured in crash<lb/>
Kansas City Chiefs' linebacker Derrick Thomas<lb/>
was injured in a one car accident early last Sunday.<lb/>
Thomas lost control of his car when he hit an ice<lb/>
patch. The car collided with the median and wit-<lb/>
nesses say it flipped multiple times. The crash<lb/>
killed one of Thomas' companions and injured an-<lb/>
other.<lb/>
Thomas is said to have suffered serious back<lb/>
injuries. Specifics on his injuries have not been re-<lb/>
leased.<lb/>
"It's devastating to me said Gunther<lb/>
Cunningham, Chiefs head coach. "Forget about the<lb/>
football aspect of it�he has given a lot to this city<lb/>
and this organization. It's a tough thing to deal<lb/>
with<lb/>
Thomas was drafted by the Chiefs in 1989. He<lb/>
has played for Kansas City for all of his 11 years in<lb/>
the NFL.<lb/>
Williams bounced<lb/>
from Australian Open<lb/>
No. 3 seed, Serena Williams was ousted from<lb/>
the Australian Open by No. 16 seed Elena<lb/>
Likhovtseva, 6-3, 6-3. Williams, the 1999 U.S.<lb/>
Open Champion, had 32 unforced errors.<lb/>
"There's no excuse for me to lose this said<lb/>
Williams. "I just couldn't find any rhythm throughout<lb/>
the match<lb/>
Notes'Janikowski arrested<lb/>
Florida State place-kicker, Sebastian<lb/>
Janikowski, was arrested Saturday night after al-<lb/>
legedly trying to bribe a police officer. Janikowski<lb/>
and some companions were trying to enter a Talla-<lb/>
hassee nightclub. When Janikowski's companions<lb/>
were refused entry, a conflict occurred. After<lb/>
Janikowski's companions were taken into custody,<lb/>
the two-time All-American attempted to give $300<lb/>
to a Tallahassee police officer.<lb/>
Bribing a police officer is a third-degree felony.<lb/>
Janikowski was released Sunday morning on<lb/>
$1,000 bail.<lb/>
Janikowski is forgoing his senior year and opt-<lb/>
ing for the NFL draft.<lb/>
Yankees resign Pettite<lb/>
The New York Yankees announced Monday<lb/>
they would resign lefthander Andy Pettite. Pettite,<lb/>
who went 14-11 with a 4.70 era in 31 starts last<lb/>
season, will ink a four-year deal that could be<lb/>
worth as much as $35 million.<lb/>
Pettite was rumored to be trade bait for much<lb/>
of last season as he struggled with his mechanics.<lb/>
The deadline came and went and Pettite was still<lb/>
in pinstripes. He proved his worth as a big game<lb/>
pitcher, leading the Yankees to two wins in their<lb/>
postseason run to the World Championship.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
sports@studentmedia.ecu.edu<lb/>
Pirates weather comeback, top UNCW<lb/>
Men's basketball<lb/>
team snaps losing streak<lb/>
Susanne Milenkevich<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
The Pirates ended a three game losing streak Sat-<lb/>
urday after defeating UNC-Wilmington 65-57 before<lb/>
a crowd of 6,712 at Williams Arena at Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum.<lb/>
ECU opened the game with a 13-2 run against the<lb/>
Seahawks. Senior forward Neil Punt posted six of his<lb/>
15 points in the opening minutes.<lb/>
The Pirate defense held the Seahawks to just 27<lb/>
percent shooting from the field in the first half while<lb/>
ECU'S offense took a 17 point lead on two occasions<lb/>
before entering the locker room with a 35-20 lead.<lb/>
"Our defense played great for 40 minutes and we<lb/>
came out in the second half with a chance to go up<lb/>
25 or 30 points first year head coach Bill Herrion<lb/>
said. "But we missed three front ends of 1-and-l situ-<lb/>
ations that could have put us up 28 points. We didn't<lb/>
make them or some other free throws and they hit<lb/>
some 3-pointers to get back in it. But give the kids<lb/>
credit because they stuck with it<lb/>
ECU continued to score in the second half as the<lb/>
Pirates opened with a 13-4 run to put the Seahawks<lb/>
down by 24 points.<lb/>
In the final eight minutes of the game, UNC-W<lb/>
sparked a 25-4 run that brought the Seahawks within<lb/>
3 points. The run was led by UNC-W freshman guard<lb/>
Brett Blizzard who posted 12 of his 24 points as he<lb/>
hit four 3-pointers in 2:05 to bring the Seahawks back<lb/>
into the game.<lb/>
"We knew coming in UNC Wilmington was not<lb/>
going to give up and that itj was going to be tough<lb/>
to put away Herrion said. "They showed that today.<lb/>
UNC Wilmington Is a talented club<lb/>
and we just held them off. Now we<lb/>
need to learn to put people away<lb/>
ECU held onto the win by com-<lb/>
pleting 7-8 free throws with 42.4 re-<lb/>
maining in the game to give the Pi-<lb/>
rates an eight point advantage.<lb/>
"Good teams know how to put<lb/>
people away Herrion said. "We<lb/>
would have liked to have won by<lb/>
20 points, but we put ourselves in a<lb/>
position late in the game that<lb/>
maybe we can learn from<lb/>
The 25 point run by the<lb/>
Seahawks had people on edge while<lb/>
the team was confident they could<lb/>
hold on.<lb/>
"I knew we had it the whole<lb/>
time said senior forward Neil Punt.<lb/>
"I knew we were going to step up<lb/>
and hit shots<lb/>
ECU finished the game with a<lb/>
35-33 rebound advantage, the<lb/>
Pirate's seventeenth game out of 18<lb/>
with the rebound advantage. ECU<lb/>
shot 49 percent (20 of 41) from the<lb/>
floor and 61 percent (20 of 33) from<lb/>
the free throw line.<lb/>
The Pirates will return to action<lb/>
on January 26 when they travel to<lb/>
Richmond to face CAA foe Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
smilenkevich@studentmedia.ecu.edu.<lb/>
David Taylor scores his only bucket in ECU's 66-57 win over UNCW (photo by<lb/>
Bobby Russell)<lb/>
OPINION COLUMN<lb/>
Tarheels' hard times<lb/>
are no surprise<lb/>
Tar Heels not included on AP<lb/>
Top 25 for the first time in a decade<lb/>
Stephen Schramm<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Alphons van Ireland scored five points and grabbed two rebounds in Saturday's game (photo by Bobby Russell)<lb/>
Ok, I know this is the ECU student paper, but 1<lb/>
can't help myself. The most talked about sports story<lb/>
in the state is wi thout a doubt, the collapse of the Caro-<lb/>
lina Blue hoops dynasty.<lb/>
Yesterday, for the first time since 1990, an AP Top<lb/>
25 came out that did not include the Tarheels. As a j<lb/>
person who has spent 18 of his 21 years living iril<lb/>
Chapel Hill, I can say this, Carolina fans are not ac-TJ<lb/>
customed to losing and for them, the sky is indeed<lb/>
falling.<lb/>
Now to many, this comes as a surprise. The Heels<lb/>
were picked No. 2 in the nation by Sports Illustrated,<lb/>
and were in the preseason top ten in most national<lb/>
polls. Carolina was also picked to finish atop the ACC.<lb/>
All this for a team who was bounced from last years'<lb/>
NCAA tournament in the first round by Weber State?<lb/>
I don't get it. North Carolina finished the 1999 sea- -<lb/>
son with a whimper. They were plagued by inconsis-<lb/>
tency. They won the preseason NIT, and limped<lb/>
through the ACC schedule. They got to the final of<lb/>
the ACC tournament and then stunk up Seattle in their<lb/>
opening round loss to Weber State.<lb/>
For a team coming off of such a disappointing sea-<lb/>
son, they got an awful lot of credit coming into this<lb/>
year. The amount of praise heaped upon these Heels is �<lb/>
made more puzzling by the fact that they lost last<lb/>
season's floor leader, Ademola Okulaja, to graduation.<lb/>
the lack of leadership is evident to even the most<lb/>
casual observers. This year's squad often looks rudder-<lb/>
less and they play with out fire. It seems that in every<lb/>
game, the Heels' opponent looks as if they just want it<lb/>
more.<lb/>
In the eyes of many Carolina fans, slumps like this<lb/>
happen everywhere, except Chapel Hill.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@studentmedia. ecu. edu<lb/>
Women's team looks at undefeated conference record<lb/>
Men learn from<lb/>
their mistakes, fall to American<lb/>
Ryan Downey<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The Lady Pirates picked up two more wins over the<lb/>
weekend, improving to 9-1, 6-0 in the CAA, while the<lb/>
men's team fell short in a tough meet Saturday.<lb/>
Friday the ladies had a road win against the Rich-<lb/>
mond Spiders, 175-125. "We are pleased to get a con-<lb/>
ference victory over a top CAA team said Head Coach<lb/>
Rick Kobe.<lb/>
The meet featured five first place finishes, one such<lb/>
finish by Dana Fuller in the 1000 free style. The meet<lb/>
provided some momentum for their home meet Sat-<lb/>
urday against American, which was a resounding 149-<lb/>
92 blowout.<lb/>
The women are not just on a roll, they have been<lb/>
consistent winners all season. The American meet fea-<lb/>
tured 7 first place finishes for the ladies.<lb/>
"It was fantastic said team captain Hollie Butler.<lb/>
"We won a meet yesterday and then won our meet<lb/>
today. What mote can you ask for?"<lb/>
The team has been working extremely hard since<lb/>
their Christmas training and has not let up on prac-<lb/>
tice since they got back to campus.<lb/>
"Tired is the only word Butler said. "Everybody<lb/>
is so tired. Some people shaved and tapered for this<lb/>
meet, and the team supported them. They did real well<lb/>
for us<lb/>
The men's team was dealt a loss (135-102) in its<lb/>
Saturday meet against American. The loss knocked the<lb/>
men to 6-3, :i-2.<lb/>
"This is one of the top teams in the conference<lb/>
said captain Matt Jabs. "They have a lot of national<lb/>
caliber talent on their team. It was the kind of meet<lb/>
where everybody had to he at the top of their game.<lb/>
Today some of us were and some of us weren't<lb/>
While a loss is not a positive happening, Matt Jabs<lb/>
explains that it is not the end of the world.<lb/>
"The initial loss always hurts because of the expec-<lb/>
tations Jabs said. "But after that you have a win some,<lb/>
lose some attitude while still striving lor excellence<lb/>
This is turning out to be a great season for both the<lb/>
men's and women's teams. The women are on the verge<lb/>
of an undefeated conference record.<lb/>
"As a senior, I can say that there is nothing that<lb/>
makes me happier than to see everyone be as success-<lb/>
ful as they have been Butler said.<lb/>
Coach Kobe put the meet in perspective.<lb/>
"We were pleased with how everyone swam, Ameri-<lb/>
can is probably the toughest team in the conference<lb/>
Kobe said. "We took them down to the last two events,<lb/>
any time you score 100 points you have to be happy.<lb/>
We are working and preparing for the championship<lb/>
meet<lb/>
ECU vs. Richmond<lb/>
Women<lb/>
1000 freestyle first place Dana Fuller<lb/>
4000 relay first place Lady Pirates<lb/>
200 freestyle first place Hollie Butler<lb/>
50 freestyle second place Mary Bennett<lb/>
200 backstroke first place Amy Hendrick<lb/>
400 freestyle relay second place team finish<lb/>
ECU vs. American<lb/>
Men<lb/>
400 medley relay second place<lb/>
200 freestyle first place Casey Charles<lb/>
50 freestyle second place Matt Jabs<lb/>
100 backstroke second place Matt Jabs<lb/>
200 backstroke second place Claes Lindgren<lb/>
77i$ writer can be<lb/>
rdowaey@studentmedia.ecu. edu.<lb/>
contacted<lb/>
at<lb/>
<pb facs="00058891__tn_0010"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
wwM.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
"Hurricanes trade Primeau to Flyers Jets set to name Al Groh as coach<lb/>
Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
sports@studentmedia.ecu.edu.<lb/>
 KALEIGH, N.C. (AP)�The Carolina Hurricanes got<lb/>
a player with impeccable playoff credentials. The Phila-<lb/>
delphia Flyers received some insurance for corxeussion-<lb/>
prone star Eric Lindros.<lb/>
,J(n the biggest NHL trade this season, Carolina fi-<lb/>
najjby unloaded disgruntled former captain Keith<lb/>
Prjjmeau on Sunday for Rod Brind'Amour.<lb/>
.Xhe two veteran centers have comparable career<lb/>
numbers, except in the postseason, where<lb/>
Brind'Amour has 33 goals in 87 games. Primeau has<lb/>
ojlly six in 64.<lb/>
� ZAny time that Eric (Lindros) had an injury when<lb/>
ym look at who the guy was that stepped up and made<lb/>
that team go Brind'Amour was always that guy Caro-<lb/>
lina coach Paul Maurice said of one of Philadelphia's<lb/>
mast popular players. "He'll have an opportunity to<lb/>
cfcihat here on a nightly basis because he is going to<lb/>
recounted on that strongly<lb/>
1 "Primeau, 28, had been in a contract dispute with<lb/>
(Slolina since he became a restricted free agent July 1<lb/>
afiS vowed never to play for the Hurricanes again.<lb/>
2 "Carolina general manager Jim Rutherford said the<lb/>
t$n resisted trading Primeau until recently, when sev-<lb/>
eRJ teams began inquiring about the rugged 6-foot-5,<lb/>
2J-pounder.<lb/>
JlfThe deal with the Flyers was apparently off Satur-<lb/>
dSS night, but things fell into place early Sunday.<lb/>
J IJPrimeau, who missed Carolina's first 48 games af-<lb/>
tftjleading them with 30 goals a season ago, said he<lb/>
sjjped a five-year, $22.75 million contract with the<lb/>
Fftf rs and should be in uniform Thursday night. He<lb/>
vfljj receive $5 million a year the last three years of<lb/>
t deal.<lb/>
SSTheoniy regret that 1 would have is that it didn't<lb/>
vfctTR out in the first place Primeau said. "As far as<lb/>
how it has unfolded and how it has developed, I don't<lb/>
have any regrets<lb/>
Primeau's relationship with team owner Peter<lb/>
Karmanos deteriorated during the five-month dispute.<lb/>
"It's best left unsaid Primeau said when asked if<lb/>
he had anything to say to Karmanos, who at one point<lb/>
in the negotiations called Primeau a 'prima donna<lb/>
Karmanos released a statement through the team's<lb/>
public relations office.<lb/>
"When you break it all down, Keith basically got<lb/>
the same contract we originally offered him in Au-<lb/>
gust Karmanos said.<lb/>
That's true.<lb/>
Carolina's first contract offer to Primeau in July<lb/>
was five years for $20 million. He then turned down<lb/>
various other offers for fewer years and less money<lb/>
over the past few months.<lb/>
"We don't think this is a contract that embarrasses<lb/>
what we did Rutherford said. "Once he passed on<lb/>
arbitration for the month of August, we had $20 mil-<lb/>
lion on the table for him. So, he still ended up getting<lb/>
a five-year deal. As an organization, we felt it was im-<lb/>
portant to keep his contract in line<lb/>
Brind'Amour, an 11 -year NHL veteran, had played<lb/>
in 484 straight games before missing the first 34 games<lb/>
this season with a broken left foot. Since returning to<lb/>
the lineup, the 6-foot-l, 200-pound center has eight<lb/>
points in 12 games. '<lb/>
Rod Brind'Amour is the newest member of the Carolina<lb/>
Hurricanes (AP photo)'<lb/>
"He is one of the top two-way centers in the Na-<lb/>
tional Hockey League Rutherford said.<lb/>
Maurice said Brind'Amour, 29, would center a line<lb/>
with wings Gary Roberts and Jeff O'Neill against<lb/>
Montreal on Monday night.<lb/>
Maurice made the phone call to Brind'Amour to<lb/>
inform him of the trade. He was in Pittsburgh get-<lb/>
ting ready to play the Penguins.<lb/>
"I think he knew the call was coming Maurice<lb/>
said. "While there may have been a shock to it when<lb/>
he finally heard it, he is still that great pro and he<lb/>
snapped right into the arrangements of when he was<lb/>
coming.<lb/>
"He got very focused at the job at hand. There<lb/>
wasn't any, 'I'll have to call you back or I have to talk<lb/>
to my agent It was hockey<lb/>
Rutherford said Brind'Amour has two years re-<lb/>
maining on his contract, which will pay him $3.5 mil-<lb/>
lion next season and then $4.2 million.<lb/>
Carolina also gets 21-year-old goalie Jean-Marc<lb/>
Pelletier and a second-round pick at the NHL entry<lb/>
draft in June. The Flyers will get Carolina's fifth pick.<lb/>
Primeau has 179 goals, 227 assists and 1,127 pen-<lb/>
alty minutes in 597 games in an 11-year career with<lb/>
Detroit and Carolina.<lb/>
Brind'Amour has spent his last eight seasons with<lb/>
Philadelphia. He has 273 goals and 430 assists in 778<lb/>
games with Philadelphia and St. Louis. He was third<lb/>
in Flyers scoring last season with 74 points.<lb/>
Carolina came into Sunday's games four points<lb/>
out of a playoff spot in the tight Eastern Conference.<lb/>
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP)�The<lb/>
New York Jets finally appear to have<lb/>
found someone who wants to coach<lb/>
their team.<lb/>
Three weeks after Bill Parcells re-<lb/>
signed and Bill Belichick turned<lb/>
down the job, the Jets- were set to<lb/>
hire Al Groh, one of the more non-<lb/>
descript assistant coaches in the NFL,<lb/>
as their new head coach.<lb/>
Although he will replace Parcells,<lb/>
one of the coaching icons of pro<lb/>
football, Groh doesn't seem con-<lb/>
cerned.<lb/>
"I feel very ready for this, if it<lb/>
were to happen he said. "I don't<lb/>
minimize the size of the job. I'm not<lb/>
trying to make it sound as if I would<lb/>
be taking over at some small high<lb/>
School, but I don't see this as that<lb/>
big a deal<lb/>
The decision to hire Groh will<lb/>
bring to an end three weeks of un-<lb/>
certainty for the franchise.<lb/>
Since the season ended on Jan.<lb/>
3, the Jets have seen:<lb/>
� Parcells step down as coach,<lb/>
saying that while he could still do<lb/>
the job, the total commitment to it<lb/>
was lacking. <lb/>
� Belichick, the defensive coor-<lb/>
dinator and coach-in-waiting, el-<lb/>
evated to the position upon Parcells'<lb/>
announcement.<lb/>
� Belichick stun the team and<lb/>
everyone else by quitting the next<lb/>
day, citing the unsure ownership<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
� Representatives of Belichick<lb/>
filing a grievance with the NFL,<lb/>
claiming the team was not allow-<lb/>
ing him to seek employment else-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
� The estate of the late Leon<lb/>
Hess agree to sell the team to Rob-<lb/>
ert Wood (Woody) Johnson IV for<lb/>
$635 million.<lb/>
� Parcells tell Johnson he did<lb/>
not want to return to the sidelines.<lb/>
� The league rule in the Jets' fa-<lb/>
vor in Belichick's grievance. Com-<lb/>
missioner Paul Tagliabue said the<lb/>
contract bound Belichick to the Jets<lb/>
for 2000 and urged Belichick, the<lb/>
Jets and any outside team (New En-<lb/>
gland) seeking to hire Belichick to<lb/>
work out an agreement before Feb.<lb/>
1.<lb/>
And now comes the expected el-<lb/>
evation of Groh, recommended by<lb/>
Parcells. <lb/>
Groh, the team's linebackers<lb/>
coach, is a former defensive coordi-<lb/>
nator under Parcells, and wouldn't<lb/>
deviate much from the approach his<lb/>
boss took.<lb/>
"It's confirmed by the results<lb/>
Groh said. "The system of putting a<lb/>
team together, running a team, the<lb/>
whole thing as it's been spearheaded<lb/>
by BiH, is one of the most success-<lb/>
ful operations in the history of the<lb/>
league.<lb/>
"To be in three different Super<lb/>
Bowls, to resurrect two programs,<lb/>
with New England and the Jets, ob-<lb/>
viously it works. And all of us that<lb/>
have been in it feel very confident<lb/>
in implementing it if given our own<lb/>
opportunity<lb/>
Groh is an expert In the Parcells I<lb/>
system, which features an aggressive,<lb/>
defense with multiple designs, usu-<lb/>
ally run out of a 3-4. He worked unr �<lb/>
der Parcells In 1989 and 1990 with!<lb/>
the Giants, winning a Super Bowl<lb/>
He reunited with Parcells in New En<lb/>
gland in 1993 as defensive coordi-<lb/>
nator, but then stepped down to-<lb/>
linebackers coach again when!<lb/>
Belichick, who spent five years as �<lb/>
head coach in Cleveland, joined the;<lb/>
Patriots.<lb/>
When both Parcells and.<lb/>
Belichick left for the Jets in 1997<lb/>
Groh came, too. Three years later<lb/>
he is about to get his first head;<lb/>
coaching position since leading'<lb/>
Wake Forest from 1981-86.<lb/>
Would Groh feel overshadowed I<lb/>
because Parcells will remain the;<lb/>
organization's football chief?<lb/>
"Some players might say Al is a-<lb/>
puppet for Bill' said the Daily"<lb/>
News.<lb/>
But another disagreed.<lb/>
"Bill will do everything he can'<lb/>
to launch Al on a successful cruise<lb/>
the source said. "If the cruise goes-<lb/>
as anticipated, Bill can backoff and!<lb/>
let it be Al's ship<lb/>
The Jets also are concerned with-<lb/>
continuity, and promoting Groh-<lb/>
might keep much of the staff intact<lb/>
The Jets already have lost an<lb/>
other coach. Romeo Crennel, defen<lb/>
sive line coach the past three sea<lb/>
sons, accepted an offer Sunday to!<lb/>
become the defensive Coordinator<lb/>
for the Cleveland Browns.<lb/>
While Yankees win, Orioles pay<lb/>
(AP)-While the New York Yankees got the trophies,<lb/>
the Baltimore Orioles ran up the biggest taxes.<lb/>
Baltimore's total bill for the three years of baseball's<lb/>
luxury tax was $10,643,897, according to management<lb/>
records obtained by The Associated Press.<lb/>
The Yankees, who won the World Series twice in<lb/>
the three years of the tax, were second at $9,919,651,<lb/>
followed by Los Angeles at $2,712,672, Boston at<lb/>
$2,205,960 and Cleveland at $2,065,496.<lb/>
Only three others teams wound up with bills dur-<lb/>
ing the three years of the tax: the Atlanta Braves<lb/>
($1,795,582), the New York Mets ($1,137,992) and the<lb/>
Florida Marlins ($139,607).<lb/>
Teams received their bills for the last year of the tax<lb/>
Jan. 10, and they are payable Jan. 31.<lb/>
For 1999, the Yankees had the highest tax bill for<lb/>
the second time in three seasons: $4,804,081. They-<lb/>
were followed by the Orioles ($3,475,048), the Dodg-1<lb/>
ers ($2,663,079), the Mets ($1,137,992) and the Red!<lb/>
Sox ($21,226).<lb/>
While the Yankees finished with the best record in �<lb/>
the American League and went 11-1 in the postseason<lb/>
the Orioles were fourth in the AL East at 78-84 and the !<lb/>
Dodgers were third in the NL West at 77-85.<lb/>
The luxury tax is based on the average annual val<lb/>
ues of contracts of players on teams' 40-man rosters as �<lb/>
See ORIOLE, page 11 ,<lb/>
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nmv ,iv,iil.ilil' <lb/>
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HRS. M-F9-6, Sat 9-3<lb/>
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M varieties<lb/>
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Sure, we'll have you climbing walls. But if you qualify for<lb/>
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ARMY ROIC Unlike any other college course you can take.<lb/>
For more information, .<lb/>
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M varieties<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058891__tn_0011"/><lb/>
 ��� ;v:timt'<lb/>
Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
itmedia.ecu.edu.<lb/>
ach<lb/>
Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
I www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
pert in theParcellsI<lb/>
itures an aggressive,<lb/>
Itiple designs, usu<lb/>
5-4. He worked unr �<lb/>
�89 and 1990 with!<lb/>
ling a Super Bowl<lb/>
ParcellsinNewEn<lb/>
defensive coordi<lb/>
stepped down to<lb/>
ach again when!<lb/>
pent five years as<lb/>
�veland, joined the;<lb/>
l Parcells and.<lb/>
the Jets in 1997<lb/>
Three years later<lb/>
;et his first head;<lb/>
an since leading'<lb/>
1981-86.<lb/>
eel overshadowed;<lb/>
will remain the;<lb/>
itball chief?<lb/>
! might say Al is a-<lb/>
" said the Daily"<lb/>
isagreed.<lb/>
verything he can;<lb/>
successful cruise<lb/>
If the cruise goes'<lb/>
I can backoff and!<lb/>
e concerned with;<lb/>
promoting Groh-<lb/>
of the staff intact<lb/>
dy have lost an<lb/>
oCrennel, defen<lb/>
le past three sea<lb/>
offer Sunday to-<lb/>
isive Coordinator<lb/>
Browns.<lb/>
f<lb/>
;hest tax bill for<lb/>
1,804,081. They-<lb/>
048), the Dodg<lb/>
�2) and the Red !<lb/>
lebest record In �<lb/>
the postseason, �<lb/>
it 78-84 and the !<lb/>
77-85.<lb/>
age annual val<lb/>
)-man rosters as �<lb/>
I<lb/>
K<lb/>
Brown &amp; Brown<lb/>
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ftuftEquaBfrJUrtfcc Speeding Tickets<lb/>
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�Possession of DrugsParaphenalia<lb/>
�Drinking in Public<lb/>
�Felonies and Misdemeanors<lb/>
�Free Consultation<lb/>
Phone 752-0952 752-0753<lb/>
-mail - ghb.greenvillenc.com<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
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IkKKjr. hir.iajii ('ontaif<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
sports@studentmedia.ecu.edtf<lb/>
ORIOLE<lb/>
from page 10<lb/>
adjusted each day of the regular<lb/>
season, and was assessed on the<lb/>
five biggest spenders at a rate of 34<lb/>
percent on the amount of salary<lb/>
above the midpoint of the teams<lb/>
with fifth- and sixth-hjghest pay-<lb/>
rolls.<lb/>
By shedding payroll late in the<lb/>
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Based on opening-day rosters,<lb/>
liquid IjnxwaK- Smin-<lb/>
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$5,150,347, followed by the Yan-<lb/>
kees ($4,247,903), Orioles<lb/>
($4,067,305), Braves ($772,506:<lb/>
and Mets ($525,156).<lb/>
The tax went out of existence<lb/>
following the season. Owners, un-<lb/>
able to get a salary cap, agreed W"<lb/>
the tax in the settlement of the<lb/>
1994-95 strike, hoping it would"<lb/>
slow the rate of payroll growth. <lb/>
Pagers - $49.95<lb/>
Includes Activation and 1 Month Service<lb/>
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(Across from Kinko's) -r US, Cellular<lb/>
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M Also an interest in writing.<lb/>
Apply at the second floor of the Student Publications Building<lb/>
or call 328-6366<lb/>
�r<lb/>
ASS<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
MISA<lb/>
Wants you<lb/>
Co mejoin the best student<lb/>
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Open to all majors<lb/>
Meeting: Jan 25<lb/>
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Place: GCB 1028<lb/>
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TEL 252-328- 6893<lb/>
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New York RangersJan. 207:00PM<lb/>
Buffalo SabresJan. 221:30PM<lb/>
Montreal CanadiensJan. 247:30PM<lb/>
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<pb facs="00058891__tn_0012"/><lb/>
Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2000<lb/>
wftyw.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
COMICS<lb/>
The East Carolinian 12 j<lb/>
comics@studentmedia.ecu.pdu<lb/>
www.tec.<lb/>
hths jo&amp;yshow<lb/>
by joey ellis<lb/>
THE GRASS IS ALWAYS (KEENER<lb/>
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355-3183.<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
JASMINE GARDENS 2 bedroom. 1<lb/>
bath, all appliances, free cable, small<lb/>
pets. $410 per month Wainright Prop-<lb/>
erty Management 756-6209.<lb/>
SIZE DOES Matter! Biggest break<lb/>
package Best price from $29.<lb/>
WWW.SPRINGBREAKHQ.COM. 1-<lb/>
800-224-GULF<lb/>
ONE BEDROOM for sublease Pirate's<lb/>
Cove $375. Includes cable, utilities,<lb/>
own bathroom. Will neg. call (919) 851-<lb/>
1677 or (919)549-2278 ask for Paul or<lb/>
Len.<lb/>
! -WESLEY COMMON SOUTH: <lb/>
1 or 2 bed rooms, 1 bath, range,<lb/>
refrigerator, free watersewer. <lb/>
washerdryer hookups, laundry;<lb/>
facilities, 5 blocks from campus.i<lb/>
ECU bus services.<lb/>
NOW PRELEASING<lb/>
FOR JANUARY<lb/>
-All Properties have 24 hr emergency i<lb/>
maintenance- Call 758-1921 i<lb/>
LEARN TO<lb/>
SKYDIVE!<lb/>
CAROLINA SKY SPORTS<lb/>
(919)496-2224<lb/>
DO YOU need a good job? The ECU<lb/>
Telefund is hiring students to contact<lb/>
alumni and parents for the ECU An-<lb/>
nual Fund. $5.50 hour plus bonuses.<lb/>
Make your own schedule. If interest-<lb/>
ed, call 328-4212. M-TH between the<lb/>
hours of 3-6pm.<lb/>
RECEPTIONIST WANTED for small<lb/>
law firm of 4 attorneys: full-time or<lb/>
part-time. If interested, please call 758-<lb/>
4257 or fax resume to 758-9282.<lb/>
LIFEGUARDWATER SAFETY <lb/>
tant needed to work at therapy pool<lb/>
TuesdayThursday 8am-3pm at PCMH<lb/>
please call 321-1214.<lb/>
BROWSE ICPT.COMWIN aTREE trip<lb/>
for Springbreak "2000 ALL destina-<lb/>
tions offered. Trip Participants, Stud-<lb/>
ent Orgs &amp; Campus Sales Reps want-<lb/>
ed. Fabulous parties, hotels &amp; prices.<lb/>
For reservations or Rep registration call<lb/>
Inter-Campus Programs 800-327-6013.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Resident Crisis Coun-<lb/>
selor position. Free rent, utilities,<lb/>
etcplus monthly stipend in exchange<lb/>
for employment. Training available at<lb/>
REAL. For more information call 758-<lb/>
HELP. 600 East 11th Street. Greenville<lb/>
NC 27858.<lb/>
$200 MILLION is spent on advertis-<lb/>
ing tactics aimed at YOU! Want a<lb/>
piece! Log onto www.TeamMag-<lb/>
ma.com for information on how to<lb/>
earn money now.<lb/>
THE GREENVILLE Recreation and<lb/>
Parks Department is recruiting part-<lb/>
time youth In-Lme Hockey coaches.<lb/>
Applicants must possess some knowl-<lb/>
edge of the hockey skills and have the<lb/>
ability and patience to work with youth.<lb/>
Applicants must be able to coach<lb/>
young people ages 5-18, in hockey fun-<lb/>
damentals. This program will run from<lb/>
late February to mid-May. Salary rates<lb/>
start at $5.15 per hour. Applications<lb/>
will be taken until the positions are<lb/>
filled. For more information please call<lb/>
Judd Crumpler. Michael Daly or Ben<lb/>
James at 329-4550 after 2pm.<lb/>
WAIT, HOST and bus staff needed<lb/>
for friendly and fun work environment.<lb/>
Must have some morning week day<lb/>
availability. Experience helpful but not<lb/>
necessary. Pick up application @ Ba-<lb/>
sil's Restaurant on Firetower Rd.<lb/>
WANTED: PAYING $6.50hr. plus<lb/>
bonuses for qualified telemarketers.<lb/>
No Friday or Saturday work. Hours<lb/>
4:30-9 p.m. Monday-Wednesday:<lb/>
3:30-8 p.m. Sunday. Call Energy Sav-<lb/>
ers Windows &amp; Doors. Inc. at 758-<lb/>
8700 for appointment.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
THE GREENVILLE Recreation &amp; Parks<lb/>
Department is recruiting for 12 to 16<lb/>
part-time youth soccer coaches for the<lb/>
Spring Youth Soccer Program. Applic-<lb/>
ants must possess some knowledge<lb/>
of the soccer skills and have the abili-<lb/>
ty and patience to work with youth.<lb/>
Applicants must be able to coach<lb/>
young people ages 5-18. in soccer fun-<lb/>
damentals. Hours are form 3:00pm<lb/>
until 7:00pm with some night and<lb/>
weekend coaching. Flexible with<lb/>
hours according to class schedules.<lb/>
This program will run from early March<lb/>
to early May. Salary rates start at<lb/>
$5.15 per hour. For more information<lb/>
please call Ben James. Michael Daly<lb/>
or Judd Crumpler at 329-4550 after 2<lb/>
�pm.<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
ads@studentmedia.ecu.0du<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
PACTOLUS RESCUE Squad needs<lb/>
volunteer EMTs. Any hours will be<lb/>
helpful day or night. Building has<lb/>
sleeping quarters, kitchen facilities, sit-<lb/>
ting area with TV and meeting room<lb/>
ideal for college students to study.<lb/>
Please contact Jerry Mizell at 946-<lb/>
0672 or Carolyn Lee at 762-0837.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK - Grad Week. $76 &amp;<lb/>
up per person, www. retreatmyrtle-<lb/>
beach.com 1-800-645-3618.<lb/>
 1 SPRING Break Vacations! Cancun,<lb/>
Jamaica, Bahamas &amp; Florida. Best pric-<lb/>
es guaranteed! Free parties &amp; cover<lb/>
charges! Space is limited! Book it now!<lb/>
All major credit cards accepted! 1-800-<lb/>
234-7007 www.endlesssummer-<lb/>
tours.com<lb/>
COURTYARD TAVERN is hiring<lb/>
cooks, waitstaff and bartenders. Ap-<lb/>
ply M-F 2-4 must be available for 2<lb/>
weekday lunches.<lb/>
GREENVILLE UTILITIES Commission<lb/>
Employment Opportunity. Temporary<lb/>
PT Engineering Technician. Temporary<lb/>
position available for person to work<lb/>
twenty hours per week, Monday<lb/>
through Friday, in the Water Resourc-<lb/>
es Engineering Section. This position<lb/>
will involve reading and interpreting<lb/>
maps and preparing databases and<lb/>
spreadsheets. Qualified candidate<lb/>
should have completed one year of col-<lb/>
lege level course work in engineering,<lb/>
geography, or computer related field.<lb/>
Ability to read and interpret maps re-<lb/>
quired. Possession of a valid North Car-<lb/>
olina driver's license is also required.<lb/>
Applications accepted through Janu-<lb/>
ary 28. 2000. Salary $8.00hour. Em-<lb/>
ployment is contingent upon passing<lb/>
a physical examination including a<lb/>
drug screening urinalysis. To ensure<lb/>
consideration, a completed Greenville<lb/>
Utilities' application must be received<lb/>
in the Human Resources Office. Con-<lb/>
tact the Human Resources Office, PO<lb/>
Box 1847, Greenville, NC 27835 (200<lb/>
Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive) or call<lb/>
(252) 551-1513.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
WWW.THECOMMENTATOR.COM<lb/>
GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
i.<lb/>
1 opemj<lb/>
B<lb/>
orrtQermv,<lb/>
�jj<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
NOTETAKER. GET smarter by getting<lb/>
paid to take notes in class. Versity.com<lb/>
is now hiring notetakers for more than<lb/>
fifty of next semester's classes. Earn<lb/>
$8-$14class. Apply online �<lb/>
www.versity.com<lb/>
APPOINTMENT SETTING telemar-<lb/>
keters. Full-time or part-time. Flexi-<lb/>
ble hours. Great for students or ca-<lb/>
reer marketers. Health insurance, paid<lb/>
vacation. Great pay plus benefits and<lb/>
bonuses. Call Thermal -Gard 355-0210.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED to share 3<lb/>
bedroom house one block from cam-<lb/>
pus. Rent 160 a month plus 13 utili-<lb/>
ties. Call Amanda 413-6953.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED to share new-<lb/>
ly renovated 3 bedroom duplex. Eve-<lb/>
rything is new. Includes new applianc-<lb/>
es. 4 car port, washer and dryer, all<lb/>
for only $275mo. Call 321-6446(d)<lb/>
329-0709(n).<lb/>
SUBLEASER WANTED from Febru-<lb/>
ary to July in Pirates Cove apts. Fully<lb/>
furnished, all utilities included, wash-<lb/>
er and dryer, cable TV, $375 a month.<lb/>
Bedroom and bathroom. Call 931-<lb/>
9425.<lb/>
$$� TUTORS NEEDEDSSS Looking<lb/>
for some extra money (best pay on<lb/>
campus) and a way to improve aca-<lb/>
demically? Do you have a 3.0 or bet-<lb/>
ter GPA? Become a tutor for the Of-<lb/>
fice of Student Development-Athletics.<lb/>
We need individuals capable of tutor-<lb/>
ing classes from Accounting to Zoolo-<lb/>
gy. Undergraduate students are paid<lb/>
six dollars ($6) an hour and graduate<lb/>
students are paid seven dollars ($7)<lb/>
an hour. Does this sound like the job<lb/>
for you? If so. join us for one of our<lb/>
orientation meetings in 236B Ward<lb/>
Sports Medicine Building (behind<lb/>
Minges Coliseum) on either 119. 1<lb/>
20. 125 or 126 at 5pm. questions?<lb/>
Need more information? Contact Isha<lb/>
Williams at 328-4691 for further infor-<lb/>
mation.<lb/>
FUN &amp; free pictures. Looking to try<lb/>
something new? Looking for fun?<lb/>
Would you like to have special pictures<lb/>
to give to your family or boyfriend? I<lb/>
enjoy shooting pictures of young wom-<lb/>
en for my portfolio. If you model for<lb/>
me, I will give you free pictures. Repu-<lb/>
table amateur photographer. Referenc-<lb/>
es available (I've photographed dozens<lb/>
of ECU girls). Please send a note,<lb/>
phone number and a picture (if avail-<lb/>
able - it will be returned) to Paul Hron-<lb/>
jak, 4413 Pinehurst Dr Wilson, NC<lb/>
27893 or call 252-237-8218 or e-mail<lb/>
me at hronjak@simflex.com. You can<lb/>
also check my website at www.sim-<lb/>
flex.comusershronjak<lb/>
4-5 tennis instructorattendants need-<lb/>
ed at Greenville Recreation &amp; parks<lb/>
dept. For winter and spring. $5.15-<lb/>
5.75 per hour. Tennis teaching experi-<lb/>
ence needed. Call 329-4559.<lb/>
LIFEGUARDS AND beach vendors<lb/>
needed in North Myrtle Beach for the<lb/>
summer season. Will train, no experi-<lb/>
ence necessary! Fill out the applica-<lb/>
tion at www.nsbslifeguards.com-<lb/>
Email-dudes@nsbslifeguards.com or<lb/>
call (843) 272-3259.<lb/>
THE SISTERS of Alpha Phi would like<lb/>
to congratulate Jennifer Johnson.<lb/>
Becky Gunn. and Kim Lewis on their<lb/>
engagements. We wish you all the<lb/>
best of luck.<lb/>
PHI PSI would like to congratulate<lb/>
their newly elected officers: Rob Smith-<lb/>
President. Bob Smith- Vice President.<lb/>
Matt Ensley- Corresponding Secretary.<lb/>
John Batchelor- Recording Secretary.<lb/>
Aaron Harris- Messenger. David Buc-<lb/>
ci- sargent-at-arms. and GW Barker-<lb/>
chaplain. Good luck guys, we know<lb/>
you'll do a great job.<lb/>
BRIOITTe, CABANAS ve.ry cool-<lb/>
once you put your mind to it you can<lb/>
do anything! Now lets work on that<lb/>
GPA. I am so proud of you. love your<lb/>
Big Sis.<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA Lambda Chi Alpha.<lb/>
Alpha Qmicron Pi, the quad was a<lb/>
blast! We'll have to do it again soon.<lb/>
Love Alpha Phi.<lb/>
ZETA, THANKS for helping us spend<lb/>
our money at the social last Thursday!<lb/>
We can't wait to do it again! Love, the<lb/>
Brothers of Phi Psi.<lb/>
FEDEX GROUND Packaae Handlers<lb/>
A.M. sort positions starting at $7.50hr<lb/>
Guarenteed Periodic Advances. Apply<lb/>
at 2410 United De. Greenville, NC<lb/>
27834 (Off Staton Rd.)<lb/>
ZETA TAU Alpha is having open rush<lb/>
parties for all ladies interested 126<lb/>
and 127 at 5:30pm. Call 757-1811 for<lb/>
info and rides.<lb/>
A SPECIAL congratulations to Marie<lb/>
Davis of Zeta Tau Alpha and Daniel<lb/>
Knight of Delta Chi on their engage-<lb/>
ment. We love you both, sisters of Zeta<lb/>
Tau Alpha<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
share apartment at Eastgate Village.<lb/>
Two bedrooms, one bath. wd. balco-<lb/>
ny. $242.50 month plus 12 utilities.<lb/>
Call Stephanie at 830-0903.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED to share two<lb/>
bedroom townhouse. $175, free ws<lb/>
and 12 utilities. 756-7755.<lb/>
RELIABLE DRIVER someone to drive<lb/>
son to school Mon. Wed. Fri. pick him<lb/>
up at their home at 8:00am. Also need<lb/>
someone to help son with homework<lb/>
Tues. &amp; Weds. 4-6. Call 328-0007 or<lb/>
355-4855.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Cook or Assistant Cook<lb/>
Luptons Seafood Restaurant<lb/>
14th &amp; Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
�752-4174<lb/>
ARAMARK, AN international lead-<lb/>
er in managed services, is hiring a part-<lb/>
time graphicsmarketing asst. for ECU<lb/>
dining services. Must have experience<lb/>
with Illustrator. Macintosh. Pagemak-<lb/>
er. Freehand. Word and Excel. Duties<lb/>
include assisting marketing director<lb/>
with research, special events and creat-<lb/>
ing promotional materials, hours are<lb/>
flexible 15-20 per week. Please apply<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center or send<lb/>
resume to Human Resources, PO Box<lb/>
3295, Greenville, NC 27836.<lb/>
WELCOME SIGMA class Love, your<lb/>
Pi Delta sisters<lb/>
ADMIN. ASSISTANTRECRUITER<lb/>
$9.00 per hour<lb/>
Great Opportunity<lb/>
Large Research Company in Greenville is seeking a full-<lb/>
time AdminRecruiter to recruit, interview, and staff<lb/>
telephone surveyors.<lb/>
Qualified candidate will possess<lb/>
the following skills:<lb/>
� MSWord and MSExcel (spreadsheets)<lb/>
� Excellent oral and written<lb/>
communication abilities<lb/>
� Strong work ethic and<lb/>
flexible work schedule<lb/>
� Great organization skills<lb/>
Fax vour resume todavll<lb/>
Headway Corporate Staffing Service<lb/>
Fax: (252) 641-4898<lb/>
Attention: Greenville Recruiter<lb/>
Spring Break 2000<lb/>
CANCUN'JAMAICA'NASSAU<lb/>
Space is limited<lb/>
CALL TODAY<lb/>
800-293-1443<lb/>
www.StudentCity.com<lb/>
canCOwdamaicaSahatnas<lb/>
Soring Break trim wat 1 of G small busmtsttt tn the US m 19M to be<lb/>
recojmred for outstarrtno. m by Council of Better Boane� Burwui'<lb/>
Bahamas Party<lb/>
Cruise $279<lb/>
5 dirt. Most Metis � F;w fartet � Includes Tues<lb/>
Panama $139<lb/>
City- Boardwalk, Holiday Inn Sunspree &amp; More<lb/>
Florida $149<lb/>
1 Nights � Daytona. South Beach. Cocoa Bexh<lb/>
Cancun &amp; Jamaica $439<lb/>
7 rights � Air Hotel � fret Food i 3C Hrs of Drinks<lb/>
5pringbrcaktravcl.com - Our 13th Year!<lb/>
1-800-678-6386<lb/>
canCOh-Jamaica-Baiiattias<lb/>
$n in $s?<lb/>
ENDLESS<lb/>
ACT NOW! LAST CHANCE TO RE-<lb/>
SERVE YOUR SPOT FOR SPRING<lb/>
BREAK) DISCOUNTS FOR 6 OR<lb/>
MORE! SOUTH PADRE, CANCUN,<lb/>
JAMAICA, BAHAMAS, ACAPUL-<lb/>
CO, FLORIDA Er MARDI GRAS.<lb/>
REPS NEEDEDTRAVEL FREE. 800-<lb/>
838-8203WWW.LEISURE-<lb/>
TOURS.COM<lb/>
CALL NOW OR RESERVE ONLINE!<lb/>
18002347007<lb/>
www.endlesssummertours.com<lb/>
SUMMER TRIP to Spain and Moroc-<lb/>
co. Two weeks. First session 3-6 hours<lb/>
credit. Scholarships, loans available.<lb/>
For more information, leave name,<lb/>
number at 328-4310 or mer-<lb/>
cerc@mail.ecu.edu<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
NOTE TAKING: The Center for Coun-<lb/>
seling and Student Development is of-<lb/>
fering the following workshop on Janu-<lb/>
ary 27. 1 30. If you are interested in<lb/>
this workshop please call 328-6661.<lb/>
BOOST YOUR Sell-Esteem: this one<lb/>
session workshop will help you under-<lb/>
stand how self esteem is developed<lb/>
and how you can create a more posi-<lb/>
tive sense of self. This workshop will<lb/>
meet on Tuesday. Jan. 25 3:30. For<lb/>
more information call 328-6661.<lb/>
B-GLAD, bisexuals, gays, lesbians,<lb/>
and allies for diversity, will hold their<lb/>
first meeting of the semester Wed.<lb/>
Jan. 26 at 7:30 in Mendenhall 248.<lb/>
CHOOSING A major and a career:<lb/>
This workshop is designed to help you<lb/>
explore your interests, values, and abil-<lb/>
ities to find out possible career and<lb/>
major choices. You will learn effec-<lb/>
tive tools in the greatest hunt of you<lb/>
life. Contact the Center for Counsel-<lb/>
ing and Student Development at 328-<lb/>
6661 for more details. This workshop<lb/>
meets every Thursday from 3:30-5.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA Phi Society will meef<lb/>
Thursday, January 27 at 5:30pm in<lb/>
Mendenhall Great Rooms 1 &amp; 2. For<lb/>
more info: www.ecu.eduorggbp<lb/>
GOLDEN KEY will meet today. Tues.<lb/>
Jan 25 at 5:30 in GC 2019. Well dis-<lb/>
cuss inductions, officer elections, and<lb/>
semester activities. E-mail any ques-<lb/>
tions to ecugkGhotmail.com<lb/>
GREEKCYPRIOT-AMERICANS, if<lb/>
you are an ECU student of Hellenic or<lb/>
Cypriot descent that is interested in<lb/>
meeting, socializing, and participaitng<lb/>
in cultural activities with others, please<lb/>
call or e-mail Eleftheria at 752-8004.<lb/>
(elemantzo@yahoo.com) or Katerina at<lb/>
353-5083. (katerinaOgreenvil-<lb/>
lenc.com)<lb/>
ADULT SWIM lessons. Beginner and<lb/>
Intermediate. Beginner is designecLfpr<lb/>
the non-swimmer to receive instruct<lb/>
tion on basic stroke skills in a suppor-<lb/>
tive, fun environment. Intermediate is<lb/>
for the average swimmer to receive<lb/>
instruction on intermediate stroke<lb/>
skills, turns, and workouts. Cosj" is<lb/>
$20mem-$30non-mem. Registra-<lb/>
tion deadline is Feb.4. for more infor.<lb/>
mation call 328-6387. "V.<lb/>
TEST ANXIETY. Learn ways NOT to<lb/>
stress over tests, including ways to<lb/>
help you gain the grade you want. The<lb/>
Center for Counseling and Student De-<lb/>
velopment is offering the following<lb/>
workshop on January 26. 11:00. If you<lb/>
are interested in this program, contact<lb/>
the center at 328-6661.<lb/>
HAWKSNEST WEEKEND FEBRU-<lb/>
ARY 5-6. this is the trip for those that<lb/>
need a ski fix but can't afford those<lb/>
normal resort prices, we will leave Sat.<lb/>
morning and our first session wlffbe<lb/>
night skiing 6pm-2am and then Jback<lb/>
again Sun. morning at 9am. Cost is<lb/>
$110mem-$130non-mem. Registra-<lb/>
tion deadline is Jan.26, 5pm. Call 328-<lb/>
6387 for more information.<lb/>
STRESS MANAGEMENT: This one-<lb/>
session workshop helps you explore<lb/>
the causes of stress and the effect that<lb/>
stress has on you. For more informa-<lb/>
tion call 328-6661.<lb/>
AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY<lb/>
WELCOME COLLEGE<lb/>
STUDENTS - FOR A RIDE<lb/>
CALL 830-1186<lb/>
CHRIST PRESBYTE-<lb/>
RIAN CHURCH<lb/>
4889 Old Tar Road<lb/>
Winterville<lb/>
355-9632<lb/>
Services: 9:30 a.m. Sun.<lb/>
JOIN US FOR A GOOD<lb/>
BIBLE PREACHING.<lb/>
FRIENDLY ATMOSPHERE. A<lb/>
CHURCH THAT CARES<lb/>
IMMANUEL FREE WILL<lb/>
BAPTIST CHURCH<lb/>
317 Vernon White Road<lb/>
Winterville<lb/>
756-2670<lb/>
Services: 10, 11 a.m 6<lb/>
p.m. Sun 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
DYNAMIC WORSHIP -<lb/>
JOHN 4:24 DYNAMIC<lb/>
MESSAGE - ACTS 2:38<lb/>
FIRST UNITEB<lb/>
PENTECOSTAL CHURCH<lb/>
114 E. 11th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
757-3033<lb/>
Services: 10 a.m 7:30<lb/>
pm. Sun 7:30 p.m. Wed.<lb/>
WHERE GOD IS PRAISED.<lb/>
LIVES ARE CHANGED &amp;<lb/>
FRIENDS ARE MADE!<lb/>
CHURCH OF CHRIST<lb/>
1700 SE Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
752-6376<lb/>
Services: 9 &amp; 10:15 a.m.<lb/>
Sun 7 8- 8:30 p.m. Wed.<lb/>
WE INVITE YOU TO OUR<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
SAINT JAMES UNITED<lb/>
METHODIST CHURCH<lb/>
2000 E. 6th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
752-6154<lb/>
Services: 8:30 &amp; 11 a.m<lb/>
Sun College Sunday<lb/>
School class 9:45 a.m.<lb/>
A MULTI-CULTURAL<lb/>
CHURCH-CUTTING-EDGE<lb/>
MUSIC-ACTIVE CAMPUS<lb/>
MINISTRY<lb/>
FAITH AND VICTOR<lb/>
CHURCH<lb/>
3950 Victory Lane<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
355-6621<lb/>
Services: 9 &amp; 10:45 a.m.<lb/>
Sun 7 p.m. Wed.<lb/>
REACHING OUT WITH THE<lb/>
CLAIMS OF CHRIST<lb/>
FIRST FREE Will<lb/>
BAPTIST CHURCH<lb/>
2426 S. Charles Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
756-6600<lb/>
Services: 9:45 a.m.<lb/>
Sunday School, 11 a.m 7<lb/>
p.m. Sun 10 a.m. &amp; 7<lb/>
p.m. Wed. Bible Study<lb/>
COME AND SEE WHAT<lb/>
GOD INTENDED CHURCH<lb/>
TO BE<lb/>
KOINONIA CHRISTIAN<lb/>
CENTER CHURCH<lb/>
408 Hudson Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
752-1848<lb/>
Services: 8 &amp; 11 a.m.<lb/>
Sun 7 p.m. Wed.<lb/>
PIRATES WORSHIPPING<lb/>
WITH PIRATES<lb/>
UNITY FREE WILL<lb/>
BAPTIST CHURCH<lb/>
2725 E. 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
756-6485<lb/>
Services: 8:30, 9:45, 11<lb/>
a.m 6 p.m. Sun 6:30<lb/>
p.m. Wed.<lb/>
A WARM WELCOME<lb/>
AWAITS YOU AT THE<lb/>
GREENVILLE CHURCH<lb/>
OF GOD<lb/>
GREENVILLE CHURCH<lb/>
OF GOO<lb/>
3105 S. Memorial Drive<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
355-6595<lb/>
Services: 9:45 a.m 6p.m.<lb/>
Sun 7:30 p.m. Wed.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058891__tn_0014"/><lb/>
.��� �HPW<lb/>
I<lb/>
SWASHBUCKLER<lb/>
CARWASH<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
RE-OPEN!<lb/>
Due to Hurricane Floyd<lb/>
We have all NEW<lb/>
car washing equipment!<lb/>
(ON 14lh St. between Belk Dorm and Harris Teeter)<lb/>
Gamma Chi Ensiton<lb/>
ECU'S newest sorority invites<lb/>
YOU to join us for RUSH 2000!<lb/>
General Classroom building 1019<lb/>
TUESPAY, JANUARY Z5: mm THAN SEX NI&amp;HT!<lb/>
WEPNKPAY, JANUARYS: IUAU NIGHT!<lb/>
THURSDAY. JANUARY 17: RETRO NIGHT!<lb/>
FRJPAY, JANUARY U: CLOSER RUSH. IwHatioM Only.<lb/>
ore?.<lb/>
,oo<lb/>
C?b<lb/>
For mor: info call Elizabeth @ 695-0520 or visit<lb/>
http:www.arigelfire.conincZgammarudihtniJ<lb/>
It's TOURNAMENT TIME!<lb/>
You could represent ECU at Regional Competitions in<lb/>
BILLIARDS BOWLING CHESS<lb/>
TABLE TENNIS RACQUETBALL<lb/>
Tournament winners will be awarded trophies and the opportunity to represent<lb/>
ECU at regional competitions to be held at University of Tennessee, Knoxville,<lb/>
TN, the weekend of Feb. 18-20,2000. All expenses paid by Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
ARE YOU THE BEST?<lb/>
If you think you could be, we want to give you the opportunity to find out!<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Wed Jan. 26. 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
The Outer Limitz<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Center<lb/>
(Men's and Women's Divisions)<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Nine-Ball<lb/>
Mon Jan. 31 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Center<lb/>
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Chess<lb/>
Sat Jan. 29 9:00 a,m,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Ce<lb/>
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