<?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="00057232_0001"/>
Embezzlement trial begins for Best<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The trial of Dr. Andrew A. Best, an East Carolina<lb/>
University board of trustees member charged with<lb/>
conspiracy and embezzlement from a local credit union,<lb/>
is scheduled to continue in Pitt County Superior Court<lb/>
Thursday at 9:30 a.m.<lb/>
Dr. Best, a local physician and an ECU Board of<lb/>
trustees member for the past six and a half years, was<lb/>
among three others who were indicted June 4, 1979 on<lb/>
charges relating to the alleged theft of $13,400 from the<lb/>
Eastern Tar River Credit Union.<lb/>
Best was a member of the black-operated credit<lb/>
union's board of directors during the time that the<lb/>
alleged theft occurred.<lb/>
Testimony during the trial proceeding Wednesday<lb/>
centered on financial practices employed by Best and<lb/>
Ruth Staton, a former secretary and treasure of the<lb/>
credit union.<lb/>
Staton, a Greenville high school teacher, pled guilty<lb/>
to similar charges in connection with the case and is<lb/>
testifying for the State against Best.<lb/>
In testimony Tuesday, Staton said that she had<lb/>
falsified records in an attempt to protect Best and the<lb/>
credit union, which at the time was in danger of being<lb/>
shut down due to delinquent accounts. According to her,<lb/>
money was shifted from different accounts to cover the<lb/>
delinquent loans.<lb/>
She also said that she aided Best in carrying out<lb/>
fraudulent transactions that benefitted him. One of these<lb/>
involved the account of Georgia Corey of Washington,<lb/>
N.C from whose savings $2,500 was withdrawn!<lb/>
allegedly with her signature and consent.<lb/>
Corey testified Tuesday that she did not know Best,<lb/>
and when shown a check with her signature on it, said<lb/>
that she was unable to write her own name.<lb/>
Other transactions involved $7,000 in the account of<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta sorority and about $3,900 from the<lb/>
account of Annie Taft Boyd. Staton said that some of<lb/>
See BEST, page 2<lb/>
Dr. Andrew Best<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 54 No. 2?<lb/>
12 pages today<lb/>
Thursday, November 15, 1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Food airlifted<lb/>
to Thailand for<lb/>
Cambodians<lb/>
. an Oxfam field worker in Phnom Penh<lb/>
the extent of damage to the city caused<lb/>
by Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge when they forcibly<lb/>
evacuated 2 million people in April, 1975.<lb/>
New director unhappy<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)<lb/>
� The new director of the<lb/>
Civil Right- Office of the<lb/>
D' partment of Health,<lb/>
tcation and U elfare is<lb/>
happ) with the L'n-<lb/>
: North Carolina's<lb/>
'� -egregation<lb/>
piai<lb/>
"I have looked at it<lb/>
briefly, and my impression<lb/>
is that I didn't like it<lb/>
Roma J. Stewart said<lb/>
Tuesdaj<lb/>
1- Stewart, a Wash-<lb/>
ton lawyer in private<lb/>
prat tii e who was named to<lb/>
'iv i rights post last<lb/>
th b HEW Secretary<lb/>
Patricia Harris, said the<lb/>
revised I'N'C proposal<lb/>
appeared to be a "per-<lb/>
petuation of the separate-<lb/>
hut-equal doctrine that<lb/>
was ruled unconstitutional<lb/>
decades ago<lb/>
Her comment is the<lb/>
first government reaction<lb/>
to the university's pro-<lb/>
posal since it was submit-<lb/>
ted to HEW and the<lb/>
Department of Justice last<lb/>
month.<lb/>
I NC is fighting a<lb/>
cut-off of its federal funds<lb/>
by HEW, which has<lb/>
demanded that the 16-<lb/>
campus university system<lb/>
eliminate program duplic-<lb/>
ation at neighboring pre-<lb/>
dominantly white and<lb/>
black colleges.<lb/>
Ms. Stewart said she is<lb/>
"discouraged from what<lb/>
I've seen that there will be<lb/>
any settlement in the near<lb/>
futureIt doesn't look<lb/>
good She appears to be<lb/>
taking a line similar to<lb/>
that of David Tatel, who<lb/>
resigned as the office's<lb/>
director last month to<lb/>
return to private practice.<lb/>
Ms. Stewart said she<lb/>
would have no part of<lb/>
what she called a compro-<lb/>
mise.<lb/>
Ms. Stewart set legal<lb/>
precedent about two years<lb/>
ago when a federal court<lb/>
agreed with her that the<lb/>
government should pay<lb/>
the legal fees for federal<lb/>
employees who prevail in<lb/>
administrative hearings on<lb/>
discrimination complaints.<lb/>
The ruling eased the way<lb/>
for federal employees who<lb/>
feel discriminated against<lb/>
to hire legal help.<lb/>
She has never met any<lb/>
of the UNC official's<lb/>
involved in the dispute<lb/>
and said she would be<lb/>
interested in visiting the<lb/>
campus, only if it would<lb/>
not b e "an empty<lb/>
gesture<lb/>
Officials check on<lb/>
N.C. student visas<lb/>
By RONNIE LOVLER<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
Immigration officials were trying to<lb/>
work out the "logistics" yesterday of a<lb/>
bi-state check on the visas of Iranian<lb/>
students enrolled at universities in North<lb/>
and South Carolina.<lb/>
Under a nationwide order issued by<lb/>
U.S. Attorney Gerneral Benjamin Civiletti<lb/>
Tuesday, Iranian students must report to<lb/>
immagration authorities within 30 days or<lb/>
face possible deportation.<lb/>
The order was issued in the wake of<lb/>
the Nov. 4 takeover of the U.S. Embassy<lb/>
n Tehran where some 100 persons,<lb/>
including 60 Americans are being held<lb/>
hostage by militant Iranians who want the<lb/>
deposed shah returned. The shah is<lb/>
undergoing cancer treatment in New York.<lb/>
A spokesman for the Immigration and<lb/>
Naturalization Service in Charlotte, N.C,<lb/>
8&amp;�d immigration officers will personally<lb/>
visit universities with large Iranian<lb/>
student populations, such as the<lb/>
University of North Carolina in Charlotte<lb/>
with 91 Iranian students.<lb/>
"Where there are larger numbers, we<lb/>
will go to the university or college. We're<lb/>
trying to work out the logistics in 30 days.<lb/>
If we don't do it that way, we'll have<lb/>
them all in here at once said the<lb/>
spokesman, Louis Richard.<lb/>
At those schools where only a few<lb/>
Iranians are enrolled, the students will be<lb/>
asked to appear before an INS officer in<lb/>
Atlanta, Charlotte or Charlston, S.C.<lb/>
In all instances, the students "will be<lb/>
interviewed by an immigration officer to<lb/>
determine whether they are maintaining<lb/>
their immigration status Richard said.<lb/>
Richard stated that there are about<lb/>
2,000 Iranian students enrolled in colleges<lb/>
and universities in North and South<lb/>
Carolina. According to Richard, the<lb/>
Charlotte office, which handles im-<lb/>
migration matters for the two Carolinas,<lb/>
hoped to send officers to all schools with<lb/>
See STUDENTS, page 5<lb/>
Inside today<lb/>
Durham sports writer<lb/>
criticized<lb/>
page 4<lb/>
and the reason why<lb/>
page 4<lb/>
Wendel Adkins<lb/>
interviewed<lb/>
page 6<lb/>
Mother98 Finest. �.<lb/>
A close-up look at<lb/>
Leander Green<lb/>
page 9<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Carter administration is<lb/>
preparing an immediate airlift of food to starving<lb/>
refugees in Thailand while private relief agencies try to<lb/>
raise $100 million in contributions to help ease the crisis<lb/>
in Indochina.<lb/>
"Two and a half million people face starvation in the<lb/>
next few months unless food reaches them said<lb/>
Matthew Nimitz, acting U.S. coordinator for refugees.<lb/>
Rosalynn Carter, who visited Cmabodian refugee<lb/>
camps in Thailand last week, announced Tuesday that<lb/>
President Carter had ordered deliveries bv air of<lb/>
vegetable oils, special food for infants and youngsters,<lb/>
and other supplies.<lb/>
The shipment is mainly to help young children, many<lb/>
ot whom suffer from malnutrition. Their physical and<lb/>
mental development will be impaired without adequate<lb/>
food.<lb/>
Ofticials said the airlift would begin as soon as the<lb/>
supplies could be located and assembled for shipping,<lb/>
but they gave no precise timetable.<lb/>
Meanwhile, a spokesman for the State Department<lb/>
said an air shipment of 45 metric tons of infant formula<lb/>
arrived in Bangkok on MOnday.<lb/>
Mrs. Carter announced the presidential actions at a<lb/>
White House meeting of executives from about 30 relief<lb/>
agencies who held a day-long conference to decide how-<lb/>
to improve their efforts to help the refugees.<lb/>
Afterward, the Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, president<lb/>
ot Notre Dame, said he believed the groups should raise<lb/>
$100 million in private contributions. About $30 million<lb/>
has been donated so far.<lb/>
"Somehow, using every means possible, we think we<lb/>
can save this second holocaust from taking place he<lb/>
told reporters later. "We are committed to every<lb/>
possible, conceivable effort that will get to these people<lb/>
before they die<lb/>
Most of the aid to Thailand and Cambodia goes<lb/>
through relief agencies, such as UNICEF, CARE and the<lb/>
Red Cross.<lb/>
Hesburgh said the voluntary groups were using<lb/>
rivers, railroads, trucks and airlifts to get food to the<lb/>
famine-struck Indochinese people.<lb/>
Carter, acting at his wife's behest, also ordered an<lb/>
immediate $2 million grant to UNICEF to buy rice for<lb/>
the refugees, whose food supply was said to be for less<lb/>
than 30 days.<lb/>
Mrs. Carter said her husband also was increasing the<lb/>
number of refugees from Thailland to be resettled in the<lb/>
United States. So most of the U.S. monthly quota of<lb/>
14,000 refugees will be filled by persons from Thai<lb/>
camps rather than by boat people now in Malaysia and<lb/>
Hong Kong.<lb/>
Mrs. Carter said that, at her urging, the president<lb/>
also was providing $4<lb/>
million for the care and<lb/>
maintenance of refugee<lb/>
camps and had ordered a<lb/>
review of the refugee re-<lb/>
settlement process, which<lb/>
was said to take too long.<lb/>
"We cannot lose<lb/>
time the first lady told<lb/>
the representatives from<lb/>
voluntary agencies. "The<lb/>
situation is urgent<lb/>
An agreement with<lb/>
Phnom Penh has spurred<lb/>
13 countries into pledging<lb/>
a total of $186 million<lb/>
dollars to aid an estimated<lb/>
2.5 million Cambodians<lb/>
who are starving.<lb/>
On Thursday, and in-<lb/>
ternational fast will be<lb/>
held to aid the starving<lb/>
populations. Money that<lb/>
people save by fasting for<lb/>
one day will be donated to<lb/>
an international aid so-<lb/>
ciety.<lb/>
The government statd<lb/>
on Monday that it was<lb/>
"from now on ready to<lb/>
receive whatever quantity<lb/>
of humanitarian aid <lb/>
without political consi-<lb/>
derations<lb/>
An ECU student stands a silent vigil until all U.S.<lb/>
Postages in Iran are freed.<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
American<lb/>
hostages<lb/>
may go free<lb/>
page 6<lb/>
EDITOR'S OTE - At<lb/>
3:25 a.m. �57, the<lb/>
following bulletin was<lb/>
transmitted by Associated<lb/>
Press. Mo further details<lb/>
were available at press<lb/>
time.<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) -<lb/>
Iran's foreign minister<lb/>
said Thursday that all<lb/>
hostages held in the<lb/>
American Embassy in<lb/>
Tehran except white<lb/>
American males would be<lb/>
freed "very soon CBS<lb/>
News reported from the<lb/>
Iranian capital.<lb/>
The network said For-<lb/>
eign Minister bolhassan<lb/>
Bani Sadr told CBS cor-<lb/>
respondent Randy Daniels<lb/>
in an interview that "all<lb/>
women and blacks would<lb/>
be freed very soon<lb/>
Bani Sadr did not say<lb/>
exactly when this would<lb/>
take place, Daniels re-<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
A total of 62 Americans<lb/>
and 36 non-Americans<lb/>
have been held hostage in<lb/>
the embassy since Nov. 4,<lb/>
but it is not known how<lb/>
many of the Americans are<lb/>
women. Most of the<lb/>
non-americans are be-<lb/>
lieved to be Pakistani or<lb/>
Indian employees of the<lb/>
embassy, but the South<lb/>
Korean government re-<lb/>
ported Thursday that a<lb/>
South Korean busines-<lb/>
sman was among them.<lb/>
Less than 24 hours<lb/>
before the announced re-<lb/>
lease. President Carter put<lb/>
a freeze on all Iranian<lb/>
bank accounts in the<lb/>
i nited States.)<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)�<lb/>
w hite House press<lb/>
secretary Jody Powell<lb/>
issued a statement at 8:10<lb/>
a.m. EST saying: "The<lb/>
purpose of this order is to<lb/>
insure that claims on Iran<lb/>
by the United States and<lb/>
its citizens are provided<lb/>
for in an orderly manner<lb/>
The assets that Carter<lb/>
ordered blocked include<lb/>
deposits of the govern-<lb/>
ment of Iran, Central Bank<lb/>
of Iran and "other con-<lb/>
trolled entities" in U.S.<lb/>
banks and their foreign<lb/>
branches and subsidiaries.<lb/>
Powell's statement said<lb/>
the exact amount of money<lb/>
being blocked is not<lb/>
known, "but there is no<lb/>
reason for disturbance in<lb/>
the foreign exchange or<lb/>
other markets<lb/>
Carter acted under<lb/>
authority granted him<lb/>
under the International<lb/>
Emergency Economic Pow-<lb/>
ers Act.<lb/>
Powell said this law<lb/>
gives the president au-<lb/>
thority "to deal with any<lb/>
unusual and extraordinary<lb/>
threat to the national<lb/>
security, foreign policy or<lb/>
economy of the United<lb/>
States<lb/>
See IRAN, page 2<lb/>
.<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057232_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 THE EAST CAR0L1NAIN 15 November 1979<lb/>
Jage 2 THE EAS AROUN,  If<lb/>
Health Careers Day to be held;<lb/>
50 institutions to interview<lb/>
Students who plan to<lb/>
enter health-related fields<lb/>
will have the chance to<lb/>
meet prospective employ-<lb/>
ers during Health Careers<lb/>
Day on Friday, Nov. 16.<lb/>
Approximately 50 in-<lb/>
stitutions from the Caro-<lb/>
linas, Georgia, Virginia<lb/>
and Maryland will send<lb/>
representatives to inter-<lb/>
view ECU students who<lb/>
are nearing the end of<lb/>
their college work in the<lb/>
health fields.<lb/>
Nurses are apparently<lb/>
in greatest demand this<lb/>
vear, with over half of the<lb/>
institutions seeking nursing<lb/>
school graduates. Both<lb/>
large and small institu-<lb/>
tions are among this<lb/>
group, including Duke,<lb/>
John Hopkins, N.C. Mem-<lb/>
orial, N.C. Baptist, Medi-<lb/>
cal College of Virginia,<lb/>
Rex Hospital, and Wake<lb/>
Medical Center in Raleigh.<lb/>
In addition to other<lb/>
hospitals in Asheville,<lb/>
Charlotte, Charleston and<lb/>
Savannah, the U.S. Navy<lb/>
and the U.S. Army Nurse<lb/>
Corps will also be inter-<lb/>
viewing prospective em-<lb/>
ployees.<lb/>
The purpose of the<lb/>
interviews is to acquaint<lb/>
interested students with<lb/>
the prospects o f health<lb/>
career and to give them a<lb/>
better idea of the advan-<lb/>
tages offered by individual<lb/>
institutions. Salary scales<lb/>
and benefits will als be<lb/>
discussed.<lb/>
Although nursing stu-<lb/>
dents are in particular<lb/>
demand, the various pub-<lb/>
lic and private institutions<lb/>
will also be seeking<lb/>
graduates in almost every<lb/>
other health specialization:<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Medical Technology; Phy-<lb/>
sical and Occupational<lb/>
Therapy; Dietetics; Re-<lb/>
habilitation Counseling;<lb/>
Medical Records, and also<lb/>
Psychology, Social Work<lb/>
and Corrections, Child<lb/>
Development and even<lb/>
Music Therapy.<lb/>
"This year's Health<lb/>
Careers Day promises to<lb/>
be one of the best ever art<lb/>
ECU saysFurney James,<lb/>
ECU director of Career<lb/>
Placement and Planning.<lb/>
James added that in-<lb/>
terviews will be held with<lb/>
students at the Nursing<lb/>
Building between 9:45<lb/>
a.m. and 1 p.m.<lb/>
(DKT<lb/>
AfflWNCCN DtHCHI<lb/>
FEATURING BEVErages<lb/>
3:00-<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
3:30-4:00<lb/>
10' A CUP<lb/>
3:30-7:00<lb/>
50' A CAN<lb/>
International<lb/>
fast to be held<lb/>
for starving<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Black Oak<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
wOZ<lb/>
FRI. Pegasus<lb/>
SORT H.H.<lb/>
AT.Pegaaua!<lb/>
UN.<lb/>
Warehouse<lb/>
&amp; Pegasus<lb/>
campus division<lb/>
SOCIETY FOR THE<lb/>
ADVANCEMENT<lb/>
OF MANAGEMENT<lb/>
QUEST SPEAKER<lb/>
ALL Interested persons<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
Thurs. Nov. is 4:00<lb/>
244<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
LIVE<lb/>
BAND<lb/>
ADMISSION -25<lb/>
rei. ncw. it 411H<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
An estimated 300 stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty will be<lb/>
participating in a fast for<lb/>
world hunger here at ECU<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 15.<lb/>
The fast, which will be<lb/>
held nationwide, is being<lb/>
sponsored locally by the<lb/>
Greenville Hunger Coali-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
According to Robert<lb/>
Jones, who plans to<lb/>
participate, the project is<lb/>
held each year "to give<lb/>
them (the participants) an<lb/>
opportunity to see what its<lb/>
like to go hungry for a day<lb/>
and to show their support<lb/>
Cor people who go hungry<lb/>
a the time<lb/>
Many participants in<lb/>
the fast will be donating<lb/>
the money that they save<lb/>
to OXFAM, an inter-<lb/>
national anti-hunger or-<lb/>
ganization.<lb/>
AAIT is essentially a<lb/>
svmbolic gesture on the<lb/>
honor system said Jones.<lb/>
Jones stated that the<lb/>
main purpose of the fast is<lb/>
to build awareness in the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The fasters can drink<lb/>
water and fruit juices,<lb/>
but cannot eat solid food.<lb/>
Maggie McKivergin,<lb/>
another member of the<lb/>
group, said of the reason<lb/>
thev are fasting, "That's<lb/>
exactly what the people<lb/>
are doing that are<lb/>
starving<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
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University students need for any bash<lb/>
from party platters to disco plat-<lb/>
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4 00 8:00 PM<lb/>
SALAD�50 EXTRA<lb/>
IRAN<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
While the Iranian gov-<lb/>
ernment has put the<lb/>
amount of money in<lb/>
question at around $12<lb/>
billion, U.S. reporters<lb/>
were told that the sum<lb/>
was closer to $5 billion.<lb/>
A high White House<lb/>
official said orders block-<lb/>
ing Iranian assets had<lb/>
been drawn up before<lb/>
yesterday's action and that<lb/>
Carter needed only to sign<lb/>
the papers to block<lb/>
withdrawal of the Iranian<lb/>
money.<lb/>
The official, who asked<lb/>
not to be named, said the<lb/>
president had anticpated<lb/>
that the Iranian govern-<lb/>
ment might attempt to pull<lb/>
out its funds, but decided<lb/>
not to act unless such a<lb/>
situation actually devel-<lb/>
oped.<lb/>
Carter took his action<lb/>
after meeting with top<lb/>
Treasury officials to dis-<lb/>
cuss the implications of<lb/>
the Iranian action.<lb/>
Treasury Secretary G.<lb/>
William Miller called aides<lb/>
to his office after the<lb/>
announcment in Tehran.<lb/>
The United States has the<lb/>
power to retaliate by<lb/>
freezing Iranian assets,<lb/>
but there was no word on<lb/>
what measures might be<lb/>
taken.<lb/>
Abolhassan Bani-Sadr,<lb/>
the new Iranian foreign<lb/>
minister, said at a new<lb/>
conference in Tehran that<lb/>
some $12 billion in U.S.<lb/>
deposits would be trans-<lb/>
ferred to branches of<lb/>
banks that will not be able<lb/>
to block the funds.<lb/>
Bani-Sadr specifically<lb/>
mentioned New York's<lb/>
Chase Manhattan Bank in<lb/>
his announcement, saying<lb/>
that bank because it is<lb/>
headed by David Rocke-<lb/>
feller.<lb/>
ASST. VAR 9 9<lb/>
PIZZA � .ONLY TUE<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLESLAW<lb/>
FRIED H 9 9<lb/>
CHICKEN ?N.LY � WED<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
SPAGH<lb/>
WITH FRIES &amp; COLE SLAW<lb/>
FRIED i 9 9<lb/>
FBI.<lb/>
BEST<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
these monies were used by Best to pay on loans ana<lb/>
income taxes. , ,<lb/>
Best replied to the charges, saying that he had<lb/>
borrowed the money to pay off unpaid loans and keep<lb/>
the credit unicn financially afloat. Investigators testified<lb/>
Tuesday that Best had paid back $5,600 of the amount.<lb/>
Best also commented that a Tar River Credit Union<lb/>
loan application entered as evidence by the prosecution<lb/>
was "a forgery at best<lb/>
The proceedings Wednesday were punctuated by<lb/>
heated cross-examination from chief assistant District<lb/>
Attorney Tom Haigwood, who at one point accused Best<lb/>
of neglecting the interest of "hundreds of black folks in<lb/>
the community<lb/>
The credit union was established in 1943 for use<lb/>
primarily by black citizens who reside within a 10-mile<lb/>
radius of Greenville, according to the testimony of an<lb/>
auditor from the credit union division of the state<lb/>
Department of Commerce.<lb/>
HaiRwood added that the assets of the credit union<lb/>
decreased from about $450,000 in 1972 to about<lb/>
1150,000 in 1977.<lb/>
Asked what would happen to Dr. Best s status as an<lb/>
ECU trustee if he were convicted in the case, Assistant<lb/>
to the Chancellor Richard Blake said ' I really don t<lb/>
have any information regarding such aj uation. 1<lb/>
imagine that it would be a matter for the UNC Board of<lb/>
Governors to decide . ,<lb/>
The trial enters its third day Thursday following the<lb/>
selection of the all-white jury Monday.<lb/>
Donald D. Pollock of the Kinston law firm Beech<lb/>
and Pollock is defending Dr. Best in the case.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057232_0003"/><lb/>
Despite an increase in costs<lb/>
15 November 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 3<lb/>
Jarvis residents pleased<lb/>
Construction workers labored throughout new look, and residents there are<lb/>
the summer to give Jarvis dormitory a generally pleased with the result.<lb/>
(Photo by John H. Grogan)<lb/>
SGA official silent<lb/>
The investigation into<lb/>
the alleged theft of a letter<lb/>
to SGA President Brett<lb/>
Melvin has come to a<lb/>
standstill and mav have<lb/>
been dropped, despite a<lb/>
preliminary conference<lb/>
held by the Attorney<lb/>
General.<lb/>
Three ECU students<lb/>
were asked to the confer-<lb/>
ence and were told that<lb/>
charges were being placed<lb/>
against them concerning<lb/>
the theft and subsequent<lb/>
attribution of copies of a<lb/>
letter from former SGA<lb/>
president Tim Sullivan to<lb/>
Melvin.<lb/>
However, a reliable<lb/>
source close to the investi-<lb/>
gation has told The East<lb/>
Carolinian that the inves-<lb/>
tigation has been dropped<lb/>
and that the pending<lb/>
charges have been dis-<lb/>
missed.<lb/>
When SGA Attorney<lb/>
General Drake Mann was<lb/>
asked to comment on the<lb/>
case, he stated that he had<lb/>
"been advised to make no<lb/>
comment<lb/>
Mann has been asked<lb/>
repeatedly to comment on<lb/>
the case and has consis-<lb/>
tently refused.<lb/>
According to former<lb/>
Attorney General Randv<lb/>
J<lb/>
Ingram, the investigation<lb/>
was ordered by Melvin to<lb/>
determine who copied and<lb/>
distributed the letter to<lb/>
members of the board of<lb/>
trustees, administration<lb/>
officials and the editor of<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Ingram stated at the<lb/>
time that the distribution<lb/>
of the letter appeared to<lb/>
be a serious violation of<lb/>
the honor code.<lb/>
In recent weeks, when<lb/>
asked why the investiga-<lb/>
tion was ordered, Mann<lb/>
has replied that he could<lb/>
not possibly try to deter-<lb/>
mine a person's motives<lb/>
(referring to Melvin).<lb/>
It is unknown at this<lb/>
time whether the investi-<lb/>
gation will continue.<lb/>
By MARY RIDER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Last January part of<lb/>
the ceiling in Jams Hall<lb/>
collapsed, causing approx-<lb/>
imately 168 girls to Hnd a<lb/>
new place of residence.<lb/>
Now, almost a year later,<lb/>
after extensive repairs,<lb/>
Jarvis is once again filled<lb/>
to capacity.<lb/>
The renovations in-<lb/>
cluded a new roof, new<lb/>
ceilings, complete rewir-<lb/>
ing, an entire new paint<lb/>
job and the installation of<lb/>
such things as smoke<lb/>
detectors, fire alarms,<lb/>
overhead flourescent<lb/>
lights, carpeting in the<lb/>
halls and individual air<lb/>
conditioning and heating<lb/>
units in each room. Girls<lb/>
living in Jarvis now pay an<lb/>
extra $50.00 a semester.<lb/>
During a recent inter-<lb/>
view, some of the resi-<lb/>
dents were asked what<lb/>
they like best about the<lb/>
renovations. Most replied<lb/>
that they enjoyed being<lb/>
able to regulate their own<lb/>
ASU student is<lb/>
charged in rapes<lb/>
Bonds set for<lb/>
Greensboro men<lb/>
GREENSBORO. N.C.<lb/>
(AP)�Bond in amounts<lb/>
ranging from $4,000 to<lb/>
$50,000 were set Tuesday<lb/>
for 13 of 14 men charged<lb/>
in the shooting deaths of<lb/>
five leftist radicals during<lb/>
a demonstration Nov. 3.<lb/>
By late night, none of<lb/>
the 13 had posted bond.<lb/>
The 14th defendant did<lb/>
not request it. Twelve<lb/>
have been jailed without b<lb/>
ond since their arrest after<lb/>
the rally. The other two<lb/>
have remained in custody<lb/>
since their arrest several<lb/>
days later.<lb/>
In hearings that conti-<lb/>
nued late Tuesday even-<lb/>
ing, Guilford District Court<lb/>
Judge Robert Cecil set the<lb/>
bonds based on whether<lb/>
the defendant had a<lb/>
weapon during the inci-<lb/>
dent in which five mem-<lb/>
bers of the Communist<lb/>
Workers Party were shot<lb/>
to death during an anti-Ku<lb/>
KIux Klan rally.<lb/>
Cecil dismissed de-<lb/>
fense arguments that de-<lb/>
monstrators had provoked<lb/>
the shootings. Attorneys<lb/>
ai ed evidence of provo-<lb/>
cation could be found in<lb/>
the title of the march�<lb/>
"Death to the Klan"�and<lb/>
in threats in the handbill<lb/>
the radicals distributed at<lb/>
the shooting scene.<lb/>
Twelve of the 14 are<lb/>
charged with five counts- of<lb/>
R<lb/>
first-degree murder and<lb/>
Twelve of the 14 are<lb/>
charged with five counts of<lb/>
first-degree murder and<lb/>
five counts of conspiracy<lb/>
to commit murder. The<lb/>
other two face the con-<lb/>
spiracy charge only.<lb/>
The defendants claim<lb/>
the demonstrators opened<lb/>
fire first and attacked<lb/>
them with sticks. They<lb/>
said they came to the rally<lb/>
to throw eggs, heckle and<lb/>
disrupt activities, and fired<lb/>
in self defense.<lb/>
Defense lawyers<lb/>
claimed their clients had<lb/>
been subjected to "selec-<lb/>
tive prosecution They<lb/>
asked why none of the<lb/>
demonstrators have been<lb/>
charged with assault with<lb/>
intent to kill for firing<lb/>
weapons at the defend-<lb/>
ants, beating the de-<lb/>
fendants' vehicles with<lb/>
sticks or why no one has<lb/>
been charged with assault<lb/>
with a deadly weapon with<lb/>
intent to kill Flowers.<lb/>
Police said the shootin<lb/>
g of<lb/>
Police said the shooting<lb/>
of Flowers is under<lb/>
investigation. Defense at-<lb/>
torneys also urged the<lb/>
demonstrators could be<lb/>
charged with conspiracy<lb/>
because of evidence they<lb/>
held meetings prior to the<lb/>
rally and made plans to<lb/>
kill Klan members.<lb/>
BOONE, (AP)-A 19-<lb/>
year-old Appalachian State<lb/>
University freshman from<lb/>
Raleigh has been charged<lb/>
in connection with a series<lb/>
of alleged assaults and<lb/>
rapes on two coeds.<lb/>
Campus authorities<lb/>
said Reginald Gerrord<lb/>
Smith of Raleigh was<lb/>
arrested about 12:05 a.m.<lb/>
Wednesday by Appalac-<lb/>
hian State University sec-<lb/>
urity officers.<lb/>
He is charged with one<lb/>
count each of first-degree<lb/>
rape, crime against nature<lb/>
and assault on a female.<lb/>
He remained in Watauga<lb/>
County Jail without bond<lb/>
Wednesday, pending an<lb/>
initial court appearance.<lb/>
A probable cause hear-<lb/>
ing for Smith has been set<lb/>
in Watauga County Dis-<lb/>
trict Court Nov. 27.<lb/>
The charges against<lb/>
Smith stem from alleged<lb/>
attacks on two university<lb/>
coeds last Friday and<lb/>
Sunday, and the alleged<lb/>
assault Tuesday night of a<lb/>
State Bureau of Investig-<lb/>
ation agent who was<lb/>
acting as a decoy.<lb/>
A spokesman for the<lb/>
ASU security office said<lb/>
Smith allegedly attached<lb/>
the female agent near a<lb/>
campus mall, in the same<lb/>
area where the other<lb/>
incidents occurred. The<lb/>
spokesman said Smith ran<lb/>
and was apprehended near<lb/>
the school library.<lb/>
An investigation is<lb/>
continuing, the spokesman<lb/>
said, and additional<lb/>
charges may be filed.<lb/>
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As Clenda Blackwell, a<lb/>
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control the heat or the air<lb/>
conditioning. Before, the<lb/>
heat might come on and<lb/>
you would burn up on a<lb/>
warm day<lb/>
Other residents were<lb/>
also pleased with the<lb/>
carpeting in the halls and<lb/>
the air conditioning.<lb/>
Students felt, however,<lb/>
that certain things were<lb/>
forgotten in the renovation<lb/>
process. One major com-<lb/>
plaint concerned the bath-<lb/>
room facilities. The<lb/>
plumbing is such that<lb/>
whenever a tiolet is<lb/>
flushed, all the cold water<lb/>
is taken from the showers.<lb/>
Residents are instructed to<lb/>
yell "Shower when they<lb/>
flush the toilet to keep<lb/>
from scalding a fellow<lb/>
student.<lb/>
Another grievance in-<lb/>
volved the placement of<lb/>
study rooms. As one<lb/>
resident stated, "As far as<lb/>
studying goes, the study<lb/>
room is next to the lobby;<lb/>
that can be counter-pro-<lb/>
ductive<lb/>
Generally, though, the<lb/>
residents feel that the<lb/>
extra money is well worth<lb/>
it. According to Angie<lb/>
Mosley, a freshman, Jar-<lb/>
vis is "the best dorm at<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
An East Carolinian<lb/>
article earlier this year<lb/>
discussed the possibility of<lb/>
a violation in Title IX.<lb/>
Title IX provides that both<lb/>
sexes must have access to<lb/>
"comparable facilities<lb/>
this includes housing.<lb/>
When asked their feel-<lb/>
ings on this subject, most<lb/>
residents of Jarvis replied<lb/>
that they could sympathize<lb/>
with the male viewpoint.<lb/>
However, they felt that the<lb/>
male residents had differ-<lb/>
ent housing advantages<lb/>
such as suites and that<lb/>
this tends to equalize any<lb/>
inequities.<lb/>
This feeling was sum-<lb/>
med up by Louise Massey,<lb/>
a senior, who said, "None<lb/>
of the housing is equal,<lb/>
and I think that's as<lb/>
important as the renova-<lb/>
tions done here<lb/>
Most residents were<lb/>
vehemently opposed to the<lb/>
possible solution of<lb/>
making Jarvis a co-ed<lb/>
dorm. The students felt<lb/>
that they were entitled to<lb/>
the better conditions that<lb/>
now prevail as many of<lb/>
them had lived in Jarvis<lb/>
before the renovations,<lb/>
when it was commonly<lb/>
called a "ghetto dorm<lb/>
On the other hand,<lb/>
some residents agreed<lb/>
with the opinion of Nancy<lb/>
Morris, a freshman. "If<lb/>
that (making Jarvis co-ed)<lb/>
would remedy the discri-<lb/>
mination controversy, I<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057232_0004"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
(Opinions<lb/>
Thursday, November 15, 1979<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
ECU was insulted<lb/>
Reprinted below is an article by Art<lb/>
Chansky that reeks of insult, bias and<lb/>
poor taste, and � you guessed it � it<lb/>
is all aimed at ECU.<lb/>
This editorial is from the pages of<lb/>
the Durham Morning Herald, the<lb/>
Sunday edition after the football game<lb/>
with the University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill. Since the controversy<lb/>
surrounding this column has continued<lb/>
for weeks following the game, we have<lb/>
decided to run the column in its<lb/>
entirelty for those who may have<lb/>
missed it.<lb/>
Our reasons for this action are<lb/>
obvious.<lb/>
We have been treated unfairly in the<lb/>
Piedmont press once again. The<lb/>
pro-UNC line has been consistently<lb/>
taken by almost every newspaper in this<lb/>
state since the battle began between<lb/>
the newspaper editors fighting for their<lb/>
beloved alma mater, UNC, and ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Emeritus Leo Jenkins on the<lb/>
subject of the ECU Medical School.<lb/>
Long after the battle for the Medical<lb/>
School was fought and won, editors of<lb/>
Piedmont publications continue to<lb/>
attack ECU.<lb/>
Supporters of UNC did not see the<lb/>
purpose of having a medical school in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina. Aided by thier<lb/>
cohorts in the newspaper business, they<lb/>
attacked the idea of that little<lb/>
backwoods school in the East having a<lb/>
medical school.<lb/>
Fortunately for us � and the poor<lb/>
and disadvantaged of East North<lb/>
Carolina � the legislature saw the light<lb/>
and decided that those poor children in<lb/>
little hamlets near the coast could use a<lb/>
little medical treatment. What can be<lb/>
said for Art Chansky, the middle-aged<lb/>
sports editor of teh Herald, the man<lb/>
who wrote the swill you see below?<lb/>
Granted, Mr. Chansky is usually a<lb/>
professional writer and does a good job<lb/>
of directing the flow of sports news for<lb/>
the Herald. But this time he has<lb/>
missted the mark by a mile.<lb/>
Chansky referred to ECU fans as<lb/>
drunkards, overflowing "from both end<lb/>
zone sections having "imbibed so<lb/>
much alcohol that whatever they drove<lb/>
in from down east may not have needed<lb/>
fillups on the way home But he<lb/>
instists on describing UNC fans as rich<lb/>
and privileged.<lb/>
Attacking the football team, Chan-<lb/>
sky called one "black and bow-legged<lb/>
and yet another as a "third string<lb/>
kickerwhose father owns a hot dog<lb/>
stand in Wilson<lb/>
Other examples follow. Read them.<lb/>
If they make you as angry as they make<lb/>
us, let the Durham Morning Herald<lb/>
know about it. Write a letter to the<lb/>
editor protesting this column. The<lb/>
address is:<lb/>
The Durham Morning Herald<lb/>
P.O. ox 2092<lb/>
Durham, North Carolina 27702<lb/>
One thing Mr. Chansky failed to<lb/>
mention when he was comparing ECU<lb/>
fans to UNC fans was the "question of<lb/>
admittance to an institution of higher<lb/>
learning in this state.<lb/>
No one ever had to know somebody<lb/>
to gain admittance to East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
This is not the case in Chapel Hill,<lb/>
unfortunately.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor<lb/>
Tuesday's editorials questioned<lb/>
Chansky column<lb/>
f ECU players, f(<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE � The following is reprinted from the<lb/>
Sunday, October 28 edition of the Durham Morning<lb/>
Herald. It was written as an opinion column, and it<lb/>
appeared under the byline of Sports Editor Art Chancy.<lb/>
The headline over the column read "ECU Vs. UNC:<lb/>
Sobriety, Socrate and Frustation<lb/>
This column appears here by permission of the Sports<lb/>
Desk of the Durham Morning HeraldJ<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL � When UNC tied East Carolina in<lb/>
football Saturday afternoon, it struck a note for sobriety<lb/>
in America.<lb/>
Jeff Hayes' 47-yard field goal with only a few<lb/>
seconds to play sobered up a Kenan Stadium crowd that<lb/>
was ready to either drunk-drive its way back to<lb/>
Greenville or drown its sorrows in the bare of Chapel<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
That's what a tie does in college football. No one<lb/>
knows quite how to act. The team that does the tying is<lb/>
generally happier that the team that gets tied. But, on<lb/>
this day, two-touchdown favorite Carolina had little to<lb/>
cheer about by snatching a deadlock from the jaws of<lb/>
defeat.<lb/>
After East Carolina watched what would have been a<lb/>
season-saving victory slip away, the Pirates filed<lb/>
glassy-eyed into the locker room. Their feelings<lb/>
ricocheted in four-letter epithets as they loped off the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
Carolina, which sort of surrendered by kicking for a<lb/>
tie, was just as stunned. Quarterback Matt Kupec, who<lb/>
played another superb game, left before reporters could<lb/>
get to him. "Matt always leaves right after a loss said<lb/>
a teammate. "And this was a loss<lb/>
The tie, ironically, was the only bad thing about an<lb/>
otherwise exceptional day of college football. Two<lb/>
high-powered offenses symbolized the contrasts of these<lb/>
two teams.<lb/>
Carolina was returning to its scenic, packed stadium<lb/>
after a big win over arch-rival N.C. State. The Tar Heels<lb/>
were many people's pick to win the ACC championship,<lb/>
and they were again being watched by bowl scouj.<lb/>
Their game plan was to run overand run downthe<lb/>
smaller, independent Pirates.<lb/>
East Carolina counters with finesse on the field and<lb/>
in its program. The Pirates deceptive wishbone offense<lb/>
is the brainchild of coach Pat Dye, who picks his words<lb/>
carefully about opponents because he wants to keep<lb/>
most of them on the Schedule.<lb/>
Their quarterback, Leander Green, is 5-foot-7 and<lb/>
black, compared to Kupck, Carolina 6-2, blond-haired<lb/>
All-American type. Their fullback is a bow-legged<lb/>
walk-on named Theodore Sutton, who is nicknamed<lb/>
"Toad" because he runs like a very fast frog. His<lb/>
counterpart is Greenville native Doug Paschal, who<lb/>
shunned the home-town school for the glamour of the<lb/>
ACC that has a 3-0-1 record against ECU this season.<lb/>
Carolina's kickers are highly recruited specialists.<lb/>
The closest East Carolina comes to that is a third-string<lb/>
kicker named Socrates (Giarmis), whose father owns a<lb/>
hot dog stand in wilson.<lb/>
The stadium was filled largely with Carolina fans<lb/>
who drove long cars and fancy campers to the game.<lb/>
ECU fans overflowed from two end zone sections and<lb/>
inbibed so much alcohol that whatever they drove in<lb/>
from down east may not have needed fill-up on the way<lb/>
home.<lb/>
That merry band of Pirates provided the backdrop for<lb/>
the game's greatest play. Green, scrambling to find a<lb/>
receiver, rifled a pass to Vern Davenport at the<lb/>
intersection of the sidelines and goal line for what<lb/>
looked like ECU's winning touchdown.<lb/>
It was the essence of athletics in one freeze frame,<lb/>
why players play, coaches coach and fans follow teams.<lb/>
Complete satisfaction. The ultimate high.<lb/>
"Pure ecstasy, my biggest thrill ever sighed<lb/>
Davenport later. 'I always wanted to go to Carolina, but<lb/>
I was never recruited. I had to walk on at East Carolina<lb/>
as a kicker. But now I wouldn't trade Greenville, Ptt<lb/>
Dye or the Pirates for anything<lb/>
Earlier, Dye had emerged from the locker room<lb/>
teary-eyed and said his players didn't have enough new<lb/>
football shoes to go around by they won 40,000 new<lb/>
hearts nevertheless. He hedged when asked if he would<lb/>
have kicked for a tie like Carolina did.<lb/>
But Dye didn't want sudden death. "Naw he said.<lb/>
"You prepare to play 60 minutes of football, and you<lb/>
can't decide a winner in that time, let everyone go home<lb/>
frustrated<lb/>
Everyone did.<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
It is my hope that<lb/>
through this letter some<lb/>
grumbling and cussing<lb/>
might be silenced.<lb/>
I'm referring to the<lb/>
article and editorial in the<lb/>
November 13th. issue<lb/>
concerning the November<lb/>
12th Legislative meeting.<lb/>
There seems to be<lb/>
some confusion about the<lb/>
emergency fund from<lb/>
which $5,000. was drawn.<lb/>
The emergency fund<lb/>
has previously been in a<lb/>
local savings account,<lb/>
separate from the SGA<lb/>
General Fund, but LaciiMr<lb/>
of new, state regulations<lb/>
they now share a single<lb/>
checking account in the<lb/>
State Reserve Bank, the<lb/>
$40,000. remaining from<lb/>
that emergency fund is<lb/>
still to be considered for<lb/>
emergency use only.<lb/>
Tuesday's front page<lb/>
article quotes one Legisl-<lb/>
ator: "The Appropriations<lb/>
Committee was completely<lb/>
bypassed President<lb/>
Brett Melvin had in-<lb/>
formed one Committee<lb/>
chairperson of the reserve<lb/>
fund on Sunday, Novem-<lb/>
ber 14th. And according<lb/>
to one member, the entire<lb/>
committee had known of<lb/>
the money prior to the<lb/>
12th.<lb/>
V ice-President Charlie<lb/>
Sherrod had questioned<lb/>
Mr. Melvin and Mr. Lowe<lb/>
about the emergency<lb/>
monies over two weeks<lb/>
ago, and that was made<lb/>
known to the Legislature<lb/>
at last Monday's meeting.<lb/>
I am well aware that<lb/>
editorials are designed to<lb/>
express personal opinion,<lb/>
but the views stated<lb/>
should be based on facts.<lb/>
Tuesday's editorial, "Mel-<lb/>
vin Rides Again sug-<lb/>
gests that Mr. Melvin and<lb/>
Treasurer, Ricky Lowe,<lb/>
purposely kept information<lb/>
from the Legislators. This<lb/>
is not true; their know-<lb/>
ledge had been put forth.<lb/>
Quite simply, the Legis-<lb/>
<lb/>
lators failed to act on it.<lb/>
Maybe people left the<lb/>
meeting grumbling and<lb/>
cussing. I didn't hear it<lb/>
because Iwas elated that a<lb/>
good, workable, minimal<lb/>
Transit budget has been<lb/>
passed. But, if they<lb/>
grumbled, it was because<lb/>
they didn't know what<lb/>
some of their fellow<lb/>
Legislators knew.<lb/>
Ellen N. Fishburne<lb/>
The writer of this letter is<lb/>
the SGA secretary of<lb/>
communications and ex-<lb/>
ecutive advisor to the SGA<lb/>
president.<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I wish to take issue<lb/>
with the editorial that<lb/>
appeared in the Nov. 13<lb/>
issue of this newspaper<lb/>
entitled "Sound and<lb/>
Fury<lb/>
In a subtle way the<lb/>
editorial condemned those<lb/>
students who staged an<lb/>
anti-Iranian demonstration<lb/>
last Monday. The editorial<lb/>
officially condemned the<lb/>
demonstration.<lb/>
It is a sad day when<lb/>
any newspaper in this<lb/>
country condemns the<lb/>
citizenry for patriotism and<lb/>
for standing up for the<lb/>
liberty and freedoms of<lb/>
their fellow Americans,<lb/>
specifically those being<lb/>
held hostage by crazed<lb/>
and vicious foreigners.<lb/>
This newspaper has<lb/>
long complained about<lb/>
apathy on this campus. On<lb/>
its editorial page The Easi<lb/>
Carolinian and its prede-<lb/>
cessor, Fountainhead,<lb/>
have repeatedU colded<lb/>
the student bod) for not<lb/>
taking stands on ;�-ues<lb/>
and not taking action on<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
That editorial v.as cer-<lb/>
tainly not the opinion of<lb/>
this member of the<lb/>
editorial board.<lb/>
It appear- that the<lb/>
students on thi campus<lb/>
will continue to be<lb/>
"damned if you do and<lb/>
damned if you don't" by<lb/>
the newspaper.<lb/>
Robert 8 aim<lb/>
The writer of this letter a<lb/>
the director of advert<lb/>
for The East Carolinian<lb/>
Student's view of Iranian situation<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
As the ECU Students<lb/>
took to their feet to<lb/>
demonstrate the recent<lb/>
developments in Iran, a<lb/>
number of questions ran<lb/>
through my mind. First,<lb/>
was this fired-up crowd<lb/>
there only because UNC<lb/>
and State held a rally or<lb/>
was it a good chance for<lb/>
T.V. time?<lb/>
Or did most feel the<lb/>
real need to show others<lb/>
that they really cared what<lb/>
happens to this country?<lb/>
As I continued to<lb/>
follow the mob it began to<lb/>
appear that, yes, this<lb/>
crowd did care and knew<lb/>
somewhat the problems<lb/>
between the USA and<lb/>
Iran.<lb/>
The only problem was<lb/>
that few, if any during the<lb/>
march, said anything con-<lb/>
structive about what stand<lb/>
they themselves take.<lb/>
People would blast out<lb/>
brilliant statements such<lb/>
as let's deport all Iranians<lb/>
in the USA or let's attach<lb/>
Iran and take the whole<lb/>
country over.<lb/>
Such statements<lb/>
seemed to me as having<lb/>
no place coming from<lb/>
college students. To begin<lb/>
with, to deport Iranians<lb/>
who are here in the USA<lb/>
legally just for not believ-<lb/>
ing what the majority<lb/>
believes defeats the whole<lb/>
idea the founding fathers<lb/>
or the USA meant for us.<lb/>
Since when do you<lb/>
throw someone out for not<lb/>
believing what you may<lb/>
think is right.<lb/>
The other statement<lb/>
about "let's attach Iran"<lb/>
is ludicrous. What we are<lb/>
dealing with in Iran is a<lb/>
terrorist group. It seems to<lb/>
me that the Khomeini<lb/>
government feels that if<lb/>
they don't keep their<lb/>
followers fired up they<lb/>
might realize how far out<lb/>
in left fiedl this Khomeini<lb/>
chap has led them.<lb/>
It seems that the way<lb/>
Carter is handling the<lb/>
situation now is about the<lb/>
only alternative. The only<lb/>
card violence holds is if<lb/>
the 60 Americans are<lb/>
harmed. Then the ISA<lb/>
should deal with those<lb/>
who are directlv respon?<lb/>
ible.<lb/>
The best thing the<lb/>
concerned student can do<lb/>
is show his or her support<lb/>
peacefully and pray for a<lb/>
safe end to this stalemate.<lb/>
Now that Carter ha?<lb/>
stopped imports of Iranian<lb/>
oil the need is even<lb/>
greater to stop driving so<lb/>
much; this in itself would<lb/>
probaby be the most<lb/>
effective knife we hold<lb/>
against Iran and others<lb/>
who feel hatred against<lb/>
us.<lb/>
The USA can throw her<lb/>
weight around if she is<lb/>
totally self-dependent. But<lb/>
not until we are free of the<lb/>
oil string can the full<lb/>
effect of our wrath be felt.<lb/>
So nezt time we feel a<lb/>
need to show our support<lb/>
for the USA, let's do it<lb/>
with pride and fore<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
Donald W. Warren<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR<lb/>
Richard Green<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Anita Lancaster<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
A83T. NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
THE<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marc Barnes<lb/>
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
ASST. DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING<lb/>
Terry Herndon<lb/>
ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR<lb/>
Cheryl Holder<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Steve O'Geary<lb/>
Karen Wendt<lb/>
Tarry Gray<lb/>
BWJones<lb/>
Kr� rimi Miaiii<lb/>
.Kj. PfBBunarn<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
COPV EDITOR<lb/>
AD TECH. SUPER.<lb/>
Charles Chandler<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree<lb/>
Diane Henderson<lb/>
Paul Uncke<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
of East<lb/>
by the<lb/>
distributed<lb/>
ser pwep� �wwnww<lb/>
Thursday during<lb/>
weekly during the summer<lb/>
Offices are located an the<lb/>
la the student<lb/>
University<lb/>
ef ECU<lb/>
Tuesday and<lb/>
27SS4.<lb/>
1 �WP pHnPnMV<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
fOtd South<lb/>
Is: Old<lb/>
MM<lb/>
ate: TW-mm, S3S7<lb/>
SIS<lb/>
floor ef<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057232_0005"/><lb/>
People, places, arid<lb/>
15 November 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN P�Q� 5<lb/>
I tl�tl ill 4 4 IM<lb/>
law<lb/>
c.<lb/>
8<lb/>
d<lb/>
ded<lb/>
not<lb/>
on<lb/>
the<lb/>
md<lb/>
iim<lb/>
rr is<lb/>
are<lb/>
SA<lb/>
lose<lb/>
r<lb/>
Ithe<lb/>
do<lb/>
lort<lb/>
a<lb/>
te.<lb/>
las<lb/>
lan<lb/>
ren<lb/>
;o<lb/>
ild<lb/>
st<lb/>
�ld<lb/>
;rs<lb/>
ist<lb/>
ler<lb/>
is<lb/>
lut<lb/>
le<lb/>
a<lb/>
rrt<lb/>
it<lb/>
m<lb/>
M1�<lb/>
The Women's Resi-<lb/>
dence Council is now<lb/>
taking applications for the<lb/>
two scholarships which it<lb/>
awards annually. The schol<lb/>
arships, each for $250.00,<lb/>
are the Ruth A. White<lb/>
Scholarship for an in-state<lb/>
student and the Carolyn<lb/>
Fulghum Scholarship for<lb/>
an out-of-state student.<lb/>
The awards are based on<lb/>
need and contributions to<lb/>
the residence hall and<lb/>
university.<lb/>
Any sophomore, junior<lb/>
or senior who lives in a<lb/>
W RC (excluding co-ed)<lb/>
residence hall and has<lb/>
paid this year's social fee<lb/>
is eligible to apply. The<lb/>
applications can be ob-<lb/>
tained from and returned<lb/>
to residence directors.<lb/>
They should be completed<lb/>
and turned in by Novem-<lb/>
ber 21. The Scholarship<lb/>
Committee will review the<lb/>
applications until Decem-<lb/>
ber 10 and the scholar-<lb/>
ships will be presented on<lb/>
Decmeber 11.<lb/>
t il t u c<lb/>
Students needed for<lb/>
Task force committees<lb/>
concerning student ser-<lb/>
vices. Screenings will be<lb/>
held Nov. 19, Mon. 4-7<lb/>
p.m. oin SGA Cabinet<lb/>
Room. Call 757-6611, Ext.<lb/>
218 for an appointment.<lb/>
Committees are:<lb/>
StudentLife Administration<lb/>
Student Counselling<lb/>
Career Development and<lb/>
Placement<lb/>
Student Financial Aid<lb/>
Student Health Services<lb/>
Residence Life Programs<lb/>
and Student Housing<lb/>
Student Food Services<lb/>
Student Union and the<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
Public and Life Safety<lb/>
Intramural Recreation Ser-<lb/>
vice-<lb/>
lecture<lb/>
Mill I<lb/>
100 percent Cotten, a<lb/>
senior show of clay and<lb/>
textiles works by Holly<lb/>
Cotten, is in Joyner<lb/>
Library from Friday thru<lb/>
Nov. 22. She is receiving a<lb/>
BFA in Ceremic Design.<lb/>
Thomas F. Conlon,<lb/>
Counselor in the Depart-<lb/>
ment of State, will give a<lb/>
lecture at 11 a.m Friday,<lb/>
Nov. 16, in the Auditorium<lb/>
of the Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Building. Mr. Conlon has<lb/>
served in Indonesia, the<lb/>
Philippines, Singapore,<lb/>
Vietnam, and Thailand.<lb/>
He will lecture on "Con-<lb/>
temporary Problems in<lb/>
Southeast Asia including<lb/>
drug traffic and the<lb/>
"boat people A question<lb/>
and answer session will<lb/>
follow the lecture. The<lb/>
public is invited to attend.<lb/>
reeJ<lb/>
Students needed for<lb/>
administrative committees.<lb/>
Screenings will be held<lb/>
Nov. 15, Thursday, 4-7 in<lb/>
SGA Cabinet Room. Call<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 218 for an<lb/>
appointment. Committees<lb/>
are: Canvassing, Selling &amp;<lb/>
Soliciting on campus, Re-<lb/>
sidence Dfe, Status of<lb/>
Women, Student Health<lb/>
Affairs, and Univ. Traffic<lb/>
Appeals.<lb/>
cam feed<lb/>
The Alpha Phi Frater-<lb/>
nity will be sponsoring its<lb/>
5th annual Can Food Drive<lb/>
for the needy of Green-<lb/>
ville, starting 12-20 Nov-<lb/>
ember 1979. Donations of<lb/>
non-perishable items and<lb/>
canned foods will be<lb/>
accepted. We will be<lb/>
collecting from the dorm-<lb/>
itories between the hours<lb/>
of 7-9 p.m. on the above<lb/>
dates. All donations will<lb/>
be greatly appreciated.<lb/>
eta mu<lb/>
The brothers of the Eta<lb/>
Nu Chapter of Alpha Phi<lb/>
Alpha Fraternity, Inc will<lb/>
be collecting canned goods<lb/>
for their annual Thanks-<lb/>
giving Canned Food Drive<lb/>
the week of Nov. 12-19.<lb/>
Members will be collecting<lb/>
goods in the Dorms from<lb/>
7-9 p.m. Weekdays. Please<lb/>
give.<lb/>
dance<lb/>
The Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma service sorority will<lb/>
hold a dance-a-thon Sat<lb/>
Nov. 17, 8 p.m. until 8<lb/>
a.m in Wright Aud-<lb/>
itorium. All proceeds will<lb/>
go to the American Lung<lb/>
Assoc. Donations are by<lb/>
solicited pledges, so pick<lb/>
up your pledge sheets at<lb/>
Mendenhall and the ECU<lb/>
Student Store.<lb/>
(ie<lb/>
I ill i<lb/>
Hillel is having a Bagel<lb/>
and Lox Dinner Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 15th, at 6:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room. This all<lb/>
you can eat dinner will<lb/>
cost $2 for members and<lb/>
$3 for nonmembers. All<lb/>
Jewish students are invited<lb/>
to attend. For more<lb/>
information, call Jeff Glei-<lb/>
berman 752-9453 or Mike<lb/>
Freelander 752-9473.<lb/>
rcsse<lb/>
There will be a meet-<lb/>
ing of the ROSSE, return-<lb/>
ing older students seeking<lb/>
education, at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 15, in<lb/>
Wright Annex, Room 305.<lb/>
Discussion will be center-<lb/>
ed on problems encoun-<lb/>
tered by the older stu-<lb/>
dent's return to college<lb/>
after being out for five<lb/>
or more years, or older<lb/>
students just beginning<lb/>
college.<lb/>
faculty<lb/>
serate<lb/>
Students needed for<lb/>
faculty senate committees.<lb/>
Screenings will beheld<lb/>
Nov. 15, Thursday 4-7 in<lb/>
SGA Cabinet Room. Call<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 218 for an<lb/>
appointment. Committees<lb/>
are: Career Education,<lb/>
Teaching Effectiveness,<lb/>
Library, and Teacher Ed-<lb/>
ucation.<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
continued from page 1<lb/>
more than 26 Iranian students to make it<lb/>
easier on students, school officials and<lb/>
immigration offcers.<lb/>
"It's a three, party affair involving<lb/>
immigration, the student and the school<lb/>
he said. "We don't want to interrupt the<lb/>
studies of students if they are maintaining<lb/>
their status<lb/>
In South Carolina, officials at six<lb/>
colleges and universities said immigration<lb/>
officials had already contacted them<lb/>
informally by telephone before Civiletti<lb/>
issued his formal order Tuesday.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life,<lb/>
Elmer E. Meyer stated Wednesday that<lb/>
he has not yet received official notification<lb/>
of the move and will take no action<lb/>
towards the "handful" of Iranians on the<lb/>
ECU campus.<lb/>
MIDNIGHT<lb/>
EXPRESS<lb/>
This Friday<lb/>
And Saturday<lb/>
7 And 9 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee<lb/>
The Graduate Record<lb/>
Examination will be offered<lb/>
at East Carolina University<lb/>
on Saturday, January 12,<lb/>
1980. Application blanks<lb/>
are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational<lb/>
Testing Service,Box 966-R,<lb/>
Princeton, N.J. 08540.<lb/>
Registration deadline is<lb/>
November 28, 1979. Ap-<lb/>
pplications may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105.<lb/>
plhctcs<lb/>
The ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
has an immediate opening<lb/>
for the position of Staff<lb/>
Photographer. Anyone<lb/>
who is interested in<lb/>
applying for the position<lb/>
should fill out an applica-<lb/>
tion at the office of the<lb/>
East Carolinian in the Old<lb/>
South Building across from<lb/>
the Library.<lb/>
njby<lb/>
The ECU Women's<lb/>
Rugby Team is playing a<lb/>
practice game against<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro on Sun-<lb/>
day, Nov. 18 at 3 p.m. on<lb/>
the Allied Health sports<lb/>
field. Anyone interested in<lb/>
seeing what women's rug-<lb/>
by looks like or any<lb/>
woman who is interested<lb/>
in playing is encourages to<lb/>
come and watch. For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
758-8482.<lb/>
amina<lb/>
beta pM<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet Thursday, Nov. 15,<lb/>
at 7 in room 244,<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
tuffeey<lb/>
Thursday you can win<lb/>
your Thanksgiving Turkey<lb/>
at the Turkey Shoot in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Cen-<lb/>
ter. A SI.50 entry fee<lb/>
allows you to bowl one (1)<lb/>
ball at a full set of pins on<lb/>
ten consecutive lanes. If<lb/>
you knock down at least<lb/>
eight (8) pins with just<lb/>
nine (9) of the ball, you<lb/>
WIN A TURKEY! (Limit<lb/>
two turkeys per person).<lb/>
Remember, Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 15, from 7 p.m. until<lb/>
10 p.m. at Memdenhall.<lb/>
You can try as many times<lb/>
as you like so don't miss<lb/>
it! '<lb/>
4e�i(rci�<lb/>
There will be a meet-<lb/>
ing of the Young Home<lb/>
Designers League on<lb/>
Tues Nov. 20, at 5 p.m.<lb/>
in the Van Landingham<lb/>
Room in the Home Ec.<lb/>
building. The speaker will<lb/>
be the City Planner of<lb/>
Tarboro. All housing<lb/>
majors and minors are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
rcsl<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Student Legislative will<lb/>
meet Thursday at 7 p.m.<lb/>
at Mendenhall, Room 221.<lb/>
Topics to be discussed will<lb/>
be the Nov. IC and tickets<lb/>
will be issued for the<lb/>
upcoming fund raiser. All<lb/>
members are urged to<lb/>
attend this meeting.<lb/>
clep<lb/>
The ECU Racquetball<lb/>
Club is scheduling dual<lb/>
matches and tournament<lb/>
competition with other<lb/>
colleges and universities in<lb/>
North Carolina, South<lb/>
Carolina, and Virginia.<lb/>
The club would like to<lb/>
identify all male and<lb/>
female students who are<lb/>
interested in representing<lb/>
the University on a Club<lb/>
basis in competitive rac-<lb/>
quetball.<lb/>
Anyone interested in mem-<lb/>
bership in the Racquetball<lb/>
club and the opportunity<lb/>
to compete for the Univer-<lb/>
sity should contact Ms.<lb/>
Mize, 757-6387, or come<lb/>
by 204 Memorial Gym as<lb/>
soon as possible. A<lb/>
meeting has been sched-<lb/>
uled for 5 p.m. on<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 15, in<lb/>
Room 104 of Memorial<lb/>
Gym to discuss the<lb/>
Racuetball Club and inter-<lb/>
collegiate competition.<lb/>
Everyone interested should<lb/>
attend this important<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Mr. John Childers,<lb/>
Director, ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, requests that all<lb/>
persons who have taken<lb/>
the College Level Examin-<lb/>
ation Program (CL�P)<lb/>
English Composition Test<lb/>
from May, 1979, to<lb/>
October 1979, contact teh<lb/>
ECU Testing Center at<lb/>
their earliest convenience.<lb/>
tiawail<lb/>
The Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Pledges in conjunction<lb/>
with the Alpha Delat Pi<lb/>
pledges will hold their<lb/>
"Greeks Go Hawaiian, Pig<lb/>
Pickin Dinner will be<lb/>
serve from 6-8, Friday,<lb/>
Nov. 16, at the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma House.<lb/>
Get your advance tic-<lb/>
kets from any Kappa<lb/>
Sigma or Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
pledge for $4.00. Have all<lb/>
the beer and pig you can<lb/>
handle.<lb/>
Be there, Aloha'<lb/>
.WfiNLttB S<lb/>
Chanelo's<lb/>
Delivers<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
FAST<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
HOT<lb/>
7S8-7400<lb/>
Give to the HEART FUND<lb/>
Leethor Bolts<lb/>
SCtoStt<lb/>
Leather Handbag<lb/>
$10 to $28<lb/>
Shoes Repaired To Look<lb/>
Like New<lb/>
Riggon Shoo Repair<lb/>
t Leather Shop<lb/>
111 WEST 4TM3T.<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Parking in Front<lb/>
and Rear.<lb/>
Hwy 264<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
6 miles west of<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
on Hwy 264<lb/>
Thur.<lb/>
10th Ave. JAM<lb/>
FrL<lb/>
Special 4-7<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
TOMMY G.<lb/>
&amp; CO.<lb/>
PART<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
JOB<lb/>
Looking for part-time<lb/>
job with flexible hours<lb/>
and real business<lb/>
experience? Northwest<lb/>
Mutual Life Ins. Co.<lb/>
has openings for college<lb/>
agents. Call before noon<lb/>
for appointments!<lb/>
7SS-4080<lb/>
The hottest<lb/>
sex film<lb/>
of the<lb/>
yean"<lb/>
Adult Power<lb/>
Magazine<lb/>
fWASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
III E, lOSF,<lb/>
across from<lb/>
KRlSpy KRtE<lb/>
DONUTS<lb/>
"A FULL SERVICE LAUNDRY"<lb/>
NEW fAMTfib VJfiShERS<lb/>
Carpeted Lounqjl uith Color TM<lb/>
FLUFF c9Vd FOId SzrviCJL-<lb/>
PiNbsil machines<lb/>
Et&amp;Jknt profcrjohdt dyCJesniOQ<lb/>
�srjuul <lb/>
ote utfsh and a Soft dnnlc<lb/>
aj(rh -this cnufwh<lb/>
expires -�-79 ,ViJ<lb/>
WO - faoo dlmit Qrt ftr v6t J<lb/>
CORSO, the club for<lb/>
those interested ineither<lb/>
Social Work or Correc-<lb/>
tions, will meet TUes<lb/>
Nov. 20. The meeting will<lb/>
beheld in room A-101 Belk<lb/>
at 5. Elections for the next<lb/>
calendar year will take<lb/>
place at this time. The<lb/>
departmental Christmas<lb/>
social will be discussed<lb/>
also. Members are asked<lb/>
to bring all money and<lb/>
dinner giveaway tickets tot<lb/>
this meeting.<lb/>
The Law School Ad-<lb/>
mission Test will be<lb/>
offered at East Carolina<lb/>
University on Saturday,<lb/>
Decmeber 1, 1979. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to<lb/>
Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 966-R, Prince-<lb/>
ton, N.J. 08540. Regis-<lb/>
tration deadlin is Nov. 5,<lb/>
1979. Applications may be<lb/>
obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, Speight<lb/>
Building, Room 105.<lb/>
Electrolysis<lb/>
Permanent Removal<lb/>
of Unwanted Hair<lb/>
Free Consultation<lb/>
Mrs. Vicki Smith,<lb/>
Licensed Electrologist<lb/>
103 Oakmont Dr. Greenville<lb/>
756-3760<lb/>
Tues. Wed. Fri. 10:00-5:00<lb/>
Thurs. 2:00-7:00<lb/>
Discount to college Students<lb/>
Starts TOMORROW!<lb/>
Guess Who's Back?<lb/>
i V<lb/>
r<lb/>
5V�<lb/>
1<lb/>
ffl<lb/>
j�fe<lb/>
-rr<lb/>
���<lb/>
�<lb/>
LAMPaar,<lb/>
ANIMAL IMUtB<lb/>
The Most Popular Movie Comedy Of All Time<lb/>
THE MATTY SIMMONS IVAN REITMAN PRODUCTION<lb/>
NATIONAL LAMPOON S ANIMAL HOUSE JOHN DELUSHI<lb/>
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and DONALD SUTHERLAND � c�Nt,i Produce by MATTY SIMMONS<lb/>
ond IVAN REITMAN- Music by ELMER 0ERNSTEIN<lb/>
Vnrren by HAROLD RAMIS DOUGLAS KENNEY 0 CHRIS MILLER<lb/>
Directed by JOHN LANDIS<lb/>
Song ANiMAL MOUSE Composed ond Performed by STEPHEN 01SHOP<lb/>
�0"� 0oo� o� ��w��one ivd 600'<lb/>
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Fun Shows Daily 3-5-7-9<lb/>
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Starts FRIDAY!<lb/>
The Movie. The Music. The<lb/>
Magic. Let It All Happen<lb/>
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stResanD Krascoftsasor<lb/>
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fioducedtjONPtltlfc Oracledt� fRANK PltCUi tveuine hoduar BMHtt SlttCMIi<lb/>
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KP-T TJ "i Au,<lb/>
SHOWS 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30<lb/>
<pb facs="00057232_0006"/><lb/>
The Kat (Carolinian<lb/>
features<lb/>
Thursday, November 15, 1979 Page 6<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Adkins could be Jennings'twin<lb/>
a star in his own right<lb/>
(Photo b Kip Sloan)<lb/>
. . stry, idki i - so s. All<lb/>
hart ail the<lb/>
. � i<lb/>
By BILL JONES<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
His voice comes from way down in the basement, a<lb/>
gravelly, rumbling baritone carved out of so many days<lb/>
and nights on the road.<lb/>
Wendel Adkins has broken all attendence records at<lb/>
the Carolina Opry House. Scheduled for a five-night<lb/>
succession of performances, Nov. 6 through 10, Adkins<lb/>
enjoyed playing the club so much and was so popular,<lb/>
the engagement was extended another three days. On<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 10, a capacity crowd of over 1,000<lb/>
attended and dozens had to be turned away.<lb/>
Prior to his final performance. Tuesday, Adkins<lb/>
spoke about his burgeoning career and the music<lb/>
business.<lb/>
"I've been playing for about 14 years. 1 played in<lb/>
rock V roll bands for a while, doing a lot of Beatles'<lb/>
tunes tnd such. Then 1 formed my own band and got<lb/>
back into country music. We took off on tin- road, and<lb/>
that's where we've been ever since<lb/>
"The road" includes a four-year stint in Las Vegas.<lb/>
Although successful there, Adkins was unhapp) with<lb/>
the hype of Vegas' show business.<lb/>
Jim Parker, a Las Vegas entertainment writer, called<lb/>
him "the sex idol of the country &amp; western set and<lb/>
Adkins found himself being billed as such. But. two<lb/>
beneficial things resulted from the promotional factor)<lb/>
of club- like The Sahara and the Golden Nugget; Adkins<lb/>
received wide exposure for his uncanny physical anc<lb/>
vocal resemblance to Waylon Jennings, and among th<lb/>
people his talent impressed was Willie Nelson.<lb/>
Nelson advised Adkins to "go to Texas dkins did.<lb/>
a week later.<lb/>
Since then, he has become a regular at Vt ikey<lb/>
River. Nelson's Dallas night club. For tin- past year,<lb/>
Adkins has born touring with David Allen Coo. his<lb/>
favorite musician.<lb/>
When asked if he resented being compared to<lb/>
Wavlon Jennings, Adkins replied, "No, I don't resent it.<lb/>
It bothers me sometimes. 1 don't try to sound like<lb/>
Waylon; I've always Ming like this. When I listen to<lb/>
mvself on an album. don't think 1 sound like him. but<lb/>
Willie think- I do, Waylon think- 1 do; every one rise<lb/>
seems to think 1 do.<lb/>
"One time Wavlon and Jessi (Colter) we're riding<lb/>
down the road when a song 1 had recorded came on the<lb/>
air. Wavlon said to Jessi, T don't remember recording<lb/>
thai song She told him he hadn't, that it was Wendel<lb/>
dkins. Wavlon told me that happened<lb/>
On another occasion, Adkins was at a Jennings<lb/>
concert when, having a -ore throat. Jennings ordered<lb/>
him on stage saying, "Get your ass out here and -ing<lb/>
like me<lb/>
Questioned a- to whether those who come to see him<lb/>
because he looks and sings "just like Wavlon Jennings"<lb/>
will leave recognizing him as a legitimate performer, he<lb/>
paused characteristically, a- it to satisfy himself with an<lb/>
answer.<lb/>
"I Hi. m tune. See, I've always done a lot of<lb/>
Wavlon's material; I -till do. People like to hoar -tuff<lb/>
that the van relate to. Then you ran always put in some<lb/>
 .mi. and thev'll enjo that to.<lb/>
See TV IN. page 8<lb/>
Adkins wailin'<lb/>
Test-tube turkeys:<lb/>
meat machines'<lb/>
n NN C LLAS<lb/>
1 Prt s s<lb/>
Did Si haefer can<lb/>
�  wore omen<lb/>
- lather in the -eat<lb/>
liamond ring.<lb/>
isl a bunch ol clone<lb/>
run the BBB ranch<lb/>
ireh meat machines<lb/>
-mart- � and just<lb/>
turkeys ovor the<lb/>
� Schaefer family<lb/>
le livelihood and a<lb/>
"best-dressed" and<lb/>
i torn- within a<lb/>
� their southern<lb/>
- v ith an occasional<lb/>
ispended bod moving to<lb/>
c regularity in the<lb/>
- ranch home. He and his<lb/>
ntracted polio within 12<lb/>
26 years ago. He is<lb/>
k down; she has no<lb/>
: part of her left hand<lb/>
house and yard in a<lb/>
M. but not quite, like a<lb/>
w ith her head cut oti.<lb/>
the life of a modern-day<lb/>
� ach other word- at<lb/>
imt tho geneology ol their<lb/>
omes through clearly<lb/>
gh.<lb/>
Coming<lb/>
Attractions<lb/>
PAPERM K1N(,<lb/>
n art exhibition on Papermaking and<lb/>
paperworks will be on display in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Art Gallery from November<lb/>
19 until De ember 16.<lb/>
ESCAPK<lb/>
Tonite! Escape to the South Seas, a<lb/>
presentation and travel-adventure film by<lb/>
Thaor Soule, will show in Hendnx<lb/>
Theatre at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
MADRIGAL<lb/>
The Madrigal Dinners will begin on<lb/>
December 4, in Mendenhall's multi-<lb/>
purpose room.<lb/>
MOTHER'S<lb/>
Mother's Finest and Nantucket will be<lb/>
featured in concert on Sat December 1,<lb/>
at 8:00 p.m. in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
ie poults says Betsy, "come to us<lb/>
ild from San Joaquin Valley tor 85<lb/>
apiei e They're produced by<lb/>
-� mination there and -hipped<lb/>
m special v an-<lb/>
" o have to decide in January and<lb/>
ruarv how many we can sell and we<lb/>
-tart rai-ing them in May, June and July<lb/>
for Thank-giving, Christmas and New<lb/>
Year's Schaefer cut in. "They're<lb/>
anvwhere from 16 t 26 weeks when<lb/>
thev're killed and processed<lb/>
Their turkeys cost more than $1 a<lb/>
pound, compared to a supermarket price<lb/>
55 cent But Schaefer sniffs: "They're<lb/>
frozen. Our- are all fresh<lb/>
- haefer returns to bewailing the<lb/>
innocuous turkey. "They're all the same.<lb/>
 one take- over the flock. They don't<lb/>
fight. If a buzzard should come over they<lb/>
wouldn't even show any fear. It's scary<lb/>
The flock has white features, the result<lb/>
of meticulous breeding, Betsy says, of the<lb/>
Belt-ville White with the Broad-breasted<lb/>
Bronze.<lb/>
"It all scientific now she says. "No<lb/>
setting hens, no family flock<lb/>
"And fun Schaefer repeats.<lb/>
But they have to keep the hens<lb/>
-oparated from the toms nonetheless.<lb/>
"Tho toms just defeather them when<lb/>
thev're together Betsy exclaims.<lb/>
The BBB Broad-breasted Bird<lb/>
Ranch isn't considered a large one.<lb/>
They've cut their volume from 19,000 to<lb/>
11,000 birds yearly since 1976. A large<lb/>
rancher has a half-million and may<lb/>
proces all year long.<lb/>
Even so, the 45-acre ranch in the hills<lb/>
of Chino has 30 seasonal employees.<lb/>
Dick father, William, now 75, still<lb/>
"rides herd" on the processing plant to<lb/>
make -ure the end product is up to<lb/>
standard. Willie, 22, Dick and Betsy<lb/>
Schaefer's youngest, delivers to choice<lb/>
independent markets and individual<lb/>
buyers when he's not in class at nearby<lb/>
Chaffee College.<lb/>
Their two daughters, Laura, 29, and<lb/>
Mindv, 27, are on their own and no longer<lb/>
involved. Laura, however, has pursued the<lb/>
poultry business in her own way. She's a<lb/>
qualitv control inspector for the California<lb/>
Department of Agriculture.<lb/>
Housing developments have been<lb/>
closing in on them, and smaller ranches<lb/>
are becoming rare in the trend<lb/>
agribusiness.<lb/>
The Schaefers are ready to sell but<lb/>
there are problems with sewer rights.<lb/>
"We'll be doing this another year at<lb/>
least says Dick.<lb/>
The gobbling sounds of thousands of<lb/>
turkeys comes faintly through the door as<lb/>
the sun began to set. There was only one<lb/>
more question.<lb/>
"And what do you eat on Thanksgiv-<lb/>
ing and Christmas?"<lb/>
"Turkey they exclaimed in unison<lb/>
for the first time that afternoon. "We love<lb/>
it<lb/>
Humor<lb/>
<lb/>
little<lb/>
(Photo by Fred Midgett)<lb/>
Mothers Finest in concert<lb/>
Welcoming students back to school from Th<lb/>
finest rock V roll concert in ECl history<lb/>
This high energy event is scheduled for<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. Tickets go on sale Monday<lb/>
Office: $4 for students, $6 at the door.<lb/>
anksgiving will be perhaps the<lb/>
Mothers Finest with antucket.<lb/>
Saturday. Dec. 1, 8 p.m in<lb/>
Nov. 19, at the Central Ticket<lb/>
i n k s g<lb/>
i s a s t h a 1<lb/>
f re thinking. � <lb/>
. � � .<lb/>
Negative. Pre ksgn :<lb/>
�� a hi rs start assigi<lb/>
Wednesdav before Turkey d<lb/>
afterw ards.<lb/>
I personally happen I think<lb/>
iu - v thing to do. I mi i<lb/>
tuff my faci md resl<lb/>
essorl'vegothasa is<lb/>
me. I'm tellii ly<lb/>
Granted, I worship at the<lb/>
just like the rest I i gu) s, and<lb/>
a . � �  � this si<lb/>
in the m1 to take a bum I<lb/>
i Ine w ould assume th<lb/>
this university for no short amoui I<lb/>
braced myself for the inevitable<lb/>
have thought I'd have taken a nott r I a<lb/>
October and that I'd have I<lb/>
research on those term papers 1<lb/>
September.<lb/>
NX rong again.<lb/>
Ever heard ol the motl<lb/>
can put off until next weel<lb/>
ol mine. It ha- served me we<lb/>
between a party or a trip to the<lb/>
notecards.<lb/>
At anv rate, whether I'm in the n<lb/>
ests and papers aren't going to tiptoe avvav 1<lb/>
that. I've accepted it, and so, yesterday when 1<lb/>
out ot bed (suffering, but the wav. from<lb/>
hangover), I derided to get on the stick and ; .<lb/>
and schoolwork together.<lb/>
Ah. the noble ideal- of a guilt) consciei<lb/>
I rechecked assignments and dis<lb/>
horror, that two term papers and four tests<lb/>
agenda. After fighting down the visi <lb/>
danced in my head. I decided to make a da<lb/>
ibrary. I figured that would Ao it.<lb/>
I rolled into Joyner that afternoon .<lb/>
intentions in the world. 1 want you to know i<lb/>
there is somethng about that place that tun<lb/>
helpless, bumbling idiot. Suffice it to say that I b<lb/>
out ol Library Science and haven't gotti<lb/>
rev i-iting the course.<lb/>
Truthfully though, admit it � nobody <lb/>
what in that librarv. I aw quite a tew v<lb/>
students wandering around in confusion, and I<lb/>
one poor soul sobbing into the card catalog in<lb/>
frustration because all the information he needed was<lb/>
microfiche.<lb/>
V<lb/>
Th<lb/>
1 w �<lb/>
m<lb/>
See HUMOR, page 8<lb/>
V.<lb/>
t1 Oavw Nois<lb/>
H�1, I &amp;0tf loo �eco0<lb/>
)u KirJQ -n rr)ik up<lb/>
<lb/>
mhat oo we aKx p<lb/>
<pb facs="00057232_0007"/><lb/>
15 November 1979 THE EAST CAROLINIAN Page 7<lb/>
Spice of Life<lb/>
sUCCliltntlv �<lb/>
S�Charles speak<lb/>
sII treat)<lb/>
Li ign Rel-e, he had<lb/>
r<lb/>
is Republ-leagues i e for end) and ised all the<lb/>
kv a slaughter.<lb/>
k -id.<lb/>
d Isav?" he<lb/>
Percj joined the laughter Clegg, also accused Mrs.<lb/>
whispered.<lb/>
and corrected "succul-<lb/>
ently" to "succinctly"<lb/>
before going on with his<lb/>
speech.<lb/>
Encroachment<lb/>
BRIGHTON, England<lb/>
i P) � One post being<lb/>
used by Laura Evans to<lb/>
repair a boundary fence<lb/>
was an inch thicker than<lb/>
the others, so an 80-year-<lb/>
old widow took her to<lb/>
court, charging property<lb/>
encroachment.<lb/>
the widow. Phyllis<lb/>
Evans' son-in-law of hit-<lb/>
ting her over the head<lb/>
with the post in the<lb/>
ensuing row.<lb/>
Both charges were<lb/>
dismissed.<lb/>
Big beans<lb/>
CHESTER, England<lb/>
(AP) � Head scratching<lb/>
horticultura lists, noting<lb/>
that runner-bean plants<lb/>
"usually grow to about 13<lb/>
feel at must are at a loss<lb/>
to explain how young<lb/>
Calvin Breckon managed<lb/>
to coax his to 30 feet.<lb/>
It's a nice, big<lb/>
plant muses Breckon,<lb/>
"but I don't like beans<lb/>
Break pays off<lb/>
NAPLES. Italy (AP) -<lb/>
VI hen Ciancarlo Hazoni<lb/>
had his left thigh broken<lb/>
in a 1 c74 auto accident,<lb/>
the bone healed but he<lb/>
v as left with a limp.<lb/>
K hen the same thigh<lb/>
u.i- broken again recently,<lb/>
surgeons found three coins<lb/>
imbedded in the flesh of<lb/>
his thigh.<lb/>
The impact of the first<lb/>
accident had forced the<lb/>
coins through his trouser<lb/>
pocket and pressed them<lb/>
so deeply into the open<lb/>
wound they were hidden<lb/>
from sight when the bone<lb/>
was set.<lb/>
Stealers strip<lb/>
DRACHTEN, Nether-<lb/>
lands (AP) � Six young<lb/>
women caught stealing<lb/>
curtains took to their<lb/>
heels, pursued by several<lb/>
angry men. As the women<lb/>
ran, they began stripping.<lb/>
leaving their clothes be-<lb/>
hind them.<lb/>
The men were so em-<lb/>
barrassed they gave up<lb/>
the chase and let the<lb/>
thieves escape � still<lb/>
clutching the stolen cur-<lb/>
tains.<lb/>
Kenyan steam<lb/>
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)<lb/>
� The East African<lb/>
country of Kenya is in hot<lb/>
water these days but is<lb/>
very happy about it.<lb/>
Surveys financed by<lb/>
the United Nations' De-<lb/>
velopment Program have<lb/>
disclosed that a valley<lb/>
near Nairobi contains e-<lb/>
nough underground steam<lb/>
for the generation of<lb/>
steam on a commercial<lb/>
s ale.<lb/>
The government is now<lb/>
negotiating with the World<lb/>
Bank lor a loan w hie h<lb/>
would permit the con-<lb/>
struction ot two generating<lb/>
units in the region, about<lb/>
45 miles northwest ol the<lb/>
Kenyan capital.<lb/>
Thev would be the first<lb/>
geothermal power stations<lb/>
in Africa.<lb/>
Visitors<lb/>
COVENTRY. England<lb/>
(P) � A -iirvev conduct-<lb/>
ed at Walsgrave Hospital<lb/>
shows that patients are<lb/>
sick ot visitors.<lb/>
W ell-wishers are dis-<lb/>
turbing afternoon naps<lb/>
and forcing patients to<lb/>
rush through their meals,<lb/>
the pull shows, but the<lb/>
patients are too embai<lb/>
sed to -peak up.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Acclaimed Film<lb/>
Of The Year<lb/>
Chanelo's<lb/>
Delivers<lb/>
This Friday And Saturday<lb/>
7 And 9 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
y<lb/>
u<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$175.00 "all inclusive<lb/>
pregnancy test birth control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further information can 832-0535 mo I-<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568. between<lb/>
9 A M -5 P V weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
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SEMI-SOFT &amp; HARD LENSES<lb/>
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CLEAR-VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
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VISA'<lb/>
 A<lb/>
NAVY OFFICER.<lb/>
YOU GET RESPONSIBILITY THE MOMENT<lb/>
YOU GET THE STRIPES.<lb/>
i �t i f big corporations offer you a big<lb/>
But how many offer a young college<lb/>
luate a really important job?<lb/>
As a Navy Officer, you don't have<lb/>
lit to do a job that counts. We give<lb/>
you one as soon as you've earned your<lb/>
commission. A job with responsibility for<lb/>
the livesof others, and for millions of dollars<lb/>
of complex equipment. A job that requires<lb/>
skill and leadership. A job that Navy Officers<lb/>
have been doing proudly for 200 years.<lb/>
I f that's the kind of job you're looking<lb/>
for, speak to a Navy recruiter. You'll find<lb/>
that Naw Officers have unequalled<lb/>
opportunities in fields like Nuclear Power,<lb/>
Aviation, and Engineering.<lb/>
Or call toll free 800-841-8000. (In Georgia,<lb/>
toll free 800-342-5855.) Early responsibility.<lb/>
It's what being a Navy Officer is all about.<lb/>
NAVY OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
 INFORMATION CENTER<lb/>
 P.O. Box 2000. Pelham Manor. NY 10803<lb/>
D Send me information on Career Opportunities<lb/>
in the Navy (0G)<lb/>
? Call me at<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
i Area lode)<lb/>
First<lb/>
i Please Print)<lb/>
IjLst<lb/>
ADDRESS<lb/>
CITY<lb/>
DATE OF:<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
tUniversity.<lb/>
L<lb/>
STATE<lb/>
ZIP<lb/>
Birth<lb/>
(College Graduation<lb/>
?GPA<lb/>
CN '1-9<lb/>
D.A.KELLY'S FEAST<lb/>
It's here: D.A.Kelly's "Fruitful Day<lb/>
Come see what our girls have to give away!<lb/>
Oxford Sweaters with stripes are selling,<lb/>
"Come on down we're all yelling!<lb/>
Lurex Shirts, plaid skirts, blazers too-<lb/>
All are waiting -just for you!<lb/>
Whoever comes can register for a "beast<lb/>
A twenty-pound turkey-Oh! What a feast!<lb/>
Ladies gathering clothes for the fall,<lb/>
Think of D.A. Kelly's, with something for all!<lb/>
SPECIAL GROUP OF PULLOVER &amp; WRAP SWEATERS<lb/>
were $9.98 &amp; $13.98<lb/>
nowjust$7.00-$10.00<lb/>
OXFORD SWEATERS<lb/>
values at $15.98<lb/>
Buy 1 and get 1 free<lb/>
LUREX TRIM SHIRTS<lb/>
values upto $13.98<lb/>
now only $6.98<lb/>
Buy a blazerof your choice<lb/>
and find a matching skirt at 1 3 off-<lb/>
Cowl necks in new fall colors<lb/>
NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. <lb/>
Buy 1 at $8.98 and get<lb/>
another for just $2.99<lb/>
'DAKlly<lb/>
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Mon-Sat<lb/>
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10-9 Daily<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057232_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 15 November 1979<lb/>
Coffeehouse delivers<lb/>
comedy and good signs<lb/>
Kids9 games are deadly<lb/>
By RAYMOND L. FIKE<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
The ECU Student<lb/>
Union Coffeehouse pre-<lb/>
sented a double-bill of<lb/>
entertainment on Friday,<lb/>
Nov. 9. Both Jeff Blum-<lb/>
berg, a comedian, and the<lb/>
ECU Sign Language<lb/>
Troupe performed. The<lb/>
sell out crowd was well<lb/>
pleased with the two half<lb/>
hour shows.<lb/>
The ECU Troupe did<lb/>
sign language renditions<lb/>
of some popular songs.<lb/>
Troupe members were<lb/>
very good individually and<lb/>
in groups. The troupe had<lb/>
an abundance of material<lb/>
even enough to choose<lb/>
TWIN<lb/>
continued from page 6<lb/>
But, if you get up there and play just stuff they've<lb/>
never heard before, it's kind of hard for them to sit all<lb/>
night and listen to something that's unfamilar.<lb/>
In speaking of the recording industry, Adkins says,<lb/>
"All the large record companies have bought up all the<lb/>
small companies<lb/>
RCA and Columbia control the majority of<lb/>
distribution in this country, so if you can't get in with<lb/>
them, you can't get a hit record.<lb/>
"If you can stay alive long enough he continues,<lb/>
"just hold out � you'll do it. There's more talent<lb/>
undiscovered than people realize. I mean, there are<lb/>
some great damned singers all over that nobody will<lb/>
take time to listen to or help.<lb/>
"And then you get some people (in positions of<lb/>
control) who don't want nothing to change. Some guy<lb/>
might have a song that would change the whole music<lb/>
scene � they don't want that to happen, they're going<lb/>
to lose too much money, so they do all they can to keep<lb/>
him from getting recognized. It's politics in the music<lb/>
industry<lb/>
Wendel Adkins' performance, later Tuesday night,<lb/>
was a combination of professionalicm and spontenaity.<lb/>
Adkins prefers to do long sets, often up to 90 minutes in<lb/>
length.<lb/>
His choice of songs varies with each show. He never<lb/>
uses a song schedule. This provides him with an<lb/>
unusual intimacy with the audience that reflects and<lb/>
caters to the audience's mood. Occasionally he even<lb/>
changes songs in the middle of a tune.<lb/>
On stage, under the spotlights, he does take on a<lb/>
resemblance to Waylon Jennings. Although lacking the<lb/>
same degree of rich, clean, operatic tremelo which<lb/>
makes Jennings' voice so pleasant (perhaps due to the<lb/>
number of performances in the last week) Adkins'<lb/>
baratone voice all but indistinguishable from country-<lb/>
music's premier 'outlaw<lb/>
Adkins spotlighted his very talented band in the<lb/>
second set. Billy Harold Lee, the drummer, has been<lb/>
with Adkins since the rock V roll days twelve years<lb/>
ago. The other members of the band include Rob Langy<lb/>
on bass. Langy has been with Adkins for 9 years. Larry<lb/>
Hill picks lead guitar. Randy Schaffer (who was<lb/>
stationed at Cherry Point while in the Navy) also plays<lb/>
lead guitar. And Slim "Wild Cat" George Hill, is armer<lb/>
former Louisiana State harmonica champion.<lb/>
Wendel Adkins might could pass for Waylon<lb/>
Jennings' twin on stage, but he is no clone. He is very-<lb/>
much a 'star' in his own right.<lb/>
from when a call for more<lb/>
came as time ran out on<lb/>
their second show.<lb/>
This group should have<lb/>
been billed for the multi-<lb/>
purpose room rather than<lb/>
the small Coffeehouse.<lb/>
People were lined up in<lb/>
the hallway hoping to see<lb/>
the performance. Most<lb/>
said that they had been<lb/>
drawn by the music and<lb/>
had come to see what it<lb/>
was about. They probably<lb/>
would have paid admission<lb/>
and stayed for the show if<lb/>
they had had a place to<lb/>
sit.<lb/>
Comedian Jeff Blum-<lb/>
berg was good, but he<lb/>
needs work. He used old<lb/>
adages, comedy about<lb/>
childhood and other topics<lb/>
where more original mat-<lb/>
erial would have gone over<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Blumberg is funny, and<lb/>
after he gets more exper-<lb/>
ience, he may even<lb/>
become a star. Yet, he<lb/>
doesn't seem to know<lb/>
whether he should pattern<lb/>
his act after those of<lb/>
famous comics or move<lb/>
into his own style. We got<lb/>
a little bit of Don Rickles,<lb/>
Rich Little, Richard Pryor,<lb/>
and a few others. We<lb/>
should have gotten more<lb/>
of Jeff Blumberg.<lb/>
By JOHN BARBOUR<lb/>
AP Newsfeatures Writer<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) � This city's streets are a<lb/>
playground for a fifth of the city's million or so<lb/>
school-age kids who don't go to school. The games they<lb/>
play these days are deadly.<lb/>
A 13-year-old boy with an older youth spot a<lb/>
17-year-old with a radio. They want it. They take it at<lb/>
gunpoint. The 17-year-old is left, shot dead in the street.<lb/>
A 15-year-old and a 20-year-old plan to rob an<lb/>
84-year -old woman's apartment. She is bludgeoned to<lb/>
death, he body burned.<lb/>
Another juvenile wants money from his grandmother.<lb/>
He chokes her, cuts her, and leaves her in flames.<lb/>
Passing firefighters save her life.<lb/>
The ugly recital goes on. In nine months in the<lb/>
boroughs of this city, 18 youngsters under 16 were<lb/>
arrested for felony murder, and 36 for attempted<lb/>
murder. The city is schocked at the scneselessness, the<lb/>
easy way even 13-year-olds choke off life.<lb/>
The state passes a law alloowing juveniles as young<lb/>
as 13 to be prosecuted in adult courts for violent and<lb/>
capital crimes.<lb/>
The state passes a law allowing juveniles as young as<lb/>
13 to be prosecuted in adult courts for violent and<lb/>
capital crimes.<lb/>
Among the people who have to deal weith this<lb/>
sudden epidemic of violence by youngsters is District<lb/>
Attorney Mario Merola of teh Bronx.<lb/>
He points out it's not a New York problem alone.<lb/>
"Kids are committing 50 percent of all the crimes not<lb/>
only in New York City or the Bronx, but throughout the<lb/>
nation<lb/>
Merola admits the Bronx is worse than most places.<lb/>
In the last year, the county has had 13 juveniles under<lb/>
16 who committed 15 homicides. One of the worst<lb/>
involved a 14 and 15-year-old who used fire to light up<lb/>
an attempted burglary. The flames spread after they left<lb/>
and killed seven people.<lb/>
"When I left the Bronx DA's office in 1964 Merola<lb/>
says, "we had 86 homicides a year. When I came back<lb/>
in 1973, we had 430, a 500 percent increaseIf you look<lb/>
at the statistics, you'll see that younger people are<lb/>
committing adult crimes, much more violent crimes. But<lb/>
so is the enitire society<lb/>
Now that the actions of society are an excuse for<lb/>
HUMOR<lb/>
continued from page 6<lb/>
I wandered around for awhile trying to look<lb/>
competent, but since I have no earthly idea where to<lb/>
locate things in that library, I didn't find anything even<lb/>
remotely related to my term paper topics. I did,<lb/>
however, happen to run across a book by Robert<lb/>
Benchley, whom I consider to be an outstandingly funny<lb/>
guy. I checked it out and went home to curl up in bed<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
This morning I remembered the four tests and the<lb/>
term papers. I also remembered that I don't have<lb/>
anything special to do next Tuesday except pack to go<lb/>
home. I'll work on them then.<lb/>
Yours,<lb/>
775134<lb/>
Go<lb/>
Pirates,<lb/>
GO<lb/>
juvenille behavior.<lb/>
Asst. District Attorney Robert Spadero of Brooklyn,<lb/>
who handles juveniles in the borough quotes a police<lb/>
officer who said "The child of today is not the same that<lb/>
we had around here 15 years ago. They're more violent<lb/>
today<lb/>
Merola disagrees that youngsters are different.<lb/>
"They're the same kids of 15 or 20 years ago. The<lb/>
only difference is that then, if a guy brualized your girl<lb/>
on Friday or Saturday night, maybe you had a fistfight<lb/>
and maybe you had a black eye or a broken nose. But<lb/>
now what happens is out come the knives and guns and<lb/>
you've got death<lb/>
There are other defferences, however. Merola<lb/>
blames the highest divorce rate ever, more working<lb/>
mothers than ever, violence on television and narcotics.<lb/>
And more than any other facotr, besides the availability<lb/>
of guns, is the high rate of truancy, he says.<lb/>
"In New York City they tell me there are something<lb/>
like 200,000 truants a day out of a school population of a<lb/>
million<lb/>
Merola recalls that New York used to have a facility<lb/>
called the 600 school for those youngsters who fit<lb/>
neither of teh other categories. It was a school for<lb/>
disruptive students.<lb/>
"You gave them a basketball and you had a physical<lb/>
education teacher who made them play ball all day. If<lb/>
you did all that, you'd reduce crime by half overnight<lb/>
Merola also blames the ready availability of guns and<lb/>
other weapons. "They tell me there are something like<lb/>
two million guns in New York City out of eight million<lb/>
people he says.<lb/>
New York state's Division of Criminal Justice<lb/>
Services is tabulating the number of youngsters under<lb/>
16 brought to trial as adults. In a July report, the<lb/>
division reported that "contrary to scare stories" violent<lb/>
13 to 15-year-olds were just as unlikely to strike out at<lb/>
younger kids as they were to pick on people over the<lb/>
age of 60.<lb/>
"In fact, they are most likely to pick on kids their<lb/>
own size the report said, "with 380 of 932 or almost<lb/>
41 percent of the victims between ages 13 and 19<lb/>
The various district attorneys are in various stages of<lb/>
discomfort with the new law. It's not easy to bring a<lb/>
13-year-old to trial.<lb/>
"Am I in favor of the juvenile law?" Merola repeats.<lb/>
"I don't like the juvenile law. Nobody likes the juvenile<lb/>
law. But what alternatives do you have. There's no<lb/>
alternative. Obviously the way we handled them in the<lb/>
past was totally unsatisfacotry.<lb/>
"So, of course, I end up in favor of it because it is<lb/>
the only thing we have available to us<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057232_0009"/><lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
lian m<lb/>
sports<lb/>
Thursday, November 15, 1979 Page J GreemHe, N.C<lb/>
man9 Green fills big shoes ft<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
H<lb/>
e s a<lb/>
done some big things during his Pirate career, especially<lb/>
in this, his senior season.<lb/>
"I look at a quarterback in terms of what his team's<lb/>
little man's hero says East Carolina offense gains from him said Dye. "And in our<lb/>
football coach Pat Dye. Naturally, Dye's subject is a offense, Leander is spectacular. He's about four men<lb/>
"little man" himself. combined into one<lb/>
Actually, he is a little, big man. For 5-7 ECU One example of Green's value to the Pirates is the<lb/>
quarterback Leander Green may be short but he has yards per carry average of the entire backfield.<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
Green barks out signals to Pirate offense<lb/>
Halfbacks Anthony Collins and Sam Harrell are<lb/>
averaging 7.4 and 7.3 yards per carry, respectively.<lb/>
Fullback Theodore Sutton owns a sparkling 6.5 average<lb/>
and his back-up, Mrvin Cobb, averages 7.3 yards per<lb/>
rush.<lb/>
"The fact that all our backs have such great<lb/>
averages is just another tribute to Leander's play at<lb/>
quarterback Dye proclaimed. "He always seems to<lb/>
know where the soft spots of the defense are<lb/>
Dye talked of Green's situation as compared to that<lb/>
of Southern California's celebrated QB, Paul McDonald.<lb/>
"Here it's not like it is with McDonald he said. "All<lb/>
he has to do it pitch the ball to White (tailback Charles,<lb/>
present Heisman Trophy favorite) and they're off. In our<lb/>
offense, Leander must always make crucial decisions<lb/>
because we run the option. <lb/>
"The entire offense revolves around him Dye<lb/>
added. "He must be able to read defenses, pitch, run<lb/>
and pass. So he's actually a 'four-in-one quarterback<lb/>
Green says that much of his success � he has<lb/>
rushed for 490 yards and thrown for 851 in addition to<lb/>
assisting the other backs this season � is due to being<lb/>
surrounded by great personnel. "With the type of<lb/>
offensive line we have, it's kind of easy to do my job<lb/>
Green said. "Our backs have run great too, so our<lb/>
offensive figures look real good<lb/>
"Real good" is a major understatement. The Pirate<lb/>
offense ranks third in the nation in running offense,<lb/>
sixth in passing offense and eighth in scoring offense.<lb/>
The Pirate offense is loaded with seniorsand Green<lb/>
says this is the main reason for the success. "We have<lb/>
all played together for a long time he said. "It all<lb/>
comes from experience. The other backs know just as<lb/>
well as I do about what I'll do in certain situations. This<lb/>
proves that experience is the best teacher<lb/>
Though things have gone well for Green this season,<lb/>
it has not always been all roses for the Jacksonville<lb/>
native. In fact, for much of the first part of last season,<lb/>
when the ECU offense was struggling, Green received<lb/>
large doses of criticism.<lb/>
He suffered several injuries that slowed him down,<lb/>
and also slowed down the Pirate team as a whole.<lb/>
"Those were trying times said Green. "When I was<lb/>
hurt, I figured someone would step in and everything<lb/>
would be all right. But it didn't work out that way<lb/>
Green said that there came a time last season that he<lb/>
realized he must try to playi in pain. It all came together<lb/>
for him in the late stages of a 21-14 win over Richmond.<lb/>
"I felt I had to start doing something and figured<lb/>
that was as good a time as any he said.<lb/>
I that game, the Pirates struggled for much of the<lb/>
afternoon against the underdog Spiders. Late in the<lb/>
fourth quarter, the game seemed headed for a 14-14 tie.<lb/>
But the Pirates, led by some fancy running by Green,<lb/>
overtook Richmond with a last-minute touchdown.<lb/>
"That was when it all came together for this<lb/>
offensive team proclaimed Green. "We gained some<lb/>
confidence then that we have had ever since<lb/>
The rough going that Green experienced for part of<lb/>
last season came as a surprise to many, including<lb/>
himself, because of the success that he had enjoyed his<lb/>
sophomore season. That year he split time at<lb/>
quarterback with senior Jimmy Southerland. "My job<lb/>
was to come in mainly to run the football Green said.<lb/>
And run the ball he did, finishing his first full season as<lb/>
a Pirate with 546 yards and seven touchdowns on the<lb/>
ground. He threw the ball a mere 79 times that<lb/>
sophomore season.<lb/>
All of a sudden last season, there was no Jimmy<lb/>
Southerland. It was all on the shoulders of Leander<lb/>
Green. "At first it didn't seem like a big deal to me<lb/>
claimed Green. "It really turned out to be tough,<lb/>
though. The injuries sure didn't help any. I learned an<lb/>
awful lot from the whole experience<lb/>
The little ECU quarterback has, of course, rebounded<lb/>
from the bad experiences of his junior year and become<lb/>
a truly great quarterback. Some coaches have gone so<lb/>
far as to call him the best wishbone quarterback in the<lb/>
COuntry- See GREEN page 12<lb/>
Wiggins' shoi<lb/>
ives White<lb/>
4-72 win<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
In 18-foot jumper by freshman guard Bryant<lb/>
-gins gave the White team a 74-72 win over the Gold<lb/>
in the first official intrasquad scrimmage of the season<lb/>
for teh East Carolina basketball team Wednesday night.<lb/>
�friggins, who finished the night with six points, put<lb/>
the -hot through with five seconds remaining in the<lb/>
ie. A last-second shot by the Gold's Kyle Powers<lb/>
Ued from 25 feet. M<lb/>
"I was not surprised to see Bryant take the shot,<lb/>
Mid ECU coach Dave Odom. "He's got a lot of guts<lb/>
Hkut him<lb/>
The two teams played a very tight game all the way,<lb/>
ith neither coming even close to building a substantial<lb/>
Ud at anv time.<lb/>
"This proves that we have a lot of kids who we will<lb/>
ie able to play Odom said. "It really doesn't matter<lb/>
ho we start because we will play nine or ten, maybe<lb/>
?ven 11 people a great deal<lb/>
The White team was led in scoring by senior<lb/>
-Bwingman Herb Krusen, who finished the night with 18<lb/>
points. He was followed closely by 6'8" sophomore<lb/>
fDavid Underwood with 15 points, senior guard George<lb/>
IMaynor with 14 and forward Frank Hobson with 10.<lb/>
Herb Gray of the Gold team shared game-high with<lb/>
Krusen as he too poured in 18 points. Clarence Miles<lb/>
finished with 15 and Michael Gibson added 14 for the<lb/>
3 Odom in his first year at the Pirate helm, said he<lb/>
was pleased wth every aspect of the scrimmage.<lb/>
"Considering this was the first time that we have played<lb/>
before a crowd ,1 was very pleased " he said.<lb/>
"I was surprised that we didn't run more though,<lb/>
Odom added. "That could be good or bad. Maybe we<lb/>
were a little cautious or maybe our defense was that<lb/>
good. We've worked a lot on the zone defense itself, but<lb/>
have not worked much against it<lb/>
Odom said that he told his team before the<lb/>
nmmage that winning and losing -as not somethmg<lb/>
that he was worried about, "to it turned out, he said,<lb/>
"nobodv really lost after all<lb/>
The'rookihead coach said that the go he had set<lb/>
prior to the game have been achieved We had two<lb/>
prior to tne g find Qut where we<lb/>
main goals, he said. We &amp; from<lb/>
are as a team and we wanieu tu b<lb/>
the sneetators I feel like we achieved both.<lb/>
the spectators. d h d f<lb/>
us to be atthis point. And I feel that we showed we can<lb/>
plavgooo baseball, which hopefully gamed na some<lb/>
that the team had � m ffWS<lb/>
during preseason practice, �"� �<lb/>
hard to achieve. j nc �he team<lb/>
He also said that �X�, �uch Irk<lb/>
effort, he realizes that the Pirates su" � . id<lb/>
to'do. "We've JJe we must<lb/>
"First of all, we're very ���J�J�m&amp;e of thm could<lb/>
develop some advantages of our own.<lb/>
be our 8uard height . odom i8<lb/>
One feature of the game h' � f from the<lb/>
the fact that both teams shot well ove�<lb/>
field, the Gold team shooting 55.8 and tn<lb/>
55 The point totals for this game wereabiUe.mng<lb/>
game, going two 15-mmute naive<lb/>
regulation 20-minute halves.<lb/>
The Pirates will hold another 'fJ<lb/>
lame next Wednesday, Not. :I , for p <lb/>
High school gymnasium. Tip-oH time<lb/>
Mean Gre<lb/>
to invade<lb/>
(Photo by Chap Gurley)<lb/>
ECU halfback Sam Harrell 125) is one of many Pirate seniors<lb/>
ECU vs. NTSU Saturday<lb/>
Seniors' home finale<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's football team hopes to make the best<lb/>
out of a bad situation Saturday when they take on North<lb/>
Texas State in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
The "bad situation" is created by the fact that a<lb/>
large number of Pirate seniors will be playing their last<lb/>
home game for ECU. Among those is quarterback<lb/>
Leander Green.<lb/>
"It's kinda sad said Green. "I just hope we can<lb/>
play our best game of the year<lb/>
Pirate head coach Pat Dye definitely hates to see this<lb/>
group of seniors graduate from his squad. All season<lb/>
long it has been evident that this recruited group is<lb/>
probably his favorite ever.<lb/>
"They're a class bunch of people said Dye at his<lb/>
weekly press luncheon Wednesday. "They've been fine<lb/>
leaders and citizens as well as fine players. Each one of<lb/>
them has improved so much due to the amount of work<lb/>
and determination that they have exerted for four<lb/>
years t<lb/>
Dye noted that many estabished "starsi among the<lb/>
seniors were not highly recruited. "But he added,<lb/>
"they all have the intangibles that you look for in a<lb/>
great football player<lb/>
The Pirate offensive unit, which ranks sixth in the<lb/>
nation in total offense at this point, is senior-laden and<lb/>
drew many raves from Dye. "This is by far the best<lb/>
offensive team that we've had here he said. "They ve<lb/>
played together a long time and know just how to<lb/>
execute our attack<lb/>
Dye said that he had recently talked with Barry<lb/>
Switzer, head coach of the powerhouse Oklahoma<lb/>
Sooners. "He wanted to know how our offense was<lb/>
doing so well said Dye. "I told him that we were just<lb/>
exciting. He commented on our lack of turnovers (the<lb/>
Pirates have but 13, third best mark in the country). He<lb/>
said that their offense had fumbled the ball 35 times<lb/>
already  .<lb/>
On ECU's offensive unit, at least seven will be gone<lb/>
next season. Those seven players include quarterback<lb/>
Green, halfback Sam Harrell, Center Jeff Hagans, guard<lb/>
Mitchell Johnston, tackles Matt Mulholland and Joe<lb/>
h<lb/>
Godette, and tight end Billy Ray Washington.<lb/>
Fullback Theodore Sutton and split end Vern<lb/>
Davenport are seniors but have a year of eligibility left.<lb/>
Guard Wayne Inman and halfback Anthony Collins are<lb/>
juniors. M<lb/>
"It will really be tough replacing those guys, said<lb/>
Dye. "They've meant so much to ECU football<lb/>
Dye mentioned some of the players individually.<lb/>
"When I think of this group I think of a kid like Billy<lb/>
Ray. He has blossomed so much not only as a player but<lb/>
personality-wise in his four years.<lb/>
"The entire line is made up of self-made players.<lb/>
They've worked so hard. Take Matt Mulholland for<lb/>
example. Everything he has achieved has come through<lb/>
nothing by hard, long hours of work.<lb/>
Dye spoke especially high of Green. "He runs our<lb/>
offense to perfection Dye said. "If there is an all-state<lb/>
team and he is not named the quarterback, then there<lb/>
ain't no justice<lb/>
The sixth-year Pirate mentor did not forget his<lb/>
seniors on defense either when passing out laurels<lb/>
"Just look at Vance Tingler he said, "he's worked<lb/>
himself into a player. The same can be said for Tim<lb/>
Swords and Wayne Pocle. Noah Clark has meant an<lb/>
awful lot to us, having always started on and off<lb/>
Dye applauded the careers of senior secondary<lb/>
members Charlie Carter and Ruffin McNeill, also.<lb/>
"They've both started since they were sophomores he<lb/>
said. "They're very tough and physical. Folks don't like<lb/>
to run at either one of them<lb/>
Then, of course, there is Ail-American candidate<lb/>
Mike Brewington, a linebacker. "Mike's been a great-<lb/>
player, Dye said. "He was highly recruited and has<lb/>
lived up to all we expected of him. I just hope he gets<lb/>
all the recognition that he deserves<lb/>
Dye mentioned that there were so many seniors on<lb/>
this year's team that he could hardly remember them<lb/>
all. "I know I've probably left somebody out. But each<lb/>
and every one of our seniors are super individuals and<lb/>
will really be missed. , ' -<lb/>
"If you check the record I think you 11 find that this<lb/>
group of seniors will haTe won more football games than<lb/>
any group of seniors in North Carolina.<lb/>
<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
How does North Texas State plan to handle the<lb/>
Pirates of East CArolina when the two teams meet<lb/>
Saturday at 1:30 at Ficklen Stadium?<lb/>
"With a great deal of difficulty muses North Texas<lb/>
defensive coordinator Harold itichardson.<lb/>
It seems the legacy of the powerful ECU wishbone<lb/>
reaches all the way to the bad-lands of Texas, and it has<lb/>
the Mean Green coaches disturbed.<lb/>
"East CArolina's offense is close to being<lb/>
awesome said Richardson. "I've seen the films and<lb/>
they've moved the ball on every team they've played.<lb/>
"The EAst CArolina wishbone is hard to defend<lb/>
against. The defense has to be aware of teh entire<lb/>
field<lb/>
Fullback Marvin Cobb and running backs Sam<lb/>
Harrell and Anthony Collins each average over seven<lb/>
yards per carry, with fullback Theodore Sutton following<lb/>
closely at 6.5; making the Pirate backfield on eof the<lb/>
most potent in the nation.<lb/>
"I think it is just indicative of how a veteran team<lb/>
like East Carolina works together on offense. Those boys<lb/>
have been together for three or fout years and they<lb/>
execute to perfection. It's a situation with seniors where<lb/>
you can't depend on them to make mistakes and cough<lb/>
up the football. They just play too consistantly<lb/>
Turnovers have come far too often for the Mean<lb/>
Green offense, and according to Rchardson, the defense<lb/>
has been unable to match the fumble interception total<lb/>
which helped the 1978 squad to a 9-2 finish.<lb/>
"One of the things we haven't done well this year is<lb/>
get the turnovers he said. "A lot depends on being in<lb/>
the right place at the right time and we just haven't<lb/>
been there often enough<lb/>
Offensively, the Mean Green works out of the basic<lb/>
I-formation, with veteran signal caller Jordan Case<lb/>
directing the attack.<lb/>
Case has completed 96 out of 152 passes (63.2<lb/>
percent) for 1056 yards on the season.<lb/>
"They have good speed, good receivers and a good<lb/>
quarterback said ECU assistant defensive coach Bobby<lb/>
See MEAN GREEN page 10<lb/>
NTSU tailback Bernard Jackoon<lb/>
I<lb/>
MB<lb/>
<pb facs="00057232_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN 15 November 1979<lb/>
The Fearless Football Forecast<lb/>
N. TEXAS STATE AT ECU<lb/>
ARKANSAS AT TEXAS A&amp;M<lb/>
AUBURN AT GEORGIA<lb/>
CLEMSON AT NOTRE DAME<lb/>
N.C. STATE AT DUKE<lb/>
NAVY AT GEORGIA TECH<lb/>
PURDUE AT INDIANA<lb/>
OHIO STATE AT MICHIGAN<lb/>
OKLAHOMA AT MISSOURI<lb/>
UNC AT VIRGINIA<lb/>
WAKE FOREST AT SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
TENNESSEE AT MISSISSIPPI<lb/>
Charles ChandlerTerry Herndon<lb/>
(81-37-2)(76-42-2)<lb/>
ECU 38-20ECU 42-31<lb/>
ArkansasArkansas<lb/>
AuburnGeorgia<lb/>
Notre DameNotre Dame<lb/>
DukeN.C. State<lb/>
NavyNavy<lb/>
PurdueIndians<lb/>
Ohio StateMichigan<lb/>
OklahomaOklahoma<lb/>
UNCVirginia<lb/>
South CarolinaWake Forest<lb/>
TennesseeTennessee<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree<lb/>
(73-45-2)<lb/>
ECU 35-24<lb/>
Arkansas<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
N.C.State<lb/>
Georgia Tech<lb/>
Purdue<lb/>
Michigan<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Tennessee<lb/>
Dave Odom ECU Basketball CoachThomas B. Brewer ECU Chancellor<lb/>
ECU 28-14ECU 31-21<lb/>
ArkansasArkansas<lb/>
AuburnAuburn<lb/>
Notre DameNotre Dame<lb/>
N.C. StateN.C. State<lb/>
Georgia TechGeorgia Tech<lb/>
PurduePurdue<lb/>
MichiganMichigan<lb/>
OklahomaOklahoma<lb/>
UNCVirginia<lb/>
South CarolinaWake Forest<lb/>
TennesseeTennessee<lb/>
Lady Gold downs Purple<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Led by the hot outside<lb/>
shooting of forward Kathy<lb/>
Riley and the board<lb/>
strength of center Marcia<lb/>
Girven, the Gold eased by<lb/>
the Purple 55-43 in the<lb/>
Lady Pirates' intrasquad<lb/>
game last evening in<lb/>
Minges Colesium.<lb/>
Riley scorched the nets<lb/>
for 19 points, but it was<lb/>
Girven who paved the way<lb/>
to victory by adding 15<lb/>
and grabbing a game-high<lb/>
12 rebounds.<lb/>
Top performers among<lb/>
the Lady Bucs' rookies<lb/>
were forward-center Mary<lb/>
Denkler with 11 points and<lb/>
guard-forward Donna<lb/>
Brayboy with 11 rebounds.<lb/>
All-American candidate<lb/>
Rosie Thompson paced the<lb/>
Purple with 16 points and<lb/>
11 grabs, followed by<lb/>
junior Lydia Rountree with<lb/>
nine and transfer Heidi<lb/>
Owen with eight.<lb/>
The gold performed<lb/>
without the services of<lb/>
junior playmaker Laurie<lb/>
Sikes, which limited them<lb/>
to five players. Sikes<lb/>
suffered a minor injury in<lb/>
a recent scrimmage, and<lb/>
coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
decided to rest the scrappy<lb/>
court general.<lb/>
After forging a seven<lb/>
point lead by halftime, the<lb/>
Gold showed signs of<lb/>
fatigue in the second<lb/>
building to the final<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
"The big thing right<lb/>
noe is Laurie Sikes being<lb/>
out said Andruzzi. "At<lb/>
out other scrimmages,<lb/>
that's where our enthu-<lb/>
siasm has come from. She<lb/>
makes things happen<lb/>
In the absence of<lb/>
Sikes, Andruzzi and as-<lb/>
sistant coach Marcia<lb/>
Richards decided agaisnt<lb/>
reforming the units for the<lb/>
adjustment and. instead<lb/>
moved Brayboy and fresh-<lb/>
man Fran Hooks to the<lb/>
point. Neither player had<lb/>
practiced at that position<lb/>
until Tuesday.<lb/>
The result of teh<lb/>
experiment were favor-<lb/>
able. While neither shoed<lb/>
the awareness possessed<lb/>
by Sikes, both turned in<lb/>
solid performances at the<lb/>
new slot.<lb/>
"I think they both did<lb/>
very well said Andruzzi.<lb/>
"Donna Brayboy rushes<lb/>
her shots, but that will<lb/>
come with time. They<lb/>
were all a little nervous<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
Hooks, a walk-on after<lb/>
a shadowy career at<lb/>
Goldsboro High School,<lb/>
admits that the point<lb/>
guard slot added pressure,<lb/>
but stated that she en-<lb/>
joyed the challenge.<lb/>
"I have more trouble<lb/>
working to get my shot<lb/>
said Hooks. "I like<lb/>
shooting from the wing<lb/>
best. I like to be inside<lb/>
rebounding, but I enjoyed<lb/>
handling the ball<lb/>
The inside performance<lb/>
of Girven and freshman<lb/>
Donna Moody showed a<lb/>
marked improvement over<lb/>
that of the 1978-79 squad,<lb/>
with Denkler and Owen<lb/>
adding to that power.<lb/>
"Riley is really a<lb/>
shooter explained An-<lb/>
druzzi. "The previous two<lb/>
scrimmages, she scored<lb/>
second to Rosie. Kathy<lb/>
complements Rosie on<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
"Denkler is a good<lb/>
offensice ballplayer. She's<lb/>
probably one of the best<lb/>
shooters on the team.<lb/>
Even though she's over six<lb/>
feet, we like to use her at<lb/>
forward. She's not afraid<lb/>
to go up against anybody.<lb/>
"Girven is getting<lb/>
Mean Green<lb/>
more aggressive with ev-<lb/>
ery practice she said.<lb/>
"She's gotten a lot more<lb/>
confident in herself.<lb/>
"Heidi Owen is a good<lb/>
shooter. She only made<lb/>
four tonight, but the shots<lb/>
she took were percentage<lb/>
shots. She really kept that<lb/>
club (Purple) together on<lb/>
defense<lb/>
The Lady Pirates open<lb/>
their 1979-80 scheduel<lb/>
Saturday at 5:00 in Minges<lb/>
Colesium against the In-<lb/>
dians of William and<lb/>
Mary.<lb/>
The Division II Indians<lb/>
return their entire starting<lb/>
lineup from last season,<lb/>
and with the unkown<lb/>
status of Sikes for the<lb/>
game, the Lady Bucs will<lb/>
be put to the test in their<lb/>
season premier.<lb/>
"I thnk maybe every-<lb/>
body was nervous said<lb/>
Sikes. "We're definitely<lb/>
better than we showed<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
Cont'd from page 9<lb/>
Wallace. "They are capable of throwing the football. He<lb/>
(Case) has only had one out of every 41 passes he's<lb/>
thrown intercepted over the last three years. Across the<lb/>
line they have a lot of experience<lb/>
North Texas starts four seniors and two juniors in<lb/>
their front wall, similar the the veteran lineup of ECU.<lb/>
"They had the number six rusher in the nation last<lb/>
year in Bernard Jackson (junior, 5-11, 187), but was hurt<lb/>
early in the season explained Wallace.<lb/>
"Overall they have a good offense and are very<lb/>
dangerous<lb/>
Defensively North Texas is led by sophomore Louis<lb/>
Haynes and senior defensive end Bernard West.<lb/>
Haynes and senior Mike Oliphant moved to<lb/>
linebacker after serving at end last season.<lb/>
"It's a hard position and I'm sure they had some<lb/>
trouble adjusting said Richardson, "but no more than<lb/>
the offense had gettin gused to a new system.<lb/>
"We had a good year recruiting as far as talent goes<lb/>
and we're starting some of our freshmen on defense<lb/>
who played well for us early in the season<lb/>
The Pirate staff will not only have to deal with the<lb/>
powerful starters on the front line, but the unusually<lb/>
deep reserve unit as well.<lb/>
"They're going to play a lot of people up front<lb/>
said ECU offensive coordinator Dick Kupec. "They've<lb/>
got more quality linemen than anyone we've played.<lb/>
"Charles Young (sophomore tackle) is a fine football<lb/>
player, but apparently Chris Osborne has beaten him<lb/>
out of his position.<lb/>
"They lost two good linebackers last year and they<lb/>
didn't have a lot of depth.<lb/>
"They do not do a lot of stunting on defense. They<lb/>
work very simple and very sound on defense<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057232_0011"/><lb/>
J5MflMfimfefiI-13Z3JlE�AST CAROLINIAN Page 1<lb/>
Odom calls for, and deserves, student aid<lb/>
tball coach Dave Odom spoke lo a group<lb/>
ruesda) night in Minges Coliseum and<lb/>
ite ih- proper atmosphere" at home<lb/>
- season.<lb/>
ne SN an assistant at Atlantic Coast<lb/>
i-e-member Wake Forest the last fev seasons,<lb/>
ke with knowledge about the importance ol the<lb/>
 creating the "atmosphere" for games<lb/>
M ges<lb/>
I i- an atmosphere sport he said. "In<lb/>
hve what is called the 'home court edge<lb/>
ted b the noise and excitement treated b)<lb/>
spe ialh the students<lb/>
U he had hopes that Minges would<lb/>
i "1 would especially like to<lb/>
filled. We (the team) should be<lb/>
rt hard we tr 1 amconfident that we will<lb/>
i h game It will mean so much to see<lb/>
the atmosphere" that creates a<lb/>
- long b tore the game<lb/>
in the gates five minutes<lb/>
�int is missed " he<lb/>
� begins long before that. It<lb/>
ur players it the) could stand<lb/>
he gym area) and be able to<lb/>
tn � enthusiasm before the game<lb/>
Iter than an pep talk I could<lb/>
llso u the students<lb/>
im. i '� � for our<lb/>
rgel the other team is even<lb/>
al you are<lb/>
�76 W ake Forest team as an<lb/>
I that that team. v hich wei<lb/>
� ven CC road game except<lb/>
N v . 'Everywhere we went we had<lb/>
' stufl thrown down at us<lb/>
- it� hen the fans did that out<lb/>
ss and used it to an advantage<lb/>
�<lb/>
is a point, you know. I he h<lb/>
rtant. He simph not<lb/>
L<lb/>
want the students at ECl to do anything to take awa<lb/>
from it, but rather to come up with tilings to increase it.<lb/>
Odom and his staff are doing their part He has<lb/>
arranged tor a pep bam) to perform inMinges during<lb/>
home games and has other dans to liven up the<lb/>
i .iliseum.<lb/>
It would make the job oi the coaching stalj, and the<lb/>
team tor that matter, much easier if the students would<lb/>
take serioush the idea ol building up the ECl<lb/>
basketball program.<lb/>
I he building of this program will rel) heavily on the<lb/>
attitude of the students. In the past, man) students<lb/>
attended home games fur laughs. Granted, at times<lb/>
what the) saw on the court was funny. The head coach<lb/>
oi the past two season certainly performed mam<lb/>
amusing (and shocking) antics during the game- You<lb/>
might even call his actions childish and clown-like.<lb/>
Bui � is gone nun. Dave Odom is the new head<lb/>
man. I nlike his predecessor, Odom is a professional, lb-<lb/>
know- how to build a winner at East CAroIina. He also<lb/>
knows that the students must take the program serioush<lb/>
and support it. It not, he would not have taken time<lb/>
Irom his hectic schedule to speak to the group Tuesda<lb/>
night.<lb/>
I he incompetent") ol the past two season is gone.<lb/>
N �V hi.I is blessed with a knowledgeable, competent<lb/>
Staff. It the students want to keep it this wa. the) will<lb/>
answer to the needs of the new staff.<lb/>
S WE.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057232_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12 THE EAST CAROLINAIN 15 November 1979<lb/>
Bowls in state of chaos<lb/>
By<lb/>
HERSCHEL NISSENSON<lb/>
AP Sports Writer<lb/>
Every bowl want Ala-<lb/>
bamaand every bowl<lb/>
could be disappointed. In<lb/>
all the guessing over<lb/>
which bowl Alabama will<lb/>
go to, no one seems to<lb/>
realize it's po��Me for the<lb/>
Crimson Tide to be shut ot<lb/>
of a bowl.<lb/>
A lot of things are<lb/>
possible in the wild and<lb/>
crazy bowl picture, much<lb/>
of which should fall into<lb/>
place Saturday if Georgia,<lb/>
a four-time loser, beats<lb/>
Auburn and becomes the<lb/>
itheastem Conference's<lb/>
representative in the Su<lb/>
gar Bowl.<lb/>
That would free the<lb/>
Orange and Cotton Bowls<lb/>
invite No. 1-ranked<lb/>
Uabama. The Crimson<lb/>
e prohablv would favor<lb/>
Miami over Dallas since<lb/>
Big Eight, whose<lb/>
impion hosts the Ur-<lb/>
ge Bowl, currently has a<lb/>
her ranked team than<lb/>
S ithwest Conference.<lb/>
its champ to<lb/>
Cotton Bowl.<lb/>
More aboul that later.<lb/>
What if Auburn beats<lb/>
Georgia? The Sugar Bowl<lb/>
uld then have to wait<lb/>
for the Alabama-Auburn<lb/>
game Dec. I. If Alabama<lb/>
wins or ties that one, the<lb/>
Tide goes to New Orleans.<lb/>
But should Auburn �<lb/>
which is on probation and<lb/>
can't go to a bowl � win<lb/>
that one to, Georgia would<lb/>
back into the Sugar Bowl<lb/>
and Alabama would back<lb/>
into Tuscaloosa. All the<lb/>
other bowls would be filled<lb/>
by that late date and<lb/>
Alabama would have to<lb/>
stay at home.<lb/>
Now, let's say that<lb/>
Georgia beats Auburn.<lb/>
Would you believe the<lb/>
following conversation<lb/>
come Saturday evening?<lb/>
"Coach Bryant, how<lb/>
about coming to the<lb/>
Orange Bowl to face the<lb/>
Nebraska-Oklahoma win-<lb/>
9"<lb/>
ner<lb/>
Aww. hay-ull, we<lb/>
ain't worth a damn jes'<lb/>
'cause we edged Miami<lb/>
35-0. That ol' Howard<lb/>
Schnellenberger out-<lb/>
coached me every way<lb/>
known to man. But if ya'H<lb/>
really want us, tell ya<lb/>
what ah'll do. Ah'll poll<lb/>
mv seniors Sunday<lb/>
mornm' and see if the)<lb/>
want to play in Miami<lb/>
"Sorry, Coach, we've<lb/>
got to know now or we 11<lb/>
invite Florida State.<lb/>
Decisions decisions.<lb/>
"1 wouldn't mind ask-<lb/>
ing them to wait a day, or<lb/>
even a week Bear<lb/>
Brvant said Tuesday, "but<lb/>
1 don't think they'd do it<lb/>
As usual, bowls,<lb/>
schools and conferences<lb/>
have been breaking the<lb/>
no-contact-before-Nov. 17<lb/>
rule left and right and<lb/>
some teams are signed,<lb/>
sealed and delivered. But<lb/>
many of teh commitments<lb/>
are contingent on vic-<lb/>
tories, not only this<lb/>
weekend but also down<lb/>
the line.<lb/>
The Rose Bowl is the<lb/>
onlv game not holding its<lb/>
breath. Southern Calif-<lb/>
ornia will be the host team<lb/>
for the 10th time in 14<lb/>
years and either Ohio<lb/>
State or Michgan will be<lb/>
the Big Ten's representa-<lb/>
tive for the 12th year in a<lb/>
row. Ohio State will go if<lb/>
it beats or ties Michigan<lb/>
on Saturdayor if Purdue<lb/>
beats Indiana. Don't ask<lb/>
why; just believe it.<lb/>
IfIfIf- That's what<lb/>
it all comes down to.<lb/>
If Alabama and Ohio<lb/>
State and Nebraska and<lb/>
Southern Cal and Texas<lb/>
and Arkansasand Geor-<lb/>
giakeep winning, the<lb/>
four major bowls probably<lb/>
will look like this:<lb/>
Orange � Alabama vs.<lb/>
Nebraska. Rose - Ohio<lb/>
State vs. Southern Cal.<lb/>
Cotton � Arkansas vs.<lb/>
Oklahoma. Sugar � Geor-<lb/>
gia vs. Texas.<lb/>
But don't be surprised<lb/>
to see some changes,<lb/>
depending on the results<lb/>
of the next few weeks. AH<lb/>
bowls have alternatives.<lb/>
The word is that the<lb/>
Sugar and Cotton Bowls<lb/>
have agreed to split Texas<lb/>
and Arkansas. But if<lb/>
Texas loses one of its last<lb/>
three games � don't<lb/>
forget the Longhorns must<lb/>
face Baylor and texas<lb/>
A&amp;M � and the bwL<lb/>
ends in a Houston-Ar-<lb/>
kansas tie, the Cotton<lb/>
Bowl could get Houston<lb/>
and Arkansas could get<lb/>
shut out of a major-major<lb/>
bowl with a 10-1 record.<lb/>
So could Ohio State if<lb/>
the Buckeyes lose to<lb/>
Michigan and Indiana<lb/>
beats Purdue, although<lb/>
that would make the<lb/>
Buckeyes awfully attract-<lb/>
ive to the Cotton Bowl.<lb/>
And what does the<lb/>
Cotton do if Texas makes<lb/>
it to Dallas and Nebraska<lb/>
beats Oklahoma? A Tex-<lb/>
as-Oklahoma Cotton Bowl<lb/>
is out of the question<lb/>
because it would be a<lb/>
rematch of their October<lb/>
war.<lb/>
Houston will wind up a<lb/>
somewhere, but, says one<lb/>
bowl source, "Nobody<lb/>
want them; they've got the<lb/>
old Arizona State syn-<lb/>
drome<lb/>
Sme other items:<lb/>
� The Gator Bowl will grab<lb/>
Florida State if the Sem-<lb/>
inoles don't get the<lb/>
Orange Bowl.<lb/>
� The Fiesta Bowl would<lb/>
like to match the Big Eight<lb/>
and Big Ten runners-up �<lb/>
a SWC team also is a<lb/>
possibility � but Michigan<lb/>
would prefer not to play<lb/>
on Christmas Day. Ohio<lb/>
State doesn't care.<lb/>
i$&amp; ��<lb/>
� Clemson would like<lb/>
another trip to the Gator<lb/>
Bowl but the Gator people<lb/>
might not want the Tigers<lb/>
three years in a row. Notre<lb/>
Dame is not out of the<lb/>
question for Jacksonville,<lb/>
although the Fighting Irish<lb/>
might stay home this year.<lb/>
� The Liberty Bowl is said<lb/>
to be leaning toward Pitt<lb/>
and vice versaand might<lb/>
invite Clemson, if it beats<lb/>
Notre Dame, although<lb/>
there are other candidates.<lb/>
The Hall of Fame Bowl<lb/>
would like Clemson, which<lb/>
has a huge following.<lb/>
imrVE-THRTf BE�EnAGE STORE<lb/>
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Green<lb/>
Cont'd from page 9<lb/>
N C State must have realized his potential when he<lb/>
. �9 - (. for a touchdown on his first varsitj<lb/>
I tf .u. 1- �" J ' 9o i i Pirate<lb/>
i-tl H finished that game, a li-i rirait<lb/>
� fds rLX and -IDs. -That firs, m<lb/>
tobVonhe big.hnUs ofm, �rm d<lb/>
"That gave some confidence right oft the bat.<lb/>
'f That confidence began Green on the road to success<lb/>
Id end with all-star honors, says Uye.<lb/>
 pick an all-state team Dye said, and<lb/>
Leander is'mS the number one quarterback, then there<lb/>
 ; There are a lot of great college<lb/>
. m him in setting the ball to his sKiuea<lb/>
lose t turn in U1"s , <lb/>
H ' the uerlect East CArohna quarterback.<lb/>
The acana g�?fL � -old - " "T<lb/>
QB position this Saturday a sad day for both<lb/>
and player. SAturday's game in Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
TJ North Texas State marks the last home game of<lb/>
pen's illustrious career.<lb/>
"U kinda sad said Green. "I'm just gomg to go<lb/>
out and try to do m best. I'd really like to have my best<lb/>
"happens the Mean Green of North Texas<lb/>
; ue will be in for a long afternoon. An aufully long<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
classified<lb/>
MALE TO SHARE: apart-<lb/>
ment or house close to<lb/>
campus. Can move in after<lb/>
exams and stay until the<lb/>
end of spring semester.<lb/>
Reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
Terrv at 752-8461 or at<lb/>
work M.T.W. 2:30-7 at<lb/>
758-7767.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
to share two bedroom<lb/>
apartment. Water and<lb/>
heating included in rent.<lb/>
Call 758-4253.<lb/>
KENNEDY DISSIDENTS<lb/>
UNITE Get your "I will<lb/>
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not serve if elected"<lb/>
T-shirts bv mailing $6.50<lb/>
check or money order to<lb/>
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Dickinson Ave Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1975 Gibsen<lb/>
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Sunburst. Excellent condi-<lb/>
tion with case. 1400. Call<lb/>
752-8354.<lb/>
personal (J)<lb/>
MALE GRAD STUDENT<lb/>
NEEDS ROOMMATE: be-<lb/>
ginning Dec. 1 to share<lb/>
nice apartment. Apartment<lb/>
has full kitchen, air<lb/>
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ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
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758-5590 after 9 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
to share two bedroom apt.<lb/>
$75 per month plus half<lb/>
utilities. Located close to<lb/>
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MALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
NEEDED, to share one<lb/>
bedroom apartment at<lb/>
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monthly. Call 752-0564<lb/>
after 10 p.m.<lb/>
SKI TRIP: to Killington<lb/>
Vermont Dec. 31-Jan. 7.<lb/>
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Other options as low as<lb/>
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Jane Pollock, 752-9719.<lb/>
SPRING SEMESTER:<lb/>
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one block from campus.<lb/>
Male only 752-4814.<lb/>
LOST: A black suede<lb/>
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If found please call Laurie<lb/>
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Phone<lb/>
758-74��<lb/>
507 EAST 14th St.<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
BREAD BAKED FRESH DAILY<lb/>
Shot Loaf 2.05 GARLIC BREAD .79<lb/>
Long Loaf 2.80 CHEFS SALAD 2.95<lb/>
SUBMARINE<lb/>
Ham, Salami, Sauce, Cheese-Baked<lb/>
HAM AND CHEESE<lb/>
Ham, Cheese, Mustard, Lettuce &amp; Tomato<lb/>
H0GIHam, Salami, Mustard, Mayonnaise, Olive Oil,<lb/>
&amp; Tomato Lettuce<lb/>
ITALIAN SANDWICH<lb/>
Ham, Salami, Sauce, Cheese, Onions,<lb/>
Mushrooms-Baked Pepper<lb/>
VEGETARIAN SANDWICH  sauce<lb/>
Onions, Green Pepper, Mushrooms, sauce,<lb/>
Cheese-Baked<lb/>
CHANELLaS SUPREME 5.60 7.50 8.75<lb/>
Pepperoni, Italian Sausage, Mushrooms, Onion.far<lb/>
Pepper, Green dive, Anchovy on request<lb/>
Remember the top of the line is<lb/>
CHANELLOS SUPREME PIZZA mmmm<lb/>
ELUXE SICILIAN PIZZ.<lb/>
" "THICK CRUST EXTRA CHEESE"<lb/>
10" 14" 17"<lb/>
puppec 3.40 5.10 5.90<lb/>
ONION 400 5.80 6.70<lb/>
GREN PEPPER 400 5.80 6.70<lb/>
PEPPERONI 4.00 58� 670<lb/>
ITALIAN SAUSAGE 400 5.80 6.70<lb/>
GROUND BEEF 400 5.80 6.70<lb/>
OLlVE(Black or Green) 4-00 5.80 6.70<lb/>
ANCHOVY 400 5.80 6.70<lb/>
BACON 400 5.80 6.70<lb/>
SHRIMP 4.0C 5.80 6.70<lb/>
MUSHROOM 4.00 5.80 6.70<lb/>
iiam 4.00 5.80 6.70<lb/>
JALAPENOS 4.00 5.80 6.70<lb/>
ADDITIONALITEMS M � f<lb/>
SICILIAN SUPREMF<lb/>
'�$1.00 OFF ANY gkj �j<lb/>
 SIZE SUPREME "mm m<lb/>
! PIZZA<lb/>
4JNRijQ5<lb/>
S1.00OFF ANY<lb/>
! Not valid during<lb/>
OFFER I Not valid during<lb/>
EXPIRES I any other special<lb/>
J any other special �� �<lb/>
I ,07 E. 14th st. 1MS-79 j f7E. i4ta St.�<lb/>
iFOR FAST"FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
PHONE 758-7400<lb/>
OFFER<lb/>
EXPIRES<lb/>
12-15-70 ,<lb/>
��) ��) ��� ����Mi MB �� �� ����T<lb/>
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