<?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="00057257_0001"/>
?e lEaat (Earoltntan<lb/>
' Circulation 10,000<lb/>
??????????"??"?????? (,reenville. NA .<lb/>
Fourteen Busted In College Hill Kaia<lb/>
X VA. m, sQ we are dQing possessl0n o Njaqute possession of cocaine. <lb/>
B I ARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
ssistant News Editor<lb/>
 top candidate for defensive<lb/>
team captain on next year's ECU<lb/>
football team was among 14 persons<lb/>
arrested in an extensive drug raid<lb/>
yesterday.<lb/>
let!rev Warren, 21, a junior resi-<lb/>
dent of Belk Dorm, is the Pirates'<lb/>
top returning linebacker. He was<lb/>
charged with one count of sale and<lb/>
possession of marijuana and one<lb/>
count of sale of cocaine.<lb/>
The raid capped an undercover<lb/>
operation mounted jointly by the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department and<lb/>
the State Bureau of Investigation<lb/>
The operation has been conducted<lb/>
over the last several months, accor-<lb/>
ding to Greenville Police.<lb/>
In all, 12 students and two non-<lb/>
students were arrested on a total ot<lb/>
37 charges of drug-law violations,<lb/>
according to a police spokesman.<lb/>
SGA President Brett Melvin has at-<lb/>
tempted to secure bail for those<lb/>
students involved who were unable<lb/>
to secure it any other way.<lb/>
"I became involved because it<lb/>
seems to me that this is the:same<lb/>
type of operation as ABSCAM,<lb/>
with an SBl agent moving into the<lb/>
dorm and posing as a student, said<lb/>
Melvin. 1 feel that this type of in-<lb/>
vestigation is wrong. Because of<lb/>
that if there is anything the fcx-<lb/>
ecutive Branch can do to help, we<lb/>
will do<lb/>
"Students were awakened at 5:30<lb/>
a m They are students,and I don't<lb/>
think that it should have been<lb/>
handled that way, so we are doing<lb/>
whatever we can to help, con-<lb/>
tinued the SGA president. About<lb/>
all we can do is arrange for the bond<lb/>
of those who can't get it<lb/>
Melvin urged anyone who can<lb/>
assist in securing bail money or a<lb/>
bail bondsman to call him at the<lb/>
SGA offices.<lb/>
Other students charged in tne<lb/>
raid, according to police, were:<lb/>
Steven Charles Pace, 18, of Jones<lb/>
Dorm, one count ofsale and posses-<lb/>
sion of LSD; one count of sale and<lb/>
possession of Methaqualone; one<lb/>
count of sale and possession of<lb/>
Quaaludes, and two counts of sale<lb/>
of cocaine. f<lb/>
Thomas Christopher Niver, 19, ot<lb/>
Scott Dorm, one count of sale and<lb/>
possession of marijuana and one<lb/>
count of sale and possession of co-<lb/>
caine.<lb/>
Timothy W. Gave, age unknown,<lb/>
of Aycock Dorm, two counts of sale<lb/>
and possession of cocaine and two<lb/>
counts of sale of cocaine.<lb/>
Steven W. Williams, 21, ot<lb/>
Aycock Dorm, two counts of sale<lb/>
and possession of cocaine.<lb/>
Stacey A. Duncan HI, 20, ot<lb/>
Scott Dorm, three counts ot sale<lb/>
and possession of cocaine.<lb/>
Benjamin Green, 20. of Aycock<lb/>
Dorm, one count of sale and posses-<lb/>
sion of Quaaludes.<lb/>
Orlando Nathaniel Jones. 20. ot<lb/>
Scott Dorm, one count of sale and<lb/>
possession of marijuana and two<lb/>
counts of sale of marijuana.<lb/>
See Hill. Pa&amp;e ? c ol l<lb/>
New Hours g<lb/>
Planned By<lb/>
Mendenhall gg<lb/>
For Spring<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
staff has announced that the Stu-<lb/>
dent Center will have extended<lb/>
operating hours during Spring<lb/>
Semester exams.<lb/>
Operating hours will be extended<lb/>
until 3:00 a.m. on Tuesday, April<lb/>
29- Wednesday, April 30; Thursday,<lb/>
May 1; Sunday, May 4; and Mon-<lb/>
day, May 5. Nearly all areas of the<lb/>
Student Center will be open for use.<lb/>
reas which will be open until<lb/>
3:00 a.m. include the reading room<lb/>
and music listening rooms, as well<lb/>
as ihe billiards center and table ten-<lb/>
nis center. Conference rooms will be<lb/>
available for group study upon re-<lb/>
quest. A limited variety of school<lb/>
supplies will be on sale at the Infor-<lb/>
mation Center. The Snack Bar will<lb/>
be open from 10:00 p.m. until 2:00<lb/>
a m in addition to its regular<lb/>
operating hours and will provide<lb/>
coffee and light snacks.<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
has extended the hours for the pur-<lb/>
pose of facilitating both study and<lb/>
relaxation during exam period.<lb/>
W hether students are looking for<lb/>
a quiet place to study or a pleasant<lb/>
place to relax, Mendenhall will be<lb/>
open for their use until 3:00 a.m. It<lb/>
response is good and students in-<lb/>
dicate that they want and need this<lb/>
service extended hours during ex-<lb/>
ams will probably become a stan-<lb/>
dard practice.<lb/>
Taking it to the Air<lb/>
Board of Trustees<lb/>
Approve Proposed<lb/>
Student Fee Increases<lb/>
By TERRY GRAY<lb/>
News Kdilor<lb/>
The ECU Board of Trustees ap-<lb/>
proved all proposed student fee in-<lb/>
creases in their Tuesday afternoon<lb/>
meeting, raising annual fee costs by<lb/>
about S76 per student.<lb/>
Three attempts by SGA President<lb/>
Brett Melvin to reduce the amount<lb/>
of some increases died for lack of<lb/>
secondina motions. Melvin had ask-<lb/>
ed to cut $3.50 from the<lb/>
$19.50-annually athletic fee in-<lb/>
crease, $1-00 from the $21.00<lb/>
Health Services proposal and i.J<lb/>
from the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's request.<lb/>
Trustee Louis B. Singleton was<lb/>
the only board member to support<lb/>
the proposed cuts.<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Thomas Brewer<lb/>
defended the increases, saying that<lb/>
current ECU fees were low in com-<lb/>
parison to the other 15 universities<lb/>
in the UNC svstem, and that student<lb/>
services at ECU had been<lb/>
deterioratine due to inflation.<lb/>
According to Brewer, the tee hike<lb/>
will raise total student costs per year<lb/>
bv 7.6 percent.<lb/>
In other business, the board voted<lb/>
to change the name of the Well-<lb/>
ington B. Gray Art Gallery, located<lb/>
in the Jenkins art building, to the<lb/>
East Carolina University Art<lb/>
Museum. Wellington B. Gray<lb/>
Gallery. Chancellor Brewer noted<lb/>
that the change was necessary tor<lb/>
the university to qualify for certain<lb/>
types of federal grants.<lb/>
The board also voted to buy<lb/>
smoke alarms that will be placed in<lb/>
dormitories.<lb/>
Mr Donald Lemish, vice<lb/>
chancellor for ECU's Office ot In-<lb/>
stitutional Advancement and Plann-<lb/>
ing, reported to the trustees that the<lb/>
university has received close to S4<lb/>
million in research grants during the<lb/>
present fiscal year, and that alumni<lb/>
contributions were on the rise.<lb/>
Dr. Elmer Meyer, vice chancellor<lb/>
for student life, reported thai the<lb/>
school's program for ha:<lb/>
students wa going well, and that<lb/>
ten more handicapped studenl<lb/>
applied for ECU admission Mc<lb/>
also noted that $4 million in fin<lb/>
cial aid ha- been paid out b the<lb/>
university in the present fiscal y<lb/>
and that the number of<lb/>
was rising.<lb/>
Mr. Cliff Moore, vice chai<lb/>
for financial affairs, said that c<lb/>
tracts to repair the ro<lb/>
Coliseum will be let on pril 3. He<lb/>
also reported on the cow<lb/>
new parkine lots on campus a<lb/>
nounced that ECU ha acqu<lb/>
three houses near the school<lb/>
will be razed to make i w more<lb/>
parking space.<lb/>
After the met<lb/>
business. Dr. Wa tei J-<lb/>
Chairman of the surg<lb/>
mem at the ECU medica<lb/>
delivered a presental<lb/>
treatment of obesity.<lb/>
offk<lb/>
Pones.<lb/>
der<lb/>
- <lb/>
Springtime Skateboarder<lb/>
thawing out his wheels in Charleston, SX.<lb/>
Price Of Education Keeping<lb/>
Abreast of High Inflation Rate<lb/>
Area Station Plans Forum<lb/>
The recent drug bust at East<lb/>
Carolina University will be a topic<lb/>
of discussion on an area radio show<lb/>
Sunday night.<lb/>
Twelve ECU students and two<lb/>
others were arrested in an early mor-<lb/>
ning raid on College Hill Wednes-<lb/>
day on charges ranging from mari-<lb/>
juana sale to sale and possession ot<lb/>
cocaine. The raid was an SB1-<lb/>
Greenville police joint operation.<lb/>
Allen Handelman's Forum,<lb/>
which airs on WITN-FM 93 Sunday<lb/>
evenings from 10:00 p.m. until 1:00<lb/>
a m will invite calls from anyone<lb/>
interested in talking about the ECU<lb/>
bust and the laws, attitudes, culture<lb/>
and paraphernalia surrounding drug<lb/>
use<lb/>
According to Handelman, the<lb/>
show will feature a nationally<lb/>
known expert on drug use or drug<lb/>
laws. , , ,<lb/>
Handelman said Wednesday that<lb/>
due to such short notice, he was not<lb/>
able yet to name who the guest<lb/>
would be.<lb/>
Three possibilities are Keith<lb/>
Stroph, founder of the National<lb/>
Organization for the Reform ot<lb/>
Marijuana Laws (NORML); Jim<lb/>
Lawson, a Massachusetts attorney<lb/>
with extensive experience in drug<lb/>
cases; or Larry Sloman, author ot<lb/>
Reefer Madness, a book about the<lb/>
marijuana culture. All three are<lb/>
former guests on his show, said<lb/>
Handelman.<lb/>
Handelman added that the<lb/>
telephone conversations will be<lb/>
aired between selections of rock<lb/>
music.<lb/>
WITN-FM is located in<lb/>
Washington, N.C but Handelman<lb/>
noted that Sunday evening<lb/>
telephone rates were low.<lb/>
"If anyone calls in and our lines<lb/>
are tied up, we'll get their number<lb/>
and call them back said<lb/>
Handelman. "That way they'll save<lb/>
the cost of waiting .<lb/>
For anyone interested in talking<lb/>
with Handelman and his guest, the<lb/>
numbers are 946-2162 and 946-2163.<lb/>
Drake Mann<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
complete platforms of these presidential candidates<lb/>
as well as all other officers, are on pages 6 and 7.<lb/>
The same inflation that is squeez-<lb/>
ine familv budgets is boosting the<lb/>
cost of going to college, with prices<lb/>
at some schools nearing the<lb/>
S10,000-a-year mark for the coming<lb/>
academic season.<lb/>
The Chronicle of Higher Educa-<lb/>
tion recentlv reported that double-<lb/>
digit increases in prices for tuition,<lb/>
room and board will be common<lb/>
this fall. The average boost will be<lb/>
about 13 percent - about equal to<lb/>
the increase in the Consumer Price<lb/>
Index in 1979.<lb/>
"We've been hit with inflation<lb/>
like everybody else said Steve<lb/>
Kezerian of Yale University. That,<lb/>
and higher energy costs and faculty-<lb/>
salary increases .<lb/>
A student at Yale during the<lb/>
1980-81 academic year will face bills<lb/>
totaling a minimum of $9,110 ? up<lb/>
12 percent from this year's $8,141).<lb/>
The biggest chunk of the money ?<lb/>
$6 120 ? will go for tuition.<lb/>
Prices generally are lower at<lb/>
public universities than they are at<lb/>
private ones, but the state schools<lb/>
are not immune from rising costs.<lb/>
Officials at Florida State Univer-<lb/>
sity in Tallahassee estimate that a<lb/>
student will spend an average of<lb/>
$3 990 next year on tuition, room<lb/>
and board, transportation, books<lb/>
and supplies and miscellaneous ex-<lb/>
penses. That's an increase of about<lb/>
6 percent from this year. Dormitory<lb/>
rents alone are rising an average ot<lb/>
$50 because of utility costs, the<lb/>
school said.<lb/>
Ed Marsh, the financial aid direc-<lb/>
tor at the university, said the<lb/>
amount of money available to help<lb/>
students pay the bills has increased<lb/>
sharply. In 1978-79, he said, FSU<lb/>
provided $13.5 million in aid; this<lb/>
year, the school gave out $20<lb/>
million, an increase of almost 50<lb/>
percent. Marsh said he expected up<lb/>
to $23 million in aid would be<lb/>
available for the 1980-81 year.<lb/>
"Forty-five percent to 55 percent<lb/>
of the students get financial aid<lb/>
now said Marsh. "If you take a<lb/>
look at the cost of school, for the<lb/>
average family, it's got to present<lb/>
some kind of problem. Financial aid<lb/>
is not just for poor folks anymore'<lb/>
The situation at Yale and Florida<lb/>
State is typical, according to an<lb/>
Associated Press spot check.<lb/>
Robert H. Strotz. president ot<lb/>
Northwestern University in<lb/>
Evanston. 111 announced recently<lb/>
that tuition for the 1980-81 year will<lb/>
be $S98S ? a 10.5 percent boost<lb/>
from this year. It is the 13th straight<lb/>
year of tuition increases. Strotz also<lb/>
said that room charges w ould<lb/>
increase by 14.5 percent and food<lb/>
bills would go up 11.2 percent.<lb/>
William C. Tempelmeyer, Nor-<lb/>
thwestern's housing director, said<lb/>
the increase in room and board<lb/>
charges was "the largest that 1 an<lb/>
recall He blamed the rise on an<lb/>
assessment to pay for new dor-<lb/>
mitories and on higher utility rates,<lb/>
adding that water cost alone increas-<lb/>
ed 67 percent this year.<lb/>
Richard Conklin, a spokesman<lb/>
for the University of Notre Dame.<lb/>
said the school plan- a Uperct<lb/>
crease in tuition, althe<lb/>
amount of the boost must be<lb/>
proved bv the board of trustees<lb/>
May. The cost for room and<lb/>
will increase about 1" perct<lb/>
Overall, next year's studer<lb/>
pay S6.490 for tuition, room<lb/>
board, compared to S5.t;<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
"The main pressure point on us<lb/>
is that we're labor intei<lb/>
said Conklin. "It's all facult)<lb/>
salaries. Of course food and energx<lb/>
costs were a factor too. We're ven<lb/>
successful in conserving energy, but<lb/>
we're paying more for it than we as<lb/>
ed to<lb/>
Conklin added: "Our student a d<lb/>
allocations are not reall keeping<lb/>
pace with the percentage increase<lb/>
tuition and fees and room and<lb/>
See Cost. Page 3, Col. 1<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
SGA Presidential Candidates<lb/>
Drake Mann<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
SGA Vice-Presidential Candidates<lb/>
AI Patrick<lb/>
Lynn ColderSee Page 6<lb/>
SGA Treasurer Candidates<lb/>
Kirk Little<lb/>
Danny O'Connor<lb/>
SGA Secretary Candidate<lb/>
Marianne EdwardsSee Page 7<lb/>
Letters To The EditorS Pagc<lb/>
Jack Daniels, Smooth and MellowSee Page 5<lb/>
, j o rn See Page 10<lb/>
Odom Retained By ECU<lb/>
Sec Pace 12<lb/>
Hines Sets Soccer Records<lb/>
MW I?mi"r " "T Tf  i ? 'W11 m<lb/>
??in???'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057257_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 27, 1980<lb/>
Threat Of Trial Hovers Over Hostages<lb/>
By The Associated Press<lb/>
The majority of Iran's ruling<lb/>
Revolutionary Council wants to put<lb/>
the American hostages on trial if the<lb/>
shah and his fortune are not return-<lb/>
ed to Iran, the council's first<lb/>
secretary, Ayatollah Mohammad<lb/>
Behesti, said today.<lb/>
Famed Texas surgeon Dr.<lb/>
Micnael DeBakey was on his way to<lb/>
Egypt, meanwhile, apparently to<lb/>
operate on the exiled and ailing<lb/>
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.<lb/>
Cairo newspapers said the shah's<lb/>
doctors have confirmed he has<lb/>
cancer of the spleen.<lb/>
Beheshti, "who also is Iran's<lb/>
justice minister, told reporters at his<lb/>
weekly news conference in Tehran<lb/>
that he advocates breaking<lb/>
diplomatic relations with the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
The ayatollah said trying the<lb/>
hostages is "the general idea in<lb/>
Iran" and most members of the<lb/>
Revolutionary Council are behind it<lb/>
if the shah is not brought back to<lb/>
stand trial for his alleged crimes.<lb/>
Pahlavi avoided extradition pro-<lb/>
ceedings in Panama and flew to<lb/>
Cairo Monday.<lb/>
The threat of such trials was rais-<lb/>
ed often after young militants seized<lb/>
the U.S. Embassy last Nov. 4 but<lb/>
had not been made for many weeks.<lb/>
It was revived Monday by Ayatollah<lb/>
Sadegh Khalkhali, a leading revolu-<lb/>
tionary and former chief judge, who<lb/>
Hill Raid Snares 12 Students<lb/>
said that after the new Iranian<lb/>
Parliament meets those Americans<lb/>
accused of being spies would be<lb/>
judged by revolutionary courts and<lb/>
sent to prison if found guilty, while<lb/>
the others would be freed.<lb/>
Tens of thousands of Iranians<lb/>
demonstrated outside the embassy<lb/>
Tuesday in support of the militants,<lb/>
and many signed a petition calling<lb/>
for hostage trials.<lb/>
But Foreign Minister Sadegh<lb/>
Ghotbzadeh said Tuesday there<lb/>
were no plans to try the Americans,<lb/>
and those demanding they be tried<lb/>
were "irresponsible people<lb/>
Ghotbzadeh said, however, that<lb/>
the shah "will either have to return<lb/>
to Iran" to face trial "or die He<lb/>
did not elaborate.<lb/>
He said the shah's flight to Egypt<lb/>
made the release of the hostages<lb/>
"extremely difficult" because it<lb/>
might turn more members of Iran's<lb/>
new Parliament against freeing<lb/>
them.<lb/>
The 50 hostages were in their<lb/>
144th day of captivity today.<lb/>
In Washington, State Department<lb/>
spokesman Hodding Carter said the<lb/>
U.S. government was continuing<lb/>
"to examine available options that<lb/>
have not been exercised" to free the<lb/>
hostages. He said formal imposition<lb/>
of economic sanctions ? essentially<lb/>
a symbolic gesture since<lb/>
U.SIranian trade is virtually cut<lb/>
off wiU "always be available as a<lb/>
non-violent option but breaking<lb/>
relations with Iran would be<lb/>
counter-productive.<lb/>
 AJEix) PW" UJosfr<lb/>
excelled Profsicr rvdlevr<lb/>
a H<lb/>
expire fcrA-0 n ?<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Brian Preston, 18, of<lb/>
Jones Dorm, two<lb/>
counts of sale and<lb/>
possession of mari-<lb/>
juana and one count of<lb/>
sale of marijuana.<lb/>
Steve Ward Smith,<lb/>
20, of Scott Dorm, two<lb/>
counts of sale and<lb/>
possession of mari-<lb/>
iiiana, one count of<lb/>
sale of marijuana and<lb/>
one count of sale of<lb/>
LSD.<lb/>
Dave Landin Peter-<lb/>
son, 18, of Jones<lb/>
Dorm, one count of<lb/>
sale and possession of<lb/>
marijuana.<lb/>
Marvin Tyler Rakes<lb/>
Jr 19, of Jones Dorm,<lb/>
three counts of sale and<lb/>
possession of cocaine.<lb/>
The two non-students<lb/>
are:<lb/>
Robert Mitchel<lb/>
Floyd, 21, of Green-<lb/>
ville, three counts of<lb/>
sale and possession of<lb/>
marijuana.<lb/>
Diane Floyd Perkins,<lb/>
26, of Greenville, one<lb/>
count of sale and<lb/>
possession of mari-<lb/>
juana.<lb/>
Police reported that<lb/>
more arrests in the case<lb/>
are expected.<lb/>
tf<lb/>
??<lb/>
2<lb/>
Sp<lb/>
THE PARTY BEVERAGE CENTER<lb/>
Corner of 10th &amp; Evans St.<lb/>
Open 24 Hours<lb/>
752-6303 or 752-5933<lb/>
WE SUPPORT THE PIRATES<lb/>
They're Back<lb/>
At<lb/>
Saturday Night<lb/>
THE ALLSTARS<lb/>
with<lb/>
LUCILLE<lb/>
Doors open at 8:00<lb/>
STEEPLECHASE<lb/>
CAFETERIA<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
MONDAY SATURDAY<lb/>
HOURS: 11AM 2PM 4:30-8:0OPM<lb/>
Closed Sundavs<lb/>
Tues. 25th 1.29 Franksf Sauerkraut<lb/>
1.69 Stuffed Peppers<lb/>
Wed. 26th 1.29 Chili AAac<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/>
Sat. 29th<lb/>
AAon. 31st<lb/>
ECU NIGHT<lb/>
The people at Hallow Distributing<lb/>
Co distributors of Stroh's, Stroh's<lb/>
Light, and Pabst products, want to<lb/>
SALUTE THE GREEKS<lb/>
for their outstanding support and<lb/>
Service to ECU and the communi-<lb/>
ty-<lb/>
We Wish You The Best!<lb/>
Hallow Distributing Co.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C <lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Seafood BuffetS3.00<lb/>
choice of 3 seafood entrees<lb/>
choice of 5 vegetables<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
iLi<lb/>
  <lb/>
DAILY LUNCHEON I<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
I HOt DOgOnlyOil<lb/>
u &amp;M<lb/>
I Hamburger,<lb/>
F<lb/>
199<lb/>
French Pries $4<lb/>
&amp; 12-0z. Drink  ?<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT I<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
4:00-0:00 Ptt NOCMBYOUT<lb/>
SALAD?50? EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR. $499<lb/>
PIZZA. .?w I<lb/>
WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
TUE.<lb/>
$199<lb/>
SPAGHETTI ??<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
Tapes<lb/>
SSSSfiT<lb/>
8<lb/>
16-Oz.<lb/>
Ret.<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
MELLO YELLO OR ??<lb/>
Coca-Cola '<lb/>
Plus Deposit<lb/>
STROH'S OR<lb/>
6<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
Stroh's Light Beer<lb/>
$l<lb/>
ROSE, BURGUNDY,<lb/>
RHINE OR<lb/>
Paul Masson Chablis<lb/>
3$<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
iCheese<lb/>
Itfif Pizza<lb/>
199<lb/>
I Each<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Cheese<lb/>
Balls<lb/>
$<lb/>
REG. OR DIP<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
frOz. Twin Pack<lb/>
59'<lb/>
m<lb/>
ADVIRTISED ITIM POLICY<lb/>
I Mama to required to to<lb/>
Ml tn each Krogor Sev-or? Wore aaoept m ?PJj?<lb/>
ad. NwadorunoutofanedvortiaadtfmwwwWolt<lb/>
of a comparable Nam, amen evailebte, refecting the<lb/>
ratachec wttcrt wtt entttte you to purchcee <lb/>
ivouM<lb/>
price wHNfi 30 day a<lb/>
id an thte<lb/>
otter you your choice<lb/>
?vino or<lb/>
Mam at the<lb/>
NONE SOLD<lb/>
TO<lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
OPEN 7 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
-? MpaoM ?oaooai<lb/>
?a m ? i in ?"?<lb/>
? ' i ??? wmmmmmqmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057257_0003"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Lifesaving<lb/>
?X Red Cross Mvtnccd life-saving<lb/>
course will he offered Jurmg the monlh<lb/>
at April I he hrsi class meeting will be<lb/>
hdd lucsdas. pnl I. a! ft p.m. at<lb/>
Memorial dun Pool Come prepared<lb/>
10 swim lor further information, call<lb/>
"K -? Sands Skellie.<lb/>
Car Wash<lb/>
I he Intei national I anguage Organta<lb/>
non is holding a ear Mth this coming<lb/>
Saturday, March 2?, from "? am to J<lb/>
p m at the 1 sson station just past the<lb/>
Hig Stai in I'm Plaa We will wash<lb/>
soin cat tor S 50 I VCTJrOBe is invited<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
PRC<lb/>
I he PRC Department is having an<lb/>
awards banquet on pril 2, (torn<lb/>
ft-12:00 p m . at the Holnlas Inn in<lb/>
Greenville Ml ICl students, facttlt)<lb/>
and alumni are united to attend lor<lb/>
ticket information call Margie at<lb/>
?S2 0306; cresa ai 756 8241; ir Diane<lb/>
,i 752 US4 I he cosi ol the banquet is<lb/>
s'1 00 net person oi Sh no per couple.<lb/>
Graduation<lb/>
Vttcntion, all Second Semester<lb/>
Ciraduatcs The deliver) dates lor caps<lb/>
and gowns at the Student SuppK Store<lb/>
.ire Apr it I, 1 and V Announcements<lb/>
ire on sale at this tune I here arc fix? in<lb/>
a package foi n? r<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
The East Carolina Poetry Forum will<lb/>
have a regular workshop and meeting<lb/>
Thursday, pril 3, a, g p.m.t in<lb/>
Mcndcnhall. room 248 The public is<lb/>
cordially invited.<lb/>
Boxing<lb/>
Openings for TKE boxing arc still<lb/>
available. The tournament will be held<lb/>
April 8, 9 and 10 Openings arc<lb/>
available in 183-192. 193-202. and<lb/>
Unlimited weight classes. Interested<lb/>
boners call 758 7894 or drop by TKE<lb/>
House, 951 E. Tenth St. This tourna-<lb/>
ment benefits St. Judcs Children<lb/>
Hospital<lb/>
Kite Making<lb/>
Learn to design and make your own<lb/>
kite by attending a free workshop spon-<lb/>
sored bv Mcndcnhall Student C enter<lb/>
The workshop, conducted by Cicorgc<lb/>
Brer. Put Community College Artist<lb/>
In Residence, is scheduled tor Wednes-<lb/>
day, April 2ft, from ft-8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall C rafts Center There is no<lb/>
registration oi supplies tec for this uni-<lb/>
que workshop Just come by the C rails<lb/>
C enter and join in the fun!<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta, National English<lb/>
Honor Society, will hold its induction<lb/>
of new members on Thursday, March<lb/>
27, ai Villa Roma. A social hour will<lb/>
begin at 5:30 p.m. with the induction<lb/>
ceremony at 6:30 p.m followed bv<lb/>
dinner All members, faculty, and in-<lb/>
ductees are asked to be present at this<lb/>
function.<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
Sigma Nu Iraternity will be holding a<lb/>
softball tournament on April 12 and 13.<lb/>
The entry fee will be S3 00 per player,<lb/>
which includes a jersey, and beverages<lb/>
at the championship parly. For more<lb/>
information call 758-7640 or 758-6493.<lb/>
There will be a 20 team maximum.<lb/>
Summer Dorms<lb/>
Residence hall room deposits for Sum-<lb/>
mer School 1980 wili be accepted in the<lb/>
Cashiers Office, room 105, Spilman<lb/>
Building, beginning April 9. Room<lb/>
assignments will be made in the respec-<lb/>
tive residence hall offices on April 10<lb/>
and III hereafter, they will be made in<lb/>
the office ol Housing Operations, room<lb/>
201, Whichard Building. Students who<lb/>
wish to reserve rooms they presently oc-<lb/>
cupy, provided such rooms arc to be in<lb/>
use this summer, arc to make reserva-<lb/>
tions 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, Ciarrett, and Cireenc<lb/>
(floors two through six). Men will be<lb/>
housed in Bclk (floors one through<lb/>
three).<lb/>
Toto<lb/>
I he Student Union Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee presents TOTO. with a<lb/>
special guest TBA, on April 17 at 8:00<lb/>
p m in Minges Coliseum. Tickets will<lb/>
go on sale Monday, March 31. at 10:00<lb/>
a.m. in Mcndcnhall Student Center.<lb/>
Tickets will be $5 00 for ECU students<lb/>
and S7.00 for the public<lb/>
Caucus<lb/>
The Siudeni Caucus for Progressive<lb/>
Reform has been formed to promote<lb/>
student activism, fight nuclear energy,<lb/>
and lo promote a humanitarian, alter-<lb/>
native lifestyle. The SCPR is presently<lb/>
organizing a "Festival for a<lb/>
Humanitarian Renaissance" tentatively<lb/>
scheduled for April 11. The Caucus is<lb/>
dedicated to providing a forum for the<lb/>
expression of the ideals of tomorrow.<lb/>
Interested people shoul ! contact: Jcan-<lb/>
nic Igoe. 752-8493; Jeff Whisnal and<lb/>
Mark Kemp, 707 4th St; or Jay Stone,<lb/>
1207 CotanchcSt.<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
Phi Beta lambda will meet Tuesday.<lb/>
April I, at 4.00 p.m. in Rawl 103 A<lb/>
Buccaneer group picture will be taken<lb/>
and nominations and voting for next<lb/>
years officers will be held We will also<lb/>
have a guest speaker.<lb/>
LAE<lb/>
The EC U Chapter of I ambda Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon will meet Monday, March 31 in<lb/>
the Allied Health Auditorium at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. All persons who arc presently<lb/>
enrolled in a course of criminal justice<lb/>
or are majors or intended majors in<lb/>
Correctional Services arc invited to at-<lb/>
tend. Applications for membership will<lb/>
be available at the meeting. If you<lb/>
would like to join but arc unable lo at-<lb/>
tend the meeting, contact Diane Austin<lb/>
at 758 4397 or Mr. Jim Campbell in the<lb/>
SCK'W and C"ORS Office<lb/>
Rho Epsilon<lb/>
There will be a Rho Epsilon meeting<lb/>
Thursday. March 27 ai 3:00 in Rawl<lb/>
room 130. All members are urged to at-<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
French Night<lb/>
The International I anguage Organiza-<lb/>
tion is sponsoring La Soiree Francaise<lb/>
on Thursday, April 3 at 8 p.m. at the<lb/>
International House on Ninth Street.<lb/>
Taste imported wines and cheeses with<lb/>
fresh French bread and friends. Ad-<lb/>
vance tickets are $2.50, $3.00 at the<lb/>
door, covering four glasses of wine and<lb/>
the food. Extra glasses will be $.50<lb/>
each. Door prizes will be given away.<lb/>
Everyone is invited lo attend.<lb/>
Seder<lb/>
Attention Jewish students, if you would<lb/>
like to partake in the Passover Seder<lb/>
celebration held by Hillcl please contact<lb/>
Richard Cole. 758-0420, or Dr. Bramy<lb/>
Rcsnik. 756-5640<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma will have its monthly<lb/>
meeting on March 27 at 5:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Mcndcnhall room 221. All members arc<lb/>
urged lo attend. Officers for next year<lb/>
will be elected.<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 27, 1980<lb/>
Advertisers <lb/>
Cost Of Education Increases<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
board We are trying<lb/>
to parcel out our ex-<lb/>
isting funds to more<lb/>
people.<lb/>
"Our market here<lb/>
has always primarily<lb/>
been a Catholic,<lb/>
middle-class market.<lb/>
We're concerned that<lb/>
we not price ourselves<lb/>
out of that market. But<lb/>
quality education is ex-<lb/>
pensive<lb/>
Slippery Rock Col-<lb/>
lege in Pennsylvania<lb/>
now charges $950 a<lb/>
year for tuition and<lb/>
$1,210 for room and<lb/>
board. "We were told<lb/>
by the (Pennsylvania)<lb/>
secretary of education<lb/>
there would be a $150<lb/>
increase in tuition (next<lb/>
year), but there is a<lb/>
move by some<lb/>
legislators to keep it<lb/>
where it is said Pam<lb/>
Shingler, a<lb/>
spokeswoman for the<lb/>
state school. Ms.<lb/>
Shingler said the money<lb/>
the school gets from the<lb/>
state "is just not<lb/>
enough to cover the in-<lb/>
crease in expenses" for<lb/>
things like salaries,<lb/>
maintenance and the<lb/>
coal-fueled heating<lb/>
system.<lb/>
C. Lee Winder, pro-<lb/>
vost at Michigan State<lb/>
University, said the<lb/>
school is waiting to find<lb/>
out how much money it<lb/>
will get from the<lb/>
Legislature before it<lb/>
determines 1980-81<lb/>
fees. Winder added,<lb/>
however: "The<lb/>
economic indicators for<lb/>
this state are not very<lb/>
encouraging  It does<lb/>
seem fair to assume<lb/>
there will be an increase<lb/>
in tuition<lb/>
Winder said that tui-<lb/>
tion has risen by about<lb/>
7.5 percent to 10 per-<lb/>
cent every vear since<lb/>
1976-77. It is now<lb/>
$1,250 for a full-time<lb/>
undergraduate who is a<lb/>
resident of Michigan<lb/>
and about doubHWat<lb/>
much for a non-<lb/>
resident.<lb/>
The increased costs<lb/>
of college have forced<lb/>
families to change their<lb/>
thinking about paying<lb/>
the bills. Joe Paul Case<lb/>
of the College Scholar-<lb/>
ship Service of the Col<lb/>
lege Board said th<lb/>
most people use t<lb/>
finance college from<lb/>
accumulated savings<lb/>
and current savings.<lb/>
Today, he said, the<lb/>
money comes "from<lb/>
current income and ac-<lb/>
cumulated future<lb/>
debt<lb/>
NEXT: How<lb/>
Students Are Coping.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
$176 00 "all inclusive"<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth con<lb/>
trol, and problem prcgnan<lb/>
cy counseling. For further<lb/>
information call 832 0535<lb/>
(tol I free number<lb/>
800 221 2568) between 9<lb/>
A M 5 P.M. weekdas<lb/>
Raleigh Women's<lb/>
Health Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh, NX 27603<lb/>
HAM<lb/>
ITS HAM AND CHEESE AND HAH<lb/>
Oh Qa&amp;bo<lb/>
201 E. 5TH. STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. 27834<lb/>
(919) 752-9384<lb/>
Student Appreciation<lb/>
JEWELRY SALE<lb/>
March 28 and ?9<lb/>
Show your ID and Save<lb/>
20 or MORE!<lb/>
REDUCED for STUDENTS<lb/>
ONLY!<lb/>
Great Buys On Sterling Silver<lb/>
Don't<lb/>
get pregnant.<lb/>
Use Centra-Foam.<lb/>
I won't risk damaging my body<lb/>
with the Pill or the IUD. Ive<lb/>
discovered Contra-Foam.<lb/>
WITH CONTRA-FOAM S<lb/>
PATENTED SINGLE STEP<lb/>
ATTACHED APPLICATOR THERE S:<lb/>
? NO WAITING<lb/>
? NO FUMBLING<lb/>
? NO MESS<lb/>
IT S THAT SIMPLE TO<lb/>
PREVENT PREGNANCY.<lb/>
CONTRA-FOAM CONTAINS<lb/>
APPROXIMATELY 30<lb/>
APPLICATIONS BUT IT S<lb/>
SMALL ENOUGH TO FIT INTO<lb/>
YOUR POCKET OR PURSE<lb/>
!<lb/>
CONTRA-FOAM IS AVAILABLE<lb/>
WITHOUT PRESCRIPTION AT<lb/>
LOCAL STORES<lb/>
$<lb/>
II<lb/>
II<lb/>
DEALER Aa our agent you may accept tftia<lb/>
coupon trorn retail customers We will re-<lb/>
imburse you lor the lace value ol this coupon<lb/>
only omen redeemed by you only for the<lb/>
purchase ol 1 bottle of CONTRA-FOAM Any<lb/>
other use may constitute Iraud Adequate proof<lb/>
of purchase must be submitted upon request<lb/>
Customer pays any tax This coupon is VCMD if<lb/>
transferred assigned reproduced taxed<lb/>
licensed restricted or wherever prohibited by<lb/>
lew redeemed from retailers only Cash value<lb/>
0OIC Mal coupon to CONTRA-FOAM USA<lb/>
tnc 2760 NW 63rd Ct Ft lnudttrdate Fla<lb/>
33309<lb/>
Coupon Expires Jun? !k).196u A ycear etoator tor ? rain ckNi, If fee<lb/>
TGIF<lb/>
4:00-6:30<lb/>
JOLLY ROGER<lb/>
TSPBRtS<lb/>
Group Rates<lb/>
756-9709<lb/>
THERE JS A ou?<lb/>
DIFFERENCE! USnW)<lb/>
PREPARE FOR<lb/>
j fQEECFMG FLEX<lb/>
NAT L MED BOS.<lb/>
NAT! DENTAL BDS.<lb/>
NURSING BOARDS<lb/>
MCAT- DAT ? LSAT GRE<lb/>
GMAT ? OCAT ? PCAT<lb/>
VAT ? SAT<lb/>
?3fen?b-H<lb/>
MPLflN<lb/>
EDUCATIONAL<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
TEST PREPARATION<lb/>
SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938<lb/>
Visit Any Center<lb/>
And See For Yourself<lb/>
Why We Make The Difference<lb/>
Flexible Prof rams t Hours<lb/>
Call Days, Eves &amp; Weekends<lb/>
919-4W-S720<lb/>
Suite 102<lb/>
CrostBWg<lb/>
2634 Chapel Hill BJ?d<lb/>
Durham. N.C. 27707<lb/>
For Information About<lb/>
Other Centers Outside NY State<lb/>
Call Toll Free<lb/>
800-223-1782<lb/>
Centers in Major US Cities<lb/>
Puerto Rico, Toronto, Canada<lb/>
&amp; Lugano, Switzerland<lb/>
Spring Fever!<lb/>
On Sale March 27 - April 2<lb/>
BOBSEGER<lb/>
 NE SILVER BULLET BANO<lb/>
Against Thai Wind<lb/>
5.99<lb/>
IPs &amp; Tapes<lb/>
JOURNEY<lb/>
DEPARTURE.<lb/>
'tow Star ????<lb/>
ill<lb/>
Siuyjou<lb/>
Glass<lb/>
Houses<lb/>
?ncfcjtfcng<lb/>
AI For leyna<lb/>
touhtoy<lb/>
BeffcgM<lb/>
OontAifc<lb/>
Me Why<lb/>
IDontWant<lb/>
lo Be Alone<lb/>
RsSea<lb/>
Rock and Roa<lb/>
lb Me<lb/>
6eat<lb/>
Even N Up Stoanga fckoht<lb/>
Rocki He??n Ocrmn Break Owwi On I<lb/>
Country Music Round-Up<lb/>
Now through April 16<lb/>
weekly sales on country &amp; western LPs and tapes<lb/>
? extra savings each Saturday during the sale ?<lb/>
Stop by for the savings and selection?<lb/>
?P RECORDS &amp; TAPES m Wfe<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
SOUNDS DELICIOUS<lb/>
Pitt Plaza ? Carolina East Mall<lb/>
?OJ Student Union fTVor fHtroction<lb/>
penults<lb/>
Tic!?tre?euahKte Rfc$K0 AfDoor$XX<lb/>
TICKETS GO ON SALE MARCH 31st!<lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057257_0004"/><lb/>
Cfce Cart (kwctfliniun<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, mmm<lb/>
Diane Henderson, MmaXmK tdm<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, a??r yur ?m Richard Green, c mm<lb/>
Chris Lichok, ??? wa?r Charles Chandler, ?? e?<lb/>
Terry Gray, v,? mm Debbie Hotaling, ?,?,? mm<lb/>
THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
Throw Away The Axe ?<lb/>
Does a falling tree make a sound<lb/>
if no one hears it fall?<lb/>
Apparently not, and it is<lb/>
discouraging. The time and effort<lb/>
that went into preparing and<lb/>
answering the recent SGA survey on<lb/>
student fee increases was, like it or<lb/>
not, a waste of time.<lb/>
A broad cross-section of over<lb/>
1600 students tried to send a<lb/>
message to the ECU board of<lb/>
trustees last week, via SGA Presi-<lb/>
dent Brett Melvin's survey. With<lb/>
one notable exception, that<lb/>
distinguished group was in no mood<lb/>
for any such interference as they<lb/>
voted on the increases Tuesday.<lb/>
Students are often criticized for<lb/>
their apathy. Everyone talks about<lb/>
involvement, about participation,<lb/>
about the so-called "student<lb/>
voice<lb/>
According to the SGA survey, a<lb/>
majority of ECU students voted<lb/>
'no' to most of the proposed hikes<lb/>
in their student fees, especially the<lb/>
55 percent jump in athletic fees and<lb/>
the 45 percent jump in health ser-<lb/>
vices fees.<lb/>
Now, that doesn't mean that the<lb/>
students are against the programs<lb/>
per se, or that they don't realize the<lb/>
pressure of inflation on program<lb/>
budgets. The important issue was<lb/>
the size of the increases. The<lb/>
message that students sent ? the<lb/>
tree that fell ? was that maybe the<lb/>
trustees could do a little trimming<lb/>
here and there.<lb/>
Silence.<lb/>
Not a red cent was cut. Every<lb/>
single one of the proposed fee in-<lb/>
creases were approved carte blan-<lb/>
che, despite Brett Melvin's almost<lb/>
symbolic attempts to cut a dollar<lb/>
here, fifty cents there. The only<lb/>
trustee who spoke out against the<lb/>
increases was Louis Singleton, who<lb/>
voted accordingly.<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer sought to<lb/>
justify the vote by citing a<lb/>
"deterioration of services" on cam-<lb/>
pus. Never mind that the student<lb/>
survey indicated a willingness to<lb/>
make certain sacrifices ? we were<lb/>
going to get those services whether<lb/>
we wanted them or not.<lb/>
People and politicians all across<lb/>
America are busy talking about<lb/>
belt-tightening and fiscal respon-<lb/>
sibility. ECU students tried to make<lb/>
it clear that they expected no less of<lb/>
some of their own service organiza-<lb/>
tions, but most of the trustees ig-<lb/>
nored them.<lb/>
The tree was a small one, and no<lb/>
one expected much of a crash. The<lb/>
discouraging part is that the effort<lb/>
to make even a small sound was, in<lb/>
a word, futile.<lb/>
It's enough to make you want to<lb/>
throw away the axe.<lb/>
Don't Trash Our Books<lb/>
State government, which is not<lb/>
well known for its excessively effi-<lb/>
cient manner of doing business, has<lb/>
done itself one better ? it is cur-<lb/>
rently causing the unneeded waste<lb/>
of knokwledge among students at<lb/>
its institutions of higher learning.<lb/>
Recently, we reported that some<lb/>
students found a dumpster behind<lb/>
the library crammed full of old (and<lb/>
reportedly "worthless") books.<lb/>
Such a sight alarms us, because it<lb/>
was reported that because of certain<lb/>
governmental regulations, that was<lb/>
the only way that the books could<lb/>
have been disposed of.<lb/>
Whose fault is it? It is certainly<lb/>
not the fault of Library Director Dr.<lb/>
Eugene Brunelle or any of his staff.<lb/>
They have consistently made efforts<lb/>
to build up a university library that<lb/>
we can all be proud of. To do this, it<lb/>
became necessary to move old and<lb/>
damaged volumes out and make<lb/>
room for new ones.<lb/>
The library itself has tried m tne<lb/>
past to give the books away to other<lb/>
state institutions, such as prisons<lb/>
and workshops for the handicap-<lb/>
ped, but those institutions usually<lb/>
don't want them. Students want the<lb/>
books, but the only way, it seems,<lb/>
for them to get them is to go rum-<lb/>
maging through a trash dumpster<lb/>
after they have been thrown away.<lb/>
The ideal would be to sell the<lb/>
books to used book dealers, and use<lb/>
whatever small proceeds that come<lb/>
from the sale to buy new books.<lb/>
This way, the books might possibly<lb/>
bring more money than they would<lb/>
if they were sent to a paper recycler.<lb/>
Another possibility would be to<lb/>
give the books away to someone<lb/>
who could make use of them, such<lb/>
as state or county hospitals, nursing<lb/>
homes, or other institutions where<lb/>
people can benefit from them.<lb/>
It seems to us, however, that an<lb/>
author's best efforts should be read<lb/>
and studied by as many people as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
To this end, then, no book should<lb/>
ever end up in a trash heap, solely<lb/>
because the state can't help find a<lb/>
better use for it.<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Writers Endorse Sherrod, Mann<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
The usual excuses for not voting for<lb/>
student government offiers range from "I<lb/>
didn't know when the elections were<lb/>
held" to "I did not know any of the can-<lb/>
didates I would be apt to use the latter.<lb/>
The elections are Wed April 2, and I will<lb/>
not need an excuse. During this year, I<lb/>
found that Charlie Sherrod represented<lb/>
my opinions as a student at ECU and also<lb/>
supported our efforts to rebuild the North<lb/>
Carolina Student Legislature delegation<lb/>
at ECU. He is personable and shows con-<lb/>
cern for the individual student. As Stu-<lb/>
dent Government President, he will work<lb/>
to improve situations that will directly ef-<lb/>
fect student life (improve the student<lb/>
banks, food service, parking, transit<lb/>
system ) I needed more information<lb/>
about his year as Vice President of the<lb/>
SGA so he allowed me to look at his<lb/>
record. If you have any questions, he is<lb/>
glad to respond. As a student, it is your<lb/>
obligation to find out about the can-<lb/>
didates and cast your vote to the student<lb/>
that will represent your opinions.<lb/>
Anne Northington<lb/>
Support Of Mann Voiced<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
I would ask all students concerned with<lb/>
the overall academic improvement of our<lb/>
University to support Mr. Drake Mann's<lb/>
effort in the upcoming SGA election.<lb/>
I have known Mr. Mann as a student<lb/>
for two years and believe his desires to im-<lb/>
prove the scholarly activities of the ECU<lb/>
student body to be genuine. Mr. Mann<lb/>
would like to 1) increase student research<lb/>
activities by having allocations in the SGA<lb/>
budget for such and 2) improve the inter-<lb/>
change between nationally and interna-<lb/>
tionally recognized scholars and the con-<lb/>
stituency at ECU.<lb/>
Selfishly, I would also like to see Mr.<lb/>
Mann's desires implemented. For these<lb/>
reasons, 1 ask all those concerned with im-<lb/>
provements of the academic quality of<lb/>
student life to support him when voting<lb/>
on Wednesday.<lb/>
Hal J.Daniel. Ill<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Allied Health<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or drop<lb/>
them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from the library.<lb/>
Letters to the editor must include the<lb/>
name, address, phone number and<lb/>
signature of the author(s) and must be<lb/>
typed, double spaced, or neatly printed.<lb/>
Letters should be limited to three<lb/>
typewritten, double-spaced pages. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obcenity and libel. Letters by the same<lb/>
author are limited to one each 30 days.<lb/>
A "Thank You" Would Have Been Sufficient<lb/>
By ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
Seldom, as you faithful readers know, do<lb/>
I write a column and venture onto the<lb/>
editorial page of this newspaper where I<lb/>
have worked for the past four years. Only<lb/>
when the spirit moves me do I sit down at<lb/>
the typewriter and try to crank something<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Well the spirit (or maybe the spirits) mov-<lb/>
ed me at the Inter-Fraternity banquet this<lb/>
past Tuesday.<lb/>
It was the typical banquet. If you've seen<lb/>
one you've seen them all.<lb/>
I'm sure that everybody has noticed that<lb/>
during the course of the year this newspaper<lb/>
has gone to great pains to promote any and<lb/>
all IFC sponsored events, especially their<lb/>
concerts, happy hours, and rush. Never1<lb/>
before has the newspaper devoted so much<lb/>
space, effort and time to the Greek system.<lb/>
Thousands upon thousands of dolalrs<lb/>
worth of free advertising were donated to<lb/>
help make all of the IFC events a success.<lb/>
There is the strong feeling here that some if<lb/>
not most of the IFC events would have flop-<lb/>
ped had it not been for the tremendous pro-<lb/>
motion that the paper gave them.<lb/>
We do not seek lavish praise for our ef-<lb/>
forts. However, we do feel that a very sim-<lb/>
ple "thank you" was due the newspaper at<lb/>
the IFC banquet.<lb/>
My mild disappointment turned into a<lb/>
furious rage when James B. Mallory, ad-<lb/>
visor to the IFC, took the podium and in his<lb/>
first remark attacked the newspaper referr-<lb/>
ing to a story we had printed earlier as<lb/>
"garbage "That's all it was, pure and<lb/>
simple garbage said Mallory.<lb/>
The spectacle of an administrator stan-<lb/>
ding in front of a crowd of some five hun-<lb/>
dred people and calling the newspaper<lb/>
"garbage" was disgusting.<lb/>
Mallory was quick in his condemnation<lb/>
of the newspaper that just a month ago<lb/>
editorially praised, defended, and com-<lb/>
mended Greeks on this campus.<lb/>
It was even more distressing that my own<lb/>
fraternity brother, the outgoing IFC presi-<lb/>
dent, did not come to our defense and did<lb/>
not offer a thank you to the newspaper. The<lb/>
whole affair was a bitter pill to swallow.<lb/>
The newspaper staff can recall many a<lb/>
night when the IFC president would come<lb/>
hot footing it into the newspaper office re-<lb/>
questing, and at times.almost demanding<lb/>
that we donate unbelievably large amounts<lb/>
of our space to accomodate the IFC , ana we<lb/>
always did it.<lb/>
For all of this we got no thanks, only an<lb/>
insult from Dean Mallory. There is no<lb/>
worse feeling than getting kicked in the<lb/>
teeth by the folks you've devoted so much<lb/>
help to.<lb/>
I think it also appropriate here to give<lb/>
honorable mention to the Student Union.<lb/>
I also attended that banquet. Again we<lb/>
have an organization that is heavily in-<lb/>
debted to this newspaper for tons of free<lb/>
publicity.<lb/>
With the exception of Charles Sune, no<lb/>
one at the Union, in my memory, has ever<lb/>
said "thank you" to the paper.<lb/>
It was frustrating to sit there at that din-<lb/>
ner and hear all the thank you's coming<lb/>
out; the notably absent thank you was the<lb/>
one due the newspaper.<lb/>
Now more than ever, we know who our<lb/>
friends are, and, more importantly, we<lb/>
know who isn't. 1 have a long memory and 1<lb/>
don't forget.<lb/>
We will remember those who have abided<lb/>
by the golden rule of doing unto other as<lb/>
they do unto you, and we will remember<lb/>
even longer those who have not.<lb/>
Televised Religion Pulls In The Masses And The Money<lb/>
By CHARLES GRIFFIN<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
Don't get me wrong. Religion is<lb/>
not such a bad thing. It should be<lb/>
observed or practiced in small<lb/>
doses, in private, away from small<lb/>
children who might be adversely af-<lb/>
fected by irrational adult behavior.<lb/>
Religion should be whatever a<lb/>
person wants to believe, based on<lb/>
his or her personal study of<lb/>
whichever religious, or even<lb/>
philosophical, texts turn him on.<lb/>
But that is not the way of the<lb/>
world. Religion is the property of a<lb/>
hierarchy, a special set of people<lb/>
who take the well-meaning words of<lb/>
ancient and safely-dead reformers,<lb/>
teachers, and philosophers and<lb/>
reinterpret them to suit the bends<lb/>
and twists of their own organiza-<lb/>
tion, their own goals and ambitions;<lb/>
these people do this to achieve<lb/>
power and wealth through the in-<lb/>
fluence of God, Allah, Jesus, Or-<lb/>
mazd, Buddha, Vishnu, Zeus, Thor,<lb/>
or Manitou, rather than through<lb/>
legality or any form of hard work.<lb/>
The only differences between Bil-<lb/>
ly Graham and Ruholiah Khomeini<lb/>
are their titles, their cultural<lb/>
backgrounds, and their targets or<lb/>
opportunity. Grahan enjoys the<lb/>
friendship of presidents and the<lb/>
fruits of that association in a coun-<lb/>
try that attempts to maintain a<lb/>
separation of church and state.<lb/>
Khomeini has spent his life in op-<lb/>
position to a ruler who led a state<lb/>
founded and deeply dependent upon<lb/>
religion, in attempting to shed the<lb/>
bonds of religion to a small degree<lb/>
and modernize Iran, the Shah<lb/>
destroyed the base of the religious<lb/>
leaders who supported him, and<lb/>
failed to consider the ability of the<lb/>
opposition to overcome him.<lb/>
In the United States, a man like<lb/>
Graham or Jim Jones is free to ex-<lb/>
ploit religion without having to<lb/>
worry about the government.<lb/>
Although politicians court the favor<lb/>
of religious leaders, they are not at<lb/>
liberty to tax or comment upon their<lb/>
activities. The same is not true in a<lb/>
nonsecular government such as that<lb/>
of Iran or Saudi Arabia. There the<lb/>
revenue and the legislation of the<lb/>
nation are often inextricably bound<lb/>
to the rules and leadership of the na-<lb/>
tional religion.<lb/>
That Jones went off the deep end<lb/>
should not be considered an excep-<lb/>
tion by any means. There are a<lb/>
number of charismatic leaders of<lb/>
religious movements who have been<lb/>
accused of or confessed to behavior<lb/>
that is  according to their own<lb/>
precepts ? less than ideal.<lb/>
Graham can easily be said to be<lb/>
the best known and least offensive<lb/>
evangelist in the world. He may also<lb/>
be the richest. Wealth in itself<lb/>
should not condemn a man or his<lb/>
movement, but the men by whose<lb/>
words most of humanity live led<lb/>
their lives close to austerity. No holy<lb/>
man in history that I can recall ever<lb/>
set any store by what he could ac-<lb/>
quire for himself; what benefit came<lb/>
his way went directly out to others.<lb/>
Even Mohammed, whose creed en-<lb/>
couraged plunder and slavery, kept<lb/>
little for himself when spoils were<lb/>
divided, but spent his portion for<lb/>
the religion.<lb/>
Contrast that to the head of a<lb/>
"Television Ministry' whose<lb/>
organization was in financial trou-<lb/>
ble recently: he readily accepted,<lb/>
from a follower, a love gift of a new<lb/>
house that cost about three times as<lb/>
much as the $50,000 home he had<lb/>
for the needs of him and his wife.<lb/>
Of course, he made a television<lb/>
appeal for more money. And he got<lb/>
what he asked for. In the United<lb/>
States, it seems to be easy to raise<lb/>
money for religious purposes if you<lb/>
use the radio or television.<lb/>
A few months ago, while I was<lb/>
changing channels on a Sunday<lb/>
morning, I flipped past the face of a<lb/>
grown man crying. I switched back<lb/>
to see what tragedy had taken place.<lb/>
He was saying: "Friends, we must<lb/>
have your help if we are to continue<lb/>
our worldwide ministry. All or pro-<lb/>
grams will go down the tubes if you<lb/>
do not send money now. There is a<lb/>
toll-free number at the bottom of<lb/>
your screen. Call it now. We have<lb/>
young men and women waiting for<lb/>
your call around the clock. They<lb/>
will take your pledge as soon as you<lb/>
call. You don't even have to have<lb/>
cash. Just tell them your Master<lb/>
Charge or Visa card number and<lb/>
how much you want to give. We will<lb/>
do the rest<lb/>
And he was crying all the time. I<lb/>
suppose he cried on the way to the<lb/>
bank, too.<lb/>
When things get quiet and atten-<lb/>
dance and donations drop at your<lb/>
hole-in-the-wall Church of the<lb/>
Blessed Redeemers Savings and<lb/>
Loan, the resident witch doctor<lb/>
figures it is time to have a revival.<lb/>
He calls in a hot young speaker to<lb/>
bring in the members and raise their<lb/>
spiritual emotions and lift their<lb/>
monetary burdens.<lb/>
Any fakir, priest, monk,<lb/>
preacher, or revereno doctor who is<lb/>
' in the business to make a living is a<lb/>
parasite, or a con artist with a legal<lb/>
scam, k was Robert Heinlein who<lb/>
wrote that the profession of shaman<lb/>
was the most lucrative and least pro-<lb/>
ductive of any that man had ever in-<lb/>
vented.<lb/>
These are the people who always<lb/>
want to set your morals, to plan and<lb/>
guide your education, to tell you<lb/>
whom to love and how, to tell you<lb/>
who should lead you, and with<lb/>
whom you should war. And for the<lb/>
favor, you get to support them in a<lb/>
style you will never be able to af-<lb/>
ford.<lb/>
But you get your reward m<lb/>
heaven, don't you?<lb/>
As bad as it is, it could be worse.<lb/>
Look at the governments and stan-<lb/>
dards of living in countries that are<lb/>
ruled by or heavily influenced by a<lb/>
priesthood: Iran, India, Spain,<lb/>
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey,<lb/>
and Bangladesh, just to mention a<lb/>
few. Other third world countries<lb/>
with as many problems have reac-<lb/>
tionary governments that are as<lb/>
harsh as they are because of their<lb/>
opposition to the entrenched and<lb/>
fanatical religion inhabiting their<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
At some time, you will read or<lb/>
hear someone say that Khomeini is<lb/>
sincere in his faith and does not<lb/>
understand the twentieth century. I<lb/>
say, BULLSHIT!<lb/>
One of the strictest prohibitions<lb/>
of Mohammed was the use of im-<lb/>
ages, the idolatry of some living in-<lb/>
dividual. Khomeini and his ilk ?<lb/>
the power- and money-hungry op-<lb/>
portunists of the Moslem world ?<lb/>
parade and plaster their faces<lb/>
whenever and wherever lacy caw.<lb/>
The Koran be damned. If you arc<lb/>
going to pull m the masses, ymt need<lb/>
 good press and an excellent<lb/>
pnofograplicf.<lb/>
!<lb/>
f.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057257_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
MARCH 27. 1980 Page 5<lb/>
Daniels Gives<lb/>
Intoxicating<lb/>
Performance<lb/>
Jack Daniels Silver Cornet Band performed Mondav evening taking the audience back to the Charleston and Dixieland Jazz eras.<lb/>
By MARK KEMP<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
All the posters said Mr. Jack<lb/>
Daniels was coming. But all I knew<lb/>
of Jack Daniels was his smooth, and<lb/>
mellow whiskey for which he's so<lb/>
famous.<lb/>
So Jack Daniels was coming <lb/>
coming where for God's sake? Hell,<lb/>
he comes to see me most every<lb/>
weekend. Unfortuantely, this was<lb/>
probably the reaction of most other<lb/>
students. The show just didn't get<lb/>
the correct type of promotion.<lb/>
As I wandered into the<lb/>
auditorium that evening, it was as if<lb/>
I had walked up to a small-town,<lb/>
outdoor gazebo some time during<lb/>
the latter part of the 19th century. A<lb/>
grey-haired fellow was sitting in a<lb/>
rocking chair casually talking to the<lb/>
audience as if he were an old friend.<lb/>
He gossiped about Mr. Jones and<lb/>
Mrs. Smith and told of church<lb/>
meetings and the square dance<lb/>
scheduled for Friday night on the<lb/>
old town square.<lb/>
After a few minutes, a group of<lb/>
casually dressed men and one<lb/>
woman walked on stage with their<lb/>
instruments. They looked as if they<lb/>
had just walked away from a hard<lb/>
day's work ? farming, smithing, or<lb/>
whatever. As they sat down with<lb/>
their instruments, the old fellow ap-<lb/>
proached them. After he introduced<lb/>
them, the excitement began to build<lb/>
These fellows may have looked<lb/>
hke laid-back old farmers, but<lb/>
believe me, they were all fine musi-<lb/>
cians in their own rights. They<lb/>
played the best turn-of-the-century<lb/>
cultural music I have had the<lb/>
pleasure of hearing in quite a while<lb/>
Dave Fulmer, the grey-haired<lb/>
man, is the recreator of the band.<lb/>
He is a historian, a musician, an ac-<lb/>
tor, and a writer. With a grant from<lb/>
the Jack Daniels Distillery, Fulmer<lb/>
researched the old original band for<lb/>
about three years, eventually<lb/>
recreating an almost exact replica<lb/>
As the lead character of the show<lb/>
and the conductor of the band<lb/>
Fulmer made Tuesday evening a<lb/>
memorable event. Unfortunately,<lb/>
the turnout was sadly disappointing!<lb/>
The band played a few old<lb/>
ragtime tunes such as "Dixie and<lb/>
other later songs like "The<lb/>
Charleston Between songs you<lb/>
could hear the quiet chirping sounds<lb/>
of crickets in the background. It set<lb/>
the mood for some of the quieter,<lb/>
See DANIELS, Page 9, Col. 3<lb/>
Carrboro Company Faces Misconceptions<lb/>
By PAM KELLEY<lb/>
Daily Tarheel Staff Writer<lb/>
Reprinted, with permission, from<lb/>
The Daily Tar Heel, March 19,<lb/>
1980.<lb/>
At first glance, the vice president<lb/>
of sales' office looks rather<lb/>
nondescript.<lb/>
A large desk occupies most of the<lb/>
space, and bookshelves line part of<lb/>
one wall. Most people wouldn't be<lb/>
able to figure out what kind of pro-<lb/>
duct the company sells. Unless, of<lb/>
course, they notice the large orange<lb/>
vibrator on top of the bookshelves.<lb/>
The vice president of sales is O.C.<lb/>
Bushnell. The company he works<lb/>
for is Adam &amp; Eve. It claims to be<lb/>
America's largest mail-order retailer<lb/>
of contraceptive products, and it is<lb/>
located right in UNC's back yard ?<lb/>
on U.S. Highway 54 West outside<lb/>
Carrboro.<lb/>
Through advertisements sent to<lb/>
the 500,000 people on its mailing list<lb/>
and placed in about 100 publica-<lb/>
tions ranging from Penthouse to<lb/>
Psychology Today, Adam &amp; Eve<lb/>
sells a variety of condoms,<lb/>
vibrators, sexy lingerie and sex<lb/>
manuals. Bushnell estimates the<lb/>
company sold between 3.5 million<lb/>
and 4 million condoms last year<lb/>
alone and grossed $4 million-$5<lb/>
million in total sales.<lb/>
Despite the risque nature of<lb/>
Adam &amp; Eve's wares, Bushnell<lb/>
maintains that the company itself is<lb/>
quite conservative. Its product line<lb/>
is pretty tame compared to the pro-<lb/>
ducts of some sexual paraphernalia<lb/>
companies.<lb/>
"Some customers want more<lb/>
graphic things than we sell or care<lb/>
to he says. "People have a<lb/>
misconception about us. They think<lb/>
we must be a swinging place to work<lb/>
for. But we don't have any orgies in<lb/>
the back room<lb/>
Even though some people may<lb/>
judge Adam &amp; Eve as a swinging<lb/>
place, Bushnell says its office on<lb/>
Highway 54 has never received com-<lb/>
plaints from local residents ? about<lb/>
what it sells or anything else.<lb/>
"We're well-liked in the<lb/>
neighborhood he says.<lb/>
And Adam &amp; Eve is liked with<lb/>
good reason. It employs 40 full-time<lb/>
and 40 part-time people from the<lb/>
Chapel Hill-Carrboro area and also<lb/>
contributes to local charities, such<lb/>
as Carolina Challenge and United<lb/>
Way.<lb/>
Bushnell says he's sure the com-<lb/>
pany is accepted much more readily<lb/>
today than it would have been 20<lb/>
years ago He doesn't get negative<lb/>
responses from acquaintances to<lb/>
whom he explains the nature of his<lb/>
work, and he even explained what<lb/>
he does at a recent family reunion.<lb/>
He's still a member of the family.<lb/>
Even though Carrboro residents<lb/>
don't seem to mind their unusual<lb/>
neighbor, both Carrboro and North<lb/>
Health. They were working on their<lb/>
master's degrees and were testing<lb/>
new ways of promoting and<lb/>
distributing birth control products.<lb/>
Prior to 1970, no one had con-<lb/>
sidered distributing contraceptives<lb/>
by mail, but those students made<lb/>
studies which shows that such<lb/>
"People have a misconception<lb/>
about us. They think we must<lb/>
be a swinging place to work<lb/>
for. But we don't have any<lb/>
orgies in the back room<lb/>
Carolina seem unlikely locations for<lb/>
a national sexual paraphernalia<lb/>
company. Adam &amp; Eve came to be<lb/>
located in Carrboro simply because<lb/>
it was the outgrowth of a research<lb/>
project begun in 1970 by two UNC<lb/>
students in the School of Public<lb/>
distribution would be well received.<lb/>
"The principle was to market<lb/>
birth control, to make it a desirable<lb/>
product Bushnell says. Popula-<lb/>
tion Services International, a non-<lb/>
profit organization that distributes<lb/>
contraceptives in overpopulated and<lb/>
underdeveloped countries such as<lb/>
India and Kenya, was an outgrowth<lb/>
of that project and is still run by one<lb/>
of the UNC graduates. Although<lb/>
Adam &amp; Eve also grew out of<lb/>
Population Services International, it<lb/>
id independent now and attempts to<lb/>
make a profit.<lb/>
The company purchases its line of<lb/>
products from many different<lb/>
manufacturers, but it doesn't ac-<lb/>
tually product anything. In its of-<lb/>
fices, orders are processed, put in<lb/>
packages (the standard plain brown<lb/>
wrappers) and shipped to<lb/>
customers.<lb/>
Adam &amp; Eve once worked out of<lb/>
a warehouse in Carrboro, but it<lb/>
outgrew its space there and moved<lb/>
to its present site in 1978. The com-<lb/>
pany sells by mail, but Bushnell says<lb/>
if a customer makes the trip out to<lb/>
Adam &amp; Eve's offices, employees<lb/>
will sell products directly even<lb/>
though it interrupts their processing<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Adam &amp; Eve has been successful<lb/>
because it offers unusual and high<lb/>
quality merchandise, Bushnell says.<lb/>
Customers like the privacy of the<lb/>
mail, and they can call in orders toll<lb/>
free. Everything carries a money-<lb/>
back guarantee, too.<lb/>
The company's product line has<lb/>
expanded since it began operating.<lb/>
Besides carrying condoms of every<lb/>
style, shape and size, Adam &amp; Eve<lb/>
features products such as edible<lb/>
panties, jaguar-print santin sheets<lb/>
and crotchless panty hose in its full-<lb/>
color catalogue.<lb/>
"But contraceptives remain a ma-<lb/>
jor part of our product line and cor-<lb/>
porate philosophy Bushnell says.<lb/>
"We want to make condoms fun,<lb/>
part of lovemaking instead of just a<lb/>
drag. If people are having fun,<lb/>
whether they know it or not, they're<lb/>
using contraceptives. And there will<lb/>
be less unwanted children<lb/>
Bushnell, along with other<lb/>
employees, tries to think of just<lb/>
about every way possible to make<lb/>
condoms fun. Although they don't<lb/>
manufacture them, they suggest<lb/>
ideas to companies that do. Their<lb/>
best selling products, Bushnell says,<lb/>
are Score, a condom designed with<lb/>
"pleasure probes and Texture<lb/>
Plus, another condom billed as "a<lb/>
perfect blend of contraceptive and<lb/>
French tickler<lb/>
Even though economists predict a<lb/>
recession, Bushnell says condom<lb/>
sales may even increase during bad<lb/>
times. His rationale: "If you're out<lb/>
of a job, you have more time to fool<lb/>
around, and you don't want any<lb/>
more children<lb/>
'Coal Miner's<lb/>
Daughter9 Review<lb/>
By ANDREA DIEHL<lb/>
National News Bureau<lb/>
"Coal Miner's Daughter" is a<lb/>
diamond in the rough ? romantic,<lb/>
yet sharp and tough, sparkling<lb/>
through the dirt. That the film is an<lb/>
almost gem is a tribute to the<lb/>
woman upon whose life it is based,<lb/>
Loretta Lynn.<lb/>
Hers is not a difficult story to<lb/>
translate to film: Dirt-poor coal<lb/>
miner's daughter falls in love with<lb/>
older boy, gets married at age 13, is<lb/>
a mother of four at age 18 and of<lb/>
twins years later, starts with a guitar<lb/>
and her husband's dream and<lb/>
becomes a country music superstar,<lb/>
her innocence, basic goodness and<lb/>
Butcher Hollow, Kentucky, accent<lb/>
still shining through.<lb/>
The funny thing is ? it's true.<lb/>
And so Loretta Lynn sits, in-<lb/>
nocence, basic goodness and But-<lb/>
cher Hollow accent in abundance,<lb/>
answering questions bout how it<lb/>
feels to have one's life up on the<lb/>
screen. .  .<lb/>
"I didn't see the movie until three<lb/>
weeks ago says Lynn, "when me<lb/>
and my husband walked in alone<lb/>
and watched the movie. The only<lb/>
scene I could remember after is of<lb/>
me cooking at the stove. I guest the<lb/>
rest was just too close<lb/>
Loretta Lynn draws her tiny<lb/>
frame closer in the overstuffed<lb/>
chair and tucks a leaned leg under.<lb/>
A denim vest covers a flowered<lb/>
shirt; her leather boots are not quite<lb/>
Western. She wears a necklace with<lb/>
the initials IWMAO on it, a reply to<lb/>
those who ask how she got where<lb/>
she did ("I worked my ass off").<lb/>
She does not look like a woman who<lb/>
has had six children, nor like a<lb/>
superstar.<lb/>
Neither does Sissy Spacek, who<lb/>
plays Loretta in the movie. Spacek<lb/>
perches on a cane chair a suite away<lb/>
in the Essex House in New York.<lb/>
Her hair, dyed brown in an attempt<lb/>
to make Sissy look even somewhat<lb/>
like Loretta ("It was more impor-<lb/>
tant that someone talk like me and<lb/>
was like me says Loretta), is back<lb/>
to its natural straight blonde. Her<lb/>
eyes are watery blue, and she wears<lb/>
no makeup, not even lipstick. She<lb/>
looks like a wisp of a 16-year-old,<lb/>
trapped temporarily in the worldly<lb/>
garb of a white silk shirt, grey cor-<lb/>
duroy pants and a cowboy belt. A<lb/>
blue sweater is loosely tied, preppie-<lb/>
style, around her shoulders; a gold<lb/>
tank watch and several rings are the<lb/>
only evidence that this is no teenage<lb/>
waif.<lb/>
After a day with Loretta again,<lb/>
Sissy's old Texas-born twang has<lb/>
switched to Kentucky-style speak-<lb/>
ing. "It's much harder to stop talk-<lb/>
ing like Loretta than to start she<lb/>
says with a giggle. She adds that,<lb/>
while catching Loretta's speaking<lb/>
style was easy, hooking into her<lb/>
famed singing style was a bit less so,<lb/>
even though Spacek had been sing-<lb/>
See COAL, Page 8, Col. 1<lb/>
'Book-Trader'<lb/>
Has New Idea<lb/>
By ROBERT ALBANESE<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
There's a store in Greenville<lb/>
where you can buy "Freak<lb/>
Brothers" and other underground<lb/>
comics, select from back issues of<lb/>
the National Lampoon, and buy<lb/>
best sellers for 60 percent of the<lb/>
cover price - the "Book-Trader"<lb/>
on Dickinson Avenue.<lb/>
"I used to teach school explains<lb/>
proprietor Mary Atkeson, "and<lb/>
then I had a baby. I didn't want to<lb/>
give her up to a baby-sitter, and I<lb/>
wanted a business that would let me<lb/>
keep her with me. So I opened the<lb/>
'Book-Trader and Nostalgia Newss-<lb/>
tand over on Evans Street. Now I<lb/>
have this store, a nicer one in Rocky<lb/>
Mount, and I'm thinking about<lb/>
another one<lb/>
Atkeson has a selection of some<lb/>
20,000 paperbacks, including best-<lb/>
sellers, romance novels, mysteries,<lb/>
science fiction and classics. She<lb/>
doesn't buy books, but she'll give<lb/>
you 20 percent of the cover price of<lb/>
the book toward a trade.<lb/>
Throughout the business day,<lb/>
customers come into her small, "no<lb/>
frills" store with armfuls of paper-<lb/>
backs they want to exchange for<lb/>
works they haven't read yet.<lb/>
"I got the idea for this kind of<lb/>
store in Jacksonville (N.C.), where<lb/>
servicemen brought it back with<lb/>
them from Europe explained<lb/>
Atkeson. "This is already very<lb/>
popular over there, and as the price<lb/>
of pulp for paper rises, it'll get more<lb/>
popular here<lb/>
Comic collectors and amateurs<lb/>
can go to the "Book-Trader" and<lb/>
choose from the largest comic book<lb/>
selection in the state east of<lb/>
Charlotte. Available are some titles<lb/>
from the 'Silver Age' of comics;<lb/>
some early editions of The Incredi-<lb/>
ble Hulk, The X-Men, and The<lb/>
Avengers, for example. These col-<lb/>
lector's items can be had for $10 to<lb/>
$20 per copy.<lb/>
"There are two kinds of people<lb/>
who buy The Hulk, Atkeson com-<lb/>
mented. "Either they're young kids<lb/>
or older, mature collectors<lb/>
"I don;t make a lot of money<lb/>
she continued, "but I am able to<lb/>
pay the rent. We do get a lot of<lb/>
books in. One advantage to running<lb/>
this type of operation is that you get<lb/>
books that have gone out of print.<lb/>
That's almost impossible to do<lb/>
otherwise<lb/>
Atkeson, the wife of ECU history<lb/>
professor John Atkeson, recently<lb/>
sold a romance novel to a publishing<lb/>
firm in California. "Now I'm work-<lb/>
ing on a science fiction short story<lb/>
she said, "which I'm pretty excited<lb/>
about. I'm going to send it to Isaac<lb/>
Asimov<lb/>
V<lb/>
A European idea has come to<lb/>
Greenvilie, and if you have cham-<lb/>
paign reading tastes on a draft<lb/>
budget, its time has come. Vive la<lb/>
<pb facs="00057257_0006"/><lb/>
THF EAST CARPI IN1AN jARCH 27. 1980<lb/>
SGA Elections '80<lb/>
-Election Procedures<lb/>
The election for 1980 SGA officers will be held on Wednesday,<lb/>
April 2. Students may vote in the following polling places: Allied<lb/>
Health Building, Student Supply Store, the Croatan, Minges Col-<lb/>
Useum, Mendenhall Student Center, and all residence halls. Election<lb/>
results are expected to be announced on the same night.<lb/>
Candidates For President<lb/>
Drake Mann<lb/>
Student government<lb/>
has got problems. It has<lb/>
for several years, but if<lb/>
1 can help it, it won't<lb/>
next year. For three<lb/>
years 1 have worked<lb/>
hard in the SGA's<lb/>
Judicial Branch and<lb/>
have carefully studied<lb/>
the other branches of<lb/>
student government. I<lb/>
know where things<lb/>
work and how .they<lb/>
work. As attorney<lb/>
general, I have made<lb/>
sure that the judiciary<lb/>
has been freed of its<lb/>
past political ties. My<lb/>
I work as chairman of<lb/>
the Joint Judicial Board<lb/>
has resulted in a<lb/>
reorganized Judicial<lb/>
Handbook and the for-<lb/>
mation of a new board<lb/>
which will check the ac-<lb/>
tivities of the University<lb/>
Police bi-weekly. Never<lb/>
before have steps like<lb/>
this been taken.<lb/>
If students see a can-<lb/>
didate with reasonable<lb/>
realistic goals they will<lb/>
support him. Here is<lb/>
my platform. I will<lb/>
push for an East<lb/>
Carolina student seat<lb/>
on the Greenville<lb/>
Utilities Commission. I<lb/>
would like to cure the<lb/>
transit problems by:<lb/>
buying used city buses<lb/>
to replace the long-<lb/>
distance equipment we<lb/>
now have. We don't<lb/>
need a new version of<lb/>
the old problem. There<lb/>
should be a Student<lb/>
Research Forum to<lb/>
fund student indepen-<lb/>
dent research. If the ad-<lb/>
ministration won't do<lb/>
it, we need to support<lb/>
student scholarship<lb/>
ourselves. The SGA ad-<lb/>
ministration should<lb/>
work to replace the<lb/>
walk-in vending<lb/>
machines like Soda<lb/>
Shop No. 2 with wort-<lb/>
while food facilities.<lb/>
Along this line, Allied<lb/>
Health recently held a<lb/>
holistic health con-<lb/>
ference which captured<lb/>
the spirit of the pro-<lb/>
gressive changes that<lb/>
- 'students toctay5 want.<lb/>
We need to unite with<lb/>
all facilities of the<lb/>
university to make our<lb/>
work at East Carolina<lb/>
valuable.<lb/>
Charles Sherrod<lb/>
We all know that<lb/>
politicians at the school<lb/>
level are disgusting. In<lb/>
many cases they are<lb/>
some of ECU'S inferior<lb/>
students that perform<lb/>
in a manner that has<lb/>
given our student<lb/>
government a stinking<lb/>
reputation.<lb/>
Last year I won vice-<lb/>
president claiming to be<lb/>
a ? positive-activist. Dat-<lb/>
ing my term I personal-<lb/>
ly had four wrecker ser-<lb/>
vices to lower rates for<lb/>
towing by $10.00. With<lb/>
the help of the<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Police Department,<lb/>
wheel boots now appear<lb/>
to be a good alternative<lb/>
I proposed to replace<lb/>
tow trucks. My idea to<lb/>
open Mendenhall park-<lb/>
ing lot to all student<lb/>
vehicles was accepted.<lb/>
By becoming a Notary<lb/>
Public I have already<lb/>
saved the students<lb/>
$100.00 and by chang-<lb/>
ing the academic<lb/>
catalogue student<lb/>
teachers now have bet-<lb/>
ter working rights. A<lb/>
Fall Break now is closer<lb/>
to reality due to my ef-<lb/>
forts.<lb/>
These . ac<lb/>
complishments could<lb/>
have been done by<lb/>
anyone if they were<lb/>
willing to work to im-<lb/>
prove the East Carolina<lb/>
Way of Life. When you<lb/>
vote Wednesday con-<lb/>
Candidates For Vice-President<lb/>
L<lb/>
Lynn Calder<lb/>
From having been in<lb/>
the legislature for two<lb/>
years as dorm and day<lb/>
representative, nad hav-<lb/>
ing been SGA secretary<lb/>
this year, I've acquired<lb/>
an understanding of<lb/>
student government<lb/>
and the vice-<lb/>
presidential position.<lb/>
One of the most impor-<lb/>
tant factors is that the<lb/>
vice-president has time<lb/>
to work with students.<lb/>
There are very few<lb/>
specific responsibilities<lb/>
of the job, and this of-<lb/>
ficer has the opportuni-<lb/>
ty to take up student<lb/>
gripes and problems<lb/>
and concentrate on<lb/>
resolving them. One of<lb/>
the definite duties of<lb/>
the vice-president is<lb/>
working on the Athletic<lb/>
Council, which is a<lb/>
chancellor' s advisory<lb/>
committee. With the<lb/>
newly passed athletic<lb/>
fee increase, I'm excited<lb/>
about the possibility of<lb/>
having an input in the<lb/>
way these fees are used<lb/>
in behalf of students. I<lb/>
hope that the increase<lb/>
can be used partially in<lb/>
behalf of women's<lb/>
sports and the Mar-<lb/>
ching Pirates as well as<lb/>
supporting current pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
The most important<lb/>
goal that I have for stu-<lb/>
dent government and<lb/>
East Carolina is the in-<lb/>
itiation of innovative<lb/>
and imaginative ideas.<lb/>
So many new concepts<lb/>
and concrete changes,<lb/>
such as a more pro-<lb/>
student book buying<lb/>
policy by faculty and<lb/>
the book store, can be<lb/>
put into effect with a<lb/>
little dedication. I am<lb/>
sincerely ready to be<lb/>
dedicated to the job of<lb/>
vice-president, as I have<lb/>
been to SGA for the<lb/>
past three years. Also,<lb/>
with this past ex-<lb/>
perience as well as being<lb/>
from Greenville, I have<lb/>
become acquainted<lb/>
with campus ad-<lb/>
ministration and feel I<lb/>
can work with them<lb/>
successfully. I have<lb/>
great confidence in<lb/>
SGA and what it can<lb/>
accomplish for<lb/>
students; and I'm very<lb/>
optimistic about a<lb/>
positive 1980-81 Stu-<lb/>
dent Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Al Patrick<lb/>
As a general class of<lb/>
people, vice-presidents<lb/>
have not been noted for<lb/>
their excitement for<lb/>
their job nor has the of-<lb/>
fice itself ever ac-<lb/>
complished anything<lb/>
noteworthy. This has<lb/>
not been the case with<lb/>
the job of SGA vice-<lb/>
president nor should it<lb/>
be allowed to be. I am<lb/>
excited about the job of<lb/>
vice-president and will<lb/>
continue to be excited<lb/>
about U My two years<lb/>
experience in the<lb/>
legislature have been<lb/>
productive ones and<lb/>
sider that my ac-<lb/>
complishments are con-<lb/>
cerned with the day-to-<lb/>
day problems we face as<lb/>
students. Don't accept<lb/>
the garbage, the impor-<lb/>
tant issues are where<lb/>
can I park, will 1 get<lb/>
towed, or is the bus<lb/>
coming so I can save the<lb/>
gas in my car that costs<lb/>
$2.00 a gallon.<lb/>
I ask everyone to find<lb/>
someone who knows<lb/>
me and find out if ?<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod is<lb/>
deserving of your vote.<lb/>
I believe they will tell<lb/>
you that I dispense with<lb/>
. the ctstp dhd try to<lb/>
alleviate the little<lb/>
headaches we face day-<lb/>
to-day as students in<lb/>
college.<lb/>
They will tell you that<lb/>
I am a positive-activist.<lb/>
they have shown me<lb/>
that hard work is the<lb/>
way to accomplish<lb/>
necessary goals. I pro-<lb/>
pose to use this ex-<lb/>
perience as I have in the<lb/>
past to further the best<lb/>
interests of the students<lb/>
of ECU.<lb/>
The welfare of the<lb/>
students at ECU has<lb/>
long been a major con-<lb/>
cern pf mine. Relying<lb/>
upon my two years ex-<lb/>
perience as chairman of<lb/>
the Student Welfare<lb/>
Committee, I feel that<lb/>
through the office of<lb/>
vice-president, a pro-<lb/>
ductive relationship can<lb/>
be established and nur-<lb/>
tured between the ex-<lb/>
ecutive and legislative<lb/>
branches.<lb/>
I feel that through<lb/>
my invaluable prior ex-<lb/>
perience, I am aware of<lb/>
the needs of the<lb/>
students. I promise to<lb/>
continue this awareness<lb/>
and to enhance it by the<lb/>
maintenance of an open<lb/>
door policy. Students'<lb/>
needs have always come<lb/>
first with me and will<lb/>
continue to do so.<lb/>
Phet&amp;te? JilX A0A?S<lb/>
i<lb/>
?M<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057257_0007"/><lb/>
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jHLEA<lb/>
janilNlAN MARCH 27.10 7<lb/>
SGA Elections '80<lb/>
Candidate For Secretary<lb/>
My name is Marianne<lb/>
Edwards, and I am run-<lb/>
ning, with no opposi-<lb/>
tion, for the SGA office<lb/>
of secretary. I feel the<lb/>
best way to<lb/>
demonstrate my<lb/>
abilities as a secretary is<lb/>
to tell you of my ex-<lb/>
perience as one. I have<lb/>
worked in the office of<lb/>
the Secretary of the Ar-<lb/>
my located in the Pen-<lb/>
tagon. There I received<lb/>
high recommendations<lb/>
from both the Office of<lb/>
Small and Disadvantag-<lb/>
ed Business Utilization<lb/>
and the Assistant<lb/>
Secretary of the Army's<lb/>
office (Civil Works).<lb/>
Presently, I am the Ad-<lb/>
ministrative Assistant<lb/>
for the Alpha Phi<lb/>
Sorority. This elected<lb/>
office deals primarily<lb/>
with secretarial duties.<lb/>
For two years now, I<lb/>
have served in the<lb/>
legislative positions of<lb/>
dorm and day student<lb/>
representatives. I have<lb/>
also served on the Rules<lb/>
and Judiciary Commit-<lb/>
tee as secretary for two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
If elected to the of-<lb/>
fice of SGA secretary, I<lb/>
will be available to the<lb/>
students to listen and<lb/>
help them in any way I<lb/>
can.<lb/>
Thank you! Vote<lb/>
Marianne Edwards for<lb/>
SGA secretary.<lb/>
Marianne Edwards<lb/>
j<lb/>
Candidates For Treasurer<lb/>
Danny O'Connor<lb/>
Like most students, I<lb/>
am tired of hearing pro-<lb/>
mises from politicians<lb/>
who have no intention<lb/>
of fulfilling their cam-<lb/>
paign obligations. I am<lb/>
not a politician. I have<lb/>
never served in the<lb/>
legislature, and I'm not<lb/>
a part of any political<lb/>
faction. It's time for an<lb/>
outsider, one who has<lb/>
the knowledge of the<lb/>
job to be done, as SGA<lb/>
treasurer. I have that<lb/>
knowledge and the<lb/>
needed fresh insights.<lb/>
In order for anyone<lb/>
to be an effective<lb/>
leader, they must first<lb/>
make the necessary<lb/>
commitment of time.<lb/>
The SGA treasurer<lb/>
must be available to all<lb/>
students. This may<lb/>
seem elementary, but I<lb/>
think it's worth men-<lb/>
tioning. Too often stu-<lb/>
dent leaders have failed<lb/>
to carry out this fun-<lb/>
damental responsibili-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
The SGA Confiden-<lb/>
tial Loan Fund or the<lb/>
Abortion Loan Fund,<lb/>
as it is more commonly<lb/>
known, is basically<lb/>
sound, although the<lb/>
procedure for acquiring<lb/>
such a loan badly needs<lb/>
revamping. It is not<lb/>
necessary for the SGA<lb/>
treasurer to be involved<lb/>
in the approval of such<lb/>
loans. The legislature<lb/>
has already established<lb/>
the loan fund. After a<lb/>
licensed physician has<lb/>
verified the pregnancy,<lb/>
the treasurer need only<lb/>
be responsible for the<lb/>
dispersal of funds. The<lb/>
least ' governmental<lb/>
involvement is best.<lb/>
The SGA Emergency<lb/>
Fund needs to be ex-<lb/>
panded to meet the<lb/>
needs of today's<lb/>
students. I propose us-<lb/>
ing some of the addi-<lb/>
tional revenues that will<lb/>
be received from the<lb/>
unfortunate recent in-<lb/>
crease in student fees to<lb/>
provide more emergen-<lb/>
cy loans and to increase<lb/>
the maximum amounts<lb/>
to $35 each.<lb/>
The position of SGA<lb/>
treasurer is in need of<lb/>
new blood. I believe I<lb/>
am that new blood. The<lb/>
'debating society" im-<lb/>
age of SGA needs to be<lb/>
changed. As an outsider<lb/>
I believe I can work to<lb/>
destroy the club image<lb/>
and establish an<lb/>
organization that will<lb/>
benefit all students.<lb/>
Kirk Little<lb/>
Historically, the job<lb/>
of SGA treasurer has<lb/>
consisted of making<lb/>
periodic reports to the<lb/>
Legislature, signing<lb/>
checks, and being one<lb/>
of the three members of<lb/>
the Summer<lb/>
Legislature. These and<lb/>
other duties are en-<lb/>
trusted to the treasurer<lb/>
by the SGA Constitu-<lb/>
tion. I propose to con-<lb/>
tinue to carry out these<lb/>
duties in addition to<lb/>
relying upon my<lb/>
legislative experience to<lb/>
further serve the needs<lb/>
of the students.<lb/>
Paramount among<lb/>
the needs of the<lb/>
students is a revamping<lb/>
of both the SGA Con-<lb/>
fidential Loan Fund<lb/>
and the Emergency<lb/>
Loan Fund. It is im-<lb/>
perative that the Con-<lb/>
fidential Loan Fund be<lb/>
restructured to virtually<lb/>
guarantee complete and<lb/>
total confidentiality<lb/>
and at the same time<lb/>
speed up what appears<lb/>
to be mind-boggling<lb/>
bureaucracy. The<lb/>
Emergency Loan Fund<lb/>
needs to be examined to<lb/>
ascertain a more effi-<lb/>
cient method of collec-<lb/>
tion of past-due loans.<lb/>
The SGA has had to<lb/>
" write-off? too many<lb/>
of these past-due loans<lb/>
from their books, loans<lb/>
that are derived from<lb/>
student fees.<lb/>
The SGA Legislature<lb/>
this past year ap-<lb/>
propriated in excess of<lb/>
$100,000 of student<lb/>
fees. Too often the<lb/>
Legislature was unsure<lb/>
of the circumstances<lb/>
surrounding a bill and,<lb/>
on occasion, even how<lb/>
much money it had left<lb/>
to appropriate.<lb/>
Through my ex-<lb/>
periences as both a<lb/>
legislator and a class<lb/>
president, I realize these<lb/>
problems and will work<lb/>
with the Legislature to<lb/>
alleviate them in a<lb/>
cooperative and pro-<lb/>
ductive atmosphere.<lb/>
Photo bv J'LL ADAMS<lb/>
??.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
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?<lb/>
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?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Vote<lb/>
For The SGA Candidate<lb/>
Of Your Choice<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
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April 2,1980<lb/>
? ? ?YYYV??? y jtMJQtJiiUOUMUMMMMMMM<lb/>
fj<lb/>
jmrjTJgg;<lb/>
Mmwff??iir<lb/>
<pb facs="00057257_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MARCH 27, 1980 Page 8<lb/>
Odom Gets Extension And Increase<lb/>
B CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
ports Editor<lb/>
1 he contract of East Carolina<lb/>
basketball coach Dave Odom has<lb/>
been extended and increased, it was<lb/>
announced yesterday by Athletic<lb/>
Director Bill Cain.<lb/>
'We're very proud of what<lb/>
Coach Odom has done Cain said.<lb/>
"I'm glad to say that we can reward<lb/>
him with a salary increase<lb/>
Odom's reward came after his<lb/>
first ECU team finished a surprising<lb/>
16-11 last season, the first winning<lb/>
mark in five years for the Pirates.<lb/>
I he happening is welcome news<lb/>
to persons concerned with the Pirate<lb/>
ECU Coach Dave Odom<lb/>
program as there had been little or<lb/>
no satisfaction with ECU basketball<lb/>
for nearly five years before Odom's<lb/>
arrival last summer as the new head<lb/>
coach. He replaced to controversial<lb/>
Larry Gillman.<lb/>
Cain mentioned that the event<lb/>
was big news. "People won't<lb/>
believe it he said jokingly, "an<lb/>
East Carolina basketball coach who<lb/>
gets his contract extended instead of<lb/>
cut<lb/>
Odom is the third head coach at<lb/>
East Carolina in four years. If<lb/>
yesterday is any indication, he may<lb/>
last quite some time.<lb/>
"Coach Odom has laid a strong<lb/>
foundation said Cain. "We lotok<lb/>
forward to the future of Pirate<lb/>
basketball with enthusiasm<lb/>
Odom, naturally, was happy with<lb/>
the news. "I'm elated he claimed,<lb/>
"that the administration and<lb/>
athletic council have shown pleasure<lb/>
with the job we've done.<lb/>
"I take this extension on behalf<lb/>
of everybody who worked with the<lb/>
program so diligently this past<lb/>
season?especially the staff and the<lb/>
players.<lb/>
The ex-Wake Forest aide gave<lb/>
much of the credit for the team's<lb/>
success to his young, but hard-<lb/>
working assistant coaches. "We<lb/>
must have the most sincere, hard-<lb/>
Softball Team<lb/>
Takes Double<lb/>
Bv JIMMY DuPKF.K<lb/>
Assistant Spurts Editor<lb/>
1 asl Carolina outlasted Pem-<lb/>
broke Slate 8-7 in the second game<lb/>
o! a Tuesday doubleheader after<lb/>
downing the vis rs 2 in the<lb/>
opener.<lb/>
Third sacker Maureen Buck open-<lb/>
ed the second game with a drive<lb/>
which shot past ih. PSU let!fielder<lb/>
for a triple. A single by Yvonne<lb/>
Williams drove BucV to the plate<lb/>
and freshman Mitzi Davis whipped<lb/>
a triple down the right field line to<lb/>
plate Williams.<lb/>
The Pirate offei ive continued<lb/>
with freshman Cyntl a Shepard leg-<lb/>
ging out another riple to score<lb/>
Davis. Shirley Brown's single to left<lb/>
droe Shepard in for the final TCI<lb/>
run of the inning<lb/>
Pembroke leadoff L. Huntley<lb/>
scored their only run of the inning<lb/>
after reaching base on an error and<lb/>
was driven in on a single by P. I ee.<lb/>
freshman catcher Iran Hooks<lb/>
opened the second with a single and<lb/>
later scored on a single by pitcher<lb/>
Angie Humphrey.<lb/>
Davis reached first on an error to<lb/>
open the third and Shepard follow-<lb/>
ed with a single to left. Robin Fag-<lb/>
gart's single cleared the bases as the<lb/>
Pirates took a commanding 7-1<lb/>
lead, but Pembroke State had not<lb/>
made the trip to surrender without a<lb/>
fight.<lb/>
The visitors made their first<lb/>
assault on Fast Carolina in the<lb/>
fourth with four runs on just one<lb/>
single and a pair of costly errors by<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
Humphrey, who was credited<lb/>
with her first win of the season,<lb/>
reached first on an error in the<lb/>
fourth and crossed the plate on a<lb/>
later error on Williams drive to the<lb/>
second baseman.<lb/>
Pembroke continued to cut at the<lb/>
East Carolina lead, scoring a run in<lb/>
the sixth on three singles and<lb/>
another in the decisive seventh three<lb/>
consecutive errors by the Pirate<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
ECU survived the seventh despite<lb/>
St. Augustine Wins<lb/>
working young coaches in the coun-<lb/>
try he said. "I wouldn't trade<lb/>
them for any three assistants<lb/>
anywhere<lb/>
Odom's aides are George Felton,<lb/>
an ex-South Carolina Gamecock;<lb/>
Eddie Payne, once a star guard at<lb/>
Wake Forest; and David<lb/>
Pendergraft, the youngest of the<lb/>
three and a former player at<lb/>
Catawba.<lb/>
"It's something the way they<lb/>
work together said Odom. "It's<lb/>
really amazing how close they are to<lb/>
one another after having worked<lb/>
together for only one year. It's<lb/>
almost like one is an extension of<lb/>
the other<lb/>
The always-modest Odom also<lb/>
gave credit to the Pirate players for<lb/>
their efforts in the recent successes.<lb/>
"The guys did all we asked o<lb/>
them he proclaimed. "I especial-<lb/>
ly want to pay tribute to our seniors.<lb/>
They wanted to go out on a good,<lb/>
classy note and I feel they most cer-<lb/>
tainly did<lb/>
The five seniors that Odom spoke<lb/>
of included the team's top three<lb/>
scorers and two of the top three re-<lb/>
bounders. Their loss creates a void<lb/>
that Odom and his staff must fill.<lb/>
"This is a crucial recruiting year<lb/>
for us he said. "We have to get<lb/>
some guys in here who can help<lb/>
right away because of the loss oi<lb/>
five players<lb/>
Odom commented that the<lb/>
1980-81 Pirate schedule would<lb/>
resemble the one from this past<lb/>
season. "They should look a lot<lb/>
alike he said. "It should, though.<lb/>
have more a traditional flavor<lb/>
will also be more balanced is <lb/>
won't have as main voids in i<lb/>
last year<lb/>
Odom also claimed that it<lb/>
necessity that the Pirates folio<lb/>
this year's success with another w<lb/>
ning season next vear. 'We<lb/>
establish a tradition he claim<lb/>
"We will be young but it is<lb/>
perative that we have a w<lb/>
season<lb/>
Two recruits have a I read) .<lb/>
mitted themselves to the Pirate<lb/>
several others are on the verge I<lb/>
Jeff Best. 6-8 from C B V<lb/>
and Quan Roseboro, j<lb/>
transfer from Florida,<lb/>
committments.<lb/>
Payne<lb/>
frelton<lb/>
endergratt<lb/>
runners on first and second with<lb/>
momentum in Pembroke State's<lb/>
tavor.<lb/>
Ihc first game was a domination<lb/>
b the 1 adv Pirates from the initial<lb/>
pitch.<lb/>
senior first sacker Teresa Whitley<lb/>
came through in the first inning with<lb/>
a two-out single to drive in Davis<lb/>
and Shepard. Davis forced an error<lb/>
b the PSL second sacker and<lb/>
Shepard followed with a single.<lb/>
Shepard again singled in the third<lb/>
and scored on a single by freshman<lb/>
Ginger Rothermel.<lb/>
Pembroke plated the first of their<lb/>
pair oi runs in the fourth on a single<lb/>
by K. I title, another by M. Hinton<lb/>
and a sacrifice by P. Tee.<lb/>
East Carolina's bats remained<lb/>
silent until Davis, an all-state<lb/>
prepster from Taylorsville, pounded<lb/>
out the first of her triples. Steady<lb/>
Shepard Davis across the plate with<lb/>
a sacrifice as the I adv Pirates padd-<lb/>
ed their lead at 4-1.<lb/>
Sophomore shortstop Mary<lb/>
Powell and freshman left fielder<lb/>
Ierrv Andrews singled to open the<lb/>
sixth for ECU. Powell scored on a<lb/>
sacrifice by Williams and Andrews<lb/>
crossed home when Hooks reached<lb/>
first on an error. Hooks tallied the<lb/>
final Pirate run on a single by<lb/>
Shepard.<lb/>
D. McMillan singled in the<lb/>
v isitors half o' hte seventh scored on<lb/>
A. Blake's single to right, but it was<lb/>
too little too late as ECU senior<lb/>
Mary Bryan Carlyle picked up her<lb/>
third win in as many outings. She<lb/>
also earned a save in the second<lb/>
game as she came on in relief of the<lb/>
victorious Humphrey in the fifth.<lb/>
"We certainly made more than<lb/>
our share of the errors in that se-<lb/>
cond game said coach Alita<lb/>
Dillon. "Errors get to be kind o'<lb/>
contagious.<lb/>
"If you play poorly and still win,<lb/>
then vou know vou're going to be all<lb/>
right<lb/>
East Carolina, now 5-0 on the<lb/>
season, travels to Cullowee to com-<lb/>
pete in the Western Carolina Tour-<lb/>
nament Friday and Saturday.<lb/>
.?<lb/>
Wolfpack Shuts<lb/>
Out ECU Women<lb/>
t<lb/>
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?<lb/>
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?Jyfr 0m.?,<lb/>
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ECU'S Karen Jeffreys Volleys<lb/>
By EDDIE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina women's ten-<lb/>
nis team lost to N.C. State 9-) Tues-<lb/>
day ? at least that's what the<lb/>
history books will show. The lady<lb/>
Pirate netters may have gained a<lb/>
moral victory in the process,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
"They played their hearts out and<lb/>
played the very best the could said<lb/>
a satisfied ECU Head Coach Bar-<lb/>
bara Olschner. "That's hard for an<lb/>
athlete to say, that they played their<lb/>
best even though thev lost<lb/>
One singles match typified the<lb/>
Pirates' overall effort.<lb/>
In the first tlight match, FCL's<lb/>
Lynn Grosvener was defeated bv<lb/>
Suzanne Nirschl 4-6, 7-5, 6-1. After<lb/>
Grosvenor had won the opening set.<lb/>
the built a 5-4 lead in games in the<lb/>
second set and needed only one<lb/>
point to win the set and the match.<lb/>
On the next serve, Grosvener hit a<lb/>
cross-court approach shot to<lb/>
Nirschl's backhand. Nirschl's return<lb/>
shot hit the tape and bounced awav<lb/>
from Grosvener and the game wen<lb/>
to deuce. Nirschl eventually won<lb/>
both that game and the set, then<lb/>
went on to win the match.<lb/>
In other singles play. Karen Jef-<lb/>
freys lost to Sarah Harmer 6-0, 6-1;<lb/>
Laura Redford was ousted by Susan<lb/>
Sadn 6-1. 6-2; Debbie C I i<lb/>
defeated by Ina Walston bv<lb/>
tical fc-1 scores; Claire Bake: ft<lb/>
Dawn Mavbeck 7-5, 6-2; . K<lb/>
I egette was downed hv . .<lb/>
Knapp 6-3. 6-2.<lb/>
OUchner commented that ht ft<lb/>
the Pirates could have won <lb/>
number one. four or five position<lb/>
the singles competition.<lb/>
The doubles action found State's<lb/>
Sadn and Nirschl defeated R. I<lb/>
and Grosvener 6-0. 6-0 in the rsi<lb/>
light matchup.<lb/>
The .second flig ded<lb/>
the most entertainment of the match<lb/>
as State's Harmer and W alston c<lb/>
ed bv Christine and Baker 7-6, 3<lb/>
6-4. The match took two hours<lb/>
complete as each side I<lb/>
controlling the action.<lb/>
State's Mavbeck and K . me<lb/>
out on top over Hannah dams<lb/>
Jeffreys 6-1. 6-3 in the fin.<lb/>
the afternoon.<lb/>
State Assistant Coach (<lb/>
Fahrer stated, "Todav the (S<lb/>
women) mav've had a little m<lb/>
perience to draw on.<lb/>
"We've scheduled some ol<lb/>
toughest teams around he con-<lb/>
tinued. "We're happv for our tc<lb/>
to play well and get a victory<lb/>
State picked up its first win ol ihe<lb/>
season after two defeats. FCl di<lb/>
ped to 0-4.<lb/>
May nor, Krusen In Tourney<lb/>
By ALEX CUNNINGHAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A very talented St. Augustine ten-<lb/>
nis team defeated the ECU mens'<lb/>
squad 9-0 yesterday at the Minges<lb/>
Courts.<lb/>
As often occurs in tennis, the<lb/>
team score does not indicate the in-<lb/>
dividual match scores. That was the<lb/>
case in yesterday's match. Every<lb/>
Pirate netter played hard and "hung<lb/>
in there all the way commented<lb/>
Coach Rose.<lb/>
In the number one singles<lb/>
bracket, Kenny Love fell to Tony<lb/>
Mmoh 6-0, 6-3. Mmoh is an All-<lb/>
Ameriean in the NCAA Division II<lb/>
ranks and the number two player<lb/>
for the Nigerian Davis Cup team.<lb/>
At the number two spot, ECU's<lb/>
Henry Hostetler lost to Bullus Hus-<lb/>
saini (the number four Davis Cup<lb/>
player from Nigeria) 6-2, 6-3.<lb/>
In other singles action, Keith<lb/>
Zcngle was dropped by Arthur<lb/>
Drumwright 6-2, 6-4; Ted Lepper<lb/>
gave Abu Abdullahi, the defending<lb/>
West African National Junior<lb/>
Champion, a run for the money<lb/>
before losing 6-4, 7-5; Mark Byrd<lb/>
was set back in a close match by<lb/>
Sanjeen Kassal 4-6, 6-4, 6-1; and<lb/>
Barry Parker lost to Ivo Niosa 6-3,<lb/>
7-6.<lb/>
In doubles, the number one ECu<lb/>
team of Hostetler and Love lost to<lb/>
Mmoh and Hussaini 3-6, 6-2, 6-4;<lb/>
Zengle and Lepper were edged by<lb/>
Drumwright and Abdullahi 6-3, 7-6<lb/>
(5-0); and Parker and Norman<lb/>
Bryant were defeated by Kassal and<lb/>
Niosa 6-2, 6-2.<lb/>
Semopr Hostetler felt it was a<lb/>
good match. "We could have<lb/>
played better, though he claimed.<lb/>
The Pirates, 2-3 on the season,<lb/>
play today at UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
The next home match will be Sun-<lb/>
day, against Slippery Rock College<lb/>
at 1:30 p.m. on the Minges courts.<lb/>
PIRATE POOP:<lb/>
East Carolina basketball senior<lb/>
stars George Maynor and Herb<lb/>
Krusen are competing this weekend<lb/>
in the Portsmouth Invitational<lb/>
Tournament, a four-day gathering<lb/>
of outstanding college senior<lb/>
players.<lb/>
Eight teams of the all-stars play in<lb/>
the tournament, which is set up to<lb/>
benefit some of the country's better<lb/>
players that are not considered to be<lb/>
first round draft choices.<lb/>
"This is a springboard for some<lb/>
of the lesser-touted kids said PIT<lb/>
committee member Lindell Wallace.<lb/>
"We have scouts here from nearly<lb/>
all the NBA teams and many from<lb/>
the Continental League overseas<lb/>
Wallace said the tourney was<lb/>
strictly for the benefit of the<lb/>
players. "We hope to give them the<lb/>
chance to show the scouts what they<lb/>
0<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
Maynor<lb/>
can do he said. "Many of them<lb/>
will go on to the NBA and most of<lb/>
the rest will play somewhere<lb/>
Last season ECU's Greg Cor-<lb/>
nelius participated in the event and<lb/>
was successful enough that he plays<lb/>
now in the professional league in<lb/>
Italy.<lb/>
Some of the more recognized<lb/>
names in the tourney come from the<lb/>
North Carolina Tar Heels of the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference. No less<lb/>
than four Tar Heel seniors, all of<lb/>
the Heels' seniors except Mike<lb/>
O'Koren, are participating.<lb/>
UNC's Dave Colescott, John<lb/>
Virgil, Jeff Wolf and Rich Yonaker<lb/>
join UCLA's Gig Sims, N.C. State's<lb/>
Clyde "The Glide" Austin, Carl<lb/>
Nicks of 1979 NCAA runnerup In-<lb/>
diana State, Jonathon Moore of<lb/>
Furman, James Tillman of Eastern<lb/>
Kentucky and South Carolina's<lb/>
Cedric Hordes and othersin the<lb/>
four-daY event.<lb/>
The competing players are divio<lb/>
ed into eight teams, all sponsered I<lb/>
different Portsmouth, Va. rr<lb/>
chants. Krusen and Maynor's t i<lb/>
played last night (Wednesday) ? lg<lb/>
with three other clubs.<lb/>
The winners of the i? e<lb/>
move on to further competition and<lb/>
are be allowed to pick up two<lb/>
players eachfrom the two losing<lb/>
teams. Players on the losing teams<lb/>
who are not picked up are finished<lb/>
for the tourney.<lb/>
Performing impressively in the<lb/>
Portsmouth tourney is most impor-<lb/>
tant to the 6-3 Maynor.<lb/>
The leading Pirate scorer in<lb/>
1979-80 with a 17.0 average,<lb/>
Maynor must soon decide whether<lb/>
to sign with the NBA's Chicago<lb/>
Bulls (who drafted him as a<lb/>
"future" in the fifth round last<lb/>
year) or to place his name back in<lb/>
the draft for this year.<lb/>
"If George plays well said ECU<lb/>
coach Dave Odom, "he will wait<lb/>
and let his name go back in because<lb/>
his stock will have risen. If not he<lb/>
will probably go ahead and sign<lb/>
with Chicago<lb/>
The Bulls are quite interested in<lb/>
signing Maynor said Odom and they<lb/>
have made him an attractive offer.<lb/>
Already playing with Chicago is<lb/>
Maynor's ex-ECU running mate at<lb/>
guard, Oliver Mack.<lb/>
The word is that Herbert<lb/>
Gilchrist, a N.C. 3-A All-Fas:<lb/>
guard, is on the wav also. Two for-<lb/>
wards. Lester Gill and Willie<lb/>
McNair of Dunn, also appear head-<lb/>
ed for Greenville next vear.<lb/>
An encouraging note in the<lb/>
Pirates' recruiting came last<lb/>
weekend when Charles Pittman, a<lb/>
6-9, 230-pound junior college all-<lb/>
star from California, visited the<lb/>
Greenville campus last weekend.<lb/>
Pittman is considered the top juco<lb/>
in California and is the one player<lb/>
that has the Pirate staff foaming at<lb/>
the mouth the most.<lb/>
The 6-9 phenom is also consider-<lb/>
ing Iowa and Maryland as possible<lb/>
homes for his final two college<lb/>
seasons. The Pirates base their<lb/>
hopes on the fact taht Pittman's<lb/>
mother lives in North Carolina and<lb/>
would like nothing more than for<lb/>
her son to nlav nearhv<lb/>
Lady Pirate basketball whiz<lb/>
Kathy Riley is in the running for the<lb/>
U.S. Olympic women's team.<lb/>
Riley was one of over 200 girls in-<lb/>
vited to the Olympic tryouts and is<lb/>
now one of the final 25 in the runn-<lb/>
ing. Twelve regulars and three alter-<lb/>
nates will be selected for the squad.<lb/>
Already secured a place on the<lb/>
squad is Nancy Lieberman of na-<lb/>
tional champ Old Dominion and ex-<lb/>
Player of the Year Carol<lb/>
Blazekowski, among others.<lb/>
Recruiting for the ECU basket-<lb/>
ball coaching staff is in full gear<lb/>
now. Already committed to the<lb/>
Pirates is guard Quan Roseboro, a<lb/>
Florida U. transfer and 6-8 Jeff Best<lb/>
of C.B. Aycock High School.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057257_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 27, 1980<lb/>
i<lb/>
Top-Ranking Officials Will<lb/>
Speak A t Justice Conference<lb/>
Several top-ranking<lb/>
officials of the<lb/>
American Correctional<lb/>
Association will speak<lb/>
at "Criminal Justice<lb/>
Issues and Concerns of<lb/>
the 'uo's a con-<lb/>
ference scheduled by<lb/>
the N.C. chapter of the<lb/>
American Correctional<lb/>
Association and the<lb/>
N.C. Justice Academy<lb/>
in Greenville April<lb/>
10-11.<lb/>
Coordinating the<lb/>
conference is the ECU<lb/>
Division of Continuing man Carlson, president Phillips Lyons, assis-<lb/>
tant to the N.C. At-<lb/>
torney General for<lb/>
Criminal Justice Af-<lb/>
fairs.<lb/>
Education. All in-<lb/>
terested citizens,<lb/>
volunteers, coorec-<lb/>
tional workers, adult<lb/>
and juvenile service<lb/>
workers, students and<lb/>
educators are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Speakers include<lb/>
Jack McCall, president<lb/>
of the N.C. chapter of<lb/>
the American Correc-<lb/>
tional Association;<lb/>
ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Thomas Brewer; Nor-<lb/>
of the American Cor-<lb/>
rectional Association;<lb/>
and director of teh<lb/>
Federal Prison Service;<lb/>
Amos Reed, AC A<lb/>
president-elect and<lb/>
secretary of the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Correc-<lb/>
tion; Anthony<lb/>
Travisono, ACA ex-<lb/>
ecutive director; Tom<lb/>
Parker, executive direc-<lb/>
tor of the National<lb/>
Criminal Justice,<lb/>
Washington, D.C and<lb/>
Participants may<lb/>
elect to attend three<lb/>
group workshops on<lb/>
such topics as the needs<lb/>
of special offenders,<lb/>
developing a positive<lb/>
climate in correctional<lb/>
institutions, im-<lb/>
aginative alternatives to<lb/>
incarceration,<lb/>
employee coping and<lb/>
survival, and the in-<lb/>
creasing role of women<lb/>
in criminal justice.<lb/>
Further information<lb/>
and registration<lb/>
materials are available<lb/>
from the Office of<lb/>
Non-Credit Programs,<lb/>
Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, ECU.<lb/>
Preregistration must<lb/>
be completed by April<lb/>
3.<lb/>
Daniels Gives<lb/>
Unique Show<lb/>
Continued from Page 5<lb/>
mellow songs. One very<lb/>
interesting song was a<lb/>
kind of instructional<lb/>
number called, "How<lb/>
To Build A Band It<lb/>
was a humorous song<lb/>
featuring every group<lb/>
of instruments on solo<lb/>
ventures. Tne two sets<lb/>
were somewhat<lb/>
chronologically arrang-<lb/>
ed so that the audience<lb/>
could detect changes in<lb/>
style. They covered just<lb/>
about everything from<lb/>
old war songs like "Bill<lb/>
Bailey" to irnprovisa-<lb/>
lional jazz to<lb/>
smalltown songs about<lb/>
whiskey stills. Most of<lb/>
original band's<lb/>
hometown, Lynchburg,<lb/>
Tenn.<lb/>
I know a lot of<lb/>
students at ECU are in-<lb/>
to nothing but sex,<lb/>
drugs, and rock 'n'<lb/>
roll. I can dig that;<lb/>
however, Tuesday<lb/>
night's performance<lb/>
was worth the time<lb/>
because it was a unique<lb/>
cultural experience.<lb/>
Face it, if it weren't for<lb/>
the evolution and syn-<lb/>
thesis of various styles<lb/>
of past music, there<lb/>
would be no rock 'n'<lb/>
roll today.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community<lb/>
for 54 years<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday during<lb/>
the summer.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ficial newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University, owned, operated, and<lb/>
published for and by the students<lb/>
of East Carolina University.<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Alumni$15 yearly<lb/>
All others$20 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices are<lb/>
located in the Old South Building<lb/>
on the campus of ECU, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Telephone: 757 6346, 6367. 6309<lb/>
Music Students<lb/>
To Perform<lb/>
Mbcdeer.<lb/>
HOT<lb/>
HAM<lb/>
rrSHAMANO<lb/>
ANPHAM<lb/>
HEAPING tiny<lb/>
PORTIONS. price<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN<lb/>
Pianist Stephanie<lb/>
Batson of Wilmington<lb/>
and vocalist Cynthia<lb/>
Denise Moore of<lb/>
Alton, Va senior<lb/>
students in the ECU<lb/>
School of Music, will<lb/>
perform in recital Fri-<lb/>
day, March 28, at 9<lb/>
p.m. n the Fletcher<lb/>
Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Their program will<lb/>
begin at 9 p.m. and is<lb/>
free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
A student of<lb/>
Tongsook Han of the<lb/>
ECU keyboard faculty,<lb/>
Ms. Batson will per-<lb/>
form the J.S. Bach<lb/>
Prelude and Fuge in F<lb/>
Minor, Debussy's<lb/>
Sarabande from "Pour<lb/>
le Piano" and the<lb/>
Mozart Sonata in A<lb/>
Major.<lb/>
Ms. Moore, a stu-<lb/>
dent of Antonia<lb/>
Dalapas of the ECU<lb/>
voice faculty, will sing<lb/>
an aria, "The Letter<lb/>
Song from Moore's<lb/>
Ballad of Baby Doe,<lb/>
and several songs:<lb/>
"Mein schoner Stern"<lb/>
and "Der Nussbaum"<lb/>
by Schumann, Faure's<lb/>
"Les Roses<lb/>
d'Ispahan<lb/>
Chausson's "Les<lb/>
Papillons" and "Le<lb/>
Charme "1 Love All<lb/>
Graceful Things by<lb/>
Thiman and "To One<lb/>
Who Passed Whistling<lb/>
through the Night" and<lb/>
"When I Was One and<lb/>
Twenty" by Gibbs.<lb/>
She will be accom-<lb/>
panied by pianist<lb/>
Janice Joyner.<lb/>
Percussion<lb/>
Percussionist Ed-<lb/>
ward Asten of Mat-<lb/>
thews, N.C, a senior<lb/>
student in the ECU<lb/>
School of Music, per-<lb/>
formed in the national<lb/>
finals of the Music<lb/>
Teachers National<lb/>
Association solo com-<lb/>
petition in Washington,<lb/>
D.C March 16.<lb/>
He competed in the<lb/>
percussion category as<lb/>
winner at the state com-<lb/>
petition, held in<lb/>
Winston-Salem last<lb/>
fall, and the Memphis,<lb/>
Tenn. regional event.<lb/>
Asten, a candidate<lb/>
for the Bachelor of<lb/>
Music degree in percus-<lb/>
sion performance, is a<lb/>
student of Harold<lb/>
Jones of the ECU per-<lb/>
cussion faculty.<lb/>
In a campus recital<lb/>
Friday, March 28, in<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center<lb/>
Recital Hall, Asten will<lb/>
perform several selec-<lb/>
tions he prepared for<lb/>
the MTNA competi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
His program will in-<lb/>
clude Matt Ward's<lb/>
"Recitative and Im-<lb/>
broglio William<lb/>
Draft's "Encounters<lb/>
IV arrangements of<lb/>
the J.S. Bach "Kom<lb/>
Susser Tod" and Par-<lb/>
tita III, a Toshiro<lb/>
Mayuzumi zylophone<lb/>
concertino and a<lb/>
modern jazz piece,<lb/>
Felix Arndt's "Nola<lb/>
He will be assisted by<lb/>
trombonist George<lb/>
Broussard, pianist<lb/>
Carol Wolfe and per-<lb/>
cussionists Mark Ford<lb/>
and Bruce Smith.<lb/>
The recital will begin<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. and is free<lb/>
and open to the public.<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAROUNA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
AT BARRE, LTD.<lb/>
L<lb/>
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The New<lb/>
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arrived<lb/>
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There's a selection like this at S&amp;S Cafeterias ? more than 100<lb/>
delicious things to eat, homemade fresh from scratch every day!<lb/>
Best of all, they're served in heaping portions at a tiny price.<lb/>
Mmmm  S&amp;S! Get a taste of the feast you can afford on these<lb/>
special days!<lb/>
THURSDAY FEATURE<lb/>
ONLY $79<lb/>
March 27th ??<lb/>
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with your choice of two<lb/>
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STEAKHOUSE<lb/>
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Come home to eat at S&amp;S ? we're located in the<lb/>
Carolina East Mall in Greenville, at the intersection of<lb/>
West Haven Road (U.S. 264 Bypass) and Hwy. 11. Plenty<lb/>
of free parking too.<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Serving continuously dally<lb/>
front 11 a.m. till 8 p.m.<lb/>
(8:30 Friday &amp; Saturday)<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
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758-1228<lb/>
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Dew it with<lb/>
Mountain Dew<lb/>
Mountain Dew from Pepsi-Cola, the totally<lb/>
 different soft drink with the lemony-fresh flavor<lb/>
that's like nothing else you ever tasted.<lb/>
TGIF<lb/>
4:00 - 6:30<lb/>
JOLLY ROGER<lb/>
foClfR by Nature's Way<lb/>
specializing in natural hair cuts for men &amp; women<lb/>
Present ECU Student I.D. Foi<lb/>
20 Off Your Next Haircut<lb/>
Offer good thru 4 12 80<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
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appointments only<lb/>
758-7841<lb/>
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Tired of running from one resume speak for you.<lb/>
place to another for job At CURRY, we make you<lb/>
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Package consists of:<lb/>
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Matching Envelopes<lb/>
Package Of 25 -11.95<lb/>
Package Of 50-$15.50<lb/>
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offer valid from<lb/>
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PEPSMXMABOTT.Ca<lb/>
OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
J<lb/>
?? <lb/>
 - ? ' ????'?? "<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057257_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 27, 1980<lb/>
'Coal Miner 9s Daughter Portrays Real Life<lb/>
Continued from Page 5<lb/>
ing, writing songs, and<lb/>
playing the guitar for<lb/>
years and years. "The<lb/>
hardest thing to do<lb/>
Spacek admits, "is to<lb/>
sing with the accent and<lb/>
phrasing of someone<lb/>
else<lb/>
On separate floors of<lb/>
the hotel sit Michael<lb/>
Apted, the charming<lb/>
British director making<lb/>
his U.S. film debut<lb/>
with a story so<lb/>
American it should<lb/>
have been frightening,<lb/>
and Tommy Lee Jones,<lb/>
the surly, sour co-star<lb/>
who plays husband<lb/>
Mooney to Spacek's<lb/>
Loretta. The press is<lb/>
playing musical chairs,<lb/>
going from one to the<lb/>
other, fielding anec-<lb/>
dotes and discovering<lb/>
some of the problems<lb/>
of making a film about<lb/>
the story of someone's<lb/>
life who is still very<lb/>
much alive.<lb/>
"I didn't want to see<lb/>
them film any of the<lb/>
family stuff Loretta<lb/>
says in her soft, very<lb/>
slightly slurry Kentucky<lb/>
accent. "On the last<lb/>
day of filming, when<lb/>
they were doing the last<lb/>
scene in our house, I<lb/>
walked in and almost<lb/>
had to walk off<lb/>
"I think it's pretty<lb/>
hard to put the time<lb/>
from age 13 to 43 (her<lb/>
age now) in one<lb/>
movie Loretta con-<lb/>
tinues. "It wasn't a<lb/>
success story really. It<lb/>
was a story of a rela-<lb/>
tionship from the time I<lb/>
was married<lb/>
Indeed, the film<lb/>
starts in a gritty town in<lb/>
the coal mountains of<lb/>
Kentucky when Loretta<lb/>
is 13. (The press<lb/>
material stated that, to<lb/>
look 13, Spacek had<lb/>
lost 20 pounds.<lb/>
Nonsense. "If I lost 20<lb/>
pounds, I'd weigh 70 to<lb/>
75 pounds says<lb/>
Spacek. "I'm 30, but<lb/>
it's not hard to act 13.<lb/>
It's mostly body<lb/>
movements,<lb/>
something's always<lb/>
moving)<lb/>
Apted had to build,<lb/>
in Kentucky, the set for<lb/>
Butcher Hollow, not<lb/>
because the poverty<lb/>
level had decreased<lb/>
any, but because he<lb/>
couldn't find a town in<lb/>
Appalachia that didn't<lb/>
have electricity lines<lb/>
and mobile homes all<lb/>
over it. And although<lb/>
Apted did aptly catch<lb/>
the dirt, the despair,<lb/>
the strength of family<lb/>
life in Butcher Hollow,<lb/>
he did miss one terrific<lb/>
and true scene: Loret-<lb/>
ta's grandpa and<lb/>
brother Junior, she tells<lb/>
us, for entertainment in<lb/>
front of the family,<lb/>
would play the banjo<lb/>
with their toes.<lb/>
That isn't the only<lb/>
thing that Apted miss-<lb/>
ed, according to Loret-<lb/>
ta. "There was one<lb/>
thing in the movie that<lb/>
1 didn't like. It wasn't<lb/>
true to begin with in-<lb/>
sists Loretta. "And<lb/>
that was when I first<lb/>
met Patsy Cline (who<lb/>
became her best friend<lb/>
until she died in a plane<lb/>
crash), when they have<lb/>
her drinking a beer in<lb/>
the hospital (after a<lb/>
previous accident). It<lb/>
was a much more<lb/>
touching scene in real<lb/>
life. All of her face was<lb/>
wrapped but one eye<lb/>
and she was crying.<lb/>
And she certainly<lb/>
wasn't drinking. She<lb/>
didn't drink that much.<lb/>
Patsy Cline was as<lb/>
good as gold<lb/>
"The problem is<lb/>
counters Apted, "that<lb/>
Patsy Cline was a very<lb/>
tough, raunchy, sexy,<lb/>
beer-drinking, man-<lb/>
izing woman. But Patsy<lb/>
in Nashville is a legend,<lb/>
she is held in tremen-<lb/>
dous awe. Loretta can't<lb/>
distinguish between<lb/>
telling the truth and<lb/>
keeping up a legend. I<lb/>
was determined not to<lb/>
sentimentalize Patsy<lb/>
Oddly enough, when<lb/>
the British director<lb/>
began the project, he<lb/>
had heard of Patsy<lb/>
Cline, but not of Loret-<lb/>
ta Lynn. With the<lb/>
opening of the movie<lb/>
and with her previous<lb/>
best-selling<lb/>
autobiography of the<lb/>
same name, it's pro-<lb/>
bable that few people<lb/>
will not have heard<lb/>
about Loretta in a cou-<lb/>
ple of months.<lb/>
That's certainly a<lb/>
long way from her<lb/>
publicity jaunt, when<lb/>
she and her husband<lb/>
took a list of country<lb/>
music stations (2600<lb/>
stations in 1961) and<lb/>
drove to each one of<lb/>
them and forced them<lb/>
to air Loretta's one<lb/>
record. A naive ap-<lb/>
proach, but one that<lb/>
worked because of the<lb/>
naivete of the couple.<lb/>
"Once, when we were<lb/>
promoting the record at<lb/>
first Loretta recalls,<lb/>
"I was on some radio<lb/>
program in Louisiana<lb/>
where people call in<lb/>
and ask questions.<lb/>
They kept asking how<lb/>
old I was, but I<lb/>
wouldn't tell. But then<lb/>
about 50 calls of this<lb/>
type later, someone<lb/>
asked what year I was<lb/>
borned (sic) in, and I<lb/>
rattled it right off. I<lb/>
went back to the car<lb/>
where Doo (her<lb/>
nickname for her hus-<lb/>
band) was listenin and<lb/>
he said that I was the<lb/>
silliest thing he'd ever<lb/>
seen<lb/>
But, in the true<lb/>
American way, the<lb/>
sweetness and light<lb/>
didn't last forever, and<lb/>
Loretta's wild road<lb/>
touring led her to popp-<lb/>
ing pills to calm her<lb/>
down between gigs. She<lb/>
is again naive ? or<lb/>
guarded ? in talking<lb/>
about that stage now.<lb/>
"1 never had no up-<lb/>
pers she contends. "I<lb/>
just looked around and<lb/>
had lost everything try-<lb/>
ing to reach something<lb/>
that was not my idea to<lb/>
begin with. I wanted to<lb/>
sleep, I didn't want to<lb/>
wake up. I'd get off<lb/>
stage and do nerve<lb/>
pills, and wake up long<lb/>
enough to do the show.<lb/>
"I was sleeping with<lb/>
one bottle and my hus-<lb/>
band with another ?<lb/>
my husband's was just<lb/>
a little bigger she savs<lb/>
with a laugh. "That<lb/>
when I had my little<lb/>
spill onstage ? about<lb/>
four years ago<lb/>
The scene she refers<lb/>
to has Sissy start a con-<lb/>
cert before a packed<lb/>
audience; she break -<lb/>
down and can't<lb/>
remember anv words to<lb/>
her songs, and tells the<lb/>
audience that she can't<lb/>
go on<lb/>
"The audience<lb/>
thought that Stss jv<lb/>
really going to<lb/>
savs Apted "It n?<lb/>
occurred to me to tell<lb/>
them that it wa the<lb/>
breakdown scene. The<lb/>
audience know<lb/>
Ever) single shot<lb/>
in the film is from that<lb/>
first take ?<lb/>
shows<lb/>
It does show, an<lb/>
is moments of truth in<lb/>
the film like this<lb/>
cause the m<lb/>
less "A Star is B<lb/>
than a porti<lb/>
refreshing, c<lb/>
woman, an<lb/>
strong<lb/>
and an incredib<lb/>
ethnic<lb/>
V' ei<lb/>
Top Ten Honored<lb/>
Ten top-ranking<lb/>
senior students in<lb/>
LCU's College of Arts<lb/>
and Sciences will be<lb/>
honored April 8 by the<lb/>
local Phi Beta Kappa<lb/>
Alumni chapter.<lb/>
Each student will be<lb/>
presented with an ap-<lb/>
propriate gift at a 4<lb/>
p.m. reception in the<lb/>
VanLandingham Room<lb/>
of the Home<lb/>
Economics Building.<lb/>
The students have<lb/>
achieved the highest<lb/>
academic grade point<lb/>
averages among ECU<lb/>
seniors in major fields<lb/>
of study recognized by<lb/>
Phi Beta Kappa.<lb/>
The students are:<lb/>
Milbrey Cate of<lb/>
Houston Texas and<lb/>
Dawn C o 1 w e 11 of<lb/>
Millers Creek, N.C<lb/>
biology; William<lb/>
Ballance of Fremont,<lb/>
N.C. and William Ball<lb/>
of Kinston, chemistry;<lb/>
Laura Adcock of<lb/>
Fuquay-Varina,<lb/>
foreign languages and<lb/>
literatures; Virginia<lb/>
Outlaw of Wilson,<lb/>
science education;<lb/>
Barney Jernigan of<lb/>
Colerain, N.C,<lb/>
mathematics; Terry<lb/>
Campbell and Rhonda<lb/>
Hooks of Greenville,<lb/>
psychology; and<lb/>
Virginia Johnstone of<lb/>
Chestertown, Md an-<lb/>
thropology.<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
MITCH<lb/>
BOWEN<lb/>
One Night Only<lb/>
Fri. March 28<lb/>
9 p.ml a.m.<lb/>
50 Admission<lb/>
Free Snacks<lb/>
Room 15 Mendenhall<lb/>
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urt cjukxjw u??mm<lb/>
AFTER 3:<lb/>
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Distributed W Jeffrey's Beer and Wine Co.<lb/>
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Parking in front and Rear<lb/>
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Compare and then call<lb/>
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IANQUET &amp; PARTY ROOM FACILITIES<lb/>
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The decision may well be difficult . . .<lb/>
but the abortion itselfdoesn'thavetobe.<lb/>
We do our best to make it easy for you.<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Test<lb/>
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Call 781-8880 anytime<lb/>
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Your Diamond<lb/>
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Spring Dance<lb/>
Friday April 11 8:30-1:00 at th.<lb/>
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featuring<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057257_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 27. 1980 11<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU Tracksters At UVa Mee<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
With the thought of<lb/>
a cold, windy voyage to<lb/>
Richmond only a<lb/>
memory, East<lb/>
Carolina's women's<lb/>
track team journeys to<lb/>
Charlottesville, Va.<lb/>
Saturday for the<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
Invitational.<lb/>
Team leaders return-<lb/>
ing from a year ago in-<lb/>
clude All-American<lb/>
Cookie McPhatter,<lb/>
long jumper Roz Major<lb/>
and distance specialist<lb/>
I inda Mason.<lb/>
McPhatter posted a<lb/>
2:14 in the 800 meter<lb/>
event at Richmond,<lb/>
w hich coach Laurie Ar-<lb/>
rant characterized as<lb/>
satifactory.<lb/>
"Cookie didn't run a<lb/>
2:14 until the last few<lb/>
meets last season said<lb/>
rrants. "So for her to<lb/>
run a 2:14 in the first<lb/>
meet htis year and<lb/>
under such extreme<lb/>
conditions is very good.<lb/>
"Cookie is a much<lb/>
smarter runner than she<lb/>
was at the first of last<lb/>
season<lb/>
Arrants, now in her<lb/>
sixth year at East<lb/>
Carolina, explained<lb/>
that national qualifying<lb/>
time for the 800m this<lb/>
vear was lowered from<lb/>
2:11 to 2:09; a mark<lb/>
McPhatter should be<lb/>
able to accomplish with<lb/>
little difficulty.<lb/>
Mason in the 5000m<lb/>
and Debbie Mulvey in<lb/>
the 1500m each posted<lb/>
personal best times at<lb/>
Richmond, according<lb/>
to Arrants. She added<lb/>
that Mason should<lb/>
qualify for the na-<lb/>
tionals before the end<lb/>
of the season.<lb/>
Junior Dawn<lb/>
Henderson returns ot<lb/>
add strength in the 220<lb/>
and to participate on<lb/>
the 400 relay.<lb/>
Freshman Irdie<lb/>
Williams of Fort Bragg<lb/>
joined the squad in<lb/>
January and will com-<lb/>
pete in the 220 and 400<lb/>
meter events.<lb/>
"She has a very<lb/>
smooth, natural<lb/>
stride analized Ar-<lb/>
rants. "She should add<lb/>
a lot to the team<lb/>
Eve Brennan, a<lb/>
native of Arlington,<lb/>
Va and Gwen Cancey<lb/>
will be counted on to<lb/>
add depth to the Pirate<lb/>
thinclads' attack.<lb/>
"Eve had a bad<lb/>
weekend said Ar-<lb/>
rants, " but she has a<lb/>
lot of potential.<lb/>
"Gwen had more<lb/>
technique to learn than<lb/>
Irdie, but I can see<lb/>
down the road she will<lb/>
be a valuable addi-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will<lb/>
again be fortunate to<lb/>
have the survices of<lb/>
junior Lydia Rountree<lb/>
who competed as a<lb/>
freshman but sat out<lb/>
the 1979 campaign to<lb/>
concentrate on basket-<lb/>
ball. The Elm City<lb/>
hative will compete in<lb/>
the 100m sprints and<lb/>
will be counted on as<lb/>
the anchor of the 400m<lb/>
relay.<lb/>
"I agreed with<lb/>
Lydia's decision last<lb/>
year and 1 still do<lb/>
says Arrants.<lb/>
"Looking back, it was<lb/>
the right thing to do.<lb/>
We're glad to have her<lb/>
back and 1 think she's<lb/>
probably in better con-<lb/>
dition than she was as a<lb/>
freshman<lb/>
Top teams in the<lb/>
U.Va. Invitational will<lb/>
be Maryland, East Ten-<lb/>
nessee State, Pittsburg,<lb/>
Deleware State and<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
"We're not after<lb/>
team titles this year<lb/>
said Arrants. "We<lb/>
don't have the person-<lb/>
nel to go after the team<lb/>
titiles so we want to win<lb/>
as many individual<lb/>
titles as we can.<lb/>
"We'd like to win<lb/>
five this weekend and<lb/>
continue to build dur-<lb/>
ingthe season<lb/>
Arrants particularly<lb/>
includes the long jump,<lb/>
400m, 800m, mile and<lb/>
sprint medley relays in<lb/>
the list of hopeful vic-<lb/>
tories.<lb/>
"1 feel like we've pro-<lb/>
bably got the strongest<lb/>
sprint medley relay<lb/>
team in the state says<lb/>
Arrants.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
have three other meets<lb/>
before the NCAIAW<lb/>
Championships in<lb/>
Chapel Hill-<lb/>
Schembechler Complains<lb/>
DETROIT (AP) ?<lb/>
Bo Schembechler says<lb/>
team discipline is<lb/>
nobody's business but<lb/>
his, and the Michigan<lb/>
football coach says the<lb/>
media "maliciously<lb/>
crucified" five players<lb/>
suspended for alleged<lb/>
training violations.<lb/>
"We must maintain<lb/>
discipline. When I do<lb/>
discipline anyone, I<lb/>
want it kept in the<lb/>
family Schembechler<lb/>
said Friday as he ad-<lb/>
dressed a luncheon of<lb/>
the Adcraft Club of<lb/>
Detroit.<lb/>
Schembechler added<lb/>
there has been<lb/>
"tremendous media<lb/>
damage in reporting<lb/>
every little thing whethr<lb/>
it be true or not and<lb/>
they (the media) are not<lb/>
held liable. I tell our<lb/>
football players that<lb/>
they are not regular<lb/>
students and everybody<lb/>
wants a piece of them.<lb/>
"If they were regular<lb/>
students, we wouldn't<lb/>
have had this thing two<lb/>
weeks ago he added.<lb/>
The five players were violations believed to<lb/>
suspended for training have involved drugs.<lb/>
BRINGS BACK<lb/>
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TALK OF THE TOWN<lb/>
Sponsored By Our Following Friend<lb/>
3-6 On March 28th 1980<lb/>
1Shirley's Cut &amp; Style ShopStereo Village<lb/>
Taco CidThe Pipeline Restaurant<lb/>
Coca Cola Bottling Co. OfPapa Katz<lb/>
GreenvilleArbor Room at The Ramada Inn<lb/>
The New BarPepsi Cola Bottling Co. of<lb/>
1 Domino's PizzaGreenville<lb/>
IRoffler of Greenville Hair 1 Designers 1 Pipe Dreams 1 Tree House RestaurantKing Sandwich Rick's Guitar Shop Jason's Restaurant<lb/>
il <lb/>
ast<lb/>
:?<lb/>
. ?:??.?<lb/>
free deliver<lb/>
free deliver<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
University Book Exchange<lb/>
Pizza Inn<lb/>
Elbo Room<lb/>
Blue Bell Factory Outlet<lb/>
Fosdick's 1890 Seafood<lb/>
The Pride Car Wash<lb/>
Marathon Restaurant<lb/>
Etna on 264 ByPast<lb/>
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Domino's Pizza thinks<lb/>
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"?' -V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057257_0012"/><lb/>
rvri ????<lb/>
12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 27,<lb/>
1980<lb/>
Pizza Hit<lb/>
Classic Set<lb/>
WICHITA, Kan. ?<lb/>
East coach Ray Meyer<lb/>
of DePaul needed a<lb/>
center and a guard to<lb/>
balance his squad for<lb/>
the Ninth Annual Pizza<lb/>
Hut Basketball Classic,<lb/>
and West coach Tex<lb/>
Winter of Long Beach<lb/>
State needed a pair of<lb/>
big men for his squad.<lb/>
Each got what they<lb/>
needed in the at-large<lb/>
selections whic com-<lb/>
plete the rosters for the<lb/>
charity game scheduled<lb/>
for March 29 in Las<lb/>
Vegas.<lb/>
In the East, Ail-<lb/>
Americans Roosevelt<lb/>
Bouie of Syracuse and<lb/>
Reggie Carter of St.<lb/>
John's were named to<lb/>
the team. Bouie is a 6-11<lb/>
center and Carter a 6-3<lb/>
guard. Kurt Nimphius,<lb/>
a 6-10 center from<lb/>
Arizona State, and<lb/>
Michael Wiley, a 6-9<lb/>
forward from Long<lb/>
Beach State, were nam-<lb/>
ed to fill the West<lb/>
roster.<lb/>
Eight spots on each<lb/>
squad are determined<lb/>
by fan balloting at Piz-<lb/>
za Hut restaurants<lb/>
across the country and<lb/>
two spots are filled as<lb/>
at-large selections.<lb/>
Two other players,<lb/>
Marquette guard Sam<lb/>
Worthen and Mississip-<lb/>
pi State center Rickey<lb/>
Brown, have been nam-<lb/>
ed to the East team<lb/>
because Purdue's Joe<lb/>
Barry Carroll and Ken-<lb/>
tucky's Kyle Macy,<lb/>
both of whom finished<lb/>
in the top eight in<lb/>
voting for the East,<lb/>
elected not to par-<lb/>
ticipate.<lb/>
In addition to those<lb/>
named to the squad to-<lb/>
day, the East boasts<lb/>
Louisville guard Dar-<lb/>
rell Griffith, Indiana<lb/>
forward Mike Wood-<lb/>
son, North Carolina<lb/>
State forward Hawkeye<lb/>
Whitney, Ohio State<lb/>
guard Kelvin Ransey,<lb/>
North Carolina for-<lb/>
ward Mike O'Koren,<lb/>
and LaSalle forward<lb/>
Michael Brooks.<lb/>
Hines Sets Records<lb/>
Two international<lb/>
records were set by<lb/>
Reggie Hines of<lb/>
Wilson, a sophomore<lb/>
at ECU, as he paced the<lb/>
U.S. Soccer team to a<lb/>
second place finish in<lb/>
the World Games for<lb/>
the Deaf Qualifying<lb/>
Tournament in Mexico<lb/>
City.<lb/>
Selected as one of the<lb/>
tournament's four<lb/>
outstanding players,<lb/>
Hines set the record for<lb/>
the most shots at goal<lb/>
with a total of 17, in-<lb/>
cluding two goals. He<lb/>
also scored the first<lb/>
goal made by the U.S.<lb/>
team in the competi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The matches were<lb/>
played to determine<lb/>
which nation will repre-<lb/>
sent Group I in the 14th<lb/>
World Games for the<lb/>
Deaf (Deaf Olympics)<lb/>
at Cologne, West Ger-<lb/>
many in August, 1981.<lb/>
Group I is comprised of<lb/>
the United States,<lb/>
Canada, Mexico and<lb/>
Australia.<lb/>
In taking second<lb/>
place, Hines and his<lb/>
teammates defeated<lb/>
Australia 6-4, won by<lb/>
default against Canada<lb/>
and Isot to Mexico 4-0.<lb/>
His participation in<lb/>
the tournament was<lb/>
sponsored by J.D. Lit-<lb/>
tle Construction Com-<lb/>
pany of Wilson.<lb/>
A transfer student<lb/>
from Averett College in<lb/>
Danville, Va Hines is<lb/>
pursuing a double ma-<lb/>
jor in physical educa-<lb/>
tion and social work at<lb/>
ECU. He also par-<lb/>
ticipates in the ECU<lb/>
Program for Hearing<lb/>
Impaired Students and<lb/>
plans to tryout for the<lb/>
ECU soccer team when<lb/>
he becomes eligible<lb/>
Photo by KIP SLOAN<lb/>
ECU Softball Pitcher Mary Bryan Carlyle<lb/>
Emory Tabs<lb/>
Bengala Asst.<lb/>
<lb/>
.? 4M<lb/>
rut p<lb/>
? 4 "<lb/>
Spring Football Practice Action<lb/>
Photo by CHAP GURLEY<lb/>
Jim Bengala has been<lb/>
named by East<lb/>
Carolina head football<lb/>
coach Ed Emory to<lb/>
take over the assistant<lb/>
coaching position<lb/>
vacated last week when<lb/>
Steve Schnall resigned<lb/>
to take a coaching posi-<lb/>
tion at Princeton<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Bengala, who will<lb/>
coach the offensive<lb/>
backs, is a graduate of<lb/>
Miami (Ohio) Universi-<lb/>
ty. He completed his<lb/>
collegiete playing<lb/>
career in 1971, playing<lb/>
under coaches Bo<lb/>
Schembeckler, now of<lb/>
Michigan, and Bill<lb/>
Mallory. He served as<lb/>
team captain his senior<lb/>
season.<lb/>
From 1973-74<lb/>
Bengala served as<lb/>
quarterback and<lb/>
receiver coach at<lb/>
Western Connecticut<lb/>
State University. He<lb/>
moved to Michigan and<lb/>
served under<lb/>
Schembeckler as a<lb/>
graduate assistant in<lb/>
charge of defensive<lb/>
backs.<lb/>
For the past five<lb/>
years, he has been the<lb/>
offensive backfield<lb/>
coach at Western<lb/>
Michigan Universitv.<lb/>
Bengala and his wife,<lb/>
Deborah, have one<lb/>
daughter, Beth.<lb/>
TGIF<lb/>
4:00-6:30<lb/>
JOLLY ROGER<lb/>
: winj&amp;e) s<lb/>
?U?<lb/>
FAST FREE<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
DELIVERY<lb/>
Dine-in<lb/>
Carry-out<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
.ow featuring<lb/>
-Hand Pain ted Easter Eggs<lb/>
-Easter Cards<lb/>
-Easter Moveties<lb/>
Don V forget Eastertime Gala<lb/>
on the Mall this ueekend<lb/>
FR Senior Citizens Easter Egg Hunt<lb/>
FRlSATStale Shou<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FORWENT<lb/>
FOR RENT: A one bedroom fur<lb/>
rushed apartment on Student<lb/>
Street near campus; available<lb/>
from May 17 until August 22; re-<lb/>
quire quiet non-smoker; call<lb/>
752 3801 after 10 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMS AVAILABLE: Two rooms<lb/>
and or Duplex for rent. Excellent<lb/>
location, very reasonable. Call<lb/>
7S8 79?1. Keep Trying.<lb/>
APARTMENTS FOR RENT:<lb/>
Duplexes and Townhouse $17S to<lb/>
S270 per month Call 7S2-641S 9:00<lb/>
til 5:00.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE: for three<lb/>
bedroom house. Lease expires<lb/>
June 1st. $92 month and one-third<lb/>
Utilities. 752 7414.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: needed<lb/>
summer and fall to share two<lb/>
bedroom apartment at Village<lb/>
Green. Call Tyra at 7SB-22S2.<lb/>
APARTMENT AVAILABLE:<lb/>
May 15 thru August 15. Oakmont<lb/>
Square Apartments. Call 7S4-3M9<lb/>
or 758 8925<lb/>
AVAILABLE APRIL FIRST:<lb/>
Spaciou. room for non-smoker.<lb/>
Near JarvisVtorm $90. 752 5528<lb/>
WANTED TO SUBLEASE: tor<lb/>
this summer a furnished apart-<lb/>
ment. Call 7S8-9481.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING: Day or<lb/>
Night, individual or groups. Tri-<lb/>
County Stables Grimesland. Call<lb/>
752 493<lb/>
BEST PRICES: paid for class<lb/>
rings, gold, and sterling. Men's<lb/>
medium class ring S5S-S70. Sterl-<lb/>
ing fork tit. Call John after 3:00<lb/>
752 4013.<lb/>
TYPING: dissertations, theses,<lb/>
and term papers. Excellent skills<lb/>
and reasonable rates. Call<lb/>
752-1724.<lb/>
RIDER NEEDED to share ex-<lb/>
penses and good times. Leaving<lb/>
tor N.E. New Mexico in mid-May.<lb/>
Return in August. Call 75M2M<lb/>
after 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
TYPING: Speedy service,<lb/>
reasonable rates. Call Pant at<lb/>
757H52 before S:M.<lb/>
DIVING GEAR NEEDED:<lb/>
Regulator, wet suit, weight belt.<lb/>
Call Sam at 758 3918<lb/>
ARABIC BELLY DANCE<lb/>
CLASSES: Call Donna Mfhittey<lb/>
752 OfJi. Creative fun exercise.<lb/>
LOST: Timex watch. Gold, LCD<lb/>
display, if found please call Cathy<lb/>
?t m mi Reward offered sen<lb/>
' vatwe.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Cordoba fully<lb/>
loaded. Yellow with Landau top.<lb/>
Mint condition. Will sacrifice for<lb/>
$3500. Call 1 (919) 734-3178 or<lb/>
l(919)-734-7449. (Goldsboro).<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 $100. Call<lb/>
7S2-7817.<lb/>
NEED EXTRA CASH! for sale<lb/>
Sewing machine with carrying<lb/>
case. Excellent condition. S75<lb/>
Call 919 793 3998 after 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Cutless,<lb/>
sunroof,power brakes, power<lb/>
steering, power windows and<lb/>
locks, cruise co-?roM. Call Brian<lb/>
752-0379.<lb/>
Distributed<lb/>
By<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
Beverage Co.<lb/>
Goldsboro<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
?<lb/>
Heineken<lb/>
HOLLAND BEER<lb/>
THE 1 IMPORTED BEER IN AMERICA<lb/>
itcheiTs Hair Styling<lb/>
ir- T Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
-HGreenville, North Carolina 7834<lb/>
Male Student Special<lb/>
FOSDICK'S<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
?. . ? ? Thur?. Night<lb/>
No Cu-I Perm I Special?<lb/>
q. 50 " OYSTERS ?4.95<lb/>
Now Only $22.50 Hfloiwder ?3.so<lb/>
offer good thru Saturday<lb/>
756-2950 756-4042<lb/>
TROUT<lb/>
PERCH<lb/>
?2.95<lb/>
?2.95<lb/>
5the name<lb/>
DROPPER<lb/>
INC<lb/>
"1<lb/>
Thursday, Friday,<lb/>
Come to<lb/>
for the best of<lb/>
ALLAN HANDELMAN<lb/>
and<lb/>
Have a Happy from<lb/>
8:00-10:00 no Admission<lb/>
Join us at 4:00 on Friday<lb/>
and Have a Happy!<lb/>
W. '<lb/>
7<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
?200 Wardrobe<lb/>
Register for a FREE $200<lb/>
Wardrobe (luring tha<lb/>
month of March No pur-<lb/>
chase necessary You do<lb/>
not have to b present to<lb/>
Moderate &amp; Better<lb/>
Sportswear<lb/>
DESIGNER T-TOPS<lb/>
SPORT DRESSES<lb/>
Signature Jeans<lb/>
SPRING SWEATERS<lb/>
30T.50<lb/>
Shop Monday thru Saturday<lb/>
10 A.M. To9 P.M.<lb/>
756-4001<lb/>
FAMOUS LABELS FOR LESS<lb/>
GRKNVIUI SQUARE<lb/>
GRHNVUU.N.C<lb/>
all you can eat<lb/>
!?? take-outs plea.<lb/>
Umml includes:<lb/>
reach Fries Celc iliw,<lb/>
Httshfwppics,<lb/>
fig<lb/>
We are proud to<lb/>
announce that we<lb/>
have added<lb/>
one of the<lb/>
AREAS FINEST<lb/>
SALAD BARS<lb/>
tor your<lb/>
dining pleasure<lb/>
OPEN FOR LUNCH<lb/>
Dally nan<lb/>
Snn. - Thar. <lb/>
4&amp;o-eoo<lb/>
rl. and Sat<lb/>
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