<?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">
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<pb facs="00057262_0001"/>
?he lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 54 Sogf<lb/>
'81 To See<lb/>
Top School<lb/>
Enrollment<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) ?<lb/>
The National Center for Education<lb/>
Statistics, in its annual survey, is<lb/>
predicting that college enrollment<lb/>
will hit an all-time high in 1981<lb/>
before falling to levels that could pit<lb/>
four-year private colleges against<lb/>
two-year community colleges in a<lb/>
battle for older, part-time students.<lb/>
The NCES expects 11.69 million<lb/>
college students to enroll in 1982, a<lb/>
record number. By 1988, however,<lb/>
it sees enrollment shrinking to<lb/>
11.048 million.<lb/>
It projects that small private col-<lb/>
leges will lose the greatest percen-<lb/>
tage of students. Private school<lb/>
enrollment should fall to 2.294<lb/>
million in 1988, down from 2.49<lb/>
million projected for 1981 and 2.478<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
NCES analysts predict that the<lb/>
private four-year schools will have<lb/>
to attract more older, part-time<lb/>
students to compensate for their<lb/>
losses.<lb/>
Two-year community colleges,<lb/>
though, have been the most suc-<lb/>
cessful recruiting older, part-time<lb/>
students. One reason, according t.<lb/>
the study called "Projection of<lb/>
Education Statistics to 1988-89 is<lb/>
that community colleges are usually<lb/>
in urban areas convenient to com-<lb/>
muter students.<lb/>
Older, part-time students current-<lb/>
ly account for 40 percent of the na-<lb/>
tion's two-year college enrollments.<lb/>
The NCES expects two-year college<lb/>
enrollment to decline "only slight-<lb/>
ly" over the next eight years precise-<lb/>
ly because of the community col-<lb/>
leges' attraction to part-timers.<lb/>
If private four-year colleges can't<lb/>
compete effectively with two-year<lb/>
schools for the older, part-time<lb/>
students, NCES warned that "many<lb/>
of them could face closure<lb/>
The agency's projections for<lb/>
four-year public colleges and<lb/>
universities were less drastic. It ex-<lb/>
pects total public college enrollment<lb/>
to fall to 8.754 million In 1988 after<lb/>
a 1981 peak of 9.2 million. Public<lb/>
colleges' larger base should allow<lb/>
the bigger schools to survive the<lb/>
coming era of limits.<lb/>
Most experts expect college<lb/>
enrollments will decline because of<lb/>
the dwindling number of current<lb/>
school-age children. Other studies<lb/>
predict enrollments will start to<lb/>
grow again in the 1990s, when the<lb/>
children of the post-World War II<lb/>
baby boom reach college age.<lb/>
Total enrollment for the 1979-80<lb/>
academic year, according to NCES,<lb/>
is 11.508 million, up from 8.006<lb/>
million in 1969-70.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, April 15,1980<lb/>
(ireenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Toto<lb/>
The Student Union Major<lb/>
Attractions Committee will<lb/>
present TOTO this Thursday<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
"Although ticket sales have<lb/>
been poor thus far, we're hop-<lb/>
ing to at least break even<lb/>
said Charles Sune, chairperson<lb/>
of the Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
"If the TOTO concert fails,<lb/>
there will probably be no con-<lb/>
certs next year. We're hoping<lb/>
students will understand the<lb/>
importance of this concert and<lb/>
support us said Sune.<lb/>
Sherrod Sworn In<lb/>
As SGA President,<lb/>
Outlines Cabinet<lb/>
Sherrod Takes Office<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod takes the oath of office from acting SGA<lb/>
Attorney General Lester Nail during Monday's SGA<lb/>
Legislature meeting. Sherrod spoke briefly before the<lb/>
legislators and outlined his tentative plans for the incoming<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
The new president of the Student<lb/>
Government Association was sworn<lb/>
into office Monday during the 23rd<lb/>
session of the SGA legislature.<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod took the oath<lb/>
from acting SGA Attorney General<lb/>
Lester Nail after delivering a speech<lb/>
to the legislators in which he said<lb/>
that his cabinet would be "different<lb/>
than anything you've ever seen<lb/>
before<lb/>
Sherrod explained that he ten-<lb/>
tatively plans to create volunteer<lb/>
positions within the SGA executive<lb/>
whose purpose will be to deal with<lb/>
special problems. One of these<lb/>
would be filled by a graduate stu-<lb/>
dent in business administration who<lb/>
would be charged with checking up<lb/>
on the way student funds are used.<lb/>
After the meeting, Sherrod said<lb/>
that an example of misuse of stu-<lb/>
dent funds occurred recently when a<lb/>
group was granted $2,000 to finance<lb/>
a research trip for its members.<lb/>
When it was found that most of<lb/>
those members were unable to go,<lb/>
said Sherrod, the group recruited<lb/>
non-members to attend the meeting.<lb/>
Sherrod would not say which group<lb/>
was involved.<lb/>
Sherrod said another volunteer<lb/>
position would be filled by a female<lb/>
who would attend to women's pro-<lb/>
blems on campus and report on Ti-<lb/>
tle IX matters. Sherrod also said<lb/>
that he intends to create a position<lb/>
for an adviser on international<lb/>
students and minorities.<lb/>
In its regular business, the<lb/>
legislature passed unanimously a<lb/>
$7,000 appropriation request to be<lb/>
used in constructing a bus stop<lb/>
shelter at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. The proposed shelter will be<lb/>
built of brick in three different sec-<lb/>
tions, which, viewed from the air,<lb/>
will spell out E-C-U.<lb/>
The Visual Arts Forum also<lb/>
received $895 in student funds to be<lb/>
used in promoting ECU's Gray<lb/>
Gallery in North Carolina and<lb/>
around the nation. Gallery director<lb/>
Raymond Osman spoke on behalf<lb/>
of the bill.<lb/>
In other business, the legislature<lb/>
held over until their next meeting a<lb/>
major piece of legislation which<lb/>
would reorganize the SGA transit<lb/>
system's operation.<lb/>
The proposal would place the<lb/>
transit system under the manage-<lb/>
ment of two full-time managers, the<lb/>
SGA president or his appointee, an<lb/>
SGA legislator, a faculty member<lb/>
appointed by the vice-chancellor for<lb/>
student life and a business professor<lb/>
who would oversee financial opera-<lb/>
tions. At present, the transit system<lb/>
is headed by two managers who<lb/>
work with a faculty financial ad-<lb/>
visor.<lb/>
In other transit matters, transit<lb/>
See SGA, Page 2, Col.5<lb/>
Sierra Club To Study Flood Plains<lb/>
By LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Greenville's Cypress Gruop of the<lb/>
Sierra Club was recently awarded a<lb/>
grant to develop a flood plain<lb/>
management plan for two local<lb/>
creeks.<lb/>
The $2,938 grant, given by the<lb/>
N.C. Department of Natural<lb/>
Resources and Community<lb/>
Development, will be used to<lb/>
develop land management plans for<lb/>
the Green Mill Run and Hardee<lb/>
Creek watersheds.<lb/>
Green Mill Run is the main flood<lb/>
control creek in Greenville. It runs<lb/>
southwest to northeast, crossing<lb/>
Evans Street just north of Arlington<lb/>
Boulevard. Running parallel to<lb/>
Tenth Street from Rock Springs<lb/>
Road to Village Green Apartments,<lb/>
Green Mill Run forms the focus of<lb/>
Green Springs Park on Fifth Street.<lb/>
Students are most familiar with<lb/>
Green Mill Run following a heavy<lb/>
rain, when it floods the parking lots<lb/>
at the bottom of College Hill Drive.<lb/>
"The two main functions of the<lb/>
project are to find the land that is<lb/>
really worthwhile recreationally and<lb/>
preserve it for recreational purposes<lb/>
and to preserve the flood control<lb/>
function of creeks and swampy<lb/>
areas said Dr. Robert Graham of<lb/>
the Sierra Club and professor in the<lb/>
ECU psychology department.<lb/>
"Floodways have been left to<lb/>
deteriorate as the surrounding areas<lb/>
of higher elevation have been<lb/>
developed said Dr. Barney Kane,<lb/>
project supervisor and a member of<lb/>
the ECU environmental health<lb/>
department.<lb/>
"If the present City Council con-<lb/>
tinues running things as they are do-<lb/>
ing now, the entire flood plain will<lb/>
be filled in said Dr. Graham.<lb/>
"What they will do then, as they<lb/>
have already done once and will<lb/>
continue to do, is to bring in the Ar-<lb/>
my Corps of Engineers.<lb/>
"They will say 'Ah, Green Mill<lb/>
Run isn't serving its purpose to get<lb/>
the water out as fast as possible, so<lb/>
we will make it better That means<lb/>
making it into a channelized mud<lb/>
ditch which is deeper and drains<lb/>
water faster. It could possibly even<lb/>
have concrete sides or bottom. For<lb/>
recreational purposes, it would be<lb/>
totally ruined<lb/>
The main purpose of the program<lb/>
is data collection concerning use of<lb/>
the property and ways to better<lb/>
maintain the floodplains, Graham<lb/>
said. The club'also plans to produce<lb/>
a slide program showing the effects<lb/>
of flood plains and their proper<lb/>
utilization.<lb/>
Graham cited the Hopkins Park<lb/>
housing project on Evans Street as<lb/>
an example of poor flood plain<lb/>
management. The project was built<lb/>
on a part of the flood plain of Green<lb/>
Mill Run, entirely on sand. During<lb/>
periods of heavy rain, when the<lb/>
creek would need to perform its<lb/>
flood control functions, in flooding,<lb/>
it would flood the housing project.<lb/>
Graham said.<lb/>
Rumored Letter Raises Fear<lb/>
For Iranian Student Safety<lb/>
AUSTIN, TX (CPS) ? Two<lb/>
University of Texas students have<lb/>
obtained a U.S. Customs Service<lb/>
report detailing possible Islamic ter-<lb/>
rorist attacks by foreign students<lb/>
within the United States. However,<lb/>
some foreign student advisers doubt<lb/>
the report's authenticity and fear it<lb/>
may be used to exacerbate hostility<lb/>
toward ? and increase the danger<lb/>
to ? Iranian students in this coun-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
The report was prompted by a let-<lb/>
ter, allegedly now being distributed<lb/>
in some eastern cities, that calls on<lb/>
Moslems to conduct "Islamic<lb/>
guerilla warfare in the United<lb/>
States" in the event the United<lb/>
States uses military force in Iran.<lb/>
The letter, reprinted in the<lb/>
Customs report, warns Moslems to<lb/>
prepare to defend "our lively in-<lb/>
terests" and to use "rhetoric,<lb/>
demonstrations, coordinated<lb/>
policies and physical warfare if<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
Although the letter was circulated<lb/>
in the East, the report was written<lb/>
out of the Customs Service's<lb/>
Portland, Ore office.<lb/>
Special Agent Lawrence LeDage<lb/>
wouldn't say how the Portland of-<lb/>
fice got involved in the case.<lb/>
Though reluctant to comment,<lb/>
LeDage did confirm the authenticity<lb/>
of the report.<lb/>
Lt. Larry Soulsby of the<lb/>
Washington, D.C. police told the<lb/>
Daily Texan, which first broke the<lb/>
story, that the letter did exist.<lb/>
"Our investigative services unit<lb/>
and our special operations units<lb/>
working on the Iranian situation are<lb/>
aware of that report he said, "but<lb/>
they will not discuss it<lb/>
"I'm sure the Secret Service<lb/>
wouldn't give you any information<lb/>
on this, and we sure won't he add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
?Rumors of conspiracies by<lb/>
foreign nationals in this country are<lb/>
nothing new, warns Bill Bray of the<lb/>
National Association for Foreign<lb/>
Student Affairs in Washington.<lb/>
They are more likely now because of<lb/>
the "group phobia" of Iranians.<lb/>
"The problems with Iranian<lb/>
students aren't new Bray told<lb/>
See LETTER, Page 2, Col.l<lb/>
Book Collectors Enter Library Contest<lb/>
One might expect to find books<lb/>
on art, painting, politica. theor,<lb/>
American Indians and medieval<lb/>
history on the shelves of a local city<lb/>
or college library. But these are just<lb/>
a few of the types of personal collec-<lb/>
tions of books assembled in the dor-<lb/>
mitories, apartments or homes of<lb/>
ECU students.<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
High Gis PricesP?ge 3<lb/>
KGB, CIA Gel LetterPage 4<lb/>
Words Oa "EqaasP?e <lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Wilmington .Pate 8<lb/>
Many of these bibliophile<lb/>
students chose to enter their per-<lb/>
sonal collections in this year's an-<lb/>
nual Student Library Competition,<lb/>
sponsored by the Friends of the East<lb/>
Carolina University Library. To<lb/>
enter the contest, they had to submit<lb/>
a list of books in their personal col-<lb/>
lections and also an essay explaining<lb/>
why they collected the books.<lb/>
The collection of last year's first<lb/>
place winner, John Lawrence, con-<lb/>
tained up to 500 volumes dealing<lb/>
with the American Civil War and<lb/>
Ancient Oriental History.<lb/>
Lawrence said that his entry<lb/>
reflected a life-time interest in col-<lb/>
lecting books.<lb/>
Another of last year's three win-<lb/>
ners submitted a collection of<lb/>
science fiction novels and short<lb/>
stories.<lb/>
One student in this year's com-<lb/>
petition who has lived near the sea<lb/>
for the past eight years and been in-<lb/>
trigued by the ocean has an exten-<lb/>
sive collection of books on marine<lb/>
science.<lb/>
Another student, who is majoring<lb/>
in English, submitted an extensive<lb/>
list of books by English, French and<lb/>
American fiction writers of the 20th<lb/>
century.<lb/>
In their essays, many students<lb/>
said that they collected books simp-<lb/>
ly because they loved to read.<lb/>
Announcements of three award<lb/>
winners will be made April 16 at 3<lb/>
p.m. in Joyner Library. There will<lb/>
be a display of portions of the winn-<lb/>
ing collections.<lb/>
The judges of the competition are<lb/>
Dr. Ralph Rives of the ECU English<lb/>
faculty, Don Lennon of the library<lb/>
faculty, and Dr. Virginia Herrin, a<lb/>
member of the Friends of the<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
Although students were required<lb/>
to submit a list of at least 15 of their<lb/>
personal library titles, the judging is<lb/>
based on quality, not quantity of the<lb/>
collections and also on the imagina-<lb/>
tion and intelligence shown in<lb/>
creating the collection.<lb/>
The first prize winner will receive<lb/>
$75, the second $50 and the third<lb/>
$25.<lb/>
In connection with National<lb/>
Library Week, April 13-19, the<lb/>
Friends of the Library will also<lb/>
sponsor a bargain book sale from 10<lb/>
a.m3 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. on April<lb/>
16 and from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on<lb/>
April 17.<lb/>
Exam Notice<lb/>
The spring semester exam<lb/>
schedule that appears in the<lb/>
1979-80 campus activity calen-<lb/>
dar distributed by the Student<lb/>
Supply Store contains an er-<lb/>
ror, according to- Joseph O.<lb/>
Clark, student store manager.<lb/>
The schedule should read<lb/>
"12:00 MWF8:00-10:00,<lb/>
Wednesday, April 30 The<lb/>
exam schedule printed in the<lb/>
1979-80 Undergraduate<lb/>
Catalogue is correct, Clark<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The calendars were<lb/>
distributed by the Student<lb/>
Supply Store at the start of fall<lb/>
semester, Clark noted.<lb/>
Spring Rains Have Arrived p,Kobv ??cha.oc?.<lb/>
sprouting dormant umbrellas<lb/>
N. Greene Street Wreck<lb/>
Results In Severe Injury<lb/>
Three Greenville residents were<lb/>
injured, one critically, in a three-car<lb/>
accident on North Greene Street<lb/>
yesterday.<lb/>
Robert Harris Daniel was admit-<lb/>
ted to the Intensive Care Unit of Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital after<lb/>
receiving "severe injuries accor-<lb/>
ding to a hospital spokesman and<lb/>
investigating officer I.E. Nichols.<lb/>
Daniel was pinned in his car while<lb/>
rescuers worked approximately 30<lb/>
minutes to dislodge the car from<lb/>
around him, using various rescue<lb/>
tools.<lb/>
Also injured in the accident were<lb/>
Robert Keith Casper, who received<lb/>
head injuries, and Carolyn Jean Lit-<lb/>
tle, who received a shoulder injury.<lb/>
Both were treated and released at<lb/>
the emergency room.<lb/>
Police charged Casper with driv-<lb/>
ing under the influence of alcohol in<lb/>
the incident.<lb/>
Daniel's car was totalled, police<lb/>
reported. There was $800 damage<lb/>
done to Link's vehicle and $1000<lb/>
damage to Casper's in the 2:10 p.m.<lb/>
incident. The exact location of the<lb/>
accident was North Greene Street<lb/>
norta of the Dudley Street intersec-<lb/>
tion, near Mum ford Road.<lb/>
V<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057262_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 15, 1980<lb/>
Kale To Speak<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
The East Carolina Poetr horum will<lb/>
have a regular workshop and meeting<lb/>
Thursday. April 17, at 8 p.m in<lb/>
Mendenhall, room 248 The public is<lb/>
cordially msiled<lb/>
Family Fun<lb/>
tach Thursday during April is "family<lb/>
I un Night" at Mendenhall hrom 6 10<lb/>
p m . all children under age IS accom<lb/>
panied hv a parent or responsible adult<lb/>
may bovsl. plav billiards or plav table<lb/>
'ennis tor . oil regular price Tach<lb/>
game or line ol bowling will be halt<lb/>
prut- tor children, and billiards and<lb/>
table tennis will be hall price tor the en<lb/>
ite family Only one adult per group<lb/>
must have a Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Membership card or III II)<lb/>
aid to participate<lb/>
Olympics<lb/>
The New Summer Olympics is the<lb/>
theme ol the nevt Nig Tau paru ai the<lb/>
I Ibo Mam contests and pries are<lb/>
scheduled tor the Tuesday, -pril I 5<lb/>
event t vervone is invited'<lb/>
SI Artist<lb/>
Applications foi student I nion Vim<lb/>
will be accepted April 14 is pplica<lb/>
lions mav be picked up in the Student<lb/>
I nion Office, room 24 Mendenhall<lb/>
lob descriptions will also he available<lb/>
Portfolio required<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
 ciudrc dance i being held a. the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center, 501 1 5ih<lb/>
St on Saturday night, -pril 19, ji 8<lb/>
p m Jerrv Powell will he out dller<lb/>
I he price is right at Si i? pel person.<lb/>
'Clreshmcntc provided Put on yout<lb/>
Mjuare dance clothes and come on ovet'<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
Out dinner meeting to install nest<lb/>
u'jr officers will be at the "hree<lb/>
steerc a; 7 00 p m . Wednesday, pril<lb/>
lh Brownbag it you wish Hope lo see<lb/>
all ol vou there<lb/>
Kappa Delta Pi<lb/>
I he t-ta Chi Chapter of Kappa Delta Pi<lb/>
will meet on Saturday. April 26, ai<lb/>
i!11am at the Holiday Inn in Green-<lb/>
ville This meeting will be held in con<lb/>
lunction with our Spring Initiation<lb/>
Our speaker will be Dr f lovd Mattheis<lb/>
sconce Education Department<lb/>
kadelpia.is should send in then reserva<lb/>
lions hv -pril is<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha<lb/>
Spring banquet on Saturday. April 14.<lb/>
at p m Guest speaker will be John<lb/>
? ?? ommissionei ol I abot ol<lb/>
Carolina I he banquet will he<lb/>
held a; Ihe Three Steers Restaurant on<lb/>
Memorial Drive in Greenville All<lb/>
bers and guests are invited lo -it<lb/>
tend The price ol the meal is S6.00 :h ?<lb/>
person nv interested persons should<lb/>
go by a Ji! ei tor the dinner at the<lb/>
Political science Office, 124 Brewster<lb/>
Building ih ing<lb/>
Table Tennis<lb/>
A table tennis tournament, with singles<lb/>
and doubles events, will be held in the<lb/>
Mendenhall multi-purpose room on<lb/>
Wednesday April 16 at 6 p.m Ihe com<lb/>
petition is open to all ECt students and<lb/>
faculty and statt MSC members<lb/>
I rophies will be awatded to 1st and 2nd<lb/>
place singles winners and 1st and 2nd<lb/>
place doubles teams ntrants must<lb/>
register at the MSt Billiards C enter by<lb/>
Monday, April 14<lb/>
Nurses<lb/>
Ihe representative from Nightingale<lb/>
I niform t ompany will he in the School<lb/>
Ol Nursing building, room 102. on<lb/>
April 1" from 8 0 a m lo I 00 p m to<lb/>
measure each freshman nursing student<lb/>
foi uniforms lotal uniform cosl will<lb/>
be i72 70 foi female students and<lb/>
$so in foi male students A money<lb/>
ordei foi the exaci amount mud be<lb/>
submitted with ihe uniform ordet<lb/>
Please stop bv the School ol Nursing<lb/>
Office, Room 152, lo make an appoini<lb/>
mem<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
ECGC will hold itc monthly business<lb/>
meeting Tuesday. phl 19. 5:00p.m at<lb/>
the Newman House, mis I s)th si<lb/>
Plan- foi summei will be discussed Hr<lb/>
tng yo beverage All in<lb/>
lerested persons are welcome'<lb/>
Kacquetball<lb/>
There will be a meeting ol the ECI<lb/>
Racquetball Club Thursday, April 7ai<lb/>
 p in in room 104 Memorial Gym Ke<lb/>
quesi  980 si budgei will be<lb/>
discussed along with the dub's rules<lb/>
and the men and women - I addei<lb/>
Please join uc'<lb/>
Booksale<lb/>
The friends of the Library will hold a<lb/>
booksale at Joyner Library April 16<lb/>
and P Hours will be 10 a.m. lo 3 p.m.<lb/>
and 7 p m to 9 p.m. Wednesday, April<lb/>
16, and 10 am. to 3 p m. Thursday,<lb/>
April 17.<lb/>
Auction<lb/>
The Methodist Student Center is having<lb/>
an auction of new and used items o<lb/>
Vsednesdav. April 16 ai 7:00 p.m SOI<lb/>
I Fifth St across from Garret! Dorm.<lb/>
Pick up some bargains and have some<lb/>
lun'<lb/>
Attorney General<lb/>
Anyone who wishes to apply for the<lb/>
position of SCiA Attorney General<lb/>
must till out an application in the SGA<lb/>
office b 5 tx) p m . Tuesday. April 15.<lb/>
ISIHO<lb/>
NASW<lb/>
Members ol NASW. social work and<lb/>
corrections majors are now selling rat<lb/>
tie tickets to raise money for their<lb/>
departmental soltball g?me and<lb/>
cookout Six drawings for dinners at<lb/>
losdicks 1X90. Ihe Beet Barn, Pcppi's<lb/>
Pitta, Shoneys and Parker's BBQ will<lb/>
he held at the game on April 26 Tickets<lb/>
are S 50 I or more information contact<lb/>
Barbara Anderson, Anne O'Neal or<lb/>
Diane Austin<lb/>
SU Reps<lb/>
Revival<lb/>
The E I Fountain ol 1 ife c hnstian<lb/>
 ship will be sponsoring its second<lb/>
annual revival ihis spring, on April 24.<lb/>
25 and 26 i ? onum The<lb/>
"Behold I<lb/>
(. onic Quickly " I he speakers foi ihe<lb/>
thr? day rev sal are Reverend Ken<lb/>
neth I: J bv the In<lb/>
terdenon nat onalho i and the I i I<lb/>
1 ountatn if on Tl irsdav<lb/>
haplai Kenneth<lb/>
ompamed by (he<lb/>
I y I Gospel I nscmble (and possible<lb/>
(he si Augustine's Fellowhsiphoir).<lb/>
oi xa lay Rci Mi inffin with<lb/>
1 N hapel Hill and the Fountain ol<lb/>
L1SK Mis<lb/>
Rosale induct two<lb/>
seimnai- Saturday April 26 -tar<lb/>
in the I edoma w .<lb/>
. entei Ihe opto foi the seminar are<lb/>
and sires Devotional set<lb/>
? a I at 7 ? ich night Please<lb/>
ml and pra ? (he I oid ?vith uc<lb/>
Toto<lb/>
v i.<lb/>
I ommittee present? rOTO with a<lb/>
PBA Vpi 'a ? ?<lb/>
M fickets w<lb/>
al Monday. March 31 n 10 00<lb/>
? Mendenhall Studenl i enter<lb/>
rickets a ill b - 10 I r ECT students<lb/>
.1" I $7 K) fo<lb/>
Positions are open lor two day-student<lb/>
representatives to serve on the Studenl<lb/>
I nion Boaid ol Directors lor 1980-81<lb/>
Dav students who wish to apply for the<lb/>
positions mav pick up applications<lb/>
from the Inlormalion Desk in<lb/>
Mendenhall Deadline for applications<lb/>
is Monday. April 21 at 5 p.m The Stu-<lb/>
dent I nion Board of Directors is com-<lb/>
posed of: President ol Men's Residence<lb/>
C ouncil, President of Women's<lb/>
Residence . ouncil. President ol the<lb/>
Intei Fraternity Council. President oi<lb/>
the Panhellenic Council, President of<lb/>
the Student Government Association, a<lb/>
taciiltv member appointed by the<lb/>
faculty Setiale. an administrator ap-<lb/>
pointed bv the Chancellor of the<lb/>
I niversity . two day students appointed<lb/>
bv Ihe Board, the President ol the Stu-<lb/>
denl I nion te otticio member without<lb/>
a vote) and the Executive Director of<lb/>
Mendenhall iev officio member without<lb/>
a vote) I he Board selects the President<lb/>
oi ihe student Union, approves the SC<lb/>
budgei and appiopnates funds, ap-<lb/>
proves si committee chairpersons, and<lb/>
sets organizational policy<lb/>
Phi V la Sigma<lb/>
Sl tdents lo be initiated into Phi Eta<lb/>
Sigma, freshman honor society, are<lb/>
reminded thai the initiation ceremony<lb/>
will take place on rhursday, April l" in<lb/>
-?? room ol Mendenhall.<lb/>
beginning ai " 30 p m Students are<lb/>
asked lo be present bv 7:15 pm in<lb/>
order that proper arrangements for the<lb/>
ceremony he made.<lb/>
SCEC<lb/>
The Student Council for Exceptional<lb/>
Children will hold its last meeting of the<lb/>
year on Wednesday, April 16 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
in room 129 Speight. Officers for new<lb/>
year will be introduced, and plans for<lb/>
Special Olympics, Exceptional<lb/>
Children's day at Camp Bonner, and<lb/>
(he reception on May 10 for senior<lb/>
SPED majors will be discussed<lb/>
Episcopal Worship<lb/>
An Episcopal service of Holy Commu-<lb/>
nion will be celebrated Wednesday,<lb/>
April 16, in ihe chapel of the Methodist<lb/>
Studenl Center (5th Street across from<lb/>
Ciarreit Dorm) at 6:00 p.m The<lb/>
Episcopal Chaplain, the Rev Bill Had-<lb/>
den, will celebrate. Supper will be serv-<lb/>
ed at 6:30 p.m. following the service<lb/>
SCA<lb/>
The ECU-Greenville branch of the<lb/>
Society for Crealive Anachronism will<lb/>
hold its last meeting of the semester on<lb/>
Tuesday, April 15 at 7 p.m. at 907 E.<lb/>
4th St side apt. Officers are needed<lb/>
lor the fall semester The SCA is a na-<lb/>
tionwide medieval interest group<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta history honor society<lb/>
will have its final business meeting of<lb/>
the year on Tuesday. April 15 at 7 30<lb/>
p m in the Richard C. Tood room<lb/>
located in D wing of Brewster This<lb/>
meeting is very important and all<lb/>
members are urged to attend<lb/>
Student Welfare<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the SGA Stu-<lb/>
dent Welfare Committee on Wednes-<lb/>
day at 4 p.m. in Mendenhall Room 239<lb/>
All committee members are urged to at-<lb/>
tend<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
We wish to remind all<lb/>
students and faculty that we<lb/>
will not accept any an-<lb/>
nouncements for the An-<lb/>
nouncements column unless<lb/>
they are typed doublespace<lb/>
and turned in before the<lb/>
deadline. No exceptions will<lb/>
be made. The deadlines are<lb/>
2:00 p.m. Friday for the<lb/>
Tuesday edition and 2:00<lb/>
p.m. Tuesday for the Thurs-<lb/>
day edition. We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit for brevity. We<lb/>
cannot guarantee that<lb/>
everything turned in will ap-<lb/>
pear in the paper, due to<lb/>
space limitations, but we will<lb/>
do our best.<lb/>
Student Journalists Inducted<lb/>
W. Wilford Kale,Jr.<lb/>
SGA Holds Bill<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
co-manager Chubby<lb/>
Abshire announced<lb/>
that a new van would<lb/>
be purchased soon for<lb/>
$9300. Abshire said<lb/>
that the van would save<lb/>
$21 per day in fuel<lb/>
costs, compared to the<lb/>
larger buses now in use.<lb/>
Legislator Sam Bern-<lb/>
stein also suggested to<lb/>
Speaker Mike Adkins<lb/>
that the Rules and<lb/>
Judiciary Committee<lb/>
should write laws defin-<lb/>
ing the exact dates of<lb/>
the terms of SGA of-<lb/>
ficers.<lb/>
Bernstein said that<lb/>
such laws would<lb/>
eliminate the kind of<lb/>
speculation that has oc-<lb/>
curred this year over<lb/>
the legal end of Brett<lb/>
Melvin's term as SGA<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Fourteen new<lb/>
members will be in-<lb/>
ducted into the ECU<lb/>
chapter of the Society<lb/>
for Collegiate Jour-<lb/>
nalists Thursday, April<lb/>
17 in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center's Cof-<lb/>
feehouse at 7 p.m.<lb/>
The national presi-<lb/>
dent of SCJ, W.<lb/>
Wilford Kale, Jr will<lb/>
speak to the society<lb/>
following induction<lb/>
ceremonies. Kale is<lb/>
Bureau Chief of<lb/>
Eastern Virginia for the<lb/>
Richmond Times<lb/>
Dispatch with head-<lb/>
quarters in<lb/>
W i 11 iamsburg . An<lb/>
alumnus of William<lb/>
and Mars. Kale serves<lb/>
as chapter adviser of<lb/>
SCJ at W&amp;M Kale is a<lb/>
much sought atler<lb/>
speaker, especially on<lb/>
college campuses. As a<lb/>
reporter he covered<lb/>
such.national events as<lb/>
the arrival of Emperor<lb/>
Hirohito of Japan, the<lb/>
third presidential<lb/>
debate of 1976, and the<lb/>
recent Columbia<lb/>
University NCCPA<lb/>
conference in New<lb/>
York City<lb/>
SCJ is the nation's<lb/>
oldest collegiate<lb/>
honorary for mass<lb/>
communications. The<lb/>
ECU chapter was<lb/>
organized in 1969 b<lb/>
Ira L. Baker, as Alpha<lb/>
Phi Gamma, of which<lb/>
Baker was then na-<lb/>
tional president In<lb/>
1975 APG merged with<lb/>
Pi Delta Epsilon,<lb/>
another national<lb/>
publications honorary,<lb/>
to form SCJ. All<lb/>
former members of<lb/>
APG at ECU then<lb/>
became members o<lb/>
S4 I At present, there<lb/>
are 200 active<lb/>
honorars memb<lb/>
ECU. President f tht<lb/>
campus chapter this<lb/>
year is Joyce 1 vans.<lb/>
and Ira I Baker, who<lb/>
will retire at the end of<lb/>
the vear, has been ad-<lb/>
viser since the orgarna<lb/>
tion's charter das<lb/>
Immediately foil<lb/>
ing induction<lb/>
ceremonies, a social<lb/>
hour in honor of Kale<lb/>
and new members will<lb/>
be held in the<lb/>
feehouse. The pub!<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
Inductees include the<lb/>
following: John Jeter.<lb/>
New Bern; Glenda S ic<lb/>
K illingsw ort h .<lb/>
Bern; Mrs M<lb/>
Schulken. White.<lb/>
I inda Allred. <lb/>
ville; Joseph Dan<lb/>
Jr Shelby; Marl<lb/>
Kemp, sheb i<lb/>
ward Will ?<lb/>
Durham; Me<lb/>
th, C harlottes.<lb/>
Susan 1<lb/>
ipel Hill; Del<lb/>
Hotaling.<lb/>
I Drew. C hatl<lb/>
N.J Ellen -<lb/>
Chestei Pa . Ian<lb/>
Stone. W<lb/>
( it<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
Letter Rumored<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
College Press Service.<lb/>
"It's just the most re-<lb/>
cent and greatest<lb/>
political activists have<lb/>
been Iranians<lb/>
He notes that there<lb/>
could be "political<lb/>
motivations" behind<lb/>
such a letter in an elec-<lb/>
tion year.<lb/>
"I would really ques-<lb/>
tion the organization<lb/>
attributed to these ter-<lb/>
rorists he added.<lb/>
But federal agencies<lb/>
are taking the possibili-<lb/>
ty of Islamic guerilla<lb/>
activities in the United<lb/>
States seriously. The<lb/>
Immigration and<lb/>
Naturalization Ser-<lb/>
vice's round-up and<lb/>
photographing of all<lb/>
Iranian students is<lb/>
widely suspected to be<lb/>
part of anti-terrorist<lb/>
preparations. Various<lb/>
international student<lb/>
advisors around the<lb/>
country have reported<lb/>
visits from FBI agents<lb/>
seeking photos of<lb/>
foreign students since<lb/>
the November seizure<lb/>
of the American em-<lb/>
bassy in Tehran.<lb/>
?<lb/>
He says analysis by a<lb/>
university Iranian<lb/>
specialist suggests the<lb/>
grammar and usage<lb/>
were not originally in<lb/>
English. Puffer con-<lb/>
cluded the letter could<lb/>
have been written in<lb/>
any number of Middle<lb/>
Eastern languages.<lb/>
Puffer said the letter<lb/>
itself advocates a<lb/>
thorough, carefully-<lb/>
planned approach t )<lb/>
guerilla activities. It<lb/>
warns that "targets<lb/>
must be chosen in-<lb/>
telligently and<lb/>
realistically (and)<lb/>
weapons should be<lb/>
chosen in corrlation<lb/>
with the targets per-<lb/>
sons in mind<lb/>
LeDage says the<lb/>
Customs Service is<lb/>
"still in the process of<lb/>
discovering who's<lb/>
responsible (for the let-<lb/>
ters)<lb/>
rXTTTTTi;<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
Backpacks, B-15, Bomber,<lb/>
Field, Deck, Flight, Snorkel<lb/>
Jackets, Peacoats, Parkas,<lb/>
Shoes, Combat Boots,Pius<lb/>
1501 S. Evans Street<lb/>
??<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repaii<lb/>
across St. from<lb/>
Blount Harvey<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
111 W. 4th St.<lb/>
Parking in front and Rear-<lb/>
Eastern Business Brokers<lb/>
.10 Wvil.HinhSinti (,?tnvilk. VxlhCanrfbu Z7HU. ??W) 75M 44?.<lb/>
Investment Opportunities<lb/>
Looking for a Summer Business at the coast?<lb/>
Waterslide and Amusement Center on Boardwalk!<lb/>
Appraised at $580,000. Sales price is $410,000.<lb/>
Seafood Restaurant and Deli on Outer Banks. New-<lb/>
ly constructed. Inexpensive living quarters<lb/>
available. Locally staffed. Sales price: $27,000.<lb/>
Many other businesses  Eastern Brokers. 210<lb/>
West Fourth St Greenville, N.C. 27834 919-758-4485.<lb/>
We have p buyer who has put in an order for 2,500 class rings<lb/>
We desperately need to fill that order as soon as possible, so for<lb/>
the coming week Coin and Ring Man will be offering a SPECIAL<lb/>
PREMIUM on all class rings . . . from High Schools, Colleges,<lb/>
Armed Services, Fraternities. Sororities, Technical Institutes,<lb/>
Organizations  all class rings will be bringing an EXTRA HIGH<lb/>
PRICE all week. Take advantage of this offer.<lb/>
Terry-<lb/>
Susan P.<lb/>
Mary Anne<lb/>
Molly<lb/>
Becca<lb/>
Carroll<lb/>
Ellen<lb/>
Loretta<lb/>
Susan N.<lb/>
Pam<lb/>
Lynn<lb/>
Denise<lb/>
Patty-<lb/>
Melissa<lb/>
Susan S.<lb/>
Betty<lb/>
We are the women who make The<lb/>
Fleming Center such a special place,<lb/>
providing prompt and personal,<lb/>
patient-oriented care for women of all<lb/>
ages. We know your needs. WeVe been<lb/>
here since 1974.<lb/>
Call 781-8880 anytime<lb/>
Accurate, non-judgmental<lb/>
information whenever you need it,<lb/>
about contraception, abortion, sex and<lb/>
relationships, from the resource<lb/>
center for sexual health.<lb/>
The Fleming Center, Inc.<lb/>
3613 Haworth Drive<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27609<lb/>
Dial<lb/>
a summer job:<lb/>
800-331-1000<lb/>
Work as a Manpower<lb/>
temporary. Flexible<lb/>
schedules. Good pay.<lb/>
Assignments available in<lb/>
your college town or<lb/>
hometown. Please call.<lb/>
toU free.<lb/>
?MANPOWER<lb/>
u<lb/>
2,500 CLASS RINGS<lb/>
NEEDED We Pay CASH!<lb/>
There are always a lot of people who don't wear their hiah<lb/>
school rings after they go to college, or women who don't wear<lb/>
their class rings after they get married, or people whose rings no<lb/>
longer fit them. So, instead of letting those rings lie around<lb/>
bring them in to Coin &amp; Ring Man for cash. Remember<lb/>
PREMIUM PRICES all this week! "ememoer . . .<lb/>
OF COURSE, WE<lb/>
ALSO PAY CASH<lb/>
FOR STERLING,<lb/>
SILVER COINS,<lb/>
AND ANY OTHER<lb/>
COLD MARKED<lb/>
10K, UK, UK.<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. OPEN 9:30-5:30 MONSAT.<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHO N E 752-3866<lb/>
I 'YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER "<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057262_0003"/><lb/>
High Gas Prices To Blame<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 15. 19)<lb/>
More Time Spent At Home<lb/>
Reprinted from the<lb/>
News and Observer,<lb/>
Ralewh, N.C. April<lb/>
14.<lb/>
By<lb/>
HOWARD TROXLER<lb/>
N4l) Staff Writer<lb/>
For years, Dennis G.<lb/>
Jones o Garner took<lb/>
driving his ear for<lb/>
granted.<lb/>
But when he realized<lb/>
recentlv that he was<lb/>
spending more than<lb/>
$100 a month for<lb/>
gasoline, he decided to<lb/>
make some changes.<lb/>
"Now, instead of go-<lb/>
ing somewhere, a lot of<lb/>
times we sit and talk (at<lb/>
home) said Jones, a<lb/>
financial analyst.<lb/>
"We've found new<lb/>
ways o entertainment<lb/>
 We build fires and<lb/>
toast weiners. We go<lb/>
for walks. We've met<lb/>
our neighbors<lb/>
Jones and his wife<lb/>
are not alone.<lb/>
News and Observer<lb/>
interviews with 100<lb/>
People in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina showed<lb/>
many have changed<lb/>
their lifestyles to curtail<lb/>
driving. More people<lb/>
are staying home more<lb/>
often.<lb/>
Last year, for the<lb/>
first time since the state<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Revenue began keeping<lb/>
records 17 years ago,<lb/>
North Carolinians<lb/>
bought less gasoline<lb/>
than they did the<lb/>
previous year.<lb/>
About 3.0 billion<lb/>
gallons of gasoline were<lb/>
sold in North Carolina<lb/>
in 1979, compared with<lb/>
3.17 billion gallons in<lb/>
1978, state officials<lb/>
said.<lb/>
And a recent Gallop<lb/>
poll showed that 70<lb/>
percent of the nation's<lb/>
car owners are driving<lb/>
less.<lb/>
i4I was considering<lb/>
taking another job<lb/>
Jones said. "So I got in<lb/>
the car, drove to the<lb/>
new place and<lb/>
measured the mileage.<lb/>
That's something I<lb/>
wouldn't have con-<lb/>
sidered three or four<lb/>
years ago<lb/>
The average price of<lb/>
regular gasoline in<lb/>
North Carolina was 72<lb/>
cents a gallon in<lb/>
January 1979, accor-<lb/>
ding to a monthly<lb/>
survey by the Carolinas<lb/>
Motor Club. A year<lb/>
later, the average price<lb/>
had climbed to $1,078 a<lb/>
gallon, the club said.<lb/>
The club's latest<lb/>
survey showed regular<lb/>
gasoline costing an<lb/>
average of $1.22 a<lb/>
gallon during late<lb/>
February and early<lb/>
March.<lb/>
"We drive as little as<lb/>
we have to said W.<lb/>
David Hawkins, a<lb/>
Zebulon surveyor.<lb/>
"We don't decide on<lb/>
the spur of the moment<lb/>
to drive to Raleigh for<lb/>
supper anymore<lb/>
Joan McFarland of<lb/>
Sanford said, "We us-<lb/>
ed to go shopping in<lb/>
Fayetteville, and we'd<lb/>
go to Southern Pines<lb/>
just to eat. We don't do<lb/>
that anymore<lb/>
Instead of using cars<lb/>
during leisure time,<lb/>
most people interview-<lb/>
ed said they were spen-<lb/>
ding more time closer<lb/>
to home, both around<lb/>
town and in their own<lb/>
neighborhoods.<lb/>
"We watch TV a lot<lb/>
more and get out and<lb/>
walk more Mrs.<lb/>
McFarland said.<lb/>
"Come summer, we'll<lb/>
find more things to do<lb/>
around the house<lb/>
"I don't know<lb/>
what's going to happen<lb/>
this summer she said.<lb/>
"We'd like to go to the<lb/>
beach, and if we're<lb/>
lucky, maybe we'll get<lb/>
to go once<lb/>
Another Sanford<lb/>
resident, Betsy Kelly,<lb/>
said, "We used to go<lb/>
riding on Sunday<lb/>
nights, but now we just<lb/>
Local Firm,<lb/>
ECU Sponsor<lb/>
Intern Program<lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
An internship pro-<lb/>
gram for graduate<lb/>
students studying<lb/>
microbiology has been<lb/>
established through the<lb/>
cooperation of Bur-<lb/>
roughs Wellcome Co.<lb/>
and ECU. Wayne<lb/>
Stephens, of Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C has been selected<lb/>
as the first intern.<lb/>
Stephens is working<lb/>
this semester in the<lb/>
Bacteriological Control<lb/>
Laboratory at Bur-<lb/>
roughs Wellcome.<lb/>
During his internship,<lb/>
he receives both<lb/>
academic credit and a<lb/>
saiary.<lb/>
The program also<lb/>
benefits Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome, according to<lb/>
Bill Underwood, a<lb/>
scientist in the com-<lb/>
pany's Quality<lb/>
Assurance Department.<lb/>
"The intern supplies<lb/>
us with additional man-<lb/>
power in our<lb/>
laboratories said<lb/>
Underwood. "Also, by<lb/>
enhancing the<lb/>
qualifications of<lb/>
graduate students, the<lb/>
Company increases the<lb/>
number of qualified<lb/>
potential employees in<lb/>
the workforce<lb/>
Minimum qualifica-<lb/>
tions for interns are<lb/>
that they have com-<lb/>
pleted basic<lb/>
microbiology course<lb/>
work and are enrolled<lb/>
as graduate students in<lb/>
biology, medicine or<lb/>
medical microbiology<lb/>
or environmental<lb/>
health. One candidate<lb/>
will be recommended<lb/>
each semester by a<lb/>
selection committee at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
N.C. Realtors<lb/>
Plan Symposium<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARM1S<lb/>
Greek Correspondent<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's<lb/>
celebrated their annual<lb/>
Parent's Day on Sun-<lb/>
day, April 13 with an<lb/>
open house and lun-<lb/>
cheon.<lb/>
The Phi's would like<lb/>
to congratulate Bobbi<lb/>
Daniel for being chosen<lb/>
TKE Sweetheart; Diane<lb/>
Gray and Cynthia<lb/>
Mewborn for being<lb/>
chosen University Mar-<lb/>
shall; Diane Gray for<lb/>
being elected into Bega<lb/>
Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Business Honor Socie-<lb/>
ty; and Karen Jones for<lb/>
winning a $500 home<lb/>
furnishings scholar-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi's<lb/>
celebrated with Joanna<lb/>
Best at a reception<lb/>
honoring her Senior<lb/>
Art Show in Textile<lb/>
Design.<lb/>
Congratulations to<lb/>
all the Phi's for their<lb/>
outstanding sisters!<lb/>
The Sigma's have<lb/>
been doing very well in<lb/>
Intramurals this Spr-<lb/>
ing. They are currently<lb/>
sorority division<lb/>
leaders in Team Tennis.<lb/>
They have also been<lb/>
beating their opponents<lb/>
soundly in Softball.<lb/>
Tri Sigma is having<lb/>
its formal Friday, April<lb/>
18, at the Washington<lb/>
Country Club. Other<lb/>
functions for this<lb/>
month include a rush<lb/>
party and social<lb/>
Wednesday night, Spr-<lb/>
ing Cleaning, Senior<lb/>
Send-on, a lock-out for<lb/>
the pledges, and<lb/>
Founder's Day.<lb/>
The Alpha Delta Pi's<lb/>
presented their eight<lb/>
spring pledges Saturday<lb/>
night at the Spring For-<lb/>
mal at Bogue Banks<lb/>
Country Club at Atlan-<lb/>
tic Beach. Sunday<lb/>
night, the Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi's honored the<lb/>
graduating seniors of<lb/>
the sorority at a<lb/>
Founder's Day banquet<lb/>
at the Beef Barn.<lb/>
The Greek News has<lb/>
a new writer for the<lb/>
1980-81 school year.<lb/>
Beginning in<lb/>
September, Tommy<lb/>
Bland, a member of<lb/>
Kappa Alpha, will be<lb/>
composing the Greek<lb/>
News. More details<lb/>
next week.<lb/>
get together with the<lb/>
family and play cards<lb/>
and volleyball<lb/>
In Murfreesboro,<lb/>
Jack Hassell, buildings<lb/>
and grounds<lb/>
superintendent at<lb/>
Chowan College, said,<lb/>
"Rather than going out<lb/>
of town when we have<lb/>
time off, we are taking<lb/>
advantage of activities<lb/>
offered right here in<lb/>
Murfreesboro. We're<lb/>
visiting neighbors more<lb/>
often<lb/>
"There's no way the<lb/>
consumer can win<lb/>
said J.R. Winecoff, a<lb/>
Wilmington policeman.<lb/>
AprJIlay June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar<lb/>
Awag? gM prtc?c In N.C. Source: Cyotina Motor Qub<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
Jl 76 00 "all inclusive"<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth con<lb/>
trol, and problem pregnan<lb/>
cy counseling For further<lb/>
information call 832 0535<lb/>
(toll free number<lb/>
800 221 2568) between 9<lb/>
AM 5 P AA. weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's<lb/>
Health Organitation<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27603<lb/>
03<lb/>
Nl<lb/>
LtffiNlEiX) 5<lb/>
jjp<lb/>
?2 Try Our Nfew Sub<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
ro<lb/>
CD<lb/>
Short Sub (your ?<lb/>
choice) 21<lb/>
? Fresh Tossed Salad <lb/>
xj Lagre Iced Tea "P<lb/>
 ONLY $2.79<lb/>
OnlyatCHANELO'S<lb/>
The Fifth Annual<lb/>
"Opportunities in Real<lb/>
Lstate" Symposium<lb/>
will be held Wednes-<lb/>
day, April 16, on the<lb/>
campus of East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
Sponsored by Rho Ep-<lb/>
silon (the professional<lb/>
Real Estate Fraternity<lb/>
at ECU), the North<lb/>
Carolina Real Estate<lb/>
Educational Founda-<lb/>
tion, and the North<lb/>
Carolina Association<lb/>
of Realtors, the sym-<lb/>
posium will be held at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center from 9:00 a.m.<lb/>
until 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
luaiity Shoe Repair<lb/>
The program, which<lb/>
is primarily designed to<lb/>
offer the real estate<lb/>
students at ECu<lb/>
guidance on oppor-<lb/>
tunities in real estate,<lb/>
will feature speakers on<lb/>
Commercial Develop-<lb/>
ment, Appraising, Pro-<lb/>
perty Management,<lb/>
Residential Construc-<lb/>
tion, Residential<lb/>
Brokerage and Mor-<lb/>
tgage Lending. In addi-<lb/>
tion, the students will<lb/>
be given an opportunity<lb/>
to discuss employment<lb/>
possibilities with in-<lb/>
terested realtors.<lb/>
THEREJS low<lb/>
DIFFERENCE! 42nj)<lb/>
PREPARE FOR?<lb/>
VQEECFMG FLEX<lb/>
NAT! MED BDS.<lb/>
NAT L DENTAL BDS.<lb/>
NURSING BOARDS<lb/>
MCAT ? OAT ? LSAT ? GRE<lb/>
GMAT ? OCAT ? PCAT<lb/>
VAI ? SAT<lb/>
-H.<lb/>
EDUCATIONAL<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
TEST PREPARATION<lb/>
SPECIALISTS SINCE 1931<lb/>
Visit Any Ctnter<lb/>
Ani Set Far VMTMlf<lb/>
Why Wt Make TM Difftrtnet<lb/>
Flexible fef raws &amp; Hows<lb/>
Call Days, Ewes 4 Weekends<lb/>
i Mi<lb/>
2M<lb/>
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i <lb/>
<pb facs="00057262_0004"/><lb/>
Sty ?aBt (Earfllinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, tmm m ms<lb/>
Richard Green. uanaKmK wtor<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim. a Diane Henderson, copy em<lb/>
Chris Lichok. bum Manager Charles Chandler. spom Editor<lb/>
Terry Gray ? mm Debbie Hotaling. Features &amp;au<lb/>
TUESDAY. APRIL 15, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
Political Games<lb/>
The Olympics, at least for the<lb/>
American team, is pretty much<lb/>
given up for dead, now that the<lb/>
House of Delegates have made their<lb/>
decision not to participate in<lb/>
Moscow.<lb/>
The question remains, was the<lb/>
cancellation of American participa-<lb/>
tion a way to protest the upheaval in<lb/>
Afghanistan, or was it merely a<lb/>
political ploy by President Carter to<lb/>
appear the hero in this election<lb/>
year?<lb/>
The leader who was murdered in<lb/>
Afghanistan during the most recent<lb/>
invasion was nothing more than a<lb/>
Soviet puppet, a ruler that bowed to<lb/>
every whim from the Kremlin.<lb/>
Carter didn't get upset then. In<lb/>
fact, the American government of-<lb/>
fered not one word of resistance<lb/>
against the man. Only when Soviet<lb/>
leaders appeared to tire of him and<lb/>
decided to dethrone him by force<lb/>
did Carter begin to cry from his<lb/>
soapbox about "human rights<lb/>
The lingering hostage problem<lb/>
has been marked by the fact that<lb/>
Carter seems to hint that the<lb/>
stalemate is about to be broken,<lb/>
coincidentally at the time that the<lb/>
polls are about to open in a major<lb/>
primary. This political ploy is<lb/>
reminiscent of the Nixon years,<lb/>
when the Vietnam deescalation<lb/>
would mysteriously slow down<lb/>
while Nixon waited for the returns<lb/>
to come in. This useless election-<lb/>
saver cost America more than we<lb/>
would like to admit in human lives.<lb/>
What is there for us to do, then?<lb/>
One of the few hopes we can have is<lb/>
that politics will triumph and the<lb/>
elected president, whoever he is, will<lb/>
be too frightened that the rival party<lb/>
will win a landslide four years from<lb/>
now that he won't do anything too<lb/>
crazy. Inflation, Iran and<lb/>
Afghanistan notwithstanding, this<lb/>
fear of the other party just might be<lb/>
the thing that will save us.<lb/>
Buy A Ticket. Save Our Concerts<lb/>
The Student Union Major Attrac-<lb/>
tions Committe is about to lose its<lb/>
entire operating budget for the next<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
And it's nobody's fault but your<lb/>
own.<lb/>
Major Attractions, which has put<lb/>
on such quality acts as Jimmy Buf-<lb/>
fet, Pablo Cruise and Styx relies on<lb/>
a break-even system of manage-<lb/>
ment. Simply put, if they sell<lb/>
enough ticketw to break even, they<lb/>
will have enough money the next<lb/>
time around to put on a good con-<lb/>
cert.<lb/>
only 1,000 tickets have been sold to<lb/>
the TOTO concert next Thursday<lb/>
night. 2,800 more need to be sold<lb/>
for the committee to break even.<lb/>
Major Attractions depends on<lb/>
ticket sales, and ticket sales alone to<lb/>
pay for concerts. No student fees<lb/>
whatsoever go into any part of the<lb/>
committee. It is the only committee<lb/>
in the Student Union that is totally<lb/>
independent.<lb/>
If we don't, we have no right to<lb/>
complain next year when there are<lb/>
no concerts.<lb/>
AFRICAN ELEPHANT INPIAN ELEPHANT<lb/>
UA&amp; two<lb/>
urge: ears<lb/>
AMERICAN ELEPHANT<lb/>
pJOCKY MTU.<lb/>
NtW?<lb/>
College Press Service<lb/>
HAfe TviO<lb/>
EAR&amp;<lb/>
HA&amp; ONE<lb/>
6I6AN1JC RIGHT<lb/>
EAR AND Ig<lb/>
COMPLETELY<lb/>
DEAF OM THE<lb/>
LEFT SIPE<lb/>
T?S A ReASOM I M?TW?T? K6NN6DY, BUT He FORGQTTeN MAT IT mn<lb/>
Dear Mr. CIA And Comrade KGB<lb/>
The following letter was written and sent<lb/>
to the directors of the CIA and KGB by<lb/>
Mark Gerzon, managing editor of<lb/>
WuildPaper. It is reprinted here from the<lb/>
March April edition.<lb/>
Dear Mr. CIA and Comrade KGB:<lb/>
Although the return to the cold war is no<lb/>
doubt keeping you busy, I'd appreciate<lb/>
your taking a moment to consider a modest<lb/>
proposal that could transform your global<lb/>
reputations from villains to heroes.<lb/>
Before outlining the proposal, however,<lb/>
let me assure you that I know you both<lb/>
mean well and that your motives are ge-<lb/>
nuinely patriotic. Each of you no doubt<lb/>
undertakes your "dirty tricks" to<lb/>
counteract those of your adversary.<lb/>
But after watching for more than a<lb/>
generation as you both interfere in Africa,<lb/>
Asia and Latin America, I am becoming<lb/>
suspicious. Beneath your enmity I detect a<lb/>
paradoxical alliance. Without each other,<lb/>
you would have no excuse to meedle in the<lb/>
rest of the world.<lb/>
Whatever your differences as capitalists<lb/>
and communists, you both are afflicted by<lb/>
the Superpower syndrome: a political men-<lb/>
tality that denies one's own tendency to<lb/>
dominate the world while magnifying the<lb/>
tendency of one's adversary to do so. The<lb/>
White House and the Kremlin have been so<lb/>
quick to condemn each other's aggression<lb/>
? and slow to admit their own ? that the<lb/>
history of the cold war reads like a case<lb/>
history of two megalomaniacs. For exam-<lb/>
ple:<lb/>
?Mr. CIA, when Mohammed<lb/>
Mossadegh's rise to power in 1953<lb/>
threatened American control of Iran's oil,<lb/>
you plotted his downfall and enthroned the<lb/>
Shah.<lb/>
?Comrade KGB, when Alexander<lb/>
Dubcek peacefully tried to find his own<lb/>
blend of socialism, you advocated and then<lb/>
helped plan and execute the Soviet invasion<lb/>
of Czechoslovakia in 1968. Of course you<lb/>
claimed that members of the Czechoslovak<lb/>
Communist Party "requested military aid"<lb/>
for the Soviet Union because their country<lb/>
was "threatened by counterrevolution" in-<lb/>
spired by the West. But this excuse sounded<lb/>
as hollow then as it does now.<lb/>
?When your government was deciding<lb/>
whether to escalate the war in Vietnam,<lb/>
Mr. CIA, you adopted the same self-<lb/>
serving logic that the Soviets used in<lb/>
Eastern Europe. As your own high-ranking<lb/>
employee Victor Marchetti reported (in<lb/>
The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence,<lb/>
which you censored), you installed your<lb/>
own leader and later justified American<lb/>
military presence on the grounds that you<lb/>
were invited. "The Vietnamese have asked<lb/>
our help Secretary of Defense Robert<lb/>
McNamara explained in 1964. "We have<lb/>
given it<lb/>
?For the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan,<lb/>
Comrade KGB, you relied once again on<lb/>
the same tired phrases. "There has been no<lb/>
Soviet 'intervention' or 'invasion' at all<lb/>
announced Leonid Brezhnev, based on in-<lb/>
formation provided by you and your<lb/>
military cousin Comrade GRU. "We are<lb/>
helping the new Afghanistan at the request<lb/>
of its government to defend its national in-<lb/>
dependence  from armed aggression<lb/>
from outside<lb/>
People around the world do not need to<lb/>
read George Orwell's description of<lb/>
newspeak to recognize your deception. You<lb/>
excuse your overt interference everywhere<lb/>
on the grounds that the other Superpower<lb/>
has already covertly interfered. At times of<lb/>
crisis, the White House and the Kremlin<lb/>
sound identical. With the appropriate word<lb/>
substitutions, either Jimmy Carter or<lb/>
Leonid Brezhnev could make the following<lb/>
statement:<lb/>
As the leader of the (Free<lb/>
WorldSocialist Community), we cannot<lb/>
permit a free and sovereign nation to be<lb/>
undermined by the international<lb/>
(communistcapitalist) conspiracy. The<lb/>
enemy's attempt to instigate<lb/>
(revolutioncounterrevolution) cannot be<lb/>
tolerated. Nations that are united in<lb/>
defense of (democracysocialism) share a<lb/>
vital interest in safeguarding their mutual<lb/>
security. Consequently, we will not hesitate<lb/>
to defend any nation that is threatened by<lb/>
(totalitarianimperialist) aggression.<lb/>
No cure is possible as long as secrecy re-<lb/>
mains supreme. As former US Senator J.<lb/>
William Fulbright has said, "People who<lb/>
have secrets travel in a kind of fraternity <lb/>
and they will not speak to anyone else As<lb/>
the primary members of this exclusive es-<lb/>
pionage club, you both seem almost as<lb/>
loyal to it as to your respective govern-<lb/>
ments. When a high-ranking Washington<lb/>
consultant recently asked a senior CIA of-<lb/>
ficial why the agency did not "blow the<lb/>
cover off" a KGB operation in a certain<lb/>
African country, he replied, "We can't af-<lb/>
ford to. If we exposed their guys, they'd ex-<lb/>
pose ours, and the government would<lb/>
throw us both out<lb/>
Secrecy makes suspicions grow like mold<lb/>
in the dark. Whenever a socialist nation<lb/>
breaks away from Moscow, Comrade<lb/>
KGB, you suspect that Mr. CIA is involv-<lb/>
ed. And whenever a nation tries to liberate<lb/>
itself from a tyrannical government, Mr.<lb/>
CIA, you suspect that Comrade KGB ti<lb/>
gered the insurrection.<lb/>
In fact, the best countermeasure is to ex-<lb/>
pose publicly the other's underccne-<lb/>
tivities. If the problem is darkne the<lb/>
solution is "light" ? reliable, comprehen-<lb/>
sive intelligence. This is why 1 am addre-<lb/>
ing my proposal to both of vou.<lb/>
As a journalist, I have learned thai<lb/>
almost impossible to obtain informs<lb/>
from either of you about your own<lb/>
tivities, but that you are both eager<lb/>
describe each other's. My propo<lb/>
therefore, is quite simple. Don't di<lb/>
your own covert operations, iut n<lb/>
known each other's. Why don't both<lb/>
you publicize the most complete and detail-<lb/>
ed account of each other's activities<lb/>
Asia, Africa and South America.<lb/>
I am sure your superiors in the Kremlin<lb/>
and the White House would approeo in<lb/>
modest proposal. After all. Comrade KGB.<lb/>
you will simply be informing the peopk ol<lb/>
the world what the CIA is doing so<lb/>
they can protect themselves igainst<lb/>
"Western imperialism And, Mr.  <lb/>
you will simply be telling them what the<lb/>
KGB is doing to save them from the "Rec<lb/>
Menace<lb/>
Before I close, however, let me re-p<lb/>
in advance to a concern that 1 am sure<lb/>
both have that this project ? if it ultin<lb/>
ly made all your activities public ? m<lb/>
make you unnecessary. But remember<lb/>
proposal only covers your activities in the<lb/>
rest of the world. You are still free to in-<lb/>
filtrate each other's country as much a you<lb/>
want. The United States and the Soviet<lb/>
Union, after all, are big enough to absorb<lb/>
an infinite number of each other's sleuths.<lb/>
And the more you know about each other.<lb/>
the better. There are over 200 KGB<lb/>
operatives in New York Citv alone. You<lb/>
could each keep many more spies emploed<lb/>
full time if you blanketed each other's<lb/>
country.<lb/>
With thousands of your agents on the<lb/>
other Superpower's territory, neither of<lb/>
you would be likely to advocate launching<lb/>
a nuclear attack. Your "intelligence"<lb/>
would then serve the cause of peace. V<lb/>
heroes instead of villains, wouldn't you<lb/>
sleep better at night?<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Mark Gerzon<lb/>
Citizens Party Is A Likely Alternative To GOP, Democrats<lb/>
By PATRICK MINGES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Only last week, in a faint effort of<lb/>
desperation, I proposed to run my pet on a<lb/>
platform that vaguely resembles one that<lb/>
could meet the needs of our people. It was<lb/>
a joke, but the idea of deciding between<lb/>
Carter and Reagan is even more of a joke,<lb/>
one that is not so funny. Anderson is the<lb/>
only candidate even mildly agreeable, but<lb/>
he is not the liberal messiah that many, in-<lb/>
cluding members of the press, seem to<lb/>
believe. Remember he is still a Republican.<lb/>
Last Friday I received the answer to all<lb/>
my dreams from an article in, of all places,<lb/>
Rolling Stone, concerning the origins of a<lb/>
third party entitled the Citizens Party and<lb/>
its candidate for president, Barry Com-<lb/>
moner. I have known about Barry Com-<lb/>
moner and the Citizens Party for some<lb/>
time, but this is the first detailed interview<lb/>
with and exposition of the platform of<lb/>
Barry Commoner and the Citizens Party.<lb/>
This party has a promise for the future.<lb/>
The Citizens Party has its origins among<lb/>
ultraliberals in the Democratic Party who<lb/>
have become disenchanted with the neo-<lb/>
Republican platform of Jimmy Carter. In<lb/>
August of last year, Commoner and other<lb/>
progressive individuals such as Julian<lb/>
Bond, Studs Terkel, United Steelworkers<lb/>
Ed Sadlowski, 'Mother Jones' publisher<lb/>
Adam Hothschild, and Gray Panther<lb/>
leader Maggie Kuhn launched the Citizens<lb/>
Party and last weekend the party held its<lb/>
first convention in Cleveland. The party<lb/>
elected Barry Commoner as their presiden-<lb/>
tial candidate. Although the Citizens Party<lb/>
is only in its founding stages, it can already<lb/>
claim chapters in more than 30 states.<lb/>
Barry Commoner was born in Brooklyn<lb/>
in 1917, received his doctorate in biology<lb/>
from Harvard in 1941 and has been direc-<lb/>
tor of the environmental and economic<lb/>
think tank Center for the Biology of<lb/>
Natural Systems since 1965. He has<lb/>
published such books as Science and Sur-<lb/>
vival, The Poverty of Power and The<lb/>
Politics of Energy and has been one of the<lb/>
pioneers of the environmental and anti-<lb/>
nuclear movements. Commoner was dubb-<lb/>
ed "The Paul Revere of Ecology" on the<lb/>
cover of Time in 1970. He has since grown<lb/>
increasingly political because of his<lb/>
abiding conviction that scientists have a<lb/>
responsibility to make their work tangible<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
The Citizens Party has as its basis the<lb/>
needs and future of our country and its<lb/>
people and is the very antithesis to the<lb/>
corporate-dominated two-party system.<lb/>
With the Democrats and Republicans<lb/>
rushing headlong from the crucial political<lb/>
issues that plague our country, the Citizens<lb/>
attempt to meet these problems actively<lb/>
and progressively. The Citizens Party<lb/>
hopes to "give the voter something to<lb/>
smile about when he enters the polling<lb/>
place" by returning to him his dignity and<lb/>
a new respect for the value of his vote.<lb/>
The Citizens Party platform is as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
?Public control of the energy industries<lb/>
?A swift halt to nuclear power<lb/>
?A strong push for conservation and<lb/>
solar energy<lb/>
?An immediate, sharp reversal in the<lb/>
rate of military spending<lb/>
?Vigorous support for human rights<lb/>
here and abroad<lb/>
?A guaranteed job for everyone who<lb/>
wants to work<lb/>
?Stable prices for the basic necessities of<lb/>
life: food, fuelhousing and medical care<lb/>
?Limitations on the political and<lb/>
economic influence of corporations<lb/>
Rolling Stone<lb/>
May 1,1980<lb/>
This platform rests on the wealth and<lb/>
energy to be found in the American in-<lb/>
dividual and the tremendous role that he<lb/>
can provide toward the redirection of our<lb/>
national goals with a strong emphasis on<lb/>
living for the future. It plans to severe our<lb/>
dependence on unrenewable energy<lb/>
sources such as fossil fuels, nuclear energy<lb/>
and the integrity of the corporations and to<lb/>
redirect the national economy through <lb/>
production of the photovoltaic cell and <lb/>
conversion of automobiles to gasohol. The<lb/>
only thing that is standing in the way of<lb/>
making America once again the strongest<lb/>
nation in the world is a political system<lb/>
that is dominated by the profit incentive<lb/>
instead of the drive for self preservation.<lb/>
Barry Commoner and the Citizens Partv<lb/>
may not have much of a chance in the up-<lb/>
coming election, but the party is trying to<lb/>
downplay the emphasis on personalities<lb/>
and return the focus to issues. If the<lb/>
Citizens Party can secure a firm political<lb/>
stance by gaining five percent of the elec-<lb/>
torate in this year's presidential election,<lb/>
ic21W"J5L digibte for fcderal fusing in<lb/>
i$4. This is the beginning of the Aqurian<lb/>
revolution which may relinquish the power<lb/>
of the corporate state and return it to its<lb/>
nghtful owners, the people and the<lb/>
motherland. The chance is now, and the<lb/>
opportunity is within our grasp. Failure to<lb/>
seize such may doom us to an uncertain<lb/>
future. It is our choice - to face the sunset<lb/>
 or the sunrise.<lb/>
V<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057262_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Op-Ed<lb/>
Other Opinion<lb/>
APRIL IS, 1980<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Is Nuclear World War Inevitable?<lb/>
By FRANK BARNABY<lb/>
The following article is reprinted with permis-<lb/>
sion from the MarchApril edition of<lb/>
WorldPaper.<lb/>
Ever since World War II, great efforts have<lb/>
been made to control military technology and to<lb/>
stop the nuclear arms race between the Americans<lb/>
and the Russians. Many of the world's most<lb/>
brilliant people have been actively involved in<lb/>
these efforts. No other problem has received so<lb/>
much attention in the United Nations and other<lb/>
international forums. Whole libraries have been<lb/>
written on the subject. Yet, because of the enor-<lb/>
mous political influence of those groups that con-<lb/>
tinually press for every conceivable technological<lb/>
advance for military purposes, nuclear and other<lb/>
arms races go on just as fast as human skill in the<lb/>
American and Soviet societies allows. We are be-<lb/>
ing driven toward nuclear world war by the sheer<lb/>
momentum of military technology.<lb/>
1 have not always been so pessimistic. Quite the<lb/>
contrary. When I began working as a physicist in<lb/>
the early 1950s, I was convinced, along with most<lb/>
of my generation, that science and technology<lb/>
could ? and would ? solve most of the world's<lb/>
major problems. We realy did believe, for exam-<lb/>
ple, that nuclear power could help to develop<lb/>
Third World countries rapidly by providing<lb/>
massive amounts of cheap energy. (Remember<lb/>
the Atoms for Peace program?) But now it has<lb/>
become clear that the solutions to most, if not all,<lb/>
major world problems lie in politics, not in<lb/>
technology.<lb/>
I am not suggesting that some evil group is<lb/>
plotting our destruction. But I do suggest that we<lb/>
may not have the sort of intelligence required to<lb/>
set up the political and social institutions essential<lb/>
to controlling military technology. So far as I can<lb/>
see, we are drifting toward a disaster not because<lb/>
politicians are either ignoiant or want this to hap-<lb/>
pen, but because of man's very nature.<lb/>
The world's arsenals contain tens of thousands<lb/>
of nuclear weapons, probably topping 60,000.<lb/>
The total explosive power of these weapons is<lb/>
equivalent to about 1.25 million Hiroshima<lb/>
bombs. If all, or a significant portion of them,<lb/>
were used, the consequences would be beyond im-<lb/>
agination. Even though I have witnessed nuclear<lb/>
explosions and have been deeply moved by the ex-<lb/>
perience, I can't begin to imagine an all-out<lb/>
nuclear war.<lb/>
All the major cities in the Northern<lb/>
Hemisphere, where most nuclear warheads are<lb/>
aimed, would be destroyed. Most of the urban<lb/>
population there would be killed by blast and fire,<lb/>
the rural population by radiation. Many millions<lb/>
of people in the Southern Hemisphere would be<lb/>
killed by radiation from fallout. And the disaster<lb/>
would not end even there. The unpredictable<lb/>
long-term effects might well include changes in<lb/>
the global climate, severe genetic damage and<lb/>
depletion of the ozone layer that protects life on<lb/>
earth from excessive ultraviolet radiation. No<lb/>
scientist can convincingly assure us that human<lb/>
life would survive a nuclear world war.<lb/>
Why then is the probability of such a war<lb/>
steadily increasing? The major reason is that<lb/>
military technology is developing weapons<lb/>
suitable for fighting rather than for deterring a<lb/>
nuclear war. These newer weapons are very ac-<lb/>
curate and reliable ballistic missiles with<lb/>
warheads that can be aimed at smaller and,<lb/>
therefore, many more military tagets than in the<lb/>
past. In other words, the day is coming when one<lb/>
country might hope to destroy its enemy's nuclear<lb/>
retaliatory capability by striking first.<lb/>
For many years now, official nuclear policies,<lb/>
at least in the United States, were based on the ex-<lb/>
pectation of mutual assured destruction. The<lb/>
theory was that the enemy would not attack for<lb/>
fear that its own cities and industries surely would<lb/>
be destroyed in retaliation. Moves away from a<lb/>
deterrent strategy and toward a fighting strategy<lb/>
(or "counterforce as the experts call it) are be-<lb/>
ing made not because the requirements of nuclear<lb/>
deterrence have changed. The psychology of the The energy shortage itself is also likely to the nuclear arms race, it would insist on action by<lb/>
enemy is, after all, the same. Policies are chang- heighten the probability of a nuclear war. Low its political leaders. The job of getting objective<lb/>
ing because military technology has produced economic growth brought on by energy shortages information across to the public must be left to<lb/>
more precise weapons. Once available, weapons in the coming decade, with resultant high infla- the mass media. Whether or not we avoid a<lb/>
are usually deployed, and policies then have to be tion and increasing unemployment, may lead to nuclear disaster may, therefore, ultimately de-<lb/>
modified to justify the deployment. political and social turmoil in the rich countries pend on journalists.<lb/>
Apparently, Soviet nuclear strategy always has and worsening poverty in the poor countries. And<lb/>
had a stronger emphasis on counterforce than these are the exact circumstances under which Dr. Frank Barnaby, the author and editor of<lb/>
U.S. strategy even though Soviet missiles are less countries resort to military action. (In the end, several books and articles on nuclear and disar-<lb/>
accurate and reliable than their American North-South tension may be a greater threat to moment issues, was born in England in 1927. He<lb/>
counterparts. As the Russians improve the quality world security than East-West tension.) The has been the director of the Stockholm Interna-<lb/>
of their missiles, the counterforce doctrine will dilemma is that insofar as nuclear power can help tional Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) since<lb/>
probably become more refined. And the more the the energy crisis (many believe it can't help 1971. He has also served as the executive secretary<lb/>
two great powers adapt to counterforce doctrines, much), it may reduce the probability of nuclear of the Pugwash Conferences on Sciences and<lb/>
the greater will be the probability of a nuclear war war. But nuclear power may also increase the pro- World Affairs, as a research physicist at Universi-<lb/>
because the idea that such a war is both bability by spreading the know-how and material ty College, London, and has worked at the British<lb/>
"fightable and winnable" will gain ground. The for making weapons. My own gut feeling is that Atomic Weapons Research Establishment.<lb/>
path from the Hiroshima bomb to a nuclear the fewer the nuclear weapon states, the better ?<lb/>
world war brought on by the characteristics of even if this world is a somewhat colder one.<lb/>
nuclear weapons themselves may be a The main, perhaps the only, hope for the<lb/>
technological inevitability. future that I can see is that the public will learn<lb/>
I am not suggesting that a direct nuclear attack the facts in time and that an aroused public opi-<lb/>
by one Superpower on the other is a likely way in nion will force reluctant politicians to stop the<lb/>
which such a war would begin, although the arms race and reduce armaments. I am convinced<lb/>
danger of its starting by accident or miscalcula- that political leaders, left to themselves, will not<lb/>
tion is ever present. The escalation of a regional be able to prevent a nuclear holocaust however<lb/>
conflict to a general nuclear war is more likely. A sincerely they may wish to do so. I am equally<lb/>
local conflict in, say, a Third World region like convinced that if the public knew the truth about<lb/>
the Middle East might begin as a conventional<lb/>
THANKS<lb/>
GAAAAAA<lb/>
SIGAAA<lb/>
SIGMA<lb/>
and<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
for helping<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
ELECTIONS<lb/>
BUY YOUR TOTO<lb/>
TICKETS NOW!<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUOCNT UMON<lb/>
war and then escalate to a limited nuclear war, us-<lb/>
ing the nuclear weapons of the local powers. This<lb/>
could in turn escalate to a general nuclear war in-<lb/>
volving the Superpowers, especially if the Super-<lb/>
powers supplied the conventional weapons for<lb/>
the original conflict. And that is why both the in-<lb/>
ternational arms trade, now totally out of con-<lb/>
trol, and nuclear weapons proliferation are so<lb/>
dangerous.<lb/>
We seem to be on the threshold of a new round<lb/>
of nuclear weapons proliferation, with Pakistan<lb/>
the next probable nuclear power. The widening<lb/>
access to nuclear weapons technology goes hand<lb/>
in hand with the spread of peaceful nuclear<lb/>
technology, which was itself a spin-off from<lb/>
military programs. And whatever the apologists<lb/>
for the nuclear industry say, I am utterly convinc-<lb/>
ed that the more nuclear reactors there are<lb/>
generating electricity around the world, the<lb/>
greater will be the number of countries acquiring<lb/>
the skills and fissle material to make nuclear<lb/>
weapons. As the number of countries with<lb/>
nuclear weapons increases, the probability of<lb/>
nuclear war will increase.<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 dur-<lb/>
ing the summer.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of-<lb/>
ficial newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published for and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
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<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. ?<lb/>
Telephone: 757344, 6347, 4309<lb/>
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?? M? ?<lb/>
Bring your blanket or lawn chair<lb/>
;?? AMBERS<lb/>
"ASTW?VS<lb/>
Concert begins at 11 00 a. m.<lb/>
APRIL 20,1980<lb/>
HOLIDAY INN TRAVEL PARK<lb/>
EMERALD ISLE. NX.<lb/>
(on the beach)<lb/>
IXMIFON<lb/>
Offer Rind the fiftuwMR Chick-R-A<lb/>
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i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057262_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
APRIL IV 1980<lb/>
Pag 6<lb/>
'Equus' Opens April 16<lb/>
"Equus the internationally ac-<lb/>
claimed and award-winning drama<lb/>
by Peter Shaffer, will be presented<lb/>
by the ECU Playhouse April 16-19<lb/>
and 21-26.<lb/>
Each performance will begin at<lb/>
8:15 p.m. in the ECU Studio<lb/>
Theater. Tickets are now on sale at<lb/>
the Playhouse Box Office and may<lb/>
be reserved by calling 757-6390.<lb/>
In addition to a three-year Broad-<lb/>
way run, "Equus" toured across the<lb/>
nation and has been produced by<lb/>
mans top regional and resident<lb/>
theaters. It received the Tony<lb/>
Award, the Outer Circle Critic's<lb/>
Award, the Drama Desk Award and<lb/>
the New York Critic's Award and<lb/>
has been translated into 10<lb/>
languages for performance<lb/>
throughout the world.<lb/>
The action of the play revolves<lb/>
around a brutal and inhuman crime.<lb/>
Late one night, in the stables where<lb/>
he works, 17-year-old Alan Strang<lb/>
gouges out the eyes of five horses<lb/>
with a metal spike. Why? He refuses<lb/>
to say. When questioned, he<lb/>
responds only by singing television<lb/>
commercials.<lb/>
The boy is referred to Child<lb/>
Psychiatrist Martin Dysart, and the<lb/>
play then traces his treatment,<lb/>
parental interviews, a gradual<lb/>
revelation and exhausting confron-<lb/>
tations between doctor and child.<lb/>
Played out on platform at stage<lb/>
center, the drama involves a fluid<lb/>
treatment of time and space. The ac-<lb/>
tors, seated onstage throughout, rise<lb/>
to play their parts, then recede. Five<lb/>
young men portray the horses,<lb/>
wearing iron hooves and<lb/>
ceremonially donning wire horse<lb/>
masks.<lb/>
The ECU production of "Equus"<lb/>
is directed by Del Lewis of the ECU<lb/>
drama faculty. His cast is headed by<lb/>
Travis Lockhart, also of the drama<lb/>
faculty, as the psychiatrist who is<lb/>
driven to solve the complex and<lb/>
disturbing mystery of the boy's<lb/>
crime.<lb/>
Denny Wright of Greenville por-<lb/>
trays the tortured young man.<lb/>
Veteran area performers Hael<lb/>
Stapleton and Bob Myers fill strong<lb/>
supporting roles. Ms. Stapleton is a<lb/>
member of the ECU psychology<lb/>
faculty, and Myers is a morning an-<lb/>
nouncer at WNCT radio.<lb/>
According to Scott Parker,<lb/>
Playhouse general manager,<lb/>
"Equus" is "a play for adults<lb/>
There is no nudity in the produc-<lb/>
tion, but the play deals with very<lb/>
serious psychological elements that<lb/>
we feel may not be suitable for<lb/>
younger audiences<lb/>
The Playhouse Box Office is open<lb/>
from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. each<lb/>
weekday. Ticket reservation is ad-<lb/>
vised, as seating in the Studio<lb/>
Theater is limited.<lb/>
First ECU<lb/>
Anti-Nuke<lb/>
Fest Held<lb/>
B MARK KEMP<lb/>
and JAY STONE<lb/>
Staff Writers<lb/>
It was a radiant April afternoon<lb/>
as a lone voice rang out across the<lb/>
student mall singing "The Times,<lb/>
They Are A-Changin It seemed<lb/>
an to be an omen ? a message for<lb/>
students who had begun to assemble<lb/>
there at 12 noon, Thursday, April<lb/>
10.<lb/>
"The Festival For A<lb/>
Humanitarian Renaissance" was<lb/>
reminiscent of the late 1960's in that<lb/>
it sought to present controversial<lb/>
issues in a festival-like atmosphere,<lb/>
combining political speeches with<lb/>
folk and rock &amp; roll music. Mike<lb/>
Joyner gave the keynote address for<lb/>
the Student Caucus for Progressive<lb/>
Reform.<lb/>
Speeches were given on alternate<lb/>
energy sources, the Equal Rights<lb/>
Amendment, Gay rights, the draft,<lb/>
nuclear energy, holism, world<lb/>
hunger and other humanitarian sub-<lb/>
jects. Jim Garrison, with the Coali-<lb/>
tion for a Non-Nuclear World, flew<lb/>
to Greenville from Washington,<lb/>
D.C. to warn students of the<lb/>
dangers associated with the nation's<lb/>
growing nuclear industry.<lb/>
Garrison's speech was one of the<lb/>
most powerful speeches of the day.<lb/>
When he finished by extending a<lb/>
personal invitation to the students<lb/>
of ECU to attend the April 26 anti-<lb/>
nuclear rally in Washington, he<lb/>
received a standing ovation. Steve<lb/>
Summerford, of the Chapel Hill<lb/>
War Resistors' League, also receiv-<lb/>
ed enthusiastic response after his<lb/>
speech on nuclear weapons and the<lb/>
draft.<lb/>
Both speakers agreed to come to<lb/>
the festival for half of their travel<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
The audience tht attended "The<lb/>
Festival For A Humanitarian<lb/>
Renaissance" was an unusually at-<lb/>
tentive and responsive group. There<lb/>
seemed to be a sense of common<lb/>
purpose.<lb/>
Throughout the day, natural<lb/>
foods were served to a crowd vary-<lb/>
ing from 150 to 250 people. SCP'R<lb/>
sponsored the concessions, offering<lb/>
peanut butter and banana sand-<lb/>
wiches, granola and apple juice.<lb/>
Also offered were tomato and<lb/>
sprout sandwiches.<lb/>
Several of the speakers passed out<lb/>
free literature and buttons. After<lb/>
the literature was read, most of it<lb/>
was placed in trash cans.<lb/>
Meanwhile, onstage, the M.C<lb/>
Hal Daniel, denounced school food,<lb/>
excessive automobile travel, and the<lb/>
lack of draft beer of campus.<lb/>
Students persistantly urged Daniel<lb/>
to tell them jokes but instead, the<lb/>
ECU SLAP professor recited many<lb/>
applicable poems and quotes.<lb/>
People danced to the old time<lb/>
music of Mike Wells and "fiddlin' "<lb/>
Earl White and their friends. The<lb/>
music was provided by local per-<lb/>
formers who came to play and sing<lb/>
for free.<lb/>
Mark Kemp, an SCPR member<lb/>
and one of the musicians summed<lb/>
up Jim Garrison's Nuclear Power<lb/>
speech with his own composition,<lb/>
"The New Protest Blues The song<lb/>
pleads for support of the support of<lb/>
the movement.<lb/>
Carol Simmione, another musi-<lb/>
cian that played folk music, sang a<lb/>
Photo by LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Photo by LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
song written by a friend of her's.<lb/>
Other performers who appeared<lb/>
at the festival were, in addition to<lb/>
Mike Wells, Mark Kemp and Carol<lb/>
Simmione, were: Allen Oatley,<lb/>
Alisa Mann, The Tour, and Buford<lb/>
T. Band.<lb/>
Acoustic Folk Music played from<lb/>
the mall's stage until around 6 p.m.<lb/>
when The Tour led off the electric<lb/>
set with an Elvis Costello tune entitl-<lb/>
edMystery Dance Lead singer<lb/>
Mitch Bowen dedicated his original<lb/>
song, "Wave" to the New Wave<lb/>
movement of the world. "No<lb/>
thanks, I already gave, all I have left<lb/>
is Wave<lb/>
By the time the Buford T. Band<lb/>
finally came onstage, it was well<lb/>
after 7 p.m. and SCPR personnel,<lb/>
as well as musicians had already<lb/>
been warned that electric music<lb/>
would be cut off promptly at 8 p.m.<lb/>
At 8 p.m. however, Buford T. still<lb/>
had not had enough time to do their<lb/>
last song, "Power which was<lb/>
generally regarded as the anthem of<lb/>
the entire festival.<lb/>
An SPCR spokesperson was<lb/>
quoted as saying, "The song went<lb/>
on, which was a sort of coup de<lb/>
grace in itself, but it was cut short as<lb/>
a result of campus security's<lb/>
threatening to pull the plug<lb/>
Ending the festival, two NCSU<lb/>
professors, Dr. David Martin and<lb/>
Dr. Raymond Saxe, engaged in a<lb/>
debate on the topic of nuclear<lb/>
energy ? pro and con. Fifty people<lb/>
stayed for the debate, many of<lb/>
whom had been at the festival all<lb/>
day leaving only to take a shower<lb/>
or drink a beer.<lb/>
A reporter for channel 7, WITN-<lb/>
TV estimated that the festival was<lb/>
the largest anti-Nuclear rally ever<lb/>
held in the state.<lb/>
The Student Caucus for Pro-<lb/>
gressive Reform is presently coor-<lb/>
dinating the chartering of a bus for<lb/>
ECU students and people in the<lb/>
Greenville area to the national anti-<lb/>
nuclear march in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Cross Releases<lb/>
New Album<lb/>
B MARC BARNES<lb/>
rdilor-ln-( hief<lb/>
"Twas the Pig fair last Septembei<lb/>
A day I well remember<lb/>
When my knees heaan to flutter<lb/>
And I sunk down io the am<lb/>
And a pig came up and lay down h<lb/>
my side<lb/>
As I lay (here in the guttt ?<lb/>
Thinking thoughts I could not utter<lb/>
I thought I heard a passing lady -<lb/>
You can tell the man who boozes<lb/>
By the company thai he choost s<lb/>
With that the pig<lb/>
Got up and walked away. '<lb/>
Irish traditional poem<lb/>
The above (and rather typical)<lb/>
Hurt. Roberl<lb/>
I emon Jeffei<lb/>
I rom m :<lb/>
?<lb/>
Paul S<lb/>
the R Ston<lb/>
fkrrv .<lb/>
??!<lb/>
ed to<lb/>
? <lb/>
danc k ol<lb/>
?<lb/>
with the pei<lb/>
I here set n I<lb/>
?<lb/>
k e " W i<lb/>
d th<lb/>
tOOt-sl<lb/>
like "Old Pa nt 1<lb/>
quote from one of Mike Cross' live<lb/>
performances signifies the fact that<lb/>
he has not strayed very far from the<lb/>
traditional although many of the<lb/>
cuts from his most recent album<lb/>
Bounty Hunter are rock V roll in<lb/>
origin.<lb/>
Most of his music has its roots in<lb/>
the blues traditions of the early 20th<lb/>
century.<lb/>
"I was influenced musically bv<lb/>
the old acoustic blues players from<lb/>
the Mississippi Delta, like John<lb/>
next album will feature the besl<lb/>
both worlds<lb/>
Titled Rock 'n Re and due<lb/>
release in about two months, the<lb/>
album will feature one side ol i ?<lb/>
and one side of country.<lb/>
There are total!) new players on<lb/>
the album Cross said. "Mosl ol<lb/>
the songs that will be on the album<lb/>
are songs that I haven't done be<lb/>
m public<lb/>
See CROSS, Page 7, Col. 1<lb/>
Catch A<lb/>
Fallen B-<lb/>
Ball Star<lb/>
By ROBERT ALBANESE<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
One of the things a Pirate learns<lb/>
in Adolescent Psychology is that ac:<lb/>
cording to a recent survey, high<lb/>
school and college students most<lb/>
revere the non-studious athlete.<lb/>
I was fortunate enough to have<lb/>
figured that out while I was still in<lb/>
high school.<lb/>
Most of us can still remember<lb/>
those not-too-far-off days of<lb/>
oscillating voices and puss-filled<lb/>
faces. Who could forget the fond<lb/>
and foggy memory of going to class<lb/>
with a zit the size of Mount Etna<lb/>
square in the middle of your<lb/>
forehead? Our hormones seemed<lb/>
forever out of balance, producing<lb/>
erratic behavior and the desire to eat<lb/>
ridiculous food with even more<lb/>
ridiculous names. The overpowering<lb/>
desire to eat a "Twinky" was<lb/>
scarcely enough compulsion to give<lb/>
you the courage to ask for some at<lb/>
the store.<lb/>
You had to prove you were a man<lb/>
in those days, even though you<lb/>
knew you weren't and neither was<lb/>
anyone else in your class<lb/>
Athletics was, of course, the vehi-<lb/>
cle for asserting one's manhood.<lb/>
For the hard-core hopefuls, the first<lb/>
choice of sport was foorball.<lb/>
Women will never understand the<lb/>
utter torment the adolescent male<lb/>
will subject his fragile body to for so<lb/>
little as a leer of desire. Broken<lb/>
bones, smashed fingers and frac-<lb/>
tured femurs were not too much for<lb/>
the young man's new-found hunger<lb/>
for attention and whatever else he<lb/>
could talk a cheerleader into.<lb/>
I was among those who did battle<lb/>
on the field. I was as mercenary as<lb/>
all others who fought under the ban-<lb/>
ner of the school but were actually<lb/>
only interested in the plunder and,<lb/>
of course, the booty.<lb/>
In my first game, I discovered<lb/>
that everyone else on the field seem-<lb/>
ed a lot more desperate for romantic<lb/>
adventure than I was. As 1 lay<lb/>
smouldering on the field, a heap of<lb/>
sheared cartilage and pulled tendon,<lb/>
resnlendent with throbbing cleat<lb/>
marks on my chin, a question came<lb/>
into my mind (accompanied by<lb/>
miscellaneous pain): "What price<lb/>
petting?"<lb/>
I decided at that moment that<lb/>
there were indeed other sports that<lb/>
would rocket me to popularity, so I<lb/>
let my bones mend in anticipation of<lb/>
the basketball season.<lb/>
The basketball team at my high<lb/>
school was like many others in in-<lb/>
tegrated North Carolina high<lb/>
schools: big and black. Now this<lb/>
was before Disco, and if you<lb/>
remember, that was when blacks<lb/>
and whites didn't like each other too<lb/>
much. Whites felt like blacks had<lb/>
the mentality of crazed dogs. Blacks<lb/>
seemed detrmined to make the<lb/>
whites pay for 300 years o repres<lb/>
sion The worst part o the trvouts<lb/>
was not the epithets, thoueh. Ml the<lb/>
other guvs trving out were about<lb/>
three yards taller than me. and everv<lb/>
time I tried to shoot the ball it was<lb/>
slapped back into ray nostril or<lb/>
pharynx. I left basketball with a tea.<lb/>
 Tn ee 3nd a lunip in nn tnro'?l<lb/>
All this convinced me that<lb/>
baseball had to be mv eame. Other<lb/>
tahan-surnamed people like Joe<lb/>
DiMaggio, Yogi Berra and Joe<lb/>
Garagiola had made  big in<lb/>
baseball, and it seemed logical to me<lb/>
?hat I could find stardom behind the<lb/>
p'ate.<lb/>
S STAR, P. 8, ol. I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057262_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 15, 1980<lb/>
Mike Cross Releases 'Rock 7i Rye<lb/>
Continued from Page 6<lb/>
He added that the<lb/>
only thing left is the<lb/>
cover art for the album<lb/>
jacket, and it will be<lb/>
ready to go to the<lb/>
presses.<lb/>
Dispelling rumors<lb/>
ihat he is about to sign<lb/>
a major record con-<lb/>
tract. Cross said that<lb/>
the pressures were not<lb/>
worth it.<lb/>
"One major thing<lb/>
about a label is that the<lb/>
music is accessible to<lb/>
the public, but what<lb/>
you have to give up is<lb/>
not worth it, for me at<lb/>
least<lb/>
Cross says that the<lb/>
ensions would be<lb/>
greater performing<lb/>
under a label.<lb/>
"Economically, I'm<lb/>
under more tension to<lb/>
sign, but artistically,<lb/>
I'm under less. As long<lb/>
is I can survive like<lb/>
il " tine. The in-<lb/>
teresl of it is not of<lb/>
?uch a persuasive<lb/>
nature hit it could<lb/>
convince me to give up<lb/>
nn freedom<lb/>
lot his own enter-<lb/>
lainment, Cross enjoys<lb/>
nine to the tradi-<lb/>
ial music of Ireland,<lb/>
Hind and style that<lb/>
uences some of his<lb/>
k. merican music,<lb/>
blues and<lb/>
tegrass, are also<lb/>
among his favorites, as<lb/>
are classical composers<lb/>
? e Moart.<lb/>
?"1 like whatever<lb/>
eems to entertain me,<lb/>
you know. When I go<lb/>
o see someone else<lb/>
perform, I become a<lb/>
part of the audience. 1<lb/>
just want to enjoy the<lb/>
show<lb/>
Unlike structured<lb/>
performers who write<lb/>
at a set time of day in a<lb/>
set place, Cross writes<lb/>
his music wherever and<lb/>
whenever the mood<lb/>
strikes him.<lb/>
"It might be in my<lb/>
car after I have gotten<lb/>
home from a concert,<lb/>
or it might be at a waf-<lb/>
fle shop on 1-85 bet-<lb/>
ween Atlanta and<lb/>
Greensboro<lb/>
Unlike some per-<lb/>
formers who wall<lb/>
themselves off from an<lb/>
audience, Cross seems<lb/>
to know no strangers<lb/>
from the moment he<lb/>
takes the stage. Before<lb/>
every song, he will tefl a<lb/>
humorous story or tale.<lb/>
This creates among<lb/>
members of the au-<lb/>
dience a feeling of<lb/>
oneness with the per-<lb/>
former and with each<lb/>
other. Fairly soon, you<lb/>
are laughing and look-<lb/>
ing around at your<lb/>
neighbors.<lb/>
"I first started telling<lb/>
tales about why it<lb/>
struck me to write the<lb/>
song. The truth of it is,<lb/>
it was a natural evolu-<lb/>
tion of my style. 1<lb/>
started out playing a<lb/>
small club in Chapel<lb/>
Hill, and I knew quite a<lb/>
few people in the room<lb/>
personally. I talked to<lb/>
them day to day, so<lb/>
why shouldn't I talk to<lb/>
them from the stage?"<lb/>
Cross is not a likely<lb/>
candidate for his self-<lb/>
acclaimed role as<lb/>
"modern troubadour<lb/>
Although he was raised<lb/>
in the mountains of<lb/>
Tennessee and North<lb/>
Carolina, he was not<lb/>
musical at an early age.<lb/>
In fact, his only ex-<lb/>
perience with music as<lb/>
a child was the time he<lb/>
was kicked out of the<lb/>
church choir. Not only<lb/>
could he not sing, he<lb/>
proved it in a voice<lb/>
louder than all the<lb/>
others.<lb/>
"Although I grew up<lb/>
around a bunch of<lb/>
good musicians, my<lb/>
great addiction in life<lb/>
was golf. I was a hard-<lb/>
core golfer from the<lb/>
time I was about ten<lb/>
years old until I went<lb/>
off to college.<lb/>
"I was gonna go to<lb/>
college and play golf on<lb/>
a scholarship. But I fell<lb/>
in love with this little<lb/>
girl, thought I'd go off<lb/>
to college and study to<lb/>
be a doctor, do<lb/>
something solid and<lb/>
secure so she'd marry<lb/>
me.<lb/>
"We broke up when<lb/>
I was a freshman. I'd<lb/>
given up my golf<lb/>
scholarship, given up<lb/>
my golf clubs actually,<lb/>
so I had to find<lb/>
something to replace<lb/>
them. 1 think that's<lb/>
why I took up the<lb/>
guitar. 1 needed a new<lb/>
passion in life<lb/>
Many changes have<lb/>
come since those days<lb/>
back in 1970. Cross has<lb/>
married and started a<lb/>
family; he went to law<lb/>
school (quitting, as he<lb/>
puts it, "because I<lb/>
couldn't grow a dorsal<lb/>
fin") and taking up the<lb/>
fiddle.<lb/>
Cross went through<lb/>
some trying times<lb/>
("during those times,<lb/>
we were TRYING all<lb/>
kinds of drugs") when<lb/>
he went without such<lb/>
luxuries as food to play<lb/>
his music. He got his<lb/>
first fiddle when he was<lb/>
bumped out of a golf<lb/>
tournament, and he<lb/>
spent the better part of<lb/>
the weekend making<lb/>
horrible noises with it.<lb/>
To develop his arm<lb/>
muscles on his right<lb/>
arm, he bought heavy<lb/>
wooden sticks, and<lb/>
made bow-like motions<lb/>
through thin air while<lb/>
he was watching televi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Gradually, however,<lb/>
Cross built up a local<lb/>
following in small clubs<lb/>
in Chapel Hill, and<lb/>
after his first album<lb/>
Child Prodigy) was<lb/>
released, he went to<lb/>
music full-time. His se-<lb/>
cond album (Born In<lb/>
The Country) followed<lb/>
in October 1977, and<lb/>
immediately received a<lb/>
Recommended LP pick<lb/>
by Billboard Magazine.<lb/>
Easily his most<lb/>
popular album. Bounty<lb/>
Hunter was released in<lb/>
April, 1979 to regional<lb/>
airplay and prominent<lb/>
position in local record<lb/>
stores. Fc; a time, it en-<lb/>
joyed the status of out-<lb/>
pulling albums from<lb/>
national labels in the<lb/>
Raleigh-Durham<lb/>
market.<lb/>
One amazing thing<lb/>
about Cross the man is<lb/>
that he has changed<lb/>
very little in the last ten<lb/>
years. For someone<lb/>
who has had as much<lb/>
acclaim as Cross has<lb/>
had leveled at him, he<lb/>
remains surprisingly<lb/>
philosophical.<lb/>
"I've been incredibly<lb/>
fortunate to make a liv-<lb/>
ing at playing music,<lb/>
because there's no<lb/>
logical reason why I<lb/>
should be able to do it.<lb/>
Starting out so late, not<lb/>
having any idea of how<lb/>
School of Music News<lb/>
H a nd-Me-Down-<lb/>
Music . a new collec-<lb/>
tion of folk music from<lb/>
Monroe and Union<lb/>
Counties, North<lb/>
Carolina, co-recorded<lb/>
and edited by Dr. Otto<lb/>
Henry of the ECU<lb/>
school of Music facul-<lb/>
ty, has been released by<lb/>
Folkways Records of<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
Henry's collaborator<lb/>
on the project was<lb/>
Karen Helms of<lb/>
Wingate, who teaches a<lb/>
seminar in folk music<lb/>
at Wingate College.<lb/>
Henry is associate pro-<lb/>
fessor of<lb/>
ethnomusicology and<lb/>
electronic music at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The two previously<lb/>
worked on other recor-<lb/>
dings, Between the<lb/>
Sound and the Sea and<lb/>
Hand-Me-Down Music<lb/>
I: Old Songs, Old<lb/>
Friends.<lb/>
In preparation, also<lb/>
for Folkways Records,<lb/>
is North Carolina<lb/>
Sampler, a collection of<lb/>
North Carolina folk<lb/>
music from the moun-<lb/>
tains to the coast.<lb/>
Tenor<lb/>
Tenor Dennis<lb/>
Hamrick of Shelby and<lb/>
pianist Florence Goode<lb/>
of Petersburg, Va<lb/>
senior students in the<lb/>
ECU School of Music,<lb/>
performed in recital in<lb/>
the Fletcher Music<lb/>
Center Recital Hall,<lb/>
Tuesday, April 8.<lb/>
Hamrick, a can-<lb/>
didate for Bachelor of<lb/>
Music degrees in music<lb/>
education and music<lb/>
therapy, has been an<lb/>
active performer in<lb/>
musical productions<lb/>
during his studies here.<lb/>
He appeared in several<lb/>
Opera Theater perfor-<lb/>
mances and has been<lb/>
one of the Madrigal<lb/>
Singers in ECU's an-<lb/>
nual Christmas<lb/>
Madrigal Dinners.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
NC. No. 3<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Night<lb/>
TOMMY G<lb/>
&amp;CO.<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
CRIPPLE<lb/>
CREEK<lb/>
All ECU<lb/>
Students<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Pizza ion<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$2.59<lb/>
Mon. -Fri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
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758 6266 Evening buffet 02.79<lb/>
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OUTER BANKS<lb/>
SAILING ADVENTURES<lb/>
ONE OR TWO<lb/>
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$ 100 00 ppf week<lb/>
Tnps thfotighout the<lb/>
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Beginning May 18th<lb/>
Instructional weekends<lb/>
also aval ible<lb/>
For Information<lb/>
United Methodist<lb/>
Ministry Outdoors<lb/>
Comp Don Lee<lb/>
Arapohoe, N C<lb/>
28510<lb/>
LA-KOSMETIQUE<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
u<lb/>
1980 SPRING &amp; SUMMER<lb/>
HAIR FASHIONS"<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
MONSAT.<lb/>
?Redken<lb/>
The Elegant Eighties Are Here, And Career Cut Are The Hair<lb/>
Fashions For The New Decade. Individuals in the Eighties demand a<lb/>
fashion look that is elegant but yet comfortable. Career Cuts are the<lb/>
perfect hair fashions to meet the need.<lb/>
For both Male and Female<lb/>
Career Cuts - For short, medium or long hair.<lb/>
You choose the length.<lb/>
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PIPING - New face framing colors.<lb/>
TRI-UGHTING - Let us lift your own color. Apply two or more<lb/>
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You'll love the look.<lb/>
CALL 752-3419 Eight<lb/>
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or <lb/>
Stop by for a consultation.<lb/>
to Derform for an au-<lb/>
dience, having a tin ear<lb/>
and a scratchy old voice<lb/>
that behaves half the<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"Sometimes I come<lb/>
home at night and I'll<lb/>
lie back in bed and<lb/>
think ? 1 just can't<lb/>
believe all those people<lb/>
came out and paid<lb/>
money to see me storm<lb/>
around on stage for a<lb/>
couple of hours<lb/>
Cross remains<lb/>
something of an<lb/>
enigma to those who<lb/>
know him and listen to<lb/>
his music. A country<lb/>
boy with little formal<lb/>
training, he seems to set<lb/>
you free to listen to him<lb/>
and accept him on his<lb/>
own terms ? terms<lb/>
which will make you<lb/>
laugh freely and<lb/>
without concern as to<lb/>
how you look to your<lb/>
neighbor or girlfriend.<lb/>
In these days of $2 a<lb/>
gallon gas and $75<lb/>
mandatory disco jump-<lb/>
suits, Mike Cross is a<lb/>
bargain. He makes you<lb/>
feel good again.<lb/>
The Student Union Theatre Arts committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
THE DIARY OF<lb/>
ADAM AND EVE<lb/>
(A Musical Comedy)<lb/>
April 16 ? 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
$1.50 ECU Students<lb/>
$3.00 Faculty and Staff<lb/>
$4.00 Public<lb/>
fed)<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUWNT UNION<lb/>
mst cimum uanrfNTT<lb/>
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In this ad<lb/>
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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. APRIL 19. AT A4P mGREENVILLE NC<lb/>
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ANN PAGE<lb/>
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Boule 3D. I 9<lb/>
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MOUNTAIN DEW<lb/>
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Plostic Bottle<lb/>
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V Good Products Tfa<lb/>
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mom tissue 4 69<lb/>
$09<lb/>
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19<lb/>
GENERIC ORY LAUNDRY<lb/>
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STRAWBERRIES<lb/>
10 OZ ?<lb/>
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25 BAG<lb/>
DOC FOOD<lb/>
isi oz<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
AAP REGULAR<lb/>
PIE SHELLS<lb/>
AAP CRINKLE CUT OR REGULAR<lb/>
SEA4JEST ICE MH.K<lb/>
LIGHT N LIVELY<lb/>
CARTON<lb/>
SAVE 50<lb/>
Effective April 18 Fosdick's will<lb/>
io longer accept personal<lb/>
n<lb/>
PURE VEGETABLE<lb/>
CRISCO<lb/>
SHORTENING<lb/>
LNKTONf<lb/>
WITH THIS<lb/>
IT M<lb/>
3<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
t5<lb/>
AV<lb/>
19<lb/>
Cjraacivilie fs?<lb/>
SAVE 80<lb/>
A SUPERB BLEND.<lb/>
RICH IN BRAZILIAN COFFEES<lb/>
EIGHT O'CLOCK<lb/>
1<lb/>
?????&amp;????. NC<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057262_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 15, 1980<lb/>
Anderson Still Attracting College Students<lb/>
California Gov.<lb/>
Jerry Brown, banking<lb/>
on Wisconsin's liberal<lb/>
tradition and an ex-<lb/>
traordinary effort to<lb/>
recapture the "youth<lb/>
vote" that was once<lb/>
thought to be his per-<lb/>
sonal property, intend-<lb/>
ed to accomplish a lot<lb/>
in the April 1 primary<lb/>
here.<lb/>
He aimed to finish<lb/>
ahead of Sen. Ted Ken-<lb/>
nedy, to establish<lb/>
himself as the cam-<lb/>
paign season's leading<lb/>
liberal over Illinois<lb/>
Rep. John Anderson<lb/>
and to pump life into<lb/>
what had been a sur-<lb/>
prisingly limp run for<lb/>
the presidency.<lb/>
The state's college<lb/>
students were the only<lb/>
voters who responded<lb/>
at all, however. The<lb/>
day after the primary,<lb/>
the governor pulled out<lb/>
of the race.<lb/>
lhirty-seven percent<lb/>
of the Democratic stu-<lb/>
dent voters in selected<lb/>
wards around eight<lb/>
Wisconsin colleges and<lb/>
universities endorsed<lb/>
President Carter.<lb/>
Brown, who in prior<lb/>
primarires had often<lb/>
finished behind U.S.<lb/>
Labor Party candidate<lb/>
Lyndon LaRouche and<lb/>
"undecided captured<lb/>
31 percent of the<lb/>
Wisconsin Democratic<lb/>
student vote. Kennedy<lb/>
also attracted 31 per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
But no one could<lb/>
diminish Anderson's<lb/>
still-growing appeal to<lb/>
college students.<lb/>
Anderson took 48 per-<lb/>
cent of the Republican<lb/>
college vote, comfor-<lb/>
tably ahead of former<lb/>
Ambassador George<lb/>
Bush (24 percent) and<lb/>
former Gov. Ronald<lb/>
Reagan (21 percent).<lb/>
As in past primaries,<lb/>
Anderson ran well on<lb/>
all campuses. Reagan<lb/>
beat him at University<lb/>
of Wisconsin campuses<lb/>
at Green Bay and<lb/>
Whitewater, while<lb/>
Bush won at Oshkosh<lb/>
and Marquette.<lb/>
Anderson's victory<lb/>
margins were big<lb/>
elsewhere, piling up 75<lb/>
percent of the vote at<lb/>
the University of<lb/>
Wisconsin's main cam-<lb/>
pus in Madison.<lb/>
tials. Brown, who left like the one that carried<lb/>
Wisconsin for only Eugene McCarthy to a<lb/>
three days in the month Wisconsin primary vie-<lb/>
before the vote, turned tory.<lb/>
his sights from Carter Brown backed it up<lb/>
and Kennedy to Ander- with a $32,000 last-<lb/>
Anderson's more con-<lb/>
servative positions.<lb/>
"Mr. Anderson sup-<lb/>
ports the neutron<lb/>
bomb. He voted for it.<lb/>
1 oppose it Brown<lb/>
gasoline. I think we<lb/>
have to have rationing.<lb/>
Anderson also sup-<lb/>
ported the Clinch River<lb/>
breeder reactor, and he<lb/>
has been the leading<lb/>
tti?<lb/>
tttcf11<lb/>
h&amp;<lb/>
det1<lb/>
Otffc<lb/>
ice<lb/>
????<lb/>
r? -3<lb/>
?S$r<lb/>
Vie?1<lb/>
,<lb/>
?A'<lb/>
-Co'<lb/>
CAH mK??SIH<lb/>
i?"<lb/>
isST-<lb/>
9?"<lb/>
?-?"<lb/>
?P<lb/>
ocV<lb/>
op"<lb/>
A?"r<lb/>
ft<lb/>
PwP?<lb/>
?TO<lb/>
(?<lb/>
ec?<lb/>
ro<lb/>
Vk<lb/>
?.<lb/>
i<lb/>
4l,<lb/>
uPP?<lb/>
'sisten<lb/>
fin<lb/>
?,<lb/>
ina q<lb/>
The Brown campaign covered campuses with flyers on Anderson's conservative stands.<lb/>
He did it despite a<lb/>
Brown campaign aimed<lb/>
at discreding Ander-<lb/>
son's liberal creden-<lb/>
son early in the cam-<lb/>
paign, hoping to<lb/>
mobilize a student<lb/>
"Children's Crusade"<lb/>
minute radio and televi-<lb/>
sion ad blitz and with<lb/>
numerous campus<lb/>
speeches dwelling on<lb/>
told 1000 students at<lb/>
Wisconsin-Milwaukee.<lb/>
"Mr. Anderson sup-<lb/>
ports $2 a gallon<lb/>
proponent of nuclear<lb/>
power in Congress. He<lb/>
voted against the crea-<lb/>
tion of the consumer<lb/>
protection agency, one<lb/>
of Ralph Nader's top<lb/>
priorities<lb/>
Steve Rivers,<lb/>
Brown's Wisconsin<lb/>
press secretary, ex-<lb/>
plained: "There's been<lb/>
a real successful effort<lb/>
on Anderson's part to<lb/>
obscure his record.<lb/>
He's somehow been<lb/>
made the media darling<lb/>
of the 1980s. He ap-<lb/>
peals to people who<lb/>
would likely support<lb/>
Brown, and he's refus-<lb/>
ed to debate Brown<lb/>
"Anderson's projec-<lb/>
ting himself as a<lb/>
liberal complained<lb/>
Pat Boushell, another<lb/>
Brown aide, "when in<lb/>
reality he's a conser-<lb/>
vative ? at best, a<lb/>
moderate Republican<lb/>
To make the point,<lb/>
the campaign also cir-<lb/>
culated a flier called<lb/>
"The Brown Anderson<lb/>
Difference which<lb/>
compared the two can-<lb/>
didates' records on the<lb/>
Vietnam war, military<lb/>
issues, consumer pro-<lb/>
tection, nuclear power<lb/>
and labor questions.<lb/>
In an interview, the<lb/>
candidate claimed "On<lb/>
women's issuev.<lb/>
freedom of choice, ex-<lb/>
tension of the ERA. in-<lb/>
equality of opportune<lb/>
in employment, it is<lb/>
pretty hard to get am<lb/>
debate between us<lb/>
Though Brown quit<lb/>
the race the da after<lb/>
the votes were counted,<lb/>
students may not have<lb/>
heard the last of him<lb/>
Tom Hayden. torn:<lb/>
Chicago Seen defen-<lb/>
dant and current dire.<lb/>
tor of the Campaign<lb/>
for Economic<lb/>
Democracy, broadl)<lb/>
hinted that Browi<lb/>
might try again in 1984<lb/>
?' s governor of the<lb/>
state of California<lb/>
Havden told studa<lb/>
iournalist at Madison.<lb/>
Brown is a viable<lb/>
presidential cand<lb/>
in 1984.<lb/>
"In the vear 200<lb/>
Brown said on the<lb/>
stump. '1 will<lb/>
younger than R<lb/>
Reagan . lay<lb/>
Falling Stars Always Get Burned<lb/>
ft- A s ? ? organized crime, eftism and the<lb/>
C ontinued from Page 6 . &amp;<lb/>
 clergy.<lb/>
For those of you who have never I couldn't get into organized<lb/>
tried to stop an air-borne baseball, crime, as I have never really been<lb/>
you should know before you ever good at organizing anything. That<lb/>
stand in front of one that they can kind of knocked leftism out, too,<lb/>
and unique approach to the fine art watch TV, I'd like to share a story<lb/>
of dating. If a girl refuses to go out with you that has made a lot of dif-<lb/>
with me, I try to reason with her. ference in my life, and it could help<lb/>
"Be reasonable I say . "Wouldn't you as well.<lb/>
punch a hole through plate steel. I<lb/>
was calmly standing in right field<lb/>
playing solitaire when I heard a<lb/>
sonic boom. I saw a projectile hiss-<lb/>
ing through the air. I planted my<lb/>
feet, gritted my teeth, and the last<lb/>
thing I could remember was a loud<lb/>
"thud" and Whitey Ford's<lb/>
autograph.<lb/>
Well, badminton just didn't seem<lb/>
to be my sport, and neither did<lb/>
marbles. We weren't fortunate<lb/>
because I couldn't get the pro-<lb/>
letarians out of the county to unite.<lb/>
And the clergy was out because I<lb/>
was Catholic. Protestant ministers<lb/>
and Jewish Rabbis often have cute<lb/>
girlfriends, but Catholic priests<lb/>
couldn't fool around much. That<lb/>
was because the church always used<lb/>
Latin, and most college and high<lb/>
school women prefer Greeks.<lb/>
Since that time, 1 have decided<lb/>
that there's more than one way to<lb/>
you rather go out with me than have<lb/>
your car explode mysteriously in the<lb/>
middle of the night?" It's a sure-fire<lb/>
method, and I freely share it with all<lb/>
you guys out there who can't seem<lb/>
to cut it at being gladiators.<lb/>
Before I close this column and go<lb/>
Once a Roman soldier who had<lb/>
longed to go into battle for the first<lb/>
time joined the legions to go fight in<lb/>
Gaul. When the battle started, he<lb/>
realized that it was no fun matter.<lb/>
He saw some of his best friends bite<lb/>
the martial dust and discovered that<lb/>
it was no pretty sight. He returned<lb/>
home tattered and torn, disgusted<lb/>
with the whole deal. On the road he<lb/>
met Flatus Magnus, a renowned<lb/>
man of wisdom. "O Flatus he<lb/>
cried, "why do Roman men make<lb/>
war?<lb/>
To this Flatus replied, "Because<lb/>
the Roman women are watching<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
enough at my high school to have skin a pair of lips. I have dropped<lb/>
intervarsity checkers. There seemed any interest in pain for pleasure,<lb/>
to be only three choices left- and have developed a totallv new<lb/>
LADIES NITE! LADIES NITE! LADIES NITE1 LADIES NITE' LADIES NITE' LADIES NITE! C<lb/>
 S<lb/>
 m<lb/>
<lb/>
Z<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
z<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Wednesday Night<lb/>
April 16<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
t<lb/>
THE COMPLETE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
DAILY LUNCHEON<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
on<lb/>
O<lb/>
li<lb/>
ll<lb/>
<lb/>
Z<lb/>
ii<lb/>
UJ<lb/>
<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
B.Willie Smith<lb/>
Hot Rock-Rhythm<lb/>
and Blues<lb/>
LADIES NITE1 LADIES NITE' LADIES NITE1 LADIES NITE! LADIES .NITE! LADIESNI7?<lb/>
CLIFF'S e<lb/>
Seafood House and Oyster bar<lb/>
Mtth.ngwr ? IN C Bin i 6tww.il, Nantl CaraMM<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT!<lb/>
Monday - Thursday<lb/>
Crab Cakes<lb/>
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HOt DOgOnlyUJ<lb/>
Hamburger,<lb/>
French Pries $499<lb/>
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ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
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4 00-8:00 PM<lb/>
SALAD-50 EXTRA<lb/>
ASST. VAR.<lb/>
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WITH GARLIC BREAD<lb/>
ITALIAN<lb/>
SPAGHETTIoH"<lb/>
THUR.<lb/>
Magazines and<lb/>
Paperback Books<lb/>
CLIFF'S SUPER<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
CRAB CAKE SPECIAL<lb/>
2 Golden Fried Crab Cakes<lb/>
French Fries, Slow, and<lb/>
Hush Puppies. $.99.<lb/>
 10<lb/>
I B fv sugg<lb/>
?? a???V RETAIL<lb/>
Records and<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057262_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
APRIL 15, 1980 Page 9<lb/>
Pirates Victorious<lb/>
As Davis Stars<lb/>
Nh<lb/>
.<lb/>
V ?$ ! ff <lb/>
Photo by KIP SLOAN<lb/>
Pirate Star Butch Davis Shows Off His Record-Breaking Swing<lb/>
Mason Always<lb/>
Striving Ahead<lb/>
Bn JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
??People don't realize that in<lb/>
track, you don't have to come in<lb/>
first to be a winner. To me, you're a<lb/>
winner if you just improve your<lb/>
time over what you've done<lb/>
beore<lb/>
L ad Pirate trackster Linda<lb/>
Mason has strived for improvement<lb/>
throughout her four year career at<lb/>
East Carolina University, but the<lb/>
therapeutic recreation major has<lb/>
participated in such a variety of<lb/>
events that improvement has been<lb/>
complicated by adjustment.<lb/>
As a freshman out of Richlands<lb/>
High School, Mason participated in<lb/>
the 110 and 440 meter hurdles and<lb/>
continued in those events until her<lb/>
lunior year when she shifted to the<lb/>
1500 meters. As a senior, she com-<lb/>
petes exclusively in the 1500, 3000<lb/>
and 5000 meter races.<lb/>
"I think she's found her home at<lb/>
5000 meters says coach Laurie Ar-<lb/>
rants. "She'd do anything I asked<lb/>
her to. When she came here, I think<lb/>
she was like a lot of girls who think<lb/>
they are suited for one event, but<lb/>
really are at their best in another<lb/>
Mason came to Pirate country<lb/>
almost as a whim, having previously<lb/>
selected the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Wilmington to further<lb/>
her education. But spirited mentor<lb/>
Arrants steered the Richlands native<lb/>
away from UNC "by the sea a<lb/>
decision which has paid off both for<lb/>
the Pirates and Linda Mason.<lb/>
"She changed my mind Mason<lb/>
happily states "I was going to<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington hoping they<lb/>
would have a track program for<lb/>
women soon after I got there.<lb/>
"It's four years later now and<lb/>
they still haven't got track for<lb/>
women<lb/>
Even though the Lady Pirates are<lb/>
not competing as a team for points<lb/>
and victories this season, Mason still<lb/>
credits team spirit as a major force<lb/>
behind her improved performances.<lb/>
"Everyone on the team has been<lb/>
an inspiration to me says Mason.<lb/>
"If one person is down one day and<lb/>
the team helps her through it, then<lb/>
it's an inspiration to everyone. 1<lb/>
know they help me all the time<lb/>
Off-season training for Mason<lb/>
consists of approximately 40 miles<lb/>
running a week and numerous 10<lb/>
kilometer road races, along with<lb/>
competing with the Tidewater<lb/>
Striders club from Virginia Beach<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Butcb Davis was in a "breaking"<lb/>
mood Sunday as the East Carolina<lb/>
baseball team downed UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington 7-4.<lb/>
Davis tripled and homered to lead<lb/>
the Pirates to victory, breaking a<lb/>
two-game ECU losing skein. The<lb/>
lead-off triple set a new single-<lb/>
season school mark. Davis' fifth<lb/>
three bagger of the season surpassed<lb/>
the old mark of four set last season<lb/>
by Billy Best and two seasons ago by<lb/>
Bobby Supel.<lb/>
The eighth inning roundtripper by<lb/>
the Pirate leftfielder was his 11th of<lb/>
the season, bettering by one the<lb/>
record set by Rick Derechailo last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The win left the Pirates 18-5 on<lb/>
the season, a mark that has ECU<lb/>
head coach Hal Baird pleased. "I'm<lb/>
very proud of our record thus far<lb/>
he said. "It will probably compare<lb/>
with anybody's. I know it's about<lb/>
the best in the state anyhow<lb/>
The impressive mark has Baird<lb/>
hoping, and expecting, a national<lb/>
ranking this week. "1 certainly<lb/>
would think that we'd be in there<lb/>
somewhere. Our winning percentage<lb/>
must be among the best around<lb/>
Davis' heroics Sunday, and<lb/>
steady pitching by Bill Wilder, may<lb/>
have saved ECU's chances at a na-<lb/>
tional ranking. The team was com-<lb/>
ing off tough losses to North<lb/>
Carolina and Maryland before the<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
In the 12-8 loss at Chapel Hill,<lb/>
ECU was at an emotional peak. In a<lb/>
8-6 loss to Maryland Saturday,<lb/>
though, the Pirates seemed<lb/>
somewhat drained.<lb/>
"We didn't play either hard or<lb/>
well against Maryland said Baird.<lb/>
"We've always been successful<lb/>
against Maryland before, but we<lb/>
never have looked at them like we<lb/>
do N.C. State and North Carolina.<lb/>
We were especially flat this year<lb/>
Down 8-0 to tlie Terps after six in-<lb/>
nings, Baird's installment of a<lb/>
younger lineup began to pay off as<lb/>
the lead was eventually trimmed to<lb/>
the final 8-6 margin.<lb/>
"I felt like some of our starters<lb/>
just weren't giving it their all said<lb/>
the first-year Pirate coach. "So I<lb/>
brought in some of our younger<lb/>
guys, who did a real fine job for<lb/>
us<lb/>
Especially impressive among the<lb/>
reserves was Pete Persisco, who<lb/>
replaced Mike Sorrell at second base<lb/>
and went three-for-three, scoring<lb/>
once.<lb/>
Uniquely, Wilder took both the<lb/>
loss to Maryland and the win over<lb/>
Wilmington, leaving his season<lb/>
mark at 7-1. The sophomore lef-<lb/>
thander went all the way against the<lb/>
Seahawks, his seventh complete<lb/>
game of the season, after a shaky<lb/>
stint against Maryland the day<lb/>
before had forced him out of the<lb/>
contest early.<lb/>
In the victory over UNC-W, the<lb/>
Pirates banged out 14 hits in sup-<lb/>
port of Wilder. The contest was<lb/>
close until ECU broke a 1-1 tie in<lb/>
the seventh inning, scoring twice.<lb/>
Davis put the icing on the cake in<lb/>
the eighth when his record-breaking<lb/>
home run scored himself and Sor-<lb/>
rell, who had reached on a one-out<lb/>
single.<lb/>
The Pirates had been scheduled to<lb/>
face the Seahawks again yesterday<lb/>
but were forced to cancel those<lb/>
plans due to rain. The team hopes to<lb/>
work out an arrangement with<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth for a<lb/>
Thursday game.<lb/>
"I hate to see us lose any more<lb/>
games from our schedule Baird<lb/>
said. "We need to get in as many as<lb/>
possible in hopes of eettine into the<lb/>
playoffs<lb/>
Ladies Take Fifth<lb/>
Mason<lb/>
"She's probably the hardest<lb/>
worker on the team states Ar-<lb/>
rants. "She has a huge endurance<lb/>
capacity, but speed is her problem.<lb/>
She needs to set a quick pace and<lb/>
hope to outlast her competition.<lb/>
"They (teammates) know that<lb/>
she's dedicated and I'm going to<lb/>
have a hard time replacing her<lb/>
leadership. I don't have another<lb/>
personality coming around like Lin-<lb/>
da. Her iight-heartednes really<lb/>
keeps the teams' spirits high<lb/>
Mason completed her degree in<lb/>
December, but elected begin<lb/>
graduate studies in order to compete<lb/>
in her final year of eligibility.<lb/>
"I guess the nicest thing someone<lb/>
could say to me says Mason, "is<lb/>
that 1 was an influence on their<lb/>
lives; that I was helpful to them in<lb/>
some way<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's Lady Pirate soft-<lb/>
ball team earned a fifth place tie<lb/>
with a split in the North Carolina<lb/>
State University Invitational in<lb/>
Raleigh over the weekend.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates fell 3-1 in their<lb/>
Friday opener against the University<lb/>
of Florida, but rebounded to crush<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro 11-0 and Flagler<lb/>
10-0 before losing to Northern Ken-<lb/>
tucky 6-5 in an eight-inning Satur-<lb/>
day matchup.<lb/>
Florida claimed first place honors<lb/>
in the tourney, followed by Florida<lb/>
State, N.C. State, Northern Ken-<lb/>
tucky, ECU and UNC-CH (tie),<lb/>
Western Carolina and UNC-G (tie),<lb/>
Appalachian State and Flagler<lb/>
(Florida).<lb/>
East Carolina extended Northern<lb/>
Kentucky to eight innings before<lb/>
NKU's Redmond singled, advanced<lb/>
on a pair of ECU errors and scored<lb/>
on a single to right by Districh.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped to an early<lb/>
lead in the fifth with Cynthia<lb/>
Shepard reaching base on an error<lb/>
and scoring on a sacrifice by rookie<lb/>
backstop Fran Hooks. Junior Kathy<lb/>
Riley added another with a double<lb/>
and a sacrifice fly by shortstop<lb/>
Mary Powell.<lb/>
NKU quickly answered with a<lb/>
pair in their fifth, but ECU recap-<lb/>
tured the lead in the sixth as Cindy<lb/>
Meekins reached on a fielder's<lb/>
choice, Mitzi Davis singled and both<lb/>
scored when Riley's grounder was<lb/>
mishandled by the Kentucky second<lb/>
sacker. Shepard drew a walked and<lb/>
was driven home by Hooks'<lb/>
sacrifice to close out the Pirates'<lb/>
scoring.<lb/>
Senior Mary Bryan Carlyle earn-<lb/>
ed the decision in each of East<lb/>
Carolina contests, establishing her<lb/>
seasonal mark at 13-4.<lb/>
ECU opened the scoring against<lb/>
Florida in the second, but the<lb/>
Gators plated a pair of runs in the<lb/>
third and another in the seventh.<lb/>
Carlyle scattered three hits and<lb/>
allowed only one UNC-Greensboro<lb/>
runner to make it to third as the<lb/>
Pirates belted out 13 hits and com-<lb/>
mitted only one error en route to<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
Williams lead off the first and<lb/>
scored the game's premier run, and<lb/>
Meekins reached on an error and<lb/>
Davis lashed a single. Riley follewed<lb/>
with a three-run homer to right.<lb/>
Powell was awarded first on an er-<lb/>
ror and scored as freshman Ginger<lb/>
Rothermel's grounder eluded the<lb/>
UNC-G shortstop.<lb/>
Catcher Jan McVeigh lead off the<lb/>
third with a single up the middle and<lb/>
Powell drove her home with a dou-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
Meekins, Shepard and Riley<lb/>
crossed home in the fourth to give<lb/>
ECU the necessary runs to ab-<lb/>
breviate the contest after five.<lb/>
Carlyle turned in her best perfor-<lb/>
mance of the weekend against<lb/>
Flagler, allowing shortstop Minton<lb/>
a lone single in the opening inning.<lb/>
Offensively, the Pirates pounded<lb/>
Flagler in the first and continued to<lb/>
dHfheinsightr oT Riley stepping on<lb/>
home plate was to be common, as<lb/>
the Nashville, Tennessee native rap-<lb/>
ped a home run to left-center in the<lb/>
third to score Davis.<lb/>
Williams lead off the fifth with a<lb/>
single and scored on a Davis<lb/>
sacrifice. Meekins singled and<lb/>
Shepard reached first on an error.<lb/>
This time at the plate, Riley sliced<lb/>
the ball to deep right and legged out<lb/>
her second homer of the game (her<lb/>
third of the tournament). McVeigh<lb/>
singled and capped the scoring by<lb/>
crossing home on Rothermel's base<lb/>
V tiocW<lb/>
Riley posted a perfect three out of<lb/>
three on the contest, with Williams<lb/>
and McVeigh adding a pair in three<lb/>
trips to the plate.<lb/>
California Juco Star Decides To Join Terps<lb/>
PIRATE POOP:<lb/>
The battle royal is over for East<lb/>
Carolina. For the University of<lb/>
Marvland it has only just begun.<lb/>
The ECU basketball coaching<lb/>
staff learned this weekend that<lb/>
Charles Pittman, a 6-foot-9 Califor-<lb/>
nia junior college superstar, had<lb/>
chosen the Maryland as his home<lb/>
tor his final two collegiete seasons.<lb/>
Pittman's decision ended weeks of<lb/>
optimism in the Pirate camp.<lb/>
The big Californian had seriously<lb/>
considered joining the Pirate fold,<lb/>
mainlv because his mother resides<lb/>
nearby. ECU supposedly was in the<lb/>
lead for Pittman until the final<lb/>
week, when the Terps wooed the<lb/>
voungster to the point that he could<lb/>
not turn them down.<lb/>
Rumor has it that Maryland has<lb/>
promised Pittman a starting posi-<lb/>
tion next season. That seems<lb/>
somewhat unreal, though, as the<lb/>
defending Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference champions return all five<lb/>
starters from this past season.<lb/>
Who would he replace? The word<lb/>
is that Ernest Graham will become a<lb/>
"super sub leaving Pittman trrt<lb/>
power forward position, something<lb/>
the Terps did not have this season.<lb/>
Graham actually gives Maryland<lb/>
two starting small forwards (Albert<lb/>
King the other one). If the husky<lb/>
Pittman is all he is said to be, he and<lb/>
center Buck Williams could make<lb/>
the Maryland rebounding game<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
Chandler<lb/>
unreal<lb/>
The remainder of the Pirates'<lb/>
recruiting efforts have gone very<lb/>
well, says assistant coach George<lb/>
Felton.<lb/>
"I'm very pleased so far he<lb/>
said. "We've signed five guys that<lb/>
we feel can step right in and help<lb/>
The basketball office is not of-<lb/>
ficially releasing the names of the<lb/>
players, but it is known that 6-1<lb/>
point guard Herbert Gilchrist and<lb/>
6-8 Jeff Best of C.B. Aycock are in<lb/>
the group.<lb/>
The Pirate staff is still awaiting<lb/>
the word from Cecil Exxum, a small<lb/>
forward from state 4-A champion<lb/>
Southern Wayne and Anthony<lb/>
Teachey, a 6-9er from Goldsboro.<lb/>
Harold Thompson, a 6-5 forward<lb/>
from Raeford and one of the state's<lb/>
best prepsters this year, has commit-<lb/>
ted to N.C. State. The signing of<lb/>
Exxum by the Pirates would more<lb/>
than make up for that loss to the<lb/>
Wolf pack.<lb/>
Harris earned many honors in his<lb/>
prep days, including being named to<lb/>
the All-Tidewater, All-Metro, All-<lb/>
Southeastern District, and All-<lb/>
Regional teams while.<lb/>
Harris, a defensive and offensive<lb/>
back, intercepted eight passes dur-<lb/>
ing his senior campaign. The word<lb/>
is that he is best in the defensive<lb/>
backfield but is still a good prospect<lb/>
on the offensive squad. He is said<lb/>
to be a superb kick returner.<lb/>
One thing Harris has is speed, as<lb/>
evidenced by his 9.8 clocking in the<lb/>
100.<lb/>
An interesting note about Harris<lb/>
joining the Pirates involves a sister<lb/>
institution. The Great Bridge High<lb/>
School senior had signed with North<lb/>
Carolina on December 15, but inked<lb/>
a national letter of intent with the<lb/>
Pirates when national signing day<lb/>
rolled around.<lb/>
at fullback. There is talk around the<lb/>
Pirate camp, though, that Roy<lb/>
Wiley might rate a shot come fall.<lb/>
Wiley, a bulldozer of a fullback,<lb/>
could even move into the starting<lb/>
lineup, moving Sutton to halfback<lb/>
and giving the Pirates a speedy<lb/>
backfield with plenty of blocking<lb/>
ability.<lb/>
On defense, the new Pirate<lb/>
coaching staff has moved 6-5 Doug<lb/>
Smith from nose guard to left tackle<lb/>
in a unsuspected but logical move.<lb/>
The Pirate staff has been well<lb/>
pleased with the play of the defen-<lb/>
sive line in spring practice, especial-<lb/>
ly the right side where tackle George<lb/>
Crump and end Mike Davis have<lb/>
been superb.<lb/>
The secondary doesn't look bad<lb/>
either, with Willie Holley, Freddie<lb/>
Jones, Marvin Elliott and James<lb/>
Freer listed as the frontrunners at<lb/>
this point.<lb/>
The annual ECU Purple-Gold in-<lb/>
trasquad football game is scheduled<lb/>
for Saturday, April 26, at 3 p.m.<lb/>
All procees will go to benefit the<lb/>
family of Pirate assistant coach<lb/>
Norm Parker, whose wife is still in<lb/>
critical condition following an auto<lb/>
accident two weeks ago.<lb/>
ECU Grid Coach Ed Emory At Work With Line,<lb/>
The Pirate football coaching staff<lb/>
is still bringing in recruits also.<lb/>
Recently, coach Ed Emory an-<lb/>
nounced the signing of a bonafide<lb/>
blue-chipper.<lb/>
Clint Harris, a 5-foot-ll,<lb/>
185-pounder from Chesapeake,<lb/>
Va recently signed with ECU.<lb/>
Pirate grid coach Ed Emory has<lb/>
begun narrowing things down in<lb/>
preparations for the upcoming<lb/>
season. A look at his most recent<lb/>
depth sheet reveals a few surprises.<lb/>
At the all-important quarterback<lb/>
position, rising sophomore Carl ton<lb/>
Nelson has moved ahead of senior<lb/>
Henry Trevathan in the battle to<lb/>
take over the spot left vacant by<lb/>
Leander Green. Running just<lb/>
behind them is Greg Stewart,<lb/>
another rising sophomore who<lb/>
needs nothing but experience and<lb/>
confidence to develop into a real<lb/>
player.<lb/>
The backfield has Anthony Col-<lb/>
lins and Mike Hawkins at the<lb/>
halfback slots and Theodore Sutton<lb/>
And With Wide-Open Quarterback<lb/>
i .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057262_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
'H I VM i K ' ! I I M <lb/>
M'KIl<lb/>
TKE Boxing<lb/>
Joy Of Victory And Agony Of Defeat<lb/>
Phot<lb/>
Podeszwa<lb/>
Scenes from last week's TKE Boxing Tournament<lb/>
exemplify the joy, pain, ecstacy and suffering in-<lb/>
volved in competition. Victory, though, is oh so<lb/>
sweet as is evident in middle photo at bottom.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
6.701 ir.<lb/>
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R<lb/>
OKLI) I TSUMMER JOBS<lb/>
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CALL 758-3089<lb/>
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i in; m:<lb/>
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Moderate &amp; better<lb/>
Sportswear<lb/>
Dresses<lb/>
Designer Jeans 3Q 5Q<lb/>
&amp; Tops<lb/>
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$5.00 off on<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057262_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 13. 1980<lb/>
11<lb/>
Records Fall At UNC<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
women's track con-<lb/>
tinued along the<lb/>
journey to the top<lb/>
Saturday at the<lb/>
Carolina Relays in<lb/>
Chapel Hill with a trio<lb/>
of varsity records fall-<lb/>
ing during the competi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The 400 meter relay<lb/>
team of Dawn Hender-<lb/>
son, Catherine Suggs,<lb/>
Irdie Williams and<lb/>
Lydia Rountree placed<lb/>
second in the meet with<lb/>
a time of :48.2 to<lb/>
establish a new ECU<lb/>
mark in the process.<lb/>
Freshman Eve Bren-<lb/>
nan set an East<lb/>
Carolina record in the<lb/>
1500 meters with a time<lb/>
of 4:49.3 to earn third<lb/>
in the event.<lb/>
The big news of the<lb/>
day for East Carolina<lb/>
was senior Cookie<lb/>
McPhatter winning the<lb/>
Suggs<lb/>
800m with an ECU and<lb/>
Carolina Relay record<lb/>
time of 2:10.9 as she<lb/>
coasted to first in the<lb/>
event. The Raeford<lb/>
native bested her own<lb/>
Carolina Relay mark<lb/>
by almost two seconds<lb/>
in the championship<lb/>
race.<lb/>
The previous v "ek at<lb/>
the Columbia Relays in<lb/>
South Carolina,<lb/>
McPhatter was award-<lb/>
ed Most Valuable<lb/>
Player honors as she<lb/>
McPhatter<lb/>
established new meet<lb/>
records in the 400 and<lb/>
800 meter events.<lb/>
Other top finishers<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates at<lb/>
Carolina included Roz<lb/>
Major with a second<lb/>
place leep of 18 feet,<lb/>
nine inches in the long<lb/>
jump; Elaine Davis<lb/>
with third place heave<lb/>
of 37 feet, three inches<lb/>
in the shot put and a<lb/>
seventh place toss of<lb/>
105 feet in the discus;<lb/>
Toya Revils with sixth<lb/>
in the discus at 107;<lb/>
Gwen Dancy with a<lb/>
:26.0 performance in<lb/>
the 200m for third; and<lb/>
Rountree with fourth in<lb/>
the 100m at :12.3<lb/>
followed by Suggs in<lb/>
sixth at .12.6.<lb/>
Major added a per-<lb/>
sonal best in the 400<lb/>
meters at 1:01, but fail-<lb/>
ed to place in the event.<lb/>
Veteran Linda<lb/>
Mason failed to place<lb/>
in the Carolina relays,<lb/>
but the previous week<lb/>
at Columbia set a new<lb/>
varsity record in the<lb/>
3000m with a time of<lb/>
10:27, as well as a per-<lb/>
sonal best in the 1500m<lb/>
at 4:47.<lb/>
LWIN fcuD 5<lb/>
ECU Spring Football Drills<lb/>
Photo by KIP SLOAN<lb/>
CHANELLO'SisNow<lb/>
Looking for 3 Fast<lb/>
Delivery Men<lb/>
Come by anytime<lb/>
during the week<lb/>
after 4:00 pm<lb/>
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Classified<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Cutless.<lb/>
sunroof,power brakes, power<lb/>
sTeerinq, power windows and<lb/>
locks, cruise cootroll. Call Brian<lb/>
7S2 0373.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 19T3 Pinto Station<lb/>
Wagon. AT, AC, Good Condition.<lb/>
S6S0. Call 758 8665.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 74 Yamaha 175 En<lb/>
duro, less than 4000 miles. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition. Call Gail<lb/>
758-92M.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Steel retted Radials.<lb/>
Four 14 inch, Uniroyal, white wall<lb/>
ed ?tires with 8 10,000 miles of life<lb/>
left. SS0 for all four. Call 758 ?f 19.<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
APARTMENTS FOR RENT:<lb/>
Duplexes and Townhouses $175 to<lb/>
$270 per month Call 752-6415 9:00<lb/>
til 5:00.<lb/>
ROOM AVAILABLE: in four<lb/>
bedroom house on 5th street, near<lb/>
campus. Rent $87.50. Call<lb/>
Hill<lb/>
HOUSING FOR SUMMER<lb/>
SCHOOL: available, $100 per ses<lb/>
sion plus percentage of utilities.<lb/>
Apply 803 Hooker Road. Phone<lb/>
756 3J40.<lb/>
ROOM F0R KENT: with private<lb/>
entrance and bath, located on 14th<lb/>
street behind dorms. $80 month.<lb/>
Open May IS. Call 758 2585.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
artment at<lb/>
Eastbrook for fall semester.<lb/>
Share half expenses. Call 752 6068.<lb/>
ROOMMATE . NEEDED:<lb/>
(female) to share two bedroom<lb/>
apartment. Must call by April 30.<lb/>
Call 7SS-M38.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: To share<lb/>
three bedroom duplex near cam-<lb/>
pus tor summer only. $67 plus<lb/>
third 'jtilities. Washer dryer, fur-<lb/>
nished bedroom. Call 752 5977.<lb/>
GOOD STUDENT: seeks to share<lb/>
trailer expenses, country location,<lb/>
write Box holder 567, Bell Arthur,<lb/>
N.C. 27811.<lb/>
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
NEEDED: beginning May 7. $50<lb/>
and one-third utilities. Three<lb/>
blocks from campus on Jarvis<lb/>
street. Call Becky 758-6173.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: $80 month<lb/>
plus utilities. Close to campus,<lb/>
available May 15th. Call 758 3545<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING: Day or<lb/>
Night, individual or groups. Tri-<lb/>
County Stables Grimesland. Call<lb/>
II HM.<lb/>
REWARD $50: Mr the return of<lb/>
Charter to Kappa Alpha order at<lb/>
N.C. State missing since January.<lb/>
No questions asked.<lb/>
REWARD $50: for the return of<lb/>
1979 composite and 1974 Ammen<lb/>
Award to Kappa Alpha order N.C.<lb/>
State missing since January. No<lb/>
questions asked.<lb/>
MARY KAY COSMETICS: to<lb/>
reach your consultant for a facial<lb/>
or reorders phone 7S6-36S9.<lb/>
RIDER NEEDED: to share ex-<lb/>
penses and good times. Leaving<lb/>
for N.E. New Mexico in mid-May.<lb/>
Return in August. Call 752 8288<lb/>
after 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
POUNDS AND INCHES OFF!<lb/>
Special pre-summer spot reducing<lb/>
at Sunshine Studios. Call 756-7235<lb/>
after 1:00.<lb/>
DON'T RISK: your frture with<lb/>
uncertainty and doubt. See what<lb/>
lies ahead for the month with your<lb/>
personal Biorhythm Chart. Send<lb/>
name, address, birthdate, along<lb/>
with the month and year for your<lb/>
chart. Enclose $2.00 for each<lb/>
month requested to: Ross Enter-<lb/>
prises P.O. Box 4104 Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 2734.<lb/>
BALLET CLASSES: beginning<lb/>
soon. Mornings. Sunshine<lb/>
Studios. 754-7235 after 1:00.<lb/>
SW ATTENTION: Business Ma<lb/>
jors, summer work, practical<lb/>
business experience. Tremendous<lb/>
for job resume. Hard work equals<lb/>
good pay. Call 758 3719 for inter-<lb/>
view.<lb/>
HATHA YOGA CLASSES: offered<lb/>
soon. Emphasis in weight loss.<lb/>
Sunshine Studios. 756-7235 after<lb/>
1:00.<lb/>
TYPING DONE: Term papers,<lb/>
Resumes, Thesis, Etc.<lb/>
Reasonable. Call Jane Pollock<lb/>
752-9719.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED HOURS FOR TAK<lb/>
ING ADDS ARE 3:00 - 4:00 MON-<lb/>
DAY THRU FRIDAY.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now hiring students for the following positions on the Summer 1980 and<lb/>
1980-81 staffs:<lb/>
MANAGING EDITOR: Responsible for the overall operation of the editorial division of<lb/>
the newspaper tie. News, Features, Sports, Production, Copy Editing). Management<lb/>
and newspaper experience and completion of JOUR 2000, 2100, 3100, 3200<lb/>
necessary. Salary: $150 month.<lb/>
COPY EDITOR: Edit for style all copy for editorial section of newspaper. Completion of<lb/>
JOUR 2000, 2100, 3100, 3200 necessary. Salary: $125 month.<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR: Direct Features section of paper. Newspaper experience and<lb/>
completion of JOUR 2000, 2100, and enrolled in or completed JOUR 3100, 3200<lb/>
necessary. Salary: $125 month.<lb/>
STAFF WRITERS: To cover events for News, Sports and Features sections of paper.<lb/>
Completion of JOUR 2000, 2100 preferred but not necesary. Trial period with no pay<lb/>
for first five stories. Up to 48 cents per column inch thereafter, according to<lb/>
proficiency.<lb/>
LAYOUT WORKERS: Layout copy and headlines in "editorial section of paper.<lb/>
Experience necessary. Salary: $100 month.<lb/>
CONTACT RICHARD GREEN, 1980-81 editor of The East Carolinian, Old South Bldg<lb/>
757-6366, 6367, 6309. Make appointments with secretary for interviews. Time of<lb/>
interviews: TTh - 8-11:00 a.m 3:30-6:00 p.m.<lb/>
All new ynphyees wrH receive onttie-job training on Compographic typesetting<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is an equal opportunity employer.<lb/>
AUTO SERVICE SPECIALS<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
Retread Tires<lb/>
17.00 &amp; Up<lb/>
SEB<lb/>
iwac-StT ?Z giuE <lb/>
SHOCKS  4Cs"?<lb/>
All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
available<lb/>
wfr<lb/>
m<lb/>
??5SSPia:<lb/>
OFFICIAL NORTH CAROLINA STATE INSPECTION STATION<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
KFGoodrieh Cogglns Car Car<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
SbTlRE CENTER<lb/>
WMMH<lb/>
MMJLfclM.<lb/>
SAM,<lb/>
tauL-iaui<lb/>
lip these coupons and Save $$<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
10 oz. carton of six<lb/>
Sealtest Autocrat Ice Cream<lb/>
half gallon carton<lb/>
98<lb/>
plus deposit<lb/>
Grade A Whole Fryers 41 c<lb/>
rozen T.V. Dinners<lb/>
Turkey or Salisbury Steak, 11 oz. package<lb/>
Campbell's VegetarianVegetable Soup 1 Q<lb/>
lOoz.can<lb/>
Sealtest or Maola Homogenized<lb/>
r-<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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limit 6 with $7.50 food order<lb/>
I<lb/>
Fab Detergent Giant Box 98c<lb/>
with this coupon and $7.50 food order<lb/>
excluding specials<lb/>
without coupon $1.28<lb/>
Limit 1 coupon per customer<lb/>
Expires April 19,1980<lb/>
per lb.<lb/>
58.<lb/>
Cottonelle ToiSet Tissue<lb/>
4 roll pack 68c with this coupon<lb/>
and $7.50 food order excluding specials<lb/>
Without coupon 98c<lb/>
Limit 1 coupon per customer<lb/>
expires April 19,1980<lb/>
ScotTowels Giant Roll 48c<lb/>
With this coupon and $7.50 food order<lb/>
excluding specials<lb/>
without coupon 78c<lb/>
jjSLi Limit 1 coupon per customer<lb/>
Fresh Milk<lb/>
:<lb/>
i<lb/>
Gallon Jug $1.99 -<lb/>
Expires April 19,1980<lb/>
Health and Beauty Aids<lb/>
Listerine Mouthwash<lb/>
32 oz. size, reg. $3.09<lb/>
Right Guard Deodorant<lb/>
3oz. can, reg. $1.65<lb/>
Aqua Fresh Toothpaste<lb/>
8 oz. tube, reg. $1.85<lb/>
$1.78<lb/>
$1.18<lb/>
Overton's<lb/>
Why Pay More P I ECU Pirate Coupon<lb/>
? j 5 Discount on all food<lb/>
orders $20.00 or more (excluding<lb/>
Look What A Dime Will Buy: i keg beer). Present this coupon<lb/>
Juicy Florida Oranges 10c each J and show ECU ID CQrd to<lb/>
Juicy Calif. Lemons 10c each ? cashier. Nnm<lb/>
Texas medium onions 10c per lb. I Coupon effective id No.<lb/>
Florida Crisp Carrots 10c per lb.<lb/>
Purchase.<lb/>
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"?" l Jji Hn I 'yy? ??-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057262_0012"/><lb/>
? . ,<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 15, 1980<lb/>
Maynor Named MVP<lb/>
By CHARLES<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Kdilor<lb/>
Seniors George<lb/>
Maynor and Herb Gray<lb/>
came away as the big<lb/>
winners last Thursday<lb/>
nigru at the first annual<lb/>
Hast Carolina Basket-<lb/>
ball Awards Banquet.<lb/>
The banquet, held at<lb/>
Greenville Country<lb/>
Club, honored the en-<lb/>
tire 1979-80 squad and<lb/>
most especially the<lb/>
year's outstanding per-<lb/>
formers.<lb/>
Maynor, a senior<lb/>
guard, was named the<lb/>
club's most valuable<lb/>
player in an earlier<lb/>
voting by his team-<lb/>
mates. The Raeford<lb/>
native led this season's<lb/>
squad in scoring with a<lb/>
17.0 average.<lb/>
Gray, a four-year<lb/>
team member, was<lb/>
named the team's<lb/>
outstanding defensive<lb/>
player and received an<lb/>
award for being the<lb/>
team's top rebounder<lb/>
with an average of 8.5<lb/>
boards a game.<lb/>
Two other seniors,<lb/>
Kyle Powers and Herb<lb/>
Krusen, also received<lb/>
awards. Powers receiv-<lb/>
ed the most improved<lb/>
player award while<lb/>
Krusen was rewarded<lb/>
for being the team's top<lb/>
free throw shooter,<lb/>
connecting on 85.2 per-<lb/>
cent of his efforts from<lb/>
the charity strike.<lb/>
One award recepient<lb/>
was unable to be pre-<lb/>
sent at the ceremonies<lb/>
due to an illness.<lb/>
Guard Tony Byles, who<lb/>
had a stomach ailment,<lb/>
was named the team's<lb/>
outstanding newcomer<lb/>
after transferring from<lb/>
junior college.<lb/>
Each team member<lb/>
received a plaque eom-<lb/>
merating the 1979-80<lb/>
season that saw the<lb/>
Pirates go 16-11, the<lb/>
team's first winning<lb/>
season since 1975.<lb/>
Senior team<lb/>
members Mavnor,<lb/>
Photo by KIP SLOAN<lb/>
Clemson Basketball Coach Bill Foster<lb/>
Addresses ECU Banquet<lb/>
Gray, Krusen, Powers<lb/>
and Frank Hobson<lb/>
received special senior<lb/>
awards in addition to<lb/>
being presented with<lb/>
their home jerseys.<lb/>
Guest speaker at the<lb/>
initial banquet was<lb/>
Clemson head basket-<lb/>
ball coach Bill Foster.<lb/>
The ex-UNC-Charlotte<lb/>
mentor spoke to the<lb/>
team on the meaning of<lb/>
winning and what it<lb/>
takes to win.<lb/>
"The big word<lb/>
said Foster, "is at-<lb/>
titude. You've got to<lb/>
have a positive ap-<lb/>
proach, not only in<lb/>
basketball but in<lb/>
everything you do<lb/>
Foster said that this<lb/>
positive approach<lb/>
should reach an end<lb/>
result. "Success<lb/>
claimed the Tiger head<lb/>
man, "sums it all up.<lb/>
That word covers many<lb/>
areas. It's what<lb/>
everybody strives for.<lb/>
"But he con-<lb/>
tinued, "success is dif-<lb/>
ferent that just winning<lb/>
and losing. If you're<lb/>
doing all you can do<lb/>
and you're doing it<lb/>
together, then you're<lb/>
successful<lb/>
Foster said that often<lb/>
teams were<lb/>
"successful" even<lb/>
though they may not<lb/>
have been victorious.<lb/>
"I always tell our guys<lb/>
at Clemson if they<lb/>
come in the locker<lb/>
room and after a ten<lb/>
minute cooling off<lb/>
period feel good about<lb/>
themselves, then<lb/>
they've had a successful<lb/>
night<lb/>
The ultra-successful<lb/>
coach ,whose team<lb/>
recently made it to the<lb/>
quarterfinals of the<lb/>
NCAA Tournament<lb/>
told the crowd of over<lb/>
150 assembled at the<lb/>
banquet that building a<lb/>
successul program<lb/>
meant "surrounding<lb/>
vourself with good peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
"You have to have<lb/>
them everywhere.<lb/>
Your assistants must be<lb/>
as well as your<lb/>
players<lb/>
Foster spoke of what<lb/>
he looked for in a<lb/>
recruit. "If we're in-<lb/>
terested in a guy he<lb/>
explained, "we look at<lb/>
him personally,<lb/>
academically and then<lb/>
at their basketball abili-<lb/>
ty ? in that order.<lb/>
You've got to recruit<lb/>
people that come to<lb/>
college wanting a<lb/>
degree<lb/>
The Clemson head<lb/>
coach warned of<lb/>
players with attitude<lb/>
problems. "You don't<lb/>
need any 'head cases<lb/>
It's not only in college,<lb/>
either. I have pro<lb/>
coaches calling me all<lb/>
the time asking me<lb/>
about players' at-<lb/>
titudes<lb/>
He spoke to the<lb/>
Pirate team in par-<lb/>
ticular about team<lb/>
togetherness. "The key<lb/>
words are loyalty and<lb/>
optimism he pro-<lb/>
claimed with authority<lb/>
"The word 'team' is<lb/>
important also. You<lb/>
may not be good in-<lb/>
dividually, but you can<lb/>
be good collectively.<lb/>
That's been the case<lb/>
with us at Clemson.<lb/>
"Heck, I remember<lb/>
once we were picked to<lb/>
finish eighth in a seven<lb/>
team league Foster<lb/>
said with a grin. "But<lb/>
we went on to win 22<lb/>
games because we<lb/>
played together. You<lb/>
can get anywhere you<lb/>
want if you get your<lb/>
heads together and<lb/>
work hard<lb/>
HEAPING tiny<lb/>
PORTIONS. price<lb/>
Wednesday Feature<lb/>
April 16<lb/>
Chicken Kan Pie<lb/>
with 2 vegetables<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$1.59<lb/>
Thursday Feature<lb/>
April 17<lb/>
Trout Almondine<lb/>
with hot slaw<lb/>
and french fries<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
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 daily<lb/>
front H ? o? till 8 p.m.<lb/>
(8:30 Friday &amp; Saturday)<lb/>
Photo by KIP SLOATT<lb/>
Forward Mark McLaurin Eyeing Plaque<lb/>
Given To All Members Of ECU Team<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
?an caaauai auunvn<lb/>
CARTOON HISTORY<lb/>
OF OS. FOREIGN POLICY<lb/>
MARCH 30-APRIL 27<lb/>
MENOENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
WW STUDENT UN?I ART EJWBTWN OlilTrEE W<lb/>
1Rcc?&amp; (fate Z6o&amp;<lb/>
Announces<lb/>
Giant 40OFF Sale<lb/>
Friday, April 18 &amp; Sat 19th<lb/>
Alvarez Guitars40Off<lb/>
Amplifiers40 Off<lb/>
Garcia Guitars50Off<lb/>
Banjos40 Off<lb/>
Good selection of used<lb/>
guitars at tremendous<lb/>
savings<lb/>
Morley Pedals50Off<lb/>
All strings&amp;accessories<lb/>
40 Off<lb/>
Blue Grass Music<lb/>
Friday Night<lb/>
Hours:Fri. 10am-10pm<lb/>
Sat. 10am-6pm<lb/>
207 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
752-2509<lb/>
THANK YOU SALE<lb/>
UBE is slashing pri<lb/>
for the BIGGEST<lb/>
sale of the year.<lb/>
We want to thank you, ECU Students for making this<lb/>
our best year ever! To show you our appreciation<lb/>
we're slashing prices.<lb/>
Clip these coupons and come on<lb/>
down to UBE and save<lb/>
Tennis Shorts<lb/>
Reg. $7.95<lb/>
and $8.95<lb/>
$l.00OFF<lb/>
Gym Shorts<lb/>
Reg. $3.49<lb/>
to $5.99<lb/>
I ECU T-shirts and I<lb/>
I novelty T-shirts i<lb/>
J Reg. $2.95 and $3.95 j<lb/>
 $1.00OFF j<lb/>
I ECU and plain i<lb/>
l hooded sweatshirts j<lb/>
Reg. $8.95 to $9.95<lb/>
528 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
J ECU and plain <lb/>
 jerseys<lb/>
j Reg. $5.95 to $6.95<lb/>
! $1.00 OFF<lb/>
! Wild Coupon <lb/>
i<lb/>
J 20 OFF ANY j<lb/>
 sportswear <lb/>
$UX)OFF $2.00 OFF j<lb/>
Sale ends Saturday, April 19th<lb/>
We pay cash for Textbooks<lb/>
l?-zmI<lb/>
Hurry downtown and SAVE SAVE SAVE<lb/>
Prices will never be this low again<lb/>
Now is the best time to selI<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057262_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>