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<pb facs="00057266_0001"/>
I<lb/>
?te lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Vol. 54 NoT<lb/>
s <lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, April 29, 1980<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Bus Drivers Will Decide A ction A fter Meet<lb/>
BvTERRYC.RAV ?w   <lb/>
B TERRY GRAY<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
A spokesman for the SGA bus<lb/>
drivers said Monday that the drivers<lb/>
are waiting to see what happens in a<lb/>
special transit meeting scheduled for<lb/>
today before deciding on taking any<lb/>
action concerning SGA President<lb/>
C harlie Sherrod's appointment of<lb/>
Panny O'Connor to the position of<lb/>
Transit Administrative manager.<lb/>
Last Wednesday, the drivers<lb/>
notified The East Carolinian that<lb/>
the) were unanimously opposed to<lb/>
the appointment of any<lb/>
'unqualified person" to the job and<lb/>
that they felt O'Connor was not the<lb/>
best choice.<lb/>
There are two management posi-<lb/>
tions within the transit system ?<lb/>
operations manager and ad-<lb/>
ministrative manager ? each of<lb/>
whom earn $112.50 per month, in<lb/>
addition to wages paid them for<lb/>
their share of driving the buses.<lb/>
Sherrod defended his appoint-<lb/>
ment of O'Connor, saying that he<lb/>
had "good managerial skills and<lb/>
that the SGA president should ap-<lb/>
point someone with whom he feels<lb/>
comfortable. The spokesman for<lb/>
the drivers said they felt the position<lb/>
should be given to someone from<lb/>
within the ranks of the transit<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Sherrod also said Monday that he<lb/>
thought he was being as fair as he<lb/>
could be in his decisions, and noted<lb/>
that in the past, incoming SGA<lb/>
presidents have usually dismissed<lb/>
many more cabinet employees than<lb/>
he has.<lb/>
The drivers now concede that the<lb/>
threatened strike was an "excited"<lb/>
and "emotional" response to the<lb/>
news that an outsider would take<lb/>
over Abshire's job, but that the<lb/>
possibility of some kind of action<lb/>
was not yet ruled out.<lb/>
Leonard Fleming, who is ex-<lb/>
pected to continue in his job as the<lb/>
operations manager of the transit<lb/>
system, said he has tried to get the<lb/>
drivers to cooperate with the new<lb/>
management proposal.<lb/>
At the root of the conflict lies the<lb/>
question whether or not the transit<lb/>
managers should earn their posi-<lb/>
tions by rising through the ranks or<lb/>
be appointed to them.<lb/>
"In any business, upward mobili-<lb/>
ty is the strongest incentive for peo-<lb/>
ple to work hard said Fleming,<lb/>
who added that his greatest concern<lb/>
was to "prevent disharmony"<lb/>
within the transit system, although<lb/>
he sympathized with the drivers'<lb/>
view of the matter.<lb/>
Sherrod also said he sympathizes<lb/>
with the drivers, but added that his<lb/>
decision to appoint O'Connor<lb/>
would stand.<lb/>
'The drivers have a legitimate<lb/>
concern. It just shows that thev were<lb/>
worried about the future of the han-<lb/>
sit system. We have a lot of good<lb/>
people and the future looks good<lb/>
Sherrod said Monday.<lb/>
The bus drivers disagree. Driver<lb/>
Freddie Simons said that<lb/>
O'Connor's appointment was "not<lb/>
in the best interest of the transit<lb/>
system, and it's very disheartening.<lb/>
If you don't know the routes, the<lb/>
system, the ins and outs of<lb/>
everything, then you can't compare<lb/>
driving a school bus six or seven<lb/>
years <lb/>
Sherrod has set up a special<lb/>
meeting of the people involved in<lb/>
transit to discuss plans for the<lb/>
future. He said that the meeting<lb/>
scheduled for 5:00 todav would give<lb/>
everyone a chance to air their<lb/>
views<lb/>
Anti-Nuke Rally<lb/>
Draws Thousands<lb/>
30,000 Anti-nuclear Activists<lb/>
came to Washington to protest<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It happened on an ugly cold and<lb/>
rainy Saturday. On April 26th ap-<lb/>
proximately 30,000 anti-nuclear ac-<lb/>
tivists from across the nation<lb/>
pilgrammaged to Washington, D.C.<lb/>
to protest nuclear power and the<lb/>
proliferation of nuclear weapons.<lb/>
The agenda included speakers of<lb/>
diverse ideologies who emphasized<lb/>
their commitment to a 'holistic'<lb/>
anti-nuclear movement. Some<lb/>
notable personalities were: Barry<lb/>
Commoner (noted environmentalist<lb/>
and solar activist and presidential<lb/>
candidate running for office on the<lb/>
Citizens' Party ticket); Helen<lb/>
Caldicott (an Australian pediatri-<lb/>
cian and president of the Physicians<lb/>
for Social Responsibility); Dave<lb/>
Make-Up Day Attendance Low<lb/>
By LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Clas attendance of less than 50<lb/>
percent was the rule rather than the<lb/>
exception on Saturday's make-up<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Professors and students reported<lb/>
an average attendance of approx-<lb/>
imately 45 percent. It ranged from<lb/>
no students to almost 80 percent of<lb/>
total enrollment.<lb/>
Some professors used the day to<lb/>
catc p on class work, but many<lb/>
said they did not require attendance,<lb/>
and would simply be there if<lb/>
students wished to come, but few<lb/>
did. A few instructors simply chose<lb/>
not to hold classes at all.<lb/>
"Having those make-up days was<lb/>
like throwing a rare steak at a<lb/>
vegitanan commented SGA Presi-<lb/>
dent Charlie Sherrod on the atten-<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
The make-up was scheduled after<lb/>
the university was closed March 3<lb/>
and 4 in the wake of the worst<lb/>
snowstorm to hit the Greenville area<lb/>
in over 50 years.<lb/>
Making up the days are necessary<lb/>
in order for the university to main-<lb/>
tain its accreditation, according to<lb/>
Di. Robert H. Maier, vice<lb/>
chancellor for academic affairs.<lb/>
The make-up for Tuesday, March<lb/>
4, is today, previously scheduled to<lb/>
be reading day.<lb/>
Students and faculty members<lb/>
alike have expressed discontent with<lb/>
the program to make up the snow<lb/>
days. At its April 8 meeting, the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Association pass-<lb/>
ed a resolution opposing the make-<lb/>
up plan.<lb/>
"I understand why we had to do<lb/>
it (make up the days), but I think it's<lb/>
a gross violation of the students'<lb/>
rights to have to make them up this<lb/>
close to examssaid one irate stu-<lb/>
dent. "If we had to make them up,<lb/>
why couldn't we have done it earlier<lb/>
in the term?"<lb/>
"I believe that any benefit gained<lb/>
by picking up one clas day will be<lb/>
negated by the loss of study time<lb/>
caused by the lack of a reading<lb/>
day said one student. "I have an<lb/>
exam Wednesday morning and<lb/>
classes most of Tuesday. I don't see<lb/>
how I am going to have enough time<lb/>
to study for it<lb/>
One student, though, defendec<lb/>
the administration's action.<lb/>
"I feel that we were obligated to<lb/>
make them up he said. "Some<lb/>
professors were stiff about them,<lb/>
but some were cool ? saying that<lb/>
attendance was not mandatory,<lb/>
thereby pleasing both the ad-<lb/>
ministration and the students<lb/>
Dellinger (anti-war and social ac-<lb/>
tivist and editor of Seven Days<lb/>
Magazine); Terri Clark (a lesbian-<lb/>
feminist active in the D.C. area);<lb/>
Jane Horvath (member of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Coalition Against Nukes Na-<lb/>
tionwide); and Pat Smith (a<lb/>
housewife and anti-nuclear activist<lb/>
from the Three Mile Island area.)<lb/>
The demonstration began at the<lb/>
Capitol building, where an orderly<lb/>
crowd composed primarily of<lb/>
students assembled to hear speeches<lb/>
and music.<lb/>
At last report 150 anti-nuclear<lb/>
demonstrators were arrested for at-<lb/>
tempting to blockade the pentagon.<lb/>
Pat Smith told the crowd, "All<lb/>
the stuff you've heard about people<lb/>
selling their homes, animal birth<lb/>
defects, and sickness ? it's all true.<lb/>
Nothing matters any more until we<lb/>
get rid of nuclear power. Please<lb/>
keep up with the news and. when you<lb/>
hear that TM1 will reopen, come to<lb/>
Harrisburg for the largest display of<lb/>
civil disobedience this country has<lb/>
ever seen<lb/>
According to the Kudzu Alliance,<lb/>
an anti-nuclear group in Chapel<lb/>
Hill, N.C it will cost S100 million<lb/>
to replace the mangled core at TMI;<lb/>
more than 100 million gallons ot<lb/>
contaminated water and an<lb/>
equivalent amount of gases must be<lb/>
dealt with; the radioactive water<lb/>
alone will take at least four years<lb/>
and $400 million to completely<lb/>
decontaminate; and the folks living<lb/>
near TMI are "frantic<lb/>
More than 1 million gallons of<lb/>
radioactive water and an equivalent<lb/>
amount of contaminated gases must<lb/>
be dealt with. The radioactive water<lb/>
alone will take at least four years<lb/>
and $400 million to completelv<lb/>
decontaminate with hopefully, no<lb/>
leakages occuring during this time.<lb/>
The solution being offered now to<lb/>
get rid of the contaminated gases is<lb/>
to simply release them into the at-<lb/>
mosphere. Needless to say the folk-<lb/>
living near TMI are frantic.<lb/>
Followine Ms. Smith's speech.<lb/>
See A NT Page 3. Col. 1<lb/>
Sex For Grades Case<lb/>
Reopens With Yale<lb/>
Women's Appeal<lb/>
ECU Society Wins<lb/>
National Awards<lb/>
ECU's N.C. Epsilon chapter of<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta national<lb/>
premedical, predental honor society<lb/>
received two awards at the organiza-<lb/>
tion's national convention at the<lb/>
University of Kentucky, March<lb/>
27-29.<lb/>
Chapter President for 1980-81<lb/>
Michael E. Bell accepted the two<lb/>
awards for the chapter. ECU tied<lb/>
with Xavier University in New<lb/>
Orleans, La for the medium size<lb/>
chapter activities award, given for<lb/>
the best overall program over the<lb/>
past two years. ECU also won the<lb/>
attendance award. This is the se-<lb/>
cond time ECU's chapter has won<lb/>
these awards.<lb/>
North Carolina chapters won a<lb/>
total of four of the seven awards<lb/>
given. UNC's N.C. Beta chapter<lb/>
won the activities award for large<lb/>
chapters and N.C. State's N.C.<lb/>
Delta chapter won the small chapter<lb/>
activities award.<lb/>
The ECU chapter recently<lb/>
established the Paul Wayne Ayers<lb/>
Scholarship and the James S.<lb/>
McDaniel Award. Michael E. Bell<lb/>
of Morehead City received the<lb/>
Ayers Scholarship and Clyde L.<lb/>
Johnson, Jr. of Statesville won the<lb/>
McDaniel Award. The Ayers<lb/>
Scholarship is awarded annually to<lb/>
the outstanding rising senior and the<lb/>
McDaniel Award is given to the<lb/>
outstanding initiate.<lb/>
Noted Pacifist To Speak<lb/>
This Week In Greenville<lb/>
Igal Roodenko, noted pacifist<lb/>
and past chairman of the War<lb/>
Resisters' League, will speak in<lb/>
Greenville this weekend.<lb/>
Roodenko, who served 20 months<lb/>
in a federal prison during World<lb/>
War II for refusing to serve in the<lb/>
military, will speak on Pacifism and<lb/>
the Draft at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center Sunday, May 4 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
He was arrested on numerous oc-<lb/>
caisions for anti-war and civil rights<lb/>
activities, including 30 days on a<lb/>
North Carolina "road gang" in<lb/>
1947 for his part in the first CORE<lb/>
"freedom ride" through the South.<lb/>
Roodenko has been a member of<lb/>
the War Resisters' League's Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Committee since 1947, serv-<lb/>
ing ten years as its vice chairman<lb/>
and four years as its chairman. He<lb/>
has toured the world extensively,<lb/>
visiting hundreds of college cam-<lb/>
puses in the United States and<lb/>
Canada in the last ten years.<lb/>
Roodenko will be in Greenville<lb/>
May 3-5. His visit is sponsored by<lb/>
the Greenville Peace Committee and<lb/>
the War Resisters' League. For<lb/>
more information, call Edith Web-<lb/>
ber, 758-4906.<lb/>
NEW YORK, NY (CPS) ? The<lb/>
controversial Yale sex-for-grades<lb/>
case was re-opened last week when<lb/>
Federal District Court in New York<lb/>
heard testimony in an appeal of the<lb/>
July, 1979 decision that exonerated<lb/>
Yale.<lb/>
Pamela Price and five Yale<lb/>
undergraduates sued the university<lb/>
in 1977, charging it had violated<lb/>
federal anti-sex discrimination laws<lb/>
by failing to have a grievance pro-<lb/>
cedure for students' sexual harass-<lb/>
ment complaints.<lb/>
Price, now a law student at the<lb/>
University of California-Berkeley,<lb/>
claimed Raymond Duvall, a<lb/>
political science professor now at<lb/>
the University of Minnesota, had<lb/>
offered her an "A" in exchange for<lb/>
sex. She says she refused, and got a<lb/>
"C in the course. Duvall denied<lb/>
having made any advances.<lb/>
Last July a federal court ruled<lb/>
that while Yale's grievance pro-<lb/>
cedure was "ad hoc and inade-<lb/>
quate there was not enough<lb/>
evidence to support Duvall had ac-<lb/>
tually propositioned Price.<lb/>
In the appeal, filed on behalf of<lb/>
all five female students, the<lb/>
women's attorney argued that the<lb/>
decision should be reconsidered<lb/>
because the court had not heard the<lb/>
harassment complaints of all the<lb/>
women. Lawyer Nadine Taub said<lb/>
the complaints cumulatively in-<lb/>
dicate a pattern of harassment at<lb/>
Yale.<lb/>
Taub, who practices for the<lb/>
Rutgers Women's Rights Litigation<lb/>
Clinic, would not guess when the<lb/>
appeal decision might be given.<lb/>
"I think it's fair to say that the<lb/>
panel (of three court judges) was<lb/>
quite interested she observes. "It<lb/>
appeared that the basic questions in<lb/>
the case were unclear in their minds,<lb/>
and they were concerned about the<lb/>
question of when an institution has<lb/>
to be responsible for its own ac-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
William Doyle, a private attorney<lb/>
retained by Yale, expects the July<lb/>
ruling will be sustained.<lb/>
"The first time around they prov-<lb/>
ed that Price was a liar Doyle<lb/>
says. "And besides, there has<lb/>
always been a grievance procedure<lb/>
at the university. Thev just didn't<lb/>
like it<lb/>
Taub argues there is a griebance<lb/>
board, "but the board has no<lb/>
power<lb/>
"Yale likes to deal with things in<lb/>
a gentlemanly fashion she<lb/>
charges. "In cases like this they<lb/>
have chosen mostly to ignore the<lb/>
problem<lb/>
Entitled "Another One For Nancy this haunting vision of bondage<lb/>
and latent suffocation is one of ECU artist Ed Midgette's contribu-<lb/>
tions to the 22nd edition of the Rebel, which will be available to ECU<lb/>
students beginning today. The Rebel is an award-winning magazine of<lb/>
poetry, prose, art and photography by East Carolina University<lb/>
students. Midgette says that toe inspiration for the print comes from<lb/>
Nancy Grossman, an artist who first developed a similar theme in the<lb/>
1950's.<lb/>
t<lb/>
This is the last issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian for the<lb/>
spring semester. The first<lb/>
issue of the summer ses-<lb/>
sions will be published May<lb/>
28.<lb/>
Inside Today<lb/>
It's All OverPage 4<lb/>
Bus Drivers SpeakPage 4<lb/>
LeRoux ReviewPage S<lb/>
No-Nuke RallyPage 5<lb/>
Lady Pirates .<lb/>
ChampionsPage 10<lb/>
Athletes<lb/>
Of The YearPate It<lb/>
<pb facs="00057266_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 29, 1980<lb/>
Examination Schedule<lb/>
i imes Class Regularly Meets Time and Day of Examination<lb/>
8:00 MWF<lb/>
8:00 TTh<lb/>
9:00 MWF<lb/>
9:00 TTh<lb/>
10:00 MWF<lb/>
10:00 TTh<lb/>
11:00 MWF<lb/>
11:00 TTh<lb/>
12:00 MWF<lb/>
12:00 TTh<lb/>
1:00 MWF<lb/>
1:00 TTh<lb/>
2:00 MWF<lb/>
2:00 TTh<lb/>
3:00 MWF<lb/>
3:00 TTh<lb/>
4:00 MWF<lb/>
4:00 TTh<lb/>
11:00- 1:00, Tuesday, May 6<lb/>
11:00- 1:00, Wednesday, May 7<lb/>
2:00- 4:00, Wednesday, April 30<lb/>
2:00- 4:00, Thursday, May 1<lb/>
2:00- 4:00, Friday, May 2<lb/>
2:00- 4:00, Monday, May 5<lb/>
2:00- 4:00, Tuesday, May ,6<lb/>
2:00- 4:00, Wednesday, May 7<lb/>
8:00-10:00, Wednesday, April 30<lb/>
8:00-10:00, Thursday, May 1<lb/>
8:00-10:00, Friday, May 2<lb/>
8:00-10:00, Monday, May 5<lb/>
8:00-10:00, Tuesday, May 6<lb/>
8:00-10:00, Wednesday, May 7<lb/>
11:00- 1:00, Wednesday, April 30<lb/>
11:00- 1:00, Thursday, May 1<lb/>
11:00- 1:00, Friday, May 2<lb/>
11:00- 1:00, Monday, May 5<lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Attractions<lb/>
The Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
will meet on Thursday. May 1, at<lb/>
! 00 p m. in room 238 Mendenhall<lb/>
?Ml members are urged to attend<lb/>
Advisor Needed<lb/>
? ta.iilt advisor is needed to form<lb/>
the bC I Baha'i Club Call 58P88<lb/>
'or Jetailv<lb/>
Panel<lb/>
The Sew Church Politics: Implica-<lb/>
tions for Public Polics" will be<lb/>
iheme of a panel discussion on Tues-<lb/>
Ja e ening. April 29. at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
The meeting will be in the<lb/>
Auditorium of the Willis Building at<lb/>
First and Reade Streets, Greenville<lb/>
There will be three panelists<lb/>
Morns (Irani, editor of The Biblical<lb/>
Recorder; Thomas Strickland, at-<lb/>
lornes from Goldsboro; and Tinsley<lb/>
Gene ' Yarbrough. ECL' professor<lb/>
l political science. Yarbrough ssill<lb/>
give a background talk on<lb/>
separation of Church and Slate ?<lb/>
A Constitutional and Historical<lb/>
Perspective Grant will comment on<lb/>
Separation of Church and State ?<lb/>
Current Requirements " Strickland<lb/>
will present "Curren; Issues in Chur-<lb/>
ch State Relations<lb/>
Professor Herman "Gus"<lb/>
Mocller, ECl penologist. will<lb/>
nodeTate discussion among the<lb/>
panelists and between panelists and<lb/>
ludience Admission is free, and the<lb/>
public is insiied.<lb/>
MCAT<lb/>
All candidates planning to take the<lb/>
October 4. 1980 Medical College Ad-<lb/>
mission Test (MCAT) are strongls<lb/>
urged to register before they leave<lb/>
campus this Spring Whatever the<lb/>
circumstances, candidates should<lb/>
make absolutely sure they have a<lb/>
registration packet available in time<lb/>
to meet the September 5 deadline<lb/>
Candidates may abtain a registration<lb/>
packet bv writing MCAT Registra-<lb/>
tion. The American College Testing<lb/>
Program. P.O. Box 414, Iowa 52240.<lb/>
Applications are also available in the<lb/>
ECU Testing Center, Speight Room<lb/>
105.<lb/>
Poetry<lb/>
The East Carolina Poetry Forum will<lb/>
hold a regular workshop and meeting<lb/>
Thursday, May 1. at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall. room 248. The public is<lb/>
cordially invited.<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examination<lb/>
(ORE) will be given at ECU on June<lb/>
14, 1980. Application blanks must be<lb/>
completed and mailed to Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Box 966-R.<lb/>
Princeton. SJ 08540 no later than<lb/>
Mas I Application blanks are<lb/>
available from the ECL' Testing<lb/>
Center, room 105 Speight<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<lb/>
Thursday edition. We<lb/>
reserve the right to edit for<lb/>
brevity. We cannot<lb/>
guarantee that everything<lb/>
turned in will appear in the<lb/>
paper, due to space limita-<lb/>
tions, but we will do our<lb/>
best.<lb/>
Stewart<lb/>
Carl Stewart's Pitt County campaign<lb/>
headquarters is now open on the Mall<lb/>
in downtown Greenville (formerly<lb/>
Happily Ever After toy store) We<lb/>
have lots of work to do, but what we<lb/>
don't have enough of is people' If<lb/>
you can contribute even one hour,<lb/>
PLEASE come by in the mornings<lb/>
and sign up!<lb/>
Good Luck<lb/>
With Exams<lb/>
By RICKI GLIARM1S<lb/>
Greek Correspondent<lb/>
The Greek Forum<lb/>
would like to begin by<lb/>
wishing all students<lb/>
good luck on exams<lb/>
and saying goodbye<lb/>
and best wishes to all<lb/>
graduating seniors.<lb/>
The Alpha Phis<lb/>
celebrated the end of<lb/>
the year with a cocktail<lb/>
party at the Elks Lodge<lb/>
this past Saturday<lb/>
night. Earlier in the<lb/>
week, the Phis honored<lb/>
their graduating seniors<lb/>
at their annual Senior<lb/>
Banquet at the Villa<lb/>
Roma. The Phis would<lb/>
also like to con-<lb/>
gratulate their<lb/>
graduating Big<lb/>
Brothers, Jeff Triplett,<lb/>
Steve Woodie, Robert<lb/>
Wilkerson, Chuck<lb/>
Ferguson and Robert<lb/>
Johnson.<lb/>
The Phis welcome<lb/>
Cindy Lamm into their<lb/>
pledge class. Con-<lb/>
gratulations to Cyndy<lb/>
Huters and Cindy<lb/>
Lamm for being chosen<lb/>
meml -s of the 1980-81<lb/>
pom-pom squad and to Tnjs past weekend, the fraternity division<lb/>
Linda Greatorex for tne pj Kapps held their and the All-Campus<lb/>
being accepted at formal weekend at Volleyball champion-<lb/>
George Washington Myrtle Beach. During ships with the team of<lb/>
Jniyersity where she the weekend, Alpha David Schmitz, Hank<lb/>
where<lb/>
towards a<lb/>
in Art<lb/>
will work<lb/>
Master's<lb/>
History.<lb/>
The pledge class of<lb/>
Alpha Phi are having a<lb/>
happy hour at Chapter<lb/>
X on Wednesday, April<lb/>
30, from 4:30 p.m. un-<lb/>
til  The Phis would<lb/>
like to wish evreyone<lb/>
good luck on exams.<lb/>
The Sigmas honored<lb/>
their seniors at Senior<lb/>
Send-on last Thursday<lb/>
night. The Tn Sigs had<lb/>
a party Saturday night<lb/>
at King's Row party<lb/>
house. Congratulations<lb/>
to Vera Nichols, Kathy<lb/>
Pope, Pam Jenkins and<lb/>
Debbie Maeino for be-<lb/>
ing initiated last night.<lb/>
I he Sigmas would like<lb/>
to wish everyone the<lb/>
best of luck on their ex-<lb/>
ams.<lb/>
The Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
fraternity has had an<lb/>
active and successful<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Delta Pi Christi Norris<lb/>
was crowned as the Pi<lb/>
Kapp Rose Queen.<lb/>
The Pi Kapp tennis<lb/>
team placed second on<lb/>
campus, while the soft-<lb/>
ball team continues to<lb/>
do well in the playoffs.<lb/>
The Pi Kapps won<lb/>
Wylie, Mike Wise,<lb/>
Bruce Mullis, Mike<lb/>
Brill, Alan Britt, Bill<lb/>
Beam, Mike Sheaffer<lb/>
and Mike Shane.<lb/>
The Pi Kapps would<lb/>
also lilce to con-<lb/>
gratulate their five new<lb/>
pledges.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving rheiwt:pus MMM<lb/>
farS4fmrs<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and Thyrs<lb/>
day during the academ. year and e?ry<lb/>
Wednesday during the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the official<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057266_0003"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
Trend Shifts In<lb/>
BEOG Grants<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 29, 1980<lb/>
.Photo by LARRY ZICHERMAN<lb/>
ECU students gather to hear Walter Fauntroy, a non-voting congressman from Washington, D.C.<lb/>
who came to Greenville to speak on behalf of Sen. Edward Kennedy, candidate for president in<lb/>
1980. Fauntroy spoke to students between classes Monday morning before flying to Wilson, N.C.<lb/>
to continue his campaign efforts.<lb/>
WASHINGTON,<lb/>
D.C. (CPS) ? Fewer<lb/>
low-income and more<lb/>
middle-income students<lb/>
are applying for Basic<lb/>
Educational Oppor-<lb/>
tunity Grants (BEOG),<lb/>
and the College Board,<lb/>
in a study, attributes<lb/>
the trend to govern-<lb/>
ment anti-fraud cam-<lb/>
paigns that inadver-<lb/>
tantly eliminate eligible<lb/>
students from financial<lb/>
aid programs.<lb/>
The study found that<lb/>
only 31 percent of the<lb/>
freshmen from families<lb/>
earning v less than<lb/>
$15,000 per year have<lb/>
applied for financial<lb/>
aid, compared with 41<lb/>
percent three years ago.<lb/>
For the first time in<lb/>
history, students from<lb/>
families earning more<lb/>
than $15,000 accounted<lb/>
for a majority of<lb/>
BEOG applications this<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
Lawrence Gladieux,<lb/>
the College Board's<lb/>
research director, says<lb/>
there's "no doubt"<lb/>
that the government's<lb/>
more elaborate aid ap-<lb/>
plication procedures,<lb/>
established in 1978 to<lb/>
help prevent fraud,<lb/>
have reduced the<lb/>
number of low-income<lb/>
students who get aid.<lb/>
Under the new pro-<lb/>
cedures, apparently-<lb/>
contradictory answers<lb/>
on the long incomt<lb/>
verification forms are'<lb/>
grounds for rejecting<lb/>
aid applications.<lb/>
Wednesday Night<lb/>
Ladies Nite<lb/>
Bring Your Nickles<lb/>
Anti-Nuke Rally Revives Activist Spirit<lb/>
Continued from Page 1<lb/>
Pete Seeger played an<lb/>
anti-nuclear song that<lb/>
he called "marching<lb/>
music With that<lb/>
demonstrators began<lb/>
the approximately mile<lb/>
and a half trek down<lb/>
Constitution Avenue.<lb/>
People alternately rais-<lb/>
ed their fists and the<lb/>
peace symbol.<lb/>
"This looks just like<lb/>
the sixties a<lb/>
Washington policemar<lb/>
commented.<lb/>
Backstage, press con-<lb/>
ferences were arranged<lb/>
for a press that was<lb/>
made up largely of<lb/>
alternative publications<lb/>
and student<lb/>
newspapers. Citizens'<lb/>
Party candidate for<lb/>
president, Barry Com-<lb/>
moner was the first to<lb/>
address the press.<lb/>
"You could turn off<lb/>
all the nuclear power<lb/>
plants in Chicago and<lb/>
still not suffer any loss<lb/>
of service Commoner<lb/>
?aid. "Sixty-eight of<lb/>
the 72 power plants in<lb/>
the United States could<lb/>
be cut off and there<lb/>
would still be a 20 per-<lb/>
cent surplus of power.<lb/>
"Jimmy Carter is<lb/>
commited to the<lb/>
nuclear industry and to<lb/>
the proliferation of<lb/>
nuclear power in the<lb/>
United States. Let's tell<lb/>
Jimmy Carter: get out<lb/>
of the way of the best<lb/>
interests of the people!<lb/>
Get out of the way of<lb/>
peace! Move over<lb/>
The party's goal is to<lb/>
gain one percent of the<lb/>
vote this fall in order to<lb/>
qualify for federal fun-<lb/>
ding in 1984. Both<lb/>
presidential contenders<lb/>
for office this fall are<lb/>
pro-nuclear. Even if<lb/>
John Anderson runs on<lb/>
a third party ticket, no<lb/>
viable alternative will<lb/>
be offered to anti-<lb/>
nukers.<lb/>
Dr. Benjamin Spock<lb/>
appeared at the rally<lb/>
because as he puts it,<lb/>
"I've been frightened<lb/>
of nuclear power since<lb/>
1962<lb/>
In relation to the<lb/>
radiation that nuclear<lb/>
facilities emit Dr.<lb/>
Spock said, "It's im-<lb/>
portant to realize taht it<lb/>
takes from 5 to 10 years<lb/>
to develop leukemia<lb/>
after exposure to radia-<lb/>
tion, and it takes from<lb/>
10 to 50 years to<lb/>
develop cancer.<lb/>
"The evidence<lb/>
against the emission of<lb/>
even Mow-level' radia-<lb/>
tion is there, but the<lb/>
problem is to educate<lb/>
people and to get the<lb/>
information into their<lb/>
heads<lb/>
Perhaps one of the<lb/>
day's most poignant<lb/>
and resolute speakers<lb/>
was Russell Means, a<lb/>
representative of the<lb/>
American Indian<lb/>
Movement.<lb/>
"You have to work<lb/>
and become a 24 hour-<lb/>
a-day liberation fighter<lb/>
if you want to join the<lb/>
American Indian<lb/>
Movement Means<lb/>
said. "In reality the<lb/>
concentration camps<lb/>
that the American In-<lb/>
dian people live on is<lb/>
only an example of<lb/>
what is going to happen<lb/>
to the non-Indian<lb/>
world in the future. I<lb/>
just feel pity for those<lb/>
who have no eyes and<lb/>
no ears<lb/>
The last person to<lb/>
address the assembled<lb/>
press at the rally was<lb/>
John Hall, founder and<lb/>
head of the MUSE<lb/>
foundation. When ask-<lb/>
ed if the MUSE foun-<lb/>
dation has any plans<lb/>
beyond the MUSE con-<lb/>
cert film, he replied,<lb/>
"First of all, the MUSE<lb/>
foundation is only the<lb/>
administrative body<lb/>
that allocates the funds<lb/>
for anti-nuclear ac-<lb/>
tivities. The musicians<lb/>
make the decisions.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057266_0004"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
Wift Eaat (Earnlinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community for 54 years.<lb/>
Marc Barnes, Ed<lb/>
Richard Green. ?,?.<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim, mm Diane Henderson, cm em<lb/>
Chris Lichok, a,?w ?, Charles Chandler, ? ?<lb/>
Terry Gray, ?. a Debbie HOtalino. a ??,<lb/>
TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1980<lb/>
PAGE 4<lb/>
This Newspaper's Opinion<lb/>
30<lb/>
It's over. The magic and the<lb/>
laughter and the memories and the<lb/>
broken computers and the politics<lb/>
and all the insanity is over. The East<lb/>
Carolinian is dead.<lb/>
Don't get me wrong. The newspaper<lb/>
will be here this summer, and next<lb/>
year, and for the forseeable future.<lb/>
Don't get confused by the us of the<lb/>
word "me" either. This editorial is<lb/>
being written by Marc Barnes,<lb/>
editor-in-chief, and since it is the<lb/>
last edition of the newspaper, it is<lb/>
fitting that I come out in the open,<lb/>
to at least say goodbye. Therefore, 1<lb/>
will not use the editorialist's stand-<lb/>
bye, "we I realize that I am<lb/>
breaking some rules, but this<lb/>
newspaper breaks rules at times,<lb/>
and I feel that I am entitled.<lb/>
I said in the opening paragraph<lb/>
that the paper had died. Perhaps<lb/>
this is a premature judgement, but I<lb/>
feel, nonetheless, that it is an ac-<lb/>
curate one. The magic (the relation-<lb/>
ships between the staff members in<lb/>
a given school year) is what has<lb/>
died. Never again will the same<lb/>
combination of people put together<lb/>
this newspaper again.<lb/>
CBS correspondent Dan Rather<lb/>
said in his book The Camera Never<lb/>
Blinks, that study of law is a jealous<lb/>
mistress, and that journalism is just<lb/>
as jealous, but keeps longer hours.<lb/>
We can attest to that, as our final<lb/>
deadline is 5:30 a.m. We have to<lb/>
have the completed version of The<lb/>
East Carolinian at the printers, 80<lb/>
miles away, at 6:30 a.m. on Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday mornings. The whole<lb/>
staff here has seen the sun rise and<lb/>
the sun set on the newspaper office.<lb/>
Those were the headaches, as classes<lb/>
go on whether or not you have been<lb/>
up all night.<lb/>
We haven't been up here every<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday until the we<lb/>
hours of the morning, but we have<lb/>
seen our share. I would like to<lb/>
publicly thank my professors, and<lb/>
each professor who teaches East<lb/>
Carolinian staff members, for their<lb/>
patience with newspaper reporters<lb/>
who snore during class.<lb/>
I feel that we have achieved some<lb/>
level of success during this school<lb/>
year, and I am willing to take some<lb/>
of the credit for it. The larger<lb/>
measure of credit for w. we are<lb/>
and what we have become belongs<lb/>
to the staff. I worked, but I didrv't<lb/>
do a tenth part of the total output of<lb/>
the paper. Therefore, I feel that I<lb/>
should thank certain staff members<lb/>
for their help.<lb/>
In news, we have gotten sterling<lb/>
service out of Terry Gray and Larry<lb/>
Zicherman. Those guys have really<lb/>
busted their behinds this past<lb/>
semester, and they got "Most Im-<lb/>
proved Department" award. It was<lb/>
right that they should get it, because<lb/>
they raised the level and quality of<lb/>
the news section this year.<lb/>
In features, Debbie Hotaling<lb/>
Karen Wendt, Bob Albanese, and<lb/>
Beau Hays deserve mention. Arts<lb/>
and music have been covered well,<lb/>
and movies have enjoyed great suc-<lb/>
cess because of their efforts.<lb/>
In sports, Charlie Chandler and<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree have done good.<lb/>
They comejn. do their work quietly<lb/>
and leaverusutffyftlsfhlow or<lb/>
more headlines (That's untrue, and<lb/>
unfair. The sports desk was voted<lb/>
the best department at the<lb/>
newspaper this year.<lb/>
In the editorial page department I<lb/>
would like to thank cartoonists<lb/>
John Weylar and David Norris, col-<lb/>
umnists Charlie Griffin and Pat<lb/>
Minges, and editorial writers Linda<lb/>
Allred, Richard Green, and Terry<lb/>
Gray. Also, a note of thanks to my<lb/>
assistant, Cheryl Holder.<lb/>
In production, I would like to<lb/>
thank with humble gratitude, Linda<lb/>
Allred, who has developed a<lb/>
peculiar relationship with the Com-<lb/>
pugraphic Trendsetter. Linda and<lb/>
the CG are still on speaking terms I<lb/>
think. Thanks also to Alison Bartel,<lb/>
Mark Mueller and Anita Lancaster.<lb/>
On the advertising side, I would<lb/>
like to thank Robert Swaim, Terry<lb/>
Herndon and Paul Lincke. In<lb/>
business, kudos go to Chris Lichok.<lb/>
I would also like to thank my<lb/>
predecessors, for the groundwork<lb/>
that they laid for us. Thanks to peo-<lb/>
ple like Doog White, Jim Elliot,<lb/>
Kim Devins, and Cindy Broome,<lb/>
the campus newspaper thrived<lb/>
through some lean and hungry<lb/>
years. These people held it together<lb/>
for us, and we are most ap-<lb/>
preciative.<lb/>
The person that I most want to<lb/>
thank I haven't mentioned yet.<lb/>
Richard Green came into this<lb/>
newspaper as an assistant features<lb/>
editor, and he rose through the<lb/>
ranks to managing editor. Next<lb/>
year, he will be the editor-in-chief. I<lb/>
certainly wish him the best of luck<lb/>
in his new endeavors, and I pledge<lb/>
that I will be happy to help him<lb/>
anyway I can. He will be a good<lb/>
editor, and he will practice fairness.<lb/>
I would also like to thank the<lb/>
Media Board for all their help and<lb/>
support. I had to do some mighty<lb/>
fast dancing in a few of those<lb/>
meetings to some of their questions,<lb/>
but it was enjoyable and fun.<lb/>
If there is such a thing as a guru in<lb/>
this business, Ira Baker of the jour-<lb/>
nalism faculty would have to<lb/>
qualify as mine. John Warren has<lb/>
also helped me with guidance and<lb/>
encouragement. Several<lb/>
newspapermen have helped en-<lb/>
courage me. Among them are Harry<lb/>
Hollingsworth, Mike Rouse, and<lb/>
Bob Roule of the Durham Morning ;<lb/>
Herald; Ashley Futrell of the<lb/>
Washington Daily News; Tom<lb/>
Boney of the Alamance News;<lb/>
William Shires of the ECU News<lb/>
Bureau; and Claude Sitton of the<lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer.<lb/>
By the way, "? 30 ? means<lb/>
"the end It is typed at the end of<lb/>
each story to signal the typesetter<lb/>
that there is no more to follow.<lb/>
Thanks, Mom and Dad. Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. R.M. Barnes of Durham have<lb/>
been among my biggest supporters,<lb/>
as have my brother Michael and my<lb/>
sister-in-law Karen. Thanks also to<lb/>
a special young lady named Susan<lb/>
Ries.<lb/>
Thanks also to Brett Melvin,<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas Brewer, the<lb/>
Columbus County Board of Com-<lb/>
missioners, the ECU Transit<lb/>
System, the ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees, and the Athletic Depart-<lb/>
ment for all of their help and<lb/>
assistance this year on the editorial<lb/>
page.<lb/>
Thanks to everyone. It's been<lb/>
fun, and it's been difficult, and it's<lb/>
been impossible. In closing, I would<lb/>
like to thank the most special people<lb/>
of all to me ? the ECU student<lb/>
body. We did it all for you!<lb/>
FAREWELL FROM THE 7S-80 STAFF<lb/>
HeMDeR50N<lb/>
DEBBIE<lb/>
Totaling<lb/>
CHARLES<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
?SB?<lb/>
GRAy<lb/>
and -iov cartoon.sr, (?etIer<lb/>
i-Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Bus Drivers Air Their Side<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
We are writing to give the bus<lb/>
drivers' point of view on Charlie Sher-<lb/>
rod's replacement of Chubby Abshire<lb/>
with Danny O'Connor.<lb/>
First of all we do not approve Chub-<lb/>
by's being fired in the first place. He<lb/>
would have resigned after the first ses-<lb/>
sion of summer school anyway.<lb/>
Secondly, we are disturbed over his be-<lb/>
ing replaced with Danny O'Connor.<lb/>
Mr. O'Connor says he drove a bus in<lb/>
high school which is all well and good.<lb/>
However, he has no experience what-<lb/>
soever with East Carolina's Transit<lb/>
System. If Mr. O'Connor is so in-<lb/>
terested in being assistant transit<lb/>
manager then why didn't he start as a<lb/>
driver and work his way up? In the<lb/>
past, appointments have been made<lb/>
based on the applicant's interest,<lb/>
capability and experience within the<lb/>
transit system. Mr. O'Connor doesn't<lb/>
meet any of these requirements, but he<lb/>
is a friend of Charlie Sherrod's.<lb/>
A friendship appointment in the<lb/>
regular cabinet isn't so bad, it just<lb/>
costs the students his salary. A friend-<lb/>
ship appointment as transit manager<lb/>
will cost the students their buses.<lb/>
Danny O'Connor doesn't have the<lb/>
experience nor the qualifications to be<lb/>
Assistant Transit Manager. The transit<lb/>
system is just now getting straightened<lb/>
out from unqualified management in<lb/>
the past, but it looks like it's going to<lb/>
happen again. Some of us are friends<lb/>
of Danny's, but to support his appoint-<lb/>
ment would undercut everything we've<lb/>
worked for all year.<lb/>
We, the bus drivers of ECU, are<lb/>
looking out for the best interests of the<lb/>
students by striving to provide an effi-<lb/>
cient transit system. When it comes to<lb/>
the appointment of key positions such<lb/>
as transit managers, political games<lb/>
and friendships should have no bearing<lb/>
on the decision. We feel that what we<lb/>
are doing is right and hope that the<lb/>
students will stand behind us. After all,<lb/>
if you don't, we all may be walking<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
Freddy Simon and six<lb/>
SGA bus drivers<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
In response to Richard Morgan's let-<lb/>
ter of April 24 ("TOTO Was Not The<lb/>
Right Choice For ECU Students"), I<lb/>
would like to correct some misguided<lb/>
notions.<lb/>
To bgin, the Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee selects groups based on at<lb/>
least 5 criteria:<lb/>
1. Availability (This would include a<lb/>
group's willingness to play at ECU.<lb/>
2. Cost andor afordability.<lb/>
3. Popularity based on a random<lb/>
survey.<lb/>
4. Popularity based on local record<lb/>
sales, and<lb/>
5. Popularity based on national<lb/>
record charts and on local radio<lb/>
airplay.<lb/>
The criteria used for group selection<lb/>
has not changed since my initial in-<lb/>
volvement with the Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee some 3 years ago. The same<lb/>
procedure used to select sell-out con-<lb/>
certs like Styx, Pablo Cruise, Firefall,<lb/>
and Outlaws-Molly Hatchet was used<lb/>
in selecting Toto. We had every reason<lb/>
to bdiev that the conceit would be a<lb/>
success.<lb/>
Morgan's concert selection approach<lb/>
of "supply and demand" is ineredabiy<lb/>
simplistic and probably would end in<lb/>
the satisfaction of only one individual -<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
The difficulties experienced in con-<lb/>
cert selection are complicated to say<lb/>
the least. It requires much more than a<lb/>
superficial- accessment of "supply and<lb/>
demand but rather, it requires some<lb/>
knowledge of concerts and research.<lb/>
The single worst problem is the small<lb/>
sze of Minges Coliseum ? a problem<lb/>
that we have no control over and one<lb/>
that appears to be with us for the<lb/>
foreseeable future.<lb/>
I believe the failure of the Toto con-<lb/>
cert may rest with the late date in the<lb/>
sememster. Students are simplv too<lb/>
busy with final exam to attend a con-<lb/>
cert. Unfortunately, the Toto tour<lb/>
began only one night before the ECU<lb/>
date and would have been impossible<lb/>
to schedule any earlier. Il nothing else,<lb/>
we now know that scheduling concerts<lb/>
past April 1st is a mistake.<lb/>
W are always open to constructs<lb/>
student input; however, Morgan's let-<lb/>
ter offers no constructive assistance.<lb/>
The Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
meets on a regular basis and our<lb/>
meetings are publicized in the<lb/>
"Announcements" section of the East<lb/>
Carolinian. I would suggest Morgan<lb/>
attend the meetings if he has any fur-<lb/>
ther "words of wisdom<lb/>
Charles M. Sune, Chairperson<lb/>
Major Attractions Committee<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Eloquent argumentation is a thing to<lb/>
admire ? I admire it for its own sake<lb/>
whether or not I agree with the point of<lb/>
view expressed. Clear articulation of<lb/>
both sides of an issue can be enlighten-<lb/>
ing to partisans of either position and<lb/>
speeds resolution of the issue.<lb/>
But I equally despise the shabby<lb/>
argument, especially the shabby argu-<lb/>
ment coupled with bankrupt ideas.<lb/>
Such as it is with Stephen Wohl's essay<lb/>
in the March 20 edition of The East<lb/>
Carolinian entitled "Skeletons From<lb/>
Afghanistan May Be In American<lb/>
Closet<lb/>
While Wohl's essay appeared just<lb/>
over a month ago, its outrageousness<lb/>
still demands response. And I'm<lb/>
delighted to allot myself the task ? it<lb/>
requires iittle intellectual exertion, due<lb/>
in part, probably, to the amount of in-<lb/>
tellectual exertion expended on it in the<lb/>
first place.<lb/>
It is the vogue now to give credence<lb/>
to all ideas in the academic marketplac<lb/>
no matter how often discredited or<lb/>
how badly articulated. The notion that<lb/>
some ideas are better than others seems<lb/>
to have no place in the academic world,<lb/>
and Wohl's essay is an example of the<lb/>
indescretion of the East Carolinian's<lb/>
article selection policy. The liberal<lb/>
argument is usually sophistical, com-<lb/>
plex, and circular to the point of absur-<lb/>
dity; but Wohl appears to be a liberal<lb/>
spokesman whose arguments are as<lb/>
simplistic as they are devoid of intellec-<lb/>
tual content.<lb/>
Wohl presents an intriguing<lb/>
hypothesis in the wake of President<lb/>
Carter's Olympic boycott decision. For<lb/>
those of you who fortunately missed it<lb/>
the first time around, here's the gist:<lb/>
"Fear of unfavorable comparison<lb/>
with the Soviet Union is the real reason<lb/>
the United State government is<lb/>
pushing for a boycott of the Moscow<lb/>
Olympics<lb/>
Actually, even a position a-<lb/>
untenable as Wohl has taken in his<lb/>
Skeleton essa) could have produced<lb/>
some dialogue of worth, some grist for<lb/>
the liberal-conservative mill ot conten-<lb/>
tion. But Wohl makes three mistake<lb/>
First, he disregards standard infor-<lb/>
mation considered apodictic bv liber.<lb/>
and conservatives alike. Second. Wohl<lb/>
apparentlv knows little of the pro-<lb/>
paedeutics of politics so necessarv to<lb/>
serious discussion, and third, the non-<lb/>
sequiturs sprinkled throughout his<lb/>
piece would make a high school com-<lb/>
position teacher blush. Wohl succeeds<lb/>
only in making the liberal establish-<lb/>
ment at :ast CArohna look foolish,<lb/>
something that apparentlv isn't hard to<lb/>
do.<lb/>
But more important thafn the ro?s<lb/>
inaccuracies m e essas aivd Oa?i af-<lb/>
truths used a proof Wohl's piece<lb/>
demonstrates that extent to which<lb/>
liberalism has run out of control at<lb/>
East CArohna and other major unver-<lb/>
sities. That such a vacuous piece ot<lb/>
writing can be published in a student<lb/>
newspaper in the first place and then<lb/>
go unchallenged b the student body is<lb/>
an indication of the sad state of conser-<lb/>
vatism at ECU as well as the publishing<lb/>
standards of its newspaper.<lb/>
Wohl's essay ha- no inherent worth.<lb/>
neither as political analysis nor as<lb/>
social commentary. It would be abhor-<lb/>
rent to me to give it a modicum of<lb/>
legitimacy by refusing it and thereby<lb/>
attach some importance to it that<lb/>
would not otherwise hasve existed. It<lb/>
seems that the essay served an eristic<lb/>
purpose, drawing atention to the<lb/>
author by th espousal of an outrageous<lb/>
position. I'm led to believe this fellow<lb/>
is nothing more than a luft-mensch. a<lb/>
quality shared by most persons of<lb/>
liberal persuasion.<lb/>
These persons desperately need a<lb/>
conversion to conservatism, but it will<lb/>
be a difficult process because of the<lb/>
liberal's natural reluctance to face<lb/>
reality. But it will also be an enjoyable<lb/>
task for me as a senior at East Carolina<lb/>
next year as I attempt to perform a<lb/>
maieutic function for the liberal com-<lb/>
munity and articulate a political alter-<lb/>
native for those students disgrundled<lb/>
with the posturings of the dominant<lb/>
liberal elite.<lb/>
That elite represents the kind of<lb/>
knee-jerk libralism that heeds no ra-<lb/>
tional argumentation, that heeds no<lb/>
common sense. But these are the per-<lb/>
sons that most need ideological clens-<lb/>
ing, that need the shock treatment of<lb/>
reality.<lb/>
And that is my task.<lb/>
Stan Ridglev<lb/>
Wilson, NC<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing alt points of view. Mail or drop<lb/>
'oIL by om ?kt hi the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from the library.<lb/>
Letters to the editor must include the<lb/>
name, address, phone number and<lb/>
?ZH!lUfL0 ,ke ?"?W must be<lb/>
typed, double spaced, or neath printed,<lb/>
betters should be limited '? three<lb/>
typewritten. doulde-smced pages. Aft let-<lb/>
ters are suifject (o editing for brvritv,<lb/>
f&amp;eemty and libel. Lester bv the e<lb/>
author are limited to one each M that.<lb/>
33??a mtavks wm mm be terminal<lb/>
?ff?! f ???? m? be it AM? ?ar<lb/>
wmm imitiskm of ike hmme wffi c&amp;me ke<lb/>
?tfAor embammment or ridkuk. meh us<lb/>
iwwr comrmbm bomvi9&amp;r. wg<lb/>
tdmse, etc. Nmm mm'bt nititk- otr<lb/>
on the mabnt'it ?wmm.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057266_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
APRIL 29, 1980<lb/>
Page<lb/>
LeRoux Galvanizes Attic-Goers<lb/>
Leon Medica<lb/>
bass player and producer<lb/>
By DLBBlfc HOT ALING<lb/>
Features Fdilor<lb/>
"It's about damn time com-<lb/>
mented one anxious LeRoux fan<lb/>
who had just waited through an<lb/>
hour of 10th Avenue and several<lb/>
minutes of stage preparation. At<lb/>
about 11 p.m stage lights dimmed<lb/>
and six figures stepped out of the<lb/>
backstage room and took their<lb/>
places.<lb/>
The Attic was packed throughout<lb/>
with Bud-drinking, ready-to-cut-<lb/>
loose students and Greenville locals<lb/>
who had come out to hear Capitol<lb/>
recording artists Louisiana LeRoux.<lb/>
They didn't particularly care about<lb/>
hearing an opening act. It wasn't<lb/>
that 10th Avenue was boring, it's<lb/>
just that the people wanted to hear<lb/>
one band only, and the steady line<lb/>
from 9 p.m. until 11 p.m. outside<lb/>
the Attic entrance proved that.<lb/>
Making their way fromt he west<lb/>
to the east, LeRoux played in Blow-<lb/>
ing Rock and Raleigh before coming<lb/>
to Greenville. The Greenville crowd<lb/>
proved to be an enthusiastic crowd<lb/>
cheering and clapping through all of<lb/>
the first two cuts of the perfor-<lb/>
mance. The third song, "Feel It"<lb/>
from their second album "Keep the<lb/>
Fire Burning combined the pure<lb/>
energy of Leon S. Medica on bass<lb/>
with lead singer Jeff Pollard's over-<lb/>
whelming lead.<lb/>
Providing clean back-up,<lb/>
keyboard player Bobby Campo con-<lb/>
tributed to the musical precision this<lb/>
band demonstrated throughout all<lb/>
of their Thursday night perfor-<lb/>
mance.<lb/>
LEon Medica, the Wizard of Oz<lb/>
Lion look-a-like, bass player, pro-<lb/>
vides a strong base for this efferves-<lb/>
cent band and has led the band into<lb/>
success with his production of both<lb/>
of LeRoux's albums. The<lb/>
Louisiana-based band's upcoming<lb/>
album will be produced by someone<lb/>
outside of the band.<lb/>
Placing their hit song "New<lb/>
Orleans Ladies" stategically 23<lb/>
through the performance, the crowd<lb/>
immediately intensified their hand-<lb/>
clapping and joined in on the<lb/>
choruses. Bobby Campo not only<lb/>
displayed his bongo-playing skills,<lb/>
but also played the flute on this par-<lb/>
ticular cut and others during the<lb/>
night. Rod Roddy added his clavinet<lb/>
playing talents to this song, making<lb/>
it one of the most enjoyable cuts of<lb/>
the evening.<lb/>
Interviewing jazz pieces with<lb/>
mellow rock and roll songs, LeRoux<lb/>
remained in control of the audinece<lb/>
until the end of their performance,<lb/>
their second encore. Setting the pace<lb/>
of keyed enthusiasm, drummer<lb/>
David Peters and guitarist Tony<lb/>
Haselden complete this band of<lb/>
pure, fresh talent. LeRoux proves<lb/>
its uniqueness by combining jazz,<lb/>
rock and roll, blues and cajun music<lb/>
into one overwhelming aura of<lb/>
talent that captivates all kinds of<lb/>
audineces.<lb/>
Thursday night was an evening of<lb/>
easy pleasure ? Louisiana LeRoux<lb/>
did all of the work and we, the au-<lb/>
dience, reaped the profits of a group<lb/>
consisting of six musicians who the<lb/>
audience at the Attic that night<lb/>
hopes will be back real soon.<lb/>
Following the performance, Rod<lb/>
Roddy, keyboard, and Jeff Pollard,<lb/>
lead singer and guitarist, discussed<lb/>
their start in the "Business" and<lb/>
their plans for th future.<lb/>
LeRoux's new album will be com-<lb/>
ing out in July but accoridng to Jeff<lb/>
Pollard, "We haven't decided the<lb/>
name of the album yet. We're still<lb/>
working on it<lb/>
The group is working towards a<lb/>
goal on their upcoming album of<lb/>
straight rock and roll. Pollard ex-<lb/>
plained, "It will include a lot of<lb/>
elements our old albums hada lot<lb/>
of harmony. Since the first albums<lb/>
were basically laid back and funky,<lb/>
we felt a real need to put out an<lb/>
album that was as straightforward<lb/>
and direct as we were on stage.<lb/>
See LEROUX Page 7, Col. 5<lb/>
Jeff Pollard<lb/>
lead singer and guitarist<lb/>
Low Attendance At Rally Blamed On Weather<lb/>
Sews Analysis<lb/>
By PAT MINGES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A recent article in this paper<lb/>
stated that there is a conflict bet-<lb/>
ween the anti-draft and anti-nuclear<lb/>
networks in this nation. The writer<lb/>
seemed to think that there is a battle<lb/>
for support of the individuals con-<lb/>
cerned about the future growth of<lb/>
this country and world, and nothing<lb/>
could be further from the truth.<lb/>
Throughout the nation, various<lb/>
political factions are uniting to pro-<lb/>
test against conditions that seem<lb/>
deleterious to the positive growth of<lb/>
this nation.<lb/>
There is a common enemy ?<lb/>
those who are willing to exploit the<lb/>
country and people of the United<lb/>
States for corporate profits or<lb/>
political advancement. The anti-<lb/>
draftanti-nuclear coalition is a<lb/>
gathering storm composed of in-<lb/>
dividuals who have held the same<lb/>
positions for nearly two decades as<lb/>
opposed to the politicians who drift<lb/>
as the winds of circumstance dic-<lb/>
tate. Group affiliations and<lb/>
organizational commitments are<lb/>
becoming blurred in a manner that<lb/>
would prove quite startling to a<lb/>
movement activist who had gone to<lb/>
sleep in 1968 and awakened 12 years<lb/>
later.<lb/>
The political activists of the 60s,<lb/>
who often spent more time fighting<lb/>
each other than the enemy, have<lb/>
realized that their only legitimate<lb/>
power base lies in the unification of<lb/>
various factions for the common<lb/>
good of the country. The '70s were<lb/>
spent examining goals, preparing<lb/>
through education and self-<lb/>
exploration and integrating the<lb/>
political and social mainstream of<lb/>
the country. Activists have realized<lb/>
that you cannot change the system<lb/>
through dropping out and attacking<lb/>
from the outside and that the most<lb/>
viable method of productive change<lb/>
is the transition from within.<lb/>
There have been many tremen-<lb/>
dous protests against the menace of<lb/>
nuclear proliferation such as the<lb/>
various assaults on Seabrook, In-<lb/>
dian Point and Rocky Flats. The<lb/>
movement has had its first martyr in<lb/>
Karen Silkwood and held its first<lb/>
prominent demonstration last spr-<lb/>
ing in Washington, D.C. The<lb/>
newspaper headlines spoke of<lb/>
"Carter's Vietnam and the event<lb/>
brought together over 100,000 peo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
The event was the first major<lb/>
political pronouncement of Barry<lb/>
Commoner, candidate for president<lb/>
for the Citizens Party. The interac-<lb/>
tion between Commoner and the<lb/>
crowd gave him and others the<lb/>
realization that there is an under-<lb/>
represented majority in this country<lb/>
and offered the inspiration for the<lb/>
genesis of the Citizens Party. What<lb/>
has begun as one small group's<lb/>
dream of taking the "lesser of two<lb/>
evils" out of the political scenario is<lb/>
on the verge of becoming a full-<lb/>
blown political party.<lb/>
Last August, another significant<lb/>
toll was struck in the anti-corporate<lb/>
movement as a verv prestigious<lb/>
assemblage of popular musicians<lb/>
gathered in Madison Square Garden<lb/>
for the MUSE benefit for a non-<lb/>
nuclear future. The MUSE<lb/>
organization sponsored the concert,<lb/>
a proceeding triple album vet. and<lb/>
an upcoming cinematic endeavor<lb/>
donating a significant portion to the<lb/>
fight for renewable energy sources.<lb/>
Although the group has been<lb/>
criticized as a commercial exploita-<lb/>
tion of a critical issue and for not<lb/>
really donating that large a percen-<lb/>
tage to the cause, it was still a very<lb/>
See LOW Page 7, Col. 1<lb/>
Pete Seeger<lb/>
New Greenville Area Band<lb/>
To Debut Thursday Night<lb/>
WSES<lb/>
No Vacancy<lb/>
The newest band in the Greenville area will play at JJ's this Thursday night. Three of the six musicians are ECU<lb/>
students: (from left) Mark Little, Doug Jervey (ECU), Fred Midgett, Tod Stilley (ECU), Grace Brummett (ECU),<lb/>
and David Sutton.<lb/>
By RICHARD GREEN<lb/>
"It doesn't have to make sense to<lb/>
be goodbut at least we're<lb/>
honest<lb/>
What does this mean? Who<lb/>
knows, but it's the slogan for one of<lb/>
the newest bands in the Greenville<lb/>
area ? No Vacancy ? and they'll<lb/>
be at JJ's Thursday night.<lb/>
No Vacancy is a six-piece group,<lb/>
and three of the musicians are ECU<lb/>
students: Grace Brummett, a junior<lb/>
voice major from Fayetteville; Doug<lb/>
Jervey, a freshman piano major<lb/>
from Franklin, Va and Tod<lb/>
Stilley, a freshman business major<lb/>
from New Bern (he says his business<lb/>
is rock and roll).<lb/>
The present band has only been<lb/>
together since January, according to<lb/>
drummer Fred Midgett of<lb/>
Maysville, but he and Stilley go<lb/>
back to August 1978. They met<lb/>
when playing for a March of Dimes<lb/>
telethon and started writing music<lb/>
shortly thereafter.<lb/>
With Midgett on drums and<lb/>
Stilley on guitars, they recruited<lb/>
bassist and saxophonist Gerald Ed-<lb/>
wards and began working out their<lb/>
tunes. With the addition of vocalist<lb/>
Scott Whitford, the original No<lb/>
Vacancy band was compete.<lb/>
In the summer of 1979, the band<lb/>
released a demo tape. D.M. One<lb/>
was distributed at Apple Records in<lb/>
Greenville and Rainbow Records in<lb/>
New Bern that the tape was made<lb/>
with the bare minimum of electronic<lb/>
accessories, the quality was accep-<lb/>
table. But the originality and uni-<lb/>
queness of the tunes on D.M. One<lb/>
was the strongest aspect.<lb/>
At the end of the summer, Ed-<lb/>
wards went to Western Carolina<lb/>
University to study saxophone and<lb/>
Whitford quit the band and present<lb/>
rhythm guitarist David Sutton of<lb/>
Belgrade joined the group. Then<lb/>
Stilley met keyboardist Doug<lb/>
Jervey, who lived in the same dorm<lb/>
and began playing with No Vacancy<lb/>
after Thanksgiving.<lb/>
In January of this year, vocalist<lb/>
Grace Brummett. a resident<lb/>
counselor at Real Crisis Center, and<lb/>
bassist Mark Little, formerly of<lb/>
Two Dollar Pistol, rounded out the<lb/>
group and they begangrueling prac-<lb/>
tice schedule ? three or four nights<lb/>
each week.<lb/>
About a month ago, the group ac-<lb/>
quired an excellent sound systrem<lb/>
designed by Associated Sound Pro-<lb/>
ducts ot Raleigh, quite a departure<lb/>
from the sparse e uipment used on<lb/>
D.M. One. Eb Strickland, jazz<lb/>
guitarist in the ECU Jazz Ensemble,<lb/>
presently runs the sound system for<lb/>
No Vacancy and also for Buford T<lb/>
and Tommy G.<lb/>
No Vacancy's first gig was at Big<lb/>
Surf in Atlantic Beach last weekend.<lb/>
Midgett. who has written or co-<lb/>
written most of their original tunes,<lb/>
See NO VACANCY Page 6<lb/>
Semester's End<lb/>
Means Certain<lb/>
Woes For Bucs<lb/>
By DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Another year at ECU is drawing<lb/>
to a close. The smell of coconut oil<lb/>
is in the air, crazed gunmen armed<lb/>
with water pistols carry on their<lb/>
misdeeds, an epidemic of broken<lb/>
arms and sprained wrists rages un-<lb/>
checked through the ranks of frisbee<lb/>
players and, one by one, thousands<lb/>
of students are finishing term papers<lb/>
and starting exhaustive party and<lb/>
exam schedules. College is nearly<lb/>
always a pretty crazy place, and it<lb/>
gets even more so at this time of the<lb/>
year. Spring is really a great time to<lb/>
sit back and watch the confusion<lb/>
swirling around you, and there is<lb/>
certainly a great variety of things to<lb/>
create confusion.<lb/>
Take refrigerators. Please, take<lb/>
my refrigerator. I don't feel like lug-<lb/>
ging it out to the trucks on the mall,<lb/>
and as if carrying them back isn't<lb/>
enough work, they even want us to<lb/>
take out the leftover food. At least,<lb/>
we get those $10 deposits back.<lb/>
By the way, now is not a good<lb/>
time to stock up with a month's<lb/>
worth of groceries. It sounds stupid<lb/>
to tell you this, but I have known<lb/>
people who did that this late in the<lb/>
semester and ended up eating six TV<lb/>
dinners a day to get things cleared<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Textbooks are a great source of<lb/>
student aggravation, rivaled only by<lb/>
our parking system and 8 a.m.<lb/>
classes. Often, the store will not buy<lb/>
back a certain text until the next<lb/>
school year, which is not much help<lb/>
to graduating seniors (or flunking<lb/>
juniors). This is why my brother, a<lb/>
prospective English major at<lb/>
another school, received fpr<lb/>
Christmas the complete works of<lb/>
John Milton and Alexander Pope.<lb/>
Sometimes, they will never buy<lb/>
back a particular textbook, evert if<lb/>
you never opened it. These are often<lb/>
the expensive, boring ones. To be<lb/>
fair, though, I can sometimes see<lb/>
the store's point of view. After all,<lb/>
would you want to buy 800 copies of<lb/>
Principles of Grammatical Con-<lb/>
struction or 550 copies of The Ad-<lb/>
vanced Pharmaceutical Quantitative<lb/>
Analysis Workbook?<lb/>
Room sales are common around<lb/>
this time. Pots, pans, dirty carpets,<lb/>
unsalable textbooks on boring sub-<lb/>
jects, old copies of Newsweek,<lb/>
gigantic wooden bed platforms and<lb/>
nearly everything else can be bought<lb/>
at these sales. The problem is that<lb/>
no one has any money right now.<lb/>
Room sales can be a lot of trou-<lb/>
ble, but they can ease the problems<lb/>
of packing, which is the most<lb/>
laborious task that any college stu-<lb/>
dent can face. Not only must the<lb/>
original fall consignment of junk be<lb/>
sought out and packed, but the bat-<lb/>
See SEMESTER Page <lb/>
'THIS 7?00fc ISnJT<lb/>
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?? ,?<lb/>
0 0 ? 0<lb/>
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?JkJkiAsk-A-im' ??-???-?? ??-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057266_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 29.1980<lb/>
Attic Owner<lb/>
Given Award<lb/>
No Vacancy<lb/>
By MARIANNE<lb/>
EDWARDS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Tom "Skinner"<lb/>
Haines has had a lot to<lb/>
celebrate about recent-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
In addition to turn-<lb/>
ing 35, and winning<lb/>
first place in the Pepsi<lb/>
Cola Bottling Co. Inc.<lb/>
Amateur Photography<lb/>
Contest, Haines was<lb/>
presented with a Gold<lb/>
Album from the rock<lb/>
band, The Outlaws,<lb/>
this month.<lb/>
Haines has been the<lb/>
president and talent<lb/>
buyer of the Attic,<lb/>
N.Cs number three<lb/>
nightclub, for the past<lb/>
nine years. The Gold<lb/>
sober and serious<lb/>
standpoint Once he<lb/>
sees these qualities in a<lb/>
band, Tom Haines will<lb/>
help them financially or<lb/>
in any other way possi-<lb/>
ble to achieve their<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
In the last year<lb/>
along, the Attic used 92<lb/>
different performing<lb/>
bands, more than any<lb/>
other club in a three<lb/>
state area.<lb/>
In fact, Haines was a<lb/>
major reason why the<lb/>
Outlaws have achieved<lb/>
the success that they<lb/>
have. When bass player<lb/>
Harvey Dalton Arnold,<lb/>
Jr. was just starting<lb/>
out, Haines saw that<lb/>
Album, "Bring it Back Harvey was "an artist,<lb/>
Alive" (Arista one of those lucky few<lb/>
Records) was awarded who set out for a goal<lb/>
in person to Haines by and reached it So,<lb/>
the Outlaws for his ma- Haines booked Harvey<lb/>
jor contributions to the and his early bands and<lb/>
world of rock and roll, worked hard to help<lb/>
Through his job, them out. Eventually,<lb/>
Continued from Pigc 5<lb/>
says No Vacancy will play about 20<lb/>
percent original music, but he hopes<lb/>
that will increase with greater ex-<lb/>
posure.<lb/>
At first we thought we couldn't<lb/>
play too much original stuff because<lb/>
people are going to want to come to<lb/>
a club and hear a band that plays<lb/>
stuff they're familiar with. But<lb/>
when we played at the beach, we<lb/>
were amazed that some of our<lb/>
original stuff got the best<lb/>
response<lb/>
Most of the band members feel<lb/>
that even though they play songs by<lb/>
other groups, they don't want to<lb/>
play songs that have been<lb/>
overplayed by radio stations.<lb/>
"If you can go into a bar and hear<lb/>
a band and it's just like listening to<lb/>
the radio, why not sit in the car and<lb/>
listen to the radio and park where<lb/>
you ant to Midgett says.<lb/>
"We're trying to offer an alter-<lb/>
native to the stuff that you hear all<lb/>
the time, even though we do play<lb/>
some popular things because we<lb/>
know that people wilike it and<lb/>
because we like it We don't want<lb/>
to get locked.<lb/>
Jervey, 19, echoes Midgett's feel-<lb/>
ings about variety in the music No<lb/>
vacancy plays. "One thing we ant to<lb/>
stress about other people's tunes is<lb/>
that we want to keep changing, not<lb/>
playing the same things over and<lb/>
over every time you come back<lb/>
When asked how he would<lb/>
describe the type of music No<lb/>
Vacancy writes, Stilley, 18, had a<lb/>
hard time coming up with a defini-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"I don't really know. It's so<lb/>
varied between new wave and hard<lb/>
rock. We've got different per-<lb/>
sonalities writing the different<lb/>
songs, so they're bound to come out<lb/>
different, especially when you com-<lb/>
bine them. Like Fred and I get<lb/>
together to write a song ? it's total-<lb/>
ly different from anything around<lb/>
beecause I've got the hard rock in<lb/>
me and Fred is into new wave<lb/>
All of the members expressed that<lb/>
they were out to have a good time<lb/>
playing music and to try to make a<lb/>
living at what they like best, but<lb/>
they also want their audiences to en-<lb/>
joy themselves.<lb/>
So maybe it doesn't have to make<lb/>
sense to be good. Al of the members<lb/>
are serious musicians and at the<lb/>
same time they are out to have fun.<lb/>
That makes sense to me, and they<lb/>
are good too.<lb/>
1 Semester End Blues<lb/>
Continued from Page 5 the floor and were never thought of<lb/>
ches of post-Thanksgiving and again. There was also a bunch of<lb/>
Christmas vacation items must go as drink bottles, which were quickly<lb/>
WCH sold to the Stop-N-Go. Altogether,<lb/>
Just as pioneers with overloaded it was a profitable day.<lb/>
Conestoga wagons had to abandon The actual moving-out days are<lb/>
their heavy furniture in the desert in truly phenomenal events, especially<lb/>
order to reach California, so must in the high-rise dorms. If you liked<lb/>
students leave behind unnecessary the panoramic grandeur and panick-<lb/>
belongings so they can make it home in&amp; crowds of burning Atlanta in<lb/>
in one or two trips. A stroll through "Gone With the Wind you'd love<lb/>
the halls of most dorms can be pro- the masses of refugees fleeing from<lb/>
fitable during the last few days, Greene or Clement dorms, clogging<lb/>
especially if you like back issues of the elevators and stairs as they try to<lb/>
Time or old wine bottles with escape the confusion with their<lb/>
candles in them. worldly possessions in cartons and<lb/>
Some people leave all kinds of suitcases,<lb/>
things in their fooms. One year, my Occasionally in the past, over<lb/>
father arrived suddenly, and 1 had taken by a mood of chivalry, I've<lb/>
to leave in a hurry. I left behind a helped friends move out of such<lb/>
glass of tea, a shredded silkscreen places. Most guys are smart enough<lb/>
frame and a burned-out fan. to arrange a temporary fight with<lb/>
Another year, long ago when 1 their girlfriends around moving<lb/>
dwelled on the Hill, a friend and I time, just long enough to get some<lb/>
cleaned out the room of a neighbor dumb friend of hers to help with her<lb/>
who had left for the summer and moving. (No, 1 don't want to help<lb/>
didn't lock the door. The neighbor anyone move out this semester.)<lb/>
was one of those people who dis- The nice thing about moving out<lb/>
dained small coins and never picked is that right after that, you get to go<lb/>
them up. We found a huge handful home for the summer. Recovering<lb/>
of pennies, as well as dozens of from all this takes about four mon-<lb/>
dimes and nickels that had fallen on ths.<lb/>
Tom Haines has given<lb/>
many bands the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to make<lb/>
something of<lb/>
themselves. Haines<lb/>
respects profssionalism<lb/>
and dedication.<lb/>
Through the admira-<lb/>
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Now the Attic, under<lb/>
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making the Attic into<lb/>
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So, if you get the<lb/>
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hear some good music.<lb/>
Who knows? Maybe<lb/>
Special Thanks To<lb/>
Record Bar For All<lb/>
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STEVE EVERETTE<lb/>
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TOM STANLEY<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057266_0007"/><lb/>
Low Attendance At Rally<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 29, 1990<lb/>
LeRoux Plays<lb/>
u<lb/>
in<lb/>
re<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
Continued from Page 5<lb/>
significant "occurrence for it<lb/>
popularized the movement and<lb/>
brought the argument against<lb/>
nuclear proliferation to a wider ma-<lb/>
jority of Americans.<lb/>
An equally profound event was<lb/>
Jimmy Carter's declaration of the<lb/>
resumption of the registration and<lb/>
possible conscription of 18 to 20<lb/>
year olds, spurring political reaction<lb/>
throughout the nation. On March<lb/>
22, 1980, nearly 40 thousand in-<lb/>
dividuals from all walks of life and<lb/>
from all over the country united in<lb/>
Washington to let the president,<lb/>
generals and corporations know<lb/>
that the American people will not<lb/>
stand idly by while they plan in-<lb/>
terventionist foreign policy. Viet-<lb/>
nam was not that long ago, and the<lb/>
youth of America are not so<lb/>
apathetic that they wil! succumb to<lb/>
the spilling of our blood to protect<lb/>
Exxon, Mobil and Citibanks "vital<lb/>
interest in the Middle East<lb/>
Last Saturday, the largest and<lb/>
most comprehensive anti-nukeanti-<lb/>
draft demonstration in the history<lb/>
of the United States was scheduled<lb/>
to take place in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
The event was sponsored by the<lb/>
Coalition for a Non-Nuclear World,<lb/>
a broad-based alliance of labor,<lb/>
women's, environmental, native<lb/>
American and other groups that<lb/>
began out of concern over nuclear<lb/>
weapons and the nuclear power in-<lb/>
dustries. The event was a four-day<lb/>
affair that featured massive lobby-<lb/>
ing speeches by such luminaries as<lb/>
Barry Commoner and LaDonna<lb/>
Harris, Dr. Helen Caldicott, Dave<lb/>
Dellinger, Daniel Ellsberg, Dr. Ben<lb/>
jamin Spock and Russell Means;<lb/>
music from Bonnie Raitt and John<lb/>
Hall, Blood, Sweat and Tears, Peter<lb/>
Paul and Mary, Sweet Honey in the<lb/>
Rock, Pete Seeger, Holly Near and<lb/>
Bright Morning Star and<lb/>
demonstrations such as yesterday's<lb/>
attempt to block the Pentagon.<lb/>
On the eve of the event, President<lb/>
Carter, in perhaps the most<lb/>
senseless act of the clampdown, sent<lb/>
a "humanitarian rescue force to<lb/>
Iran to attempt to rescue the<lb/>
hostages from Iranian hands. Just<lb/>
when our allies were beginning to<lb/>
rally behind us and in spite of the<lb/>
tremendous risk to the hsotages,<lb/>
Carter sent a military strike force to<lb/>
the brink of disaster. Only the hand<lb/>
of God Allah prevented the military<lb/>
action from destroying the hostages<lb/>
and launching us headlong into the<lb/>
Apocalypse. It set the stage for<lb/>
future political and social upheaval.<lb/>
We arrived in Washington at<lb/>
about 11 a.m a perfectly miserable<lb/>
Saturday. It was bitterly cold, and<lb/>
torrents of rain descended upon the<lb/>
city. The projected crowd of about<lb/>
150,000 turned out to be a much<lb/>
smaller yet stronger group of<lb/>
35,000. Many people came from as<lb/>
far away as Washington state. Col<lb/>
orado and Flotida, and it seemed<lb/>
that those from the immediate area<lb/>
may have been frustrated by the<lb/>
weather.<lb/>
As we appioached the Capitol<lb/>
building, we could hear the strains<lb/>
of "lhe limes They Are A<lb/>
Changin" performed by Peter,<lb/>
Paul and Mar Ada Sanchez of the<lb/>
Coalition moderated, a.nd speeches<lb/>
were given by Helen Caldicott,<lb/>
scientist, and Jane Lee from Har-<lb/>
risburg. An acoustic performance<lb/>
was rendered b Pete Seeger. The<lb/>
most prominent feelings were good<lb/>
cheer (in spite of conditions),<lb/>
solidarity and n dynamic ense of<lb/>
urgency in 'he discussions of the<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
As we proceeded to march down<lb/>
Constitution avenue. I became<lb/>
aware of the crowd around me, full<lb/>
not of radical longhairs but more of<lb/>
a microcosm of society. It was com-<lb/>
posed of blacks, whites, youths,<lb/>
elderly, men, women, workers and<lb/>
bosses ? all blended together to<lb/>
reveal the tremendous impact of the<lb/>
draft regulation and nuclear power<lb/>
industry upon our society. As we<lb/>
moved and chanted, I was deeply<lb/>
moved by the strong feelings of<lb/>
comaraderie among the members<lb/>
and the affinity of the non-violent<lb/>
procession. We were one with<lb/>
ourselves and the world.<lb/>
We arrived at the stage site, and<lb/>
scattered all about were booths<lb/>
from political groups ranging from<lb/>
the Citizens Party to the Socialist<lb/>
Party. There were many enterpris-<lb/>
ing capitalists out to make a large<lb/>
profit by selling I-shirts and but-<lb/>
tons at exorbitant prices. Even at<lb/>
the most idealistic of gatherings,<lb/>
there are those who are out to turn<lb/>
an important event into a personal<lb/>
profit.<lb/>
The crowd surrounded the stage,<lb/>
and the first group, Brigrh Morning<lb/>
Star, performed, followed by the<lb/>
first succession of speakers while I<lb/>
proceeded to make my way to the<lb/>
media area. Throughout the day, I<lb/>
stood face to face with Bonnie<lb/>
Raitt, John Hall, Daniel Ellsberg,<lb/>
Benjamin Spock and Russell means,<lb/>
but nothing could compare to when<lb/>
I stood eye to eye with and shook<lb/>
the hand of Barry Commoner. Few<lb/>
were as impressive or possessed as<lb/>
strong an emotional presence as did<lb/>
Dr. Commoner, and his words<lb/>
filtered through the haze of the day<lb/>
to strike at the very commitments 1<lb/>
hold dear I could not have been as<lb/>
moved by meeting anyone in the na<lb/>
tion as those few moments I spent in<lb/>
communication with the man who<lb/>
mav hold the kev to this nation's<lb/>
future.<lb/>
The interpreters who translated<lb/>
the vocal communication to the deaf<lb/>
in the audience also made a long<lb/>
lasting impression. Not only did<lb/>
they translate the spoken word, they<lb/>
translated the powerful emotion<lb/>
present in the speakers and carried<lb/>
the lyrics and musical messages to<lb/>
the crowd as various performers<lb/>
weaved their scenarios.<lb/>
Above all, the presence of the<lb/>
native American was felt very<lb/>
strongly as they formed a vital link<lb/>
in the protective chain of the stage<lb/>
area. 1 fully realized the beauty of<lb/>
the people and the tremendous debt<lb/>
that we owe them as a race, just as I<lb/>
became aware of the role that the<lb/>
play in the platform of the coalition.<lb/>
As Russell Means, president of the<lb/>
American Indian Movement, stated,<lb/>
"This country was stolen from one<lb/>
race and built upon the backs of<lb/>
another, and once again these are<lb/>
the ones who will suffer most by a<lb/>
future that is dominated by the<lb/>
nuclear menace<lb/>
As the day began to wind down,<lb/>
the crowd began to chant for Bonnie<lb/>
Raitt and John Hnll, and soon<lb/>
enough their wishes were fulfilled.<lb/>
The final song of the day was John<lb/>
and Johanna Hail's 'Power and<lb/>
as Hall and Raitt broke into the<lb/>
refrain, I began to weep openlv at<lb/>
the magnificent power that we had<lb/>
in our midst, the power to change a<lb/>
nation. As the night broke, I<lb/>
reflected on the sight oi 30 thousand<lb/>
cold and wet peop'c who had braved<lb/>
the da without a single light,<lb/>
without an arrest<lb/>
drug overdose<lb/>
whatever powers<lb/>
presenting me with the opportunity<lb/>
to take part in such a celebration of<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Continued from Page 5<lb/>
Hence, we took the direction of<lb/>
straight ahead rock and roll. We<lb/>
were very excited about the<lb/>
possibilities of exploring this direc-<lb/>
tion while keeping as much of the<lb/>
basic characteristics we started with;<lb/>
such as lots of vocal harmonies,<lb/>
sparkling keyboards, sterling bass,<lb/>
etc.<lb/>
"On the new album, keyboardist<lb/>
Rod Roddy contributed half of the<lb/>
material and features new col-<lb/>
laboration between Rod and me<lb/>
The group was heading back to<lb/>
the hotel for a night's rest before go-<lb/>
ing on to Virginia Beach in the mor-<lb/>
ning so the interview was cut back to<lb/>
only a few essential questions.<lb/>
Noticing crosses around Jeff<lb/>
Pollard's and Rod Roddy's necks,<lb/>
the question popped up ? were<lb/>
these guys Christians and if so, how<lb/>
could they remain Christians in such<lb/>
a controversial business?<lb/>
"I've been a Christian six years<lb/>
Pollard said, "and it does cause<lb/>
some problems being in thU<lb/>
business. Being a Christian is a<lb/>
maturing process like anything els,<lb/>
and it's something you have to work<lb/>
at every day<lb/>
Rod Roddy broke in at this point<lb/>
and commented, "It's a hard<lb/>
business to be a Christian in. I still<lb/>
have a long way to go but I try<lb/>
A refreshing change from the<lb/>
typical image of drug-experimenting<lb/>
rock groups, LeRoux is a band that<lb/>
will remain unforgotten not only<lb/>
because of their musical talent, but<lb/>
also because of their amiable per<lb/>
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and involvement of their audiences<lb/>
everywhere.<lb/>
and without a<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057266_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 29, 1980<lb/>
Farewell To Robert M. Swaim<lb/>
After a four-year career with The the newspaper do not produce<lb/>
East Carolinian and its predecessor, results, the account is turned over to<lb/>
Fountainhead, Advertising Director the attorney. "I've been to court to<lb/>
Robert M. Swaim is leaving at the collect accounts before, and I have<lb/>
end of this summer. never lost a case Swaim said, ad-<lb/>
Under Swaim's direction since ding that he doesn't like to do this<lb/>
1 77, the advertising department of and that with good advertisers this is<lb/>
t le campus newspaper has increased not a problem,<lb/>
revenues from $16,000 to an As far as the total process involv-<lb/>
estimated $110,000 in 1979-80. The ed in revamping the advertising<lb/>
increase has made possible several department is concerned, Swaim ad-<lb/>
improvements at The East Caroli- ded, "It didn't take any magic. It<lb/>
nian, including higher salaries for didn't take a genius. All it took was<lb/>
staff members, purchase of modern pulling some heads together and im-<lb/>
electronic typesetting equipment plementing some standard accoun-<lb/>
and remodeling of the newspaper's ting and business procedures,<lb/>
offices. "That's why the paper has pro-<lb/>
Swaim was also instrumental in spered. It's not because me or<lb/>
the creation of the Media Board, anybody else came in here and was a<lb/>
which now directs all campus media<lb/>
independent of control by the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Association.<lb/>
Once described by his detractors<lb/>
as "the most powerful and influen-<lb/>
tial student" at ECU, Swaim has<lb/>
been involved in several hot con-<lb/>
troversies since first coming here in the increased salaries for employees.<lb/>
1976. As a result, he leaves behind a "To get more work out of people<lb/>
mixed batch of friends and enemies.<lb/>
His enemies may greet with<lb/>
whiz kid. We just used some good<lb/>
business sense. It's just good<lb/>
business practice that we learned<lb/>
right here at ECU in the School of<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Among the benefits as a result of<lb/>
this increased revenue, Swaim cited<lb/>
pleasure his departure, and his<lb/>
friends may hate to see him go, but<lb/>
those involved in this newspaper will<lb/>
remember his contributions to its<lb/>
financial security and editorial in-<lb/>
dependence.<lb/>
Since Swaim was appointed<lb/>
advertising director in 1977, the<lb/>
advertising revenue of the<lb/>
newspaper has increased roughly<lb/>
700 percent. When asked about the<lb/>
he said, "you've got to pay them<lb/>
more. The attitude people had was<lb/>
'Why bust my "ass for $20 a<lb/>
month Swaim also noted the new<lb/>
typesetting system, wire service<lb/>
subscriptions, carpeting on the ce-<lb/>
ment floors, better typewriters and<lb/>
desks which have been purchased<lb/>
with the revenue.<lb/>
"Without increased revenue, the<lb/>
paper would have folded a long time<lb/>
other side for a while.<lb/>
"I've been criticized for other<lb/>
things, too. I've been called<lb/>
unethical. The very people who call-<lb/>
ed me unethical and who screamed<lb/>
it the loudest and the most often <lb/>
don't know what the word ethical<lb/>
means. It's just a catch-all word<lb/>
they throw out. It's a good criticism<lb/>
to call somebody unethical. I took<lb/>
the ethics course in the journalism<lb/>
department in my sophomore year,<lb/>
and 1 don't need anybody coming<lb/>
up to tell me what a newspaper<lb/>
should or should not print, because<lb/>
I know<lb/>
Swaim has frequently been in-<lb/>
volved in disagreements between the<lb/>
newspaper and the campus govern-<lb/>
ment. He feels that a primary role of<lb/>
journalism is to be "the govern-<lb/>
ment's adversary, the eye of the<lb/>
people, the voice of the people. I<lb/>
don't care if you're talking about<lb/>
Richard Nixon and the Washington<lb/>
Post or Brett Melvin and The East<lb/>
Carolinian. There's always going to<lb/>
be that adversary relationship.<lb/>
There always has been. That's what<lb/>
prompted the American Revolution.<lb/>
That was one of the fundamental<lb/>
principles this country was founded<lb/>
on ? freedom of the press.<lb/>
"We have an obligation to be<lb/>
'watchdog to know what's going<lb/>
on in the legislature, in the executive<lb/>
and judicial branches, and to tell the<lb/>
truth and to print nothing but the<lb/>
truth. Now, if we want to criticize<lb/>
n<lb/>
on me. I hated to see him go; ECU<lb/>
lost when he left. He was smart. He<lb/>
taught us to think and to take<lb/>
nothng at face value<lb/>
Leo Jenkins, former chancellor of<lb/>
ECU, was also an important in-<lb/>
fluence on Swaim. "I learned so<lb/>
me right from wrong, and she<lb/>
taught me to say 'yes, sir' and 'yes,<lb/>
ma'am and she taught me to<lb/>
respect people, and to try my damn-<lb/>
dest to do what is honorable<lb/>
Even now when Swaim goes<lb/>
home, he states that he learns<lb/>
steps he took to achieve this signifi- everybody. When you've got an 18<lb/>
cant increase, Swaim responded, "It percent inflation rate, you've got to<lb/>
was a lot of hard work  I guess the<lb/>
biggest thing was that we became<lb/>
aggressive. We sat down and looked<lb/>
at the Chamber of Commerce direc-<lb/>
tory, the yellow pages, and rode up<lb/>
and down the streets all over town<lb/>
looking at what stores were where<lb/>
we<lb/>
ago because there aren't enough stu- and take somebody to task, we'll do<lb/>
dent fees to go around for that on page four, and that is our<lb/>
priviledge. That page is reserved for<lb/>
our opinion<lb/>
As far as criticism is concerned,<lb/>
Swaim adds, "To be a good jour-<lb/>
nalist, you've got to let this criticism<lb/>
roll off your back. You're not going<lb/>
to please all the people all the time,<lb/>
and as long as somebody's criticiz-<lb/>
ing you, you know you're doing<lb/>
much about management from that something new from her. "I guess a<lb/>
man. I followed Dr. Jenkins' lot of my conservatism comes from<lb/>
management theory that you can't her. My grandmother is a very, very<lb/>
do it all by yourself, so the best<lb/>
make more money Even with the<lb/>
enormous increase in revenue, the<lb/>
newspaper has only reached about<lb/>
71 percent self-sufficiency, accor-<lb/>
ding to Swaim.<lb/>
Swaim feels that perhaps the most<lb/>
important thing to students is the<lb/>
For the first time, we actually resulting improvement in the quality something right.<lb/>
recruited potential advertisers, of the newspaper. "The students "If somebody doesn't like me,<lb/>
which to my knowledge had never want a good paper and they want a that's fine with me. I can live with<lb/>
been done before big paper because the bigger the<lb/>
Based on Swaim's aggressive paper is, the more information is in<lb/>
policy, the advertising staff made up it. Well, you've got to have more<lb/>
a list of prospects and sent form let- people to put it out. Having more<lb/>
ters to them. In about a week, a money enabled us to hire more peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
Swaim also noted that the circula-<lb/>
tion of The East Carolinian is larger<lb/>
than many small local papers in the<lb/>
newspaper representative would<lb/>
contact the prospect by phone or in<lb/>
person. "We discovered that there<lb/>
was a market out there Swaim<lb/>
it. But when they start hurting the<lb/>
newspaper, that gets my dander up<lb/>
? when people start venting their<lb/>
frustrations on an innocent party,<lb/>
which is the newspaper and the rest<lb/>
of the people who work here. If they<lb/>
want to go out in the back and slug<lb/>
it out with me, fine, but leave this<lb/>
paper alone. That's what I've got to<lb/>
noted. "They were just sitting there state. "We print 10,000 papers twice say to those people<lb/>
waiting for somebody to come and<lb/>
ask them<lb/>
Another factor Swaim cited was<lb/>
that, in addition to increasing sales,<lb/>
the advertising department increas-<lb/>
ed collections. Prior to this, less<lb/>
than 50 percent of the sales were ac-<lb/>
tually collected. Now it is close to<lb/>
100 percent.<lb/>
Swaim also noted that "the book-<lb/>
keeping system was  the most<lb/>
unorganized, inefficient, slipshod<lb/>
thing I'd ever seen. Half the time<lb/>
a week, and you can look at the<lb/>
Press Association's directory and<lb/>
you'll see dozens of newspapers that<lb/>
print once a week, or once every two<lb/>
weeks ? two, three, four thousand<lb/>
copies. We're bigger than two<lb/>
newspapers right here in Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
"We're able to put out a better<lb/>
product for the students, and they<lb/>
are spending less than the students<lb/>
were spending four years ago, and<lb/>
the student today is getting twice as<lb/>
Swaim was instrumental in the<lb/>
creation of the Media Board in<lb/>
1978. However, he docs not feel that<lb/>
the board has maintained its<lb/>
original purposes. "They have gone<lb/>
far beyond the bounds which were<lb/>
created for them. That board was<lb/>
created for two things: to ap-<lb/>
propriate student funds for the<lb/>
media and to appoint people to run<lb/>
the media, one person per media.<lb/>
They've gone far beyond that. They<lb/>
call themselves publishers now.<lb/>
charges didn't get billed. There was big a paper. So in essence, they're They are self-proclaimed publishers,<lb/>
so much manual labor One of the getting twice as much for half the but our lawyers in Washington have<lb/>
first steps Swaim took was to money. And it's a better quality told us they are not the publishers,<lb/>
develop a simple duplicate copy paper. they are an arm of the state. At best,<lb/>
form that could be used by the "Plus Swaim adds, "the less they are a trustee for the student<lb/>
bookkeeper and the advertising you have to grovel and crawl before body<lb/>
layout workers, with another copy the Media Board, the better off you<lb/>
for the file. The form lists all infor-<lb/>
mation needed to carry the ad<lb/>
through the entire process, from<lb/>
original sale through final billing<lb/>
stages.<lb/>
The bookkeeping system was in<lb/>
such a state of disarray that no form<lb/>
are, because he who has the gold<lb/>
makes the rules<lb/>
In the last four years, Swaim has<lb/>
been the center of controversy more<lb/>
than once. When asked how he<lb/>
would respond to some of the<lb/>
criticism that has been leveled<lb/>
Swaim admits that he doesn't<lb/>
know how to change the present<lb/>
trends but adds that he feels that is<lb/>
critical for the life of the newspaper<lb/>
and other campus media that the<lb/>
situations be changed. "I have been<lb/>
shocked, appalled and frightened by<lb/>
some of their actions. They do<lb/>
thing you can do is surround<lb/>
yourself with the smartest, hardest-<lb/>
working and most capable people<lb/>
you can find in the land. That's<lb/>
what Dr. Jenkins did, and that's<lb/>
why this university has grown and<lb/>
prospered. I applied that little<lb/>
theory to my department, and I sur-<lb/>
rounded myself with the best people<lb/>
I could find. That's what 1 learned-<lb/>
from Dr. Jenkins.<lb/>
"He was a great man; he fought<lb/>
tooth and nail for everything we've<lb/>
gotten, and nothing makes my<lb/>
blood boil more than to hear these<lb/>
'new people' in the new administra-<lb/>
tion detract from Dr. Jenkins and<lb/>
criticize them. It makes my blood<lb/>
boil and makes me want to spit in<lb/>
their eye Swaim paused and add-<lb/>
ed, "I hope you day that I said that<lb/>
in the paper<lb/>
"I admire a fighter, and Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins was a fighter :md a hard<lb/>
worker Swaim adds. "These peo-<lb/>
ple that are so quick to detract from<lb/>
him and critixize him probably<lb/>
wouldn't have a job or a university<lb/>
to work at if it weren't for Leo<lb/>
Jenkins. I cannot conceive of there<lb/>
ever being a chancellor of East<lb/>
Carolina University as great as Leo<lb/>
Jenkins was. There'll never be<lb/>
another one. I don't even think<lb/>
anybody will run a close second<lb/>
Outside of ECU, Swaim feels that<lb/>
the person who played the greatest<lb/>
role in shaping his ideals and beliefs<lb/>
has been his grandmother. "She<lb/>
taught me everything. She taught<lb/>
"Robert was certainly responsible<lb/>
for putting the paper on the map in<lb/>
North Carolina. He worked harder<lb/>
for the newspaper than any staff<lb/>
member<lb/>
Richard Green, managing editor<lb/>
states that Swaim's contribution to<lb/>
the newspaper is "unequalled b<lb/>
anyone that I know of. He is a good<lb/>
friend of mine, and even though we<lb/>
often disagree, I have the greatest<lb/>
respect for his ability<lb/>
Swaim's opinions have not always<lb/>
been readily accepted by his<lb/>
editorial staff. "1 have rarely agreed<lb/>
with Robert's conservative point of<lb/>
view says Marc Barnes, editor-in-<lb/>
chief, "and I have butted heads with<lb/>
him on more than one occasion this<lb/>
year, but his talent and expertise in<lb/>
college advertising ranks is unsur-<lb/>
passed. He is good at what he<lb/>
does<lb/>
Even those who disagree with him<lb/>
strongly have to admit that Swaim<lb/>
has been an excellent advertising<lb/>
director. "Thank God he has<lb/>
redeemed himself on one thing ? he<lb/>
sure can make money, and he saved<lb/>
this newspaper<lb/>
One factor in Swaim's decision to<lb/>
leave was that he felt that he had<lb/>
been so involved in activities at ECU<lb/>
rftat he lost sight of the world out-<lb/>
side the university. "1 made a<lb/>
mistake here. I lived for this<lb/>
newspaper. You've got to think<lb/>
about yourself sometimes, and<lb/>
that's probably why I'm getting out<lb/>
of it. I've suddenly realized it's time<lb/>
to do something for Robert. I've<lb/>
neglected myself for too long. I feel<lb/>
like I've served the paper well, but 1<lb/>
have suffered from it. I sacrificed<lb/>
everything for the paper ? my<lb/>
social life, my personal life, the<lb/>
good times, and I've suffered<lb/>
academically because of a slavish<lb/>
devotion to this place. After four<lb/>
Swaim's colleagues at the East years I realizxed that this isn't the<lb/>
Carolinian unanimously end of the road, it's just a stepping<lb/>
acknowledge his efforts to turn the st0ne. But there's a whole other<lb/>
newspaper into a profitable venture. world out there, and I'm gonna see<lb/>
According to Steve Bachner, it and be a part of it<lb/>
conservative Republican, and she is<lb/>
a gracious lady, a saintly woman, 1<lb/>
just don't know how to say<lb/>
enough<lb/>
Swaim added, "1 have a big<lb/>
mouth, and 1 don't hesitate to tell<lb/>
somebody what I think, and I learn-<lb/>
ed that from Granny. She'd tell you<lb/>
real quick what she thought about<lb/>
something. She taught me that when<lb/>
you're right, you stand up and say<lb/>
you're right<lb/>
Swaim also credits the rest of his<lb/>
family for teaching him the work<lb/>
ethic. "They're honest people,<lb/>
hardworking people, and that's<lb/>
what they taught me. They taught<lb/>
me that laziness is the sorriest thing<lb/>
in the world. If I learned anything<lb/>
from my folks, it was to work, to be<lb/>
earnest and to be honest. That has<lb/>
been a profound influence on me<lb/>
If he had the last four years to live<lb/>
over again, what would Swaim do<lb/>
differently? For one thing, he<lb/>
regrets that he alientated some peo-<lb/>
ple. "I ran my mouth a lot when I<lb/>
shouldn't have, and I didn't listen<lb/>
when I should have Swaim also<lb/>
cites the 1979 student election as a<lb/>
problem area. "I would have handl-<lb/>
ed that election differently.<lb/>
Sometimes I was too active and too<lb/>
vocal, and it caused problems<lb/>
However, Swaim emphasizes that<lb/>
with many of his activities he would<lb/>
step Swaim took was to call in the kn0w the good Lord said 'Love thy things they were never intended to<lb/>
university auditor to assist in setting neighbor but sometimes, you do They ve gotten too high and<lb/>
up an accounts receivable system. knoW) that's mighty hard to do. I &amp; andJhev vef otte" ?f<lb/>
Before this, the newspaper had not don't hate any of those people. If their place. They re trying to tell us<lb/>
been responsible to the university anything, I feel pity for them how to do our job, andi thait s no<lb/>
auditors. "You couldn't audit it because the people who have been their job. They know nothing about<lb/>
then. It was just a big mess. It was a my most vocal critics were the peo- newspapers; were the Pr???-<lb/>
shambles. We lost thousands of pie who have been the most ignorant sionals The sad thing about it is the<lb/>
ot k cit?atinn th.v were media board was created to protect<lb/>
and promote the media, but they<lb/>
dollars because of sloppy bookkeep-<lb/>
they were<lb/>
about the situation<lb/>
ing criticizing me about.<lb/>
Swaim adds that one of the pro- "I've been called a profiteer, have fallen by the wayside and they<lb/>
blems was that the advertising Well, what the hell's wrong with be- don t do that anymore. Jhey have<lb/>
department had never been run by a ing a profiteer? That's what built become our adversaries<lb/>
business major before. "The people this damn country. If it hadn't been Swaim feels that working for the<lb/>
who worked here were English ma- for people like Andrew Carnegie newspaper has been invaluable ex-<lb/>
jors, poli sci majors, history majors. and David Rockefeller and J.P. penenee in trainging for a future<lb/>
They were totally ignorant of Morgan, and these people who career in journalism.<lb/>
where<lb/>
business procedures. They didn't<lb/>
realize the potential gold mine they<lb/>
were sitting on<lb/>
Audits are now conducted<lb/>
regularly. Swaim stated that he has<lb/>
demanded this for several reasons.<lb/>
"I request an audit every year<lb/>
wanted to make money,<lb/>
would this country be? Because<lb/>
there was incentive to make a profit,<lb/>
those people went into business, and<lb/>
subsequently they created jobs and<lb/>
paid taxes. It was the industrial<lb/>
revolution in America, and these<lb/>
today than 50 percent of the job ap-<lb/>
plicants that go to the newspapers.<lb/>
I've got four years of experience<lb/>
He adds that prospective employers<lb/>
appreciate the training that col-<lb/>
legiate journalists have had because<lb/>
they don't have to be taught the<lb/>
sometimes every six months, so that people were driven, not by basics before they can work<lb/>
I know in my mind that we're mak- benevolent motives to do something "Everything I know about the<lb/>
ing money and the books are good for society. They knew they business I learned here. I ve learned<lb/>
straight Swaim added that the were gonna make a buck, and socie- ten times more lounging around the<lb/>
audits are also a form of self protec- ty benefitted. newspaper office thatn I learned in<lb/>
tion. "Yes, 1 am a profiteer. Always the classroom. In not knocking<lb/>
"There have been so many allega- have been and always will be. Free wh?t you learn in the classroom but<lb/>
lions. My enemies say that 'Swaim enterprise and the profit incentive ?l is no good until you can apply it,<lb/>
is a crook, he's a thief and this and are what made America the richest<lb/>
that. All I have to do is say, 'Look, country in the world, t say to those<lb/>
buddy, here's the report from the people who call me a profiteer and<lb/>
State Auditor's office in Raleigh, denounce the profit incentive, go to<lb/>
and they say I'm clean, so put that Russia, go to Communist China, go<lb/>
in your pipe and smoke it ? to a communist country where there<lb/>
Another improvement Swaim is no free enterprise. Let them go<lb/>
made involved an active collections there, where you can't buy a car or a<lb/>
policy. He noted that the newspaper washing machine or a pair of blue<lb/>
has taken advertisers to emit when jeans, and you don't eat meat every<lb/>
necessary to collect overaue bills, meal, and you can't go out and see a<lb/>
Shortly after he was appointed, movie, and you can't stand up and<lb/>
Swaim hired an attorney to handle criticize your government, and you<lb/>
all East Carolinian collections. If have no freedom. That's all I have<lb/>
polite inquiries and reminders from to say to them. Let them try it on the<lb/>
and here we learned to apply it. We<lb/>
make mistakes, and we learn fro our<lb/>
mistakes<lb/>
The one person at ECU who had<lb/>
the greatest influence on Swaim as<lb/>
journalism professor Larry<lb/>
O'Keefe. "He was mean, he'd just<lb/>
as soon cuss you as look at you, but<lb/>
when I walked out of his class, I<lb/>
knew a hundred times more about<lb/>
newspapers than the day I walked<lb/>
in. That man taught me everything.<lb/>
He taught me what Mr. Baker<lb/>
would call 'shirtsleeve journalism<lb/>
He had a most profound influence<lb/>
wm;<lb/>
CAN BE BEAT.<lb/>
4 ,<lb/>
:?<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057266_0009"/><lb/>
I HI I s AKOI IMAS<lb/>
APKI1 29, lVKn<lb/>
Swaim Thanks Staff And Friends<lb/>
- to the stafl.<lb/>
It has been a lone, haul foui<lb/>
vears rhe years have ben filled with<lb/>
ha, t ? work, heada. hes,<lb/>
worrit; s ms, and ulcei s<lb/>
1 could not hae made it, noi<lb/>
could papei have made it.<lb/>
without the diligent work ol my<lb/>
sta Js<lb/>
honorable mention,<lb/>
. must go to 1 ei t <lb/>
R He he assistant directoi<lb/>
ind m right hand<lb/>
he past three years in the<lb/>
ad ei i ising depai tment<lb/>
? m stall in the I all<lb/>
as an ad saleman, low man<lb/>
otem pole He jumped in<lb/>
voi ked like a tro<lb/>
I verv<lb/>
the week 1 eu went<lb/>
out, he still does, and worked the<lb/>
streets hustling up ads, selling the<lb/>
papei to the business community.<lb/>
I ei r v is. more than am thing else,<lb/>
dedicated, he does not give up easi-<lb/>
ly 11 evet there was man that<lb/>
believes in the old adage ot "it at<lb/>
first you don't succeed, try, try,<lb/>
again it must he 1 en.<lb/>
His hard work earned him pro-<lb/>
motions, and with each step up the<lb/>
laddei he assumed mote respon-<lb/>
sibility and did more work.<lb/>
I van recall very vividly the limes<lb/>
when we worked round the clock tor<lb/>
24 hours at a time running all over<lb/>
town during the day selling ads and<lb/>
then staying up all night to set them<lb/>
into type to meet the deadline.<lb/>
Herndon was always there, never<lb/>
complaining, just working as hard<lb/>
as he could.<lb/>
Without let iv I don't know what<lb/>
I would have done, I'd sell my soul<lb/>
to have had 10 more pist like him<lb/>
lerry has been named to succeed<lb/>
me. I wish him all the luck and sue<lb/>
cess in the world. "Thanks lerrv, foi<lb/>
doing one helluva job<lb/>
Next in line is a fellow who moves<lb/>
about quietly and so efficinetly that<lb/>
a lot of folks around the office<lb/>
don't even know who he is. His<lb/>
name is Paul 1 incke, "1 ink" tor<lb/>
short (which he is).<lb/>
Paul joined the advertising stall<lb/>
two vears ago as a salesman and was<lb/>
promoted to advertising technical<lb/>
supervisor a year ago.<lb/>
His work is, without exception,<lb/>
KM) percent perfect, everything he-<lb/>
does is flawless. Anybody who says<lb/>
Swaim With His Top Men<lb/>
Advertising technical Supervisor:hris Lichok. business Manager; Waverh Merritl, Classified<lb/>
Herndon, ssistanl Director ?t Advertising; Jeff Rawls, Advertising salesman; Kohert Swaim.<lb/>
d ,<lb/>
that God didn't make anybody<lb/>
perfect obviously hasn't met Paul<lb/>
vet<lb/>
Paul is reserved, conservative in<lb/>
appearance and manner, and he<lb/>
grins like a possum 24 hours a da.<lb/>
Again we have a man who is<lb/>
dedicated to his work and to the<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
lie sells a lot ol ads and I can't<lb/>
recall ever having a complainl from<lb/>
an advertiser about his work. I've<lb/>
never heard anything from oui<lb/>
customers about 1 ink that wasn't<lb/>
positive and complimentary His<lb/>
knowledge and creative abilities<lb/>
have been a real asset to the paper<lb/>
I hanks I ink, you're a good boy<lb/>
Ihe late hours that we at the<lb/>
new paper so often speak ol are<lb/>
so bad for mysell and Ieirv<lb/>
anymore and things How fairly<lb/>
smoothly in the advertising layout<lb/>
department nowadays thanks to<lb/>
chiel artist. Rk Browning<lb/>
Ric came to work tor me last 1 ill<lb/>
as the classified advertising<lb/>
manager He look the bull by the<lb/>
horns from the first day he set I<lb/>
in the office. He set up a system ol<lb/>
receipts tor classifieds and dev :<lb/>
the first record keeping system<lb/>
we ever had tor classified advert<lb/>
ing. Rk was alwav s quic l I<lb/>
hand to any departmei<lb/>
paper that needed help He<lb/>
plain loves to keep busy and hi<lb/>
jovs his work.<lb/>
I ater in the yeat I moved R.<lb/>
the lav out room as head n I<lb/>
chai ge ol live layout worker -<lb/>
the responsibility, ol overseeing I<lb/>
production ol all advertisii<lb/>
as he had done in classified advet<lb/>
ing he immediately set<lb/>
organize things in the<lb/>
taking .are ol supr<lb/>
n ent. tram me workers I<lb/>
tails, writes letters, does about halt<lb/>
ol the newspaper's bookkeppii<lb/>
and keeps the advertising tiles in<lb/>
order George is another one who<lb/>
will help out in any department. I<lb/>
hate to think what our morgue<lb/>
ild look hke without him clean-<lb/>
ing it up and organizing it every<lb/>
week Cieorge is an O.K kid, I think<lb/>
.veil keep you around tor a while<lb/>
(ieoi ge<lb/>
I can't forget my little bud<lb/>
I icht l ? pher David I ich -<lb/>
( hi is has the distinctly n of I<lb/>
the only yankee that I ever<lb/>
n Penn ylvania<lb/>
I his is his second yeai<lb/>
paper He came on the<lb/>
ir as n a si<lb/>
hman fter a ?<lb/>
?; he had a higher callii B u<lb/>
our benevolent b ; i<lb/>
managei I i<lb/>
? able tell'<lb/>
think he's cute.<lb/>
Bui rious not<lb/>
-<lb/>
lable<lb/>
He did -<lb/>
Vied<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
K<lb/>
11 ? ' '<lb/>
II<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
new computers, illv? M<lb/>
coordinatit malVV ed  l<lb/>
department nn ?re efl?<lb/>
Rv. 1?<lb/>
good.?<lb/>
I hen there's Waverh<lb/>
 averlv Merrill 111 'Wa? '<lb/>
Dawg a? ? ? as b( .<lb/>
friends, became theH<lb/>
tising -hen 1?<lb/>
Browning to tht HeHe . .<lb/>
-1 ust last<lb/>
doe HeS 5 " ?? ?<lb/>
master ItHe<lb/>
he i - alwav - a te? <lb/>
of I<lb/>
first i I o n . 1<lb/>
hav e t<lb/>
?? ? ? . ;uppori<lb/>
have nerves of sivhen ma<lb/>
job. Waverly, you've been a big help .d I here e our v<lb/>
keep up the good work. 'merit who were very<lb/>
George, what would 1 d vitl. and a ked ist as hurJ as<lb/>
<lb/>
that kid. George is a skinnv? : staff. Richard Green, Marc<lb/>
<lb/>
freshman 1 pel Hill (GodBai nes, ai ' ta I ai<lb/>
tor give him foi that) He kind ota i ? countless others, help d<lb/>
takes alter link, always grinningthrough thivk and thin a<lb/>
<lb/>
like a possum from eai to .pi me up when 1 needed a d.<lb/>
Cieorge is a newcort the si<lb/>
v- thout the team 1 could<lb/>
he's been with us for about tour months now as m aide. Gorge does everything imaginable, picks up adsne anything, nobody does<lb/>
anything singlehandedly. 1 car<lb/>
thank them enough tor their serv k .<lb/>
when I'm busy, takes my phonehard work, and devotion.<lb/>
MARYHEAUT<lb/>
i<lb/>
 r<lb/>
KA<lb/>
m<lb/>
TO SING ABOUT.<lb/>
:?<lb/>
-V <lb/>
V '<lb/>
"???<lb/>
3f<lb/>
 i<lb/>
'W<lb/>
Nineteen years ago, Mary Healy had a success<lb/>
she'll never forget: recovering from cancer.<lb/>
She and almost 2 million others are living<lb/>
proof that serious forms ot cancer can be heat.<lb/>
But not without the research and advances in<lb/>
treatment that your donations help to fund.<lb/>
Your contributions are important. As<lb/>
important as life itself.<lb/>
American Cancer Society<lb/>
<pb facs="00057266_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
APRIL 29, 1980 Page 10<lb/>
Athletes Of The Year<lb/>
QB Green Recognized<lb/>
As Offensive Catalyst<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Leander Green, star quarterback<lb/>
of last season's record-breaking<lb/>
East Carolina football team, has<lb/>
been named as The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian's 1979-80 ECU Male Athlete of<lb/>
the Year.<lb/>
Green edged out two of his team-<lb/>
mates, running back Anthony Col-<lb/>
lins and All-America guard Wayne<lb/>
Inman to capture the honor. Also<lb/>
considered highly was basketball<lb/>
star George Maynor, baseball stan-<lb/>
dout Butch Davis and track star Otis<lb/>
Melvin.<lb/>
At 5-foot-7 Green is considered<lb/>
too short for a professional quarter-<lb/>
back but used his speed, quickness,<lb/>
wits and know-how to become one<lb/>
of the top wishbone generals in the<lb/>
nation over the past two seasons.<lb/>
The Jacksonville native was nam-<lb/>
ed by ex-ECU head coach Pat Dye<lb/>
to his personal all-Pirate team after<lb/>
his resignation last December. Dye<lb/>
coached at ECU for six seasons.<lb/>
Green had by far his most pro-<lb/>
ductive season in 1979, directing an<lb/>
awesome Pirate offens e to a na-<lb/>
tional rushing championship. ECU<lb/>
also finished in the top three in the<lb/>
nation in total offense and scoring<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
"This is the greatest offensive<lb/>
unit I've ever seen Dye said after<lb/>
the season. "And Leander is the<lb/>
kev to it all. There's simply nothing<lb/>
he can't do. He is a superb runner<lb/>
and his passing has come such a<lb/>
long ways<lb/>
Dye also cited Green for his abili-<lb/>
I ty to make the correct choice on the<lb/>
I option. "In the wishbone offense<lb/>
I you must have an intelligent<lb/>
I quarterback. He must have a sixth<lb/>
I sense when he runs the option.<lb/>
I Leander runs it as well as any I've<lb/>
I ever been associated with. I<lb/>
I wouldn't trade him for any quarter-<lb/>
back in the nation<lb/>
In his senior season Green set a<lb/>
single-season school record in total<lb/>
offense as he ran and passed his way<lb/>
for 1,714 yards.<lb/>
Perhaps Green's finest moments<lb/>
came in his final home game at<lb/>
ECU's Ficklen Stadium. It was on<lb/>
that day that the flashy senior set a<lb/>
school record for single-game total<lb/>
offense as he compiled 285 yards, 90<lb/>
by rushes and 195 via the airways.<lb/>
Green also established a single<lb/>
game record in '79 for most yards<lb/>
per rush when he averaged 12.7<lb/>
yards per carry in a 52-0 drubbing of<lb/>
Richmond. In the romp Green car-<lb/>
ried 14 times for a whopping 178<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
A starter his junior and senior<lb/>
seasons after sharing the QB slot his<lb/>
sophomore year, Green has left his<lb/>
name in the ECU record books. He<lb/>
ranks third in career total offense,<lb/>
fourth in yards passing, fourth in<lb/>
pass completions and tenth in<lb/>
rushing yardage.<lb/>
The offense that Green directed<lb/>
his senior season is certainly the<lb/>
most prolific in Pirate gridiron<lb/>
history. The Pirates broke virtually<lb/>
every single-season team offense<lb/>
mark in the books, the most im-<lb/>
pressive of which was the total of-<lb/>
fense figure of 5,228 yards. The old<lb/>
mark of 4,245 was literally crushed.<lb/>
Versatile Riley Picked<lb/>
As Female Recipient<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Leander Green In Midst Of Option<lb/>
Also contributing greatly to these<lb/>
figures were runnerups Collins and<lb/>
Inman.<lb/>
Collins became the first Pirate to<lb/>
rush for over 1,000 yards since the<lb/>
days of Carlester Crumplcr when he<lb/>
totaled 1,130 in 1979. He ranked<lb/>
fourth in the nation in all-purpose<lb/>
running, averaging 154.1 yards per<lb/>
game. TK Penn Yan, N.Y. native<lb/>
also averaged an eye-popping 7.3<lb/>
yards per carry.<lb/>
Inman was named to The<lb/>
Associated Press third team All-<lb/>
America squad, becoming the first<lb/>
Pirate griddef so highly honored<lb/>
since 1976. Inman received the<lb/>
Pirate Blocking Trophy for the se-<lb/>
cond consecutive year and, like Col-<lb/>
lins, returns to the 1980 ECU squad.<lb/>
Maynor, a fourth round "future"<lb/>
draft choice in last year's NBA<lb/>
draft, wac named Most Valuable<lb/>
Player of the 1979-80 ECU cage<lb/>
squad. The team finished 16-11,<lb/>
becoming the first Pirate team to<lb/>
post a winning mark since 1975, and<lb/>
were led by the often-incredible<lb/>
Maynor.<lb/>
The Raeford native led the team<lb/>
in scoring with an average of 17.0<lb/>
points per game and had a high<lb/>
game of 30 in his career finale<lb/>
against Wisconsin-Milwaukee.<lb/>
Davis has been the catalyst off the<lb/>
remarkable ECU baseball squad<lb/>
that seems sure of attaining an<lb/>
NCAA bid due to an incredible 28-5<lb/>
mark. Davis has 12 homers thus<lb/>
far, a new school record, and has<lb/>
maintained a batting average of<lb/>
over .380 for most of the season.<lb/>
Melvin is perhaps the key to the<lb/>
Pirate's incredible relay teams. An<lb/>
AU-American, Melvin was the<lb/>
catalyst in the indoor mile relay<lb/>
team's second place finish in the na-<lb/>
tionals.<lb/>
The selection of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian's female Athlete of the Year in<lb/>
the 1979-80 term was somewhat<lb/>
more difficult than in years past.<lb/>
In basketball there was Rosie<lb/>
Thompson becoming the all-time<lb/>
leading rebounder and scorer in<lb/>
ECU history. There was Laurie<lb/>
Sikes ranking among the top assist<lb/>
makers in the nation.<lb/>
Lady Pirate track claimed All-<lb/>
American Cookie McPhatter and<lb/>
swimming added a list of eight<lb/>
female natators touted as AU-<lb/>
Americans. Volleyball slumped and<lb/>
softball soared; basketball improv-<lb/>
ed in all aspects.<lb/>
There was, however, a common<lb/>
denominator between the two most<lb/>
successful Lady Pirate programs<lb/>
and that talented junior was our<lb/>
unanimous choice as female athlete<lb/>
of the year: Kathy Riley.<lb/>
Lured from Middle Tennessee<lb/>
State University by second-year<lb/>
basketball mentor Cathy Andruzzi.<lb/>
Riley immediately earned a starting<lb/>
berth on the 21-10 basketball squad,<lb/>
but walked onto the softball team<lb/>
and robbed a scholarship freshman<lb/>
of her outfield spot.<lb/>
Riley faught her way through the<lb/>
challenging basketball season mat-<lb/>
ched defensively against taller op-<lb/>
ponants. But when push came to<lb/>
shove, there were few who profited<lb/>
from a confrontation with the 5-9<lb/>
Nashville native.<lb/>
Even in the Lady Bucs most<lb/>
her<lb/>
the<lb/>
tournament. Rilev i tubed three hits<lb/>
in six trips tothe plate including<lb/>
pair of homers which brings<lb/>
record setting total to 10 on<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The name of Kathv Rilev has<lb/>
become synonimous on all -<lb/>
tournament tea<lb/>
In basketball, she w? .nosen all-<lb/>
tournev at the Clemson Invitational<lb/>
despite an opening round upset at<lb/>
the hands ol Mississippi Universitj<lb/>
for Women and later the NC Al AW<lb/>
tournev where ECU placed third.<lb/>
The selection committee ol the<lb/>
state softball championship includ-<lb/>
ed her name on ihesr list, and it un-<lb/>
announced at Monday's SAC1A<lb/>
Awards Banquet that she has been<lb/>
named on the ' Ul-NCAIA<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Her statistics in both -ports sup-<lb/>
port hei accolades. -V an EC!<lb/>
eager, Rilev posted 16.4 points per<lb/>
outing with a field goal percentage<lb/>
of .460 and 64 from the charity<lb/>
stripe. She - n n'?n ot<lb/>
32 against the University of North<lb/>
Carolina Tar Heel<lb/>
Softball coach Mita Diilon<lb/>
recognized Rile - abilities and in-<lb/>
serted her in left field, where -he ft<lb/>
posted a .964 fielding effick<lb/>
rating.<lb/>
Blessed with power and speed.<lb/>
Rilev has legj homers<lb/>
the sea-on and driven in 40 runs.<lb/>
Her batting avei  I 593 was tops<lb/>
among Lad Pirate -<lb/>
Perhaps the ultima1<lb/>
athlete is the opportunity to par-<lb/>
physical clash of the'year. a 97-54 the Olympic Games<lb/>
drubbing at the hands of then na-<lb/>
tionally ninth ranked South<lb/>
Carolina, Riley pushed herself clear<lb/>
for 12 points and drew criticism<lb/>
from veteran Gamecock coach Pam<lb/>
Parsons for her aggressive "block<lb/>
out" defense.<lb/>
In the recent NCAIAW softbaJJ<lb/>
Rilev narrowly missed in her bid to<lb/>
join the elite group who quality.<lb/>
1 rora a gr Hip f over 2X talented<lb/>
plaer- ; I r wha cer-<lb/>
tainly oni one opening on the<lb/>
squad, the fiesty forward shitted to<lb/>
point . Firsl time ol her<lb/>
career and made it to the flnaf rive<lb/>
Record Now 28-5<lb/>
Pirates Sweep Past ACC<lb/>
Butch Davis Takes A Cut<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina baseball team,<lb/>
destined to receive a berth to the<lb/>
regionals, improved their record to<lb/>
28-5 Sunday by sweeping a<lb/>
doubleheader from Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian College 6-0 and 4-0.<lb/>
Junior Rick Ramey and southpaw<lb/>
Bob Patterson added 14 innings to<lb/>
East Carolina's mark of 27 con-<lb/>
secutive scoreless innings over the<lb/>
past four outings. Both notched<lb/>
complete games and allowed ACC<lb/>
only three hits in the pair of games.<lb/>
Shortstop Frank Carmichael<lb/>
spoiled Ramey's bid for a perfect<lb/>
game in the top of the fourth with a<lb/>
single to right. The Ridgeway,<lb/>
Virginia native struck out five and<lb/>
issued a pair of walks in going the<lb/>
distance.<lb/>
Senior leftfielder Butch Davis<lb/>
blasted his 12th home run of the<lb/>
season to lead off the Pirate's half<lb/>
of the first and provide all the of-<lb/>
fense the home team was to need for<lb/>
victory. With two outs in the same<lb/>
frame, Raymie Styons drew a walk<lb/>
and Macon Moye rapped a single.<lb/>
Sophomore designated -tiitter<lb/>
John Hallow foil wed with a single<lb/>
to score Styons as the Pirates padd-<lb/>
ed their lead.<lb/>
Kelly Robinette led off the the<lb/>
third by reaching first on an error,<lb/>
with Billy Best and Moye receiving<lb/>
walks to load the bases. Hallow<lb/>
salpped a double to plate Robinette<lb/>
and Best, and Todd Hendley follow-<lb/>
ed with two-out single to score<lb/>
Moye and Hallow.<lb/>
Hallow posted three hits in four<lb/>
trips to the plate on tl. jontest.<lb/>
In Patterson's victory, Hendley<lb/>
singled in the first and scored on a<lb/>
double by Best. With two down.<lb/>
Hallow swatted his first round-<lb/>
tripper in the purple and gold over<lb/>
the right field fence to plate Best.<lb/>
Best led off the fifth witha walk<lb/>
and stole second, as the ACC cat-<lb/>
cher sailed the ball to center field<lb/>
allowing Best to advance to third.<lb/>
He later scored on a wild pitch.<lb/>
Patterson issued three walks in<lb/>
going the didtance. but countered<lb/>
with nine strikeouts. He allowed a<lb/>
single by Keith Zimmerman in the<lb/>
second and a double bv Mike<lb/>
Burgess in the fourth en route to his<lb/>
sixth win in eight outings.<lb/>
"We had two super jobs on the<lb/>
mound tonight said ECU coach<lb/>
Hal Baird. "Our pitchers seem to be<lb/>
finishing strong.<lb/>
"Both of them did a good job and<lb/>
threw hard. We had trouble with<lb/>
them and the other night, but they<lb/>
bore down tonight and never gave<lb/>
them a chance<lb/>
Lady Pirates Take NCAIA W Championship<lb/>
I<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina's Lady Pirates added another crown to<lb/>
their record-setting softball season, capturing the North<lb/>
Carolina Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for<lb/>
Women championship Sunday in Graham.<lb/>
The Pirates drew a bye in the opening round as the<lb/>
top ranked team in the state and proceeded to eliminate<lb/>
Campbell 6-5, UNC-Chapel Hill 3-0 and Western<lb/>
Carolina 6-3 to claim the golden trophy.<lb/>
East Carolina suffered their closest match of the<lb/>
tourney in the first contest, as underdog Campbell<lb/>
challenged the Pirates for glory.<lb/>
Sophomore Maureen Buck led off the contest with a<lb/>
single and freshman Mitzi Davis followed later with a<lb/>
sacrifice to plate the first ECU run.<lb/>
Slugging first sacker Shirley Brown bounced a double<lb/>
over the left field wall, advanced on a fielder's choice<lb/>
and scored on a single by Buck.<lb/>
? East Carolina held the edge, but the Camals struck<lb/>
back in the third on a single by Sandra Kelley and a base<lb/>
clearing homer to left-center by Rhonda Mueller.<lb/>
The Bucs again assumed the offensive in the fifth,<lb/>
with Buck reaching first on a fielder's choice, Davis ad-<lb/>
ding a single and Cynthia Shepard clubbing a single to<lb/>
plate Buck. Junior Kathy Riley stroked a homer to<lb/>
center to score Davis and Shepard.<lb/>
Campbell retaliated with a homer in the fifth as Tam-<lb/>
my McCauley homered to left-center and Mueller singl-<lb/>
ed and scored on a base knock by Sherry Raynor.<lb/>
Campbell made a seventh inning run at the Pirates,<lb/>
but managed only one run on a Cheryl Tew single and a<lb/>
sacrifice by Raynor. '<lb/>
In their other Saturday contest, East Carolina<lb/>
demolished UNC-Chapd HUl with Davis fading the<lb/>
way in the first with a single and Riley adding an RBI<lb/>
double. Cynthia Shepard reached first on an error and<lb/>
scored on a single by Yvonne "Flea" Williams.<lb/>
Winning pitcher Mary Bryan Carlyle scattered four<lb/>
Tar Heel hits as she recorded her second win of the<lb/>
tourney. Shepard provided another run in the sixth on a<lb/>
single and a run producing rap by Williams.<lb/>
East Carolina's 28th win of the season against four<lb/>
losses came in the championship matchup against sur-<lb/>
prise entry Western Carolina.<lb/>
Senior catcher Jan McVeigh clubbed a single in the<lb/>
first and scored on a homer by Shepard.<lb/>
Western's Beth Crisp tripled in the second and<lb/>
Curtley Schulties sacrifice drove her in.<lb/>
Riley slapped a solo homer to center in the fourth, but<lb/>
all bats remained virtually silent until the top of the final<lb/>
inning when ECU plated a trio of insurance runs.<lb/>
ECU opened the inning with junior shortstop Mary<lb/>
Powell reached first on an error and was replaced by<lb/>
pinch-runner Lillion Barnes. Browrt followed by<lb/>
reaching on an error also and Angie Humphrey replaced<lb/>
her on the bases.<lb/>
Freshman second sacker Ginger Rothermel singled in<lb/>
Barnes and Cindy Meekins, batting for Carlyle, sacrific-<lb/>
ed home Humphrey. Terry Andrews stepped to the plate<lb/>
for Buck and slapped a shot which the WCU shortstop<lb/>
bobbled to let Rothermel score.<lb/>
The Catamounts launched an offensive in their half<lb/>
of the inning which yielded a pair of runs as Crisp singl-<lb/>
ed and advanced to third on a error by Williams. Ducy<lb/>
Thompson reached first on a fielder's choice to score<lb/>
Crisp and Kit Rea's erred shot allowed Rea to plate the<lb/>
final WCU run.<lb/>
Carlyle again claimed the win as allowed the<lb/>
disgruntled Catamounts a mere five hits on the contest.<lb/>
East Carolina and WCU advance to a playoff this<lb/>
weekend at Graham with the top two teams of the other<lb/>
two divisions of the NCAIAW. The Lady Pirates again<lb/>
draw a bye and will face the winner of the Pembroke-<lb/>
North Carolina Wesleyan matchup.<lb/>
The Swtag Off A Slate<lb/>
?. ?t??ig<lb/>
<pb facs="00057266_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 29.19S0<lb/>
11<lb/>
the<lb/>
like<lb/>
1<lb/>
the<lb/>
ich<lb/>
be<lb/>
ind<lb/>
mh<lb/>
ley<lb/>
tve<lb/>
Nelson Directs Purple Win<lb/>
CHARLES<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Quarterback Carlton<lb/>
Nelson scored two<lb/>
touchdowns to lead the<lb/>
Purple team to a 21-16<lb/>
victory Saturday in<lb/>
East Carolina's annual<lb/>
Purple-Gold intras-<lb/>
quad football game.<lb/>
Nelson scored on<lb/>
runs of one and 35<lb/>
yards in the first half as<lb/>
he put his team out<lb/>
front by a 14-0 margin<lb/>
that was never erased.<lb/>
The rising<lb/>
sophomore signal caller<lb/>
and the heir apparent<lb/>
to graduating star<lb/>
Leander Green rushed<lb/>
for 76 yards on 14 car-<lb/>
ries and passed for 79<lb/>
more, completing four<lb/>
of six tosses. The per-<lb/>
formance was a<lb/>
welcome one for new<lb/>
ECU head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory.<lb/>
"There is no ques-<lb/>
tion that Carlton is our<lb/>
number one quarter-<lb/>
back right now<lb/>
Emory said following<lb/>
the contest. "He show-<lb/>
ed us a lot of good<lb/>
things. He's starting to<lb/>
pass really well also<lb/>
Nelson wasted little<lb/>
time in establishing<lb/>
himself, heading a<lb/>
seven play, 69-yard<lb/>
scoring drive on the<lb/>
Purple's first possesion<lb/>
of the day. The Port<lb/>
smouth, Va. native<lb/>
capped the drive with a<lb/>
35-yard jaunt. Vern<lb/>
Davenport's extra<lb/>
point put the Purples<lb/>
ahead 7-0 with 8:48 left<lb/>
in the initial period.<lb/>
Nelson initiated<lb/>
another long drive early<lb/>
in the second period<lb/>
before watching it go<lb/>
for naught when a Vern<lb/>
Davenport 3 3 - y a r d<lb/>
field goal attempt was<lb/>
blocked by Freddie<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
Late in the first half,<lb/>
Nelson and the Purple<lb/>
team was on the move<lb/>
again. Aided by a<lb/>
15-yard penalty and a<lb/>
21-yard run by Nelson,<lb/>
the Purples moved the<lb/>
ball quickly downfield.<lb/>
The drive was capitaliz-<lb/>
ed when the young<lb/>
quarterback went over<lb/>
from the one with but<lb/>
four seconds remaining<lb/>
before halftime.<lb/>
Fancy was the word<lb/>
in the final Purple scor-<lb/>
ing drive as a flea-<lb/>
flicker pass highlighted<lb/>
a 75-yard drive.<lb/>
Halfback Anthony<lb/>
Collins took a handoff<lb/>
and quickly lateralled it<lb/>
across field to Nelson,<lb/>
who promptly con-<lb/>
nected with tight end<lb/>
Norwood Vann on a<lb/>
35-yard gain.<lb/>
A 13-yard pass play<lb/>
from Nelson-to-<lb/>
Davenport and a<lb/>
13-yard run by Nelson<lb/>
;et up the final Purple<lb/>
score. Collins took a<lb/>
quick pitch and scootea<lb/>
around the right side of<lb/>
:he line until he reached<lb/>
paydirt. Davenport's<lb/>
kick made it 21-0.<lb/>
The Gold team,<lb/>
which was silent for<lb/>
three periods, erupted<lb/>
for two fourth quarter<lb/>
touchdowns. One<lb/>
came on a 30-yard<lb/>
jaunt by fullback<lb/>
Theodore Sutton and<lb/>
the other on a two-yard<lb/>
plunge by Greg<lb/>
Stewart. Both were<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Get Five Wins<lb/>
followed by two-point<lb/>
conversions.<lb/>
5 The first Gold score<lb/>
immediately followed<lb/>
Collins' jaunt, as a six-<lb/>
play, 73-yard drive was<lb/>
capped by Sutton's<lb/>
30-yard romp.<lb/>
Quarterback Greg<lb/>
Stewart made it 21-8<lb/>
when nr succeeded in a<lb/>
two-point conversion<lb/>
attempt with a keeper<lb/>
to the left.<lb/>
The other Gold score<lb/>
came late in the game<lb/>
and was again<lb/>
engineered by<lb/>
sophomore Stewart.<lb/>
Three passes tot?'vAng<lb/>
o0 yards by tne<lb/>
youngster put the ball<lb/>
on the Purple two-yard<lb/>
line with nine seconds<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
The final eight points<lb/>
were put on the board<lb/>
when Stewart went over<lb/>
from the two for six<lb/>
and halfback Leon<lb/>
Lawson converted a<lb/>
two-point attempt.<lb/>
Besides Nelson, there<lb/>
were several outstan-<lb/>
ding individual perfor-<lb/>
mances in the intras-<lb/>
quad meeting. Sutton<lb/>
was the leading ground<lb/>
gainer, totalling 81<lb/>
yards in 11 carries for<lb/>
the Gold team.<lb/>
Fullback Roy Wiley<lb/>
contributed 54 and Col-<lb/>
lins added 34 for the<lb/>
Purple squad.<lb/>
Gold tight end Will<lb/>
Saunders was the<lb/>
receiving star, pulling<lb/>
in five passes for 90<lb/>
yards, which came as a<lb/>
welcome surprise to<lb/>
Emory.<lb/>
"He hasn't caught<lb/>
the ball all spring<lb/>
said the first-year<lb/>
Pirate coach. "That<lb/>
shows you that the spr-<lb/>
ing game gives you<lb/>
another chance to show<lb/>
what you can do<lb/>
FEMALE RESIDENT<lb/>
COUNSELOR<lb/>
REAL CRISIS CENTER<lb/>
FREE:<lb/>
Rent, Utilities, Local Phone.<lb/>
Requirements: Complete specified<lb/>
crisis intervention counselor<lb/>
training.<lb/>
CALL 758-HELP<lb/>
By JIMMY DUPREE<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina claim-<lb/>
ed five first place<lb/>
finishes at the<lb/>
NCA1AW meet this<lb/>
weekend at Lhe Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina<lb/>
Track includi. " cenior<lb/>
Cookie McPhatter's<lb/>
national qualifying<lb/>
time in the 800 meters,<lb/>
but the surprise of year<lb/>
came with sophomore<lb/>
Roz Major capturing<lb/>
first place in the high<lb/>
jump.<lb/>
The Fayetteville<lb/>
native is a long jump<lb/>
specialist and won that<lb/>
event also, but her vic-<lb/>
torious leep over the<lb/>
bar at five feet, four in-<lb/>
ches was an ac-<lb/>
complishment Major<lb/>
and coach Laurie Ar-<lb/>
rants hadn't counted<lb/>
on since her last par-<lb/>
ticipation in the event<lb/>
was one year ago in the<lb/>
same meet.<lb/>
"They're two totally<lb/>
different events with<lb/>
different techniques in-<lb/>
volved said Arrants.<lb/>
"She missed her first<lb/>
two tries at five feet<lb/>
and I just told her to<lb/>
relax and not to con-<lb/>
centrate so much on<lb/>
technique but just get-<lb/>
ting over the bar. She<lb/>
only had one more try<lb/>
or she would have been<lb/>
out, but she must have<lb/>
cleared it by a foot<lb/>
Major easily bested<lb/>
the competition in the<lb/>
long jump with a flight<lb/>
of 18 feet, 4.5 inches.<lb/>
McPhatter again<lb/>
captured first place in<lb/>
the NCA1AW 800m<lb/>
with a time of 2:11.3,<lb/>
however it was her Fri-<lb/>
day time of 2:07.9<lb/>
which qualified her for<lb/>
the nationals. The<lb/>
mark established new<lb/>
meet, track and varsity<lb/>
records, as well as be-<lb/>
ing her personal best.<lb/>
Freshman Eve Bren-<lb/>
nan claimed fourth in<lb/>
the event with a time of<lb/>
2:22.7.<lb/>
The major disap-<lb/>
pointment in the meet<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates<lb/>
came in the 400m relay,<lb/>
as the team of Dawn<lb/>
Henderson, Catherine<lb/>
Suggs, Irdie Williams<lb/>
and Lydia Rountree<lb/>
had to settle for a se-<lb/>
cond place finish. In<lb/>
the final 10 yards of the<lb/>
anchor leg, Rountree<lb/>
suffered an injury<lb/>
which allowed St.<lb/>
Augustine's to push<lb/>
through for the win<lb/>
with a time of :48.66<lb/>
while Rountree limped<lb/>
across at :48.68.<lb/>
The versatility of this new artist is fan-<lb/>
tastic. We in Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
should be verv Droud.<lb/>
Steve Hardy,<lb/>
V-Pres. &amp; Gen. Manager<lb/>
WRQR-FM, Farmville, N.C.<lb/>
a very remarkable endeavor, one that<lb/>
is sure to catapult Richard Duane to na-<lb/>
tional acclaim<lb/>
Pat Minges<lb/>
Staff writer.<lb/>
East Carolinian,<lb/>
March 18,1980<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
an introduction to the language and s<lb/>
ed for stardomThere is something very<lb/>
for everyone who 'cares<lb/>
Available at Record<lb/>
(Pitt<lb/>
SPECIAL WORDS<lb/>
PUBLISHING<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
W<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
BRANDY MUSIC<lb/>
and<lb/>
SOUNDS INC.<lb/>
Nashville, Tenn.<lb/>
proudly announce<lb/>
the debut album<lb/>
WORDS<lb/>
by Richard Duane<lb/>
The man's music is superb He writes<lb/>
the words, he composes the music and<lb/>
he sing the songs. The album will be a<lb/>
hit.<lb/>
Walt Cunningham<lb/>
Pianist &amp; Music Arranger<lb/>
Nashville, Tennessee<lb/>
"Dr. Richard Duane Logue has reached<lb/>
the unattainable<lb/>
Oaily Reflector,<lb/>
Sunday, December 2.1979<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
tyle of a new artistunquestionably head-<lb/>
meaningful in the magnificent debut album<lb/>
Gene Cash<lb/>
Songwriter, Sound Engineer<lb/>
Nashville, Tennessee<lb/>
Bar &amp; Apple Records<lb/>
Plaza)<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057266_0012"/><lb/>
1 1 1<lb/>
 1<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 29, 1980<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
Dodgers Get Nod As NL West Favorite<lb/>
CHARLES<lb/>
CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Will it be the re-<lb/>
juvinated Dodgers, the<lb/>
Ryanized Astros or the<lb/>
real Reds in 1980?<lb/>
The National League<lb/>
West race is just that<lb/>
full of questions this<lb/>
season. The three<lb/>
forementioned clubs<lb/>
are the ones considered<lb/>
serious candidates to<lb/>
take the crown.<lb/>
Will it be Los<lb/>
Angelas, the over-<lb/>
whelming favorite last<lb/>
year that was a flop un-<lb/>
til it was too late? Or<lb/>
will it be the Houston<lb/>
Astros, who have an in-<lb/>
credible pitching staff<lb/>
but no hitting?<lb/>
What about the<lb/>
defending champion<lb/>
Cincinnati Reds?<lb/>
Aren't they just as<lb/>
strong as a year ago?<lb/>
Tennis Team<lb/>
Wins Tourney<lb/>
By ALEX<lb/>
CUNNINGHAM<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
tennis team captured its<lb/>
own Invitational Tour-<lb/>
nament this past<lb/>
weekend by winning<lb/>
the first, third, fourth<lb/>
and sixth flights and<lb/>
the championship in<lb/>
the singles competition.<lb/>
ECU won with 20<lb/>
points, followed by<lb/>
UNC-W with 18,<lb/>
Campbell with 15,<lb/>
while NC Central failed<lb/>
to score in the two-day<lb/>
event. St. Augustine,<lb/>
the pre-tournament<lb/>
favorite did not com-<lb/>
pete.<lb/>
Kenny Love finished<lb/>
up a fine four year<lb/>
career with the Pirates<lb/>
by winning the number<lb/>
one flight. Henry<lb/>
Hostetler also ended his<lb/>
career by placing se-<lb/>
cond in the number two<lb/>
flight, Keith Zengle<lb/>
dominated his op-<lb/>
ponents to win the<lb/>
number three flight,<lb/>
while Ted Lepper had<lb/>
to struggle to win the<lb/>
number four flight.<lb/>
Bai rv Parker placed<lb/>
third in the fifth flight<lb/>
and Mark Byrd swept<lb/>
through all his matches<lb/>
to win the sixth flight.<lb/>
The Pirate netters<lb/>
were fortunate to have<lb/>
played so strong in the<lb/>
singles, because they<lb/>
could place no higher<lb/>
than second in the<lb/>
doubles competition.<lb/>
Lepper and Zengle<lb/>
wound up with second<lb/>
place at the number one<lb/>
position; Love and<lb/>
Hostetler only manag-<lb/>
ed a third place finish<lb/>
in the second flight;<lb/>
and Parker and Nor-<lb/>
man Bryant captured<lb/>
second place in the<lb/>
third flight.<lb/>
Coach Rose com-<lb/>
mented, "1 was real<lb/>
pleased with the boys'<lb/>
efforts. They all work-<lb/>
ed hard to win this<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
Love's victory was<lb/>
especially rewarding<lb/>
because he lost to two<lb/>
of the players in his<lb/>
flight during the<lb/>
season. 'T just tried to<lb/>
stay on top in my mat-<lb/>
ches Love said. "It<lb/>
was a good way to go<lb/>
out<lb/>
ECU finished the<lb/>
season 10-8.<lb/>
The rest of the divi-<lb/>
sion ? San Francisco,<lb/>
Atlanta and San Diego<lb/>
? does not rate with<lb/>
the others, therefore<lb/>
making for what<lb/>
should be a three team<lb/>
race to the pot of gold.<lb/>
The Dodgers get the<lb/>
nod here. Dissension<lb/>
and injuries, not to<lb/>
mention unusually<lb/>
poor pitching, led to<lb/>
the poor season last<lb/>
year. There is too<lb/>
much talent on this<lb/>
squad for the same<lb/>
thing to happen two<lb/>
years in a row.<lb/>
Steve Garvey, Ron<lb/>
Cey, Davey Lopes,<lb/>
Reggie Smith and Steve<lb/>
Yeager are still around<lb/>
to batter opposing pit-<lb/>
chers, giving the<lb/>
Dodgers a powerful of-<lb/>
fensive attack.<lb/>
The pitching, which<lb/>
slipped greatly a year<lb/>
ago, should return to<lb/>
respectability. The<lb/>
main reason for this is<lb/>
the spending of $5<lb/>
million in the re-entry<lb/>
draft to acquire the ser-<lb/>
vices of Dave Goltz of<lb/>
Minnesota (14-13 last<lb/>
season) and reliever<lb/>
Don Stanhouse of<lb/>
Baltimore (7-3, 2.84<lb/>
ERA and 21 saves).<lb/>
These two coupled<lb/>
with holdover starters<lb/>
Doug Rau, Don Sut-<lb/>
ton, Rick Suteliffe and<lb/>
Burt Hooten give the<lb/>
Dodgers the nucleus of<lb/>
what could be the staff<lb/>
o a pennant winner.<lb/>
Outfield injuries also<lb/>
hurt LA last year.<lb/>
Starters Rick Monday<lb/>
and Reggie Smith<lb/>
played only 80 games<lb/>
between them,<lb/>
something the Califor-<lb/>
nians can ill-afford to<lb/>
happen again. If the<lb/>
two stars are healthy<lb/>
this year and the pit-<lb/>
ching becomes sound<lb/>
again, LA is on the<lb/>
way.<lb/>
Cincinnati has the<lb/>
troops to repeat and<lb/>
fewer ifs than do the<lb/>
Dodgers and Astros.<lb/>
The one big if is the<lb/>
Red pitching staff.<lb/>
Young and inexperienc-<lb/>
ed, it could go either<lb/>
way this year.<lb/>
Staff ace Tom Seaver<lb/>
can be expected to have<lb/>
a banner year. Mike<lb/>
LaCoss was exceptional<lb/>
for the first half of last<lb/>
season but tired near<lb/>
the end of the season.<lb/>
He does appear,<lb/>
though, to be an up and<lb/>
coming star.<lb/>
Beyond LaCoss and<lb/>
Seaver, Cincy's pit<lb/>
ching is of unknowr<lb/>
quantity. Manager<lb/>
John McNamara likes<lb/>
his staff, calling them<lb/>
young but extremely<lb/>
talented. Only time<lb/>
will tell whether he is<lb/>
correct.<lb/>
The fact that the<lb/>
Reds won last year<lb/>
despite the fact that<lb/>
Ken Griffey played on-<lb/>
ly 95 games is im-<lb/>
pressive. All-Star slug-<lb/>
ger George Foster also<lb/>
missed 40 games.<lb/>
Foster is perhaps the<lb/>
top power hitter in the<lb/>
game. In only 121<lb/>
games last year he had<lb/>
30 homers, 98 RBIs and<lb/>
batted .302.<lb/>
Also around to help<lb/>
with the offense is<lb/>
shortstop Dave Con-<lb/>
cepcion, catcher<lb/>
Johnny Bench, third<lb/>
baseman Ray Knight,<lb/>
first baseman Dan<lb/>
Driessan and up-and-<lb/>
coming star Dave Col-<lb/>
lins.<lb/>
These are not the<lb/>
Reds of the Big Red<lb/>
Machine era, but<lb/>
they're strong con-<lb/>
tenders nonetheless.<lb/>
The Astros have<lb/>
what everyone wants ?<lb/>
pitching, pitching, pit-<lb/>
ching. The acquisition<lb/>
of free agent superstar<lb/>
Nolan Ryan gives<lb/>
Houston a phenomenal<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
With Ryan and<lb/>
James Rodney<lb/>
Richard, the Astros<lb/>
have perhars the two<lb/>
hardest throwers in the<lb/>
game. Also around for<lb/>
starting duty is Joe<lb/>
Niekro, who won 21<lb/>
games last year, and<lb/>
Ken Forsch, who has a<lb/>
no-hitter to his credit.<lb/>
In the bullpen there's<lb/>
Joe Sambito and Joa-<lb/>
quin Andujar, last<lb/>
year's dynamic All-Star<lb/>
duo.<lb/>
AH this gives the<lb/>
Astros all the pitching<lb/>
any team could dream<lb/>
of. Now if they only<lb/>
had some offensive<lb/>
punch.<lb/>
Power is almost<lb/>
unheard of in Houston.<lb/>
The team hit only 49<lb/>
last year ? that's only<lb/>
one more than<lb/>
Chicago's Davt<lb/>
Kingman hit on his<lb/>
own.<lb/>
Houston does have<lb/>
some power potential<lb/>
in first baseman-<lb/>
outfielder Cesar<lb/>
Cedeno, but not<lb/>
enough to warrant ex-<lb/>
citement. If the Astros<lb/>
are to win the division<lb/>
they must pull out a lot<lb/>
of close games as the<lb/>
opponent's hitting and<lb/>
their own should be<lb/>
similar.<lb/>
FOXHUNTER<lb/>
(formally the Rathskeller)<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE; Red 1971 MGB. AM<lb/>
FM Cassette, new convertable top<lb/>
Many more extra's. Excellent<lb/>
conditipn Call 752 1SA6<lb/>
FOR SALE 1 pair AR -11<lb/>
speakers, new woffers and<lb/>
tweeters 7 58 020 before 10:00 am<lb/>
or after 6:00p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: two twin beds S25<lb/>
each Stop by 106 F Eastbrook<lb/>
Apartments after 3 00 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE sleeper sofa, 6 ft by<lb/>
34 in. wide. Very good condition.<lb/>
$150 negotiable Call 752 5?54<lb/>
FOR SALE 73 Plymouth Scamp,<lb/>
very good condition S1000<lb/>
7 56 3847<lb/>
MUST SELL Chevy Nova, good<lb/>
condition, new battery tires,<lb/>
automatic, 6 cylinder engine<lb/>
$1700 or best offer Call after 600<lb/>
p.m. 746 2205<lb/>
FOR SALE Womans 3 speed<lb/>
bicycle (Iverson BMA 6) Call:<lb/>
756 6976 after 5 00 p-n $35 or best<lb/>
offer<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING Day or<lb/>
Night, individual or groups Tn<lb/>
County Stables Gnmesland Call<lb/>
752 6893<lb/>
MARY KAY COSMETICS to<lb/>
reach your consultant for a facial<lb/>
or reorders phone 756 3659<lb/>
TYPING dissertations, theses,<lb/>
term papers Excellent skills and<lb/>
reasonable rates Call 756 9169<lb/>
NEED RIDE TO DC for no nuke<lb/>
rally Call Susan 758 6137<lb/>
DESPERATELY NEED ROOM<lb/>
MATE: to share trailer 4 miles<lb/>
from campus. Rent Negotiable<lb/>
Call 756 9802.<lb/>
LOST: A pair of light brown<lb/>
glasses with brownish rose tint, in<lb/>
a brown case. A reward of $20 for<lb/>
the return and no questions asked.<lb/>
Call 758 8937.<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/>
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
Needed to share furnished apart<lb/>
ment at Riverbluff for both sum<lb/>
mer sessions possibly into fall<lb/>
Call 758 5823. <lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED apartment located one<lb/>
mile from campus, furnished,<lb/>
assume half rent and half utilities<lb/>
Available May 15th Call Debbie<lb/>
758 0269 after 5 00 p m for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
FOR RENT large, furnished one<lb/>
bedroom apartment ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED (female) to share two<lb/>
bedroom townhouse Call 756 3851<lb/>
after 5 00<lb/>
NEEDED TWO FEMALE room<lb/>
mates starting May 15. One per<lb/>
manent, one summer only<lb/>
Spacious three bedroom duplex<lb/>
Rent $65 month plus third utilities<lb/>
758 7532<lb/>
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT<lb/>
To sublet startmgMay<lb/>
Overlooks river, short walk to<lb/>
campus Come by Apt. 16. 201 N<lb/>
Woodlawn Also furniture for sale<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEED<lb/>
ED: To share two bedroom apart<lb/>
ment. Pay half rent, utilities and<lb/>
phone Call Cathy at 752 7S05<lb/>
ONE MALE ROOMMATE need<lb/>
ed $65 per month plus third<lb/>
utilities Call 758 7024 For sum<lb/>
mer school as well as 80-81 school<lb/>
year<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
for summer and or fall semester<lb/>
at King's Row Apartments Call<lb/>
after 4:00, 758 2690<lb/>
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES:<lb/>
needed to share three bedroom<lb/>
house for summer $100 plus third<lb/>
utilities, near campus off tenth<lb/>
street Call 752 3715.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEED<lb/>
ED for summer pay third of ex<lb/>
penses Carnage House Apart<lb/>
ments Call 756 6897<lb/>
PRIVATE ROOMS share bath<lb/>
and kitchen, two blocks fuom cam<lb/>
pus $75 $80 plus utilities<lb/>
Available May 15 June I<lb/>
752 5296<lb/>
FOR RENT : three bedroom house<lb/>
for summer $150 a month Five<lb/>
blocks from campus Contact<lb/>
Michael Edwards 752 4394 or<lb/>
Ceramics Dept m School of Art<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE Lewis<lb/>
Street furnished rent is $100 a<lb/>
month plus utilities Call 752 7190<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED to share furnished<lb/>
apartment for summer Adiacent<lb/>
to campus $60 a month plus half<lb/>
utilities Call 758 3682 SOON-<lb/>
room i "K kin:<lb/>
OFFERING<lb/>
LADIES NITE<lb/>
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Owner and Operator<lb/>
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i<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
12th WEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
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. ?? ??? tj ' ip c on<lb/>
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-? rmation can 83: 0535<lb/>
(toll f rei nu"<lb/>
800 221 2568 between 9<lb/>
 v -i p v AceKoavs<lb/>
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917 West fworgan St<lb/>
Raleigh N C 27603<lb/>
AFTER 3<lb/>
II<lb/>
RM.<lb/>
GOLD and SILVER<lb/>
Compare and then can<lb/>
758-1892<lb/>
for best prices<lb/>
by Les Jewelers<lb/>
120 E. 5th St.<lb/>
CHICK-FIIA<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
FOR 99.<lb/>
?Jhick-fil-A. It's America s niginal boneless breast of chicken sandwich.<lb/>
.And now . .with the coupon below .you can get all the Chick-nl-A sand-<lb/>
wiches you want for 99c each .once the clock strikes three in the afternoon<lb/>
I<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
OUR CHKXRLA SANDWICHES ARE 9 EACHIAFTH<lb/>
3S0RMJUST FILL INTHE NUMBER YOU WANT<lb/>
SPECIE<lb/>
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SAVE<lb/>
PIPE DREAMS<lb/>
ANNIVERSARY DRAWING<lb/>
FREE $30 Worth of Merchandise<lb/>
to the Winning Customer.<lb/>
Drawing to be held May 14th.<lb/>
Present this coupon at your local<lb/>
Chick-fil-A restaurant. We'll<lb/>
give you all the Chick fil-A<lb/>
sandwiches you want for<lb/>
99c each after 3:00 P.M.<lb/>
()ne coupon per pers n per<lb/>
visit. Oner expires:<lb/>
rf for 2,500 class rings.<lb/>
as soon as possible, so for<lb/>
Man will be offering a SPECIAL<lb/>
rgs . . . from High Schools, Colleges.<lb/>
Pernities, Sororities, Technical Institutes.<lb/>
Hi class rings will be bringing an EXTRA HIGH<lb/>
Take advantage of this effer.<lb/>
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1 G( ?ed n Sundays <lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
THE TASTE WORTH SH0PPM6 FOR.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
COITON<lb/>
Otter (?i?id at the following Chick fil A restaurants.<lb/>
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NOW IS THE<lb/>
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GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
J<lb/>
2,500 CLASS RINGS<lb/>
NEEDED ? We Pay CASH!<lb/>
There are always a lot of people who don't wear their high<lb/>
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&amp; RINC<lb/>
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forsihuk,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057266_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>