<?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="00057256_0001"/>
(Hht lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Vol.54No46'(i<lb/>
1<lb/>
) Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, March 25, 1980 1<lb/>
(Greenville, VC<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees Hears Controversies<lb/>
by CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
Members of ECU's Board of Trustees came to observe the SGA meeting on Monday as part of a 2-dav<lb/>
orientation visit they are making at the university. Seated (right to left) are Mr. Troy Pate, Board of<lb/>
I ruslees chairman: Mr. Ashley Futrell, vice- chairman; and ECU Chancellor Brewer.<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
heard student legislators discuss<lb/>
several controversial issues as they<lb/>
observed the SGA meeting yester-<lb/>
day. Among the topics discussed<lb/>
were SGA loans for abortions, the<lb/>
upcoming SGA elections and the<lb/>
personal use of the SGA secretary to<lb/>
type private term papers.<lb/>
The trustees were observing the<lb/>
legislature in connection with their<lb/>
annual orientation session, and as a<lb/>
preliminary to their regular meeting<lb/>
scheduled for 2:00 p.m. Tuesday.<lb/>
The trustees could not be present<lb/>
for all of the meeting because they<lb/>
were scheduled to attend a banquet<lb/>
in their honor later in the evening.<lb/>
The policy for receiving an SGA<lb/>
loan for an abortion was questioned<lb/>
twice by the legislature. After<lb/>
reading an editorial in The East<lb/>
Carolinian opposing the present<lb/>
system of getting an SGA-funded<lb/>
abortion ? due to the system's<lb/>
potential lack of confidentiality ?<lb/>
Jeff Triplett asked SGA Treasurer<lb/>
Ricky Lowe whether Lowe thought<lb/>
that applicants could in fact expect<lb/>
to be treated confidentially.<lb/>
"I don't see how it could be kept honest electon "<lb/>
more secret said Lowe. A "truthful and honest election"<lb/>
Lowe also expressed the opinion was also the main theme at the<lb/>
that "if there are student fees being meeting of the SGA candidates later<lb/>
used, it should be handled by in the evening. The el<lb/>
Iranian Prosecutor Threatens Hostages<lb/>
ROME (AP) ? A top Iranian<lb/>
proecutor, condemning the shah's<lb/>
move to Egypt, said today the<lb/>
American hostages in Tehran "will<lb/>
be put on trial" for espionage and<lb/>
those found guilty "will be jailed<lb/>
Ayatollah Sadegh khalkhali, a<lb/>
newly elected member of the Iranian<lb/>
Parliament who ran the Islamic<lb/>
courts that executed hundreds of<lb/>
members of the shah's old regime,<lb/>
said the trials will take place when<lb/>
Parliament opens. That is expected<lb/>
to be no earlier than mid-April.<lb/>
Khalkhali, the prosecutor who<lb/>
claimed last year to have sent out<lb/>
airport en route from Tehran to<lb/>
Tripoli, Libya, on an official visit at<lb/>
the invitation of the Libyan govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
It was the first time in weeks that<lb/>
a leading Iranian official had<lb/>
students SGA President Brett<lb/>
Melvin later agreed with this view.<lb/>
When the topic surfaced again<lb/>
later in the meeting, Lowe cited that<lb/>
males could also get the loans for<lb/>
abortions and that the loans were<lb/>
available even if the woman chose to<lb/>
continue her pregnancy.<lb/>
The SGA election, scheduled for<lb/>
April 2, was also a prime subject at<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
Nicky Francis, elections commit-<lb/>
tee chairman, was the first to speak.<lb/>
Francis' main concern was with his<lb/>
new committee.<lb/>
His choice of members on the<lb/>
committee had come under fire<lb/>
because only one member of the<lb/>
committee was not a member of the<lb/>
fraternity of which Francis is an<lb/>
alumni. Francis announced that he<lb/>
has eliminated his fraternity<lb/>
brothers from the committee and<lb/>
that only one member remained<lb/>
from the original group.<lb/>
"I didn't do this to pacify<lb/>
anyone said Francis. He said that<lb/>
he made the move to avoid con-<lb/>
troversy in the election. He also<lb/>
stated, "This will be a truthful and<lb/>
The clergyman-prosecutor assail-<lb/>
ed Sadat and President Carter for<lb/>
protecting the ousted shah and said<lb/>
the hostages' freedom "is in the<lb/>
hands of Carter. The U.S. is delay-<lb/>
ing their liberation.<lb/>
"The capitalists of America do<lb/>
not want to listen to or understand<lb/>
ssassination squads to track down months of the crisis to put their eap-<lb/>
the deposed shah, spoke at a news tives on trial. But they have made<lb/>
conference at Rome's international specific allegations of espionage<lb/>
against only a few embassy staff<lb/>
members.<lb/>
"I hope that many of them are in-<lb/>
nocent and can return to their<lb/>
families and home Khalkhali told<lb/>
reporters. "It's certain that for<lb/>
spoken so definitely of trials for any those that are guilty, we will refuse<lb/>
of the 50 U.S. Embassy hostages. It them the well-being that they are<lb/>
could not be determined, however, now enjoying in the 'hotel' where poor and suffering people and give<lb/>
they are now lodged support to a great criminal and thief<lb/>
Khalkhali also said eventual who issued orders to kill almost<lb/>
release of the hostages depends on<lb/>
the extradition back to Iran of the<lb/>
deposed Shah Mohammad Reza<lb/>
Pahlavi, who arrived today in<lb/>
Cairo, Egypt, after a three-month<lb/>
stay in Panama. Pahlavi has been<lb/>
granted asylum by Egyptian Presi-<lb/>
dent Anwar Sadat.<lb/>
evening, l ne election rules<lb/>
were discussed, and seeral an-<lb/>
nouncements were made concerning<lb/>
where handbills and poster, could<lb/>
appear.<lb/>
It was also announced in both<lb/>
meetings that an additional polling<lb/>
place will be set up in the Student<lb/>
Store Lobby. The purpose of the<lb/>
new polling station was to lighten<lb/>
traffic at the polls and hopefully en-<lb/>
courage more oters. said Francis.<lb/>
Two people will be running tor<lb/>
the office of president of the SGA<lb/>
Drake Mann, -ttorne General of<lb/>
the SGA, and Charlie Sherrod, cur-<lb/>
rent vice president, had announced<lb/>
their candidacies well before the<lb/>
deadline.<lb/>
For the office of vice president<lb/>
there will also be two candidates.<lb/>
Lynn Calder and Al Patrick.<lb/>
For the office of treasurer, there<lb/>
were two candidates. Danny<lb/>
O'Connor and Kirk I ittle.<lb/>
The secretars's post will have on-<lb/>
ly one contender this year,<lb/>
Marianne Edwards.<lb/>
At one point in the meeting. Ed-<lb/>
See ECU, Page 3. col. l<lb/>
whether Khalkhali was speaking<lb/>
authoritatively for the Iranian<lb/>
leadership.<lb/>
The Moslem militants who have<lb/>
held the embassy since Nov. 4<lb/>
threatened repeatedly in the first<lb/>
NCSL To Propose<lb/>
Adoption Of ERA<lb/>
70,000 people and tortured<lb/>
thousands and thousands of Ira-<lb/>
nians in jail.<lb/>
"We firmly condemn this action<lb/>
(Egypt's acceptance of the shah)<lb/>
and in the near future we will give<lb/>
the necessary response<lb/>
Growing Collection,<lb/>
State Laws Force<lb/>
Books Into Garbage<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
Ve?s F.ditor<lb/>
Jovner Library has thrown away<lb/>
d aerage of 1160 books per year<lb/>
crease its collection by five percent<lb/>
each year. Currently, about 17,000<lb/>
volumns are added annually. As<lb/>
many as possible of the additions<lb/>
are microfilmed to conserve shelf<lb/>
since 1977 - a fact made necessary space, Brunelle said.<lb/>
b a growing collection and shrink-<lb/>
ing shelf space, say library officials.<lb/>
According to Dr. Wilson Lu-<lb/>
quire, associate director of the<lb/>
library, the books are either old,<lb/>
damaged, out-of-date in their fields,<lb/>
or are duplicates of existing<lb/>
volumns.<lb/>
Although library administrators<lb/>
would like to offer these books to<lb/>
anyone who is interested in having<lb/>
them, a North Carolina state law<lb/>
prevents them from doing so.<lb/>
The law provides that no state<lb/>
property be given away or sold, ex-<lb/>
cept by special procedures. All<lb/>
books in Joyner Library are state<lb/>
property. As a result, the library has<lb/>
no option but to throw the books<lb/>
away, said Library Director Dr.<lb/>
Eugene Brunelle last week.<lb/>
Brunelle said that attempts had<lb/>
been made to give the books to<lb/>
other state institutions, such as<lb/>
prisons and workshops for the han-<lb/>
dicapped, but that those institutions<lb/>
usually didn't want them.<lb/>
There appears to be a demand for<lb/>
The microfilm collection contains<lb/>
about 725,000 titles, compared to<lb/>
the 520,000 volumes on the shelves.<lb/>
Dr.Luquire said that one of the<lb/>
problems with a sale or giveaway of<lb/>
the old books was that library<lb/>
employees might declare a book for<lb/>
disposal so that he could then buy it<lb/>
cheaply for himself or a friend.<lb/>
The library conducts a book sale<lb/>
three times a year, but the books are<lb/>
gifts to the library and are not con-<lb/>
sidered state property, Dr. Luquire<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In order to determine if there are<lb/>
any exceptions pertaining to old<lb/>
books in the state law, university of-<lb/>
ficials have contacted the state's<lb/>
salvage department, Brunelle and<lb/>
Luquire said.<lb/>
"What the library is trying to do,<lb/>
given our space limitations, is to<lb/>
provide the most modern collection<lb/>
we can Dr. Brunelle said.<lb/>
By LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
AsMstanl News Editor<lb/>
Proposals for a state Equal Rights<lb/>
Amendment and state funding of<lb/>
abortions will be brought by ECU's<lb/>
delegation to the North Carolina<lb/>
Student Legislature's annual<lb/>
legislative session March 26-30 in<lb/>
the old state capitol building in<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
Other topics on the session's<lb/>
agenda include press shield laws,<lb/>
regulations on out-of-state utilities<lb/>
and mandatory deposits on<lb/>
beverage containers.<lb/>
"ECU rebuilt a strong delegation<lb/>
this year. The session will allow the<lb/>
new members to see the benefits of<lb/>
their hard work. The members<lb/>
researched and prepared their<lb/>
debates on the issues that will face<lb/>
the body said Anne Northington,<lb/>
ECU delegation chairperson. "It<lb/>
will be an educational experience,<lb/>
and East Carolina should be proud<lb/>
of its representatives to the<lb/>
assembly. We are a definite con-<lb/>
tender for the Best Large School<lb/>
Delegation Award<lb/>
At Legislative Session, each<lb/>
school is the equivalent of a house<lb/>
or senate district. The body is divid-<lb/>
ed into the House of Represen-<lb/>
tatives and the Senate, and follows<lb/>
the same legislative procedure as the<lb/>
North Carolina General Assembly,<lb/>
except that NCSL's governor has<lb/>
the veto power.<lb/>
"I am really looking foreward to<lb/>
Old books compete with the new for Joyner shelf space.<lb/>
Political Analysis<lb/>
Reagan Takes Middle Road<lb/>
property is not unique to the library<lb/>
Rod Seymour, who handles surplus<lb/>
!u ?JiS 5?JUlentSdespe disposal for the university, must<lb/>
regularly get rid of equipment, fur-<lb/>
niture and miscellaneous items.<lb/>
"Every three months, the state<lb/>
conducts a state-wide mailing to in-<lb/>
dividuals or businesses that may bid<lb/>
on the items Seymour said, ad-<lb/>
ding that most of the surplus is sold<lb/>
this way. After three unsuccessful<lb/>
attempts to sell the surplus, it is<lb/>
thrown or given away.<lb/>
" It's a headache, but it's<lb/>
something that can be dealt with<lb/>
Seymour said. "We have a lot of<lb/>
students who contact us, and we<lb/>
could probably do better in the long<lb/>
run by selling to them, but the way<lb/>
the state law is set up, it's impossi-<lb/>
ble<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ? Ronald ty of that group, he did better than<lb/>
Reagan, long the torchbearer for the many expected ? particularly better<lb/>
right wing of the Republican Party, than Anderson and Bush had ex-<lb/>
is reaching out to the Americans in pected and hoped he would,<lb/>
the middle: the middle-income, the Among middle-income voters,<lb/>
moderates and the independents. Reagan did even better.<lb/>
The problem of disposing state it?s theSe Americans who make up In Illinois, the AP-NBC News<lb/>
the annual session, as u is the first in<lb/>
which I will be participating said<lb/>
Gary Williams, a member of the<lb/>
ECU delegation. "It will be the<lb/>
culmination of the year's ork tor<lb/>
us.<lb/>
NCSL has had success in getting<lb/>
its legislative ideas 'hrough the<lb/>
General Assembly, with approx-<lb/>
imately 40 percent of the legislation<lb/>
See NCSL, Page 2. col. 1<lb/>
President<lb/>
Rejects New<lb/>
Game Plan<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) The<lb/>
athletes' plan to permit them to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the Olympic Games in<lb/>
Moscow this summer while<lb/>
simultaneously protesting the Soviet<lb/>
military presence in Afghanistan ap-<lb/>
parently is a dead issue.<lb/>
A high White House aide, who<lb/>
asked that he not be identified, said<lb/>
today that a similar proposal was<lb/>
considered when President Carter<lb/>
called for a boycott of the Games,<lb/>
but the idea was rejected.<lb/>
Although he said he had not<lb/>
studied the athletes' counter-<lb/>
proposal, which was sent to the<lb/>
White House Saturday night, the of-<lb/>
ficial said, "It's obviously unaecep<lb/>
table. The president has made his<lb/>
decision<lb/>
The athletes proposed that they<lb/>
be permitted to compete in the<lb/>
Olympics but would protest the<lb/>
Soviet presence in Afghanistan by<lb/>
not taking part in any of the<lb/>
ceremonies.<lb/>
Under the proposal approved by<lb/>
the Athletes Advisory Council of<lb/>
But Reagan received some signifi- the U.S. Olympic Committee, they<lb/>
cant support from these people who would not paricipate in the opening<lb/>
are neither die-hard Republicans and closing ceremonies and would<lb/>
primaries, and he did well among<lb/>
that group.<lb/>
their age or condition. After ap<lb/>
proximately 250 volumns had been<lb/>
placed in a dumpster behind Joyner<lb/>
Library on March 17, several<lb/>
students rummaged through the<lb/>
trash and found that the books were<lb/>
good enough to take home with<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"The state has very strict rules<lb/>
about alienation of state property<lb/>
said Dr. Brunelle. "Chapel Hill<lb/>
tried once to sell some of their old<lb/>
books for 25 cents apiece, and the<lb/>
state came down on them like a ton<lb/>
of bricks<lb/>
Brunelle and Luquire explained<lb/>
that since the purpose of the library<lb/>
is to support existing curriculum<lb/>
needs, obsolete or unused books are<lb/>
periodically weeded out. But if<lb/>
records show that an old book has<lb/>
been used regularly, the book is re-<lb/>
tained.<lb/>
Brunelle added that in order to re-<lb/>
main accredited, the library must in-<lb/>
the majorities that elect presidents, poll found 51 percent of those with<lb/>
Some of these Americans are incomes from $15,000 and $35,000 a<lb/>
voting for Reagan in the early year said they backed the former<lb/>
primaries. That could be trouble for California governor. Anderson got<lb/>
President Carter or any Democratic 36 percent of their votes and Bush<lb/>
presidential candidate in the fall only 10 percent.<lb/>
election. In this year of high inflation and<lb/>
This is particularly good news for even higher taxes, this group in the<lb/>
Reagan, whom the doubters have middle will be crucial to any can-<lb/>
nor committed Democratic Party<lb/>
faithful.<lb/>
Forty-seven percent of the<lb/>
idnependents cast their ballots for<lb/>
Anderson in Illinois, but 40 percent<lb/>
voted for Reagan. Not a majority,<lb/>
but a good showing for a man who<lb/>
has been identified for so long with<lb/>
not show up to accept 'any medals<lb/>
they win.<lb/>
They would arrive in Moscow just<lb/>
before they compete and leave im-<lb/>
mediately after, remaining in the<lb/>
Olympic Village or the training<lb/>
facilities during their time on Soviet<lb/>
soil. They would do no sightseeing<lb/>
said is too conservative to be elected<lb/>
in November. Up to and including<lb/>
Reagan's 1976 nemesis ? then-<lb/>
President Gerald R. Forr1 - the<lb/>
doubters have said he not<lb/>
"electable<lb/>
Last week, in Illinois, Reagan<lb/>
drew on broad support that went<lb/>
beyond his conservative base.<lb/>
didate's hopes.<lb/>
Of course, Reagan is piling up<lb/>
these margins among voters in the<lb/>
Republican primaries. Democrats<lb/>
vote, too, in the general election.<lb/>
The voters in the GOP primaries<lb/>
tend to be more conservative and a<lb/>
bit older than the usual general<lb/>
voters. So Reagan's showings<lb/>
Forty-one percent of the people among groups in the GOP primaries<lb/>
who said they are moderates voted will not necessarily translate into<lb/>
for Reagan in the GOP primary, similar margins among those groups<lb/>
Forty-five percent voted for Rep. in the general election.<lb/>
John Anderson and 11 percent for In the November voting, though,<lb/>
Seymour said he will try to get George Bush, an Associated Press- one group will be the key ? the in-<lb/>
authorization from the state to sell NBC News poll of GOP voters dependents.<lb/>
discarded Joyner Library books to found. Anderson encouraged them to<lb/>
paper recycling firms. While Reagan didn't get a majori- come vote for him in the GOP<lb/>
the conservative side of the political or engage in any other tourist ac-<lb/>
fence. tivities.<lb/>
That was about the same level of On Friday, however, Carter told<lb/>
independent support that Reagan the nation's Olympians emphatical-<lb/>
got from independents in New ly that the United States would not<lb/>
Hampshire and Florida, two of his particpate at all: "I say that not<lb/>
other major primary victories thus with any equivocation. The decision<lb/>
far. has been made<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
WECU Tower Begins Construction TodaySee P?te J<lb/>
Joyner Introduces Foreign Language Book ExchangeSee Page J<lb/>
Brian Haskey's Tree Honse Performance ReviewedSee Page 5<lb/>
Pirates Announce Grid ScheduleSee Page B<lb/>
Batch Davis Close-LipSee Page ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057256_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 25, 1980<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
Ihc I JI Carolina Pociry Forum will<lb/>
hjM- a regular workshop and meeting<lb/>
Thurvdav, pnl , ?l H p m . in<lb/>
Mcndcnhall, room 24S Ihc public ft<lb/>
Lordiail) invited<lb/>
Mini-Courses<lb/>
Sign up today foi a non credit mini<lb/>
course now being offered b<lb/>
Mcndcnhall Student ?. entct shag Out<lb/>
cing. Beginning Running, t logging and<lb/>
v PR I raining art now available to all<lb/>
I t i Full nine students, faculty and<lb/>
ls. members, and then<lb/>
dependents, spouses or gucsis<lb/>
Registration is at ihc MM . entral<lb/>
fickcl Office through the das pnoi to<lb/>
ihc first class meeting ol each course<lb/>
fhcre is .1 maximum and minimum<lb/>
enrollment lot each course and no fee<lb/>
refunds ?ill he made alter Ihc rcgistra<lb/>
non deadline lor more information<lb/>
call " iii<lb/>
Boxing<lb/>
L loi I KI box rig arc -i11i<lb/>
ihlc I he lournamcnl will he held<lb/>
 (i, U and in i tpcnings are<lb/>
ihlc in 18.1 192, 193 21)2, and<lb/>
nitcd ueighi classes Interested<lb/>
? - "sg4 hi drop h I Kt<lb/>
Ho ix sjs .ni, s- I .  iiHirna-<lb/>
? . x ludes i hildrcns<lb/>
i<lb/>
Kite Making<lb/>
learn to design and make sour osvn<lb/>
kite h attending a tree workshop spoil<lb/>
soied hs Mendcnhall Student tenter<lb/>
Ihc wotkshop, conducted h George<lb/>
Brett, Pitt Community t oHege Artist -<lb/>
In Residence, is scheduled tor Wednes-<lb/>
day, pril 26, from Ml p m in the<lb/>
Mcndcnhallraits C enter There is no<lb/>
registration or supplies fee lor this uni-<lb/>
que workshop lusl conic hs the C rafts<lb/>
( enter and oin in the fun!<lb/>
Family-Child<lb/>
1 he Family (. hild ssOctatkm will meet<lb/>
I uesd.n. March 2 at 5 Ik' p m in the<lb/>
Home I conomics C onlereiKC Room<lb/>
14' Ml members and interested per<lb/>
sons are urged to attend<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta<lb/>
Sigma I.in Delta, National English<lb/>
Honoi Society, will hold its induction<lb/>
ol new members on Thursday, March<lb/>
2 at Villa Roma social hour will<lb/>
begin ai 5 ' p m wuh the induction<lb/>
ceremony at ft '(I p in , lollowed hv<lb/>
dinnct Ml members, faculty, and in<lb/>
ductecs arc asked to he present at this<lb/>
function<lb/>
Racquetball<lb/>
C ircie K<lb/>
i K International<lb/>
he arolinas<lb/>
n ention held March 14 16<lb/>
w salcm mosi outstanding<lb/>
ist outstand ng<lb/>
.in honorable men<lb/>
ipbook com<lb/>
in rhc I arolinas District consists<lb/>
h c arolina<lb/>
I ; ! chartei in<lb/>
, k Internationalirele K is the<lb/>
 organization on<lb/>
It ponsored hs<lb/>
a k w ints clubs tCl irele K also<lb/>
1st week and elected<lb/>
Roscannc<lb/>
 Jent; ludy Young,<lb/>
, . lot hes.<lb/>
Mcndcnhall<lb/>
m 221 every I ucs<lb/>
. ?(n pa s ome see what<lb/>
-<lb/>
I he I I Racquetball c luh will meet<lb/>
ruesday, March 25 ai ? K? p.m in<lb/>
Memorial Ciym nu fc'c will talk about<lb/>
final arrangements tor Saturday's<lb/>
match against i State and the nropos<lb/>
cd budget foi next sen nyone in<lb/>
tcrested in loinmg the racquetball club<lb/>
i- encouraced to attend<lb/>
Holy Communion<lb/>
v I piscopal service ol Hols t ommu<lb/>
nion ss i) I he celebrated Wednesday<lb/>
evening, March 26. m the chapel ol the<lb/>
Methodist Student Ccntei (Mh Street<lb/>
across from Garrett Dorm) I he service<lb/>
will he ,ii 6 tm p m with the I piscopal<lb/>
, haplain. the Res Bill Madden.<lb/>
celebrating Suppei will he served al<lb/>
is in p m ai the chaplain's home<lb/>
follow ng ihc service<lb/>
Summer Dorms<lb/>
Residence hall room deposits for Sum-<lb/>
mer School 1980 will oe accepted in the<lb/>
C ashiers Office, room 105, Spilman<lb/>
Building, beginning April 9. Room<lb/>
assignments will be made in ihe respec-<lb/>
tive residence hall offices on April 10<lb/>
and 11 Thereafter, they will be made in<lb/>
rhc office of Housing Operations, room<lb/>
201, Vshichard Building Students who<lb/>
wish to reserve rooms they presently oc-<lb/>
cupy, provided such rooms arc 10 be in<lb/>
use this summer, arc to make rcsersa<lb/>
lions on Thursday. April 10 All other<lb/>
students may reserve rooms on a first<lb/>
come, first serve basis on Friday, April<lb/>
11 Residence halls to be used for<lb/>
women are larvis, Garrett, and Greene<lb/>
(floors two through six) Men will he<lb/>
housed in Belk (floors one through<lb/>
three)<lb/>
Navy Co-op<lb/>
 ant to cam more than V4 50 per hour<lb/>
m a career related toh. accumulate time<lb/>
toward retirement in federal govern<lb/>
ment, and hvpass the usual tests<lb/>
necessary foi permanent positions in<lb/>
lederal government? representative<lb/>
from the Navy Administrative Co-op<lb/>
Program will be on campus March 26<lb/>
and 27 to interview students interested<lb/>
in civilian positions with the Depart<lb/>
ment ol the Saw Interviews will be-<lb/>
held lor two computer science positions<lb/>
in Philadelphia and lour industrial<lb/>
specialist positions in Washington D (.<lb/>
dining fall semester 1980 II time is<lb/>
available, there will also be interviews<lb/>
foi ihe following tobs data processing.<lb/>
statistician, supplv and transportation<lb/>
management, quality and reliability<lb/>
assurance specialists, personnel<lb/>
management, education specialists.<lb/>
logistics management, housing<lb/>
manager, program analysis, financial<lb/>
management, management analysis,<lb/>
and procurement Contact the C 0 op<lb/>
i uticc l t Rawl. 757-6979, immediate-<lb/>
ly to gel more information or schedule<lb/>
an interview Application forms must<lb/>
he completed in advance<lb/>
Seder<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Attention Jewish students, if you would<lb/>
like to partake in the Passover Seder<lb/>
celebration held bv Hillcl please contact<lb/>
Richard Cole, 758-0420, or Dr Bramv<lb/>
Resntk, 756 S640<lb/>
ACT<lb/>
The American College restingAt I)<lb/>
will be offered at ECU on Saturday,<lb/>
April 12 Application blanks art-<lb/>
available from the It U testing t enter.<lb/>
Speight Building room 105 Registra<lb/>
lion deadline is March 14<lb/>
Psi Chi<lb/>
Psi t'hi, Ihc psychologv honor society,<lb/>
will meet Wednesday, March 26 at 7 15<lb/>
p m. in Speight 129 Dr Durham, ol<lb/>
the ECU psychology department, will<lb/>
discuss research on lemale masturba<lb/>
lion April 1 banquet initiation plans<lb/>
will be completed also Spring initiates<lb/>
must attend<lb/>
ECU Law<lb/>
There will be a meeting ol the I C I<lb/>
I aw Society lucsdav night, March 25,<lb/>
at 8-00 p m in Mendcnhall room 221<lb/>
All members and other interested<lb/>
students are uiged to attend, because<lb/>
we will finalize spring activity plans<lb/>
We will also he meeting lor dinner at<lb/>
7 00at Western Sihn for anyone who<lb/>
would like to attend II there are any<lb/>
questions or it anyone needs a ride to<lb/>
dinner, please sail I vnn aldei al<lb/>
"H 8414 or 757 661 I, exl 218 (where a<lb/>
message may he lelt )<lb/>
A "No-Tap" Bowling Tournament<lb/>
sponsored by Mendcnhall Student<lb/>
nter will be held March II through<lb/>
?pril 21 A 9 pin hit will count as a<lb/>
strike, with all oihcr procedures re<lb/>
maining as usual frophies will be<lb/>
awarded to the lirst and second place<lb/>
singles winners and to the lirst place<lb/>
doubles winners in both men's and<lb/>
women's divisionsompetnion is<lb/>
open to all lull-time It U students<lb/>
Rules arc available at the Bowling<lb/>
tenter C all 757 6611. cl 267. loi<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
Caucus<lb/>
Ihe Student Caucus lor Progressive<lb/>
Relorm has been formed, 10 promote<lb/>
student activism, light nuclear energy,<lb/>
and to promote a humanitarian, alter<lb/>
native lifestyle Ihe St PR is presently<lb/>
organizing a "Festival lor a<lb/>
Humanitarian Renaissance" tentatively<lb/>
scheduled lor April II The t aucus is<lb/>
dedicated lo providing a lorum lor the<lb/>
expression ol the ideals of tomorrow<lb/>
Interested people should contact: lean<lb/>
me Igoe. 752 844V left W hisnat and<lb/>
M.nk Kemp, 707 4th St. or lav Stone.<lb/>
11(Potanchc St<lb/>
Toto<lb/>
Ihc Student I nion Major Attractions<lb/>
( ommittee presents IOTO. with a<lb/>
special guest I HA. on April 17 at H (81<lb/>
p m in Mingesoliscum Iickcis will<lb/>
go on sale Monday . March 31, at IffcOO<lb/>
 m in Mcndcnhall Student t enter<lb/>
I ickcts will be S 00 tor ECU students<lb/>
and S7 (8) fot the public<lb/>
J4 444 a?4?4jtt<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE <lb/>
4i Backpacks, BIS, Bomber.<lb/>
Field, Dock, Flight, Snorkel ?<lb/>
Jackets, Peacoats, Parkas, J<lb/>
Twig<lb/>
LAE<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
Bake Sale<lb/>
Ihc Student Dietetic Association spoil<lb/>
sois a "Nutritious" Bake Sale Marsh<lb/>
26, Wednesday, from 8 a m to 1 p m<lb/>
in Ihc lohhv ol the Student Supply<lb/>
stoic Home made breads and pastries<lb/>
Sigma Nu fraternity will be holding a<lb/>
softball lournament on April 12 and 13<lb/>
1 he entry fee will he $1 00 per player.<lb/>
which includes a jersey, and beverages<lb/>
al ihe championship paitv Tor more<lb/>
information call 758 "640 or "8 6491<lb/>
1 here will be a 20 team maximum.<lb/>
Ihe Was Campus Outreach will meet<lb/>
on Wednesday, March 26 in<lb/>
Mendcnhall Student t enter room 247<lb/>
ai 3:00 p.m. tor a Biblical Research<lb/>
Fellowship Everyone interested in lear-<lb/>
ning about the dynamic accuracy ol<lb/>
God's Word and how it enables you lo<lb/>
live a more lhan abundant life is warm<lb/>
ly invited to attend Bung your Bible<lb/>
and bring a Iricnd'<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
Phi Beta lambda will meet lucsdav<lb/>
April I, at 4 00 p m. m Rawl 103 <lb/>
Buccaneer group picture will he taken<lb/>
and nominations and voting tor nest<lb/>
vears otfleets will be held We will also<lb/>
have a guest speaker<lb/>
Ihe ECU Chapter ol lambda Alpha<lb/>
I psilon will meet Monday, March II in<lb/>
the Allied Health Auditorium at 5:00<lb/>
p.m All persons who are presently<lb/>
enrolled in a course ol criminal justice<lb/>
or arc maiors ot intended majors in<lb/>
( orrectional Services are invited to at<lb/>
tend Applications for membership will<lb/>
he available at Ihe meeting It vou<lb/>
would like lo join hut are unable to at-<lb/>
tend the meeting, contact Diane Austin<lb/>
,n "s 4ts?- or Ml Innampbell in the<lb/>
SO W andORS Office<lb/>
Rho Kpsilon<lb/>
I here will he a RhO Tpsilon meeting<lb/>
Ihursdav. March 2" at 118) in Rawl<lb/>
room I 30 All members are urged to at<lb/>
tend <lb/>
PRC<lb/>
The PRt Department is having an<lb/>
awards banquet on April 12. from<lb/>
h 12:00 p.m at the Holiday Inn in<lb/>
Greenville All ECU students, faculty<lb/>
and alumni arc invited lo attend For<lb/>
ticket information call Margie at<lb/>
752-0306: Teresa at 756-1241; or Diane<lb/>
at 752-1489. The sOsi ol ihc banquet is<lb/>
? (?) per person or $8 (It) per couple<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
The Beta Nu t haplcr ol Sigma Theta<lb/>
lau will hold its annual induction of<lb/>
new members Saturday. Marsh 19 at<lb/>
2 (81 p m at Ihc W ilhs Building Sigma<lb/>
1 hcia Tau is the national honor society<lb/>
ol nursing Some forty-eight<lb/>
undergraduate students, graduate<lb/>
students. faculty members, and nursing<lb/>
leaders will be indiisied into the society<lb/>
I vclvn Perry, Dean ot rh School ot<lb/>
Nursing at II . will speak on "Future<lb/>
Direction ol our School ol Nursing "<lb/>
New officers lor the 198(1 81 year will<lb/>
he installed during ihe ceremony. A<lb/>
reception will lollow All members are<lb/>
invited to attend and guests arc<lb/>
welcome I he W ilhs Building is located<lb/>
al ihc corner ol First and Rcade Streets<lb/>
in (ireenville<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
We wish to remind all<lb/>
students and faculty that we<lb/>
will not accept any an-<lb/>
nouncements for the An-<lb/>
nouncements column unless<lb/>
they are typed doublespace<lb/>
and turned in before the<lb/>
deadline. No exceptions will<lb/>
be made. The deadlines are<lb/>
2:00 p.m. Friday for the<lb/>
Tuesday edition and 2:00<lb/>
p.m. Tuesday for the Thurs-<lb/>
day edition. We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit for brevity. We<lb/>
cannot guarantee that<lb/>
everything turned in will ap-<lb/>
pear in the paper, due to<lb/>
space limitations, but we will<lb/>
do our best.<lb/>
Shoes. Combat Boots. Plus<lb/>
1S01 S. Evans Streot ?<lb/>
Shoe Kepair<lb/>
ss St. from<lb/>
mt Harvey<lb/>
awntown<lb/>
W. 4th Si.<lb/>
n front and Rear<lb/>
B 111<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
Tne uecision may well be difficult<lb/>
but the abortion itself doesn have to be.<lb/>
We do our best to make it easy for you<lb/>
Fr?? Pregnancy Teet<lb/>
Very Early Pregnancy Teet<lb/>
Call 781-8850 anytime<lb/>
Tne Fleming Center<lb/>
Friendly<lb/>
Personal . . Professional Care<lb/>
at a reasonable cost<lb/>
<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster Bar<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT!<lb/>
Monday - Thursday<lb/>
Crab Cakes<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
Flounder<lb/>
$2.95<lb/>
$2.95<lb/>
$3.25<lb/>
Committee Debates Stupidity Charge<lb/>
B TOM RAl'M<lb/>
?P Writer<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(AP) ? The House<lb/>
Armed Services Com-<lb/>
mittee may be the first<lb/>
to line up for combat in<lb/>
a new draft, if a recent<lb/>
intramural skirmish is<lb/>
any clue to a yearning<lb/>
for battle.<lb/>
Open warfare almost<lb/>
broke out during a<lb/>
meeting of the subcom-<lb/>
mittee on nuelear<lb/>
systems several days<lb/>
ago as Energy Secretary<lb/>
Charles W. Duncan<lb/>
testified.<lb/>
The issue in dispute:<lb/>
whether "stupid" was<lb/>
an apt adjective to<lb/>
describe the panel.<lb/>
Duncan was explain-<lb/>
ing that President<lb/>
Carter hadn't changed<lb/>
his mind and still op-<lb/>
posed reprocessing<lb/>
spent nuclear fuel. He<lb/>
said the plutpnium pro-<lb/>
duced from the opera-<lb/>
tion could lead to the<lb/>
proliferation of bomb-<lb/>
suitable nuclear<lb/>
materials.<lb/>
That didn't sit too<lb/>
well with conservatives<lb/>
on the panel.<lb/>
"You're begging us<lb/>
to be stupid said<lb/>
Rep. Robert E.<lb/>
Badham, R-Calif. His<lb/>
point was that other<lb/>
nuclear-capable nations<lb/>
were already processing<lb/>
their spent fuels.<lb/>
But Rep. Bob Carr,<lb/>
D-Mich told Duncan:<lb/>
"You don't need o beg<lb/>
this committee to be<lb/>
stupid. We do it very<lb/>
well by outselves<lb/>
Rep. Charles Wilson,<lb/>
D-Calif who was<lb/>
presiding at the hear-<lb/>
ing, demanded to know<lb/>
what Carr meant by his<lb/>
"reference to the<lb/>
stupidity of this com-<lb/>
mittee<lb/>
Did he mean the<lb/>
whole subcommittee<lb/>
was stupid, or was he<lb/>
just making a statement<lb/>
about individual<lb/>
members, or what?<lb/>
Carr reiterated that<lb/>
he thought the subcom-<lb/>
mittee didn't need any<lb/>
help in "making<lb/>
ourselves look stupid<lb/>
Redfaeed, Wilson<lb/>
demanded the record<lb/>
show Carr was speak-<lb/>
ing for himself and not<lb/>
on behalf of other<lb/>
panelists.<lb/>
CLIFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CAKE SPECIAL<lb/>
2 Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slaw, and<lb/>
Hush Puppies. $.99.<lb/>
NCSL To Meet Soon<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
it proposes annually<lb/>
becoming law in some<lb/>
form.<lb/>
Examples o recent<lb/>
NCSL initiatives which<lb/>
have become law in-<lb/>
clude the Migrant and<lb/>
seasonal Farm<lb/>
Workers' Act, based on<lb/>
a 1977 Duke University<lb/>
bill, the North Carolina<lb/>
Right-to-Die Act ot<lb/>
1977, based on a 197(<lb/>
ECU bill and one o<lb/>
only a handful like it in<lb/>
the country, and the<lb/>
Uniform Crnld<lb/>
Custody Act, based on<lb/>
a 1977 ECU bill.<lb/>
NCSL, the oldest<lb/>
functioning student<lb/>
legislature in ihe coun-<lb/>
try, was formed 43<lb/>
years ago at N.C. State<lb/>
University, and has<lb/>
since grown to a<lb/>
membership of 22<lb/>
schools and over 250<lb/>
delegates. From its in-<lb/>
ception to 1960, the<lb/>
organization held its<lb/>
annual legislative ses-<lb/>
sion in the old state<lb/>
capitol building in<lb/>
Raleigh. In 1960.<lb/>
however, the group was<lb/>
barred from using the<lb/>
structure for ad-<lb/>
v o c a t i n g such<lb/>
"radical" ideas as in-<lb/>
teeration and inter-<lb/>
racial marriage.<lb/>
In 1977, represen-<lb/>
tatives of the Student<lb/>
Legislature met with<lb/>
officials of the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Cultural<lb/>
Resources' State<lb/>
Capitol Division, and<lb/>
arranged for the group<lb/>
to return to the historic<lb/>
structure after a<lb/>
17-year absence.<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
DAILY LUNCHEON I<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
. . . .Onlyll!<lb/>
MELLO YELLO OR<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
o"<lb/>
<lb/>
Hot Dog<lb/>
Hamburger,<lb/>
i F<lb/>
99<lb/>
Minority Arts Film Series<lb/>
presents<lb/>
THE<lb/>
French Fries A<lb/>
&amp; 12-0z. Drink  ?<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4:00-8:00 f ? CARHY0UT<lb/>
SALAD-50 EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR. $99<lb/>
16-02.<lb/>
Ret.<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
BUS<lb/>
March 25 ? 8 PM<lb/>
Ledonia S. Wright Culture Center<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN $499<lb/>
SPAfiHETTIoIvl ?UR<lb/>
is,<lb/>
Plus Deposit<lb/>
<lb/>
STROH'S OR<lb/>
;<lb/>
Strati's Light Beer<lb/>
$l<lb/>
<lb/>
STEEPLECHASE<lb/>
CAFETERIA<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
MONDAY SATURDAY<lb/>
HOURS: 11AM-2PM 4:30 8:00PM<lb/>
fues. 25th 1.29 Franks Sauerkraut<lb/>
1.69 Stuffed Peppers<lb/>
Wed. 26th 1.29 Chili Mac<lb/>
1.69 ChickenPastry<lb/>
Thurs. 27th 1.29 Lasagne<lb/>
1.69 Liver Onions<lb/>
Fri. 28th 1.29 Creole Spaghetti<lb/>
1.69 Southern Steak<lb/>
2.50 Trout Special<lb/>
1.29 Ham Casserole<lb/>
1.69 Shrimp Chow AAein<lb/>
1.29 Tuna Casserole<lb/>
1.69 Beef Stew<lb/>
Tues. IstApr. 1.29 Franks ? Sauerkraut<lb/>
1.69 Stuffed Peppers<lb/>
THE SPECIAL OF THE DAY IS<lb/>
SUBJECT TO CHANGE<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback Books<lb/>
I w m SUGG<lb/>
?? RETAIL<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
x<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
"<lb/>
kN<lb/>
4<lb/>
ROSE, BURGUNDY,<lb/>
RHINE OR<lb/>
Paul Masson Chabiis<lb/>
-a<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
tin.<lb/>
-w<lb/>
Pr<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
$? ? Cheese<lb/>
&amp;f Pizza<lb/>
ww<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Balls<lb/>
$<lb/>
Priced<lb/>
From<lb/>
Motor<lb/>
Little Debbie Snack Cakes &amp; Archway Cookies<lb/>
KAOOEO<lb/>
Chips, Snacks &amp; Bagged Nuts<lb/>
 POUCH PACK<lb/>
Sauces &amp; Gravy Mixes<lb/>
PEPPEROOC FARtSS<lb/>
Bagged Cookies &amp; Snacks<lb/>
5-Oz.<lb/>
Pkgs.<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
8-Oz. Twin Pack<lb/>
htk<lb/>
?fro<lb/>
MFt)<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
ne??.i.<lb/>
Sat. 29th<lb/>
AAon. 31st<lb/>
m$8MC?$ 20<lb/>
MSCOUNB<lb/>
EftMrttv Tum Mw.2S<lb/>
thru Sun Mar IttO<lb/>
Nm wad o<lb/>
$ CF MANUFACTURER'S<lb/>
SUGGESTED RETAIL<lb/>
II<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
FOOD, DRUG, GEN<lb/>
MDSE. STORES<lb/>
Each of tfwM arivortlMd Hwns la required to ba<lb/>
aaia In aach Krogar Sav-ort Stora axcapt aa apac<lb/>
ad. N aw do run out of an aoVortlaad ItanvM wW <lb/>
 raodHy avaltaWa for<lb/>
?pacHlcaNy notad in thta<lb/>
 offor you your cftoioa<lb/>
I prtca vjffMn 30 day<lb/>
i wW antfMa you lo purchaw tha advarttaad Horn at tha<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. ? Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
??'??<lb/>
 ?. .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057256_0003"/><lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
Foreign Language Books<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 25, 1980<lb/>
B RKKI GLIARMIS<lb/>
(.rt-ek Correspondent<lb/>
Creek Week 1980 is<lb/>
here! Still left on the<lb/>
agenda are the Raft<lb/>
Race, Funky Nassau,<lb/>
Spring Fling, and<lb/>
Moser's 1 arm.<lb/>
The OlTs are hap-<lb/>
p and proud to<lb/>
welcome its new sisters,<lb/>
Patt) Jane Jackson,<lb/>
and Brenda Foley, into<lb/>
sisterhood as they were<lb/>
initiated on Friday,<lb/>
March 21.<lb/>
1 he AOll's have<lb/>
been working hard and<lb/>
long in preparation for<lb/>
the arrival of Debbie<lb/>
S ckland, this area's<lb/>
I ra eline Consultant<lb/>
on March 28 for a<lb/>
week's visit.<lb/>
Also in the final<lb/>
stages is Luau, the spr-<lb/>
ing formal which will<lb/>
be held April 26. Dur-<lb/>
ing this event, the spr-<lb/>
ing pledges will be<lb/>
presented.<lb/>
Parent's Day has<lb/>
been planned for April<lb/>
13 and is hoped to be a<lb/>
successful one, as<lb/>
always.<lb/>
The Sigmas have<lb/>
several things planned<lb/>
for March and April.<lb/>
Some of these events<lb/>
include Founder's Day,<lb/>
Senior Send-on, Easter<lb/>
Beach Weekend,<lb/>
socials, rush<lb/>
workshops, and spring<lb/>
cleaning. The Sigmas<lb/>
are enjoying Greek<lb/>
Week and are looking<lb/>
forward to visiting with<lb/>
several alumni who will<lb/>
be up this weekend for<lb/>
Moser's Farm.<lb/>
The sisters of Delta<lb/>
Zeta would like to con-<lb/>
gratulate the new sisters<lb/>
on their initiation. The<lb/>
DZ's are preparing for<lb/>
their cookout Wednes-<lb/>
day after the Lambda<lb/>
Chi Raft race. The<lb/>
cookout will be held<lb/>
from 5 p.m. until 8<lb/>
p.m. at Green Springs<lb/>
Park.<lb/>
The Alpha Phis<lb/>
would like to welcome<lb/>
Beth Barton, Amy<lb/>
Brooks, Suzanne Cud-<lb/>
dy, and Ann Dill into<lb/>
their sisterhood. These<lb/>
girls were initiated on<lb/>
Friday, March 21.<lb/>
The Phis would also<lb/>
like to welcome Philip<lb/>
Alexander, Durwood<lb/>
Cooper, and Jim Cook<lb/>
into the Alpha Phi Big<lb/>
Brother organization.<lb/>
A new writer is need-<lb/>
ed to compile Greek<lb/>
News for the 1980-81<lb/>
school year. The job is<lb/>
open to any fraternity<lb/>
or sorority member<lb/>
who expresses an in-<lb/>
terest in writing.<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
the job should call<lb/>
Ricki Gliarmis at<lb/>
756-9882 before April<lb/>
14.<lb/>
WECU Gets Go-Ahead;<lb/>
FM Tower Is On Its Way<lb/>
construction of the the final steps in the<lb/>
WECl broadcasting student-operated sta-<lb/>
towei is scheduled to tion's two year battle to<lb/>
n today, marking get on the air.<lb/>
of the final steps in The tower will be<lb/>
he student-operated built on top of Tyler<lb/>
n's two vear bat- dormitory at a cost of<lb/>
eel n the air.<lb/>
about $2300, according<lb/>
ECU Trustees<lb/>
Observe Meeting<lb/>
( ontinued from Page 1<lb/>
rds questioned the<lb/>
-j of the SGA<lb/>
etarj to type term<lb/>
papers for members of<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
I dwards said after<lb/>
the meeting that the<lb/>
m had come to<lb/>
her attention earlier in<lb/>
day, and that SGA<lb/>
idem Brett Melvin<lb/>
had been uncooperative<lb/>
a hen she attempted to<lb/>
ak to him about the<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
The question was rul-<lb/>
ed i r r e v e 1 a n t by<lb/>
Speaker Mike Adkins<lb/>
and was not con-<lb/>
sidered.<lb/>
The legislature also<lb/>
voted to repav a loan<lb/>
from the MRC of<lb/>
SI200 which has been<lb/>
used in their confiden-<lb/>
tial loan service. The<lb/>
MRC had asked for the<lb/>
loan back so that the<lb/>
money could be used to<lb/>
start a new loan pro-<lb/>
gram when the depart-<lb/>
ment of student life<lb/>
reorganizes.<lb/>
to John Jeter, WECU's<lb/>
general manager.<lb/>
Erection of the tower<lb/>
was supposed to begin<lb/>
several weeks ago, but<lb/>
university officials<lb/>
halted the move until a<lb/>
certified blueprint of<lb/>
construction plans<lb/>
could be prepared, said<lb/>
Jeter Monday.<lb/>
The request for a<lb/>
blueprint was the most<lb/>
recent of a long string<lb/>
of delays encountered<lb/>
by the FM station. The<lb/>
original application for<lb/>
its FM license ran into<lb/>
trouble at FCC head-<lb/>
quarters in<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
when a new regulation<lb/>
limiting the number of<lb/>
radio stations in univer-<lb/>
sity systems was pro-<lb/>
posed.<lb/>
The license was ap-<lb/>
proved after 18 months<lb/>
Caps, Gowns<lb/>
In Student Store<lb/>
ECC students wh'o<lb/>
have graduated in<lb/>
ugust or December,<lb/>
19 . or will graduate<lb/>
this May should be<lb/>
ire of this year's<lb/>
graduation procedure,<lb/>
uding to C.C.<lb/>
Rowe, commencement<lb/>
committee chairman.<lb/>
This year's com-<lb/>
mencement will be Fri-<lb/>
May 9, at 10 a.m.<lb/>
All graduates wishing<lb/>
to participate in the<lb/>
commencement exer-<lb/>
cises must attend the<lb/>
rehearsal Saturday,<lb/>
May 3, at 9 a.m.<lb/>
Each student who<lb/>
paid the S10 graduation<lb/>
tee will receive his cap<lb/>
and gown at no addi-<lb/>
tional charge; however,<lb/>
any graduate receiving<lb/>
a Master's Degree re-<lb/>
quiring an ECU<lb/>
academic hood must<lb/>
purchase it for $10.50<lb/>
plus tax. Commence-<lb/>
ment announcements<lb/>
are also available for<lb/>
S2.25 plus tax for five<lb/>
announcements.<lb/>
All items may be<lb/>
picked up or purchas-<lb/>
ed, whichever applies,<lb/>
at the Student Supply<lb/>
Store. They may be<lb/>
ordered by mail as well,<lb/>
with a handling charge<lb/>
of $2.00 per order.<lb/>
Orders must be receiv-<lb/>
ed by April 11, 1980.<lb/>
in limbo, reportedly<lb/>
with the assistance of<lb/>
first district Con-<lb/>
gressman Walter B.<lb/>
Jones, D-N.C.<lb/>
Jeter added that he<lb/>
was not sure when the<lb/>
station would go on the<lb/>
air, estimating that it<lb/>
would take at least a<lb/>
few weeks.<lb/>
The studio will be<lb/>
located in the old sec-<lb/>
tion of Joyner Library<lb/>
and will only broadcast<lb/>
in the Pitt County area.<lb/>
A tentative 80-percent<lb/>
album rock, 20-percent<lb/>
jazz format has been<lb/>
proposed, although<lb/>
scheduling for classical<lb/>
and other types of<lb/>
music will be flexible.<lb/>
-According to Jeter,<lb/>
the construction of the<lb/>
tower will be completed<lb/>
by Wednesday, March<lb/>
26.<lb/>
AT BARRE, ltd.<lb/>
Dancewear Specialty Shop<lb/>
The New<lb/>
DANSKIN<lb/>
Swimsuits have<lb/>
arrived<lb/>
10:00-6:00 MonSat.<lb/>
422 ARLIMOTOn BLVD.<lb/>
GREENVILLE. M.C. 27834<lb/>
(919) 756-6670<lb/>
itchells Hair Styling<lb/>
 ' Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
XGreenville, North Carolina 27834<lb/>
Male Student Special<lb/>
?V<lb/>
I<lb/>
No Curl Perm<lb/>
Req. $33.50<lb/>
Now Only $22.50<lb/>
offer good thru Saturday<lb/>
756-2950 756-4042<lb/>
ECU NIGHT<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Seafood BuffetS3.00<lb/>
choice of 3 seafood entrees<lb/>
hoice of 5 vegetal<lb/>
New Program Begins<lb/>
By ROBERT<lb/>
ALBANESE<lb/>
Popular, recreational<lb/>
reading is now<lb/>
available in foreign<lb/>
languages for the<lb/>
foreign student at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Joyner Library, in<lb/>
cooperation with the<lb/>
North Carolina Foreign<lb/>
Language Center, has<lb/>
books in Japanese,<lb/>
Chinese, Spanish and<lb/>
Arabic.<lb/>
"We will exchange<lb/>
these books with the<lb/>
Language Center on a<lb/>
regular basis said<lb/>
Nancy Patterson<lb/>
ECU librarian. "If the<lb/>
students will let us<lb/>
know what languages<lb/>
and what kind of mat-<lb/>
ter they want to read,<lb/>
we'll be happy to get<lb/>
the books for them<lb/>
Some of the books<lb/>
the students can read<lb/>
include foreign editions<lb/>
of "Once is not<lb/>
Enough "Shogun"<lb/>
and "Marathon Man<lb/>
Comic books, records,<lb/>
tapes and dictionaries<lb/>
of technical vocabulary<lb/>
will be forwarded from<lb/>
Raleigh on request.<lb/>
The program is part<lb/>
of the federally-funded<lb/>
Library Service Con-<lb/>
struction Act, which is<lb/>
meant to help local<lb/>
libraries build their<lb/>
special collections.<lb/>
"We have books in<lb/>
some 62 languages<lb/>
said Dr. Patrick Valen-<lb/>
tine, director of the<lb/>
Foreign Language<lb/>
Center in Raleigh.<lb/>
"Any library in our<lb/>
state can use this collec-<lb/>
tion. We don't have<lb/>
academic texts, as we<lb/>
emphasize recreational<lb/>
matter<lb/>
"The program<lb/>
started in 1976<lb/>
Valentine added.<lb/>
"Now we have works<lb/>
in Russian, Serbo-<lb/>
Croatian,<lb/>
Polish .most any<lb/>
European language<lb/>
The program is not<lb/>
exclusively for the<lb/>
foreigner. Language<lb/>
majors and the public<lb/>
at large can request<lb/>
these books be sent to<lb/>
their public library.<lb/>
The- most popular col-<lb/>
lections are in German<lb/>
and Japanese, and<lb/>
there is a growing in-<lb/>
terest in books in Viet-<lb/>
namese.<lb/>
"We have Peanuts'<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
in French, German and<lb/>
Spanish continued<lb/>
Valentine. "Many<lb/>
parents from other<lb/>
countries like to get<lb/>
these books for their<lb/>
children so they will not<lb/>
lose their mother<lb/>
tongue<lb/>
Interested persons<lb/>
can go to the Joyner<lb/>
Library Reference<lb/>
Room and ask to see<lb/>
the works. If the<lb/>
desired work or<lb/>
language is not among<lb/>
those, all one need do is<lb/>
request it on an inter-<lb/>
library loan basis. It<lb/>
takes about a week for<lb/>
the books to arrie<lb/>
JpTHENAMK<lb/>
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FAMOUS LABELS FOR LESS<lb/>
GREENVILLE SQUARF<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N C<lb/>
?CU Student Union major Attractions<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Thurs.ApriT7 6pm (Tinges Coiscum<lb/>
Tickets: ?CU?rudents$5O0 PUbfc&amp;OO AtDoor$K0<lb/>
TICKETS GO ON SALE MARCH 31 st!<lb/>
??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057256_0004"/><lb/>
? ? ' ?,<lb/>
?Ijc Eaat ?artflinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, cam lw<lb/>
Diane Henderson, Mbmwt<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, o????wwiu? Richard Green, cuto<lb/>
Chris Lichok, n. mmwt Charles Chandler, s?m t<lb/>
Terry Gray, ? t? Debbie Hotaling, mm ,?????<lb/>
TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
77tis Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
Press Rights At ECU<lb/>
During the upcoming SGA elec-<lb/>
tions, The East Carolinian will en-<lb/>
dorse candidates we feel are best<lb/>
qualified for the job.<lb/>
Candidates will be screened in<lb/>
terms of their honesty, willingness<lb/>
to work, and their past record and<lb/>
associations. Each candidate will be<lb/>
carefully scrutinized by the<lb/>
Editorial Board. The board will<lb/>
consider such things as news inter-<lb/>
views and how the candidates stand<lb/>
on the issues. Also, the candidates'<lb/>
personal intelligence will be of para-<lb/>
mount concern.<lb/>
The newspaper will conscien-<lb/>
tiously strive to give each candidate<lb/>
equal press, by making sure news<lb/>
stories appear in the news hole as a<lb/>
matter of informing the public,<lb/>
rather than helping influence the<lb/>
results of the election. Specifically,<lb/>
we will not give favored coverage to<lb/>
the person we support editorially.<lb/>
Jules Witcover, a noted political<lb/>
reporter for the Los Angeles Times,<lb/>
writing in the Columbia Journalisim<lb/>
Review, said that volume of space<lb/>
devoted to any one candidate does<lb/>
not prove editorial bias. "The flow<lb/>
of news is uneven Witcover said.<lb/>
in a political campaign, one can-<lb/>
didate often is more active than<lb/>
another, says more, or creates more<lb/>
public interest<lb/>
There are some, especially in the<lb/>
campus administration, who have<lb/>
demanded that we be fair. We feel<lb/>
that we have been, and we will con-<lb/>
tinue to be.<lb/>
On this page, everyone who sup-<lb/>
ports the candidate that we oppose<lb/>
can scream that we have been unfair<lb/>
to their own favorite.<lb/>
Furthermore, since this<lb/>
newspaper is supported with student<lb/>
fees, some students will scream that<lb/>
we should support everyone, since<lb/>
all students pay fees. Students do<lb/>
pay their fees, but in all fairness to<lb/>
the newspaper, we are 70 percent<lb/>
self-supporting.<lb/>
It is a fallacy to believe that we<lb/>
can please everyone. We knew that<lb/>
the moment we set foot into the<lb/>
business that we could not, so we<lb/>
haven't tried. All we can do is try to<lb/>
provide the best election coverage<lb/>
we know how. This may include<lb/>
stepping on a few toes. If we are<lb/>
forced to step on a few toes to tell<lb/>
the truth, and that is our role, then<lb/>
so be it.<lb/>
There are student leaders, both<lb/>
past and present who have said that<lb/>
the campus administration, notably<lb/>
the chancellor and his assistants<lb/>
should stop the newspaper from<lb/>
publishing when it backs a certain<lb/>
candidate for SGA office. The fact<lb/>
is that the adminstration cannot dic-<lb/>
tate ediorial policy in any way,<lb/>
shape or form. It is illegal.<lb/>
In the court case Antonelli v.<lb/>
Hammond (308 F. Supp 1329 (D.<lb/>
Mass. 1970), the majority held that<lb/>
the administration could not cut off<lb/>
funds to the school newspaper<lb/>
because it disagrees with editorial<lb/>
content. In another case (Arrington<lb/>
v. Taylor - 380 F. Supp 1348 MDNC<lb/>
1974) the court dismissed an in-<lb/>
dividual students suit to cut off<lb/>
school funding of the newspaper<lb/>
because of the student's<lb/>
disagreements with the paper's con-<lb/>
tent.<lb/>
Some administrators at ECU<lb/>
have claimed that since students are<lb/>
a "captive audience certain kinds<lb/>
of news coverage should not be<lb/>
allowed. According to federal law,<lb/>
however, this is not the case. In<lb/>
Gambino vs. Fairfax County School<lb/>
Board (429 F. Supp 731 E.D. Va.<lb/>
1977), the court rejected the view<lb/>
that students are a "captive au-<lb/>
dience<lb/>
?:?:?:?:?:?:?<lb/>
w?<lb/>
?$<lb/>
.?.?.?.?.?.???<lb/>
?.?.v.v<lb/>
?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?<lb/>
?:?:?:?:?:?:?:<lb/>
SBBSSSSS?<lb/>
04<lb/>
There are even some in the ad-<lb/>
ministration who might have heard<lb/>
that the Internal Revenue Service<lb/>
may cancel the school's right to tax-<lb/>
exempt status if the newspaper en-<lb/>
dorses one political candidate over<lb/>
another. The Internal Revenue<lb/>
Code (section 51) does state that if<lb/>
an organization is tax exempt<lb/>
because it is operated for<lb/>
"educational purposes then it<lb/>
cannot attempt to "participate in<lb/>
any political campaign on behalf of<lb/>
any candidate for public office<lb/>
According to the Student Press<lb/>
Law Center Report, however, this is<lb/>
not the case. In 1972, the IRS issued<lb/>
an advisory opinion that stated that<lb/>
political endorsements by school-<lb/>
funded, school-sponsored student<lb/>
newspapers would not jeopardize a<lb/>
school's tax exempt status. Under<lb/>
typical editorial page circumstances,<lb/>
the IRS says that endorsements of<lb/>
candidates would simply be<lb/>
"expressions of opinion by<lb/>
students" and would not constitute<lb/>
"acts of the university" in violation<lb/>
of the IRS code.<lb/>
In short, the law is extrememly<lb/>
tight as regards the First Amend-<lb/>
ment guarantees of freedom of the<lb/>
press in these instances. We can<lb/>
print just about anything we want<lb/>
short of libel.<lb/>
It is our policy during the SGA<lb/>
elections to be fair and responsible.<lb/>
It is our earnest hope that the<lb/>
SGA candidates running this year<lb/>
will feel the same way.<lb/>
ND BLESS MOM AND DAD AND PLEASE LET<lb/>
BOARD OF TRUSTEES BE NICE AND VOTE<lb/>
AGAINST THE FEE NCKEASE<lb/>
The Nuclear Question<lb/>
Direct Heat To Better Cause<lb/>
By HOLT CONFER<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
I'm confused. Usually I try to resolve the<lb/>
"confusion" problem before I begin to<lb/>
write, but in this case finding a solution<lb/>
isn't all that easy.<lb/>
The reason for my confusion? Well, it's<lb/>
all this hubub about nuclear power. The<lb/>
things I keep hearing from the most vocal<lb/>
adversaries of nuclear power don't seem to<lb/>
line up with the facts.<lb/>
I'd like to tell you what some of the facts<lb/>
are, then maybe ? just maybe ? you'll<lb/>
decide (as I did) to redirect much of the<lb/>
non-nuclear heat that's currently being<lb/>
generated into far more productive causes.<lb/>
You surely remember the photographs<lb/>
taken at the nuclear facility in Seabrook,<lb/>
New Hampshire. There were citizen<lb/>
guerillas paddling across the marshes on in-<lb/>
ner tube rafts, storming the gates, clinging<lb/>
to fences in silent protest, and prostrating<lb/>
themselves on the highways daring the con-<lb/>
struction vehicles to run over them. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately this was busy-work. It kept the<lb/>
police and national guard units on over-<lb/>
time, but again, the heat was on the wrong<lb/>
burner.<lb/>
Why do 1 keep harping that the efforts to<lb/>
save us all from nuclear energy are<lb/>
misdirected? Simply because the facts in-<lb/>
dicate that nuclear energy is, in reality, a<lb/>
very minor threat to my safety. The impor-<lb/>
tant point here is that it's fairly common for<lb/>
the public's idea of "risky" to differ quite<lb/>
widely from reality. Some weeks ago,<lb/>
Dunn's Review published a study made by<lb/>
Decision Research. Three groups of people<lb/>
? the League of Women Voters, college<lb/>
students, and business-professional club<lb/>
members ? were asked to rank thirty pro-<lb/>
ducts or activities from the msot to the least<lb/>
risky. In almost every case, the rankings<lb/>
given by the three groups did not agree with<lb/>
scientific analyses.<lb/>
The major risk (actual), with 150,000<lb/>
deaths is smoking. The League of Women<lb/>
Voters and the business-professional club<lb/>
members said it is fourth most dangerous;<lb/>
the college students said it is third.<lb/>
In second place, citing 100,000 deaths an-<lb/>
nual, is alcoholic beverages; motor vehicles'<lb/>
50,000 deaths is third; and handguns, in-<lb/>
volved in 17,000 deaths, are actually fourth.<lb/>
The groups ranked these risks third, se-<lb/>
cond, and first, respectively.<lb/>
A surprising entry (at least to me) is elec-<lb/>
tric power. It ranked 5th, actually causing<lb/>
14,000 deaths annually. The groups rated it<lb/>
as risk number 19.<lb/>
Bicycles, number 13 on the actual list, are<lb/>
responsible for 1,000 deaths a year; home<lb/>
appliances, number 15, cause 200 deaths<lb/>
annually.<lb/>
Notice, if you will, we still haven't come<lb/>
to nuclear power.<lb/>
Contraceptives (a product I would<lb/>
have considered) is number 18 ? 5<lb/>
a year.<lb/>
And finally, way down at number 2<lb/>
have nuclear power with 100 ear! dea<lb/>
to its credit. But the surprising thing<lb/>
both the League of Women Yotei and<lb/>
college students thought that nuclear pc<lb/>
was number 1, the leading cau-e of deal<lb/>
Business-professional club member<lb/>
thought nuclear power ranked eighth.<lb/>
The study points up some inter<lb/>
things. For example, people eem to be<lb/>
more willing to face familiar n?k- sucl<lb/>
cigarettes, alcohol, and bicycles, than un-<lb/>
familiar ones ? even if the are tar<lb/>
risky ? such as nuclear power.<lb/>
People also seem to be more wriflin -<lb/>
cept risks they can control, like Nirnming<lb/>
(number 7, with 3,000 annual deaths) rather<lb/>
than accept risks they can control, such as<lb/>
pesticides on food. The college siudem<lb/>
thought pesticides were fourth ? thej ete<lb/>
actually twenty-eighth.<lb/>
1 here are nineteen other dangers to be<lb/>
protested before we get to nuclear energy<lb/>
But because our opinions about nuclear<lb/>
power are obvious, you can be certain that<lb/>
the subject is ripe for a great des<lb/>
political drum-beating.<lb/>
Instead we really need to make a<lb/>
the power plant designers, the cor net<lb/>
companies, the inspectors, the :ra<lb/>
and, of course, the power cert"<lb/>
managers.<lb/>
Editorial Board Is Reorganized<lb/>
A proposal for a change in the structure<lb/>
of The East Carolinian staff was approved<lb/>
by the Media Board last Wednesday that<lb/>
removes all advertising and business per-<lb/>
sonnel from the Editorial Board. The<lb/>
Editorial Board makes all decisions concer-<lb/>
ning the contents of the news, features and<lb/>
sports sections. The new structure will fur-<lb/>
ther eliminate the possibility of conflicts of<lb/>
interest in the editorial section of the paper.<lb/>
The following description of the changes<lb/>
will be submitted to the Media Board to be<lb/>
written into the operations manual of The<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
An Editor-in-chief shall be appointed by<lb/>
the Media Board as the chief management<lb/>
officer of the newspaper.<lb/>
The Editor-in-chief appoints the Manag-<lb/>
ing Editor, Director of Advertising, Pro-<lb/>
duction Manager, and Business Manager.<lb/>
These four people and the Editor-in-chief<lb/>
comprise the "Management Board The<lb/>
Management Board is the internal govern-<lb/>
ing board making decisions that affect and<lb/>
concern the entire newspaper, such as prin-<lb/>
ting schedule, allocation of office space,<lb/>
preparation of budget, circulation, and ap-<lb/>
proval of ad rates. This body has all<lb/>
authority in making management decisions.<lb/>
The Editorial Board consists of: Manag-<lb/>
ing Editor, Editorial Page Editor, Copy<lb/>
Editor, News Editor, Sports Editor, and<lb/>
Features Editor. These persons make all<lb/>
decisions regarding any and all editorial<lb/>
matters. Their actions are subject to the ap-<lb/>
proval of the Editor-in-chief.<lb/>
The Managing Editor is responsible for<lb/>
the employment and performance of all<lb/>
members of the Editorial Board.<lb/>
The Production Manager is responsible<lb/>
for the employment and performance of all<lb/>
production personnel.<lb/>
The Director of Advertising is responsi-<lb/>
ble for the employment and performance of<lb/>
all advertising personnel.<lb/>
The Business Manager will aner onlj<lb/>
to the Editor-in-chief concerning new -paper<lb/>
finances and operation.<lb/>
The actions of, and decisions made b,<lb/>
any newspaper employee are subject to the<lb/>
scrutiny of the Editor-in-chief, who has<lb/>
final authority in all newspaper matier-<lb/>
Although the Editor-in-chief is superior to<lb/>
individual staff members, he is subordinate<lb/>
to the Management Board as a whole. The<lb/>
Editor-in-chief may be overruled by a ma<lb/>
jority vote of the Management Board.<lb/>
The Editor-in-chief is the new sparer'<lb/>
sole representative to the Media Board. He<lb/>
will present any and all reports to the Media<lb/>
Board. He will be assisted by individual<lb/>
staff members in the preparation and<lb/>
presentation of newspaper business to the<lb/>
board if he so desires. The Editor-in-chief is<lb/>
responsible to the board for the overall<lb/>
operation of the newspaper.<lb/>
Republicans Start Lining Up For 1980 Presidential Prize<lb/>
By CHARLES GRIFFIN<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
Several republicans would like to<lb/>
be president. They sensed a change<lb/>
in the wind ? tasted blood ? and<lb/>
leaped into the fray, eager to<lb/>
become "the Man" to oppose Jim-<lb/>
my Carter this year.<lb/>
Now things are shaping up into<lb/>
what may be a very good fight.<lb/>
Although Carter has done nothing<lb/>
of any significance to bring about<lb/>
the release of our people in Iran, has<lb/>
offered no real answer to the Soviets<lb/>
in Afghanistan, and has created a<lb/>
feeling of ease among all the people<lb/>
in the world who want to dump on<lb/>
America ? nonetheless, Carter ap-<lb/>
pears to have more public support<lb/>
than ever before. Kennedy can rave<lb/>
about domestic problems all he<lb/>
wants; as long as foreign crises keep<lb/>
cropping up, Carter will have the<lb/>
edge.<lb/>
Teddy Kennedy probably scares<lb/>
more voters than any other can-<lb/>
didate. He won. his home state of<lb/>
Massachusetts, but those people are<lb/>
used to him. Massachsuetts has<lb/>
never been the bellwether for the na-<lb/>
tion. In effect, it was a favorite son<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
The rest of the nation sees only<lb/>
the specter of a young girl clawing<lb/>
for air and screaming for help that<lb/>
never came. It sees a man who ad-<lb/>
vocates welfare programs without<lb/>
regard for costs. It sees a man who<lb/>
chokes in a crisis or when asked a<lb/>
question for which he has not<lb/>
prepared. Teddy is the Kennedy<lb/>
family's baby boy ? and it shows.<lb/>
But what hath the Republicans<lb/>
wrought? Reagan? Bush? Ander-<lb/>
son? (Whisper it softly, for it be yet<lb/>
in the hearts of all good Republican<lb/>
state chairman ? Ford?)<lb/>
Reagan is a darling. He speaks<lb/>
well, as a man should who has<lb/>
played many parts. He mixes his<lb/>
lines once in a while, but that can be<lb/>
forgiven in an old man. If Reagan<lb/>
becomes the Republican candidate it<lb/>
would not require a crystal ball to<lb/>
predict the outcome of the general<lb/>
election. The magic number allow-<lb/>
ing a man to become President<lb/>
hovers around 52 percent of the<lb/>
electorate. That is how much is<lb/>
needed to overcome the faults of the<lb/>
electoral coielge system.<lb/>
A true conservative will draw ex-<lb/>
actly 25 percent of the electorate.<lb/>
Depending on Ronnie Reagan's<lb/>
mouth, that means the Republicans<lb/>
in November can only hope for 23<lb/>
to 29 percent of the votes in<lb/>
November. Not even close ?<lb/>
nowhere near the cigar.<lb/>
George Bush is personable<lb/>
enough and intelligent, but his roots<lb/>
are in the oil business and his last<lb/>
private business ties were with the<lb/>
ganking industry. Bush is respected<lb/>
by CIA types who served under him,<lb/>
but all that means is that he did not<lb/>
rock the boat while he was director.<lb/>
.<lb/>
The Bush potential seems to be on<lb/>
the same level as Carter's. More on<lb/>
this later.<lb/>
John Anderson is the Republican<lb/>
Kennedy. He is rapidly becoming a<lb/>
cult favorite because the easy liberal<lb/>
answers that appeal to most young<lb/>
Americans sound better coming<lb/>
from him than they do coming from<lb/>
a man with blood on his hands. It is<lb/>
popular once again to be opposed to<lb/>
the Democrats, but after you've<lb/>
been taught that there is an easy<lb/>
answer to all life's little problems<lb/>
and the answers don't ever have to<lb/>
end in blood and thunder, most<lb/>
liberals feel better about supporting<lb/>
Anderson than one of the other,<lb/>
more conservative Republicans.<lb/>
Gerald Ford, although he claims<lb/>
he's not running, appeals to the pro-<lb/>
fessional politicians. He is proven<lb/>
and true. All the klutzes of the na-<lb/>
tion identify with htm. There are a<lb/>
lot of klutzes. Ford is there to pro-<lb/>
tect the party against tumbling too<lb/>
far from the center. To the old pols,<lb/>
the thing is to win the general elec-<lb/>
tion, not to prove a point. If Reagan<lb/>
or Anderson begins to pull ahead in<lb/>
the primaries, then you will be likely<lb/>
to see Ford stumble into the race.<lb/>
But it really doesn't matter who<lb/>
wants to be President or who<lb/>
becomes President. The true control<lb/>
of the nation's destiny is now in the<lb/>
hands, of the great corporations.<lb/>
Oil, the banks, General Motors, Ma<lb/>
Bell, and the power companies, to<lb/>
mention a few. These companies are<lb/>
at war ? struggling for national and<lb/>
international supremacy ? and the<lb/>
United States has become a tool in<lb/>
the struggle. Some of them actively<lb/>
conspire to control events, others<lb/>
act out of the general state-of-mind<lb/>
that prevails among captains of<lb/>
capitalism. That they may be short-<lb/>
sighted or less than concerned about<lb/>
your welfare or the future of our<lb/>
planet is beside the point; an at-<lb/>
mosphere allowing a tidy profit is<lb/>
the ultimate point.<lb/>
In that respect, the big boys think<lb/>
Carter is OK. Not perfect, but OK<lb/>
Just in case the public decides to<lb/>
throw him out, they want to make<lb/>
sure that whoever runs against him<lb/>
will still play ball in their park.<lb/>
Mind you now, there is no man<lb/>
running who wouldn't or couldn't<lb/>
be manipulated by the good ole<lb/>
Captains of Commerce, but the<lb/>
prime opponents for Carter are<lb/>
Bush and Ford. No matter which<lb/>
becomes the official candidate or<lb/>
who wins in November, for the hud-<lb/>
dled masses paying for their oil<lb/>
through the nose, for the millions<lb/>
applying for food stamps so they<lb/>
can afford to buy more packaging<lb/>
(that's what you are buying most of,<lb/>
you know), and for the young fami-<lb/>
ly faced with paying $100,000 over<lb/>
30 to 50 years for a house that costs<lb/>
$13,000-30,000 to build, for these<lb/>
there is no hope. It will he business<lb/>
jgH0MW?MM?JIPilV4MPl1 iNi?M!iiMMtyllll9 '<lb/>
???????<lb/>
??? ?. m, ?. i<lb/>
 f- ?? f <lb/>
<pb facs="00057256_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
MARCH 25, 1980 Page 5<lb/>
Original Material Gets Attention<lb/>
'I Just Set Short-Term Goals For Myself<lb/>
Brian Huskey Pho,obvJILLADAMS<lb/>
soloing at the Tree House<lb/>
By Laura Hoke<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Guitar pickers come and go<lb/>
through most college towns. We like<lb/>
to stomp our feet and clap our<lb/>
hands to get the adrenalin flowing.<lb/>
But for some reason, we often can't<lb/>
remember who it was a pickin' and a<lb/>
grinnin' when we wake up the next<lb/>
morning with a hangover.<lb/>
Despite my severe headache this<lb/>
last Saturday morning, Brian<lb/>
Huskey's name and unique blend of<lb/>
country and folk music stuck in my<lb/>
mind when I woke up. I had spent<lb/>
the better part of Friday night at the<lb/>
Tree House listening to Brian play,<lb/>
and I was so impressed that I called<lb/>
him Saturday morning to see if we<lb/>
could get together and talk for a<lb/>
while. That night over a relaxed din-<lb/>
ner before he played, I learned a lot<lb/>
about Brian Huskey and what it's<lb/>
like being a solo performer on the<lb/>
road.<lb/>
The East Carolinian: Brian, as I<lb/>
understand you've been playing for<lb/>
several years now. Have you always<lb/>
been a solo performer?<lb/>
Huskey: Heavens no! I've been<lb/>
playing the guitar for years, but on-<lb/>
ly for the past five years have I<lb/>
played solo. I started out at 16 play-<lb/>
ing with an all-black band. When we<lb/>
broke up, I had a few disasters with<lb/>
bands before I realized it would be<lb/>
easier for me solo. You have only<lb/>
yourself to depend on and to answer<lb/>
to. Granted, this can present pro-<lb/>
blems, but the benefits outweigh the<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
E.C So how has your career pro-<lb/>
gressed since then?<lb/>
Huskey: It has definitely had a<lb/>
snowball effect. I pretty much go<lb/>
with the flow, and I've had a lot of<lb/>
opportunities and run with all of<lb/>
them as they came.<lb/>
E.C Have you reached the point<lb/>
that you consider success?<lb/>
Huskey: I guess that would depend<lb/>
on what success is. I really don't<lb/>
know. I don't have a definite suc-<lb/>
cess point, I just set short-term goals<lb/>
for myself, try to fulfill them, and<lb/>
then shoot a little higher. My first<lb/>
goal was to be able to make a com-<lb/>
fortable living for myself playing<lb/>
music. I have achieved that. Since<lb/>
success can be both personal and<lb/>
professional, 1 guess it is something<lb/>
I'll always be working on.<lb/>
E.C You mentioned that your<lb/>
album should be coming out any<lb/>
day now. I know it's something<lb/>
you've been working on for a long<lb/>
time. Are you happy with it?<lb/>
Huskey: Oh, extremely. It did take a<lb/>
long time, but it's something I've<lb/>
always wanted to do. Of course, I<lb/>
wish I had had more money to put<lb/>
into it, but I feel like my essence<lb/>
came across well, which is the main<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
E.C Is there anything you would<lb/>
do differently concerning the album<lb/>
if you had it to do over again?<lb/>
Huskey: Well, I would definitely<lb/>
like for my next album to be live.<lb/>
You can be so creative with a live<lb/>
album. A lot of my material is about<lb/>
humorous events that occur on the<lb/>
road. I talk to the audience a lot,<lb/>
and I would like a lot of the funny<lb/>
stories that preface the songs to be<lb/>
on the album to add a little flavor<lb/>
and individuality. The main thing,<lb/>
though, would be to do more of my<lb/>
own material. On this album I did<lb/>
only two original songs: one an in-<lb/>
strumental, "The Road Fever<lb/>
Rag which is the name of the<lb/>
album; and "Roses Every Wednes-<lb/>
day a love song.<lb/>
E.C Do you write a lot of your<lb/>
own music?<lb/>
Huskey: Not nearly as much as I<lb/>
would like to. Writing is something<lb/>
I'm concentrating on a lot these<lb/>
days. It's difficult to perform your<lb/>
own music and get a good response<lb/>
from the crowd. Usually they want<lb/>
to hear songs they know, that they<lb/>
can sing along with. Original<lb/>
material has to be something that<lb/>
will get peoples' attention, make<lb/>
them listen despite the fact that they<lb/>
have never heard it before. It'?<lb/>
See ORIGINAL,<lb/>
Page 6, col. 1<lb/>
New Generation Protests Draft Registration<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
A News Analysis<lb/>
Slightly less than ten years ago,<lb/>
on May 4. 1970, shots rang out at<lb/>
Kent State University and students<lb/>
fell to the ground, victims of<lb/>
asaMns bullets, and repurcussions<lb/>
were felt throughout the youth<lb/>
men em en t.<lb/>
A short while later, two more<lb/>
students at Jackson State University<lb/>
in Mississippi became martyrs. It<lb/>
was equally profound and shocking<lb/>
to hear my father say, "Well, that<lb/>
oueht to silence all those protestors<lb/>
and put them back in school where<lb/>
they belong<lb/>
Times have changed. My father,<lb/>
like the rest of us, has come full cir-<lb/>
cle to realize that although we live in<lb/>
the greatest country in the world, we<lb/>
are still not without faults. I have<lb/>
forgiven, but never forgotten, the<lb/>
words of my father because he was a<lb/>
victim of the msot corrupt ad-<lb/>
ministration in the history of the<lb/>
United States (that of Richard Nix-<lb/>
on), until now.<lb/>
Last year the shots once again<lb/>
rang out and innocent-people were<lb/>
killed in Greensboro. These were<lb/>
not wild-eyed radicals plotting to<lb/>
overthrow the country. They were<lb/>
doctors and students from some of<lb/>
the most prestigious educational in-<lb/>
stitutions in the United States, gun-<lb/>
ned down without, and possibly<lb/>
with the cooperation of, police pro-<lb/>
tection.<lb/>
This time, we will not silence our<lb/>
protests at the sights of guns. Many<lb/>
various political factions are uniting<lb/>
to force the government of the<lb/>
United States to realize that it is not<lb/>
serving nor meeting the needs of its<lb/>
people, but giant corporations.<lb/>
On the very day that Jimmy<lb/>
Carter announced his plans to<lb/>
reinstate the draft, several thousand<lb/>
youths marched on Carter's head-<lb/>
quarters in Manhattan chanting<lb/>
"Hell, rtoVVe won'f go. We won't<lb/>
die for Texaco Last Saturday,<lb/>
about 30,000 youths gathered in<lb/>
Washington to let the Carter ad-<lb/>
ministration know that they would<lb/>
not stand idly by and let him spill<lb/>
the blood of our youth to defend the<lb/>
oil company investments in the Mid-<lb/>
dle East.<lb/>
On March 22, tens of thousands<lb/>
of students and parents, young and<lb/>
old, black and white, from all walks<lb/>
of life came to Washington to at-<lb/>
tempt to stop registration and the<lb/>
draft.<lb/>
They gathered in Washington to<lb/>
let the president know that they are<lb/>
opposed to registration and con-<lb/>
scription, but more importantly, are<lb/>
opposed to the cold war and the new<lb/>
militarism that has spawned in the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Though they forthrightly con-<lb/>
demn the taking of hostages in Iran,<lb/>
support the call for an international<lb/>
tribunal to investigate the crimes of<lb/>
the shah, and oppose Soviet in-<lb/>
tervention in Afghanistan; they fell<lb/>
that Carter's action is inap-<lb/>
propriate. It is felt that the standing<lb/>
force of two million backed by<lb/>
ready reserves of nearly another<lb/>
million and the most technologically<lb/>
advanced military machine the<lb/>
world has ever known are more than<lb/>
sufficient to protect any legitimate<lb/>
security interest.<lb/>
The administration claims that<lb/>
registration is simply preparedness<lb/>
for future contingencies, but history<lb/>
demonstrates that registration leads<lb/>
to the draft and the draft leads to in-<lb/>
terventionist foreign policy ? the<lb/>
same policy that caused the Vietnam<lb/>
War and threatens future en-<lb/>
tanglements around the world.<lb/>
Can we sit by and let the war-<lb/>
mongerers in the White House and<lb/>
Congress plot to possibly destroy<lb/>
the world for the sake of the cor-<lb/>
porate entities that are only in it for<lb/>
the money?<lb/>
A new genertion of protestors<lb/>
has risen out of the long sleep of the<lb/>
70s to realize they must fight against<lb/>
this new surge of militarism or it will<lb/>
be the last chance to fight for or<lb/>
against anything. The new "not-me<lb/>
generation" is a different form of<lb/>
activism because it is known that the<lb/>
multi-national organizations are<lb/>
behind this threat of war and that<lb/>
our national interests would not be<lb/>
served by such a war.<lb/>
Our interests would best be served<lb/>
by meeting our energy needs with<lb/>
alternative, safe energy sources like<lb/>
conservation, solar, wind and back-<lb/>
to-the-basics technology. We know<lb/>
that the U.S. military intervention<lb/>
could lead to an all-out nuclear war<lb/>
with Russia in which there would be<lb/>
no winners.<lb/>
Last Saturday's demonstration<lb/>
was organized by the Mobilization<lb/>
Against the Draft, a coalition of<lb/>
students, religious, women's anti-<lb/>
nuclear and old anti-war groups like<lb/>
the War Resistors League and the<lb/>
See NEW GENERATION,<lb/>
Page 7, col. 1<lb/>
Truffaut's Illusion- Creating Device<lb/>
Life's Merry- Go-Round<lb/>
Elvis Costello<lb/>
Costdlo's fourth album, GET HAPPY, is reviewed on page 7 along<lb/>
wttti liftfia Ronstadt's new one, MAO LOVE.<lb/>
The film-within-a-film device has<lb/>
many famous theatrical and<lb/>
cinematic antecedents from<lb/>
Pirandello, Fellini and Godard to<lb/>
Bergman and LeLouche. "Day for<lb/>
Night as the film explains, is the<lb/>
device of filming day for night,<lb/>
whereby night scenes are shot in<lb/>
daylight through a filter.<lb/>
It is typical of the cinematic tricks<lb/>
and illusion-creating devices which<lb/>
this film simultaneously exploits<lb/>
and exposes.<lb/>
The dedication to Dorothy and<lb/>
Lillian Gish is the first of many<lb/>
homages with which the film<lb/>
abounds. The opening sequence<lb/>
then creates the illusion of reality<lb/>
only to shatter it at once with the<lb/>
revelation that we are watching the<lb/>
shooting of a film, as Truffaut plays<lb/>
his usual fashion with our expecta-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The tragic development, in-<lb/>
terspersed with humor, of the film-<lb/>
within-the-film ("Meet Pamela") is<lb/>
paralleled by similar vicissitudes in<lb/>
the lives of the people working on<lb/>
the film.<lb/>
The apprentice script-girl<lb/>
(Liliane), the make-up girl (Odile)<lb/>
and the props man (Bernard) are<lb/>
given equal prominence with the<lb/>
stars ? Severine, the fading<lb/>
Hollywood actress, Alexandre, her<lb/>
50-year-old husband in the film,<lb/>
their son Alphonse (Jean Pierre<lb/>
Leaud) and their daughter-in-law<lb/>
Julie, who plays Pamela, who is in<lb/>
love with Alexandre.<lb/>
The whole film is a demonstration<lb/>
film-making, in the words of<lb/>
Truffaut, both the actor and the<lb/>
man, is "un metier formidable He<lb/>
compares it to a journey in a<lb/>
Western. "At first you hope you<lb/>
will have a good trip. Then you just<lb/>
wonder if you will ever reach the<lb/>
end And later: "Films go on like<lb/>
trains. They are more harmonious<lb/>
than life and there are no hold-ups.<lb/>
Personal problems no longer count.<lb/>
The cinema reigns" ? this to the ac-<lb/>
companiment of majestically low,<lb/>
swelling music.<lb/>
The warmth and solidarity of the<lb/>
film-making team ? they watch th<lb/>
rushes like a family watching home<lb/>
movies and later the group<lb/>
photograph resembles a family<lb/>
p-ortrait ? provides a temporary<lb/>
security for Truffaut. The impor-<lb/>
tance of his craving is highlighted by<lb/>
the emphasis on the line "Your<lb/>
parents invite us" (reminiscent of<lb/>
Antoine's adoptive family in<lb/>
"Antoine and Colette").<lb/>
But the film also stresses the isola-<lb/>
tion of the director in his decision-<lb/>
making role, pater familias. Hence<lb/>
his symbolc wearing of the hearing-<lb/>
aid and the recurrent enigmatic<lb/>
flashback (similar to many of Truf-<lb/>
faut's own experiences) of a solitary<lb/>
child's theft of stills of "Citizen<lb/>
Kane" from outside a cinema,<lb/>
followed by flight into deafness.<lb/>
The incident in which Severine<lb/>
can't remembr her lnes and asks if<lb/>
she can jus say numbers with the<lb/>
correct dramatic emphasis is follow-<lb/>
ed by frequent reassurances from<lb/>
Truffaut that is not serious.<lb/>
In her confusion, Severine cannot<lb/>
tell if Odile is her makeup girl or a<lb/>
film actress playing the part of the<lb/>
maid (in fact, she's both). The se-<lb/>
quence works on a number of levels.<lb/>
It is funny and moving; it is an<lb/>
authentic portrayal of Truffaut's<lb/>
working method, his delicate handl-<lb/>
ing of actors and his sympathy for<lb/>
them and it illustrates the confusion<lb/>
between illusion and reality which<lb/>
runs through the film.<lb/>
The event in the film, as usual,<lb/>
overshadow the ending and Truf-<lb/>
faut tries to lighten the mood in<lb/>
"Day for Night" as well. By the end<lb/>
of the film, our film, though, the<lb/>
film unit of the film-within-a-film<lb/>
breaks up and the camera pulls<lb/>
away from the scene of their<lb/>
farewells, the final shot freezing and<lb/>
then spinning round, evoking et<lb/>
again the whirl-wind ? or the<lb/>
merry-go-round ? of life.<lb/>
"Day for Night" is rated 'R The<lb/>
free flick for this Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day night is the Dracula-spoof<lb/>
"Love at First Bite Times for the<lb/>
film are 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
'Day for Night by Francois Trail ant<lb/>
I<lb/>
u<lb/>
juaps.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057256_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 25, 1980<lb/>
Huskey's Original<lb/>
Material Included<lb/>
NBC TV Readies New Dramas<lb/>
Continued from Page 5<lb/>
definitely a challenge,<lb/>
but I'm working on it.<lb/>
E.C Are there any<lb/>
particular artists whom<lb/>
you would say have in-<lb/>
fluenced your perform-<lb/>
ing and writing?<lb/>
Huskey: That's a hard<lb/>
question. Early in-<lb/>
fluences for me, I<lb/>
guess, were James<lb/>
Taylor and Neil Young.<lb/>
A lot of Neil Young.<lb/>
Now 1 get excited over<lb/>
leas music. Willis<lb/>
Man Ramsey, Guy<lb/>
Clark, and Jerry Jeff<lb/>
Walker are big in-<lb/>
fluences. Especially<lb/>
Jerry Jeff! I'd love to<lb/>
go to Texas. Hopefully<lb/>
I'll get there sometime<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
E.C: Have you played<lb/>
in a wide variety of<lb/>
places?<lb/>
Huskey: Everywhere<lb/>
from New York to<lb/>
Elorida. In fact, I'll be<lb/>
up in Washington,<lb/>
D.C later this spring,<lb/>
and I'm checking on<lb/>
some bookings in<lb/>
Boston and New York<lb/>
after that. I definitely<lb/>
travel a lot.<lb/>
E.C How do you feel<lb/>
about being on the road<lb/>
so much?<lb/>
Huskey: I love it. Peo-<lb/>
ple will always com-<lb/>
plain about their jobs.<lb/>
That's just life, and I<lb/>
bitch just as much as<lb/>
the next man. But I<lb/>
love to work, I love<lb/>
people, and I especially<lb/>
love to travel. Being on<lb/>
the road does have its<lb/>
drawbacks. Loneliness<lb/>
is the biggest one I can<lb/>
think of. Privacy is<lb/>
great, but too much<lb/>
privacy is solitude, and<lb/>
I don't like that. Going<lb/>
back to an empty motel<lb/>
room in a town where<lb/>
you don't know anyone<lb/>
is a really empty feel-<lb/>
ing. Thank God I like<lb/>
T.V.<lb/>
E.C Then would you<lb/>
ever consider playing<lb/>
with a band again?<lb/>
Huskey: Not because<lb/>
of traveling alone. I<lb/>
would consider playing<lb/>
with a band again if<lb/>
just the right offer<lb/>
came along.<lb/>
E.C: What would<lb/>
"just the right offer"<lb/>
have to include?<lb/>
Huskey: Money would<lb/>
be an important con-<lb/>
sideration. Major, as a<lb/>
matter of fact. And the<lb/>
music, of course,<lb/>
would have to be right.<lb/>
There could be excep-<lb/>
tions where money is<lb/>
concerned. For exam-<lb/>
ple, if the Eagles called<lb/>
me up and needed a<lb/>
guitar, I'm sure I could<lb/>
put up with a little cut<lb/>
in pay!<lb/>
E.C : But, overall, are<lb/>
you happy with your<lb/>
career at this point in<lb/>
time?<lb/>
Huskey: I'm very ex-<lb/>
cited about it.<lb/>
Everything is going<lb/>
well, and opportunities<lb/>
sometimes come faster<lb/>
than I can grab onto<lb/>
them. I try not to miss<lb/>
any, though, and I use<lb/>
every advantage to its<lb/>
fullest. Like I said<lb/>
before, I'm a<lb/>
workaholic, so the<lb/>
busier I am, the happier<lb/>
1 am. The music I'm<lb/>
playing now is the kind<lb/>
of music I love. It's me,<lb/>
my lifestyle and my<lb/>
personality. So I really<lb/>
couldn't be happier.<lb/>
E.C: You've played in<lb/>
Greenville several<lb/>
times. Do you plan to<lb/>
play here again?<lb/>
By PETER BOYER<lb/>
AP Television Writer<lb/>
It is taxing, scrutiniz-<lb/>
ing the deal that writer<lb/>
David Rintels has with<lb/>
NBC and trying to<lb/>
detect a flaw. If this<lb/>
isn't dead solid perfect,<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C. No.<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
Dixie Road<lb/>
Ducks<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
Bonnie Gringo<lb/>
it's close to it as televi-<lb/>
sion comes. Razor<lb/>
close.<lb/>
NBC has asked<lb/>
Rintels to go out into<lb/>
America and produce<lb/>
plays for the network's<lb/>
new theatre series. Find<lb/>
plays you like, they<lb/>
said. Spend what you<lb/>
must. Get the best ac-<lb/>
tors available. You<lb/>
want to reherse them<lb/>
for four weeks, as if<lb/>
you were on Broadway<lb/>
Okay?<lb/>
'They didn't even<lb/>
blink Rintels says.<lb/>
Huskey: I'll be back at<lb/>
the Tree House April<lb/>
23 and 24. The people<lb/>
here are fantastic.<lb/>
Greenville is a friendly<lb/>
town, and I've loved<lb/>
playing here.<lb/>
bafR<lb/>
 by Nature's Way<lb/>
yyectalizing in natural hair cuts tor men A wvmet<lb/>
Present ECU Student I.D. Foi<lb/>
20? o Off Your Next Haircut<lb/>
Offer good thru 4 12 80<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
appointments only<lb/>
758-7841<lb/>
"And they know the<lb/>
quality of actors we're<lb/>
going to be using<lb/>
Yes, such as Henry<lb/>
Fonda, Penelope<lb/>
Milford, Cloris<lb/>
Leachman, David<lb/>
Ogden Stiers, Tim Hut-<lb/>
ton and George Griz-<lb/>
zard. And that's just<lb/>
the cast of the first pro-<lb/>
duction, The Oldest<lb/>
Living Graduate, part<lb/>
of the late Preston<lb/>
Jones' Texas Trilogy.<lb/>
The play will be aired<lb/>
live from the Dallas<lb/>
Theatre Center. "It's<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
S;76 00 "all inclusive"<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth con<lb/>
trol. and problem pregnan<lb/>
cy counseling. For further<lb/>
information call 832 0535<lb/>
(toll free number<lb/>
800 221 2568) between 9<lb/>
AM 5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's<lb/>
Health Organization<lb/>
VI7 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN<lb/>
STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Family Night<lb/>
SIRLOIN BEEF TIPS<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
Complete with Idaho King Baked<lb/>
Potato, Texas Toast and Margarine<lb/>
IB903 E. I Oth. St. 7S8-871S<lb/>
where Jones lived and<lb/>
wrote Rintels says on<lb/>
April 7. There will be<lb/>
another production<lb/>
later this year, and at<lb/>
least four next year.<lb/>
441 told NBC that I<lb/>
wanted to do plays<lb/>
from the regions, not<lb/>
just New York and Los<lb/>
Angeles. Plays from<lb/>
writers that spoke with<lb/>
a different voice than<lb/>
the one we usually<lb/>
hear<lb/>
The extraordinary<lb/>
NBC project was born<lb/>
of a meeting Rintels<lb/>
had six years ago with<lb/>
some IBM executives<lb/>
after IBM bought<lb/>
Rintels' play Clarence<lb/>
Darrow for television.<lb/>
There, he met Jane<lb/>
Cahill Pfieffer, who<lb/>
eventually became<lb/>
NBC's chairman of the<lb/>
board.<lb/>
"Jane and I talked<lb/>
about it, and it never<lb/>
occured to me to say<lb/>
no. It was a chance that<lb/>
anybody in television<lb/>
would be thrilled to<lb/>
have, to be able to pick<lb/>
good plays and do them<lb/>
live and do them the<lb/>
right way<lb/>
He says NBC has not<lb/>
even hinted at com-<lb/>
merical factors, such as<lb/>
ratings. Can this be?<lb/>
"We can do<lb/>
anything, we have set<lb/>
no rules. I could do a<lb/>
play on Broadway, if I<lb/>
wanted, or Puerto<lb/>
Rico. Or Texas.<lb/>
"After the two this<lb/>
year, and the four next<lb/>
year, we'll sit down and<lb/>
discuss it. I want to see<lb/>
if people like it. if it's<lb/>
for people, if it's g<lb/>
for NBC. We'll see<lb/>
FOXHUNTER<lb/>
(formally the Rathskeller)<lb/>
OFFERING<lb/>
LADIES NITE<lb/>
TUE.NITE8pm-lam<lb/>
NICKEL<lb/>
DRAFT<lb/>
Owner and Operator<lb/>
Randy Alford<lb/>
Grade "A" Whole Fryers 43$ lb.<lb/>
John Morrell Fresh Half or Whole<lb/>
Pork Loin 89f lb.<lb/>
Sliced into chops or roast free<lb/>
Gwaltney Bacon or Franks 12oz. pkg<lb/>
Coca-Cola 32oz. Bottle 324 Plus deposit<lb/>
Only lc per ounce!<lb/>
Kelloggs Corn Flakes 18oz. box 58<lb/>
Campbell's Tomato Soup<lb/>
lOoz. can 184 Great with Premium Crackers<lb/>
Duke's Mayonnaise 884 QT. Jar<lb/>
Limit one with $7.50 food order.<lb/>
Franco American Spaghetti-Os<lb/>
14oz. can 39 value now 4$1.00<lb/>
Soft n Pretty Toilet Tissue<lb/>
4 roll Pkg. 784 Limit 2 With $7.50 food order.<lb/>
Golden ripe Bananas $1.00 4lbs.<lb/>
Maola or Sealtest Fresh Homigenized Milk<lb/>
Gal. Jug $1.99 Why pay $1.99 per gallon for<lb/>
off the wall brands-WE give you the best<lb/>
brands at the same price.<lb/>
Suprrmirkrt. In<lb/>
Stroh's or Miller Beer<lb/>
12oz. cans<lb/>
$1.996-pack<lb/>
Ad prices good through March 29, 1980<lb/>
clTpThFs coupon<lb/>
ScotTowels Giant Roll48fwith this coupon<lb/>
and $7.50 food order excluding specials.<lb/>
Without coupon 78 Limit one coupon per<lb/>
customer. Expires 3-29-80.<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
ECU Pirate Coupon<lb/>
5 Discount on all food<lb/>
orders $12.00 or more (excluding<lb/>
keg beer). Present this coupon<lb/>
and show ECU ID card to<lb/>
cashier. Name.<lb/>
Coupon effective id No,<lb/>
through April 1, 1980. Amt. Purchase<lb/>
Lk.<lb/>
s<lb/>
Teddy Kennedy probably scares lines once in a while, but that can be rock the boat while he was director, tect the party against tumbling too mtepnere allowing a uuy prom is as usual.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057256_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 25. 1980<lb/>
'Get Happy' Is A Costello Phenomenon<lb/>
'Mad Love9 Lacks Ronstadt's Creativity<lb/>
New Generation Protest<lb/>
Continued from Page 5<lb/>
W'omens International<lb/>
League for Peace and<lb/>
Freedom.<lb/>
This coalition has a<lb/>
much broader base, in-<lb/>
cluding blacks, labor,<lb/>
women, gays, and<lb/>
others, and has a much<lb/>
better potential for a<lb/>
broader impact thatn<lb/>
those of the 60s because<lb/>
of the forces of the<lb/>
tumultuous 70s and the<lb/>
variety of inputs that<lb/>
the MAD has within its<lb/>
grasp. The Washington<lb/>
event was coordinated<lb/>
bv Patrick Lacefield<lb/>
and received en-<lb/>
dorsements from more<lb/>
than 82 groups, in-<lb/>
cluding the Citizen's<lb/>
Party, National<lb/>
Lawyers Guild,<lb/>
Veterans for Peace,<lb/>
Clergy and Laity Con-<lb/>
cerned. Americans for<lb/>
Democratic Action,<lb/>
event featured for miles. The crowd!<lb/>
speakers like was full of people car-<lb/>
Yarrow, David rying banners froml<lb/>
various schools and<lb/>
groups, and the<lb/>
members began to<lb/>
chant such songs as<lb/>
"One, Two, Three,<lb/>
Four; No Draft and No<lb/>
War" and "Hell no, we<lb/>
won't go. We won't die<lb/>
for Texaco<lb/>
The<lb/>
many<lb/>
Peter<lb/>
Dellinger, Roy Childs,<lb/>
Rev. William Sloan<lb/>
Coffin, Mark Hatfield,<lb/>
David Harris, Ben<lb/>
Chavis, Bella Abzug,<lb/>
Stokely Carmichael,<lb/>
and many others.<lb/>
Entertainment was pro-<lb/>
vided by Penny Rosen-<lb/>
wasser and The Jones<lb/>
Boys, Bob Gilliam and<lb/>
band, Lucy Murphy,<lb/>
and Magpie. The<lb/>
highlight was a presen-<lb/>
tation by the cast of<lb/>
Hair. It was both an<lb/>
enlightening and enter-<lb/>
taining afternoon of<lb/>
civil disobedience and<lb/>
concern for the future<lb/>
welfare of our country.<lb/>
The group gathered<lb/>
at the Ellipse in<lb/>
downtown Washington<lb/>
and marched down<lb/>
By MARK KEMP<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Get Happy ? Elvis Costello<lb/>
The single most amazing quality in Elvis<lb/>
Costello's music is his uniqueness. Something<lb/>
even more amazing, however, is that all of his<lb/>
own albums are strikingly different from each<lb/>
other. Costello never burns music out. Opening a<lb/>
new Elvis record is like watching technology ad-<lb/>
vance right before your ears. Technically,<lb/>
musically and lyrically innovative, Costello is up<lb/>
front in the new music scene.<lb/>
Get Happy, Elvis' new album on Columbia<lb/>
Records, is no exception to the advances in his<lb/>
style. It consists of 20 songs What! Twenty<lb/>
songs on one record? Impossible in 1980? Not so.<lb/>
With Elvis and producer Nick Lowe, anything is<lb/>
possible, even 20 short songs. Elvis doesn't feel<lb/>
that it takes a long, drawn-out songs to express an<lb/>
idea.<lb/>
Short songs are fine, but Elvis could have<lb/>
lengthened them just a little and made sides one<lb/>
and two completely different albums. Of course,<lb/>
this was not his motive. He wants to bring back<lb/>
One of the better lines occurs in "NewAmster- Girl from Costello's Armed Forces LP,<lb/>
dam" and practically has his name pinned to it. Ronstadt changes the gender, making the whole<lb/>
"Do I step on the break to get out of the clut- song completely different than the original mean-<lb/>
cncs7?? ing expressed by Costello. "Girl Talk" and<lb/>
Get Happy is another Costello phenomenon "Talking in the Dark" are the other two Costello<lb/>
which may not receive the best critical acclaim, songs. The only remaining song is one that<lb/>
but it should. If any new album should be sug- doesn't quite seem to fit the mood of the LP.<lb/>
gested for an introduction into new music, it Looking at her past releases, however, Neil<lb/>
would have to be this one. Costello, together with Young's "Look Out for My Love" is really more<lb/>
Nick Lowe, is making the scene.<lb/>
Mad Love ? Linda Ronstadt<lb/>
That sweet little country girl we all knew and<lb/>
loved from the days of "Don't Cry Now" and<lb/>
"Heart Like A Wheel" has defied all of her tradi-<lb/>
tions, swayed from the society norms and gone<lb/>
New Wave. But don't worry fans, it's not really a<lb/>
heavy-duty change. Linda is just riding that new<lb/>
wave of excitement.<lb/>
Ronstadt's new LP, Mad Love, includes a cou-<lb/>
ple of rnid60s pop songs. "I Can't Let Go" is an<lb/>
old song originally done by Little Anthony and<lb/>
and the National Pennsylvania Avenue<lb/>
Organization of in a group almost 20<lb/>
Women. abreast and stretching<lb/>
Seniors9 Art<lb/>
Exhibited In<lb/>
Spring Show<lb/>
Two senior can-<lb/>
didates lor the<lb/>
Bachelor of line Arts<lb/>
degree from the ECU<lb/>
School of Art will show<lb/>
examples of their work<lb/>
in campus exhibitions<lb/>
beginning enxt week.<lb/>
Susan Renee Drew of<lb/>
Durham, a com-<lb/>
munication arts major<lb/>
with a minor concen-<lb/>
tration in painting, will<lb/>
show some of her<lb/>
graphic designs, il-<lb/>
lustrations,<lb/>
photographs, and<lb/>
watercolor, oil and<lb/>
acrylic paintings in the<lb/>
Kate Lewis Gallery<lb/>
March 24-April 4.<lb/>
She is secretary and<lb/>
treasurer of ECU<lb/>
Design Associates.<lb/>
Nancy Wogsland of<lb/>
Bel Air, Marylandalso<lb/>
a communication arts<lb/>
major with a minor<lb/>
concentration in metal<lb/>
design, is exhibiting<lb/>
graphic designs, il-<lb/>
lustrations,<lb/>
photographs ind metal<lb/>
designs in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
Qj?lit Shoe Repair<lb/>
She is a member of<lb/>
Design Associates, the<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship andl three<lb/>
honor societies: Prrl<lb/>
Kappa Phi, Phi Eta<lb/>
Sigma and Gamma<lb/>
Beta Phi.<lb/>
A friend of mine said<lb/>
that you could always<lb/>
tell the Christian<lb/>
groups because they<lb/>
sang songs such as "We<lb/>
Shall Overcome but<lb/>
between the Socialists,<lb/>
the Communists, the<lb/>
Libertarians, the<lb/>
Marxist-Leninists, the<lb/>
Moonies, the<lb/>
Feminists, the<lb/>
Democrats for Ken-<lb/>
nedy, the Republicans<lb/>
for Anderson, and the<lb/>
Citizens for Com-<lb/>
moner, it was hard to<lb/>
tell one faction from<lb/>
the other.<lb/>
The most impressive<lb/>
facet was the tremen-<lb/>
dous feeling of commu-<lb/>
nion that was generated<lb/>
between the individuals<lb/>
regardless of their af-<lb/>
filiation and the<lb/>
outstanding coopera-<lb/>
tion among the groups.<lb/>
It was different from<lb/>
the protests of the 60s<lb/>
in that it did not suc-<lb/>
cumb to the lure of ag-<lb/>
gression. It was a<lb/>
peaceful demonstration<lb/>
that profitted from the<lb/>
mistakes of the past ? establish a new form<lb/>
n?,V "LS2ZL Vi?'e3 The 80s will be an er<lb/>
SM5T, ?S ?f tremendous change<lb/>
the days of multi-song recordings in the style of The Imperials, and "Hurts So Bad" was first<lb/>
the old Beatles and Buddy Holly records. done by the Hollies. Together with these old rock<lb/>
One of the better cuts on the album is V roll gems are a few more recent pop songs.<lb/>
"Secondary Modern In this tune Costello br- Mark Goldenberg and Billy Steinberg of The<lb/>
ings out the lower tone quality in his voice, Cretones, a Los Angeles based New Wave band,<lb/>
in tune with what Ronstadt should be doing.<lb/>
Mad Love, like Living in the USA, will pro-<lb/>
bably be a disappointment for most Ronstadt<lb/>
fans. Her pseudo-New Wave tactics seem to come<lb/>
not so much from Ronstadt's heart as from her<lb/>
producer's head. Cut Linda's hair, dress her in<lb/>
New Wave drag, toughen up that pretty voice and<lb/>
send her down New Wave Avenue. (A recent<lb/>
Roiling Stone cover pictured Ronstadt on the cor-<lb/>
ner of Punk Street and New Wave Avenue.)<lb/>
The trouble with this is that no true "Punker"<lb/>
will possibly be able to take this LP seriously. It's<lb/>
too commercial, too phony and far too contradic-<lb/>
tory of her past style.<lb/>
Basically, Mad Love fails to bring out<lb/>
Ronstadt's own creative abilities. So Come on<lb/>
Linda, stick to your own roots, there is nothing<lb/>
wrong with those good ole "Lovesick Blues<lb/>
tive, another unique quality<lb/>
The strongest cut on the album is "downtime<lb/>
is Over It is a polished up, "pure pop for now<lb/>
people" type of song. On side 2, the strongest cut<lb/>
is "Motel Matches "Giving you away like<lb/>
motel matches" is the main line suggesting angry<lb/>
sarcasm, a style of expression most often<lb/>
associated with Costello.<lb/>
"Mad Love the title song; and a mellow, pas-<lb/>
sionate, but brutal love song, "Justine Billy<lb/>
Steinberg contributed the single cut, "How Do I<lb/>
Make You one of the strongest of the New<lb/>
Wave songs on the album.<lb/>
To sum up this power-pop packet, Ronstadt<lb/>
also adds three Elvis Costello songs. On "Party<lb/>
elude violence. I have<lb/>
seldom witnessed a<lb/>
more pacifistic,<lb/>
humanistic, well-<lb/>
behaved, and pleasant<lb/>
group of individuals. It<lb/>
was inspiring.<lb/>
We are at the dawn<lb/>
of a new age, realizing<lb/>
that at the heart of the<lb/>
American system are<lb/>
the American people,<lb/>
where the power<lb/>
ultimately lies. The<lb/>
Constitution states that<lb/>
when our country<lb/>
becomes destructive to<lb/>
the ideas on which it<lb/>
was founded, it is the<lb/>
responsibility of the<lb/>
people to abolish the<lb/>
government and<lb/>
Wednesday Nite<lb/>
at<lb/>
I STUDENT UNION<lb/>
cO'<lb/>
mm<lb/>
IT'S ALLAN<lb/>
Playing your favorite<lb/>
Oldies, New Wave, and<lb/>
Rock Music<lb/>
Contests<lb/>
Prizes<lb/>
Have a happy from 8:00-10:00<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORtre PIZZA<lb/>
IPIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$2.59<lb/>
MonFri. 11x30-200<lb/>
Hod. fiP Tues. 600-8tOO!<lb/>
Evening tomttct 08.79<lb/>
bypass Greenville , If. C.<lb/>
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MCAT ? DAT -LSAT-GRE<lb/>
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VAT ? SAT<lb/>
PROUDLY PRESENTS<lb/>
FROM AUSTIN, TEXAS<lb/>
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TENNESSEE HAT BAND<lb/>
FORMERLY WITH DAVID ALLAN (<lb/>
MARCH 26 - 29<lb/>
IN COUNTRY ROCK A,<lb/>
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THROUGH THE EVENING<lb/>
THRU. 27th LADIES FREE!<lb/>
COMING APRIL 23rd<lb/>
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For Further Irformatioii: 758-5570<lb/>
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Friday March 28th<lb/>
WRIGHT AUD.<lb/>
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Awards will be given to the<lb/>
Fraternity, Sorority, or Dorm<lb/>
that gives the most blood.<lb/>
Come Out And Give<lb/>
Sponsors<lb/>
McDonald's<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057256_0008"/><lb/>
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-? ??<lb/>
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, - ? ' ? ? ' ? -? "? , m ?<lb/>
 <lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MARCH 25. 1980 Page 8<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
Team<lb/>
Takes 3<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina opened the 1980<lb/>
softball season with three victories<lb/>
Saturday during a round robin event<lb/>
here in Greenville.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates opened the<lb/>
event with a 16-1 demolition of Ap-<lb/>
palachian State in five inning ab-<lb/>
breviated contest. Junior Kathy<lb/>
Riley tallied four RBIs in the game<lb/>
with a pair of doubles and a drive to<lb/>
the outfield which she legged for the<lb/>
only home run of the day for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates.<lb/>
Freshman Fran Hooks, starting at<lb/>
catcher for the injured Jan<lb/>
McVeigh, opened her diamond<lb/>
career in the purple and gold with a<lb/>
three out of four performance at the<lb/>
plate.<lb/>
"We've used Fran more at short-<lb/>
stop in practice than at catcher,<lb/>
though we've had her in mind as the<lb/>
backup catcher all along says<lb/>
coach Alita Dillon.<lb/>
Cindy Meekins pounded out three<lb/>
hits in four trips to the plate as<lb/>
senior Mary Bryan Carlyle tossed<lb/>
her first victory of the season for<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
The most surprising win of the<lb/>
afternoon was ECU's 9-0 stomping<lb/>
of the Tar Heels of North Carolina.<lb/>
Again Riley, a transfer from Mid-<lb/>
dle Tennessee State, led the victors<lb/>
with two RBI's on a double, a single<lb/>
and a base on balls. Freshman Cyn-<lb/>
thia Shepard clubbed a single and a<lb/>
triple to lead off the sixth as she ad-<lb/>
ded a pair of RBIs.<lb/>
Meekins added a pair of hits and<lb/>
Hooks slumped to one out of four<lb/>
as Carlyle claimed her second vic-<lb/>
tory of the day and of the season on<lb/>
the mound for the Lady Pirates.<lb/>
The toughest battle of the day was<lb/>
a 10-6 struggle with Western<lb/>
Carolina in what turned out to be<lb/>
the final Pirate outing of the day.<lb/>
Hooks, a native of Goldsboro,<lb/>
turned in three hits in as many trips<lb/>
to the plate against WCU. Shepard<lb/>
added a double and a single and<lb/>
Riley swatted a single and another<lb/>
triple. Meekins contributed a pair of<lb/>
hits to the Lady Pirates' offensive.<lb/>
ECU led UNC-Greensboro 5-3 in<lb/>
the top of the fifth, but their contest<lb/>
was called due to darkness. Rivals<lb/>
North Carolina and N.C. State were<lb/>
deadlocked at two runs each when<lb/>
their game was also stopped by<lb/>
darkness.<lb/>
In other action, Western Carolina<lb/>
beat UNC-G 10-7; UNC downed<lb/>
WCU 19-6 and ASU 7-0; State<lb/>
bested UNC-G 11-1, ASU 12-7 and<lb/>
WCU 8-6; and UNC-G outlasted<lb/>
ASU 8-7 in 10 innings.<lb/>
Riley, a refugee of Lady Pirate<lb/>
basketball, leads the team with a<lb/>
.700 batting average with 10 at-bats.<lb/>
Meekins and Hooks follow with<lb/>
.636 percentages, with Shepard next<lb/>
at .500.<lb/>
"I see that we're going to be able<lb/>
to depend on our depth said<lb/>
Dillon. "We had an excellant day<lb/>
hitting, even with the wind being so<lb/>
strong.<lb/>
"We saw people realizing that<lb/>
East Carolina was going to be a<lb/>
team to be reckoned with. We can't<lb/>
let this early success go to our heads.<lb/>
"We were pleased with what we<lb/>
did, but we still have a lot of work<lb/>
to do<lb/>
Toughest In ECU History<lb/>
Grid Schedule Includes FSU<lb/>
Bill Cain<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The 1980 East Carolina football<lb/>
schedule was announced late last<lb/>
week by ECU Athletic Director Bill<lb/>
Cain and no doubt is the toughest,<lb/>
yet most balanced, in the school's<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Road trips are set for Florida<lb/>
Moye Mauls One<lb/>
The Pirate rightfielder takes a big swing and promply<lb/>
delivers it out of the park. Moye is one of several Pirate<lb/>
power hitters that have led the team to an impressive 10-2<lb/>
start. Moye has been in the ECU lineup for just a week<lb/>
due to an early season injury. He and his teammateswere<lb/>
rained out yesterday afternoon after trailing Ohio Univer-<lb/>
sity 4-2 after one and one-half innings.<lb/>
State; Miami, Fl North Carolina;<lb/>
N.C. State; Duke and Richmond.<lb/>
Home games are scheduled with<lb/>
Southwest Louisiana, Southern<lb/>
Mississippi, Western Carolina,<lb/>
William and Mary, and Eastern<lb/>
Kentucky, the 1979 NCAA Division<lb/>
I-AA national champions.<lb/>
"There's no way anyone can say<lb/>
this isn't the toughest schedule in<lb/>
the history of East Carolina said<lb/>
Pirate head coach Ed Emory. "It's<lb/>
to be quite a challenge to play those<lb/>
people but we look forward to it and<lb/>
plan to take them one game at a<lb/>
time<lb/>
Four of the 11 opponents were in-<lb/>
vited to a bowl game last season.<lb/>
North Carolina upset Big Ten power<lb/>
Michigan in the Gator Bowl and<lb/>
Florida State fell to Oklahoma in<lb/>
the Orange Bowl after finishing the<lb/>
regular season 11-0.<lb/>
N.C. State turned down a bid to<lb/>
participate in the Garden State Bowl<lb/>
while Eastern Kentucky marched to<lb/>
the NCAA Division I-AA national<lb/>
title, winning over Delaware on na-<lb/>
tional television in the champion-<lb/>
ship game.<lb/>
Emory may think things are<lb/>
tough as it is but the fact is they<lb/>
would have been even tougher if<lb/>
plans for a couple of big games had<lb/>
not fallen through.<lb/>
Cain spent several weeks talking<lb/>
with Houston, winner of this year's<lb/>
Cotten Bowl. At one time it even<lb/>
appeared that the powerful Cougars<lb/>
would be playing in ECU's Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium next season.<lb/>
"Houston's problem was that<lb/>
they had five home games and five<lb/>
away said Cain, "because they<lb/>
weren't able to get the Astrodome<lb/>
for their September 27 home game.<lb/>
The Houston Astros (major league<lb/>
baseball) had the place booked for<lb/>
that afternoon.<lb/>
"Also, they couldn't play in town<lb/>
because Rice was hosting LSU at the<lb/>
other stadium<lb/>
When Cain heard of this, he<lb/>
quickly went to work in an attempt<lb/>
to get the big "name team" in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium that Pirate fans<lb/>
have desired for so long.<lb/>
"We offered them $150,000 to<lb/>
come here said Cain. "That's an<lb/>
outrageous figure and they were<lb/>
very receptive to it<lb/>
They were, at least, until the<lb/>
Astros agreed to allow the Cougars<lb/>
to play their game with North Texas<lb/>
State the night of the 27th.<lb/>
Cain also almost swung a deal<lb/>
with Colgate in an attempt to get a<lb/>
more recognized name in Ficklen. It<lb/>
appeared that things were set when<lb/>
the northern university backed out<lb/>
at the last minute.<lb/>
"They are playing only ten games<lb/>
next season said Cain. "We had<lb/>
hoped to get them down here on one<lb/>
of their two open dates. Their<lb/>
thinking was that the two dates<lb/>
came before games with Rutgers<lb/>
and Penn State and that they would<lb/>
be better off with no games at those<lb/>
particular times<lb/>
What Colgate did, in effect, was<lb/>
assure themselves of an extra week<lb/>
of practice in preparing for their<lb/>
two toughest games of the season.<lb/>
"I guess they figured that playing<lb/>
a team with a good reputation like<lb/>
East Carolina before those big<lb/>
games would injure their chances<lb/>
for a good season Cain com-<lb/>
mented.<lb/>
One aspect of the schedule that is<lb/>
most pleasing to Cain and the Pirate<lb/>
coaching staff is that not once dur-<lb/>
ing the season is there two con-<lb/>
secutive road games, or home games<lb/>
for that matter.<lb/>
"This is the most balanced<lb/>
schedule we've ever had said<lb/>
Cain. "You just can't beat it<lb/>
Also pleasing to the ECU AD and<lb/>
Emory is the fact that one of the<lb/>
bigger Pirate games, against chief<lb/>
rival N.C. State, is the last game ot<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
"In the past most of the so-called<lb/>
big games have come early said<lb/>
Emory. "This should keep the team<lb/>
emotionally high all season<lb/>
One of the major gripes about<lb/>
East Carolina football in the past<lb/>
has concerned the schedule,<lb/>
something that Cain has been work-<lb/>
ing desperately to improve. Results,<lb/>
he says, will be forthcoming.<lb/>
"We are now finishing up an<lb/>
agreement with Florida Slate he<lb/>
said. "We have a home-and-awaj<lb/>
series with them from 1982 through<lb/>
1990 in the makings. It looks good<lb/>
at the moment<lb/>
Cain claimed that when he began<lb/>
talks with the Seminole athletic<lb/>
department he had no idea such an<lb/>
attractive agreement could be reach-<lb/>
ed. "I am overwhelmed he pro-<lb/>
claimed. "1 didn't know we could<lb/>
come close to something this nice<lb/>
Also a possible future Pirate op-<lb/>
ponent is Southeastern Conference<lb/>
power Louisiana State. "They've<lb/>
contacted us and we've reached a<lb/>
tentative agreement Cain noted.<lb/>
"They have an opening for one<lb/>
game and we've made a date<lb/>
available. I'm confident .e will<lb/>
work something definite out oon<lb/>
Cain noted that the reception he<lb/>
has been getting when he tries to<lb/>
structure a respectable schedule has<lb/>
been better than ever lately.<lb/>
"We've done some big things and<lb/>
people are listening now he ex-<lb/>
plained. "We are working on<lb/>
future dates with VPI, Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
and Virginia, among others<lb/>
1980 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
Sept.6Duke1:30 p.m.<lb/>
13SOUTHWEST LOUISIANAH7:00 r m.<lb/>
20Florida StateA7:30 p.m.<lb/>
27SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPIH7 X) p.m.<lb/>
Oct.4Open<lb/>
11Richmond1:30 p.m.<lb/>
18WESTERN CAROLINAH2:00 p.m.<lb/>
25North Carolina2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Nov.1WILLIAM AND MARYH7:00 p m<lb/>
8Miami (Fla.)A4:00 p.m.<lb/>
15EASTERN KENTUCKYH1:30 p.m.<lb/>
22N.C. State1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Pirate Gridders Begin Drills<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Spring football practice officially<lb/>
got underway at East Carolina last<lb/>
Saturday, one day behind schedule,<lb/>
in beginnining what will be a vital<lb/>
period in the formation of the 1980<lb/>
version of the gridiron Pirates.<lb/>
"This is really an important time<lb/>
for us said first-year head coach<lb/>
Ed Emory. "We have a new<lb/>
coaching staff and have lost over 20<lb/>
seniors to graduation. This is a time<lb/>
where every position is open and<lb/>
every kid has the opportunity to<lb/>
compete for the positions<lb/>
Due to bad weather, the opening<lb/>
drill for the Pirates was postponed<lb/>
from last Friday to Saturday. Also,<lb/>
the team's Monday afternoon prac-<lb/>
tice was cancelled to to rain.<lb/>
"It's been wet, wet, wet so far<lb/>
said Emory. "We certainly hope<lb/>
things will begin to clear up. Satur-<lb/>
day was a super day but we were not<lb/>
Mulholland, Green Are Captains<lb/>
The following is a list of the<lb/>
awards and their recipients<lb/>
presented at last Thursday's ECU<lb/>
Football Banquet:<lb/>
Outstanding Offensive Player?<lb/>
?LEANDER GREEN<lb/>
Lansche Outstanding Senior?<lb/>
?LEANDER GREEN<lb/>
Swindell Memorial Award (Team<lb/>
Before Self, Dedication, Leader-<lb/>
ship)?<lb/>
?MA TT MULHOLLAND<lb/>
Outstanding Freshman?<lb/>
?FREDDIE JONES<lb/>
Best Blocking Back?<lb/>
? THEODORE SUTTON<lb/>
Blocking Trophy?<lb/>
? WA YNE IN MAN<lb/>
E.E. Rawl Memorial Award<lb/>
(Character, Scholarship and<lb/>
Athletic Ability)?<lb/>
? VERN DA VENPOR T<lb/>
Outstanding Defensive Player?<lb/>
?MIKE BREWINGTON<lb/>
Outstanding Specialty Team<lb/>
Player?<lb/>
?KEITH GOLDEN<lb/>
Rick Bankston Memorial Award<lb/>
(Scout Team)?<lb/>
?LARRY O'ROARK<lb/>
Academic Achievment?<lb/>
?ROCKY BUTLER, HENRY<lb/>
TREVATHAN<lb/>
Team Captains?<lb/>
?Offensive: MA TT<lb/>
MULHOLLAND<lb/>
?Defensive: MIKE BREW-<lb/>
INGTON<lb/>
some kids that maybe haven't been<lb/>
productive in the past will probablv<lb/>
pop up and surprise some people<lb/>
The ex-Georgia Tech assistant<lb/>
said that, for a while at least, the<lb/>
Pirates would be in mainly a testing<lb/>
stage. "The first ten days are<lb/>
basically experimental said<lb/>
Emory. "What we're doing is lay-<lb/>
ing the groundwork for next<lb/>
season<lb/>
able to work on our passing game<lb/>
due to the strong winds<lb/>
The 1979 Pirates graduate 26 let-<lb/>
termen, including 18 starters. This<lb/>
comes at a bad time for the team as<lb/>
the 1980 schedule features road trips<lb/>
to North Carolina, N.C. State,<lb/>
Duke, Florida State and Miami,<lb/>
Fla. Also included are home con-<lb/>
tests with Southern Mississippi and<lb/>
Eastern Kentucky, the 1979 NCAA<lb/>
Division I-AA national champion.<lb/>
"It's going to be a great challenge<lb/>
to play those teams Emory said.<lb/>
"We wish we could syncrinize<lb/>
things by having those 20-some<lb/>
seniors back when we had a<lb/>
schedule like this. But we're ex-<lb/>
citied about the schedule and will<lb/>
take the games one at a time<lb/>
Of the spring drills, Emory said<lb/>
that the players returning were<lb/>
beginning anew and that many<lb/>
players would probably change<lb/>
positions before the drills are over.<lb/>
"Just because a guy played on the<lb/>
offensive line last year he claim-<lb/>
ed, "does not mean that he won't<lb/>
play on defense this year. Also,<lb/>
The 1980 East Carolina Spring<lb/>
Football Clinic is set for March<lb/>
28-30 High school coaches<lb/>
throughout the state are expected to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Featured speakers will include<lb/>
Oklahoma offensive coordinator<lb/>
Galen Hall; the Sooners' defensive<lb/>
coordiator, Rex Norris and<lb/>
Nebraska strength and conditioning<lb/>
coach Boyd Epley. ECU head<lb/>
coach Ed Emory and two of his<lb/>
assistants, offensive coordinator<lb/>
Wright Anderson and defensive<lb/>
coordinator Norm Parker, will also<lb/>
be featured.<lb/>
s<lb/>
Free Swinger Davis Compared To Sanguillan<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
"If I start keeping up with my<lb/>
batting average, then I am an in-<lb/>
dividual; not playing as a team<lb/>
member<lb/>
The simple strategy of East<lb/>
Carolina senior leftfielder Butch<lb/>
Davis is refreshing to hear, but his<lb/>
accomplishments through the<lb/>
Pirates' 10-2 opening season spurt<lb/>
have brought him to the center of<lb/>
attention anyway.<lb/>
The Williamston native has<lb/>
posted a .378 batting average with<lb/>
seven homers and 14 runs batted in,<lb/>
which has thrust the soft-spoken but<lb/>
.confident veteran into an offensive<lb/>
leadership position.<lb/>
"My attitude is that I don't try to<lb/>
act cocky states Davis. "I act the<lb/>
same every day.<lb/>
"Everybody has their ups and<lb/>
downs and when my downs get here,<lb/>
I'm just going to take it from there;<lb/>
try to pull myself up<lb/>
Davis and coach Hal Baird hope<lb/>
the downs don't get here too soon,<lb/>
as the ups were a long, trying time<lb/>
coming.<lb/>
"He's played excellant defense<lb/>
for us thus far comments Baird.<lb/>
"He had a tag of not being able to<lb/>
play defense, but he's overcome that<lb/>
pretty well.<lb/>
Davis' defensive stats are nothing<lb/>
for the speedy outfielder to be<lb/>
ashamed of; .950 percentage with<lb/>
only three errors throught the first<lb/>
dozen games of the young season.<lb/>
He rates his throwing arm as<lb/>
"average; I won't say it is near pro<lb/>
standards.<lb/>
"Defensively, I had to work on<lb/>
seeing the ball come off the batters'<lb/>
bat and getting a good jump on it.<lb/>
Offensively, I guess in the fall I<lb/>
worked on my swing; along with<lb/>
picking out my pitch<lb/>
Picking his pitch out of the bar-<lb/>
rage of undesireable tosses is one<lb/>
thing Baird feels Davis has had suc-<lb/>
cess at despite abnormal tendencies.<lb/>
"He's a 'free swinger' in the true<lb/>
sense of the word says Baird. "A<lb/>
regular Manny Sanguillan<lb/>
(Pittsburg Pirate backup catcher<lb/>
notorious for swinging at anything<lb/>
within reach).<lb/>
"Seriously, he has great hand-eye<lb/>
coordination. Butch has a really<lb/>
quick bat. He's able to get the bat<lb/>
on pitches other people never could.<lb/>
"He means a lot to this team<lb/>
Team concept is the only concept<lb/>
of baseball for Davis. Success and<lb/>
honor must first come to the team<lb/>
before any personal token ac-<lb/>
complishments can be satisfying.<lb/>
"The record we have right now<lb/>
(10-2) is good says Davis, "but I<lb/>
wish we were 12-0.<lb/>
"Most of the guys can hit the long<lb/>
ball all right, but we work on line<lb/>
drives rather long balls in batting<lb/>
practice<lb/>
Speed, according to Davis, is one<lb/>
of his key assets. The driversd<lb/>
education major has a pair of stolen<lb/>
bases in as many attempts thus far.<lb/>
Attitude is the vital ingredient to<lb/>
the Pirates campaign strategy, ac-<lb/>
cording to Davis.<lb/>
"1 know on a lot of teams, the<lb/>
players don't look forward to runn-<lb/>
ing in early practices offered<lb/>
Davis. "But we'd jsut get out there<lb/>
and get it done and try to have fun<lb/>
doing it.<lb/>
"The coaches make us feel com-<lb/>
fortable. They'll call us in and joke<lb/>
with us sometimes just like one of<lb/>
the players. Joking around with the<lb/>
guys is important<lb/>
Davis credits sophomore John<lb/>
Hallow (a football refugee with a<lb/>
strong stick) with being the 'clown<lb/>
prince' of the squad, with his now-<lb/>
famous Muhammed Ali impression<lb/>
a favorite of the squad.<lb/>
"Joking relieves the pressure and<lb/>
relaxes everyone says Davis.<lb/>
"That's important.<lb/>
"I enjoy pressure confesses<lb/>
Davis. "I think it makes me play<lb/>
better when I'm under pressure<lb/>
The Pirates have road games with<lb/>
North Carolina, N.C. State and a<lb/>
home stand with Maryland before<lb/>
the 1980 campaign is concluded, so<lb/>
it is doubtful there will be a shortagt<lb/>
of pressure for Davis in the near<lb/>
future. t<lb/>
"We sure don't want the seasof<lb/>
to end as soon as it did last year<lb/>
says Davis. "We want to go on to <lb/>
regional bid ?<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057256_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 25, 1980<lb/>
Monarchs Claim Second Title<lb/>
M Oil NT ' PLEA-<lb/>
SANT, Mich. (AP) ?<lb/>
Having won it three<lb/>
times on the flooi and<lb/>
twice from the bench,<lb/>
you'd think Marianne<lb/>
Stanley might be tiring<lb/>
of the national<lb/>
women's collegiate<lb/>
basketball champsion-<lb/>
ships. No way, says the<lb/>
young coach who guid-<lb/>
ed Old Dominion to it<lb/>
s s e c o n d straight<lb/>
ssociation of Inter-<lb/>
collegiate Athletics for<lb/>
Women crown Sunday.<lb/>
'I've been here<lb/>
before as a player and a<lb/>
coach, but personally,<lb/>
it's a big thrill for me<lb/>
the 25-year-old former<lb/>
1 m maculata A11 -<lb/>
American said.<lb/>
so much so she plans<lb/>
;o win it again next<lb/>
ear, despite the loss of<lb/>
graduating stars Nancy<lb/>
Lieberman and Inge<lb/>
Nissen.<lb/>
"We've got a great<lb/>
nucleus of players com-<lb/>
ing back Stanley said<lb/>
following Old Domi-<lb/>
nion's 68-53 title romp<lb/>
over Tennessee. "We<lb/>
teel like we're going to<lb/>
be very good. We'd<lb/>
love to defend our<lb/>
championship<lb/>
Tops among<lb/>
returnees is 6-foot-8<lb/>
center Anne Donovan,<lb/>
a freshman who only<lb/>
scored seven points but<lb/>
blocked six shots and<lb/>
collected 17 rebounds<lb/>
against Tennessee.<lb/>
"I've seen Anne play-<lb/>
better, but she played<lb/>
well Stanley said.<lb/>
"That's a lot of<lb/>
pressure for a<lb/>
freshman<lb/>
Pack To<lb/>
Continue<lb/>
Search<lb/>
CI EMSON, S.C. (AP)8 Clemson<lb/>
basketball Coach Bill Foster says he<lb/>
has no plans to move to North<lb/>
Carolina State or any other universi-<lb/>
t next season.<lb/>
"I have had many universities ap-<lb/>
proach me about moving to their<lb/>
schools over the last few years<lb/>
Foster said.<lb/>
"My name seems to come up as a<lb/>
candidate for coaching vacancies all<lb/>
the time. I guess that is a compli-<lb/>
ment and testimony to our recent<lb/>
success. But I will remain at Clem-<lb/>
son he said.<lb/>
T lie rigers scored a record 23 vic-<lb/>
tories this season and several of the<lb/>
team's most outstanding players will<lb/>
be returning in 1980-81.<lb/>
Foster was recently contacted by<lb/>
North Carolina State about its<lb/>
tching vacancy. "We had a short<lb/>
:ussion about the situation. But I<lb/>
 had an interview said Foster<lb/>
?ired statement.<lb/>
Foster, who guided his Tigers to<lb/>
. s of this year's NCAA West<lb/>
nal tournament, was in In-<lb/>
ipolls for the National Coaches<lb/>
l onvention Saturday.<lb/>
Rutgers Coach Tom Young, also<lb/>
ndianapolis, said Friday that he<lb/>
withdrawn his name from con-<lb/>
sideration for the position left var<lb/>
cant b Norm Sloan's departure for<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
Young, who was interviewed for<lb/>
the opening last Monday, said his<lb/>
family and the potential of Rutgers'<lb/>
team next year infuenced his deci-<lb/>
sion to sta<lb/>
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Nissen, a 6-foot-7<lb/>
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Denmark, poured in 20<lb/>
points Sunday and was<lb/>
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valuable player of the<lb/>
four-team champion-<lb/>
ship tournament at<lb/>
Central Michigan<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Lieberman, the Lady<lb/>
Monarchs' razzle-<lb/>
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dazzle point guard,<lb/>
scored 12, grabbed nine<lb/>
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Both Nissen and<lb/>
Lieberman said they<lb/>
will pursue careers in<lb/>
the fledgling Women's<lb/>
Professional Basketball<lb/>
League ? Lieberman<lb/>
adding that she would<lb/>
play for the U.S. Olym-<lb/>
pic team if one goes to<lb/>
Moscow.<lb/>
"It's really not in my<lb/>
hands Lieberman,<lb/>
youngest member of<lb/>
the U.S. team which<lb/>
won a silver medal at<lb/>
Montreal in 1976, said<lb/>
of the proposed Olym-<lb/>
pic boycott. "If it's<lb/>
decided we go, I'll<lb/>
work hard to get<lb/>
there<lb/>
"I'd like to play in<lb/>
New York, because if<lb/>
women's pro basketball<lb/>
is going to make it, it<lb/>
has to make it there<lb/>
said the 5-foot-10<lb/>
three-time Ail-<lb/>
American and native of<lb/>
Far Rockaway, N.Y.<lb/>
Nissen said there is<lb/>
no competition left for<lb/>
her in Denmark, which<lb/>
will not send a women's<lb/>
basketball team to the<lb/>
Olympics.<lb/>
"My immediate<lb/>
future is here, in the<lb/>
U.S she said. "We<lb/>
could add a lot of<lb/>
recognition to the<lb/>
women's pro league, I<lb/>
think<lb/>
Tennessee All<lb/>
American Jill Rankin,<lb/>
also a senior, led the<lb/>
losers with 17 points ?<lb/>
playing most of the se-<lb/>
cond half with four<lb/>
fouls. The Lady<lb/>
Volunteers were even<lb/>
with Old Dominion on-<lb/>
ly briefly early in the<lb/>
game. They shot just 33<lb/>
percent from the floor<lb/>
and 56 percent from the<lb/>
The Lady Monarchs.<lb/>
37-1, ended their<lb/>
season on a 27-game<lb/>
winning streak. Ten-<lb/>
nessee closed out at<lb/>
33-5.<lb/>
In Sunday's battle<lb/>
for third place, South<lb/>
Carolina got 21 points<lb/>
from freshman Evelyn<lb/>
Johnson and defeated<lb/>
Louisiana Tech. 17-4J9.<lb/>
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Foster To Address<lb/>
Basketball Banquet<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The 1979-80 Pirate<lb/>
basketball campaign<lb/>
was a banner year for<lb/>
first year head ccoach<lb/>
Dave Odom and his<lb/>
staff, with the veteran<lb/>
laden squad posting a<lb/>
16-11 mark for the first<lb/>
winning season since<lb/>
1975.<lb/>
Tickets to the first<lb/>
annual East Carolina<lb/>
basketball awards ban-<lb/>
quet are now available<lb/>
to the public through<lb/>
the coaching staff, or<lb/>
from the secretary at<lb/>
the basketball office in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. The<lb/>
event will be held<lb/>
Thursday April 10 at<lb/>
the Greenville Country<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
Clemson coach Bill<lb/>
Foster is scheduled to<lb/>
be the guest speaker,<lb/>
with his topic being<lb/>
"Building a Winning<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Foster took over at<lb/>
Clemson after a suc-<lb/>
cessful 87-39 five-year<lb/>
mark at UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte, where he<lb/>
coached current Boston<lb/>
Celtic star Cedric Max-<lb/>
well among others.<lb/>
From 1973-75, his 49ers<lb/>
posted an amazing 45-7<lb/>
record.<lb/>
In his four years at<lb/>
the Tigers' den. Foster<lb/>
has posted a 97-48<lb/>
mark, including a<lb/>
fourth place finish in<lb/>
this year's Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference race<lb/>
and a trip to the NCAA<lb/>
Western Regionals<lb/>
where they fell in the<lb/>
championship game to<lb/>
UCLA.<lb/>
Foster guided the<lb/>
Tigers through a dis-<lb/>
daining three-year<lb/>
NCAA probation and<lb/>
into an era of success.<lb/>
The talent of 7-2<lb/>
Wayne "Tree" Rollins<lb/>
was available to Foster<lb/>
for only the first two<lb/>
seasons at the orange-<lb/>
coloured town, and<lb/>
players such as John<lb/>
"Moose" Campbell<lb/>
were molded by the<lb/>
spirited coach into<lb/>
players competitive on<lb/>
the ACC level.<lb/>
Former Raleigh<lb/>
Broughton High<lb/>
School standout Billy<lb/>
Williams ventured to<lb/>
Tiger country as a<lb/>
somewhat complacent<lb/>
sophomore guard with<lb/>
natural ability which<lb/>
desperately needed<lb/>
refinement. Foster and<lb/>
his staff honed<lb/>
Williams into one of<lb/>
the most deadly and<lb/>
creative one-on-one<lb/>
players ever to execute<lb/>
the fast break in the<lb/>
ACC.<lb/>
Recent rumors in-<lb/>
dicated that Foster was<lb/>
contemplating a change<lb/>
of scenery. But unlike<lb/>
Duke's Bill Foster (now<lb/>
with South Carolina)<lb/>
and N.C. State's Norm<lb/>
Sloan (now at Florida),<lb/>
the Clemson version of<lb/>
Bill Foster ruled out<lb/>
any such move in a<lb/>
Monday announce-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"I have had many<lb/>
universities approach<lb/>
me about moving to<lb/>
their schools over the<lb/>
last few years Foster<lb/>
said after speculation.<lb/>
he would go to N.C.<lb/>
State. "We had a short<lb/>
discussion about the<lb/>
situation, but I never<lb/>
had an interview<lb/>
Clemson has already<lb/>
claimed a pair of con-<lb/>
census Ail-Americans<lb/>
as recruiting triumphs<lb/>
in 6-9 Raymond Jones<lb/>
of Union, S.C. and 6-7<lb/>
Clark Bynum from<lb/>
Sumpter, S.C. Both<lb/>
athletes were heavily-<lb/>
recruited and at one<lb/>
point considered likely<lb/>
to go to the Tiger's<lb/>
perennial rival, the<lb/>
Gamecocks of South<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057256_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 25, 1980<lb/>
Foreman In Middle After Quick Climb<lb/>
By<lb/>
DARRELL SIMMONS<lb/>
Cox News Service<lb/>
HOUSTON, Texas<lb/>
? George Foreman<lb/>
grew up on the streets<lb/>
of this Texas<lb/>
metropolis, and he's on<lb/>
the streets again.<lb/>
But the story of the<lb/>
former boxing cham-<lb/>
pion is not a requiem<lb/>
for another<lb/>
heavyweight. He is here<lb/>
because he chooses.<lb/>
He's been to the top;<lb/>
he's not at the bottom<lb/>
now.<lb/>
"I'm right there in<lb/>
the middle somewhere,<lb/>
right where this country<lb/>
was built ? in the mid-<lb/>
dle<lb/>
Foreman, now<lb/>
known as Brother<lb/>
George and a street<lb/>
preacher for the<lb/>
Church of the Lord<lb/>
Jesus Christ here,<lb/>
builds his message to<lb/>
young people on that<lb/>
middleground outlook.<lb/>
street, by being a great selling dope, stealing, mad Ali in Zaire. He<lb/>
athlete. Some do, but anything to make it. 1 fought three more years<lb/>
not many. Not many at try to make them see and was a ranking con<lb/>
all. I made it, and I had through Jesus that<lb/>
a lot to do with kids there are other ways,<lb/>
lusting after false goals There ain't nothing<lb/>
becausemade it. wrong with learnin'<lb/>
"A lot of people say something, with gettin<lb/>
I made mine, then I got a job and going to<lb/>
to be anti-sports. But work<lb/>
I'm not. I love sports, I Foreman, a hero fo<lb/>
still love boxing. But the 1968 Olympics in<lb/>
tender when he retired<lb/>
after a loss to Jimmy<lb/>
Young in 1977. With<lb/>
circuit.<lb/>
"I called Muham-<lb/>
mad and told him not<lb/>
to fight no more. He's<lb/>
gonna get hurt. And it<lb/>
ain't just the age. It's<lb/>
"I tell 'em Jesus is But you look at the<lb/>
better than welfare politicians. They all<lb/>
he said. "That they got trying so hard to get on<lb/>
things so confused now top they tell people<lb/>
the much publicized wehn you get out there<lb/>
comeback of Ali,<lb/>
Foreman could be in a<lb/>
position to make a pro-<lb/>
fitable return of his<lb/>
own. He's only 31,<lb/>
day. If he builds a<lb/>
building, remember<lb/>
that Solomon's<lb/>
buildings, the buildings<lb/>
of Rome, they all col-<lb/>
lapsed. I said to<lb/>
Muhammas, 'Why<lb/>
just fightin' for money, don't you get out there supposed to come<lb/>
That's when you get and give the people along and pay them to<lb/>
something that will pick it up.<lb/>
really help them? Tell "We supposed to<lb/>
them it don't hurt to pick up our own trash, everything<lb/>
"Kids these days kids just shouldn't let Mexico City, won the although a good<lb/>
look at the top and the them get out of hand<lb/>
bottom says If you can make if,<lb/>
Foreman. "They forget fine. But so many of<lb/>
about the middle. It's 'em, if they can't make<lb/>
wrong to lead them into a team, then they still<lb/>
thinking they gonna get have the lust for the big<lb/>
out of poverty, off the money. They wind up<lb/>
40<lb/>
heavyweight champion- pounds over his<lb/>
ship in January 1973 in fighting weight. With<lb/>
Kingston, Jamaica, some work he could be<lb/>
where he upset Joe<lb/>
Frazier by a technical<lb/>
knockout. Foreman<lb/>
lost the title to Muham-<lb/>
right in the middle of<lb/>
millions of dollars that<lb/>
heavyweights generate<lb/>
on worldwide closed-<lb/>
hurt.<lb/>
"Muhammad said he<lb/>
could make money for<lb/>
the Muslims, that he<lb/>
could feed 10 million<lb/>
people, that he could<lb/>
build a $5 million<lb/>
building. I told him if<lb/>
he fed 10 million peo-<lb/>
ple, they'd all be<lb/>
hungry again the next<lb/>
people think if they<lb/>
throw trash in the<lb/>
street, then somebody's<lb/>
anything they want to<lb/>
hear. They say you<lb/>
been suppressed, you<lb/>
been repressed. That'<lb/>
why you had trouble.<lb/>
That explains<lb/>
get a job, that it's all<lb/>
right to get up every<lb/>
morning and go to<lb/>
work<lb/>
Foreman says his ser-<lb/>
mons against welfare<lb/>
sometimes aren't<lb/>
popular in the street.<lb/>
Bucs Down UNC-G<lb/>
By ALEX<lb/>
CUNNINGHAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU mens ten-<lb/>
nis team shut-out<lb/>
Greensboro College,<lb/>
9-0, Sunday to record<lb/>
its first victory of the<lb/>
season. Greensboro<lb/>
College could only<lb/>
Henry Hostetler pounc-<lb/>
ed Ken Jordan (a<lb/>
quarter finalist from<lb/>
the 1979 National<lb/>
Junior College Tourna-<lb/>
ment) 6-0, 6-1; Ted<lb/>
Lepper set back Rober-<lb/>
ty Kostszycki 7-6, 6-1;<lb/>
Mark Byrd stomped<lb/>
Danny Toler 6-1, 6-0;<lb/>
and Norman Bryant<lb/>
manage 15 games in the defeated John Thore<lb/>
singles matches from<lb/>
the much stronger<lb/>
Pirate team.<lb/>
At the number one<lb/>
singles position Kenny<lb/>
Love used a strong<lb/>
serve to overpower<lb/>
Sandy Morse 6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
Number two Keith<lb/>
Zengle used his ag-<lb/>
gressive style of play to<lb/>
quickly eliminate Jr.<lb/>
Luffman 6-0, 6-0;<lb/>
6-1, 6-4.<lb/>
Byrd felt that this<lb/>
was "just what the<lb/>
team needed He<lb/>
claimed dominating the<lb/>
Greensboro College<lb/>
team the way the<lb/>
Pirates did will improve<lb/>
the players' confidence.<lb/>
In the doubles the<lb/>
number one team of<lb/>
Love and Hostetler us-<lb/>
ed their experience to<lb/>
defeat Morse and Toler ding NA1A<lb/>
6-1, 6-4. Love and Champions,<lb/>
Hostetler have been<lb/>
playing together as a<lb/>
doubles team for the<lb/>
past four years. They<lb/>
are ranked number nine<lb/>
in North Carolina.<lb/>
Zengle and Lepper<lb/>
had to struggle to down<lb/>
Luffman and<lb/>
Kostszycki 6-4, 7-6.<lb/>
The team of Bryant and<lb/>
Barry Parker received a<lb/>
strong threat from Jor-<lb/>
dan and Thore before Minges courts Wednes-<lb/>
stopping them 6-4, 6-3 day at 2:30 p.m. Coach<lb/>
in the final match ot Rose says his team will<lb/>
National<lb/>
Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College.<lb/>
Atlantic Christian was<lb/>
ahead 5-1 when the rain<lb/>
prevented the doubles<lb/>
from being played.<lb/>
Mark Byrd was the on-<lb/>
ly singles winner for<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The Pirate netters<lb/>
now stand 2-1 for the<lb/>
season with a very<lb/>
tough St. Augustine<lb/>
team visiting the<lb/>
O'Koren Named<lb/>
In All-Star Clash<lb/>
INDIANAPOLIS you're bound to look<lb/>
(AP) ? Throughout good. I'm pleased to<lb/>
his collegiate career, get the award, but I was<lb/>
Mike O'Koren worked, happy just to be able to<lb/>
hard for the honors he play in the game<lb/>
the day.<lb/>
Coach Jon Rose wa<lb/>
very pleased with his<lb/>
teams performance<lb/>
after the Pirates lost a<lb/>
tough match last<lb/>
Thursday to the defen-<lb/>
be "after blood"<lb/>
against St. Augustine.1<lb/>
"They defeated us<lb/>
twice in the fall and this<lb/>
will be a grudge match<lb/>
for the guys claimed<lb/>
Rose.<lb/>
received.<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
star added yet another<lb/>
award to his collection<lb/>
Sunday, but he says<lb/>
this one came a little<lb/>
easier than the rest.<lb/>
"In a game like this,<lb/>
it's hard to do anything<lb/>
wrong O'Koren said<lb/>
after being named the<lb/>
most valuable player in<lb/>
the annual National<lb/>
Basketball Coaches<lb/>
Association All-Star<lb/>
Game.<lb/>
"When you have<lb/>
such great teammates.<lb/>
Breaks All Records<lb/>
"SSS" Dominates IM<lb/>
O'Koren scored 16<lb/>
points to help the East<lb/>
beat the West 88-79 in<lb/>
the 21st Annual Game.<lb/>
He hit seven of nine<lb/>
shots, handed out five<lb/>
assists and shared team<lb/>
scoring honors with<lb/>
James Ray of Jackson-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Indiana's Mike<lb/>
Woodson added 12<lb/>
points for the East and<lb/>
Michael Brooks of<lb/>
LaSalle contributed 10,<lb/>
plus six assists.<lb/>
"We tried to work<lb/>
together and concen-<lb/>
trate on passing said<lb/>
O'Koren, who was a<lb/>
four-year starter at<lb/>
North Carolina. "We<lb/>
didn't want to look bad<lb/>
trying to do a lot of in-<lb/>
dividual stuff<lb/>
The game was a reu-<lb/>
nion for O'Koren,<lb/>
Brooks, Woodson and<lb/>
John Duren of<lb/>
Georgetown. All were<lb/>
members of the United<lb/>
States team that won<lb/>
the gold medal at the<lb/>
1979 Pan-American<lb/>
Games.<lb/>
The contest also mat-<lb/>
ched the coaches of last<lb/>
year's NCAA finals ?<lb/>
Bill Hodges of Indiana<lb/>
State and Jud<lb/>
Heathcote of Michigan<lb/>
State. "1 liked it a lot<lb/>
better than the last<lb/>
one laughed Hodges,<lb/>
whose team was beaten<lb/>
by Michigan State<lb/>
75-64 in the 1979 cham-<lb/>
pionship game.<lb/>
Because his team had<lb/>
only an hour to practice<lb/>
? and O'Koren didn't<lb/>
arrive in time for the<lb/>
session ? Hodges said<lb/>
he tried to get the<lb/>
players to think about<lb/>
passing before scoring.<lb/>
"Most all-star games<lb/>
are guard-oriented<lb/>
Hodges said.<lb/>
By RICKIGLIARMIS<lb/>
Intramural Correspondent<lb/>
Domination is the<lb/>
only word that can<lb/>
describe the play of<lb/>
"SSS the 1980 Co-<lb/>
Rec Bowling cham-<lb/>
pions. Every record<lb/>
that could be broken<lb/>
was broken by the<lb/>
champs.<lb/>
Not only did they<lb/>
win the overall team ti-<lb/>
tle, but they received<lb/>
every individual award<lb/>
possible while finishing<lb/>
28-0 for the season.<lb/>
This record combined<lb/>
with last year's cham-<lb/>
pionship record in-<lb/>
dicates the abundant<lb/>
talent of "SSS<lb/>
Other outstanding<lb/>
teams during the bowl-<lb/>
ing season include<lb/>
Alpha Omicron<lb/>
PiAlpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
"I" who were the<lb/>
runner-ups; Chubnik<lb/>
"B and Assorted<lb/>
Nuts.<lb/>
The High Game<lb/>
Winner in the men's<lb/>
division was Mike Stan-<lb/>
cil, "SSS with a score<lb/>
of 266. The women's<lb/>
high scorer during one<lb/>
game was Selene<lb/>
Wheless of "SSS" with<lb/>
a score of 190.<lb/>
In the High Series<lb/>
Competition, "SSS"<lb/>
again dominated the<lb/>
figures with Mike Stan-<lb/>
cil winning in the men's<lb/>
division with a score of<lb/>
668 and Keila<lb/>
McGlohon winning<lb/>
with a score of 513.<lb/>
The Team High<lb/>
Series honors goes to<lb/>
none other than "SSS"<lb/>
with a total of 2188<lb/>
points in one series.<lb/>
Racquetball<lb/>
Wayne Murphy and<lb/>
West Warren fought<lb/>
their way back through<lb/>
the loser's bracket to<lb/>
play Charlie Marshall<lb/>
and John Eatman in<lb/>
the finals of the men's<lb/>
Racquetball Doubles<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
The first game of the<lb/>
match was easily won<lb/>
by Marshall and Eat-<lb/>
the match and tourna-<lb/>
ment championship<lb/>
was taken by Marshall<lb/>
and Eatman in t<lb/>
tremendous rally.<lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
Action in both the<lb/>
men's and women's<lb/>
volleyball league begins<lb/>
today, March 25.<lb/>
Among the several<lb/>
teams that entered, Phi<lb/>
Epsilon Kappa returns<lb/>
to defend their All-<lb/>
Campus Title from last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
In the women's divi-<lb/>
sion, Cotten failed to<lb/>
enter to defend their ti-<lb/>
tle, but last year's<lb/>
runner-up, Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta, will be looking<lb/>
for that first place<lb/>
finish.<lb/>
Volleyball matches<lb/>
will be played in<lb/>
Minges beginning at<lb/>
6:30 p.m.<lb/>
which are tentatively<lb/>
scheduled for 7 p.m<lb/>
Wednesday, March 26,<lb/>
at Memorial Pool.<lb/>
The top five, after<lb/>
regular season action,<lb/>
include UnKappa Fifth<lb/>
maintaining the<lb/>
number one position,<lb/>
followed by Power Hit-<lb/>
ters, All Star Players,<lb/>
Rip Tides, and Water<lb/>
Bugs.<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
Intramural softball<lb/>
began yesterday with 91<lb/>
men's teams and 44<lb/>
women's teams signed<lb/>
up for regular season<lb/>
play. Games will be<lb/>
played on the North<lb/>
and South sides of<lb/>
Ficklen and behind<lb/>
Allied Health.<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
Putt-Putt<lb/>
Putt-Putt registra-<lb/>
tion began yesterday<lb/>
with the entry deadline<lb/>
set for April 3. The<lb/>
one-day event will be<lb/>
held Tuesday, APRIL 8<lb/>
at the Greenville Putt<lb/>
Putt course.<lb/>
The defending cham-<lb/>
pions are Brian Webb<lb/>
and Carrie Johnson.<lb/>
Team Tennis<lb/>
The 1980 Team Ten-<lb/>
nis season has finally<lb/>
gotten underway. A<lb/>
total of 19 teams are<lb/>
participating in this ex-<lb/>
citing event.<lb/>
Regular season mat-<lb/>
ches began yesterday.<lb/>
The All-Campus<lb/>
Championships have<lb/>
been scheduled for<lb/>
April 20-24.<lb/>
Contests are played<lb/>
Sunday through Thurs-<lb/>
day, from 3 p.m. until<lb/>
10 p.m. at the tennis<lb/>
courts on College Hill.<lb/>
Inner tube<lb/>
Water Polo<lb/>
Innertube water polo<lb/>
teams finished regular<lb/>
man The second game wkh <lb/>
was a thriller as Mur- co$e mes Thc<lb/>
phy and Warren came, rr- w?.i? ?um.<lb/>
"KlmL ?. it o?, to th, fin<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
FOR RENT: A one bedroom fur-<lb/>
nished apartment on Student<lb/>
Street near campus; available<lb/>
from May 17 until August M; re-<lb/>
quire quiet non-smoker; call<lb/>
7S2-3M1 alter 10 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMS AVAILABLE: Two rooms<lb/>
and or Duplex for rent. Excellent<lb/>
location, very reasonable. Call<lb/>
7M-7941. Keep Trying.<lb/>
APARTMENTS FOR RENT.<lb/>
Duplexes and Townhouse $175 to<lb/>
S370 per month Call 752 4415 9:00<lb/>
til 5:00.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE: for three<lb/>
bedroom house. Lease expires<lb/>
June 1st. $1 month and one-third<lb/>
utilities. 752 741.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
GREAT DEAL: on Sylvania<lb/>
Multi-play turntable and 35 watt<lb/>
apeakers. Si SO. 7S8 9538.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 197 Cordoba fully<lb/>
loaded. Yellow with Landau top.<lb/>
Mint condition. Will sacrifice for<lb/>
S3S00. Call l-(919J-734-317? or<lb/>
1 (919) 734-769 (GOldSbOrO).<lb/>
FOR SALE: Bass Guitar S12S.<lb/>
Amp 550 and Guitar machine,<lb/>
heads $30. All in good shape.<lb/>
Machine heads brand new. Call<lb/>
Keith at 758-7878.<lb/>
CASSETTE DECK FOR SALE:<lb/>
Sanyo brand with dolby, limiter,<lb/>
and chromium oxide tape<lb/>
capability. In very good shape<lb/>
and sound. Will sell for S100. Call<lb/>
752-7017.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
BEST PRICES: paid for class<lb/>
rings, gold, and sterling. Men's<lb/>
medium class ring $55 $70 Sterl-<lb/>
ing fork $18. Call John after 3:00<lb/>
752-6013.<lb/>
TYPING: dissertations, theses,<lb/>
and term papers. Excellent skills<lb/>
and reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
752-2724.<lb/>
RIDER NEEDED to share ex-<lb/>
penses and good times. Leaving<lb/>
for N.E. New Mexico in mid-May.<lb/>
Return in August. Call 752 8288<lb/>
after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
TYPING: Speedy service,<lb/>
reasonable rates. Call Pam at<lb/>
757-4852 before 5:00.<lb/>
DIVING GEAR NEEDED:<lb/>
Regulator, wet suit, weight belt.<lb/>
Call Sam at 758-3918.<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
BRING A FRIEND<lb/>
EAR PIERCING!<lb/>
When you have your<lb/>
Ears Pierced we will<lb/>
pierce your friend's<lb/>
ears FREE if you<lb/>
bring him or her with<lb/>
you.<lb/>
Offer good thru 4-12-80<lb/>
See Mrs. Carolyn Belch L.P.N.<lb/>
MANAGER<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Your Diamond<lb/>
Earring Store<lb/>
gjhwa "? fc-??????-<lb/>
?ftOTNC CAOOP TO CAH4? tBAA8W?<lb/>
UMMER JOB OPENINGS FOR CAMP COUNSELORS at<lb/>
camp Sea Gull (boys) and Camp Seafarer (girls) on the coast<lb/>
of North Carolina. The camps feature sailing, motor<lb/>
boating, and steamship, plus all usual camping activities in-<lb/>
cluding a wide variety of major sports. Early June through<lb/>
mid-August. Challenging work with young people, 7-16<lb/>
ears of oge - outdoors - enjoyable - stimulating. Qualified-<lb/>
ions include ability to instruct in one phase of the camp's<lb/>
ogram, a genuine intrest in young people, and excellent<lb/>
es. Quick answer upon receipt of letter of applied<lb/>
ion which shouid include a brief resume' of training and ex<lb/>
ience in orea(s) of the camp program i.i which you are<lb/>
t qualified to instruct. Apply to Wyatt Taylor, Director,<lb/>
amp Sea GullCamp Seafarer, P.O. Box 10976, Raleigh,<lb/>
C 27605<lb/>
HEAPING<lb/>
PORTIONS.<lb/>
tiny<lb/>
price.<lb/>
Break the junk food routine and get a good, hot meal with<lb/>
vegetables.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY FEATURE<lb/>
March 26 only $1.89<lb/>
Smothered Chicken<lb/>
with 2 vegetables<lb/>
SPORTSWORLD<lb/>
COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
THURSDAY FEATURE<lb/>
March 27 only $1.79<lb/>
Liver and Onions<lb/>
with 2 vegetables<lb/>
6:30-10:00<lb/>
Bring L D. and<lb/>
Come home to eat at S&amp;S ? we're located in the<lb/>
Carolina East Mail in Greenville, at the intersection of<lb/>
West Haven Road (U.S. 264 Bypass) and Hwy. 1L Plenty<lb/>
of free parking too.<lb/>
Carolina Ewt Mali<lb/>
Sorvtea coattaaoe1<lb/>
frooiUa.ai.tiH Si<lb/>
(?? Friday<lb/>
GOLD and SILVER<lb/>
Compare and then call<lb/>
758 1892<lb/>
for best prices<lb/>
by Les Jewelers<lb/>
120 E. 5th St.<lb/>
IMPORT!<lb/>
Distributed<lb/>
By<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Beverage Co.<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
edX<lb/>
?<lb/>
Heineken<lb/>
HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
THEI IMPORTED BEER l AMERICA<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Tuesday Night<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
FLOIWDER ?3.50<lb/>
TROUT S8.9S<lb/>
PERCH ?2.95<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
No taste-outs please<lb/>
Meal incladct:<lb/>
sr?n?n Fries. Gel slew,<lb/>
Hwshpapal.<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that wa<lb/>
hare added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
ARSAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
lor<lb/>
dining pleasure.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057256_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>