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<pb facs="00057310_0001"/>
?hc iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. 32<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Tuesda, January 13, 19K1<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Union President's<lb/>
Term Nears Close<lb/>
B PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
News Kdltor<lb/>
Before that, she was chairperson<lb/>
of the Student Union's entertain-<lb/>
" Being Student Union president ment committee for about a year,<lb/>
puts a burden on your time, but I "The president is responsible for<lb/>
wouldn't trade the experience for selecting chairpersons and oversee-<lb/>
any thing says Karen Mel awhorn, ing the total programming of the<lb/>
the current president. Student Union McLawhorn ex-<lb/>
Mcl awhorn's term of office plained. "The president must also<lb/>
comes to an end in March, and the approve all expenditures and direct<lb/>
the Student Union artist<lb/>
She went on to add that the presi-<lb/>
dent was also a member of the<lb/>
Media Board, the Ledonia S.<lb/>
Wright Afro-American Cultural<lb/>
Center Advisory Board, the<lb/>
Homecoming Steering Committee<lb/>
and various other boards on cam-<lb/>
search is currently on for her suc-<lb/>
cessor, who will be chosen on Jan.<lb/>
22.<lb/>
Other Student Union positions<lb/>
are also coming available, and ap-<lb/>
plications will be taken within the<lb/>
next month or so.<lb/>
1 hope a lot of people turn out<lb/>
for applications McLawhorn<lb/>
said. "Besides getting involved, it's<lb/>
an opportunity for students to meet<lb/>
people and learn about entertain-<lb/>
ment. It can be a lot of fun<lb/>
Fun and entertainment, as<lb/>
McLawhorn put it, are the purposes<lb/>
of the Student Union. "It's simple.<lb/>
The S.udent Union is here to pro-<lb/>
vide entertainment for the cam-<lb/>
pus<lb/>
Mel aw hot n, a senior majoring in<lb/>
housing and management, took<lb/>
over the office in January oi 1980<lb/>
and finished out the term of the<lb/>
previous president, Charles Sune.<lb/>
she then reapplied for the position<lb/>
she 1980-81 school vear.<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
McLawhorn is also a member of<lb/>
the Student Union Board of Direc-<lb/>
tors, the board that governs the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union. The Board is made up<lb/>
of various student leaders and it is<lb/>
the body that selects the Student<lb/>
Union president.<lb/>
"People in the Student Union<lb/>
aren't popularly elected she said.<lb/>
"The Board of Directors chooses<lb/>
the president, the president chooses<lb/>
the committee chairmen and the<lb/>
committee chairmen choose the<lb/>
committee members<lb/>
Mel awhorn viewed the new pro-<lb/>
minence of the Minority Arts Com-<lb/>
mittee as one of the major ac-<lb/>
complishments of the Student<lb/>
Union during her administration.<lb/>
"Minority arts has come up with a<lb/>
lot of new activities to make people<lb/>
more aware of minorities on cam-<lb/>
pus<lb/>
McLawhorn felt, however, that a<lb/>
University Union Proposal now<lb/>
under consideration could be the<lb/>
biggest thing to happen during her<lb/>
time in office.<lb/>
According to McLawhorn, the<lb/>
University Union Proposal seeks to<lb/>
unite the Student Union and<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center under<lb/>
the auspices of one authority.<lb/>
"There are presently two fees that<lb/>
students pay to support student<lb/>
entertainment. We propose to unite<lb/>
the two and hopefully cut out some<lb/>
of the duplication. We hope to have<lb/>
a proposal by March<lb/>
Many students have criticized the<lb/>
Student Union for not bringing<lb/>
more major concerts to ECU, and<lb/>
McLawhorn saw the situation as<lb/>
regrettable.<lb/>
"There are a lot of reasons why<lb/>
we haven't had more concerts. Our<lb/>
budget is very small, and last year<lb/>
we lost a lot of money on our big<lb/>
concerts.<lb/>
"Also, a lot of the groups that<lb/>
would attract large audiences are<lb/>
See UNION, page 3<lb/>
Pho?o tt JON JORDAN<lb/>
Term Expires<lb/>
Karen Mcl.awhorn's term as Student Union president will end on March 20<lb/>
ECU Women Honored<lb/>
SGA Supports Amendment<lb/>
B PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
Nr??H Editor<lb/>
The SGA decided Monday to sup-<lb/>
port an amendment to state law that<lb/>
would allow the board of trustees of<lb/>
each state college or university to<lb/>
decide if that institution will sell<lb/>
beer and wine on campus.<lb/>
The student legislature passed a<lb/>
unanimous resolution supporting<lb/>
the matter, and Vice President Lynn<lb/>
Jer will take the resolution with<lb/>
her to the University of North<lb/>
Carolina Association of Student<lb/>
Government meeting this weekend.<lb/>
UNCASG is planning to make a<lb/>
recommendation on the matter to<lb/>
the General Assembly, which is to<lb/>
begin hearings on the subject soon.<lb/>
"As it now stands Calder ex-<lb/>
plained, "no beer or wine can be<lb/>
sold on the campuses of state<lb/>
schools. The amendment would put<lb/>
the matter in the hands of each<lb/>
school's board of trustees<lb/>
Calder also explained to the<lb/>
legislators a new measure concern-<lb/>
ing parking in Greenville.<lb/>
The Greenville City Council has<lb/>
passed an ordinance that could pro-<lb/>
hibit students from parking in<lb/>
residential areas near campus bet-<lb/>
ween the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.<lb/>
To bring the ordinance into ef-<lb/>
fect, one half the residents in a<lb/>
neighborhood near campus would<lb/>
have to sign a petition asking that<lb/>
students not be allowed to park<lb/>
there.<lb/>
The City Manager would then<lb/>
conduct a study to determine if stu-<lb/>
dent parking presented an actual<lb/>
problem in that area. If the city<lb/>
determined that a problem existed,<lb/>
it would allow residents to buy $5<lb/>
parking stickers hat would entitle<lb/>
them to park in the neighborhood.<lb/>
Those without stickers would be<lb/>
limited to two hours' parking.<lb/>
Calder also voiced her displeasure<lb/>
over a proposal by Athletic Director<lb/>
Ken Carr that would move student<lb/>
seating at football games nearer the<lb/>
end zones and force students to pur-<lb/>
chase tickets.<lb/>
The SGA defeated a resolution<lb/>
that would ask Carr to appear<lb/>
before the legislature and discuss the<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
SGA President Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
reported that the university's Calen-<lb/>
dar Committee was "dragging its<lb/>
feet" over the matter of a fall break<lb/>
at ECU. "They have accepted the<lb/>
SGA poll of students he said,<lb/>
"but now they're going through<lb/>
analysis and paralysis<lb/>
He added that the committee had<lb/>
not yet polled the faculty on the<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
Sherrod also told the SGA that he<lb/>
had received many complaints<lb/>
about Drop-Add, and that he was<lb/>
told that students could continue to<lb/>
add courses through Tuesday.<lb/>
In another matter, Sherrod said<lb/>
that the SGA was in "ridiculous<lb/>
shape" as far as organization went<lb/>
See SGA, page 3<lb/>
NAACP 'Klan Watch' Starts<lb/>
By MIKE DAVIS<lb/>
Sl.ff Writer<lb/>
Outstanding Young Women of<lb/>
America, an organization based in<lb/>
Montgomery, Alabama, have<lb/>
honored two women from the East<lb/>
Carolina faculty.<lb/>
The 1980 Edition of thfl Outstan-<lb/>
ding Young Women of America has<lb/>
honored Greysolynne J. Fox and<lb/>
Judith M. Thomas both of East<lb/>
Carolina among some 15,000<lb/>
Outstanding Young Women of<lb/>
America nominations.<lb/>
According to their organization's<lb/>
chairperson, Mrs. Dexter Otis Ar-<lb/>
nold, Outstanding Young Women<lb/>
of America Awards Program seek-<lb/>
to recognize and honor the talents,<lb/>
abilities and successes of exceptional<lb/>
young women throughout the<lb/>
United States. These individuals are<lb/>
being honored not only for their<lb/>
professional achievements but for<lb/>
their important contributions to<lb/>
their communities, states, and na-<lb/>
tion as well, she said. Otis Arnold<lb/>
serves as chairperson of the Awards<lb/>
Program Advisory Board and is<lb/>
honorary president of the General<lb/>
Federation of Women's Clubs.<lb/>
One of the entries is that of Dr.<lb/>
Greysolynne J. Fox, Assistant pro-<lb/>
fessor of anthropology. Fox receiv-<lb/>
ed her B.A M.A, and Ph.D from<lb/>
the University of Wisconsin-<lb/>
Milwaukee. This is the second time<lb/>
Fox has been nominated for this<lb/>
award.<lb/>
In 1978, she was nominated by<lb/>
Dr. Howell, then Vice Chancellor of<lb/>
Academic Affars. This year, she<lb/>
was nominated by Dr. W. Keats<lb/>
Sparrow.<lb/>
Fox, who is very deeply involved<lb/>
with a joint career in teaching and<lb/>
research, has been at East Carolina<lb/>
since 1977. She said that students<lb/>
who ask interesting questions are<lb/>
the type of students that she likes<lb/>
best.<lb/>
Teaching is not all that she does<lb/>
or is involved in. "Research along<lb/>
with different activities yields dif-<lb/>
ferent rewards she said. "It also<lb/>
keeps you at the forefront of what is<lb/>
going on<lb/>
Fox's main area of study is in<lb/>
primatology. the study of apes and<lb/>
monkeys. Her current projects in-<lb/>
clude topics such as communication<lb/>
by use of smell among the Siamang<lb/>
monkeys and trying to determine<lb/>
what socializing factors exist among<lb/>
primates.<lb/>
She has traveled and studied quite<lb/>
extensively. Her studies have taken<lb/>
her to places such as Malaysia,<lb/>
South Eastern Puerto Rico,<lb/>
England, Singapore and Germanv.<lb/>
Last summer, Fox went to Germany<lb/>
to attend an international con-<lb/>
ference on the Siamang monkeys<lb/>
Fox also added that she is excited<lb/>
about zoos and would like to travel<lb/>
to various zoos all around the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
In addition to her undergraduate<lb/>
and graduate work, she has studied<lb/>
at Northwestern University and the<lb/>
University of Chicago. She has also<lb/>
had several articles about primates<lb/>
published in journals.<lb/>
Fox is also a member of the<lb/>
Milwaukee Zoological Society and<lb/>
Sigma Xi, the scientific research<lb/>
society.<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) - The head "In North Carolina, Klan<lb/>
of the NAACP announced members were acquitted of chares<lb/>
establishment of a "Klan Watch" of murdering people at an anti-Klan<lb/>
Monday to monitor racial violence rally, despite videotape evidence of<lb/>
anc charged a majority of "decent" the shootings. In Miami, a black<lb/>
Americans have become bigoted. man's head was brutally smashed by<lb/>
Executive Director Benjamin white policemen who were acquitted<lb/>
Hooks described a resurgence of of wrongdoing by an all-white jury,<lb/>
racism at the civil rights group's an- in Chattanooga, Tennessee,<lb/>
nual membership meeting and called Klansmen were acquitted of<lb/>
on President-elect Ronald Reagan shooting four black women<lb/>
to "make sure the priorities of the Hooks said the upsurge in racial<lb/>
black and poor are not forgotten violence, particularly Klan activity<lb/>
The NAACP has been receiving will be monitored by NAACP of-<lb/>
more bomb threats and hate mail ficials in each of the association's<lb/>
than ever, he said. Politicians are seven regional offices,<lb/>
decrying busing as reverse Hooks said all incidents involving<lb/>
discrimination. the Klan will be reported by the of-<lb/>
"The Ku Klux Klan has been ficials, who plan to work closely<lb/>
teaching Boy Scouts and Civil Air with city, county and state<lb/>
Patrol cadets how to strangle people authorities.<lb/>
and fire guns Hooks said. "Black "What has brought on this sad<lb/>
men have had their hearts cut out, state of affairs. Whatever the cause,<lb/>
and black teen-agers have fallen vie- I fear that the real majority of de-<lb/>
tim to the knife of an unapprehend- cent American citizens have become<lb/>
ed slasher in New York City and captives of bigotry Hooks said.<lb/>
Buffalo. "They have been intimidated,<lb/>
,M????.?? brow-beaten, lied to, manipulated<lb/>
JL ??? V-ijf and dragooned into conformity with<lb/>
Of! HG IIISIQ6 segregation as a way of life in<lb/>
mtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm America.<lb/>
"We must be determined to call<lb/>
- them out of their hibernation and<lb/>
Announcements awaken them to reality<lb/>
Editorialsjj The n.AACP's board prepared a<lb/>
Classifieds position paper to submit to Reagan.<lb/>
Features Hooks said the NAACP is willing to<lb/>
Fetters worjc wjln Reagan to reduce infla-<lb/>
Sports tion and increase jobs.<lb/>
"It's his methods we disagree<lb/>
with Hooks said.<lb/>
Her ECU involvement includes<lb/>
being the faculty advisor of Lambda<lb/>
Alpha, the anthropology honor<lb/>
society. She also serves on the Na-<lb/>
tional Executive Council.<lb/>
She has also founded the ECU<lb/>
Fold and Country Dance Club with<lb/>
the help of Peter Fricke. The club<lb/>
puts on about two shows annually.<lb/>
One of her main areas of concern<lb/>
is animals. She says that if any<lb/>
animals become extinct, ecological<lb/>
systems would then be unbalanced.<lb/>
The second nomination is that of<lb/>
Judith M. Thomas. She is an<lb/>
associate professor of surgery,<lb/>
whose main area of research is the<lb/>
transplantation of tissues and<lb/>
organs. Another area of interest is<lb/>
immunological research, which is<lb/>
that part of transplantation service<lb/>
and research which help patients ac-<lb/>
cept and keep their newly implanted<lb/>
organs. Her research in im-<lb/>
munology has been noted by several<lb/>
medical societies.<lb/>
Thomas received her B.A. degree<lb/>
from Manhattanville College, her<lb/>
M.S. and Ph.D degrees from New<lb/>
York University.<lb/>
One of her current projects is the<lb/>
medical school's first kidney<lb/>
transplant operation.<lb/>
Thomas came to ECU in<lb/>
September of 1979 in the position of<lb/>
associate professor of Surgery. She<lb/>
makes up a transplantation team<lb/>
with her husband. Dr. Frank<lb/>
Thomas, professor of surgery and<lb/>
See WOMEN, page J<lb/>
Recent Test<lb/>
Scores Vary<lb/>
Pnotc by CHARLIE SHERROD<lb/>
Inauguration 1981<lb/>
(SPS)?Suburban schools spend a<lb/>
lot of money on their students, pav<lb/>
teachers higher salaries and offer a<lb/>
wide range of courses. As a result,<lb/>
most students who attend these<lb/>
schools score high on achievement<lb/>
tests and go to college.<lb/>
But that's not the whole story.<lb/>
Vandalism, alcohol and drug use are<lb/>
rising so fast in the suburbs that<lb/>
they may replace urban schools as<lb/>
centers of crime, drug traffic and<lb/>
alcoholism.<lb/>
For years these homogenous<lb/>
residential communities have<lb/>
boasted test scores higher than the<lb/>
national average on standardized<lb/>
tests, according to the National<lb/>
Assessment of Educational Pro-<lb/>
gress, and are well ahead of both ur-<lb/>
ban and rural students.<lb/>
The test score gap exists because<lb/>
suburban schools have money to<lb/>
spend on curriculum and teacher<lb/>
salaries, National Institute of<lb/>
Education Senior Associate Tom<lb/>
Tomlinson said. Since per pupil ex-<lb/>
penditure is figured through proper-<lb/>
ty taxes, wealthy areas have more<lb/>
money for education.<lb/>
This money allows schools to of-<lb/>
fer a wide range of pro-<lb/>
grams?college preparatory as well<lb/>
as vocational courses. Since they<lb/>
can take advantage of the college<lb/>
courses, about 75 percent go to col-<lb/>
lege as compared to 50 percent in<lb/>
other areas.<lb/>
Suburban schools have con-<lb/>
tributed, however, to a lack of em-<lb/>
phasis on reading and writing ability<lb/>
and have produced a generation of<lb/>
students weak in basic skills, accor-<lb/>
ding to education author Paul<lb/>
Cooperman. Although suburban<lb/>
students are ahead of others, SAT<lb/>
scores have declined drastically for<lb/>
all students in the last decade.<lb/>
Suburban students are ahead in<lb/>
other areas too?property destruc-<lb/>
tion and drug abuse. According to a<lb/>
report to Congress on violent and<lb/>
safe schools, suburban schools ex-<lb/>
perience more vandalism than urban<lb/>
or rural schools.<lb/>
"Kids in the suburbs have more<lb/>
money so they are getting a large<lb/>
share of crime and drug problems<lb/>
National Institute of Education Ur<lb/>
ban Team Leader Candice Sullivan<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Forty-eight percent of high school<lb/>
students in the suburbs said beer<lb/>
and wine are readily available to<lb/>
them compared to only 40 percent<lb/>
of city school students.<lb/>
Sixty-one percent of suburban<lb/>
students said they could buy mari-<lb/>
juana at their school, and heroin use<lb/>
in suburban schools has skyrocketed<lb/>
since June. "We used to view heroin<lb/>
as an inner-city slum drug. It has<lb/>
been creeping into the suburbs for<lb/>
the past year and is now reaching<lb/>
epidemic proportions Drug En-<lb/>
forcement Administrator Robert<lb/>
Feldkamp said.<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
!? . -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057310_0002"/><lb/>
THL EASTCAROI INI AN<lb/>
JANUARY 13, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CRIMINAL LAW<lb/>
A new course Principles and<lb/>
Procedures of Criminal Law<lb/>
iCorS 4003 will be ottered during<lb/>
spring semester at ECU The<lb/>
three semester hour course will be<lb/>
taught on Mon nights trom 6 30 to<lb/>
9 30 pm with the first class<lb/>
beginning on Jan 12 1981<lb/>
The course will focus on the<lb/>
nature, sources and types o?<lb/>
substantive criminal law the<lb/>
classification and analysis of<lb/>
crimes and criminal acts in<lb/>
general and the examination in<lb/>
detail ot selected spec if ic criminal<lb/>
procedures with special emphasis<lb/>
upon responsibilities ot criminal<lb/>
lustice professionals<lb/>
Pre requisite for the course s<lb/>
vonsen' of the Department<lb/>
Chairperson Area businessmen<lb/>
law enforcement officers private<lb/>
sec urity personnel human service<lb/>
oenvery personnel and other in<lb/>
'eresteo persons are encouraged<lb/>
and invited to enroll<lb/>
Registration will begin on Jan<lb/>
8 1981 and non ECU students<lb/>
should register through ECU Div.<lb/>
sion of Cont Education The<lb/>
( ourse s open to eligible students<lb/>
a'ECU interested individuals are<lb/>
encouraged to register for the<lb/>
? se and or contact the Depart<lb/>
nenl Ot Soc ial vork S. Correc<lb/>
i Sei . . rs tor additional in<lb/>
formal 111 Allied Health or<lb/>
Carol Belk Bldg )<lb/>
RESIDENCE STAFF<lb/>
Apr! canons are now being<lb/>
by the Dept of Residence<lb/>
reft Resident Advisors for Spr<lb/>
g ' semester Any full time<lb/>
student who has reserved a<lb/>
residence hail room and has an<lb/>
.i ng of 2 0 is eligible to ap<lb/>
? - ?? on ano application<lb/>
f.neo from a<lb/>
Residl ? Hall Director or the<lb/>
- ? ? ' ? Life Office, 214<lb/>
.s ? Hard I<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
PRESIDENT<lb/>
Applications are now being ac<lb/>
lepteo<lb/>
Union<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
'he quai<lb/>
office of Student<lb/>
? for the 1981 82<lb/>
?' ons will Be<lb/>
981 ano are<lb/>
guesnuns reyara"N<lb/>
ions for the oft-ce<lb/>
' 6611 Da '????<lb/>
CIC FELLOWSHIPS<lb/>
Until February 1. 1981 prospec<lb/>
five applicants from outside<lb/>
Indiana may call toll free between<lb/>
9 00am and 5 00pm E ST tor in<lb/>
formation or application forms<lb/>
The number is !800l 457 4420<lb/>
Now m its fourth year, the CIC<lb/>
Fellowships Program m the social<lb/>
sciences makes awards m an<lb/>
thropology economics,<lb/>
geography history political<lb/>
science psychology. and<lb/>
sociology<lb/>
The humanities fellowships are<lb/>
available to students seeking doc<lb/>
torates in American studies art<lb/>
history classics comparative<lb/>
literature English German,<lb/>
linguistics music philosophy<lb/>
religion Romance languages, and<lb/>
Slavic languages<lb/>
Fields covered By the natural<lb/>
sciences, mathematics and<lb/>
engineering program include<lb/>
chemistry biological sciences,<lb/>
agricultural sciences, physics and<lb/>
geological sciences We welcome<lb/>
inquiries concerning specific sub<lb/>
fields<lb/>
BAHAMAS CRUISE<lb/>
Enter the world ot rum and sun<lb/>
sh.ne take a trip to the Bahamas.<lb/>
March t 15th The Student union<lb/>
Travel Committee has already<lb/>
planned your Spring Break for<lb/>
you so make reservations now i'<lb/>
Mendenhaii Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Quad Hotem Room and Cabin<lb/>
S499 00 Double Hotel RoomQuad<lb/>
Cabin SS49 00<lb/>
PRE COLUMBIAN<lb/>
The ECU Dept of Sociology ano<lb/>
Anthropology, in cooperation with<lb/>
the ECU School ot Art, ,$ presen<lb/>
ting a series of public lectures on<lb/>
Pre Columbian Art<lb/>
The lectures will be conducted<lb/>
by Paul Clifford curator of the<lb/>
Pre Columbian Collection at the<lb/>
Duke University Museum ot Art<lb/>
They win w '? 'he auditorium<lb/>
of the ? "k ? ?'??'s Center at<lb/>
ECU at 7 30 p n .<lb/>
and Jai It<lb/>
s to be discussed nciude<lb/>
"The Dawn of Civilization<lb/>
I hr ugti -i Master ? a" i<lb/>
B The Great Em<lb/>
(fSl jan 12<lb/>
(aya One Half<lb/>
;Jan 19. and<lb/>
and Their<lb/>
Other Half of<lb/>
(ACT)<lb/>
The American College Tes'<lb/>
(ACT) will be offered at ECU on<lb/>
Sat . March 28, 1981 Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to ACT Registration, P O<lb/>
Box 414. Iowa City, Iowa 52240<lb/>
Registration deadline is Feb 27,<lb/>
1981 Applications may be obtain<lb/>
ed from the ECU Testing Center<lb/>
Speight Bidg , Room 105<lb/>
(AHPAT)<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be ottered at<lb/>
ECU on Sat. March 7 1981 Ap<lb/>
plication blanks are to e com<lb/>
pleted and mailed to the<lb/>
Psychological Corp 304 E 45th<lb/>
St . New York NY 10017 to arrive<lb/>
by Feb 7, 1981 Application blanks<lb/>
are also available at the Testing<lb/>
Center, Speight Bldg Room 105,<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
LEARNING<lb/>
A new program for increasing<lb/>
Learning Efficiency will be of<lb/>
tered by Dr George Weigand<lb/>
beginning Jan 14. 1981 There will<lb/>
be two groups One will meet on<lb/>
Mon and Wed at 1 00 p m and<lb/>
the other group will meet on Tues<lb/>
and Thurs at 1 00 p m m Rm 305<lb/>
Wright Anne The class is<lb/>
available to all students Atten<lb/>
dance is voluntary no formal<lb/>
registration is required<lb/>
EPISCOPAL WORSHIP<lb/>
An Episcopal service of Holy<lb/>
Communion will be celebrated<lb/>
Tues evening Jan 13, in the<lb/>
chapel ot the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center (5th St across from Gar<lb/>
rett Dorm The service will be at<lb/>
5 30 p m with the Episcopal<lb/>
Chaplain, the Rev Bill Hadden,<lb/>
celebrating Supper will be served<lb/>
following the service<lb/>
the Cone<lb/>
The MyS'1 '<lb/>
of the Bow Tie<lb/>
"The A jtec<lb/>
SPRING BREAK TRIP<lb/>
aic t? a an<lb/>
iude transporta<lb/>
00 Double hotel<lb/>
Double<lb/>
 4- -<lb/>
I - are tour rerod n ,<lb/>
tures in the series, and each lee<lb/>
tures a n ijde slides to dec '<lb/>
actual examples of Pre<lb/>
Columbian Art<lb/>
The wealth of pub' I<lb/>
mater,ai roaay ano the increasing<lb/>
the ancient ar's o? "<lb/>
hemisphere show thai Pre<lb/>
Columbian ar can now ta?<lb/>
Place as . i ? " i it art e<lb/>
pressions ? ?? . a ? ? Clifford<lb/>
saic It is in pet it . ? "a'ftf who<lb/>
have ccr-M ? ?? , . ,s . ? and<lb/>
nave sampled? " ?"? bounties<lb/>
Si d now accept ano P' '? <lb/>
? heritaoi ? ?" ? by the I <lb/>
 ? ? a h havi ? ? ?<lb/>
gone<lb/>
SKI TRIP<lb/>
The ECU Ski tr.p to Snowshoe<lb/>
over Sprig break is scheduled for<lb/>
March 8 13. 1981 Students seekmq<lb/>
lit should enroll in PHYE 1105<lb/>
A room deposit of $10 00 is due<lb/>
Jan 27 1981. at 4pm mMemorial<lb/>
Gym, Rm 108 Contact Mrs Jo<lb/>
Saunders in Memorial Gym <lb/>
205 lor additional information<lb/>
INSTRUCTORS<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
instructors are needed to teach<lb/>
several short term beginning ivel<lb/>
sorkshops or courses for the Crafts<lb/>
Center at Mendenhaii Student<lb/>
Center The areas tor which in<lb/>
structors are needed are<lb/>
darkroom techniques, iewelry and<lb/>
silkscreen Graduate or 4th year<lb/>
art students, or anyone who has<lb/>
sufficient knowledge to teach a<lb/>
course in any of the areas men<lb/>
tioned, may contact Tana Nobles<lb/>
Crafts and Recreation Director at<lb/>
Mendenhaii, 757 6611<lb/>
INTERNSHIP<lb/>
Sophomores iuniors and seniors<lb/>
currently enrolled in a N C col<lb/>
lege or N C residents attending an<lb/>
out of state college have until Feb<lb/>
2 to apply for the Institute of<lb/>
Government Summer Internsnp<lb/>
Program m state government<lb/>
Twenty four students will be<lb/>
selected by an advisory commit<lb/>
tee to participate in a living<lb/>
learning internship in N C s'rfii<lb/>
government directed by the in<lb/>
stitute ot Government The In<lb/>
stitute of Government interns will<lb/>
work trom May 26 through Aug 7<lb/>
Students will work 40 hours eacn<lb/>
week m a responsible position m a<lb/>
state department participate in<lb/>
evening educational seminars ano<lb/>
be paid approximately $130 prr<lb/>
week<lb/>
Students interested in the pro<lb/>
gram should secure a brochure an<lb/>
nouncmg the program and a state<lb/>
of N C application form from<lb/>
their college or university place<lb/>
ment office or local Job Service ot<lb/>
tice<lb/>
Students interested in the in<lb/>
stitute of Government program<lb/>
should mail an application to the<lb/>
institute of Government Knapp<lb/>
Bldg 059A The University ot<lb/>
North Carolina, Chapel Hill NC<lb/>
27514 by Feb 2 1981<lb/>
Applicants will be accec '<lb/>
without respect to race sex. color<lb/>
national or-an religion or nan<lb/>
dicap<lb/>
Lih Johnson a student of ECU<lb/>
served as an Institute ot Gow<lb/>
ment intern in state governn '<lb/>
dut ing 1 ? ? ler of 1980<lb/>
PRISON VISITS<lb/>
Many ECU students have joined<lb/>
Maury Correctional Facilities<lb/>
Thurs nigt t visiting ? ? ? We<lb/>
go from 7 30 p m 9 00 p m Car<lb/>
pooling ano pick up is ava-iar ?<lb/>
it s a friendly atmosphere ana en<lb/>
lOyabie for ail !??? I I rge!<lb/>
nely eople ourm n?<lb/>
day season Ca<lb/>
N.C.S.L.<lb/>
? ? .  ? ? . tudent<lb/>
Legislature w<lb/>
? ? '<lb/>
? ;? ? ? me t " . ? ? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
? . . ? . ? ? . <lb/>
I ?  ? ; a meet eacl ?'<lb/>
night at 7 p n th<lb/>
? ?? ? Cuitu'<lb/>
? ' ?<lb/>
Judge Says Garwood To Decide<lb/>
CAMP LEJEUNE,<lb/>
NX. (IPI) ? Defense<lb/>
attorneys say Pfc.<lb/>
Robert R. Garwood<lb/>
vsill be the one to decide<lb/>
whether he testifies in<lb/>
his court-martial on<lb/>
charges of desertion<lb/>
and collaboration with<lb/>
the enemy in Vietnam.<lb/>
With the defense<lb/>
now putting the final<lb/>
touches on its case, that<lb/>
decision may come by<lb/>
the end of the week.<lb/>
"The decision has<lb/>
not been made yet<lb/>
civilian defense at-<lb/>
torney Vaughan Taylor<lb/>
said Monday. "It's<lb/>
something the accused<lb/>
has to decide<lb/>
Thus far in Gar-<lb/>
wood's court-martial,<lb/>
his account of his 14<lb/>
years with the com-<lb/>
munists has been<lb/>
related to the jury by<lb/>
three psychiatrists and<lb/>
one psychologist. The<lb/>
defense is trying to<lb/>
show Garwood was<lb/>
driven insane by torture<lb/>
and isolation and is not<lb/>
responsible for his ac-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Corcoran, head of<lb/>
psychiatry at the<lb/>
School of Aerospace<lb/>
Medicine in San An-<lb/>
tonio, Texas, provided<lb/>
Monday some of the<lb/>
missing pieces in Gar-<lb/>
wood's account of his<lb/>
years behind enemy<lb/>
lines, where he is accus-<lb/>
ed by former POW s of<lb/>
collaborating with the<lb/>
Viet Gong in a series of<lb/>
jungle POW camps in<lb/>
South Vietnam.<lb/>
Corcoran said Gar-<lb/>
wood claims he twice<lb/>
appealed to the North<lb/>
Vietnamese to allow<lb/>
him to return to the<lb/>
United States. Cor-<lb/>
coran, a specialist in<lb/>
dealing with Vietnam-<lb/>
era POWs, testified<lb/>
Garwood told him he<lb/>
asked the Vietnamese<lb/>
to release him in 1973<lb/>
after learning of the<lb/>
mass release of captive<lb/>
Americans.<lb/>
"The answer he was<lb/>
given was that he was<lb/>
not an invited guest and<lb/>
should be glad he was<lb/>
still alive and given<lb/>
food and clothing that<lb/>
should have gone to the<lb/>
Vietnamese people<lb/>
Corcoran said.<lb/>
Corcoran, who said<lb/>
he was once convinced<lb/>
Garwood was guilty of<lb/>
the charges but now<lb/>
believes Garwood's ac-<lb/>
count of his actions is<lb/>
true, said Garwood<lb/>
made a second appeal<lb/>
in 1975 shortly after the<lb/>
fall of Saigon.<lb/>
"You have no one to<lb/>
blame but the<lb/>
American govern-<lb/>
ment he said Gar-<lb/>
wood was told. "When<lb/>
our relations with the<lb/>
American government<lb/>
are normalized, you<lb/>
may be returned<lb/>
He said Garwood<lb/>
told him he was moved<lb/>
from South Vietnam to<lb/>
North Vietnam in 1970<lb/>
and hospitalized for<lb/>
several months after<lb/>
being severely injured<lb/>
in a B-52 strike.<lb/>
"He was growing<lb/>
desperate. He felt he<lb/>
might not ever be abie<lb/>
to return Corcoran<lb/>
said. "He thought he<lb/>
essentially had been<lb/>
abandoned in Vietnam,<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
 N.C, No. 3(jNIGHTCLUB-<lb/>
Tues.<lb/>
(in the Phoenix Room)<lb/>
Eariy Bird Specials-<lb/>
Wed-Thurs<lb/>
PM<lb/>
Fri. -Subway<lb/>
wH.H3:30-7:00<lb/>
SALE 40 OFF<lb/>
Ladies' Velour Tops<lb/>
Ladies' Jogging Tops &amp; Pants<lb/>
Ladies' Wrangler Tops<lb/>
Men's Suits<lb/>
Lee Denim Coats<lb/>
Men's Wool Blend Sport Coats<lb/>
Reg. 12.99 NOW $7.79<lb/>
Reg. 18.98 each NOW $1 1.3" eoch<lb/>
Reg 12.98 NOW $7.79<lb/>
Reg. 56.95 NOW $34.17<lb/>
Reg. 22.50 NOW $13.50<lb/>
Reg. 49.95 NOW $29.97<lb/>
MILL OUTLET CLOTHING<lb/>
264 By-Pass in Front of Nichols<lb/>
Hours: MonSat. 9:30 to 6:00<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
Sign up for a mixed doubles<lb/>
bowling league for spring<lb/>
semester at the Mendenhaii Stu<lb/>
dent Center ground Moor bulletin<lb/>
board There will be a Monday and<lb/>
a Tuesday night league meeting on<lb/>
a weekly basis The organizational<lb/>
meeting for both leagues will be<lb/>
held on Mon . Jan 26, at 6 00 p m<lb/>
in the Bowling Center Bring some<lb/>
friends and sign up today<lb/>
For further information please<lb/>
call Tana Nobles at 757 6?n<lb/>
BILLIARDS<lb/>
interested in ioimng a billiards<lb/>
league7 Al! billiards players in<lb/>
terested in forming a league to<lb/>
meet weekly may s.gn up at the<lb/>
Mendelhall B'lhards Center An<lb/>
organizational meeting will be<lb/>
held Mon , Jan 19 at 7 00 p m in<lb/>
the Billiards Center Leauu<lb/>
scores will be handicapped and<lb/>
trophies will be awarded in<lb/>
several divisions at 757 wn<lb/>
Contact Tana Nobles for further<lb/>
information<lb/>
CRAFTS<lb/>
Crafts workshops are now<lb/>
available at the Crafts Center in<lb/>
Mendenhaii Pottery darkroom<lb/>
techniques, photography quiitmg.<lb/>
silkscreen. beginning iewelry and<lb/>
metalwork, floor loom wea.<lb/>
batik, stained glass and macrame<lb/>
are the workshops which an<lb/>
available<lb/>
All ECU Students student<lb/>
dependents, as wen as facualV<lb/>
staff and their dependents wt<lb/>
MSC members arc-eligible to oar<lb/>
ticipate Everyone must register<lb/>
for the workshops a' the Crafts<lb/>
Center no la'er rhan Saturday<lb/>
Jan 24 Craf's Center hours are<lb/>
3 00 P M unf.l 10 00 P M Mon<lb/>
through Fri ano 12 00 until 5 00<lb/>
p m Sat<lb/>
For further information contact<lb/>
ina Nol s6ii<lb/>
I Ciassi Tied Ad Form<lb/>
A.M.A.<lb/>
The ECU chapter of the<lb/>
American Marketing Association<lb/>
is holding a membership drive<lb/>
during the first 30 days ot the<lb/>
semester Named the Albert U<lb/>
Coniey Chapter, the organization<lb/>
proposes to bring together the pre<lb/>
fessional and the student -n the<lb/>
field of marketing<lb/>
Apphc ations may be obtained tw<lb/>
contacting the officers Mi?o<lb/>
McMahan or Elton Boney m A 226<lb/>
Raw!<lb/>
SENIOR RECITAL<lb/>
Clarinetist Lawyer Crawford, ot<lb/>
Goldsboro a senior in the ECU<lb/>
School of Musi will perform a<lb/>
rectal on Fri . jar 16 1981 a'<lb/>
7 30 p m m the ftj. ?<lb/>
Rei ai Hail<lb/>
C ? awforo is a candidate for the<lb/>
Bachelor of Musk degree in Music<lb/>
tne'apy Me studies clarinet witl<lb/>
Deh-rah Choda ki of the V fool of<lb/>
Music faculty<lb/>
Works to be performed t-<lb/>
Wilson Osborns s Rhapsody,<lb/>
Saint Saens Sonate and Leonard<lb/>
Bernstein s Sonata Crawford will<lb/>
be accompanied by Cynthia Creel<lb/>
pianist The recital is free and<lb/>
open to the public<lb/>
JOBS NEEDED<lb/>
Inmates at the Maury Corrp<lb/>
tional Facility are looking for iObs<lb/>
Many nma'es have been recom<lb/>
mended for work release but Obs<lb/>
aren't ava'abie If you have one to<lb/>
offer or know ot one please<lb/>
756 V324<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
POSITIONS<lb/>
Applications are be ?<lb/>
for Coffeehouse Chairperso'<lb/>
committee m?<lb/>
ly Pick up applications .n the STu<lb/>
dent union Office Rm TM<lb/>
Mendenhaii STudent Cen'er Call<lb/>
757 6611 Ext 210<lb/>
TRANSPORTATION<lb/>
the Greenv,lie Publ.c Trri<lb/>
tation Commission will meet<lb/>
Wed , Jan 21 at 8 p m n' " ?<lb/>
Public Works Fa-<lb/>
FORCES FOR<lb/>
FREEDOM<lb/>
Bracelets similar to those issued<lb/>
for POW in Vietnam are now<lb/>
available tor the men involve<lb/>
fie aborted ? pt in<lb/>
Iran Bracelets are i3 eai t<lb/>
proceeds from sales will I<lb/>
establish a college tune f i ?? .<lb/>
children of these men<lb/>
The address s<lb/>
Forr es for F reedom<lb/>
P O Bo? .<lb/>
Tuluca ? ? ? - ? ? v .<lb/>
EXERCISE<lb/>
The Dept of In'rar<lb/>
??creational Services is offe-<lb/>
asses in E?erose and W-<lb/>
Control jail Exercise Aer<lb/>
Conditioning and Slimnasl<lb/>
Each class s designed to pr( .<lb/>
information on I the purposi<lb/>
exercse (2) the eft<lb/>
Of activity .? M introi and<lb/>
figure imprc I j .<lb/>
and" ??<lb/>
various exercises to mam ? ? ? ?<lb/>
ibihty and muscle tones<lb/>
Structure of . be<lb/>
determiri. ? a ?? ?? ?<lb/>
expr let ?? ? '<lb/>
enro<lb/>
For additional ?<lb/>
'  i ? ? ? , vli ze at 757 ?<lb/>
PARKING<lb/>
The Green. <lb/>
ly eet at j 00 p m<lb/>
?. -<lb/>
I<lb/>
I PRICE II.SC for IS words. 05 for<lb/>
I ??ch addition! word<lb/>
i kr checks payjbl? to ln? C?ii<lb/>
C.rolmitn<lb/>
btryi?lion? count t on word<lb/>
as do phone numbers and<lb/>
hyphenai oni<lb/>
MAIL TO<lb/>
The Eas' Carolinian<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
Old Sou'h Building<lb/>
Greenville N C I'll"<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
Ri . stra'ion for the annual<lb/>
 ' s progro-<lb/>
ECU is s it 7 p.m or<lb/>
20 and Jan 22 and the one hour per<lb/>
 et ? ? -?? ?' 2o<lb/>
Registration will be in the Qrm<lb/>
room at M ?<lb/>
nasium ECU from 7 p " ' ? 6<lb/>
n ' evening<lb/>
Cost of the 12<lb/>
S .nciude'<lb/>
phases Of g<lb/>
I five through W<lb/>
? ?on<lb/>
AED<lb/>
? ? i ? ? I pr<lb/>
l. .  A<lb/>
? .<lb/>
?<lb/>
MINI COURSES<lb/>
j.<lb/>
g i n g (PR<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
10 00<lb/>
I .<lb/>
FOOD LAB<lb/>
?<lb/>
net<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
204 t. 5th Street<lb/>
Across From<lb/>
Newby's Sub Shop<lb/>
Open Til 9:30 Nightly<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S SALE ALBUMS<lb/>
ALL CURRENT RERELEASES<lb/>
$8.96 list for $5.99<lb/>
Pat Benatar<lb/>
Cheap I tick<lb/>
Door'i Greatest Hits<lb/>
Neil Diamond<lb/>
Barbara Streisand<lb/>
John Lennon<lb/>
Nicolette Larson<lb/>
Crosby bulls &amp; Nash<lb/>
f-irefall<lb/>
I he Gap Band<lb/>
( onfunkshun<lb/>
Parliament<lb/>
$7 9 lul for $4 99<lb/>
Ki kpile<lb/>
S9 8 list for $6.99<lb/>
? y Dan<lb/>
$13.9 list for J<lb/>
hagles Live<lb/>
Heart Live<lb/>
Heetwood Mac Live<lb/>
harth Wind &amp; hire<lb/>
ALL PARAPHANALIA<lb/>
ON SALE<lb/>
MOST IS 50 OFF<lb/>
APPLE RECORDS T-SHIRTS<lb/>
Regularly $4.50<lb/>
$3.99 WITH COUPON<lb/>
WE BUY USED ALBUMS<lb/>
M<lb/>
O<lb/>
Art and Camera<lb/>
526 S. Cotanche St.<lb/>
I kW" I Oil '<lb/>
Wed Jan. 14th ?<lb/>
Homegrown Vigilante Band<lb/>
Ladies FREE<lb/>
Men $2.00<lb/>
Thurs Jan. 15th ?<lb/>
Columbia Recording Artist<lb/>
BOBBY BARE<lb/>
?$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$?<lb/>
? KODACOLOR<lb/>
Jg Developed and Printed<lb/>
$3.23<lb/>
4<lb/>
No Fnrp.gr<lb/>
Film<lb/>
12<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
20<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
$4.81<lb/>
KODACOLOR <lb/>
Developed and Printed<lb/>
I icket Locations:<lb/>
Western Pleasure. Apple Records<lb/>
Carolina Opry House<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. ?<lb/>
Homegrown Vigilante Band<lb/>
???<lb/>
film<lb/>
!$$$$$$$$$$?,??$$$$$$$$$!<lb/>
FILM DEVELOPING <lb/>
24<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
36.<lb/>
EXPOSURE<lb/>
ROLL ONLY<lb/>
$5.53<lb/>
$7.97<lb/>
20 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
ANDEKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
$1.92gi<lb/>
$3.15<lb/>
!$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$&amp;<lb/>
36 EXPOSURE<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
AND EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING OflLY<lb/>
LOW, LOW PRICES ON<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
PROCESSING<lb/>
KODACHROME<lb/>
ANO EKTACHROME<lb/>
PROCESSING ONLY<lb/>
$2.11<lb/>
SUPER S ANO STANUaAO "GviES<lb/>
LIMITED OFFER<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES<lb/>
?$$$$$$$$$$$<lb/>
<pb facs="00057310_0003"/><lb/>
???Man<lb/>
3<lb/>
?<lb/>
Fla. Warden Criticizes Rather<lb/>
RMlnklV Fla<lb/>
I Pi<lb/>
iuiil' to inn accusa<lb/>
Muiut<lb/>
iaith m<lb/>
 Honda lions on national televi<lb/>
al Monday sion witho si gel<lb/>
 BS' Dan tin the a<lb/>
! a '60 ol the stoi <lb/>
nentar During the television<lb/>
m Florida program, Rathei intei<lb/>
lenied viewed two former<lb/>
guai ds and formei I i !<lb/>
inmate<lb/>
d 1 he guai d? ' .t<lb/>
on nuad  ot<lb/>
beai up<lb/>
e making in<lb/>
said One ot I he<lb/>
gional foi guai I he<lb/>
was  Hie<lb/>
? I<lb/>
( H ? .t "an<lb/>
the sej . ? cer"<lb/>
ils, and even kill<lb/>
I<lb/>
m, on Dec<lb/>
lei 7, 1979, with the<lb/>
know -on<lb/>
wa ? i <lb/>
McLawhorn Leaving<lb/>
Office In March<lb/>
'Buzz' Snyder,<lb/>
formei head ol the<lb/>
Special Squad, escorted<lb/>
him to the dormitory<lb/>
where Graham was<lb/>
sleeping And pointed to<lb/>
c ii aham .is the inmate<lb/>
he wanted roughed up,<lb/>
 orl said.<lb/>
"He said. 'Johnny, I<lb/>
a sinai l a inmate <lb/>
I wani you to busi him<lb/>
in his damn head with<lb/>
something I oii said.<lb/>
1 oi; eiushed his skull<lb/>
I a piece ol metal<lb/>
pipe he said Snydei<lb/>
gave him.<lb/>
In return foi keeping<lb/>
ihe inmates in hue. I Oi t<lb/>
said he and other<lb/>
"enforce! s" wei e given<lb/>
di ues and then pick ol<lb/>
iosexual partnei s.<lb/>
In the I segment,<lb/>
Snydei called Fort's<lb/>
' v a lie, but luts<lb/>
referred subsequeni<lb/>
calls from reporters to<lb/>
attorney. (im<lb/>
: new saper in-<lb/>
terviews with otl<lb/>
? son officials.<lb/>
"1 can eateg<lb/>
den that the ad<lb/>
ministration (ot 111)<lb/>
vsould condone ex<lb/>
cessive violence oi the<lb/>
use of homosexuality as<lb/>
a favor, as was charged<lb/>
on the program Gray<lb/>
said. "Whether th.it<lb/>
happened, I don't<lb/>
know, bul it has been<lb/>
turned over to the out<lb/>
side officials and. it it's<lb/>
proven that it has taken<lb/>
place, we will deal with<lb/>
those people<lb/>
Cirav did not deny<lb/>
the existence of the<lb/>
Special Squad, hut said<lb/>
he preferred to call its<lb/>
members "utility ol<lb/>
ficers He said they<lb/>
escorted prisoners to<lb/>
and from their cells,<lb/>
conducted shake<lb/>
downs toi contraband<lb/>
and organized searches<lb/>
tor escaped inmates<lb/>
?V a result ot then<lb/>
work, he said, "they<lb/>
aie involved in a lot of<lb/>
use ot force situa<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Meanwhile, State At-<lb/>
torney I ugene V hit<lb/>
worth, ot Gainesville,<lb/>
whose jurisdiction in-<lb/>
cludes It I. blasted<lb/>
state K ep A i net l<lb/>
G i r a r d e a u ,<lb/>
D-Jacksonville, who<lb/>
appealed on the CBS<lb/>
program, and said he<lb/>
intended to find out it<lb/>
(iirardeau had conceal<lb/>
ed any evidence m the<lb/>
Foi t case<lb/>
 hit w orth said it<lb/>
was "very upsetting"<lb/>
tor him to learn on na<lb/>
tional television that<lb/>
Gitardeau had evidence<lb/>
in the case that had no!<lb/>
been turned ovei to him<lb/>
lust.<lb/>
"I have reason to<lb/>
believe Rep. (rirardeau<lb/>
had knowledge ot<lb/>
Fort's story as earl) as<lb/>
last August he said.<lb/>
"It he, in tact, had that<lb/>
knowledge, which dealt<lb/>
v,ith the commission ot<lb/>
a homicide, it would<lb/>
have been illegal foi<lb/>
h i m no! t o have<lb/>
reported it.<lb/>
" T hat is something I<lb/>
think I should look in-<lb/>
to, and something 1<lb/>
think the leadership of<lb/>
the House ot Represen-<lb/>
tatives should look in-<lb/>
to the slate attorney<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Girardeau said the<lb/>
state had not shown<lb/>
any i merest in in-<lb/>
vestigating numerous<lb/>
other allegations ol<lb/>
brutality against in-<lb/>
mates and there was no<lb/>
reason to think it would<lb/>
in this ease. He also<lb/>
said he wanted to pro-<lb/>
tect hoi whose lite<lb/>
"wouldn't have been<lb/>
worth 10 cents within<lb/>
the prison system" it<lb/>
word trad gotten out<lb/>
about his charges.<lb/>
las! Sept em ber,<lb/>
I oi I , a 6-foot,<lb/>
300-pounder who had<lb/>
been a! 1(1 since 196K<lb/>
on second-degree<lb/>
murder, robbers and<lb/>
escape com ictions, was<lb/>
moved lo an undisclos<lb/>
ed federal prison tor his<lb/>
own protection.<lb/>
Photo or<lb/>
Inauguration 1981<lb/>
It. Gov. .limim Green hbn also sworn in last Saturdav<lb/>
SAAD'SSHGk<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
I I JGrandr t.<lb/>
TJH<lb/>
Qualih Repaif<lb/>
( ontinued from page 1<lb/>
? he<lb/>
.<lb/>
and<lb/>
od acad<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
9<lb/>
Mthrough 2 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
Thomas Called Outstanding<lb/>
( ontinued from page 1<lb/>
transplantation p<lb/>
Some ol hei signifi-<lb/>
ini contributions are<lb/>
?- appearing in<lb/>
70 well-noted<lb/>
She<lb/>
piesented lectures.<lb/>
me ol her profes-<lb/>
nal travels hav e<lb/>
iken her tl oul<lb/>
U.Sanada and<lb/>
She<lb/>
sp ? hi interna-<lb/>
nal mi<lb/>
meetines, several<lb/>
w h i c h<lb/>
.h<lb/>
CO-<lb/>
? ed<lb/>
s' e has also bee:<lb/>
jctor in micro-<lb/>
School ol<lb/>
Medicine. I he one<lb/>
thing that she is most designed to honoi and<lb/>
excited about, she said, recognize ex optional<lb/>
is the upcoming kidney<lb/>
transplant. women between the<lb/>
Ihe Outstanding ages of 21 and 36, ac<lb/>
Women's Program is cording to Otis Arnold.<lb/>
SGA Approves<lb/>
Alcohol Measure<lb/>
( ontinued from page 1 '10!1 ommittee,<lb/>
reported that the<lb/>
and thai he hoped a Ms new bus would<lb/>
committee would be be delivered sometime<lb/>
formed to deal with the this week oi next, and<lb/>
situation. the legislature passed a<lb/>
In other business, bill thai will allow<lb/>
Hen Singleton, chair- S.O.I .1 .V to receive<lb/>
man ol the ppropna its funding.<lb/>
 ARMY MAW STORE <lb/>
 Racfcaackt S'H Bomber ft<lb/>
ft ft<lb/>
9 Field Dart. Flifht. Snorkel ?<lb/>
 iaeartt. Paacaatt. Par. <lb/>
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I Wi S E.m Street ?<lb/>
ft<lb/>
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AftOftTlOMt  f TO<lb/>
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praftAancy mt. Mrlf can<lb/>
WzsFl 4'W j?rot ftftO prob'e ae??nari<lb/>
Cr cavrtaalino. For Iwliir<lb/>
IAIaraatle, call ?1J ftiJS<lb/>
aa mL C1 t?n ' irt ?wmr?- ?O0 JJI U?l ketween !<lb/>
r' r lA M 1 P M nwtin<lb/>
Raamjb Waiaa'i<lb/>
HaaWH Or?Miu'Wc<lb/>
run? " NeilMftH" '<lb/>
Subsc r .ption Rt,<lb/>
Ohoni' 747 6366 6167 630?<lb/>
MOFFITTS<lb/>
MA GNA VOX<lb/>
Special Magnavox 19" Color<lb/>
I elevision Sale Price $389.00<lb/>
90 Days Same as Cash<lb/>
Financing Available<lb/>
Expert I. . Service Repair Available<lb/>
Located On Leans Street Lxt.<lb/>
r<lb/>
ALWAYS FRESH<lb/>
DAIRY FOODS<lb/>
COCA COLA &amp; PhPSl Jjl<lb/>
2LITRLBOTILL '<lb/>
NO LIMIT<lb/>
98<lb/>
'Home of Greenville's Best Meats<lb/>
Overtoil's Super Coupon<lb/>
Kab Detergent Qt. Box 98t with<lb/>
this coupon and $7.50 food order<lb/>
excluding advertised specials. Without<lb/>
coupon ? $1.79. Limit one per customer.<lb/>
Expires 1-17-81<lb/>
?5i<lb/>
m.<lb/>
<lb/>
4 - f ? ?<lb/>
mMrng<lb/>
PEPSI<lb/>
TROPIC AN A PURL ?<lb/>
ORANGL<lb/>
JUICE<lb/>
Vi gallon jug 99<lb/>
TRoricmm<lb/>
IMS HI<lb/>
QRAUG1 V<lb/>
JOICl jUk<lb/>
SOFT&amp; PRETTY<lb/>
TOILET TISSUE Pl<lb/>
4 roll pkg. gg $$<lb/>
Gwaltney h ranks<lb/>
12 0z. Pkg.<lb/>
99<lb/>
Scot Towels<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
68$ AR?"<lb/>
JOHN MORRLLL BACON<lb/>
1 2 oz. pkg.<lb/>
99<lb/>
Morrell Pride Sirloin or<lb/>
T-Bone Steaks $029<lb/>
Del Monte Catsupiiii<lb/>
Qt. Bottle<lb/>
88<lb/>
'??V?<lb/>
EATSUP<lb/>
<pb facs="00057310_0004"/><lb/>
Qttlt iEaat (Earnltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
L. HR1S LIC HOk, Gemtm Wetmgei<lb/>
PAUI LlNCKE, Urecoroj Uhtrumt PAUL COLLINS, ?, ??<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree, ?, Charles Chandler v?? ?<lb/>
Anita Lancaster, ???, i, David Norms, ,?,??<lb/>
DAVl S VtRIN, ?m(n,?ut<lb/>
January 13, I9HI<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
ff Moore<lb/>
Continues Outstanding Service<lb/>
We have found that among the<lb/>
ranks of the administrators on this<lb/>
campus one individual stands out as<lb/>
an exceptionally efficient, talented<lb/>
and dedicated individual who has<lb/>
toiled tirelessly in the service of the<lb/>
university for many years. His name<lb/>
is Cliff Moore, the vice chancellor<lb/>
for business affairs.<lb/>
Mr. Moore came to East Carolina<lb/>
in 1962. Since that time he has<lb/>
developed a reputation for ex-<lb/>
cellence in administering the finan-<lb/>
cial and fiscal affairs of the Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
He has always followed the letter<lb/>
and the spirit of the law. He is a<lb/>
company man who goes pretty<lb/>
much by the book. However, he is<lb/>
flexible and always willing to listen<lb/>
to an opposing opinion. Mr. Moore<lb/>
has proven to be one of the most<lb/>
open-minded administrators on this<lb/>
campus, always fair in his dealings<lb/>
with students.<lb/>
Mr. Moore came to ECU from a<lb/>
state government post in Raleigh.<lb/>
During the tenure of Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, chancellor emeritus, Mr.<lb/>
Moore oversaw the construction of<lb/>
probably half the buildings on this<lb/>
campus, including the athletic com-<lb/>
plex.<lb/>
He has served for a good while on<lb/>
the athletic committee and has<lb/>
shown a sincere committment to the<lb/>
athletic program and its continued<lb/>
growth.<lb/>
Mr. Moore was the only high<lb/>
ranking administrator, other than<lb/>
Colonel Dick Blake, who served in<lb/>
the Jenkins administration to be re-<lb/>
tained under Thomas Brewer. That<lb/>
?certainly speaks highly of Mr.<lb/>
Moore's ability as an administrator<lb/>
considering the many other fine<lb/>
people who were not retained.<lb/>
If this university had a few more<lb/>
Cliff Moores we would be all the<lb/>
better for it. In this administration<lb/>
it is difficult to find men of good<lb/>
character, strong will, and the<lb/>
respect for tradition that Cliff<lb/>
Moore has.<lb/>
We hope that Mr. Moore stays<lb/>
with us for a while ? a long while.<lb/>
States' Rights Lives<lb/>
Sectionalism, especially in the<lb/>
South, became very prevalent just<lb/>
prior to the depression. There was a<lb/>
centralization of power in<lb/>
Washington and severe erosion of<lb/>
Jeffersonian principles. States were<lb/>
beginning to act in groups rather<lb/>
than individually.<lb/>
During the 1930's there was a<lb/>
sweeping wave of Southern sec-<lb/>
tionalism that was largely the result<lb/>
of contempt for the policies of<lb/>
Franklin Roosevelt.<lb/>
The Civil War had left the South<lb/>
defensive and sensitive to criticism<lb/>
with a fear of ridicule. Southerners<lb/>
feared the breakdown of the social<lb/>
order because of Roosevelt's in-<lb/>
terest in advancing the negro.<lb/>
One South Carolinian com-<lb/>
mented that FDR's attitudes on race<lb/>
were '4an insult to every white man<lb/>
and woman in the South The<lb/>
Southern attitude was one of pater-<lb/>
nalism toward the negro.<lb/>
The South was hard hit by the<lb/>
depression. Roosevelt's "new deal"<lb/>
did little to benefit the South<lb/>
because the lowest percentage of<lb/>
federal expenditures went to the<lb/>
South. As a result of this,<lb/>
Southerners began to organize to<lb/>
promote new industrial develop-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The Southern Newspaper<lb/>
Publishers Association brought (or<lb/>
forced) the pulp and paper industry<lb/>
to locate new plants in the South.<lb/>
Southerners were also organizing<lb/>
their political leaders to lead the<lb/>
economic fight. The Southern<lb/>
Governor's Conference was<lb/>
organized and it successfully fought<lb/>
for equalization of railroad freight<lb/>
rates.<lb/>
From 1935 to 1945 the number of<lb/>
industrial plants in the South in-<lb/>
creased from 34,143 to 44,779, and<lb/>
the value of manufactured goods in-<lb/>
creased from 7.5 billion to 20.6<lb/>
billion.<lb/>
Northern politicians launched<lb/>
vicious public attacks on the South<lb/>
and fought bitterly against in-<lb/>
dustrial development in the South.<lb/>
Northerners feared that industry<lb/>
would leave the cold, decaying<lb/>
North with its big and powerful<lb/>
labor unions. Already the textile in-<lb/>
dustry had all but deserted<lb/>
Massachusetts and the rest of New-<lb/>
England for the Carolinas and<lb/>
Georgia.<lb/>
Even more touchy than the<lb/>
economic issue was the issue of<lb/>
race. The South felt that it could<lb/>
best handle the negro and that the<lb/>
North should mind its own<lb/>
business.<lb/>
Roosevelt was despised and<lb/>
publicly criticized for. his racial<lb/>
liberalism.<lb/>
During the 1940's the South saw<lb/>
many of its long time social and<lb/>
political institutions being struck<lb/>
down, such as the white primary<lb/>
and segregation.<lb/>
Almost as quickly as the old laws<lb/>
were struck down new ones were<lb/>
enacted by our legislatures.<lb/>
Once again our representatives<lb/>
are firmly entrenched as committee<lb/>
chairmen in the United States<lb/>
Senate, and our new president is<lb/>
dedicated to the Jeffersonian prin-<lb/>
ciples of government so near and<lb/>
dear to the hearts of Southerners.<lb/>
Sectionalism is a symbol of pride<lb/>
and should be tossed before the feet<lb/>
of Tyranny like a guantlet. Indeed<lb/>
the South is rising again.<lb/>
BACK IN<lb/>
SADDLE AGAIN<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Defend Your Country!<lb/>
f<lb/>
How many of you love your homes?<lb/>
How many of you love your families?<lb/>
How many of you love your friends and<lb/>
your freedom? All of you do.<lb/>
What I'm writing about today is the<lb/>
topic of picking up your gun and<lb/>
fighting for your country. First of all 1<lb/>
want everyone to know I'm not a<lb/>
maniac, I don't want to go to war or<lb/>
fight anybody?that's a totally different<lb/>
story. My purpose is to get to the<lb/>
cowards of the group and I'm probably<lb/>
going to step on a few toes too. But,<lb/>
that's tough.<lb/>
The subject of fighting for your coun-<lb/>
try is something I feel very strongly for.<lb/>
My qualifications on this topic are plain<lb/>
and simple. I love all those things 1 men-<lb/>
tioned earlier and I will fight to protect<lb/>
them and what I believe in.<lb/>
From what I've read in my history<lb/>
books and heard my grandfather talk<lb/>
about, a lot of changes have taken place<lb/>
in this country. Some good, but mostly<lb/>
bad?in my opinion. According to my<lb/>
grandfather and my history books, this<lb/>
country seemed to have a lot of pride in<lb/>
the days of WWII and the Korean War.<lb/>
Everyone loved this country and didn't<lb/>
like it a bit when its name was dragged in<lb/>
the mud. Everyone wanted this nation to<lb/>
be the best in everything, second in<lb/>
nothing. There were cries of "Give 'em<lb/>
hell Harry" everywhere and a feeling of<lb/>
unity unprecedented at any time in our<lb/>
history.<lb/>
What about today? Do we have any<lb/>
pride? Do we get upset when someone<lb/>
burns our flag or slurs our name? NO!<lb/>
Half the population shrugs their<lb/>
shoulders and lights up another joint.<lb/>
While the other half musters up the pro-<lb/>
found wisdom and courage to say,<lb/>
"Well alright this time but don't let it<lb/>
happen again Does anyone honestly<lb/>
feel good about that? I hope not, I really<lb/>
hope not.<lb/>
I hear a lot of reasons why people<lb/>
don't want to fight for our country. I<lb/>
really understand where a lot of them<lb/>
are coming from too. There are those<lb/>
who say they just couldn't pull the trig-<lb/>
ger and kill another person. I really<lb/>
don't know if I could either, but I look<lb/>
at it this way, it's him or my family<lb/>
someday not just me or him. Others say,<lb/>
"I'm not fighting for a barrel of oil<lb/>
Then they go out for a drive in their car<lb/>
that gets 10 mpg. Another reason which<lb/>
seems to pop up is fear of the Soviet<lb/>
Union. But I'm pretty sure they're just<lb/>
as afraid of us. Both the U.S. and the<lb/>
USSR could blow up the world anytime.<lb/>
Neither are anxioas to tight.<lb/>
The only thing we really trail the Rus-<lb/>
sians in is manpower. That's why Presi-<lb/>
dent Carter issued the order for drat!<lb/>
registration. That frightened a lot of<lb/>
people, including me. But I realized it<lb/>
was iKvessarv and 1 registered. But the<lb/>
whole while I heard my peers saying,<lb/>
"111 be on the first plane or bus to<lb/>
Canada if they call on me That reailv<lb/>
makes me sick to my stomach. If any of<lb/>
you would sit down for 5 minutes and<lb/>
look at what this countrv has given vow<lb/>
instead o complaining about every little<lb/>
thing that goes wrong, you'd see how<lb/>
wrong you are. You all have clothes on<lb/>
your back, food on your table, the<lb/>
treedom to do or become whatever you<lb/>
want. Now it makes me mad when 1<lb/>
think about someone trying to take all<lb/>
that away from me and my family. It's<lb/>
enough to make me fight.<lb/>
The final thing I want to bring up is<lb/>
our heritage. Our countrv has alwavs<lb/>
tried to give freedom and democracv to<lb/>
all those who want it and I'll admit it has<lb/>
gotten us in trouble a few times. But our<lb/>
forefathers built this country on the<lb/>
principle of freedom and the idea of<lb/>
maintaining this freedom was supposed-<lb/>
ly instilled in us. But apparently it has<lb/>
died. People cried and had mass<lb/>
demonstrations just because our country<lb/>
took one step toward preserving that<lb/>
freedom.<lb/>
How many of you have relatives who<lb/>
served in WWII? Ask them about pride<lb/>
and they'll tell you just what I did.<lb/>
For those of you who still refuse to<lb/>
serve our country if and when necessary;<lb/>
you might as well turn to your uncle or<lb/>
grandfather that did serve and spit right<lb/>
in his face.<lb/>
Remember the old saying, "America,<lb/>
love it or leave it"? To all of you who<lb/>
won't support our great nation, if I had<lb/>
the money I'd send you all to Canada.<lb/>
Maybe not first class, but definitely one<lb/>
way.<lb/>
DENNIS SCHRONCE<lb/>
Sophomore, Phys. Ed.<lb/>
Last Word<lb/>
The recent decision to drop field<lb/>
hockey and the wrestling team has been<lb/>
a great detriment to the coaches and<lb/>
athletes involved. Years of practice and<lb/>
putting time into a sport are suddenly<lb/>
ended when university officials decided<lb/>
to save money and drop these programs.<lb/>
Sure the funding is not available, and<lb/>
sure there just isn't enough money to go<lb/>
around, and sure it's so easv to save<lb/>
money b just not spending it. But what<lb/>
about the human element What about<lb/>
the feelings, emotions, and attitudes of<lb/>
the people involved?<lb/>
It is so eas tor an athletic director to<lb/>
sit behind his desk and justify his<lb/>
reasoning bv saying he's saving $50,000.<lb/>
It's also so easy for him to sav. ??Well<lb/>
now they (the athletes) can spend all that<lb/>
time thev spcn, practicing on their<lb/>
studies And it's also easv to just r<lb/>
down the already small list of sch<lb/>
funded sports and drop two or three<lb/>
more of them whenever the need to save<lb/>
money arises again<lb/>
'Well I'd like to know () just where<lb/>
has this $50,000 been these pas? few<lb/>
years for wrestling and field hockev,<lb/>
just how much more tactfully and S)<lb/>
pathetically can you cancel a program bv<lb/>
announcing their decision just as the<lb/>
athletes' seasons are starting and then<lb/>
saying all their efforts to save their<lb/>
teams will be futile because the decision<lb/>
is final, and (3) just when are these<lb/>
brilliant solutions to university financial<lb/>
problems going to end?<lb/>
DAVID JEROSE<lb/>
Junior, Geologv<lb/>
EDITOR 'S XOTE: This is the last en-<lb/>
try on the subject of the dropping<lb/>
wrestling and field hockev which will<lb/>
accepted for the Campus Forum section<lb/>
Oj The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points oj view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Jovner Librar<lb/>
r or purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s) I etier<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neath printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevitv<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters bv the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each H)<lb/>
days.<lb/>
Helms Assumes Committee Duties<lb/>
North Carolina ? Home<lb/>
"I like calling North Carolina<lb/>
home This familiar line has been<lb/>
heard frequently during the past<lb/>
year on the radio by many millions<lb/>
who live in our great state and un-<lb/>
doubtedly by countless travelers<lb/>
passing through the Old North<lb/>
State.<lb/>
Our state is a leader in industry<lb/>
and education. The university<lb/>
system, perhaps the best state sup-<lb/>
ported system of higher learning in<lb/>
the nation, has fostered our growth<lb/>
and enlightened our spirit.<lb/>
It is a privilege to live here, one<lb/>
that must be respected and revered.<lb/>
There are those among us who<lb/>
might belittle our people and our<lb/>
society, but they are shallow and<lb/>
without substance in their rhetoric.<lb/>
Call us clannish, call us un-<lb/>
cultured, call us backward, but our<lb/>
pride is our shield and sword. Our<lb/>
place is with our state. At her feet<lb/>
we should kneel and at her foe our<lb/>
gun should be pointed.<lb/>
Protect and love North Carolina,<lb/>
for the land and the folk are all that<lb/>
makes life worth living.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? We received an in-<lb/>
quiry a day or so ago as to when a U.S.<lb/>
Senator from North Carolina last served as<lb/>
chairman of a major committee in the<lb/>
Senate. The caller's inquiry was prompted<lb/>
by the fact that I had just been elected<lb/>
chairman of the Senate Committee on<lb/>
Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry when<lb/>
the 97th Congress convened on January 5.<lb/>
The late Senator B. Everett Jordan serv-<lb/>
ed with distinction as chairman of the<lb/>
Senate Rules Committee. Senator Sam J.<lb/>
Ervin, Jr was chairman of what is called<lb/>
a "select" committee in connection with<lb/>
the Watergate investigation. Neither of<lb/>
these committees, however, is among the<lb/>
"major" committees of the Senate.<lb/>
I simply do not know when the last<lb/>
North Carolina Senator served as chair-<lb/>
man of a major committee. But I have ask-<lb/>
ed the Library of Congress to research the<lb/>
matter, and let us know. We'll pass along<lb/>
that information in next week's report.<lb/>
TURNOVER ? My moving up, in eight<lb/>
Jesse<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
years in the Senate, from the lowest-<lb/>
ranking member of the Agriculture Com-<lb/>
mittee to the chairmanship of the commit-<lb/>
tee is simply a measurement of the<lb/>
astonishing turnover in the membership of<lb/>
the Senate in recent years. Today, just<lb/>
eight years after being sworn in as a<lb/>
Senator, 1 rank No. 35 in seniority.<lb/>
A total of 18 new Senators took their<lb/>
seats on January 5. The average age of<lb/>
members of the Senate is now just under<lb/>
49. Ten years ago, the average age was 53.<lb/>
With the election of Mrs. Paula Hawkins<lb/>
in Florida, there are now two women in the<lb/>
Senate.<lb/>
Fifty-seven members of the Senate are<lb/>
lawyers; 23 are businessmen. Thei are five<lb/>
educators and five farmers. Two are<lb/>
former astronauts - John Glenn and Jack<lb/>
Schmitt. There's a former federal judge a<lb/>
former airline pilot, and a veterinarian<lb/>
Bill Bradley, the professional basketball<lb/>
star of just a few years ago, is now a<lb/>
Senator from New Jersey. Of the 100<lb/>
Senators, 72 are Protestants, 16 are<lb/>
Roman Catholics, six are of the Jewish<lb/>
faith.<lb/>
COMMITTEES - In addition to my<lb/>
duties on the Agriculture Committee, I am<lb/>
second-ranking Republican on the Senate<lb/>
Foreign Relations Committee; I am chair-<lb/>
man of the Senate Steering Committee<lb/>
and a member of the Senate Rules Com-<lb/>
mittee and the Senate Ethics Committee.<lb/>
I need not worry about having any idle<lb/>
time for the next few years.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057310_0005"/><lb/>
ne<lb/>
I<lb/>
)<lb/>
on<lb/>
buth<lb/>
rjee's.<lb/>
iwkins<lb/>
in the<lb/>
ife are<lb/>
ire five<lb/>
are<lb/>
id Jack<lb/>
?dge. a<lb/>
larian.<lb/>
letball<lb/>
Inow a<lb/>
100<lb/>
are<lb/>
J -wish<lb/>
i my<lb/>
1 am<lb/>
Senate<lb/>
chair-<lb/>
Imittee,<lb/>
Com-<lb/>
littee.<lb/>
Inv idle<lb/>
1 HI si CAROl IN1AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JAM KY H. ISH1<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
Sharing Is The Key In Bell-Arthur<lb/>
B DENNIS ROGERS<lb/>
HH I ARTHUR- The two in-<lb/>
cidents occurred 50 years apart, but<lb/>
there is t? connection.<lb/>
Bruce Strickland, the 72-year-old<lb/>
chairman of the Pitt County Board<lb/>
oi Commissioners, told me: "Our<lb/>
house burned down when 1 was a<lb/>
young fellow, and we had $800 in-<lb/>
surance on it<lb/>
Strickland said that the $800 was<lb/>
used by buy lumber and that people<lb/>
in the community?including<lb/>
carpenters ?pitched in to rebuild<lb/>
the Strickland house.<lb/>
"That's the kind of place Bell-<lb/>
Arthur was<lb/>
John Haughn is 30, a native of<lb/>
Massachusetts who works as food<lb/>
and beverage director of the Holi-<lb/>
day Inn in Greenville. He said: "A<lb/>
few day ago we had a family burn-<lb/>
ed out. They were offered a free<lb/>
room at the Holiday Inn, but they<lb/>
never had to use it. The people of<lb/>
the community took care of them.<lb/>
"That's the kind of place Bell-<lb/>
Arthur is<lb/>
There are many Bell-Arthurs up<lb/>
and down our highways. You ride<lb/>
down the road, catch a glimpse of a<lb/>
sign pointing off down a road bet-<lb/>
ween the pine trees or tobacco fields<lb/>
and wonder what in the world a<lb/>
"Bell-Arthur" is, or a "Chuckle"<lb/>
or a "Luck<lb/>
"I've had many opportunities in<lb/>
my life to move to town<lb/>
Strickland said. "And I've never<lb/>
wanted to go anywhere else but Bell-<lb/>
Arthur<lb/>
Haughn said simply: "I've lived a<lb/>
lot of places, on both coasts,<lb/>
Miami, Atlanta, but I've never lived<lb/>
anywhere that I liked as much as<lb/>
Bell-Arthur<lb/>
These folks like Bell-Arthur, a lit-<lb/>
tle community in western Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
It wasn't always Bell-Arthur. It<lb/>
used to be known as Beaver Dam.<lb/>
But the railroad came through<lb/>
about the turn of the century, and as<lb/>
they often did with railroads, they<lb/>
established a depot every seven<lb/>
miles along the track.<lb/>
Beaver Dam was seven miles from<lb/>
Farmville and seven miles from<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
L.C. Arthur owned the land for<lb/>
the depot, and after he sold it to the<lb/>
railroad, they named the town after<lb/>
him.<lb/>
But that got confusing, because<lb/>
there was another town called Ar-<lb/>
thur in North Carolina at the time.<lb/>
So they looked around for a new<lb/>
name while at the same time keeping<lb/>
the old one.<lb/>
Enter Clarabelle Smith (some say<lb/>
her name was Joyner). She was the<lb/>
station master for the Norfolk and<lb/>
Southern Railroad and was the<lb/>
daughter of one of the hamlet's big-<lb/>
gest merchants, the owner of the<lb/>
local sawmill, which was the main<lb/>
attraction for having the depot there<lb/>
in the first place.<lb/>
You can figure out the rest. Ar-<lb/>
thur stayed as part of the name, and<lb/>
they took Bell from Clarabelle, giv-<lb/>
ing the town its new name of Bell-<lb/>
Arthur in 1933.<lb/>
Bell-Arthur is quiet now, a couple<lb/>
of stores, a few houses. The train<lb/>
hasn't stopped in a long time at Bell-<lb/>
Arthur.<lb/>
But it wasn't always so.<lb/>
Folks from Bell-Arthur love to<lb/>
tell the story of the town's first<lb/>
police officer, Wiley Jones.<lb/>
Bell-Arthur, if it had a police of-<lb/>
ficer, had to have a jail. So they<lb/>
built a one-room jail, just a cell.<lb/>
Since Wiley was the law and they<lb/>
had 'em a jail, they just had to have<lb/>
a prisoner for the jail. So Wiley sent<lb/>
out, found a lawbreaker and ar-<lb/>
rested him.<lb/>
The good old boy didn't see the<lb/>
logic of Wiley's argument, but he<lb/>
was a good Bell-Arthur fellow, so he<lb/>
obliged and gave the town a<lb/>
prisoner?he locked Wiley in the<lb/>
jail.<lb/>
Most of Bell-Arthur burned down<lb/>
in the late 1920s or early 1930. No<lb/>
one ever knew who started the fire<lb/>
or why.<lb/>
That was the official end of Bell-<lb/>
Arthur as a chartered, incorporated<lb/>
town. But it still has its own post of-<lb/>
fice and road sign.<lb/>
And it still has people who love it.<lb/>
"Bell-Arthur?" resident Gladys<lb/>
Edwards said, "It's the best<lb/>
Old-Time Religion<lb/>
Meant Camp Meetings<lb/>
It's As Cold As Ice<lb/>
I s K IRDAN<lb/>
The colder temperatures accompanying winter have made lor some intriguing examples of contemporary ice<lb/>
sculpture as depicted in this photograph of the iceburg in the fountain on campus.<lb/>
ROBF.K1 M.SUAIM<lb/>
Vst tm Ihr 1.? nrral M?n?fcf r<lb/>
During the early 19th century, the<lb/>
United States experienced "The<lb/>
Great Revival" that was particularly<lb/>
strong in North Carolina in the<lb/>
form of camp meetings.<lb/>
Camp meetings were almost an<lb/>
exclusive activity of Baptists,<lb/>
Methodists, and Presbyterians.<lb/>
The meetings were held by roving<lb/>
ministers across the state. Usually<lb/>
advertisements were placed in the<lb/>
local newspaper w ell in advance of a<lb/>
camp meeting to insure maximum<lb/>
participation by the local popula-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
When camp meetings first began,<lb/>
they were held outdoors with little if<lb/>
any protection from the elements.<lb/>
Folks would come from miles<lb/>
around on foot, horseback, and in<lb/>
wagons to spend four or five days<lb/>
listening to various preachers. Often<lb/>
crude huts with pine bark roofs were<lb/>
constructed by the congregation to<lb/>
shelter themselves.<lb/>
e Health Hazards<lb/>
Sickness Stalks The University Campus<lb/>
Bv DAMDNORRIS<lb/>
tr?lufe? Jdttof<lb/>
Now thai winter is upon us, the<lb/>
flu and all those other annoying<lb/>
viruses and things are going around.<lb/>
People aie being advised to take<lb/>
sensible precautions, like wearing<lb/>
warm clothing, eating thirty oranges<lb/>
a day and buying lots of cold<lb/>
medicine.<lb/>
But. disease prevention is not so<lb/>
simple for college students. They are<lb/>
susceptible to a bewildering array of<lb/>
other diseases that may strike not<lb/>
onl) in winter, but in any season.<lb/>
Some of these diseases can be<lb/>
serious health hazards; others are<lb/>
mostly behavioral disorders.<lb/>
Many diseases strike right in the<lb/>
classrooms of our college campuses.<lb/>
For instance, a sickness known as<lb/>
midterm plague sweeps across cam-<lb/>
puses in epidemic proportions dur-<lb/>
ing the middle of each semester.<lb/>
This strange disease has only one<lb/>
symptom: it causes students to miss<lb/>
important midterm exams. It can be<lb/>
easily prevented by studying, taking<lb/>
crip courses or taking courses<lb/>
without midterms.<lb/>
Pop-test pox affects only faculty<lb/>
members. The major symptom is a<lb/>
rash of pop-tests lasting for a few<lb/>
weeks, or in serious cases, the pro-<lb/>
fessor's entire academic career.<lb/>
Spring fever decimates the ranks<lb/>
of students during the last month or<lb/>
so of school. There are no real<lb/>
symptoms for spring fever, except<lb/>
jme F0K A FOP tt<lb/>
Davidson College<lb/>
Closed By Flu<lb/>
DAVIDSON, N. C. (UPI) ? An<lb/>
outbreak of a flu like illness manag-<lb/>
ed to do Monday what only the<lb/>
funeral of John Kennedy and a Viet-<lb/>
nam War protest had done<lb/>
previously ? cancel classes at<lb/>
Davidson College.<lb/>
Davidson spokesman John Slater<lb/>
said an estimated 300 of the school's<lb/>
1,400 students were suffering from<lb/>
"flu like symptoms" and the facul-<lb/>
ty's executive committee voted to<lb/>
cancel classes Monday and Tuesday.<lb/>
TCP. Zimmermann, academic<lb/>
president, said canceling classes<lb/>
"will allow sick students to concen-<lb/>
trate on health rather than<lb/>
homework for a few days<lb/>
The classes were expected to be<lb/>
made up on Saturdays later in the<lb/>
year, Slater said.<lb/>
Students returned to campus<lb/>
from the holiday break Jan. 5 and<lb/>
by Friday the 23 beds in the college<lb/>
infirmary were full and about 250<lb/>
students visited or called the campus<lb/>
infirmary during the weekend.<lb/>
Dr. Ron Hunt, the school physi-<lb/>
cian, said he suspects the illness is a<lb/>
strain of influenza, although no<lb/>
cases have been confirmed.<lb/>
The dean of students' office Mon-<lb/>
day dispensed juice, soup and<lb/>
aspirin to students confined to dor-<lb/>
mitory rooms, school officials said.<lb/>
Hunt said the illness probably<lb/>
reached a peak during the weekend<lb/>
and will continue to infect students<lb/>
for a few days before tapering off<lb/>
next week.<lb/>
The students had a fever of 102 to<lb/>
104 degrees Fahrenheit and com-<lb/>
plained of headaches, muscle aches<lb/>
and a cough.<lb/>
"They feel rotten for two to three<lb/>
days and it takes about a week to<lb/>
recover fully Hunt said.<lb/>
Will Terry, dean of students, said<lb/>
Davidson does not take lightly the<lb/>
cancellation of classes. The only<lb/>
previous cancellations occurred for<lb/>
the funeral of President John F.<lb/>
Kennedy and a one day moratorium<lb/>
protesting the Vietnam War.<lb/>
Students began returning to cam-<lb/>
puses over the weekend at state sup-<lb/>
ported colleges, but spokesmen said<lb/>
Monday no similar illness had been<lb/>
reported.<lb/>
an extreme aversion to attending<lb/>
class. The main cure is a four-day<lb/>
weekend at the beach, or a sudden<lb/>
panic when final exams get close.<lb/>
Many students who are afflicted<lb/>
with eight o-clock classes also<lb/>
develop a condition known as caf-<lb/>
feine dementia, long thought to be<lb/>
a form of drug abuse, authorities<lb/>
are slowly coming to realize that<lb/>
caffeine dementia is really a disease.<lb/>
Students begin drinking large quan-<lb/>
tities of coffee to stay aw ake for ear-<lb/>
ly morning classes, or for late night<lb/>
emergency studying. Soon, the caf-<lb/>
feine attacks the victim's central<lb/>
nervous system, rendering sleep and<lb/>
relaxation almost impossible.<lb/>
Rock shock syndrome is a<lb/>
disorder that attacks the hearing of<lb/>
unfortunate students. Its major<lb/>
causes are listening to records all<lb/>
night through a set of headphones at<lb/>
full volume, and standing in front<lb/>
of the speakers while an especially-<lb/>
loud rock band is playing. Victims<lb/>
of this disorder do not listen to war-<lb/>
nings that their hearing may be<lb/>
damaged, since they can no longer<lb/>
hear anything.<lb/>
Neckus redius is a mental disease<lb/>
increasing in frequency in the<lb/>
United States. There are a number<lb/>
of warning signals for this disease,<lb/>
so it is possible to test yourself to see<lb/>
if you are contracting this disease. A<lb/>
few of the test questions are printed<lb/>
below.<lb/>
1. Do you have a morbid desire to<lb/>
set fire to Christian symbols?<lb/>
2. Do you like to run over<lb/>
mailboxes?<lb/>
3. Do you enjoy driving around<lb/>
and shooting out streetlights?<lb/>
4. Did someone have to read this<lb/>
test to you?<lb/>
While some diseases are increas-<lb/>
ing in frequency, some are disap-<lb/>
pearing. For instance, millions of<lb/>
students were kept from going out<lb/>
on weekends by Saturday Night<lb/>
Live Fever, a disease that kept vic-<lb/>
tims at home watching a popular<lb/>
late-night comedy show. Recently, a<lb/>
weaker strain of the Saturday Night<lb/>
Live Fever virus has appeared, and<lb/>
now relatively few people remain at<lb/>
home watching television instead of<lb/>
going out on Saturday nights.<lb/>
Many authorities consider the<lb/>
massive outbreak of discomania<lb/>
during the late 1970's to have been<lb/>
an epidemic mental disease, but opi-<lb/>
nions vary on this subject. (The opi-<lb/>
nions depend on whether or not the<lb/>
particular authority was affected.)<lb/>
The most devastating disease that<lb/>
the average college student is likely<lb/>
to suffer from is the hangover. It<lb/>
leaves its victims violently ill for<lb/>
what seems like years, and then in a<lb/>
shaky and weakened condition for<lb/>
hours after that.<lb/>
The hangover strikes young<lb/>
adults in the prime, or should I say,<lb/>
the time of their lives; in other<lb/>
words, after a really good party.<lb/>
The first warning that a hangover<lb/>
is imminent is the victim waking up<lb/>
after a party (often in some strange<lb/>
place) still very drunk. At this state,<lb/>
the victim's mouth usually feels like<lb/>
someone has been wiping off his<lb/>
shoes on his tongue.<lb/>
Walking is difficult at this stage<lb/>
of the disease, and is usually<lb/>
undesirable since it makes the victim<lb/>
feel sicker than necessary.<lb/>
The most severe part of the<lb/>
hangover, accompanied by throw-<lb/>
ing up and a strange desire to am-<lb/>
putate one's head, usually lasts less<lb/>
than 24 hours. Nearly everyone<lb/>
recovers from even the worst<lb/>
hangovers, although it is hard to<lb/>
convince the sufferers of that fact.<lb/>
(It is difficult for a hangover suf-<lb/>
ferer to interest himself in statistics.)<lb/>
Within a few days, the body<lb/>
recovers its equilibrium and the last<lb/>
vestiges of headaches and weakness<lb/>
fade away.<lb/>
Perhaps the most unfortunate<lb/>
thing about the hangover is that it is<lb/>
a recurrent disease. It's too bad that<lb/>
it isn't like chicken pox and can be<lb/>
erased once and for all.<lb/>
The fiesty ministers always<lb/>
preached "hellfire and damnation"<lb/>
in the truest sense of the words.<lb/>
They attacked the vices of card<lb/>
playing, drinking, and even the<lb/>
wearing of fine clothes.<lb/>
Throughout the night they would<lb/>
shout the praises of the Lord and<lb/>
warn that only repentance and<lb/>
prayer would save the sinners in the<lb/>
audience from the certain fate of<lb/>
"perishing on the fierv rocks of<lb/>
Hell<lb/>
Usually the preachers would<lb/>
describe in detail the perils of Hell<lb/>
with its molten lava, fire and painful<lb/>
suffering. The obvious purpose in<lb/>
this was to instill fear in the con-<lb/>
gregation in hopes that the fear of<lb/>
sure punishment in Hell would deter<lb/>
the masses from committing any of<lb/>
the sins so detested by the clergy.<lb/>
Often there would be exorcisms at<lb/>
the services. The first few rows in<lb/>
front of the alter were always reserv-<lb/>
ed for those who felt the need to<lb/>
pray and be saved.<lb/>
The members of the congregation<lb/>
were often so moved by the services<lb/>
that they got the "jerks<lb/>
Parishioners who experienced this<lb/>
described it as a pleasant and reveal-<lb/>
ing experience. Even though the<lb/>
body jerked and jumped violently<lb/>
the parishioners claimed they felt no<lb/>
pain but rather they felt they had<lb/>
been touched by God.<lb/>
all appearances of bein, dead while<lb/>
they were attended to by the<lb/>
ministers.<lb/>
Every now and then a devoted<lb/>
parishioner would go into a coma<lb/>
after the jerks. In the coma state<lb/>
they would lay on the ground giving<lb/>
One of the most peculiar scenes at<lb/>
a camp meeting was the "barking<lb/>
experience This was the act of a<lb/>
parishioner getting down on all<lb/>
fours and barking like a dog.<lb/>
Supposedly all of these activities<lb/>
were the result of being touched by<lb/>
God and "seeing the light<lb/>
Such activities made camp<lb/>
meetings unattractive to educated<lb/>
ministers and the gentry who looked<lb/>
upon the meetings as ignorant<lb/>
gatherings of low class people.<lb/>
The meetings were particularly<lb/>
shunned by the well-to-do because<lb/>
the preachers so often attacked their<lb/>
leisure activities as being sinful and<lb/>
certain to result in a trip to Hell.<lb/>
The early camp meetings were<lb/>
very popular among the masses,<lb/>
sometimes drawing as many as<lb/>
6,000 people in rural areas such as<lb/>
Greene County.<lb/>
This early religious experience<lb/>
was probably the root for today's<lb/>
strong fundamentalist beliefs in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
It is easy to see how and why the<lb/>
state has such strong religious and<lb/>
moral traditions when one looks at<lb/>
the earliest religious activities that<lb/>
involved camp meetings and river<lb/>
baptisms.<lb/>
Today camp meetings are a part<lb/>
of history for the most part,<lb/>
somebody must have found a cure<lb/>
for all of that "jerking<lb/>
History Professor<lb/>
Publishes Book<lb/>
The presence of America's Navy<lb/>
in European and Near Eastern<lb/>
waters during the late nineteenth<lb/>
and early twentieth centuries is the<lb/>
subject of a new book by an East<lb/>
Carolina University historian.<lb/>
Dr. William Still Jr professor of<lb/>
history at ECU, is the author of<lb/>
"American Sea Power in the Old<lb/>
World: The United States Navy in<lb/>
European and Near Eastern Waters,<lb/>
1865-1917 published this month<lb/>
by Greenwood Press.<lb/>
The 280-page book, which in-<lb/>
cludes several photographs of ships<lb/>
and naval officers, is Number 24 in<lb/>
Greenwood's "Contributions in<lb/>
Military History" series.<lb/>
Still traces the American naval<lb/>
presence from its beginnings as a<lb/>
European Squadron during the Civil<lb/>
War, designed to protect American<lb/>
shipping from Confederate<lb/>
raiders?a noncombatant role<lb/>
which did have significant implica-<lb/>
tions for America's foreign policy.<lb/>
While not involved in European<lb/>
politics, the U.S. had strong<lb/>
cultural, economic and<lb/>
humanitarian interests in Europe<lb/>
during the late 1800's especially in<lb/>
the Mediterranean.<lb/>
Diplomatic crises which threaten-<lb/>
ed the stability of the Near East,<lb/>
North Africa and other regions are<lb/>
surveyed in Still's book, with discus-<lb/>
sions of American naval response in<lb/>
each instance.<lb/>
He focuses on the Navy's involve-<lb/>
ment in protecting American philan-<lb/>
thropic and missionary interests in<lb/>
the Ottoman Empire, which<lb/>
ultimately ended in the use of<lb/>
"gunboat diplomacy" to oppose the<lb/>
Ottoman massacres of Armenians in<lb/>
the 1890V<lb/>
While the Navy's activities in<lb/>
Northern Europe were primarily<lb/>
concerned with "showing the flag<lb/>
these displays were significant in<lb/>
furthering America's international<lb/>
policies before and during World<lb/>
War I, as Still outlines.<lb/>
The book also discusses the<lb/>
logistical problems of maintaining<lb/>
fleets thousands of miles from their<lb/>
home ports.<lb/>
A specialist in military and naval<lb/>
history, Dr. Still is the author of<lb/>
"Iron Afloat: The Story of the Con-<lb/>
federate Armorclads" (Vanderbilt<lb/>
University Press), "Confederate<lb/>
Shipbuilding" (University of<lb/>
Georgia Press) and articles in<lb/>
various historical journals.<lb/>
Recently he has been actively<lb/>
working in various projects in<lb/>
underwater archaeology, including<lb/>
studies of the wrecked Union<lb/>
ironclad "Monitor" while lies top-<lb/>
side down off Cape Hatteras, and<lb/>
bottom surveys of Edenton Bay and<lb/>
nearby waters.<lb/>
A Columbus, Mississippi, native,<lb/>
Still has degrees from Mississippi<lb/>
College and the University of<lb/>
Alabama.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057310_0006"/><lb/>
THE fcASl C AROI IMAN<lb/>
I AM MO H, IKl<lb/>
LitoLtMnb A&amp;xrr Cxx?6f rwr H)0 Way<lb/>
oy 04vip Aols<lb/>
what piflvooipo i<lb/>
Tr)?" WOLWAIf ?MJ THr 000y<lb/>
Bur TMCjf coat p THr<lb/>
ELECTRICIT) 0URlJ(r-<lb/>
THCHouoftH5f<lb/>
Oh i Mwtn? tAjH y<lb/>
lights kjouloat wo<lb/>
VC Symphony<lb/>
Requests Money<lb/>
RAI FIGH, N.C.<lb/>
UP1 The North<lb/>
Carolina Symphony<lb/>
will ask the General<lb/>
Assembly to give it a<lb/>
$200,000 increase next<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
Symphony president<lb/>
R. Max Abbott told the<lb/>
symphony's board of<lb/>
trustees Tuesday the<lb/>
svmphons is requesting<lb/>
$1.4 million this year<lb/>
and $1.5 million for<lb/>
1982-83 from law<lb/>
makers.<lb/>
Abbott said season<lb/>
ticket sales are down<lb/>
S43.0O0 from last year<lb/>
but the decrease has<lb/>
been offset by increases<lb/>
in single concert sales<lb/>
and contributions.<lb/>
Comptroller Don<lb/>
Wall said symphony of-<lb/>
ficials do not know why-<lb/>
there has been a<lb/>
Local<lb/>
A rtists<lb/>
Exhibit<lb/>
faculty and alumni<lb/>
artists oi the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
School of Art are<lb/>
among thirteen North<lb/>
Carolina artists whose<lb/>
works are on display<lb/>
this month at the Foun-<lb/>
dry Gallery in<lb/>
v ashington, D.C.<lb/>
Art faculty members<lb/>
Randolph Osman and<lb/>
Norman Keller are<lb/>
represented in the<lb/>
show, along with<lb/>
George Brett, an artist<lb/>
and educational media<lb/>
specialist.<lb/>
ECU alumni artists<lb/>
participating in the ex-<lb/>
hibition are Barry<lb/>
Bailey, Kim Irwin,<lb/>
 ernessa Riley, John-<lb/>
nie Mizell, John Quinn<lb/>
and Rosie Thompson.<lb/>
The "Thirteen from<lb/>
North Carolina" show<lb/>
opened Jan. 6 and will<lb/>
run through Jan. 31.<lb/>
Paintings, sculptures,<lb/>
drawings, prints and<lb/>
soft fabric works are<lb/>
included.<lb/>
Ms. Thompson, who<lb/>
now lives and works in<lb/>
Hillsborough, and<lb/>
Washington artist<lb/>
Shirley Koller coor-<lb/>
dinated the show. The<lb/>
Foundry Gallery is<lb/>
located at 2121 P<lb/>
Street, N.W<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
A Foundry Gallery<lb/>
spokesperson noted<lb/>
that the 13 North<lb/>
Carolina artists "have<lb/>
a special affinity to<lb/>
their environment.<lb/>
"Their contact with<lb/>
each other as artists is<lb/>
mutually supportive<lb/>
and they have similar<lb/>
goals, although their<lb/>
work is diverse and<lb/>
reflects each individual<lb/>
artist's personal ex-<lb/>
ploration of that en-<lb/>
vironment he added.<lb/>
Gallery hours are 11<lb/>
a.m. through 5 p.m<lb/>
Tuesday through Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
Scheduled<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting of the students<lb/>
and faculty of the ECU<lb/>
School of Art on<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan. 14<lb/>
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
The meeting will be<lb/>
held in the Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Atten-<lb/>
dance is required.<lb/>
decrease in season<lb/>
tickets.<lb/>
"It could be reper-<lb/>
toire, it could be<lb/>
scheduling, it could bo<lb/>
the advertising mix or it<lb/>
could be economics ?<lb/>
or a combination of all<lb/>
of these he said. "We<lb/>
just don't know why<lb/>
Single concert ticket<lb/>
sales are up from<lb/>
$12,500 to $18,400.<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Recital<lb/>
Scheduled<lb/>
Saxophonist Willie<lb/>
Morris of Greenville,<lb/>
senior student in the<lb/>
East Carolina Universi-<lb/>
ty School of Music, will<lb/>
perform in recital<lb/>
Thursdav, Jan. 15. at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. m the Met<lb/>
chcr Music Center<lb/>
Recital Hall.<lb/>
Among works tor the<lb/>
alto saxophone to be<lb/>
presented are Alec<lb/>
W ilder s So n a t a i n<lb/>
1 ou r 1 o emenl s,<lb/>
M i 1 h a u d ' s<lb/>
"Scaramouchc<lb/>
I ben's "Concerto da<lb/>
Camera" and a J. Ber-<lb/>
nadaus transcription of<lb/>
the Vittorio Monti<lb/>
"Czards "<lb/>
Morris, a student of<lb/>
Brad Foley of the EC l<lb/>
instrumental faculty, is<lb/>
a candidate for the<lb/>
Bachelor o Music<lb/>
Education degree.<lb/>
His parents are Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. W.I . Morris<lb/>
Jr. of 801 West Fourth<lb/>
St Greenville.<lb/>
?5aak?.<lb/>
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f - , mm LIMIT ONE WITH THIS COUP<lb/>
 f M GOOD THRU SAT. JAN 17 A<lb/>
gallon<lb/>
jug<lb/>
48<lb/>
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GOOD THRU SAT , JAN 17ATA&amp;PIN GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
622<lb/>
CALIFORNIA CRISP SOLID?FIRM ICEBERG<lb/>
Head Lettuce<lb/>
LARGE FRESH &amp; TENDER<lb/>
California Broccoli<lb/>
s?e -r<lb/>
20 14<lb/>
size<lb/>
BUTTERY RICH<lb/>
California Avocados<lb/>
Large<lb/>
14 Size<lb/>
39<lb/>
K 30 size<lb/>
only<lb/>
00<lb/>
rw<lb/>
<pb facs="00057310_0007"/><lb/>
I HI i AM i -RO IN1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
I AN! ARY 13. 1981<lb/>
Page<lb/>
U for sale at or<lb/>
taffy not9(3 j<lb/>
<lb/>
R<lb/>
<lb/>
623<lb/>
48<lb/>
8<lb/>
0<lb/>
rP?<lb/>
Pan Am Victorious<lb/>
Behind Green 9s 30<lb/>
Photo by GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
ECU'S Dave Underwood Goes Up For A Slam nni<lb/>
Revils Leads<lb/>
Pirate Win<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Sports rdllor<lb/>
Powerful Pan American got 30<lb/>
points from All-America candidate<lb/>
Ken Green and rolled to a 82-67 win<lb/>
over East Carolina Saturday night<lb/>
in Mingcs Coliseum.<lb/>
Green scored 21 of his 30 points<lb/>
in the first half alone, as the Broncs<lb/>
rolled to a big 47-32 halftime lead.<lb/>
Coach Dave Odom's Pirates got<lb/>
no closer than ten points in the se-<lb/>
cond half as Green's presence inside<lb/>
and some hot outside shooting by<lb/>
the other Broncs stymied each ECU<lb/>
comeback attempt.<lb/>
The Pirate loss followed an over-<lb/>
time win over UNC-Asheville<lb/>
Thursday night. The Bucs took that<lb/>
one as Charles Watkins led the way<lb/>
with 18 points, two of which came<lb/>
via a crucial set of free throws late in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Watkins came back with 19 points<lb/>
in the loss to Pan Am but was not<lb/>
the top ECU scorer against the team<lb/>
that has downed Indiana, Mar-<lb/>
quette and Wichita State this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Senior center Tom Szymanski got<lb/>
the scoring honors for that contest,<lb/>
coming away with 20 points and<lb/>
nine rebounds. Most of the 6-11<lb/>
Szymanski points came because of<lb/>
good positioning under the basket.<lb/>
Following the game Odom prais-<lb/>
ed the Broncs highly. "Pan Am is<lb/>
by far the best team we've played<lb/>
this year and probably the second or<lb/>
third best we've played since I've<lb/>
been here. 1 think Duke last year<lb/>
and maybe Maryland could have<lb/>
beat them.<lb/>
"They're a type of team that does<lb/>
not do many things, but they com-<lb/>
pliment everything they do like an<lb/>
architect planned it<lb/>
Green, too, played up to an<lb/>
"architect's plans said his coach.<lb/>
"Apple (Green's nickname)<lb/>
played exactly the way he's suppos-<lb/>
ed to said Pan Am coach Bill<lb/>
White. "He's supposed to get 20<lb/>
plus points and 10 plus rebounds.<lb/>
He was just as consistent tonight as<lb/>
ever<lb/>
White complimented the Pirates'<lb/>
play. "East Carolina was as scrappv<lb/>
as anybody we've played. They are<lb/>
young and tender, and made a lot of<lb/>
mistakes, but they hustle as well as<lb/>
anybody we've seen<lb/>
Odom, too, felt the Pirates per-<lb/>
formed admirably.<lb/>
"1 felt we played rather well he<lb/>
said. "We rebounded reasonably<lb/>
well and followed our game plan<lb/>
about as well as we could. We pro-<lb/>
bablv had more assists tonight than<lb/>
all year<lb/>
All five starters for the Broncs,<lb/>
now 10-4, scored in double figures<lb/>
against the Bucs. Point guard Mike<lb/>
Carroll was runnerup to Green in<lb/>
the scoring column, getting 14<lb/>
points.<lb/>
The other three starters ?<lb/>
Reuben Cole, Robert Kirby and<lb/>
Curtis Glasper ? each tallied 12<lb/>
points.<lb/>
In addition to his 30 points,<lb/>
Green also came away with 14 re-<lb/>
bounds. Mike Gibson was the top<lb/>
rebounder for the Pirates, pulling<lb/>
down 11.<lb/>
The Pirates, 6-7 following<lb/>
loss, took on much-improved Rich<lb/>
mond last night (Monday) in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum before hosting Atlantic<lb/>
Christian Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Bledsoe Departs;<lb/>
Cites Game Time<lb/>
Following his team's 82-67 loss to<lb/>
Pan American Saturday, ECU head<lb/>
basketball coach Dave Odom an-<lb/>
nounced that sophomore guard<lb/>
Mike Bledsoe had left the team.<lb/>
"It's very simply a lack of playing<lb/>
time Odom said. "He has of-<lb/>
ficially dropped out of school. He<lb/>
and I had a very amiable talk with<lb/>
no animosity. He feels to be happy<lb/>
he must play and I couldn't promise<lb/>
him that<lb/>
Bledsoe, who started three games<lb/>
early this season for the Pirates at<lb/>
point guard, saw his playing time<lb/>
dwindle to near-nothing with the ar-<lb/>
rival of Charles Watkins.<lb/>
Watkins, a former Marine, has<lb/>
been with the Pirates only six games<lb/>
but has started five and is the team's<lb/>
leading scorer with a 17.2 per game<lb/>
average.<lb/>
Before Watkins came on the scene<lb/>
Bledsoe had steadily been losing<lb/>
playing time to freshman guard<lb/>
Herbert Gilchrist. Still, it is the<lb/>
stunningly successful arrival of<lb/>
Bledsoe<lb/>
Watkins that apparently sent Bled<lb/>
soe packing.<lb/>
The Raleigh native played in ten<lb/>
games for the Pirates, averaging 4.4<lb/>
points per contest while shooting<lb/>
35.7 percent from the floor and 73.7<lb/>
from the free throw line.<lb/>
Hv VMI IHMIUWKH'N<lb/>
suff v rtttf<lb/>
East Carolina, led by All-<lb/>
American Butch Revils, captured its<lb/>
first dual meet win ol the wrestling<lb/>
season Sunday by downing Bucknell<lb/>
University 22-18 at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
The victory upped the Pirate<lb/>
record to 1-3.<lb/>
Revils pinned Steve Greenly at<lb/>
58 of the first period to head the<lb/>
1(1 win. The Pirate team captain,<lb/>
ranked fifth nationally in his<lb/>
177-pound class, upped his seasonal<lb/>
record to 13-0 and improved his<lb/>
career standing to a phenomenal<lb/>
102-10-1.<lb/>
Other Pirate wins were by Jeff<lb/>
Leaf in the 188 pound class, who<lb/>
defeated Dawn Banhoff, 6-2; Gary<lb/>
Webb at 142, who defeated Walt<lb/>
Zimmerman 8-2; Chris Giles at 150,<lb/>
who defeated James TenBrook<lb/>
15-7, and James Ellison in the 190<lb/>
pound class, who defeated Mark<lb/>
Baker 11-7.<lb/>
In the 134-pound class, Tony Mit-<lb/>
chell found himself down 8-0<lb/>
against Pete Courtney, but bounced<lb/>
back to take the decision, 12-11.<lb/>
The Pirates now look forward to<lb/>
meeting Northern Iowa Thursday<lb/>
night at Minges Coliseum. The<lb/>
match is especially meaningful to<lb/>
Revils because his counterpart, Joe<lb/>
Gormally, was the opponent who<lb/>
stopped him in the Nationals last<lb/>
year and ruined his quest for a na-<lb/>
tional championship.<lb/>
The match is scheduled for 7:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Lady Bucs 2-1 In Fla<lb/>
Play At Home Saturday<lb/>
Riley (L), Andruzzi<lb/>
By JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Mil or<lb/>
Having posted a 9-3 record with<lb/>
only three home games in the early<lb/>
portion of the schedule, the Lady<lb/>
Pirate basketball squad finally gets<lb/>
another taste of Minges Coliseum<lb/>
action Saturday at 7:30 p.m. when<lb/>
they host the Indians of William and<lb/>
Mary. Following that, they play six<lb/>
of their next eight contests at home.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates posted a 2-1<lb/>
mark on a recent trip through the<lb/>
'sunshine' state, losing to the<lb/>
University of Florida 74-67 and then<lb/>
besting Stetson 101-67 and Florida<lb/>
State 78-67.<lb/>
Senior All-America candidate<lb/>
Kathy Riley led the Pirates in the<lb/>
loss to the Lady Gators with 25<lb/>
points and 11 rebounds. Junior Sam<lb/>
Jones added 12 points and<lb/>
sophomore Mary Denkler con-<lb/>
tributed 10 points and eight re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
"It was just a flat game says<lb/>
ECU coach Cathy Andruzzi. "I've<lb/>
gone over the game, over and over,<lb/>
and there is no one who stood out.<lb/>
If someone stood out in the first<lb/>
half, they didn't have a good first<lb/>
half.<lb/>
"If someone stood out in the se-<lb/>
cond half, they didn't have a good<lb/>
first half. We didn't get consistant<lb/>
play from anyone. We just didn't<lb/>
get our game together and Florida<lb/>
played a tremendous game. I think<lb/>
very honestly that if we played a<lb/>
them again, we'd beat them<lb/>
Senior point guard Laurie Sikes<lb/>
netted a personal season high 17<lb/>
points in the victory over Stetson,<lb/>
with Riiey adding 15 points, senior<lb/>
Lydia Rountree adding her season<lb/>
high of 14. Center Marcia Girven<lb/>
posted 12 points and nine rebounds<lb/>
and Denkler added 11 points and<lb/>
seven grabs.<lb/>
"We played well at Stetson and<lb/>
again at Florida State adds An-<lb/>
druzzi. "The girls did and excellant<lb/>
job against FSU's 1-3-1 zone.<lb/>
"We made some adjustments in<lb/>
our offense the afternoon before<lb/>
that game because we had been hav-<lb/>
ing trouble against that defense. The<lb/>
girls picked it up really well and did<lb/>
a super job that night<lb/>
Karr Discusses ECU Athletic Future<lb/>
EDITOR'S M)Tt The following is (he first of a two-part feature of<lb/>
an interview in which East Carolina Athletic Director Ken Karr<lb/>
answered questions from The East Carolinian concerning recent mat-<lb/>
ters (tf controversial nature that have arisen within his department.<lb/>
Question: There has been a great deal of criticism from ECU<lb/>
students concerning your recent proposal which, if put into effect,<lb/>
would have students paying an admission price to get into a home<lb/>
football game. Please explain your reasoning for this part of the pro-<lb/>
posal.<lb/>
Karr: Basically the reasoning is that we must find a way to establish<lb/>
an accounting system that enables us to account for all the seats on<lb/>
that side of the stadium. Further we must structure the stadium in a<lb/>
such a way that we are able to market it at the hightest possible value.<lb/>
Beyond that it is going to be necesary, as we attempt to fund our<lb/>
program in the future, to either request an increase in the student fees<lb/>
or this is an alternative that would seem to be somewhat more<lb/>
equitable in that it would be a use tax concept. Basically it would be<lb/>
better for us to tax those people w ho come to the games as opposed to<lb/>
taxing every student. We have a ton of part-time students. We present-<lb/>
ly tax them but to tag all of those with an increase If we could solve<lb/>
our problems with a use tax for those who come would be more<lb/>
equitable at this time. 1 would say those are the two main concerns ?<lb/>
the fact that we need that side of the stadium generate more hard<lb/>
dollars for the program and numberr two we need to be able to ac-<lb/>
count for each person who sits there.<lb/>
Q: When do you see this proposal becoming official?<lb/>
K: This has already gone past these hurdles. Now it's a matter of us<lb/>
getting it prepared in such a way that we can make the total student<lb/>
In future years we have to<lb/>
do everything we can to con-<lb/>
tinue our relationship with the<lb/>
Big Four of the ACC, Beyond<lb/>
that we need to do everything<lb/>
we can to bring the highest<lb/>
possible level Division I com-<lb/>
petition to Greenville.<lb/>
?Dr. Ken Karr<lb/>
body very much aware of it.<lb/>
Q: What plans do you have for football scheduling in the future?<lb/>
K: In future years we have to do everything we can to continue our<lb/>
relationship with the Big Four of the ACC. Beyond that we need to do<lb/>
everything we can to bring the highest possible level Division I com-<lb/>
petition to Greenville. Some of those games may well have to be<lb/>
scheduled as late as 1987. I think we need to get on with scheduling<lb/>
those contests.<lb/>
Q: You have stated an avid interest in forming a new conference.<lb/>
What have you done in this area and what are the hopes of such a for-<lb/>
mation. ?<lb/>
K: There are certain basic guidelines that are handed down on a con-<lb/>
ference being recognized within the national framework. Basically<lb/>
that is that you must have six institions and that they must participate<lb/>
in a minimum of six conference sports.<lb/>
Q: Can you reveal the teams that are interested at this point?<lb/>
K: Presently the four schools that withdrew themselves from the<lb/>
ECAC South ? namely William and Mary, Richmond, James<lb/>
Madison and Old Dominion ? and ourselves are five of the six that<lb/>
we hope to form the backbone of the new conference. We are sear-<lb/>
ching for a sixth. I would say as a timeline that it is vital for us to have<lb/>
this sixth institution identified and the conference put together no<lb/>
later than March 1 of this year for scheduling purposes. If we are<lb/>
unable to do that then perhaps we will be forced to be on hold for<lb/>
another year.<lb/>
Q: You came under fire from some circles with the dropping of the<lb/>
wrestling program. Wrestling and field hockey were both dropped.<lb/>
How much money do these two sports represent annually, and where<lb/>
will this money go in the future. ?<lb/>
K: For this fiscal year field hockey has an operating budget is about<lb/>
$10,700. Wrestling's is about $26,000. When you say where will this<lb/>
money go you're assuming this money is always out there to spend. If<lb/>
we have that sort of resources in the future those monies will be<lb/>
redistributed primarily through the non-revenue areas to upgrade the<lb/>
quality of those sports. Part of our motivation here is that we must do<lb/>
less and do it better.<lb/>
Next issue: Dr. Karr will deal with questions concerning overspen-<lb/>
datures in the ECU athletic budget. He will also compare the situation<lb/>
he presently faces with the Pirates with the one he once faced at San<lb/>
Diego State University, an institution he built from athletic mediocrity<lb/>
to one of the top programs on the west coast.<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057310_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
rHl L S1 C AKOl INIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 13, 1481<lb/>
'Father Mac' Combats<lb/>
Abuse In Athletics<lb/>
Reprinted below is<lb/>
an excerpt from the<lb/>
writing of a news col-<lb/>
umnist commenting<lb/>
pertinently about inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletics. It is<lb/>
selected because The<lb/>
East Carolinian feels it<lb/>
makes a point and<lb/>
discusses a topic that<lb/>
will interest readers.<lb/>
Publication herein,<lb/>
however, does not imp-<lb/>
ly endorsement of the<lb/>
views expressed b) the<lb/>
author.<lb/>
B BILLGLEASON<lb/>
 hu ' Hun I imvs<lb/>
There are two little<lb/>
newspaper stories thai<lb/>
have stayed in the<lb/>
memory bank since last<lb/>
Ma . 1 he were<lb/>
retrieved and examined<lb/>
again the other day<lb/>
during a long conversa-<lb/>
tion with Monsignor<lb/>
Ignatius McDermott of<lb/>
Catholic Charities.<lb/>
The stories, which<lb/>
were not much more<lb/>
than "items ap-<lb/>
peared in the Sun-<lb/>
Times and other<lb/>
newspapers two days<lb/>
apart. The first quoted<lb/>
Hubie Brown, coach of<lb/>
the Atlanta Hawks pro<lb/>
basketball team, as say-<lb/>
ing, "Cocaine is a big<lb/>
drug among athletes.<lb/>
These are guys with<lb/>
money The second<lb/>
story, a few inches<lb/>
longer, reported the<lb/>
death oi Terry Furlow,<lb/>
who played guard for<lb/>
the Utah Jazz and<lb/>
Michigan State. In the<lb/>
wreckage of Furlow's<lb/>
car. police investigators<lb/>
found open and empt<lb/>
alcoholic-be erage bot<lb/>
ties, marijuana and "a<lb/>
white, powdery<lb/>
substance believed to<lb/>
be cocai n e<lb/>
McDermott, who is<lb/>
known to two genera-<lb/>
tions of alcoholics and<lb/>
narcotics addicts as<lb/>
"lather Mac saw<lb/>
Terry Furlow play. Go-<lb/>
ing back over a half-<lb/>
century, the priest has<lb/>
watched almost every<lb/>
Midwestern college<lb/>
basketball player of<lb/>
note and thousands of<lb/>
Chicago-area high<lb/>
school players.<lb/>
Basketball is McDer-<lb/>
mott's addiction. On<lb/>
Supersectional day<lb/>
(and night) during the<lb/>
Illinois Class AA high<lb/>
school tournament, he<lb/>
tries to see four games,<lb/>
starting with the Public<lb/>
I eague championship<lb/>
in early afternoon. He<lb/>
never has failed to get<lb/>
to at least three tourna-<lb/>
ment sites.<lb/>
This man knows<lb/>
more about basketball<lb/>
than most coaches, and<lb/>
he knows much more<lb/>
about narcotics addic-<lb/>
tion than most parents.<lb/>
When he was a<lb/>
young priest assigned<lb/>
to the Charities at Ran-<lb/>
dolph and Des Plaines,<lb/>
Father Mac gave his<lb/>
spare time to the<lb/>
alcoholics who lived on<lb/>
nearby Skid Row.<lb/>
Later, he found time to<lb/>
counsel victims of drug<lb/>
abuse. Out of that grew<lb/>
Addictions Consulta-<lb/>
tion and Educational<lb/>
Services (ACES) of<lb/>
Catholic Charities, and<lb/>
out of that grew the<lb/>
Central States Institute<lb/>
of Addiction.<lb/>
He's a big guru in the<lb/>
counseling business, a<lb/>
national leader in a<lb/>
field that isn't exactly<lb/>
overcrowded, but he's<lb/>
also just another<lb/>
basketball buff who is<lb/>
saddened when he-<lb/>
reads reports of the use<lb/>
of cocaine and free<lb/>
base b piaver' in the<lb/>
National Basketball<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
He is saddened but,<lb/>
like Judge Earl<lb/>
S:ravhorn of the Cook<lb/>
County Criminal<lb/>
Courts, who recently<lb/>
expressed his opinions<lb/>
to me, he is not surpris-<lb/>
ed. Like Strayhorn,<lb/>
McDermott knows that<lb/>
drug addition does not<lb/>
begin in the NBA and<lb/>
then filter down to in-<lb/>
fluence school kids in-<lb/>
sidiously. It begins with<lb/>
school kids and then is<lb/>
carried into the NBA,<lb/>
into the National Foot-<lb/>
ball League, into Major<lb/>
League Baseball by<lb/>
school kids who have<lb/>
grown up to be<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
Like Strayhorn, the<lb/>
priest is tired of<lb/>
rhetoric and excuses<lb/>
from those who know<lb/>
nothing of the subject<lb/>
or, knowing something<lb/>
of it, either ignore it or<lb/>
laugh about it.<lb/>
"The problem begins<lb/>
with a permissive,<lb/>
apathetic society<lb/>
McDermott said. "In<lb/>
the wake of that, I<lb/>
suspect that media<lb/>
disclosures about the<lb/>
NBA and the arrest of<lb/>
Ferguson Jenkins on<lb/>
narcotics charges will<lb/>
cause a very small rip-<lb/>
ple. What has surfaced<lb/>
is only the tip of the<lb/>
iceberg<lb/>
Because at least 70<lb/>
percent of the players<lb/>
in the NBA are Black,<lb/>
many white persons<lb/>
dismiss the incidence of<lb/>
cocaine use as a "Black<lb/>
problem A man who<lb/>
has been very close to<lb/>
college basketball told<lb/>
me that he doubts if<lb/>
there is any player on a<lb/>
big-time team who is<lb/>
not addicted to some<lb/>
kind of drug. 1 asked<lb/>
Father Mac if he con-<lb/>
sidered that statement a<lb/>
distortion.<lb/>
"Probablv, but not<lb/>
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Call 758-6061 or 758-1535<lb/>
For An Appointment To See<lb/>
Our One Bedroom Apartments<lb/>
THE EARLY<lb/>
PREPARE FOR<lb/>
bv too much he said.<lb/>
"Back in 1976, a Nor-<lb/>
thwestern University<lb/>
study embraced high<lb/>
school students in ur-<lb/>
ban, suburban and<lb/>
rural schools. The<lb/>
students were Black,<lb/>
white, Asian and Latin.<lb/>
"The study revealed<lb/>
that only 28 percent of<lb/>
those kids were<lb/>
chemical- or alcohol-<lb/>
free. And it found that<lb/>
the peer pressure of the<lb/>
72 percent upon the 28<lb/>
percent is enormous<lb/>
Consider, as McDer-<lb/>
mott does, the peer<lb/>
pressure within a high<lb/>
school basketball team.<lb/>
If the 10 members of<lb/>
the team should con-<lb/>
form to the study's<lb/>
statistics, at least seven<lb/>
of them will go into a<lb/>
season using<lb/>
something. The other<lb/>
three players must be of<lb/>
strong character to stay<lb/>
away from something.<lb/>
The priest has<lb/>
understood the enormi-<lb/>
ty of the pressure and<lb/>
of the problem for a<lb/>
long time. "In 1963 we<lb/>
did a study in a<lb/>
Chicago high school<lb/>
he said. "Over and<lb/>
over, these seniors told<lb/>
our psychologist, 'Our<lb/>
habits are formed. Get<lb/>
out of the high schools<lb/>
and get into the gram-<lb/>
mar schools<lb/>
He knows too well<lb/>
that many of you will<lb/>
read this and think,<lb/>
"Who gives a damn<lb/>
about those overpaid<lb/>
bums in the NBA?" He<lb/>
knows too well that the<lb/>
high school basketball<lb/>
player who comes to<lb/>
practice under the in-<lb/>
fluence of cocaine<lb/>
might be yours. You<lb/>
should give a damn<lb/>
about that, but you<lb/>
probably won't.<lb/>
S'S<lb/>
1<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
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TUkJSDAY. JANUARY 13<lb/>
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THURSDAY. JANUARY 15<lb/>
Lunch only- Liver ?Onions, 2 vegetables$1.89<lb/>
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Dnon and I am looking for a quiet<lb/>
person<lb/>
APARTMENT For rent. Two<lb/>
rooms, modern bath and kitchen,<lb/>
study Call 752 3020 after 6 00 pm<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Wanted<lb/>
to share two bedroom Tar River<lb/>
Apartment Call Lisa 752 0653 or<lb/>
758 5479<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEED<lb/>
ED To share large house Walk<lb/>
mq distance to campus $70 rent<lb/>
plus fraction or utilities Call<lb/>
752 3444<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Grod<lb/>
Student, non smoker preferred<lb/>
Furnished apartment three blocks<lb/>
from campus Low rent, utilities<lb/>
Call Jan at 757 6019 8 00 5:00.<lb/>
Americas roast beef ?Vessir!?<lb/>
Deli ItemsContinental Breakfasts<lb/>
Take Home Meats &amp; Cheeses<lb/>
Call<lb/>
7:s 0080<lb/>
For<lb/>
I ake-Oul<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Mon Thurs<lb/>
8:30 AM<lb/>
11 00 P M<lb/>
Fn &amp; Sat<lb/>
8 30 A M<lb/>
12 00 P M<lb/>
? 1.VK he Si<lb/>
Weekly Specials-<lb/>
Januarv 12 Januarv 17<lb/>
elil &amp; Bowl Of Homemade Chile 5! l?r.<lb/>
Reai F i itrai<lb/>
i arking After 5 OOP M<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
i<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
111 W. 4th St<lb/>
Qreenvllfe, N.C<lb/>
towntown Gr?envllte<lb/>
Across From<lb/>
Bount-Harvey<lb/>
Parking In<lb/>
Front &amp; Bac<lb/>
Of Shop<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
I758-02Q4<lb/>
2 for $2.00 F<lb/>
Arby's Roast Beef beef r<lb/>
Sandwiches tjfll j$L<lb/>
Limit one coupon per customer Valid through F 1981 flff FT r <lb/>
fiat vaSd with any other coupon. Vafid Sll C'<lb/>
jSTorTO'toriris'<lb/>
Arby's Beef 'N ???<lb/>
jCheddar beef<lb/>
'Sandwiches<lb/>
Limit one coupon pei ? I through February 7 1981<lb/>
pot va&amp;d with any othei ? ?? atparbcipal<lb/>
B?<lb/>
H.L. HODGES BOND'S<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
SKI WEAR<lb/>
Aspen &amp; White Stag<lb/>
Warm-Ups by Adidas<lb/>
Court Casuals &amp; Loomtogs<lb/>
adidas <lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
By: Adidas<lb/>
Nike<lb/>
Converse<lb/>
Puma<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
lYICATLSATGIYIAT<lb/>
SAT-DAT-GRE CPA<lb/>
Join our "Early Bird" and<lb/>
Summer Classes In Preparation<lb/>
for Your Fall 1980 Exams<lb/>
? Permanent Centers open days, evenings and<lb/>
weekends<lb/>
? Low hourly cost Dedicated full-time staff<lb/>
? Complete TEST-n-TAPE5m facilities for review of<lb/>
class lessons and supplementary materials<lb/>
? Small classes taught by skilled instructors<lb/>
? Opportunity to make up missed lessons<lb/>
? Voluminous home-study materials constantly<lb/>
updated by researchers expert in their field<lb/>
? Opportunity to transfer to and continue study at<lb/>
any of our over 85 centers<lb/>
OTHER COURSES AVAILABLE<lb/>
GRE PSYCH-GRE BIO-MAT PCAT<lb/>
OCATVAT TOEFL MSKPNMB<lb/>
VQE ? ECFMG ? FLEX ? NDB- NLE<lb/>
Call Days Eveninis I Weekends<lb/>
i wMn Par. SMr t<lb/>
17M Chap Milt ???<lb/>
Dwriiam. m c rmi<lb/>
(tit) atf-ane<lb/>
"Don't cheat yourself out of the expert<lb/>
knowledge only years of service can of-<lb/>
fer. Shop at H.L. Hodges &amp; Bonds. Not<lb/>
new, but still the best<lb/>
This Week's Special<lb/>
Zipper Hooded Jackets<lb/>
Reg.S12.95 NOW $6.95<lb/>
Educational Center<lb/>
TUT PttFMUTION<lb/>
IMCIHISTS SINCE 1131<lb/>
Fo' mfo'fai.O" About 0t' Ce'le-s M Mof. Tka 85 MJfOl US Cit.ei 1 Ab-o?d<lb/>
far Mrtarijtiw ?m itHr ct.ttri OUWBt H T STUTt CHI TOU. ftU M? 27 7?<lb/>
SUB STATION 11<lb/>
All New<lb/>
Delivery Service<lb/>
Delivery on the hour and<lb/>
half hour<lb/>
M-F 5pm-10pm<lb/>
Store hours: I I am-1 Ipm M-Sat.<lb/>
I 2am-9pm Sundays<lb/>
Our Drivers Carry 215 E. 4th St.<lb/>
Less 1 han $10.00 Greenville<lb/>
Limittd Delivery A rea 752-2183<lb/>
No Checks Please<lb/>
QUALIFIED STUDENTS<lb/>
AND FACULTY<lb/>
REGISTER<lb/>
BY<lb/>
AN. 19, 1981<lb/>
for the<lb/>
EENVILLE<lb/>
CITY MIXED<lb/>
DRINK<lb/>
REFERENDUM<lb/>
Thank You!<lb/>
GREENVILLE RESTAURANT<lb/>
ASSOC.<lb/>
?<lb/>
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