<?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="00058919__tn_0001"/>
Vol. 77 No. 110<lb/>
12 days until classes end<lb/>
NEWS BRIEFS<lb/>
Fitness day<lb/>
ECU employees will participate in a<lb/>
one or two mile walk as part of the<lb/>
ECU Employee Health and Fitness Day.<lb/>
The program begins at noon today at<lb/>
the Student Recreation Center.<lb/>
Open house<lb/>
ECU and the Division of Continuing<lb/>
Studies will conduct the Open House<lb/>
to provide information on non-tradi-<lb/>
tion classes to adults who may be jug-<lb/>
gling family and work schedules. The<lb/>
open house will be held from 9 a.m.<lb/>
until noon on Saturday, June 10, in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center (MSC).<lb/>
For more information call 328-4696<lb/>
or 800-328-6567.<lb/>
Organization fair<lb/>
The Freshman Orientation Organiza-<lb/>
tion Fair, sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Government Association, will be held<lb/>
in the Multipurpose Room of MSC on<lb/>
June 12, 15, 26 and 29, and July 6,<lb/>
13 and 18.<lb/>
June 7, 2000<lb/>
islation<lb/>
TODAY'S WEATHER<lb/>
Sunny, high of 80?<lb/>
and a low of 60"<lb/>
ONLINE SURVEY<lb/>
VOTE0NLINEATTEC.ECU.EDU<lb/>
Do you think ECU should<lb/>
adopt a fire safety policy?<lb/>
RESULTS OF LAST WEEK'S QUESTION:<lb/>
Do you think the bond<lb/>
proposal should pass?<lb/>
22 Yes 7j Nlo<lb/>
On Sunday, May 12th<lb/>
1996, a fire erupted al<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill'sPhi<lb/>
Gamma Delta fraternity<lb/>
house, (photc<lb/>
courtesy of the<lb/>
Herald Sun<lb/>
ECU takes safety precautions<lb/>
in dorms, sororities, fraternities<lb/>
Carolyn Herald<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
Colleges and universities across the United States are await-<lb/>
ing Congress' approval of two proposals regarding campus<lb/>
fire safety. ECU is attempting to stay ahead of the game with<lb/>
its plan to install sprinkler systems in every residence hall<lb/>
Currently at ECU, Jarvis Hall is the only residence hall<lb/>
that has a sprinkler system. In the department of housing's<lb/>
master plan, one residence hall will be renovated every two<lb/>
to three years; sprinkler systems will be installed at that time<lb/>
"The sprinkler systems will be phased in as renovations<lb/>
go under way and as money is available said Phil Lewis,<lb/>
assistant director of environmental health and safety.<lb/>
The next hall up for renovation will be Jones Hall. Fire<lb/>
alarm systems are being upgraded over the summer, at a<lb/>
rate of two to three each year. Fleming Hall was upgraded<lb/>
last year, Tyler Hall this year and Cotton Hall is scheduled<lb/>
for next year.<lb/>
Covers will be installed on each individual fire alarm to<lb/>
minimize false alarms. Fire extinguisher cabinets are also be-<lb/>
ing installed to prevent vandalism.<lb/>
There have been an estimated 1,800 fires in residence halls<lb/>
and fraternity and sorority houses in the United States dur-<lb/>
ing any given year between 1980 and 1997. These fires in-<lb/>
volved one death, 69 injures and $8.1 million of property<lb/>
damage. The leading causes of residence hall fires include ar-<lb/>
son, suspected arson, cooking, smoking and electrical fires<lb/>
overloaded outlets.<lb/>
In 1996, a fire erupted at the Phi Gamma Delta house at<lb/>
the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. The fire killed<lb/>
five juniors and injured three others. This tragedy sparked<lb/>
fierce lobbying to change laws regarding fire safety in resi-<lb/>
dence halls and fraternity and sorority houses.<lb/>
According to the Chapel Hill Fire Chief, the house did not<lb/>
have a sprinkler system, which would have save lives With a<lb/>
sprinkler system the fire might have been contained in the<lb/>
basement of the building, where it started. The system would<lb/>
have notified residents and the fire department of the dan-<lb/>
ger.<lb/>
see FIRES page 4<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0002"/><lb/>
'2-xrV?e' EWst 'Caratfrtian<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
Tmym<lb/>
Wedriesday Jufe7,2OO0<lb/>
newsStec. ecu.edu<lb/>
Special Olympics<lb/>
kicks off in Raleigh<lb/>
Missie Thompson<lb/>
STAf F WRITER<lb/>
The Special Olympics will kick<lb/>
off in Raleigh, N.C. on June 2-4.<lb/>
Raleigh was the host of the sum-<lb/>
mer games that cover the six dif-<lb/>
ferent areas that make up the 18<lb/>
different sports. Events will take<lb/>
place at local parks and North<lb/>
Carolina State University. Over<lb/>
1,500 athletes competed at the<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The athletes that are compet-<lb/>
ing in the summer games com-<lb/>
peted at a local level<lb/>
previously and are now com-<lb/>
peting at the state level, (accord-<lb/>
ing to Amy<lb/>
Johnson). Year round training<lb/>
is offered by the Special Olym-<lb/>
pics to those who<lb/>
have mental retardation. The<lb/>
opening ceremony was held on<lb/>
June 2. The Flame of Hope was<lb/>
carried into the opening cer-<lb/>
emony by law<lb/>
enforcement to light the caul-<lb/>
dron. The flame will be carried<lb/>
in different<lb/>
areas of the state in May.<lb/>
"The best way to support the<lb/>
games is to come out and cheer<lb/>
on the athletes Johnson says.<lb/>
All participants of the Special<lb/>
Olympics have coaches who<lb/>
have trained them for at least<lb/>
eight weeks. The six different<lb/>
events of the Special Olympics<lb/>
include Aquatics, Athletics, Gym-<lb/>
nastics, Powerlifting, Softball and<lb/>
Volleyball. Aquatics is one of the<lb/>
most popular sports and,<lb/>
within the last ten years, has<lb/>
added competition in the 800<lb/>
meter and 1600 meter event.<lb/>
Athletics, which is better known<lb/>
as track and field, had its first<lb/>
A participant In the Special Olympics takes a break in<lb/>
between events, (photo from World Wide Web)<lb/>
competitions in 1970. Gymnas-<lb/>
tics became an official game in<lb/>
1983. Powerlifting was first held<lb/>
in Charlotte, NC. In 1983 Soft-<lb/>
ball made its arrival as a Special<lb/>
Olympics game. Over 30 differ-<lb/>
ent counties compete in the Vol-<lb/>
leyball event.<lb/>
Many different people are in-<lb/>
volved in the North Carolina<lb/>
Special Olympics. It goes beyond<lb/>
the athletes extending to volun-<lb/>
teers, sports officials, event orga-<lb/>
nizers, coaches and several oth-<lb/>
ers. The Special Olympics does<lb/>
have some new partners includ-<lb/>
ing Alltel, Sun Alliance, Royal,<lb/>
Fallons Creative Flowers, PBM<lb/>
Graphics, Kerr Drug and many<lb/>
more.<lb/>
The Special Olympics are the<lb/>
highest levels of competition in<lb/>
North Carolina. According to<lb/>
Johnson, the Special Olympics<lb/>
are also held at a national level.<lb/>
They are conducted every four<lb/>
years; the next one being held in<lb/>
the year 2003. Those who com-<lb/>
pete at the State Level the year<lb/>
before the Nationals have the<lb/>
possibility to compete at the<lb/>
National Level as well.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted<lb/>
at mthompson@tec.ecu.edu.<lb/>
May 31<lb/>
Found Property-A staff member<lb/>
reported finding a light fixture<lb/>
that was taken from the<lb/>
Chancellor's residence on May<lb/>
25. He advised that it was found<lb/>
In a pile of trash on 4th Street.<lb/>
The light fixture had been re-<lb/>
placed so it was returned to the<lb/>
grounds department.<lb/>
Controlled Substance Violation-<lb/>
A student reported a controlled<lb/>
substance violation in a room at<lb/>
Cotten Hall. The student in vio-<lb/>
lation was issued a state citation<lb/>
and Campus Appearance Ticket<lb/>
for possession of marijuana.<lb/>
June 2<lb/>
Provisional DWI-A student was<lb/>
arrested on a provisional DWI<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
Expired Registration-A non-stu-<lb/>
dent was issued a state citation<lb/>
for operating a vehicle with an<lb/>
expired registration.<lb/>
Careless and Reckless Driving-<lb/>
A non-student was issued a state<lb/>
citation for careless and reckless<lb/>
driving after an officer observed<lb/>
CRIME SCENE<lb/>
him spinning tires and driving<lb/>
at a high rate of speed in the<lb/>
Harrington Field parking lot.<lb/>
No Operator's License-A non-<lb/>
student was issued a state cita-<lb/>
tion for no operator's license af-<lb/>
ter an officer observed him driv-<lb/>
ing on College Hill Drive.<lb/>
June 3<lb/>
Attempted Breaking and Enter-<lb/>
ing of a Coin Operated Device,<lb/>
Damage To Property-Art officer<lb/>
discovered that two drink ma-<lb/>
chines, located at the<lb/>
Mendenhall bus stop, were dam-<lb/>
aged by unknown persons. Sus-<lb/>
pects were unable to gain entry<lb/>
to them.<lb/>
June 4<lb/>
Expired Registration-A non-stu-<lb/>
dent was issued a state citation<lb/>
for having expired registration<lb/>
after an officer observed him<lb/>
operating his vehicle on 10th<lb/>
Street adjacent to campus.<lb/>
Beat the Rush<lb/>
&amp; Come Stay with US!<lb/>
M4<lb/>
ETHE FASTEST SEUINC<lb/>
DC COMICS ARE AT:<lb/>
? TMOCCoMantCIMI<lb/>
Nostalgia<lb/>
NeWSStand 2527586909<lb/>
919 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
Greenville NC 27834<lb/>
Available for you July 1,<lb/>
ALL APARTMENTS<lb/>
2000<lb/>
1 Just 6 Blocks from ECU Campus<lb/>
1 Block from ECU Bus Route<lb/>
Pets Allowed with a Fee<lb/>
(no weight limit)<lb/>
Energy Efficient<lb/>
Currently Pre-leasing and<lb/>
Accepting Applications!<lb/>
Pitt Property Management<lb/>
108 Brownlea Drive, Suite A<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
(252) 758-1921<lb/>
r SPaCTOUS Secluded Two Rprirpom UnityOriP Rath<lb/>
Free Water &amp; Sewer ? Central Heat and Air ? Insulated Windows &amp; Doors<lb/>
Dishwasher ? Ceiling Fan ? CAT5 Phone Lines<lb/>
RefrigeratorStove ? Mini Blinds ? Deadbolt Locks ? Bike Racks<lb/>
First Floor Patio ? Second Floor Balcony<lb/>
Pre-Wired for Surround Sound ? Pre-Wired for Security<lb/>
J<lb/>
wym<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0003"/><lb/>
B-72OO0<lb/>
cecu.edu<lb/>
SCENE<lb/>
jnd driving<lb/>
eed in the<lb/>
king lot.<lb/>
nse-k non-<lb/>
i state cita-<lb/>
s license af-<lb/>
id him driv-<lb/>
irive.<lb/>
 and Enter-<lb/>
ted Device,<lb/>
-An officer<lb/>
drink ma-<lb/>
at the<lb/>
, were dam-<lb/>
:rsons. Sus-<lb/>
gain entry<lb/>
-A non-stu-<lb/>
ite citation<lb/>
egistration<lb/>
erved him<lb/>
e on 10th<lb/>
npus.<lb/>
WedrtesAV June 7, 2000<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
The .ESjt Carolinian- 3<lb/>
news@tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
5!<lb/>
8<lb/>
id<lb/>
ACROSS OTHER CAMPUSES<lb/>
Student wins contest<lb/>
for dirtiest room<lb/>
Boston (U-Wire)-For most of<lb/>
this quarter, freshman Regina<lb/>
Pawlewicz has been a good stu-<lb/>
dent in the class "Introduction<lb/>
to Political Science a require-<lb/>
ment for criminal justice majors.<lb/>
She wrote an essay, took the mid-<lb/>
term and the weekly quizzes and<lb/>
read The New York Times just<lb/>
about every day as professor<lb/>
William Miles requires.<lb/>
But now all that studious ac-<lb/>
tivity has ended and she's been<lb/>
cutting class. She plans to go to<lb/>
the last one on Thursday but she<lb/>
has no intention of taking the<lb/>
final.<lb/>
And why should she? She has<lb/>
an "A" for the course, all because<lb/>
she wrote a letter to The Times<lb/>
and it was published.<lb/>
For about 10 years, Miles has<lb/>
begun this introductory class<lb/>
with a challenge: Get a letter<lb/>
published by the most presti-<lb/>
gious newspaper in the country<lb/>
and he'll award you with the<lb/>
most prestigious grade possible.<lb/>
"So as to stimulate interest in<lb/>
the letter-to-the-editor section 1<lb/>
threw out this challenge and not<lb/>
once, in all these years of teach-<lb/>
ing, not one student got a letter<lb/>
published Miles said.<lb/>
He saw that streak end this<lb/>
month, with freshman commu-<lb/>
nications major Geren Horsley's<lb/>
entry about an AIDS article that<lb/>
ran in The Times on Monday,<lb/>
May IS. Two days later,<lb/>
Pawlewicz's letter about the same<lb/>
subject was published.<lb/>
Arria Wright joined the group<lb/>
when she saw her name in print<lb/>
in the letters section under the<lb/>
headline "A Lot of Harry Potter"<lb/>
last Tuesday. Wright made her<lb/>
letter personal, saying that she<lb/>
has a 12-year-old sister who<lb/>
reads the popular Potter books,<lb/>
and noted that not many chil-<lb/>
dren will be able to finish read-<lb/>
ing the new hefty volumes,<lb/>
which will be 600 pages.<lb/>
"I started getting frustrated. I<lb/>
sent letters in six times said<lb/>
Wright.<lb/>
When she finally got a letter<lb/>
published, Wright continued<lb/>
going to class, despite her "A<lb/>
because she enjoys the weekly<lb/>
political debates about subjects<lb/>
like abortion and capital punish<lb/>
Jnent. She has become used to<lb/>
reading the paper every day be-<lb/>
cause of Miles' challenge.<lb/>
"It made me read it more. I<lb/>
read all the articles to find some-<lb/>
thing I was interested in she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
After six tries writing about six<lb/>
subjects, the project gave Wright<lb/>
Brown &amp; Brownl<lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW<lb/>
Truth,Equality,Justice<lb/>
3493C South Evans Street<lb/>
Bedford Commons, Greenville<lb/>
?Speeding Tickets<lb/>
?Driving While Impaired<lb/>
?Under Age Possession<lb/>
?Possession of DrugsParaphenalia<lb/>
?Drinking in Public<lb/>
?Felonies and Misdemeanors<lb/>
?Free Consultation<lb/>
Phone 752-0952 752-0753<lb/>
e-mail - ghb.greenvillenc.com<lb/>
Mark A. Ward Attorney At Law ?DWI, Traffic, Felony Defense ?NC Bar Certified Specialist in State Criminal Law ?24 Hour Messare Service 752-7529 www.mark-ward.com<lb/>
iinrmnrifli? <lb/>
m m<lb/>
? ?iii' Brm ????? ????-<lb/>
bragging rights with her name in<lb/>
a national newspaper.<lb/>
"My whole family bought The<lb/>
New York Times that day she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In an effort to encourage ac-<lb/>
tive reading and strong writing,<lb/>
Miles has offered this exercise to<lb/>
the class, which totals more than<lb/>
100 students, he said.<lb/>
"I want students to see how<lb/>
non-journalists have an input<lb/>
into the news-making world he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Pawlewicz took on a serious<lb/>
subject and voiced her outrage<lb/>
that researchers skipped over a<lb/>
person who could have helped<lb/>
them find a cure for AIDS. For<lb/>
six years, they ignored Erich Karl<lb/>
Fuchs, a man who seemed to be<lb/>
immune to the virus even<lb/>
though he had unprotected sex<lb/>
with men who had AIDS.<lb/>
At first, Pawlewicz said, she<lb/>
had the "A" in mind when writ-<lb/>
ing the letter, but then she got<lb/>
into what she was discussing.<lb/>
Her work paid off.<lb/>
"I was extremely surprised<lb/>
she said. "I didn't think I would<lb/>
get it published<lb/>
With finals week looming,<lb/>
she's glad she has one less class<lb/>
to worry about.<lb/>
ADA, Ohio (AP)-With beer<lb/>
bottles, books and pizza boxes<lb/>
littering all corners of his apart-<lb/>
ment, it's no wonder John<lb/>
Anderson's home was chosen<lb/>
messiest college apartment in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
But it's not the kind of place<lb/>
you'd expect to find an envi-<lb/>
ronmental studies major.<lb/>
Anderson, a junior at Ohio<lb/>
Northern University, claims he's<lb/>
not the messy one.<lb/>
"At least three or four people<lb/>
stay at my place every night<lb/>
he said in an application sent<lb/>
into the contest.<lb/>
"Everyone thinks they can<lb/>
throw trash everywhere. I am<lb/>
the only one that ever cleans up<lb/>
the place, but I can't handle<lb/>
their mess so I decided to let it<lb/>
go until someone else cleans it<lb/>
up, which doesn't happen<lb/>
Anderson, 21, a native of Do-<lb/>
ver, entered the contest spon-<lb/>
sored by an Internet apartment<lb/>
search company at the urging<lb/>
of his friends.<lb/>
He said he hadn't seen the liv-<lb/>
ing room floor in his one-bed-<lb/>
room apartment since Christ-<lb/>
mas. So far, the filth has claimed<lb/>
one victim.<lb/>
Anderson had to throw out<lb/>
his math book "because it was<lb/>
soaked in an unknown liquid<lb/>
The mess, though, proved to<lb/>
be profitable. Anderson won<lb/>
$10,000.<lb/>
"College is really the last<lb/>
time you can really get away<lb/>
with being a slob said Bob<lb/>
Orr, contest coordinator for<lb/>
apartments.com, which spon-<lb/>
sored the contest.<lb/>
Anderson's mother, Char-<lb/>
lotte, said she and her husband<lb/>
couldn't be prouder.<lb/>
"We are just so proud that<lb/>
we've spent over $80,000 for<lb/>
his education to this point, and<lb/>
this is what he comes up with<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
She said that as a child he of-<lb/>
ten covered his bedroom floor<lb/>
and bed with toys to the point<lb/>
where no one could not walk<lb/>
through the room.<lb/>
"It was not dirty, dirty. It was<lb/>
just things Mrs. Anderson<lb/>
said. "I saw the pictures for the<lb/>
contest, and he did not live like<lb/>
that at home. He just had junk<lb/>
around<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0004"/><lb/>
? ? The Erfst CaVolrrtfan<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
Vt<lb/>
Vyedrwssday Jyne?7.20OO<lb/>
news@tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
FIRES<lb/>
from page 1<lb/>
All residence halls already have alarm systems<lb/>
that automatically alert the fire department in<lb/>
the event of a fire.<lb/>
"The alarm systems protect people said Mark<lb/>
Kimball, assistant director of Facilities Services-<lb/>
Residence. "The sprinklers protect property. We<lb/>
are looking at life safety as our main focus<lb/>
Even though ECU'S fraternities and sororities<lb/>
currently do not have the sprinkler system, some<lb/>
of them do have the alarm system that automati-<lb/>
cally warns the fire department. According to<lb/>
Laura Sweet, assistant dean of Student Life, five<lb/>
of ECU's fraternity houses have the alarm sys-<lb/>
tem.<lb/>
"All sorority houses have the system or are in-<lb/>
the process of getting it Sweet said.<lb/>
Sweet also said that there is funding available<lb/>
for the alarm systems. The instant-alert fire alarm<lb/>
systems exceed current Greenville fire safety<lb/>
codes.<lb/>
Legislation was passed for all University of<lb/>
North Carolina residence halls, fraternity and so-<lb/>
rority houses to be retrofitted with sprinkler sys-<lb/>
tems by the year 2001. As of April 2000,17 out of 36<lb/>
fraternity and sorority houses at UNC-CH have been<lb/>
fitted with the keeping track of this information.<lb/>
The residence halls and houses at ECU have an<lb/>
annual systems check, monthly fire extinguisher<lb/>
checks and evacuation drills that are usually estab-<lb/>
lished within the first two weeks of each semester.<lb/>
The drills test evacuation times and fire alarm acti-<lb/>
vation.<lb/>
Resident Advisers also hold monthly meetings in<lb/>
which they go over fire safety with the residents.<lb/>
"Each floor of the residence halls houses one to<lb/>
three Resident Advisers. They run drills and safety in<lb/>
their meetings with students Kimball said.<lb/>
One complaint in the past about fire alarms is that<lb/>
they have not been loud enough.<lb/>
"The alarm) will wake you up Kimball said,<lb/>
guarantee it. These new alarms are so loud, it will be<lb/>
difficult to stay in the dorms during an evacuation<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at news@tec.ecu.edu.<lb/>
ECU Student Transit Authority<lb/>
is currently accepting<lb/>
applications for the position of<lb/>
Bus Driver.<lb/>
Teacher admits sharing marijuana with students<lb/>
MESA, Ariz. (AP)?A popu-<lb/>
lar Mesa junior high school<lb/>
teacher has admitted to po-<lb/>
lice that she invited students<lb/>
to her townhouse in the wan-<lb/>
ing days of the school year so<lb/>
they could smoke marijuana.<lb/>
Eva Kovacs, 35, told police<lb/>
that she drove students from<lb/>
Kino Junior High School to<lb/>
her home four times and gave<lb/>
them marijuana so they<lb/>
could get high.<lb/>
For providing the drug to<lb/>
her students, Kovacs faces<lb/>
two counts of contributing to<lb/>
the delinquency of a minor.<lb/>
Police could only cite Kovacs<lb/>
with the misdemeanors, said<lb/>
Mesa police Sgt. Earle Lloyd,<lb/>
because they did not have<lb/>
any physical evidence of the<lb/>
drug use.<lb/>
"Just the fact that she ad-<lb/>
mitted to giving it to kids is<lb/>
not reason enough to charge<lb/>
her with possession of<lb/>
drugs Lloyd told the Tri-<lb/>
bune, a newspaper serving<lb/>
the suburban Phoenix area.<lb/>
The parent who first called<lb/>
police about Kovacs said he<lb/>
was devastated to learn about<lb/>
her pot parties with students.<lb/>
"As a parent, I expect these<lb/>
people to be role models<lb/>
said Mike Health, whose son<lb/>
was at Kovacs' house but did<lb/>
not smoke marijuana. "Our<lb/>
confidence in the teaching<lb/>
profession has been some-<lb/>
what betrayed by her<lb/>
Police and school officials<lb/>
learned of the pot-smoking<lb/>
students on the last day of<lb/>
school. School officials said<lb/>
they could take little action<lb/>
against Kovacs because they<lb/>
had decided earlier this spring<lb/>
not to renew her contract.<lb/>
Administrators at the Mesa<lb/>
Unified School District re-<lb/>
ferred Kovacs' case to the Ari-<lb/>
zona Department of Educa-<lb/>
tion, which could revoke her<lb/>
teaching certificate.<lb/>
Kovacs worked part time at<lb/>
the school two years, where<lb/>
she taught several drama<lb/>
classes and an English course.<lb/>
A boy who smoked pot with<lb/>
Kovacs told police he first<lb/>
went to her home after a May<lb/>
12 school dance. Kovacs<lb/>
drove some students home,<lb/>
the boy said, but brought him<lb/>
to her house in the 2300 block<lb/>
of East University Drive.<lb/>
The two smoked from a<lb/>
bong in her living room, he<lb/>
told police. She drove the stu-<lb/>
dent home after about 30<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
That student said Kovacs<lb/>
had previously told him he<lb/>
was "hot" and she would like<lb/>
to have sex with him but she<lb/>
"couldn't mess with me until<lb/>
I was 18 Nothing sexual ever<lb/>
happened between her and<lb/>
students, teens told police.<lb/>
Kovacs also talked with stu-<lb/>
dents about their sex lives. A<lb/>
boy told police Kovacs and<lb/>
other students made verbal<lb/>
bets on when a couple who<lb/>
dated would first have sex.<lb/>
Kovacs left the state shortly<lb/>
after the last day of school, so<lb/>
police were not able to inter-<lb/>
view her until this week. A<lb/>
detective spoke with her<lb/>
Wednesday night, Lloyd said,<lb/>
when she admitted to smok-<lb/>
ing marijuana.<lb/>
trohic<lb/>
Minimum Qualifications include:<lb/>
1) ECU Student (registered for Fell semester)<lb/>
2) In good standing with the University<lb/>
3) Minimum 2.0 GPA<lb/>
4) ValidDftvw'sUcense-NoDWIs<lb/>
Applications are available<lb/>
from the Transit Office in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Basement<lb/>
If you enjoy working around<lb/>
people In a constantly<lb/>
changing environment, we're<lb/>
loowng for you. We pay for<lb/>
your training and assist in<lb/>
obtaining your commercial<lb/>
driver's license. You set your<lb/>
work schedule to fit your<lb/>
needs. Hiring now for<lb/>
summer training.<lb/>
ecu n-anstt- A student organization<lb/>
serving the students, staff omI faculty<lb/>
of East Carolina university daily.<lb/>
Rodgers and Hammerslein's dazzling love story<lb/>
The Kiruj and I<lb/>
June 20-24<lb/>
starring six-time Emmy award winner<lb/>
Justin Deas, "Buzz" on The Guiding Light<lb/>
George Bernard Shaw's delightful comedy<lb/>
Misalliance<lb/>
July 4-8<lb/>
The "Peanuts" musical<lb/>
you're a Good Man, f<lb/>
Charlie Brourn rffe<lb/>
July 18-22 . ilfl<lb/>
Call 252-328-6829<lb/>
for ticket information.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0005"/><lb/>
'WiadrteSafey Jbrb1'?2obo<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
" I' -i r. i<lb/>
 Hn?iM 'I<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
The Eavs?teao?irtrarV'15<lb/>
opi nion?tec. ecu. edu<lb/>
OUR VIEW<lb/>
Chris Sachs<lb/>
MY OPINION<lb/>
We're<lb/>
not saying<lb/>
we condone<lb/>
disobeying fire<lb/>
safety regula-<lb/>
tions, but we<lb/>
understand.<lb/>
The residence halls on this campus are notorious<lb/>
for their constant ejecting of students due to trigger-<lb/>
happy fire alarms. As a result, most residents would<lb/>
much rather stay and see what happens between Nikki<lb/>
and Victor than tromp out into the elements just to<lb/>
stand around for the umpteenth time that week. We're<lb/>
not saying we condone disobeying fire safety regula-<lb/>
tions, but we understand.<lb/>
So for whatever reason these fire 'drills' drive girls<lb/>
out of the building in their bath towels at 7 a.m it<lb/>
has to be stopped. If it's steam that sets them off, fix<lb/>
the ventilation. If it's people pulling pranks, knock it<lb/>
off. Because at the rate these things go off, by the<lb/>
time a real fire happens no one will pay attention.<lb/>
Residents, don't ignore the drills, either. Get your<lb/>
lazy selves up out of bed and go stand outside with<lb/>
everyone else, because you may be sick of the drills,<lb/>
but sometimes the alarms go off for a reason.<lb/>
Going from bad to diverse<lb/>
JaisalCodhi<lb/>
IN MY OPINION<lb/>
Microsoft break-up doesn't compute<lb/>
The Justice Department for the<lb/>
United States seems to think that it<lb/>
would be in the best interest of the<lb/>
general public to break up the giant<lb/>
software company Microsoft. Their<lb/>
case involves the violation of a num-<lb/>
ber of anti-trust laws and unethical<lb/>
business practices. While it may seem<lb/>
to some that breaking up Microsoft<lb/>
is a good idea, 1 believe that leaving<lb/>
it alone would be much better for the<lb/>
consumer.<lb/>
Microsoft has already shown that<lb/>
it can more than meet consumer<lb/>
demands. Its application software,<lb/>
Windows Operating System and its<lb/>
Web browsers keep surprising us with<lb/>
their capabilities. There is no doubt<lb/>
that Microsoft is not holding any-<lb/>
thing back because of a lack of<lb/>
enough competition.<lb/>
The event that triggered this case<lb/>
started with the integration of the<lb/>
Microsoft Internet Explorer to Win-<lb/>
dows '98. While this might not be<lb/>
good news for Netscape, Microsoft's<lb/>
business practices aren't exactly un-<lb/>
fair. It makes a lot of sense for a com-<lb/>
pany to promote its products; this<lb/>
is just what Microsoft did. If this is<lb/>
an illegal or immoral business prac-<lb/>
tice, then every successful business<lb/>
is guilty of this charge.<lb/>
The case really took off on April 3,<lb/>
when Judgp (ackson, the presiding<lb/>
judge in this case, came to the con-<lb/>
clusion that Microsoft has main-<lb/>
tained a monopoly power over per-<lb/>
sonal computer operating systems by<lb/>
anti-competitive means and has at-<lb/>
tempted to monopolize the Web<lb/>
browser market. The attorneys rep-<lb/>
resenting the government then sub-<lb/>
mitted a plan to break the company<lb/>
into two.<lb/>
Jackson didn't seem to think this<lb/>
was enough and has asked that a new<lb/>
plan be brought forth to split the<lb/>
company three ways, even though<lb/>
no one is in favor of it. It seems that<lb/>
Jackson has absolutely no knowledge<lb/>
of the software industry. I believe he<lb/>
is not fit to handle this case.<lb/>
What will happen next? Microsoft<lb/>
will appeal Jackson's decision. From<lb/>
an economical point of view, analysts<lb/>
say that these three new companies<lb/>
will be worth 10-15 percent less than<lb/>
the Microsoft of today. Shares of the<lb/>
stock have already fallen since the an-<lb/>
nouncement of this new plan. This<lb/>
could drive up the cost of the soft-<lb/>
ware rather than reduce it, which was<lb/>
the purpose of splitting up the com-<lb/>
pany in the first place.<lb/>
The split will benefit only a very<lb/>
small number of people-those who<lb/>
are in competition with Microsoft-<lb/>
and it will hurt the vast majority, es-<lb/>
pecially the consumer. The economy<lb/>
cannot possibly be better off with<lb/>
two or more Microsofts, and the<lb/>
shareholders have a lot to lose if this<lb/>
were to happen. It will also drive<lb/>
costs up, which would in turn drive<lb/>
prices up. It is apparent that the<lb/>
breaking up of Microsoft would be a<lb/>
big mistake. I just wish that some-<lb/>
body would tell Judge Jackson.<lb/>
I recently had the opportunity to overhear a<lb/>
person talking about the South and the North,<lb/>
and it reminded me just how much I hate this<lb/>
argument. In hopes to end this never-ending<lb/>
debate I shall now give my 2 cents. However, I<lb/>
must speak the truth. And if you are offended<lb/>
in any way  well, too bad.<lb/>
I am really upset that the debate and name<lb/>
calling between the North and the South is still<lb/>
prevalent in our society. People act like it's the<lb/>
Civil War all over again. 1 cannot think of a<lb/>
more bankrupt argument and one that may<lb/>
never go away. I hope to make a few points<lb/>
that can maybe put this geographical saber-<lb/>
rattling to bed.<lb/>
I feel qualified as a mediator for this argu-<lb/>
ment because I have lived in both the North<lb/>
and the South for equal periods of time. To start<lb/>
off, the South has a courteous and friendly<lb/>
reputation. Southerners are proud of this ste-<lb/>
reotype. But that is all it is- stereotype. South-<lb/>
erners are only courteous and friendly to other<lb/>
white Southerners.<lb/>
The South has never been known to be too<lb/>
courteous to Blacks, or any ethnic group as far<lb/>
I have seen. Sure, they may not all be racist<lb/>
but I have heard 'good 'ol boys' tell me Black<lb/>
and homosexual jokes more than ever before<lb/>
in my life down here.<lb/>
People describe Northerners as rude, pushy<lb/>
people who talk too fast. That may be so, but<lb/>
we Americans are a product of where we were<lb/>
raised. Southerners are considered slower-<lb/>
paced, some may say, but have you been to<lb/>
Atlanta recently? How about Nashville, Colum-<lb/>
bia, Dallas or RaleighThey are very busy. The<lb/>
people in those areas move quickly, talk fast<lb/>
and will bump you on the streets without a<lb/>
second thought. Being fast and rude is not a<lb/>
Northern thing; it's a population thing.<lb/>
Now I have found small sleepy Southern<lb/>
towns terrified of change. They are ignorant of<lb/>
the ways outside their small town and so they<lb/>
are afraid of what they don't understand. I have<lb/>
heard too many Southerners say that they don't<lb/>
want to live outside their small town or they<lb/>
don't want to experience new cultures. "1 was<lb/>
born here, raised here and I'm gonna die here<lb/>
How sick and pitiful and close-minded is that?<lb/>
I don't meet small country folk who want to<lb/>
try Indian food for dinner. I don't see old South-<lb/>
ern families going out to cultural festivals in<lb/>
the nearest big city. I definitely don't see young<lb/>
Southern cowboy wannabees lining up to go<lb/>
see the latest Spike Lee opus.<lb/>
Now that happens up North too, but not<lb/>
nearly as much as the South-not by a long shot.<lb/>
Not even close! Go to Harvard Square in Bos-<lb/>
ton, or New York City, or Seattle or any large<lb/>
northern city. You will see many, many people<lb/>
of different ethnic backgrounds all talking and<lb/>
dating and interacting and keeping open-<lb/>
minds. There is a true melting pot and the<lb/>
people are very tolerant of others that are dif-<lb/>
ferent. But God forbid you be an interracial<lb/>
couple who goes shopping or out to eat dinner<lb/>
in Farmvitle or Mayberry.<lb/>
To close, I have lived in the North and I have<lb/>
lived in the South. Both have advantages and<lb/>
both have problems. Northerners: Quit mak-<lb/>
ing fun of the Southerners. Southerners: Take<lb/>
down your useless Dixie flag and disregard the<lb/>
Mason-Dixon Line. Quit harping about the<lb/>
Civil War and stop acting like it happened last<lb/>
month. All that old-time stuff is meaningless<lb/>
now and only helps keep this country separate.<lb/>
So please, you morons, see that there is no South<lb/>
or North. There is just America.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted<lb/>
at csachs@tec.ecu.edu.<lb/>
u&amp;om IN MY OPINION<lb/>
Greenville drivers take it slow<lb/>
What is the deal with people that can't drive<lb/>
in Greenville? When I moved here a few<lb/>
months ago, I was told by friends of mine to<lb/>
watch out when it rained because people are<lb/>
afraid to drive in it around here. At the time I<lb/>
laughed, but 1 know now that it is true!<lb/>
If you are ever caught on Greenville Boule-<lb/>
vard when it rains you'd better be careful.<lb/>
There will inevitably be some fool in front of<lb/>
you going 5 mph and someone next to you<lb/>
going 6 mph. Come on people! It's only rain!<lb/>
You can go the speed limit!<lb/>
And don't even get me started on the people<lb/>
who sit at a green light and chow down on<lb/>
their burger or women who put on their lip-<lb/>
stick. Let's not also forget those people who<lb/>
forget to turn their signals off after they make<lb/>
a turn 20 minutes beforehand, or those who<lb/>
never use one at all! I get so frustrated driving<lb/>
in this town. I honestly think the Department<lb/>
of Motor Vehicles put out a sign that said: "ALL<lb/>
IDIOTS: Free license today, no test or intelli-<lb/>
gence required<lb/>
Granted, I know that not everyone here is a<lb/>
bad driver. However, driving is not a rocket<lb/>
science, and if you can't do it, get off the road!<lb/>
This writer can be contacted<lb/>
at lgritfin@tec.ecu.edu.<lb/>
( Carolinian<lb/>
Mefyssa L Ofeda, Editor<lb/>
Carolyn Herald, News Editor Stephen Schramm, Sports Editor<lb/>
Emihj Uttle, Features Editor Laura Benedict, Head Copy Editor<lb/>
Emily Richardson, Photo Editor<lb/>
Serving ECU since 1925, The East Carolinian prmli 11,000 copies<lb/>
every Tuesday and Thursday during the regular academic year<lb/>
and 5,000 on Wednesdays during (he summer. "Our View is the<lb/>
opinion ol the Editorial Board and is written by Editorial Board<lb/>
members The East Carolinian welcome letters to the editor<lb/>
which are limited to 250 words (which may be edited lor<lb/>
decency or brevity). We reserve the nght to edit or refect tetters<lb/>
and all letters must be signed and include a telephone number,<lb/>
tetters may be sent via e-mail to editon9tec.ecu.edu or to The<lb/>
East Carolinian, Student Publications Building, Greenville, NC<lb/>
27858-4353. Call 252-328-6366 tor more information<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0006"/><lb/>
O The East Carolinian<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
tit.<lb/>
MVi<lb/>
ONLY HUMAN<lb/>
OCEAN CITY, Md. (AP)-A Bal-<lb/>
timore man was hospitalized<lb/>
with a broken tail bone after<lb/>
falling from a hotel balcony in<lb/>
Ocean City.<lb/>
Joseph Chromo, 22, fell from<lb/>
the fifth floor of the Holiday<lb/>
Inn on 67th Street at about<lb/>
8:30 Thursday night, police<lb/>
said. Shrubbery broke his fall.<lb/>
Witnesses told police that<lb/>
Chromo, who graduated from<lb/>
iohns Hopkins University last<lb/>
month, had been climbing<lb/>
horizontally from balcony to<lb/>
balcony earlier in the evening.<lb/>
Friends told police Chromo<lb/>
had been drinking.<lb/>
He was taken to Peninsula<lb/>
Regional Medical Center<lb/>
where he was reported in sat-<lb/>
isfactory condition Friday.<lb/>
Police also found a small<lb/>
amount of marijuana in the<lb/>
room Chromo shared with<lb/>
Christopher Jones, 23, of Bal-<lb/>
timore. Jones was charged<lb/>
with possession of marijuana<lb/>
and released on personal re-<lb/>
cognizance.<lb/>
POWELL, Wyo. (AP)-A man<lb/>
accused of smashing a pickup<lb/>
truck into a church after he<lb/>
was told to put out a cigarette<lb/>
will undergo psychiatric test-<lb/>
ing at the Wyoming State<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
Kenneth Wiley, 47, faces one<lb/>
count of knowingly defacing<lb/>
property and nine charges of<lb/>
attempting to cause bodily in-<lb/>
jury with a deadly weapon.<lb/>
Witnesses said Wiley walked<lb/>
into the Church of jesus Christ<lb/>
of Latter-day Saints following<lb/>
a baptismal ceremony April 10<lb/>
with a lit cigarette. After he re<lb/>
fused repeated requests to ex<lb/>
tinguish it, church members<lb/>
pushed him outside and<lb/>
locked the doors.<lb/>
He attempted several times to<lb/>
enter again, then rammed the<lb/>
church with his pickup, wit-<lb/>
nesses said. The truck crashed<lb/>
through two sets of doors and<lb/>
wound up in a gymnasium<lb/>
against a cinder block, wall.<lb/>
Wiley suffered minor facial<lb/>
cuts. No one else was injured.<lb/>
The mental evaluation, re-<lb/>
quested May 26 by public de-<lb/>
fender G. Mark Garrison, will<lb/>
put Wiley's preliminary hear<lb/>
ing on hold.<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
the wheels an the bus<lb/>
Drivers<lb/>
deserve recognition<lb/>
Wednesday June 7, 2000<lb/>
features@tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
Wedni<lb/>
www.<lb/>
Emily Little<lb/>
fEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
You probably never pay<lb/>
attention to senior plan,<lb/>
ning major Matthew<lb/>
Winslow. You may have<lb/>
thanked him every now<lb/>
and then, may have told<lb/>
him where you lived on<lb/>
occasion, but you usu-<lb/>
ally never struck up a<lb/>
conversation, even<lb/>
though he's been driving<lb/>
this campus around for<lb/>
nearly six years.<lb/>
Winslow is a university<lb/>
bus driver. He and his co-<lb/>
workers shuffle around be-<lb/>
tween ECU'S 20 currently<lb/>
functioning buses, cleaning<lb/>
up after messy students, an-<lb/>
swering the same questions of<lb/>
confused freshmen and trying to<lb/>
keep that black smoke coming out<lb/>
of the '80s era bus under control. And<lb/>
own vehicles, they stand to lose their jobs.<lb/>
It's an occupation we rarely notice, even though<lb/>
$41 out of our student fees went straight to the transit<lb/>
system this year. A healthy handful of that money pays for<lb/>
new buses. This year, for instance, the university purchased three<lb/>
new ones, and will purchase two more in the coming months. Most of<lb/>
the buses in use today are 10 to 12 years old.<lb/>
"They're constantly in need of repair of one kind or another<lb/>
said Scott Alford, ECU's transit adviser.<lb/>
Most of the new buses will include such features as cli<lb/>
mate control and more accessible wheelchair ramps,<lb/>
"That's not bells and whistles Alford said. "That's cur-<lb/>
rent technology<lb/>
The changes are just fine with Winslow, who says that<lb/>
driving a bus is actually very simple.<lb/>
"Anyone can be a bus driver he said. "You've seen<lb/>
some of the people who drive a bus<lb/>
The major annoyances, he says, are the students who<lb/>
constantly ask where the bus goes and the repetition of<lb/>
driving the same route over and over.<lb/>
"I'll pay attention and all that stuff he said. "But<lb/>
most of the time its like autopilot<lb/>
Winslow prefers for passengers to talk to him while he<lb/>
drives. Otherwise the boredom can be a little overwhelm-<lb/>
ing. Besides, he's got quite a few stories to tell after six years<lb/>
of driving students from one place to another.<lb/>
For instance, one afternoon he was sideswiped by a little old<lb/>
lady who tried to drive straight into the bus when she failed to notice<lb/>
that she'd hit it. He's cleaned up after sick students on the "drunk bus aka the Pirate Ride He<lb/>
overhears conversations and sees all that goes on in his rearview mirror. And he's perfectly willing<lb/>
to chat about it, assuming you express an interest.<lb/>
Of course that doesn't go for all bus drivers. Some may prefer to drive in silence, just as some<lb/>
may prefer to drive the same route every day.<lb/>
But Winslow likes it when people acknowledge the driver as they step on the bus It gives him<lb/>
something to smile about while he watches for smoke from the tailpipe, leaky transmission fluid<lb/>
or little old ladies with kamikaze cars. It even makes him inclined to do favdh.<lb/>
"I'll drop you off anywhere you want to be as long as you're nice to me Winslow said.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at features.tec.ecu.edu.<lb/>
G<lb/>
f<lb/>
'aii<lb/>
We<lb/>
Junior Kevin Blount says that<lb/>
employment from the<lb/>
transit authority as a<lb/>
driver is one of the<lb/>
highest paying jobs<lb/>
for students on<lb/>
campus (top<lb/>
photo). Junior<lb/>
H e a t h e r<lb/>
Vaughan's bus<lb/>
ride adventure<lb/>
comes to an end<lb/>
(middle photo) as<lb/>
junior Suzanne<lb/>
Cluth, (bottom<lb/>
photo) begins hers.<lb/>
(photos by Emily<lb/>
Richardson)<lb/>
0<lb/>
.???<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0007"/><lb/>
Wednesday June 7. 2000<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
IUJI.1.IJI.JM<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
The East Carolinian 7<lb/>
features@tec. ecu.edu<lb/>
PICK OF THE WEEK: Mission: Impossible<lb/>
Emily Little<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
,ab'?t sis<lb/>
 i-art1. den<lb/>
car<lb/>
We specialize in tattoohg<lb/>
and body piercing only<lb/>
are Greenville's only health<lb/>
department inspected studio<lb/>
earc eo5 wn?m,n<lb/>
navel:? .mtmttlmlt<lb/>
8 years with 15 years experience<lb/>
We will beat any competitor's<lb/>
advertised prices!<lb/>
Large selection of imported<lb/>
&amp; domestic jewelry!<lb/>
Tuesday-Thursday: 1-9p.m<lb/>
Friday: 1 lOp.m Saturday: 12 lOp.m<lb/>
CALL US! 756-0600<lb/>
TnTxr??.?PP0,NTMENT NECESSARY<lb/>
TATTOOING BY AWARD WINNING ARTISTS!<lb/>
From downtown, go straight down Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
Extension, located at 4685 US Hwy. 13, Greenville.<lb/>
Ethan Hunt is back, but this time the buffed-up Tom Cruise brought<lb/>
along more face masks, more hair, and more importantly, John Woo<lb/>
mat s a hell of a combination, and it's a hell of a movie<lb/>
It starts off a little slow. In the same amount of time the first Mission-<lb/>
Impossible took to show the audience four mysterious deaths, a blown-<lb/>
up car and an exploding fish tank, this one gives us a mildly interest-<lb/>
ing plane crash, some very surreal car chasing and a chopped off pinky<lb/>
finger. That may sound like the same thing, but it's not nearly as inter-<lb/>
estmg when sandwiched between a long look at Cruises muscle-heavy<lb/>
free climb up a rocky mountain face, and a handful of longing looks at<lb/>
a beaunful young thief. It's especially disappointing when neither of<lb/>
those .s riddled with intrigue the way the lulls in the first movie are<lb/>
Pth?n u? otner Problem ?s that the love story develops a little too fast<lb/>
comes 71 itsynwnhf ?2 T ' 1"? ab?Ut SPV a"d hiS WOman' Missi? ? 2 suddenly<lb/>
Hun as a scrawny boy in his underwear, dancing around in the Ling room in Risky BusZT<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at leatures@tec.ecu.edu.<lb/>
Jump on In!<lb/>
Aqua Theater 2000<lb/>
Co-Sponsored by the ECU Student Union, SPC, and Campus Dining Services<lb/>
Thursday, June 8<lb/>
Film starts at 9 p.m.<lb/>
SRC Outdoor Pool: Free popcorn<lb/>
and soft drinks. Bring your own<lb/>
lawn chair or blanket and relax<lb/>
under the stars!<lb/>
Free admission with valid ECU One Card<lb/>
Rain date: Tues June 13th<lb/>
Election ; Rated R ? Runtime IfB<lb/>
Tracy Flick is the smartest student in all Carver<lb/>
High and the only one having an affair with a<lb/>
teacher. Her other teacher Mr.McAllister is the<lb/>
most involved teacher at Carver High and is mess-<lb/>
ing around with his wife's best friend. Elections<lb/>
are coming up and Tracy Flick is the only one run-<lb/>
ning and after seeing Tracy always winning some-<lb/>
thing and doing everything right, Mr. McAllister<lb/>
bribes the dumb jock Paul to run against her for<lb/>
his own pleasure. Tracy is mortified that Paul is<lb/>
even trying to compete. Tammy Paul's lesbiansister<lb/>
who got dumped by her girlfriend to go with Paul<lb/>
decides that running against her brother is the best<lb/>
revenge. After the three say their speeches every-<lb/>
thing goes on a downfall. Who will win the elec-<lb/>
tion this year?<lb/>
?KESWICK<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
Amenities<lb/>
? Stepsaving kitchens with<lb/>
frost free refrigerator,<lb/>
continous clean range,<lb/>
dish washer, disposal<lb/>
? Washerdryer hookups<lb/>
? Private balcony or patio,<lb/>
with outdoor storage<lb/>
? Carpeting, miniblinds and<lb/>
vertical blinds<lb/>
? Wood-burning fireplace<lb/>
with mantel<lb/>
Facilities<lb/>
? energy saving heat pump<lb/>
? Ceiling fans<lb/>
? Walk-in closets<lb/>
? On site laundry facilities<lb/>
? 21 hour emergency<lb/>
maintenance<lb/>
? On site management<lb/>
? ADA Compliant<lb/>
Apartments available<lb/>
? Pets welcome<lb/>
? Clubhouse with swimming pool<lb/>
? Lighted tennis court<lb/>
? Sand Volleyball court<lb/>
? Children's playground<lb/>
? Fully-equipped Fitness Center<lb/>
1510 Bridle Circle<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone: 252-355-2198<lb/>
Fax: 252-355-4973<lb/>
www.rent.netdirectkeswlck<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0008"/><lb/>
O The East Carolinian<lb/>
www. tec. ec u. ed u<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Wednesday June 7, 2000<lb/>
features@tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
60 Minutes founder lashes out<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)-Don Hewitt,<lb/>
founder of the TV news program<lb/>
60 Minutes, lashed out at a former<lb/>
colleague for The Insider movie,<lb/>
saying he wouldn't allow Lowell<lb/>
Bergman "within a hundred<lb/>
miles of a newsroom<lb/>
Hewitt, who has kept largely<lb/>
silent about the movie that de-<lb/>
picts a dark episode in 60 Min-<lb/>
utes history, chose a speech be-<lb/>
fore a conference of investigative<lb/>
reporters and editors on Saturday<lb/>
to talk about it.<lb/>
The movie, which drew strong<lb/>
reviews last fall but was a disap-<lb/>
pointment at the box office last<lb/>
fall, depicts 60 Minutes, and<lb/>
Hewitt, caving to pressure from<lb/>
CBS lawyers and not airing a<lb/>
whisteblowing report from an ex-<lb/>
tobacco executive. The full report<lb/>
eventually aired.<lb/>
Bergman was portrayed by ac-<lb/>
tor Al Pacino as a crusading 60<lb/>
Minutes segment producer who<lb/>
arranged ex-tobacco executive<lb/>
Jeffrey Wigand's interview, then<lb/>
quit when CBS initially would<lb/>
not air it.<lb/>
Hewitt criticized the film, and<lb/>
Bergman, for taking artistic li-<lb/>
cense with the story. In reality,<lb/>
Bergman kept working for CBS<lb/>
after the episode, he said.<lb/>
"When a journalist who pro-<lb/>
fesses to be dedicated to the truth,<lb/>
the whole truth and nothing but<lb/>
the truth conspires with a screen-<lb/>
writer to concoct a movie about<lb/>
himself that portrays him, by<lb/>
name, saying things he never said<lb/>
and doing things he never did,<lb/>
that is not a journalist I would<lb/>
allow within a hundred miles of<lb/>
a newsroom Hewitt said.<lb/>
Bergman, who now works for<lb/>
PBS's Frontline, said that he didn't<lb/>
have control over the script.<lb/>
"He's entitled to his opinion<lb/>
Bergman said. "He didn't seem to<lb/>
have any problem and in fact on<lb/>
many occasions praised my work<lb/>
and its accuracy and the subjects<lb/>
I chose to cover for 16 years<lb/>
Hewitt said that Bergman had<lb/>
asked 60 Minutes correspondent<lb/>
Mike Wallace to intercede to get<lb/>
him more work at CBS after the<lb/>
Wigand episode. Bergman said<lb/>
that was not true.<lb/>
Contrary to Bergman's asser-<lb/>
tion, 60 Minutes was not afraid<lb/>
to talk about corporate censor-<lb/>
ship, Hewitt said. But Bergman<lb/>
said that this came only after<lb/>
outside pressure was applied.<lb/>
60 Minutes is not afraid to take<lb/>
on big institutions or report<lb/>
negatively on things in which<lb/>
CBS has a corporate interest,<lb/>
Hewitt said. He cited a report<lb/>
about bribery at a Winter Olym-<lb/>
pics that CBS broadcast and a<lb/>
Wallace story about defects in<lb/>
the Ford Pinto, even though Ford<lb/>
was a major CBS advertiser.<lb/>
"Anyone who has watched 60<lb/>
Minutes, let alone worked for 60<lb/>
Minutes, knows that is foolish-<lb/>
ness he said.<lb/>
Hewitt also criticized the Co-<lb/>
lumbia University Graduate<lb/>
School of Journalism for holding<lb/>
a seminar on The Insider.<lb/>
Bergman said Hewitt was invited<lb/>
to attend and noted that he<lb/>
wasn't offered an opportunity to<lb/>
rebut Hewitt before the investi-<lb/>
gative reporters.<lb/>
THIS IS NOT THE<lb/>
FLOOR PLAN OF A HOUSE.<lb/>
IT'S ATREASUKE MAE<lb/>
Your home ull be hiding some valuable treasure.<lb/>
More iluui 40 years ago. Grandma gm you a nirr bundle tif Serte C<lb/>
Savings Bonds- So you put them In a sale rrfaw and forgot about them<lb/>
unlit now And even though your old Series r Bonds are no longer<lb/>
earning interest, they could still be worth more than 5 times their<lb/>
f?re value So why not redeem those old bonds at your local flruixlal<lb/>
institution' To find out more, call fwo Mrs BOND<lb/>
Begin searching your memory then start searrhmg your house Rcause<lb/>
old Savings Bonds are a treasure worth digging for<lb/>
Do you ruveoWSvinpio?fa? Check out the Sw lond UkUator I<lb/>
xwwwiwwitfroMiLgM to drwovefUw v.<lb/>
SAVINGS <lb/>
IBONDS !<lb/>
A put Mtvfcx of chi puhUauM<lb/>
Billboard Hot 100: Top 20<lb/>
You drank.<lb/>
You danced.<lb/>
You had se<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Tests<lb/>
Call Carolina Pregnancy Center 757-0003<lb/>
1. "Maria Maria Santana<lb/>
2. "You Sang To Me Marc Anthony.<lb/>
3. "Thong Song Sisqo.<lb/>
4. "Breathe Faith Hill.<lb/>
5. "Be With You Enrique Iglesias.<lb/>
6. "Try Again Aaliyah.<lb/>
7. "The Real Slim Shady Eminem.<lb/>
8. "Everything You Want Vertical Horizon<lb/>
9. "Oops! I Did It Again Britney Spears. '<lb/>
10. "I Try Macy Gray.<lb/>
11. "He Wasn't Man Enough Toni Braxton<lb/>
12. "I Wanna Know Joe.<lb/>
13. "Higher Creed.<lb/>
14. "Say My Name Destiny's Child.<lb/>
15. "There You Go Pink.<lb/>
16. "Otherside Red Hot Chili Peppers.<lb/>
17. "I Turn To You Christina Aguilera.<lb/>
18. "Bent matchbox twenty.<lb/>
19. "It's Gonna Be Me 'N Sync.<lb/>
20. "Bye Bye Bye 'N Sync.<lb/>
ELT0RC<lb/>
Barber &amp; Style<lb/>
1 men's hair<lb/>
styling shoppe<lb/>
2800 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Walk In or Appt.<lb/>
MonFri. 9-6<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
2800<lb/>
i unit si.<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Special<lb/>
SgOO<lb/>
Style &amp; Cut<lb/>
lllwy Patrol Station<lb/>
?'I I til<lb/>
Torn<lb/>
Eastgatr Shopping Ctr.<lb/>
2800 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Eastgatc Shopping Cola<lb/>
Actob From jjgfa? Patrol<lb/>
$<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0009"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Wednesday- June 7, 2O0Q<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
It<lb/>
IB 2 hmths omr<lb/>
$100Noff<lb/>
Our Club Features<lb/>
ALL 1 YEAR<lb/>
MEMBERSHIPS<lb/>
? Cardio Kickboxing 'Yoga Classes ? Light &amp; Easy Classes<lb/>
? Senior Memberships ? Treadmills .Wolfe Tanning<lb/>
? Weight Equipment ? Massage Therapy<lb/>
I , 1 FREE VISIT !<lb/>
FOR WOMEN ONLY<lb/>
 VV ? FITNESS CENTER <lb/>
301 Plaza Drive, firppnville. NC 756-159?<lb/>
www.attlc-ninhtclub.com<lb/>
? Uptown Greenville<lb/>
?<lb/>
209 E. 5th St.<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
Ticket Locations:<lb/>
CO ALLEY J<lb/>
EAST COAST MUSIC ?<lb/>
WASH PUB ? SKULLVS4<lb/>
nescfay, June<lb/>
Comedy Zone with A<lb/>
Mike Veneman &amp; Todd McLune j<lb/>
ursaay, June 8 f<lb/>
B J in the Rathskeller ?<lb/>
aurday, June Tfff<lb/>
i Breakfast Club<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
aturday, June17i<lb/>
Cold Sweat ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
.odiuroay, Jun<lb/>
?Cravin' Melon <lb/>
The East Carolinian 9<lb/>
features@tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
Theaters add luxury to entice audiences<lb/>
FRAMINGHAM, Massachusetts (AP) - Forget<lb/>
stale popcorn and watered-down soda. Forget<lb/>
broken seats, tiny screens and bad speakers.<lb/>
Movie theater owners want people to think<lb/>
mixed drinks, rib-eye steak and squash-filled<lb/>
ravioli. Served in leather chairs in front of<lb/>
screens that go from floor to ceiling. With in-<lb/>
tense, near-deafening sound.<lb/>
Everything from full dinners to Ferris wheel<lb/>
rides now are being offered to lure consumers,<lb/>
who are faced with an increasing number of op-<lb/>
tions to going to the movies.<lb/>
More than a century after well-dressed<lb/>
theatergoers crowded to see the first moving pic-<lb/>
ture, a night at some theaters has returned to<lb/>
what it once was: an event.<lb/>
"It used to be that you could pay 25 cents<lb/>
and get more than just a feature-length movie<lb/>
for your money said Terrance Demas, director<lb/>
of the League of Historic American Theaters in<lb/>
Baltimore. "With TV, that somehow got lost.<lb/>
Now, that's what people want again<lb/>
In 1999, U.S. theaters took in nearly dlrs 7<lb/>
billion in ticket sales, up more than dlrs 1 bil-<lb/>
lion from the previous year, according to the<lb/>
National Association of Theater Owners.<lb/>
But with the rapid growth of new media and<lb/>
home entertainment systems, theater owners are<lb/>
concerned those numbers could start to drop if<lb/>
they don't offer their patrons more than just<lb/>
popcorn and a movie.<lb/>
In San Francisco, Sony recently opened a 15-<lb/>
screen Metreon Theater in a massive market-<lb/>
place, complete with restaurants, an amusement<lb/>
park, a children's museum, Sony stores and four<lb/>
IMAX theaters that show multidimensional<lb/>
films.<lb/>
Resort Theaters of America is planning to open<lb/>
about 500 theaters at resorts in California, Utah<lb/>
and Colorado that will offer gourmet coffee,<lb/>
chocolates and pastries in the lobby, a supervised<lb/>
playroom for children, and a digital screen show<lb/>
before the movie begins.<lb/>
And in Massachusetts, Wisconsin and Mary-<lb/>
land, General Cinemas has opened Premium<lb/>
Cinemas, where patrons can have dinner - any-<lb/>
thing from oven-roasted scrod to chocolate<lb/>
mousse cake-and see a movie under the same<lb/>
roof.<lb/>
At Framingham's Premium Cinema, reserva-<lb/>
tions are recommended and no one under 21 is<lb/>
allowed.<lb/>
Patrons can dine just outside the cinema. A<lb/>
full bar is set up for drinks, and slow eaters can<lb/>
take their plates into the theater. Waiters also<lb/>
offer table service inside the auditorium for late<lb/>
orders, dessert and coffee.<lb/>
For the show, moviegoers sit in leather lounge<lb/>
chairs with ample leg room behind private<lb/>
tables. Popcorn is free and waiting at each re-<lb/>
served seat.<lb/>
"I'm sick of being in a crowded theater with<lb/>
kids kicking me and screaming in my ear said<lb/>
Michael Kelly, 26, of Marlborough, before a re-<lb/>
cent showing of Mission: Impossible II. "For me,<lb/>
just a chance to have a drink and watch a movie<lb/>
without kids around is worth it<lb/>
Unique Qffts for? Unique 5eop?s<lb/>
unusual gifts-sterling Jewelry-cancJIes- &amp;C<lb/>
Incense-burnees-tgpestHes-clothing-<lb/>
dipgons-fijiries-Fantasy-eel-tic iteros-<lb/>
bucjejhas? carcjs?wall clecoc-crystals-<lb/>
win4cblmes-beaclng supplies Sr hemp-j<lb/>
patches-nag cbarnpa Incense-men's rings-i<lb/>
prisms-plants Sr plant rooters-stlckers-<lb/>
inclonesiari, tibetan Sc rnexlcan art? " Til ?1<lb/>
MONDAY SATURDAY U-6 PM 368-8280 LOOK FOR OUR PURPLE MINING<lb/>
Everythtog yotill Need For Decorating your 9cved p9ce<lb/>
way<lb/>
COOL<lb/>
3TTJFT<lb/>
EARir0"<lb/>
learn<lb/>
We have an opening for advertising representatives beginning with<lb/>
the second summer session. Come by The East Carolinian office in<lb/>
the Student Publications Building (above the cashier's office) to com-<lb/>
plete an application or call 328-6366 for more info.<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0010"/><lb/>
UlThe East Carolinian<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Wednesday' June 7, 2O00<lb/>
4x400 relay team takes seventh at NCAAs<lb/>
Pirates overcome weather,<lb/>
poor lanes to earn trip to finals<lb/>
Stephen Schramm<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
The ECU 4x400 meter relay squad celebrates after earning a spot in the finals<lb/>
Thursday night, (photo by Garrett McMillan)<lb/>
For the ECU men's 4x400 meter relay squad, being dealt a bad hand is<lb/>
nothing new. The team has dealt with injuries and a season spent under<lb/>
stormy skies.<lb/>
At the 2000 NCAA Track and Field Championships it was no different.<lb/>
The team of sophomore Lawrence Ward, senior Darrick Ingram, junior<lb/>
James Alexander and senior Damon Davis, would again face poor lane<lb/>
assignments and rain delays yet they managed to put it all behind them<lb/>
and run the best time in school history on the biggest stage of collegiate<lb/>
track and field.<lb/>
The Pirates entered Thursday's semifinal as the lowest ranked team.<lb/>
This meant that they would be running from lane eight on the outside.<lb/>
"It's a tough seed said Head Men's Track Coach Bill Carson "It's hard<lb/>
because you're running and setting the pace for the other people<lb/>
The team did not let a tough lane assignment slow them. The team<lb/>
finished second in the heat behind Arkansas and ran the fastest time in<lb/>
school history, 3:03.23.<lb/>
Ward ran the opening leg in 45.7 seconds.<lb/>
Ingram, who ran in the semifinals of the open 400 earlier in the night,<lb/>
ran the second leg in 45.6 seconds.<lb/>
"He did great running back to back in less than an hour and 30 min-<lb/>
utes Davis said. "The only thing about Darrick is that he's very confi-<lb/>
dent in his ability and confident in us, I'm glad to have him on the team<lb/>
In the third leg Alexander kept the pressure on Arkansas and gained<lb/>
separation trom third place Southern Cal.<lb/>
"The key to the relay was James Alexander Carson said. "He ran 45.7.<lb/>
James hasn't run 45 since his freshman year. He did that in Texas. We've<lb/>
been working hard on James improving his methods of running the quar-<lb/>
ter. He's had talent all along, he just didn't run it right. He came out and<lb/>
relaxed this 100 here, got into the curve, turned it on and was strong<lb/>
coming down there. He brought that into Damon very strong<lb/>
Davis ran the anchor leg in 45.8 seconds and cemented ECU's spot in<lb/>
the finals and made sure that he and Ingram had one more race as Pirates.<lb/>
The Pirates faced their first obstacle in Saturday's finals before the race<lb/>
even begun.<lb/>
Less than half an hour before the race was scheduled to begin the meet<lb/>
see TRACK, page 12<lb/>
Ingram fails to<lb/>
make finals<lb/>
Pirate Notes<lb/>
Runner places fourth<lb/>
in preliminaries<lb/>
Stephen Schramm<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
ECU's Darrick Ingram headed into<lb/>
the 2000 Outdoor Track and Field<lb/>
Championships with a chance to<lb/>
distinguish himself from the tal-<lb/>
ented 4x400 relay squad which he<lb/>
was a part of.<lb/>
The senior competed in the open<lb/>
400 semifinals less than two hours<lb/>
before he was due to compete in the<lb/>
4x400 meter relay.<lb/>
Ingram placed fourth in the sec-<lb/>
ond heat with a time of 46.13.<lb/>
see INGRAM, page 12<lb/>
seventh place<lb/>
inals, the 20i<lb/>
school record and automatic<lb/>
in meter relay squad now siis<lb/>
"We're the best said senior Darrick Ingrai<lb/>
esl time, we've got Ihe 1x4 record, we're the b<lb/>
eer been at I asl i arolina<lb/>
llu team broke us own school record in ll<lb/>
Home trai k advantagi<lb/>
"We're running hen- in front ol the home people said Head<lb/>
Men's Track (loach Bill arson, "ll wa ; irtant for us<lb/>
to as the youngmen sa 'represent<lb/>
Iv two -Hiii meter runners<lb/>
"It Feels great,<lb/>
Phe lack ol meets held in Greenville has spawned a feeling<lb/>
among ECU'S elite runners ol familiarity with Duke's Wallace<lb/>
Wade Stadium, site oi the ' hampionships.<lb/>
"What make it so great is that Duke is like home for us said<lb/>
senior Damon Davis. "Because we really don't have a hometrai k.<lb/>
lb tlo it at Duke, in our lasi season for me and (Ingram), it's awe-<lb/>
some, because it's like home<lb/>
The Pirates visited Durham earlier in the season at the Duke<lb/>
eas and I leel pie<lb/>
I 'oiei plao<lb/>
the 400 meters, N.C, State's Tyrone<lb/>
is heal in a time ol 46.61. Before he<lb/>
eot ,i , stale, I lozier snent twovears<lb/>
le hasn't run a:<lb/>
i . i i .<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0011"/><lb/>
ednesday June 7, 2OO0<lb/>
'tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
r?<lb/>
The East Carolinian!)<lb/>
Softball ends season with 60 wins<lb/>
Kee picks up 200th<lb/>
coaching victory<lb/>
Ryan Downey<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The ECU softball team topped<lb/>
loff a great '99-2000 campaign<lb/>
I with a 2-1 victory over 1 )artmouth<lb/>
I in the ECAC title game at George<lb/>
I Mason last month.<lb/>
ECU had a fantastic year setting<lb/>
 a record of 60 wins in a season.<lb/>
Denise Reagan pitched a com-<lb/>
I plete game pushing her record to<lb/>
 26-8 on the season in the win.<lb/>
Despite their strong season, the<lb/>
I Pirates were not given an invita-<lb/>
tion to the NCAA tournament.<lb/>
All season long the team was<lb/>
keyed by superior play from se-<lb/>
niors Denise Reagati and Amekea<lb/>
McDougald.<lb/>
"1 would say the over all squad<lb/>
did a wonderful job. They ex-<lb/>
ceeded my expectations as well as<lb/>
their own said Head Coach<lb/>
I'racy Kee. "I would say that not<lb/>
one individual did it all The big-<lb/>
gest surprise was that at different<lb/>
times a different individual would<lb/>
step up for us<lb/>
This season, as well, featured<lb/>
Despite their record setting season, the ECU softball team was not given an NCAA bid. (file<lb/>
photo)<lb/>
body said Kee.<lb/>
Coach Kee was able to pick up<lb/>
her 200th coaching victory this<lb/>
season (her fourth). In four years<lb/>
who won over 20 games this sea-<lb/>
son (26) will be missed and re-<lb/>
placed in the regular rotation by<lb/>
a freshman. Her leadership and<lb/>
different then hii past three, "said<lb/>
Kee. "I think next year losing<lb/>
Reagan will put a lot of pressure<lb/>
on the freshman coming in<lb/>
Kelty ? Eagle Creek ? 1V1S R ? Woolrich<lb/>
0EAN KAYAK<lb/>
Everything you need to<lb/>
enjoy the great outdoors!<lb/>
MjScim<lb/>
eicYca<lb/>
lanche Si. pr<lb/>
canoes &amp; kayaks<lb/>
53o cm<lb/>
(252) 757-3616<lb/>
215 p. Arlington Blvd<lb/>
(252) 756-3301<lb/>
?? w.nic clepost.com<lb/>
.0 IT POST<lb/>
 TRAIL Ml OP ?<lb/>
530 (otanche Si.<lb/>
(252)757-0713<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
wnvt.outposltrail.com<lb/>
Store Hours 10-6 Mon - Sat<lb/>
Mountain Hardware ? Birkenstock ? reva ? The Norihlacc ? Vasque<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0012"/><lb/>
lThe feist cferciririiari<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
" ?<lb/>
?? ?-?????<lb/>
????-?<lb/>
<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
?iVi?<lb/>
Wednesday'June'20ut)v<lb/>
sports&amp;tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
TRACK<lb/>
from page 10<lb/>
I<lb/>
was halted for nearly ninety minutes due to threatening<lb/>
weather. The delay pushed the starting time of the finals<lb/>
back from 9:15 p.m. to 10:50 p.m.<lb/>
"When it started raining and they postponed the meet,<lb/>
my head got all messed up Ward said. "I couldn't get loose<lb/>
again for the race, I just tied up bad and didn't run that<lb/>
well<lb/>
Ward's lead off leg of 46.4 seconds left the Pirates near<lb/>
the back of the eight-team field, and caused Ingram and<lb/>
the rest of the Pirates to try and make up ground.<lb/>
"When you don't get your lead off leg into position then<lb/>
you're not running your race Carson said. "(Ingram) had<lb/>
to go because after that hand off we're in sixth or seventh<lb/>
position and we're chasing. (Ingram) ran much too hard<lb/>
Ingram's attempt to put the Pirates back in front nearly<lb/>
paid off. Coming down the back stretch, Ingram had moved<lb/>
up as high as third. However, in the final 100 meters Ingram<lb/>
fell back into sixth.<lb/>
"I got out too hard in the first 200 (meters), I died com-<lb/>
ing home Ingram said.<lb/>
Alexander's leg was similar to that of Ingram. The junior<lb/>
came out fast and got the Pirates as high as fourth before<lb/>
again falling back into sixth.<lb/>
"They got us up in there except when you make the hand<lb/>
off. Your last 20 meters are slow Carson said. "By the time<lb/>
we came out of there, we kept coming out fifth, sixth or<lb/>
seventh<lb/>
On the anchor leg, Davis was unable to gain ground on<lb/>
the leaders and spent much of his lap in sixth. Davis was<lb/>
only caught at the line by Georgia Tech and the Pirates<lb/>
finished seventh.<lb/>
"We weren't running our best times Davis said. "The<lb/>
thing is that we can still be thankful that we made it here,<lb/>
and that we made it to the finals. We're still Ail-Americans.<lb/>
This miter can be contacted at sports@tec.ecu.edu.<lb/>
Lawrence Ward gets set for the semifinals of the 4x400 meter relay, (photo<lb/>
by Garrett McMillan)<lb/>
INGRAM<lb/>
horn page 10<lb/>
"I'm not mad about the time but I<lb/>
feel I should have run a better time<lb/>
Ingram said. "46.13, it's not a great<lb/>
time. 1 was looking for 45.7 or lower<lb/>
so I could get on in to the Olympic<lb/>
Trials. I'll take 46.13 and work on<lb/>
that<lb/>
Ingram's heat featured eventual<lb/>
400 meter national champion Avard<lb/>
Moncur from Auburn. Despite<lb/>
Moncur's presence Ingram's heat<lb/>
proved to be the slowest of the three.<lb/>
"I ran good, 1 just got out too slow<lb/>
but I had a great finish Ingram said.<lb/>
"I feel that if I got out fast I would<lb/>
have qualified for the finals<lb/>
Like the 4x400 relay team, Ingram<lb/>
was stuck in lane eight.<lb/>
"Lane eight is never a good lane be-<lb/>
cause you never have anybody to run<lb/>
off of, everybody runs off of you<lb/>
"That's the tough thing about the<lb/>
nationals, it's the luck of the draw with<lb/>
the lanes said Head Coach Bill<lb/>
Carson. "They draw them out of a hat,<lb/>
so it's luck of the draw<lb/>
This was Ingram's second appear-<lb/>
ance in the 400 meters at the NCAA<lb/>
Championships Ingram also com-<lb/>
peted in the event in 1998.<lb/>
"Two years ago we ran in Buffalo,<lb/>
N.Y. It was about 40 degrees, here it's<lb/>
about 80 degrees so the weather is a<lb/>
good change<lb/>
Head<lb/>
Copy<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Needed.<lb/>
?Must have excellent<lb/>
grammar &amp; editing<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
?Apply at The East<lb/>
Carolinian or call<lb/>
328-6366 for info.<lb/>
WMB<lb/>
WZMB is currently accepting applications for<lb/>
summer 2000, session II for the following<lb/>
positions: program director, music director,<lb/>
production manager, promotion manager,<lb/>
grants manager, web engineer, news director,<lb/>
sports director, specialty show hosts, and OJs.<lb/>
Applications for these positions are available<lb/>
at WZMB radio station and should be submit-<lb/>
ted before June 9, 2000. WZMB is located in<lb/>
the basement of Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
across from the social room. 328-4751<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
it<lb/>
SILVER 11<lb/>
BULLET VOllS<lb/>
Doors Open: 7:30 p.m. ' Touch OfCtoss"<lb/>
756-6278<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
Lingerie Night<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Amateur Night and<lb/>
Silver Bullet Dancers<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Rock-N-Roll Night<lb/>
FRIfcSAT<lb/>
Silver Bullet Exotic Dancer<lb/>
lxuti 5 Ufa M? of GmnM ?tU Jtk. (MM AM Scnfaa I Lao I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
thsobi<lb/>
PEASANTS<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
SESSIONS<lb/>
IS PROUD TO<lb/>
BRING YOU<lb/>
CEE<lb/>
KNOWLEDGE<lb/>
frfDTHE<lb/>
cozmrrurfK<lb/>
ORCHESTRA<lb/>
FEATURING<lb/>
DOODLEBUG<lb/>
FROMDTGflBLE<lb/>
PLflMETS<lb/>
FRIDAY JUNE 23RD<lb/>
EVERY SUNDAY? EVEWSfflfflA'<lb/>
A-nomw TrfA-TR MAJORS<lb/>
OHMTEBNTOdST FOR BANDS<lb/>
ANYMORE!<lb/>
A SrAGt ?rw AN A0KMX <lb/>
BRlfiOTUttfrSAHDfAAREAT<lb/>
YMROBrVAL Wit US 5 SOWS OR<lb/>
5MOMI6L<lb/>
OVENIUC s HEAR m YOU<lb/>
June 3-t pec7sc7nts<lb/>
btVi Oracle Orchestra<lb/>
8tVi FiftVi house<lb/>
lStr. hipbone .<lb/>
lfeth infectious<lb/>
Ot-gSniSinS<lb/>
17th SkydOg tfypSy<lb/>
22nd fl.ps.de pViOn.cs<lb/>
23rrf cee knowledge<lb/>
and the cosmic<lb/>
funk Orchestra<lb/>
CFeatur.ng doodlebug<lb/>
froM d.gabie planets)<lb/>
A MUST SEEEEEEE<lb/>
2Nth low country bo,I<lb/>
bluegrass<lb/>
band<lb/>
27th aaga-ta<lb/>
29th hobe<lb/>
30th agents of<lb/>
good roots<lb/>
mm?<lb/>
-  :???? ?:<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0013"/><lb/>
Wednesday June 7, 2000<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
The East Carolinian! <lb/>
ads9tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
?Fmm<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
?iiiiiiMiMNuyiKiHii<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE MALE or female<lb/>
roommate needed to share spa-<lb/>
cious house and gardens. $225<lb/>
per month and one share of util-<lb/>
ities. Very affordable and secure<lb/>
location. Must see to appreciate.<lb/>
Contact Dana at 830-8828.<lb/>
ECU AREAjwo bedroom duplex<lb/>
off-street parking, window air.<lb/>
ceiling fans, pets OK $375. Three<lb/>
bedroom wcentral heatair, wd<lb/>
hookup, pets OK $550. 830-<lb/>
9502<lb/>
1 BDR- 2 bdr, water and cable<lb/>
included. ECU bus line. pool, on-<lb/>
site mngt. &amp; maintenance. Pets<lb/>
allowed. 758-4015.<lb/>
REMODELED TWO bedroom<lb/>
units available at Wildwood Vil-<lb/>
las starting at $500 per month:<lb/>
Available June 1. No pets. Call<lb/>
Chip. 355-0664 or 561-6196.<lb/>
SPACIOUS 2 8 3 bedroom town-<lb/>
houses. 2 BR 1 12 BA, 2 BR 2<lb/>
12 BA. 3 BR 1 12 BA WD hook-<lb/>
ups, new appliances, newly ren-<lb/>
ovated near ECU 752-1899 day<lb/>
561-2203 pgr night.<lb/>
LARGE FURNISHED ac room.<lb/>
Private home off 10th Street. Fe-<lb/>
male non-smoking grad only<lb/>
Summer. Kitchen, washer, use.<lb/>
$285 mo. covers all except<lb/>
phone. 752-5644<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Now Taking Leases for<lb/>
1 bedroom, 2 bedroom &amp;<lb/>
Efficiency Apartments.<lb/>
CALL 752-2865<lb/>
WALK TO ECU 1,2,3.4 or 5<lb/>
Bedrms, (no flooding), available<lb/>
June. July, or August. Call 321-<lb/>
4712 leave message.<lb/>
FEMALE. SHARE three bedroom<lb/>
home with two female students.<lb/>
Campus three blocks. Prefer<lb/>
graduate student. Central air, ceil-<lb/>
ing fans, washer, dryer. $250.00<lb/>
plus utilities. (703) 680-1676.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed.<lb/>
Non-smoking, studious for Aug.<lb/>
1 to May 31 2001. $250 rent<lb/>
plus 13 utilities. Private phone<lb/>
line, washer and dryer. Call 931-<lb/>
9467. No pets. 3 bedroom, 3<lb/>
bath condo. ,<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED starting<lb/>
July. Two blocks from campus,<lb/>
three blocks from downtown.<lb/>
$200 month plus 13 utilities.<lb/>
Non smoker preferred. Call 752-<lb/>
5885 or 717-0348.<lb/>
2 CLEAN responsible females<lb/>
needed ASAP. $250month plus<lb/>
13 cable, electric, phone. $200<lb/>
deposit. Some pets OK w depos-<lb/>
it. 3 blocks from campus. Big<lb/>
house; garage, yard. Call 758-<lb/>
7249.<lb/>
MF ROOMMATES needed Dock-<lb/>
side Apts starting Aug 1 $283<lb/>
 13 utilities. Call 329-1403.<lb/>
ASAP<lb/>
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT<lb/>
Available at Pax apartments.<lb/>
Directly across from the ECU<lb/>
Recreation Center. Only $280<lb/>
per month. Call Pitt Property<lb/>
Management 758-1921.<lb/>
WILSON ACRES<lb/>
Summer Pool<lb/>
Memberships available<lb/>
$100 with ECUPCC I.D.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
EXPERIENCED BABYSITTERS<lb/>
available days, evenings, and<lb/>
weekends. Reasonable rates.<lb/>
References available. Own trans-<lb/>
portation. Children of all ages.<lb/>
Call Jennifer at 329-1326 or Ju-<lb/>
lie at 353-6707.<lb/>
WANTED: COLLEGE student to<lb/>
keep and transport (2) 9 year<lb/>
old's to local day camps and oth-<lb/>
er activities. Call day, 355-6423.<lb/>
night 353-6101 or 756-6981.<lb/>
CHRISTIAN NURSERY workers<lb/>
needed Sunday mornings 9:15-<lb/>
12:15. Additional hours avail-<lb/>
able. Jarvis Memorial United<lb/>
Methodist Church. 510 S.<lb/>
Washington St. Apply at church<lb/>
office. Office hours - 8 am- 12<lb/>
noon, and 1:30 - 5pm.<lb/>
KIDSONE AND KidsOne Too in<lb/>
Farmville, has openings for part<lb/>
time Preschool and after school<lb/>
teachers. Applicants must have<lb/>
training or experience in early<lb/>
childhood or related field. Please<lb/>
call 753-4866.<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED at a non-<lb/>
profit kennel for homeless dogs.<lb/>
Possible pay for weekend help<lb/>
Please call 329-0118 or visit our<lb/>
website http:members.aol.com<lb/>
stjudekennels<lb/>
LEARN TO<lb/>
SKYDIVE<lb/>
CAROLINA SKY SPORTS<lb/>
1-800-SKYDIVE<lb/>
www.carolinaskysports.com<lb/>
mt Sweat It!<lb/>
2 bedrooms available, 1 bath,<lb/>
range, refrigerator, free watersewer,<lb/>
patiobalcony, washerdryer<lb/>
hookups, laundry facility<lb/>
Wesley Commons South<lb/>
5 blocks from campus, ECU bus services<lb/>
Al proper lies haw 24 hi emetgency manlenance<lb/>
Pets allowed with lee Call 758-1921<lb/>
Betty Hardee is retiring from ECU<lb/>
after 30 years to take time to ride<lb/>
the elephants.<lb/>
Good luck Betty<lb/>
from the Student Media.<lb/>
We'll miss you!<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
SUMMER JOBSI The Greenville<lb/>
Recreation and Parks Department<lb/>
is continuing to hire for their up-<lb/>
coming summer programs. A var-<lb/>
iety of positions are available<lb/>
with the Athletics' Division to in-<lb/>
clude: Camp Supervisor and<lb/>
Camp Counselors for the Sports<lb/>
Mini-Camps. Baseball coaches.<lb/>
Skate park staff and Softball<lb/>
league scorekeepers. For more in-<lb/>
formation, please contact the<lb/>
Athletic Office at 329-4550<lb/>
Monday-Friday after 2 pm.<lb/>
COMPETITIVE HOURSI Great<lb/>
payl Bowen cleaners is seeking<lb/>
dependable and dedicated indi-<lb/>
viduals to fill part-time positions<lb/>
as customer service representa-<lb/>
tives. Qualified individuals must<lb/>
have a positive and quality con-<lb/>
scious attitude, sales personali-<lb/>
ty, and basic computer skills<lb/>
Part-time hours: 3p.m. to 7 p.m.<lb/>
M-F: 8 a.m. to 5p.m. (every oth-<lb/>
er weekend). Applications will be<lb/>
accepted at the Bells Fork loca-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: small company<lb/>
located walking distance from<lb/>
shipping department (average 3<lb/>
hours per day). Some heavy lift-<lb/>
ing involved $5.50hour. Call<lb/>
830-5577.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
ATTENTION GRADUATING sen-<lb/>
iors. Jefferson Pilot Life Insurance<lb/>
Co. is seeking career-minded in-<lb/>
dividuals to sell and service ex-<lb/>
isting policy owners and to open<lb/>
new accounts. $1600-$2600<lb/>
mo. guaranteed during training.<lb/>
Prior sales experience a plus, but<lb/>
not required. Full benefits. Mon-<lb/>
Fri. 8:30a.m5p.m. (252) 756-<lb/>
8711.<lb/>
DO YOU need a good job? The<lb/>
ECU Telefund is hiring students<lb/>
to contact alumni and parents for<lb/>
the ECU Annual Fund. $5.50<lb/>
hour plus bonuses. Make your<lb/>
own schedule. If interested call<lb/>
328-4212. M-Th between the<lb/>
hours of 3-6pm.<lb/>
CASHIER WANTED. Weekends<lb/>
only. Fun job. Must be depend-<lb/>
able. Apply in person at Big Splatt<lb/>
Paintball Park. Sat. or Sun. only.<lb/>
Located on Old Pactolus Hwy off<lb/>
US264.<lb/>
Appointment setting telemarket-<lb/>
ers. Full-time or part-time. Flexi-<lb/>
ble hours. Great for students or<lb/>
career marketers. Health in-<lb/>
surance, paid vacation. Great pay<lb/>
plus benefits and bonuses Call<lb/>
Thermal-Gard 355-0210<lb/>
How to advertise in<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
classifieds<lb/>
OPEN LINE AD RATE$4.00<lb/>
for 25 or fewer wordsadditional words 5e each<lb/>
STUDENT LINE AD RATE$2.00<lb/>
for 25 or fewer wordsadditional word 5e each<lb/>
Must present a valid ECU I.D. to qualify. The East Carolinian<lb/>
reserves the right to refuse this rate for any ad deemed to be<lb/>
non-student or business related.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED AD EXTRAS RATE$100<lb/>
add to above line ad rate for either bold or ALL CAPS type<lb/>
All classified ads placed by individuals or campus groups<lb/>
must be prepaid. Classified ads placed by a business must<lb/>
be prepaid unless credit has been established. Cancelled<lb/>
ads can be removed from the paper if notification is made<lb/>
before publication, but no cash refunds are given. No<lb/>
proofs or tearsheets are available.<lb/>
The Personals section is intended for non-commerical<lb/>
communication placed by individuals or campus groups.<lb/>
Business ads will not be placed in this section. All ads are<lb/>
subject to editing for indecent or inflammatory language<lb/>
as determined by the editors.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED DEADLINE4 P.M. THURSDAY<lb/>
for the following Wednesday's paper<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0014"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
0061996<lb/>
LooanoFOiA<lb/>
HEW PLACE lO<lb/>
LIVE?<lb/>
Try the classified section in<lb/>
The East Carolinian!<lb/>
Please contact our ad representatives<lb/>
at 32&amp;.2?X?X9<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0015"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
e otter m<lb/>
experience<lb/>
oj a lifetime.<lb/>
Working at The East Carolinian provides<lb/>
you with the experience needed to suc-<lb/>
ceed out of school - real-life experience.<lb/>
Experience that will help you get a job<lb/>
and get ahead in that job. Experience<lb/>
beyond the class-<lb/>
room and be-<lb/>
yond college.<lb/>
Many are paid<lb/>
positions, and all<lb/>
have a big PAY-<lb/>
BACK - experience. Apply now at The<lb/>
East Carolinian office on the second floor<lb/>
of the Student Publications Building<lb/>
(across from the libraryabove CopyServ).<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00058919__tn_0016"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
www.tec.ecu.edu<lb/>
Wednesday June 7. 2000<lb/>
ATTENTION RETURNING STUDENTS<lb/>
Planning to live off campus? If so, you can eliminate at least one<lb/>
long line by arranging your utility service in advance. Ry planning<lb/>
ahead, you can save valuable time  and possibly money. These<lb/>
options arc available:<lb/>
Option A: No Deposit Required<lb/>
At your parents' request, your utility service may be put in their<lb/>
name. Just pick up a "Request lor Utility Service" application from<lb/>
the University I lousing OHice in Jones Hall: at Greenville Utilities'<lb/>
Main Office, 200 Martin Luther King, jr. Drive; or at GUC Express,<lb/>
our satellite office located at s09S.ll. Greenville lilvd.<lb/>
Have your parents complete the application (which must be<lb/>
notarized) and mail it to GUC, P.O. Uox 1847, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
278-1847, att: Customer Service.<lb/>
Remember to attach a "letter ol credit" Irom your parents' power<lb/>
company.<lb/>
Option B: Deposit Required <lb/>
If you wish to have the utility service put in your name, a deposit<lb/>
will be required. Residential deposits are as follows:<lb/>
Water only $25<lb/>
Ulectriconly $100<lb/>
lilcctric &amp; water $125<lb/>
lllectric, water &amp; gas $17?<lb/>
Hlcctric &amp; gas $150<lb/>
You can save time by mailing the deposit in advance. Be sure to<lb/>
include your name, where service will be required, when service is to<lb/>
be cut on and a phone number where we may reach you prior to<lb/>
your arrival at the service address.<lb/>
The svrvl.ee charge ol S20.00 for electric and water, and or ho.00 hr gas will heonvour<lb/>
hrsi hill. CiUC requires you lobe home whin natural gas is cut on. While we do nol<lb/>
require you 10 he home when eleelrie or wirier service is eul on, il is your responsibility 10<lb/>
ensure that all decimal appliances and water laucels are OPF during the cul on procedure<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Jk Utilities<lb/>
7Si-7(6 ? zoo Martin Luther King.Jr. Drive ? www.jtuc.cnm<lb/>
;
</div></body></text></TEI>