<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057338_0001"/>
?Ire lEafit daroltntan<lb/>
1<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 55 u.fi4<lb/>
X Pages<lb/>
Tuesday, April 21. 19H1<lb/>
(Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
( irculation KUNMi<lb/>
Panel Decides No Run- Off;<lb/>
Kirk Little Named Treasurer<lb/>
<lb/>
i ? :?<lb/>
Kirk Little<lb/>
B Dr.BOKAII HOI Al INC<lb/>
It s finally ovei.<lb/>
Aftei almost three weeks ol ap-<lb/>
peals, comments, honor council<lb/>
charges being made, honor council<lb/>
charges being dropped, a run-ott,<lb/>
talk ol anothei run-off, etc. etc.<lb/>
ek.<lb/>
and decided.<lb/>
Kirk I ittle, I<lb/>
race, emei<lb/>
special panel, I<lb/>
second run-ol<lb/>
run-ol t was sul ficieni.<lb/>
1 he special panel met Friday<lb/>
afternoon at 2 p.m. in Room 208<lb/>
Whichard Building and prepared a<lb/>
statement explaining their decision.<lb/>
the<lb/>
lion of SCiA treasurei is ovet<lb/>
tie<lb/>
incumbent in the<lb/>
as victoi aftei a<lb/>
ormed to considei a<lb/>
, decided that one<lb/>
Before the panel met, however,<lb/>
both Kirk I ittle and ngela Pepe<lb/>
signed statements which, in effect,<lb/>
contended that no mattei what the<lb/>
panel's final decision was, that deci-<lb/>
sion would end the debate on the<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
I he special panel's statement, tit!<lb/>
ed "the decision rendered by special<lb/>
panel on second i ?n<lb/>
concluded thai according to rticle<lb/>
, section 4, B, 1 ol the election<lb/>
rules, "I! the rei hows a i<lb/>
jority ol two perceni i 0200) 01 less<lb/>
. il the total vote ; ten all<lb/>
didates thai are v? I<lb/>
will be eligibh<lb/>
lion. 11 mphasi'<lb/>
I he stai<lb/>
"Provisions ol the elections -<lb/>
imposing the .0200 margin are cleai ?<lb/>
1 applicable to elections and not to<lb/>
run-ott elections I he special panel<lb/>
only conclude that the candidate<lb/>
receiving the most votes in the run<lb/>
oil election should be declared<lb/>
elected.<lb/>
?"It is true thai ceilain provisions<lb/>
of the election rules make reference<lb/>
run 'it jusl as certain provi-<lb/>
sions ike reference to<lb/>
"elections When read in context<lb/>
rticle X, section 4, B, I,<lb/>
however, it seems clear that the use<lb/>
? the plural in these othei provi-<lb/>
sions refers to one run-ofl tor<lb/>
various offices rathei than multiple<lb/>
run ol Is foi one ol fice<lb/>
I he statement was signed by 1):<lb/>
I hri Howell, chairperson; Dr.<lb/>
finsley Yarborough, profess<lb/>
political science; Jennifei Ki .<lb/>
dent; Douglas ox. student; and<lb/>
lames Mallory . associate de I<lb/>
orientation and judiciary<lb/>
Kuk 1 ittle was officially sworn in<lb/>
late Friday afternoon I ?<lb/>
council member Drake Mann.<lb/>
"I'm very ready to get bad<lb/>
work 1 ittle said. "I'm very I<lb/>
py and I'm looking forward<lb/>
next yeai. v e're goii<lb/>
to gel SGA in the best final<lb/>
shape evei<lb/>
"In the next two weeks, the<lb/>
met legislature and 1 are ,<lb/>
down and draw up some new .<lb/>
I'm hoping we'll get a lot done<lb/>
Angela Pepe wa unavailabU<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
Kirk 1 ittle<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
general ele<lb/>
ha?<lb/>
1 ittle<lb/>
ction<lb/>
officially been declared the winner in the race for SG <lb/>
tlu incumbent, lost to challenger ngela Pepe in the<lb/>
but managed a narrow victors in a subsequent run-oft.<lb/>
Gun Control<lb/>
Would It Reduce Violent Crime<lb/>
Or Take Away Civil Rights?<lb/>
i)l RHAM, N.C. (I Ph<lb/>
reduce the ,<lb/>
people - Dum<lb/>
profess<lb/>
ends,<lb/>
"Gun conuol may be ireating the symptoms,<lb/>
doesn't mean we shouldn'1 I<lb/>
?k said recent<lb/>
vv- i '? p H thai many people on the wrong<lb/>
?  he - aid.<lb/>
He oted tl at North . arolina has had a gun permit<lb/>
919 ing sheriff's issue permits foi the<lb/>
Ig . V hat application, a<lb/>
shen gets the chano imine the prospective ;<lb/>
chaser's criminal and mental health record.<lb/>
lid be en-<lb/>
tities it is hard<lb/>
is. while in others the process is<lb/>
?. ortnw tin<lb/>
ol a  In so<lb/>
tor<lb/>
? he<lb/>
c ook pro<lb/>
e ones now in<lb/>
learne<lb/>
he sa<lb/>
"Bi<lb/>
-calihet<lb/>
thetw i<lb/>
p r o t e i<lb/>
"drain shop" laws similar to<lb/>
bartender I nder such a law ,<lb/>
it a dealer sells a gun without<lb/>
a permit and thai buyer then uses<lb/>
( C Ontrol may be the gun to harm someone, the seller<lb/>
ould be sued.<lb/>
leir home<lb/>
"( ivil liability makes the law self-<lb/>
would be .<lb/>
u a gun. particularly<lb/>
w how ? i die a<lb/>
said his research<lb/>
j him the sheer breadth<lb/>
mwide makes the<lb/>
treating the symptoms<lb/>
but that doesn 7 mean we<lb/>
shouldn 7 do something. " forcing he said.<lb/>
-Dr. Philip Cook<lb/>
has t<lb/>
? . in<lb/>
outlawing ol weapons impractical Hall ol the<lb/>
in America own some type ol firearm, he<lb/>
i  and now al least a fourth ol the households own at<lb/>
least one handgun.<lb/>
C ook also basked bans on sales ol<lb/>
concealable guns, adding that no<lb/>
honest person would want one as it<lb/>
already is illegal to carry a concealed<lb/>
tmbh?????? weapon.<lb/>
He also said police should be encouraged to become<lb/>
more active in seeking out concealed guns and con-<lb/>
fiscating them. Giving them magnetometers that can<lb/>
detect metal hidden a person is a big help. Cook said.<lb/>
Stamped<lb/>
En v elopes<lb/>
deeded<lb/>
Because ol the recent increase in<lb/>
the postal rates the office olareei<lb/>
Planning and Placement will be<lb/>
making life a little more com-<lb/>
plicated for ECU's seniors.<lb/>
Normally the office mails listings<lb/>
of job opportunities to seniors that<lb/>
are currently enrolled at EC1<lb/>
However the office is requesting all<lb/>
seniors to stop by and leave three<lb/>
stamped, sell-addressed em elopes<lb/>
in order to receive the mailing<lb/>
According to a statement released<lb/>
by the office this move was made<lb/>
necessary in order to "provide the<lb/>
necessarv services for the remainder<lb/>
ol this tisal vear<lb/>
Any student who will be living in<lb/>
Greenville this summer can pick up<lb/>
the listings themselves.<lb/>
Clarification<lb/>
In the ruesday. pril 14 issue ol ihe Easi<lb/>
c arolinian, an article appeared titled Rape<lb/>
Prevention Ruks to Remember rhe arti<lb/>
cle as written bs I wine Singleton and<lb/>
originally appeared in a rape prevention pam<lb/>
hlei written bv Ms. Singleton We regrel no'<lb/>
phlei ?-<lb/>
giving I ynne Singleton due credii ana<lb/>
apologize tor ihe oversight<lb/>
Booze and Pills<lb/>
can cause serious problems.<lb/>
More help may soon he available.<lb/>
S(, President Lester Nail<lb/>
was administered the oath oj office at the Si, 1 banquet last neck.<lb/>
Atlanta Count Now 24<lb/>
All 1 (I PI Ihe 24th aftei he disappered, on March 2. He missing,<lb/>
young Atlanta black to be slam in ? md no sign ol sexual Investigators close to the task<lb/>
the past 21 months was asphyxiated abuse. 1 he youngstei was clad only force probe have speculated that the<lb/>
" uist' like 12 others before him, a in undershorts when found, as were killer or killers responsible tor most<lb/>
medical examiner said Monday. 'he corpses ol five other victims in of the homicides may be stripping<lb/>
n autopsy showed thai 15-yeai the baffling case. the victims and dumping them in a<lb/>
old loseph Bell whose bodv was 1 here were al least two other river as an additional safeguard<lb/>
founc in the South Rivet Sunday, similarties n n the Hell death, against detection. That p<lb/>
seven week- he vanished. V in mo I the cases, there was parently began materializing m<lb/>
'probably" was smothered, little or no indication of a struggle. lanuary after reports ous<lb/>
DeKalb Counts Medical Examinei nd, two other victims, 13-year-old material and othei trace evidence<lb/>
loe Burton described the cause ol Curtis Walket and 9-year-old Aaron police had found with some ol the<lb/>
de Uh is "suffocation oj a combina lackson, also were found in or near victims' bodies.<lb/>
lion ol suffocation and smothei - uth River, southeast of Atlan- V had happened so often these<lb/>
ine" ta. rhree othei victims were found past months, a numbing sadness<lb/>
' gul .  ; there was no sign of in anothet suburban Atlanta river. gripped a home in southwesl <lb/>
"ligature strangulation such as the Chattahoochee. ta Eddie Mayes, the Bell youi<lb/>
would be the case with a rope But. In addition to the 24 victims 23-year-old halt brother, said he<lb/>
he said the bodv was too decompos whose deaths are undei investiga- wished he could "dress uP like a lit-<lb/>
ed foi him to he certain. tion by a special police task force. tie kid and jusl hang out" on the<lb/>
Burton said that Bell apparently another black youngstei 10-year- See ATLANTA, page 3<lb/>
had been in the rivei since shortly old Darron Glass is still listed as<lb/>
Alcohol And Drugs Subject<lb/>
Of New Student Organization<lb/>
either in their own lives or, ning how to recognize and deal with<lb/>
BvPAULWHITl vicariously, through the lives of intoxication and problem drinking<lb/>
suftwrito their family or friends he con- behavior, according to Matthews<lb/>
A new student organization con- tinned. He added that during the summer<lb/>
cerned with the prevention ol "Our organization accepts the the organization will participate in<lb/>
alcohol and drug abuse among ECU reality of alcohol use as a pan ol the treshman orientation with a pro<lb/>
students was officially approved by social behavior of the university stu- gram called "Responsible Drinking<lb/>
the SGA lst week Ihe new dent Tom Savidge said. "But we Behavior as a University Student.<lb/>
organization, called the Campus also realize that some of out fellow "We encourage any student who<lb/>
Alcohol and Drug Program students get into serious trouble has an interest in this area to come<lb/>
(C D P is the outgrowth ol a with alcohol or other drugs which and work with us Matthews said,<lb/>
major research study which was negatively affeel their pursuit of "The experiences as a student<lb/>
conducted in 1978-1979 to deter- educational goals he continued, volunteer in this program are ex-<lb/>
mine the extent of chemical abuse in "By promoting the responsible use cellent preparation for future<lb/>
the ECU community. of alcohol, we feel we can reduce the careers in health or social science<lb/>
The new program is operated bv negative consequences which some programs he continued,<lb/>
volunteer ECU students, according students who use alcohol ex- Anyone interested in joining the<lb/>
to lerrv I otterhos, faculty advisor perience Savidge said. program may call 757-6793 or at-<lb/>
to the organization and chairperson The organization's office, called tend one of its meetings which are<lb/>
of the ECU Alcohol and Drue the Campus Center tor Alcohol and held on Thursday afternoons,<lb/>
Education Committee. 1)ru? Information, is located in 3:30-5:00 at the second floor con-<lb/>
The officers of the new organiza- rooms 301-303 Erwin and is open terence room, Frwin Building,<lb/>
tion are Alan Matthews, chairper- from 9 a.m5 p.m. Monday ,<lb/>
son; Laurie Austen, scribe; and through Friday .The office phone fho InQlftP<lb/>
Tom Sav,dee. treasurer. number is 757-6793. The center ot- J IR IHblUtT<lb/>
There are two primary goals ol fers confidential peer counseling, in- ???<lb/>
the organization, according to Alan formation concerning the use ol Announcements2<lb/>
Matthews "First, we hope to pre- alcohol and drugs, and reterral ser- Editorials4<lb/>
vent alcohol use Matthews said, vices, according to Laurie Austen. Classifieds6<lb/>
"Secondlv. we will provide treat- The program has recently com- Features5<lb/>
men! tor' students who experience pleted a series of training exercises eUers4<lb/>
alcohol or drug related problems with residence hall advisors concer- Sporls<lb/>
<pb facs="00057338_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIl 21, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
Graduating seniors o? the spr<lb/>
inq, summer or fall ot 1981, and<lb/>
who are members ot SO U L S<lb/>
are asKed to pay $5 00 tor the<lb/>
senior social to be held April 25 at<lb/>
Lake Ellsworth Club House trom 9<lb/>
until Each senior is allowed two<lb/>
guests who are not seniors<lb/>
Seniors will also have a voice m<lb/>
deciding the menu Your coopera<lb/>
tion is of utmost necessity<lb/>
Signatures and fees will be taken<lb/>
m the lobby of the Student Store<lb/>
trom 10 until 1 on Tuesday.<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday<lb/>
MEDIA BOARD<lb/>
The Media Board 'S now accep<lb/>
ting applications tor day student<lb/>
representative to serve on the<lb/>
Media Board Applications can be<lb/>
picked up in the Media Board Of<lb/>
fice Monday Friday Pub Blag 8<lb/>
am 1pm and 2pm 5 p.m<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
Seymour Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base, Goidsboro, NC will have a<lb/>
Co op position m recreation open<lb/>
for Fall. '81 Interested students<lb/>
should apply to the Co op Office,<lb/>
313 Raw! Building, 757 6979 before<lb/>
the end ot this semester<lb/>
The Department ot Energy Co<lb/>
op positions available tor Fall, '81<lb/>
tor the following majors<lb/>
chemistry, physics, qeoloqy, com<lb/>
puter science, health sciences,<lb/>
biology business administration,<lb/>
and lournalism Contact the Co op<lb/>
Office today!<lb/>
CAMELOT<lb/>
"Camelof" an idyllic place m a<lb/>
chivalrous time where the "ram<lb/>
may never fall till after sundown<lb/>
and the climate must be perfect all<lb/>
the year King Arthur, Merlyn<lb/>
Guenevere, Sir Lancelot and the<lb/>
Kn.ghts ot the Round Table they<lb/>
all come to vivid lite in the Ayden<lb/>
Theatre Workshop's current pro<lb/>
auction The cast, chorus and or<lb/>
t hestra are deep into rehearsal tor<lb/>
what promises to be an extremely<lb/>
engaging evening of musical<lb/>
entertainment<lb/>
Three performances are<lb/>
scheduled. Thursday and Satur<lb/>
day. April 23rd and 251h at 8 p m .<lb/>
and Sunday. April 26th at 3<lb/>
o'clock Don't miss this exciting<lb/>
presentation performed tor your<lb/>
pleasure by the fine cast members<lb/>
of the Ayden Theatre Workshop<lb/>
Admission is J2 00 per person<lb/>
SCJ<lb/>
There will be an organizational<lb/>
meetina ot the Society for Col<lb/>
leaia'e Journalists at 7 p m Tues<lb/>
day April 21, in Austin room 301<lb/>
All members and persons m<lb/>
terested m becoming members<lb/>
are urged to attend Plans tor the<lb/>
coming school year will be<lb/>
discussed<lb/>
PBL<lb/>
Ph. Beta Lambda will meet on<lb/>
Tuesday April 21 at 4pm in Rawl<lb/>
103 Nominations tor next year's<lb/>
officers will be closed, and voting<lb/>
will be held during the meeting<lb/>
All members are urged to attend<lb/>
this meeting<lb/>
DISCOUNT DAYS<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
discount days are Wednesdays<lb/>
and Fridays Every week you can<lb/>
save one third on the cost ot bowl<lb/>
ing, billiards and table tennis at<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling is one third<lb/>
oft each Friday from 3:00 until<lb/>
5 30 p m and billiards and table<lb/>
tennis are one third off each<lb/>
Wednesday trom 3 00 p.m until<lb/>
5 30 p m Don't miss it!<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi Na<lb/>
tional Honor Fraternity will meet<lb/>
at 6pm Wednesday m 132 Austin<lb/>
DOG DAY<lb/>
DOG DAY A new program of<lb/>
fered at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center will be lunch on Thursdays.<lb/>
Hot dogs (50 cents) and soft drinks<lb/>
from 1130 until 1:30. Address: 501<lb/>
East Fifth Street.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Applications arc now available<lb/>
m the Psychology office for the<lb/>
Nancy and Clinton Prewetf<lb/>
Memorai Scholarship and the<lb/>
Carol Faulkner Wray Scholar<lb/>
ships AH psychology maiors may<lb/>
apply Deadline is April 30<lb/>
MANAGER<lb/>
Anyone wishing to apply tor<lb/>
Retrigera'or Manager for the<lb/>
1981 82 school year may do so by<lb/>
coming by the SGA Office, Room<lb/>
228. Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
The Wake County Employment<lb/>
and Training Office is accepting<lb/>
applications from rising senior<lb/>
college students and graduate<lb/>
school students for summer<lb/>
employment as youth coor<lb/>
dmators College graduates who<lb/>
are interested in summer employ<lb/>
ment only and not actively seeking<lb/>
full time employment are also en<lb/>
couraged to apply For more infor<lb/>
mation. contact Linda Gaddis at<lb/>
the Carec Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Office, extension 6393<lb/>
SCHOLASTIC SEARCH<lb/>
The Scholastic All American<lb/>
Selection Comm-Mee is now r? cop<lb/>
ting applications for the 19S1 Sp'<lb/>
mg Semester Students who are<lb/>
active in schoias'ic organizations<lb/>
and who perform weit in class are<lb/>
asked to iom<lb/>
The Scholastic All American is<lb/>
an honor society founded to<lb/>
recognize tn s country's top<lb/>
CATHOLICS<lb/>
Catholic Students come to the<lb/>
Newman Center. 953 East Tenth<lb/>
Street Monday April 27th at 3 00<lb/>
p m for a picnic We have food,<lb/>
beer, volleyball, and more! Come<lb/>
and have a good time1 Bring a<lb/>
friend<lb/>
ELDERHOSTEL<lb/>
Persons over 60 years old who<lb/>
wish to spend a summer week on a<lb/>
university campus and enroll in<lb/>
non credit college courses, are in<lb/>
vited to participate m an<lb/>
"Elderhostel" program at East<lb/>
Carolina University June 28 July 4<lb/>
or July 5 11<lb/>
"ELderhostel' students, who<lb/>
will be housed on campus, may<lb/>
enroll m these special courses<lb/>
"Descriptive Astronomy a<lb/>
non mathematical approach to<lb/>
studying the universe, with em<lb/>
phasis on recent discoveries m the<lb/>
solar system and current theories<lb/>
on cosmology.<lb/>
? Folk Traditional America an<lb/>
introduction to tolklife as an im<lb/>
portant aspect ot American<lb/>
culture w.th a sampling of trad,<lb/>
tions trom American regional, oc<lb/>
cupationai and ethnic folk groups<lb/>
"Cultures in Collision The Ar<lb/>
chaeology and Early History of<lb/>
the Carolina Coast a detailed<lb/>
study ot English exploration here<lb/>
between 1584 and 1587 and the<lb/>
eventual "cultural collision" bet<lb/>
ween European settlers and the<lb/>
Carolina Algonkian Indians<lb/>
No previous background m any<lb/>
of the subjects to be taught Is re<lb/>
quired Each course will be<lb/>
enhanced by the use of films and<lb/>
slides, artifact displays or live<lb/>
performances Instructors are<lb/>
ECU professors No formal<lb/>
homework" is necessary<lb/>
"Elderhostel inspired by the<lb/>
youth hostels and the tolk schools<lb/>
of Europe, is designed to qive<lb/>
retirement aged persons the ex<lb/>
penences and intellectual stimuia<lb/>
tion of on campus life<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
program and application<lb/>
materials are available from Dr.<lb/>
Ralph Worthmgton. Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, ECU<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
LIBRARY<lb/>
Due to the recent cut in student<lb/>
hours. Jovner Library cannot pro<lb/>
vide extended hours during exam<lb/>
week ot spring semester 1981<lb/>
The library hours during exam<lb/>
week will be: Friday April 24, 8<lb/>
am 9 pm. Saturday April 25, 9<lb/>
am 5 pm . Tuesday April 28<lb/>
Thursday April 30, 8 a m 12 mid<lb/>
night Friday May 1.8am 9<lb/>
p.m Saturday May 2. 9 am 5<lb/>
p.m . Sunday May 3. 2 p m 12<lb/>
midnight, Monday May 4, 8am<lb/>
12 midnight<lb/>
SIGMA TAU DELTA<lb/>
Omicron Theta Chapter of<lb/>
Sigma Tau De"a National English<lb/>
Honor Society will celebrate its<lb/>
20th anniversary at 7 30 pm<lb/>
Wednesday m 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
The program will consist of<lb/>
poetry, prose and slide presenta<lb/>
tmns by 'acuity and student<lb/>
members. Several charter<lb/>
members are scheduled to talk<lb/>
about the history of the society<lb/>
Refreshments fitting the occas.on<lb/>
Ail; be served Photographs tor<lb/>
the yearbook will be taken, so all<lb/>
87 current members should at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
students Students are selected<lb/>
trom over 1 280 schools covering<lb/>
an 50 states Members participate<lb/>
in various nationally organized<lb/>
service projects each year<lb/>
Students are selected for con<lb/>
si.ir-ratior based on the extent of<lb/>
their academic and scholastic per<lb/>
lormance both m and out of the<lb/>
classroom No one factor .s weigh<lb/>
ed heaviest when a new member is<lb/>
considered A student's best asset<lb/>
must be his or hers "well<lb/>
roundedness "<lb/>
interested students are asked to<lb/>
send a stamped, self addressee<lb/>
envelope to Application<lb/>
Scholastic All American, Ao<lb/>
mmistrative Offices. P O Box 237<lb/>
Clinton. New York, 13323<lb/>
All students are encouraged to<lb/>
submit an application regardless<lb/>
ot their grade pomt average<lb/>
AtOTIOlL"Te<lb/>
immtiKM<lb/>
P?a?NANCY<lb/>
pragrtancr test, Wnf can<lb/>
rot. ?na probtrm ?r??nn<lb/>
cy covfttrting For twrltwr<lb/>
information coll ???)$<lb/>
(toll ' Iroo nwmtor<lb/>
?oe Ml-SMN botwoon t<lb/>
A.M.r M ?ttul?n<lb/>
oMft ?????-?<lb/>
HoMWOrfMMioftM<lb/>
?IT Wool I<lb/>
I St.<lb/>
PRE-MED?<lb/>
Current undergraduate pre-<lb/>
medical students may now<lb/>
compete for several<lb/>
hundered Air Force scholar-<lb/>
ships are to be awarded to<lb/>
students accepted into<lb/>
medical schools as freshmen<lb/>
or at the beginning of their<lb/>
sophomore year. The<lb/>
scholarship provides for tui-<lb/>
tion, books, lab fees and<lb/>
equipment, plus a $400 mon-<lb/>
thly allowance. Investigate<lb/>
this financial alternative to<lb/>
the high cost of medical<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
TSgt. Bob Payne<lb/>
U.S.A.F. Health Profes-<lb/>
sions Recruiting<lb/>
Suite Gl 1, 1100 Navaho<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
Raleigh, N.C. 27609<lb/>
(919)755 4134<lb/>
PUR FORCE<lb/>
SOCIANTH<lb/>
The SociologyAnthropology<lb/>
Club is holding its end of the year<lb/>
business meeting and tareweii<lb/>
party for its loyal following. All<lb/>
members are urged to attend, and<lb/>
it is suggested you bring your<lb/>
brown bag to add to the festivities<lb/>
We are meeting on Wednesday<lb/>
n.ght at 7 30 m Brewster D 302<lb/>
(April 22) If you nave any ques<lb/>
tions or would like to bring some<lb/>
special refreshments call Anna at<lb/>
752 0826<lb/>
LAW SCHOOL<lb/>
Are you interested m attending<lb/>
law school? The ECU Law Society<lb/>
will sponsor a "get together" tor<lb/>
all interested persons on Thurs<lb/>
day. April 23 m room 244 ot<lb/>
Mendenhalt Student Center from 7<lb/>
p m to 10:30 p m Your favorite<lb/>
beverage will be served! Anyone<lb/>
interested is urged to attend1<lb/>
CHESS<lb/>
We have moved! Yes the<lb/>
Greenville Chess Club is now<lb/>
located in the basement of the<lb/>
Senior CM zens Center on the cor<lb/>
ner ot 4th and Greene We meet<lb/>
regularly at 7 15 on Monday<lb/>
nights its iust a short walk trom<lb/>
campus Jom us1<lb/>
CORSO<lb/>
There will be a Corso meeting on<lb/>
Tuesday, Apr! 21st in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center room 242 at 5 p m<lb/>
This is the last meeting for this<lb/>
semester All corrections and<lb/>
social work majors are urged tc<lb/>
attend!<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
Applications tor contestants for<lb/>
Miss Black and Gold Pageant are<lb/>
now being accepted If interested<lb/>
contact any member of Alpha Phi<lb/>
Alpha fraternity or calll 752 9875<lb/>
GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Sigma s<lb/>
cosponsering a Spring Carnival<lb/>
with the Association tor Retarded<lb/>
Citizens on Saturday. April 25,<lb/>
1981. at Elm Street Gym from 10<lb/>
am to 4 p m There will be lots ot<lb/>
fun and games as well as a BAKE<lb/>
OFF For more information call<lb/>
752 9723 or 752 9228<lb/>
PHYSED<lb/>
Students planning to declare<lb/>
physical education as a maior dur<lb/>
mg this semester are required to<lb/>
satisfactorily complete a motor<lb/>
and physical fitness test prior to<lb/>
change of major m the fall<lb/>
semester This test will be given in<lb/>
Mmges Coliseum at 10 00 a m on<lb/>
Tuesday, Apr.i 28 The test is<lb/>
designed to measure agility, ab<lb/>
dommal strength shoulder<lb/>
strength and endurance, leg<lb/>
power, flexibility, and aerobic<lb/>
fitness Additional information is<lb/>
available by calling 757 6441<lb/>
SU ARTIST<lb/>
Apply now for the Student Union<lb/>
Artists position and get work ex<lb/>
penence with pay while still m<lb/>
school<lb/>
Active m all phases of produc<lb/>
tion designing, submitting roughs<lb/>
for approval. preparing<lb/>
mechanicals, setting type, coor<lb/>
dmating projects with commercial<lb/>
printers.<lb/>
Responsibility include designing<lb/>
calendar brocures newspaper<lb/>
ads and posters<lb/>
DISCOUNT DAYS<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Centers<lb/>
discount days are Wednesdays<lb/>
and Fridays Every week you can<lb/>
save 13 on the cost of bowling<lb/>
billiards and table tennis at<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling is 13 oft<lb/>
each Friday from 3 00 p. m. until<lb/>
5 30 pm and billiards and table<lb/>
tennis are 13 oft each Wednesday<lb/>
from 3 00 pm until 5 30 p.m<lb/>
Don't miss it!<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma, freshman honor<lb/>
society, will award book scholar<lb/>
ships to a rising junior and a rising<lb/>
senior in the amount ot S100 each<lb/>
to be used during the 1981 82 school<lb/>
year Applicants must be<lb/>
members of Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Qualifications emphasize par<lb/>
tiopation in the ECU chapter of<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma and high academic<lb/>
achievement Interested students<lb/>
should see Dr John D Ebbs. Pro<lb/>
lessor of English, at 214 Austin<lb/>
HILLEL<lb/>
Come to the Hillel Passover<lb/>
Brunch at 12 00 on April 26 at the<lb/>
synagogue, 1420 E 14th St We will<lb/>
hold elections for next years of<lb/>
ticers It you wish to run for an of<lb/>
fice, want a ride, or more info .<lb/>
call Jerry at 752 5942<lb/>
GAME ROOM<lb/>
The College Hill Game Room,<lb/>
located in the Aycock basement,<lb/>
features electronic games, pm<lb/>
ball, pool, pnq pong and toosebaii<lb/>
Hours are Mon Thurs 12 11<lb/>
p.m Friday 12 5pm and Sun 8<lb/>
11 p m All proceeds are returned<lb/>
to the students through the Student<lb/>
Residence Association, please<lb/>
support the game room<lb/>
FACULTYSTAFF<lb/>
AH ECU faculty and staff<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
members take advantage ot your<lb/>
discount day at the Bowling<lb/>
Center m Mendenhall Every<lb/>
Wednesday from 5 00 p.m until<lb/>
8 00 p.m faculty and staff MSC<lb/>
mefWjW may bowl two (2) games<lb/>
ano get a 3ra game FREE Don t<lb/>
forget Wednesday is savings<lb/>
day at the Bowling Center<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian<lb/>
Serving tht- CVMQM3 t ,mimum!<lb/>
? . iv;<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday curing the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
mg the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ficial newspaper ot East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, ana published tor and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business S35 yearly<lb/>
All others S25 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
Telephone 757 636.637.6309<lb/>
Fosdick's Seafood Savers<lb/>
Nightly 5:00-9:00pm<lb/>
Tuei. Fish Fry- All I .He Fish You Can tat With A Mug<lb/>
Of Your Favorite Beverage$3.99<lb/>
Wed. Shrimp Treat- Delicious Calabash Shnmp With French<lb/>
Fries, Cole Slav and Our Famous Hushpuppies$3.99<lb/>
Thur. Family Night A Seafood Sampler With Calabash<lb/>
Shrimp, Fried Fish, Oysters and Deviled Crab$4.99<lb/>
Tues,Wed,Thur(Oyster Bar Only) 1 Doz. Halfshell<lb/>
Oysters (Steamed or Raw) And A Mug Of Your Favorite Beverage<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
Ph. 756-2011<lb/>
MBffl-tod g<lb/>
aLiifiaauLitt<lb/>
Taco Bell<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Special<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Monday PJ"S tax<lb/>
Enchirito, Bean Burrito - Small Drink<lb/>
Tuetday<lb/>
Burrito Surpreme, Tostada - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Wedneiday<lb/>
Beefy Tostada, Taco -Small Drink<lb/>
Thurtday<lb/>
Beef Burrito, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Combo Burrito, Taco - Small Drink<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Two Taco Surpremes - Small Drink<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Two Tacos, Pintos 'n Cheese - Small<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
?<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily av<lb/>
!below the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store, except as<lb/>
in this ad.<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, APRIL 25, AT AAP IN Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER<lb/>
RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
ivailable for sale at or<lb/>
specifically noted 1<lb/>
Highway 264 By-Pass Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center Greenville N.C.<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS BAGGED<lb/>
 Whole Fryers or<lb/>
 Mixed Parts ?.<lb/>
m<lb/>
A&amp;P HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Full Cut<lb/>
Round Steak<lb/>
Bone-In<lb/>
$ Allgood<lb/>
 Hot Dogs<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
79<lb/>
Market Style<lb/>
i Sliced Bacon<lb/>
98<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
SAVE 54 ON 2<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
In<lb/>
Quarters<lb/>
Mrs. Filbert's<lb/>
2 ? I00<lb/>
HOMESTYLE OR BUTTERMILK<lb/>
A&amp;P Biscuits<lb/>
U cans 9jP<lb/>
GOLD MEDAL OR<lb/>
Red Band Flour<lb/>
Plain<lb/>
Self-Rising<lb/>
Unbleached 5 D<lb/>
bag<lb/>
79c<lb/>
CONTAINS RICH BRAZILIAN COFFEE<lb/>
Eight OCIock<lb/>
? ICMT<lb/>
0-CLOC<lb/>
'NSTANT<lb/>
COFFEE<lb/>
Instant<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
Ann Page Pizzas<lb/>
10 oz.<lb/>
jar<lb/>
2<lb/>
99<lb/>
ANN PAGE FROZEN<lb/>
Hamburger<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Sausage 12oz<lb/>
Cheese pkg.<lb/>
? Salisbury Steak<lb/>
? Meat Loaf<lb/>
? Chicken 11 oz<lb/>
?Turkey pkg<lb/>
Coca Cola, Mello Yello<lb/>
Qrange Crush Grape Crush<lb/>
16oz no return Bottle ctn<lb/>
$199<lb/>
jTide Detergent<lb/>
49<lb/>
Extra<lb/>
Action<lb/>
49 oz.<lb/>
box<lb/>
Scottowels<lb/>
59c<lb/>
? Arts n' Flowers<lb/>
? Decorated<lb/>
Save 20c big<lb/>
roll<lb/>
470C Coupon).<lb/>
PURE CANE GRANULATED<lb/>
Dixie Crystals<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
I  " 675<lb/>
 LIMITONEWITHTHISCOUPON GOOD THRU SAT, APRIL25, AT A4P IN Greenville N.C?<lb/>
Sugar<lb/>
4&amp;&amp;S&amp;L<lb/>
FOR FRESHNESS AND SAVINGS<lb/>
FLORIDA CRISP SOLID<lb/>
Head Lettuce<lb/>
large<lb/>
heads<lb/>
WASHINGTON STATE RED<lb/>
Delicious Apples<lb/>
m t 49c<lb/>
FRESH, RED, RIPE<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
99c<lb/>
Jane Parker<lb/>
Shortcakes<lb/>
6 pkg. 59 ctn.<lb/>
i. kj id<lb/>
trustees<lb/>
Pr<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
legislatic<lb/>
"greatly!<lb/>
mJ<lb/>
hav I<lb/>
an<lb/>
w hen<lb/>
I<lb/>
tran-p.<lb/>
j<lb/>
ed<lb/>
an<lb/>
1<lb/>
Maiol<lb/>
the<lb/>
w ill<lb/>
hardshij<lb/>
olinl<lb/>
Hi- <lb/>
I<lb/>
ire<lb/>
C arolinj<lb/>
minimi!<lb/>
'?Th(<lb/>
tion<lb/>
ms<lb/>
prove<lb/>
?<lb/>
"But t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057338_0003"/><lb/>
???<lb/>
<lb/>
Sr<lb/>
I<lb/>
19<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
0<lb/>
?5<lb/>
Photo By JON JORDAN<lb/>
Nick Francis, left, receives a commendation from Chancellor Ihomas Brewer, center, and board of<lb/>
trustees member Ashle Futretl, right, for outstanding service to the university.<lb/>
Professor Studies Problems<lb/>
Issues affecting<lb/>
North Carolina's sea<lb/>
scallop fishermen<lb/>
(shellstockers) and pro-<lb/>
cessors will be studied<lb/>
bv an Fast Carolina<lb/>
I niversit) professor, as<lb/>
part oi the I NC Sea<lb/>
Grant Program.<lb/>
Dr. John Maiolo,<lb/>
chairman of the ECl<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Sociology and An-<lb/>
thropology, has been<lb/>
awarded a $5,460 grai I<lb/>
for the study, which<lb/>
will involve investiga-<lb/>
tion of impending<lb/>
legislation which will<lb/>
"greatly affect the op-<lb/>
tion many shrimpers<lb/>
have to switch to sea<lb/>
scalloping in the mid<lb/>
and North Atlantic<lb/>
when shrimping is<lb/>
poor<lb/>
"These fishermen<lb/>
stock the scallops in<lb/>
their shells for<lb/>
transport to North<lb/>
Carolina for process-<lb/>
ing Maiolo said.<lb/>
"About 1,000 North<lb/>
Carolinians are invok-<lb/>
ed in the industry,<lb/>
main of whom are<lb/>
women<lb/>
Maiolo will examine<lb/>
the effects of different<lb/>
policies, designed to<lb/>
improve the total<lb/>
economic yield by<lb/>
restricting harvesting to<lb/>
larger scallops<lb/>
One of the policies<lb/>
will "clearly create<lb/>
hardship" for North<lb/>
Carolinians, he said.<lb/>
His objective is to<lb/>
discover the point at<lb/>
which the yield will in-<lb/>
crease bui economic<lb/>
hardship to North<lb/>
Carolinians be kept at a<lb/>
minimum.<lb/>
"There is no ques-<lb/>
tion that something<lb/>
must be done to im-<lb/>
prove the sea scallop<lb/>
stocks Maiolo says.<lb/>
"But to create a policy<lb/>
where all of the benefits Carolina shellstockers designed to develop a<lb/>
go to New ngland and processors. total picture of North<lb/>
fishermen, while all the The research is part Carolina fishing oc-<lb/>
hardship falls on the of a series ol projects cupations.<lb/>
shoulders ol North which Maiolo directs.<lb/>
Opinions Voiced<lb/>
Against Tuition Hikes<lb/>
With a flair fot the dramatic, the<lb/>
comical and the ridiculous, students<lb/>
across the country are registering<lb/>
their opposition to almost universal<lb/>
tuition hikes<lb/>
About 35 Cornell U. students<lb/>
tried to voice their disma) over a<lb/>
tuition hike b turning in checks<lb/>
printed on Pshirts to the school<lb/>
treasurer's office. I he students, in-<lb/>
cluding two women wearing only<lb/>
brassieres undei their protest shirts,<lb/>
marched into the bursar's office and<lb/>
symbolically stripped the specially<lb/>
printed shirts off their backs, c or-<lb/>
nell officials gave each student a<lb/>
receipt acknowledging the protest,<lb/>
but said students would have to turn<lb/>
in regular checks to avoid paving the<lb/>
extra SI5 needed to process each<lb/>
shirt at a bank. Protest leaders<lb/>
say then goals, which included<lb/>
media attention, were accomplished<lb/>
even if the T-shirts weren't ac-<lb/>
cepted.<lb/>
Media attention was also the goal<lb/>
of students at nine campuses within<lb/>
the State U. ol New York system as<lb/>
they protested in-state tuition rates<lb/>
ol $1,050 bv symbolical!) seceding<lb/>
from SI N and joining the C alifor-<lb/>
nia universitj system. The protest<lb/>
was led bv the Student Association<lb/>
of State I niversities (SASU), which<lb/>
chose California as a new home<lb/>
because that state "has a real com-<lb/>
mitment lo higher education says<lb/>
SAM President Jim Stern. One ol<lb/>
the seceding schools, SUNY-<lb/>
Binghamton, announced the U. ol<lb/>
Wisconsin as its preferred foster<lb/>
parent.<lb/>
More traditional protest marches<lb/>
took place on many campuses, in-<lb/>
cluding North rexas State I  where<lb/>
200 students marched to chants of<lb/>
"No more and "Impeach<lb/>
(University President) Alexander"<lb/>
as part of Students Against Tuition<lb/>
I ax Day.<lb/>
-t the U. of Pennsylvania,<lb/>
however, students bypassed noisy<lb/>
protests for a more reasoned ap-<lb/>
proach. The student government<lb/>
there launched two separate efforts<lb/>
to identify areas where tuition<lb/>
money is being misspent, in hopes<lb/>
of keeping down future costs, says<lb/>
1 ee Brown, a member of the<lb/>
University Council Steering Com-<lb/>
mittee. One such effort. Operation<lb/>
Golden Fleece, is modeled after<lb/>
Wisconsin Sen. William Proxmire's<lb/>
national efforts to eliminate waste.<lb/>
The other examines how university<lb/>
money is spent, or misspent, says<lb/>
Brown. For example, students<lb/>
discovered that faulty sump pumps<lb/>
are causing extremely dangerous<lb/>
conditions in the basement of a dor-<lb/>
mitory . "Our investigation points to<lb/>
a general problem? that the univer-<lb/>
sity makes an investment in equip-<lb/>
ment, but too often buys cheaper<lb/>
materials and doesn't follow<lb/>
through on maintenance says<lb/>
Brown. "In the long run, that ends<lb/>
up costing a lot more money A<lb/>
report on the dorm conditions has<lb/>
been filed with the administration,<lb/>
which has not yet responded. Brown<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Not all anti-tuition hike efforts<lb/>
pit students against administrators,<lb/>
though. At Western Kentucky U<lb/>
more than 200 students braved<lb/>
1 1 -degree temperatures to attend a<lb/>
"Back Zack" rally expressing sup-<lb/>
port for University President<lb/>
Donald Zacharias' efforts to get<lb/>
more money for higher education<lb/>
from state government. The ram-<lb/>
bunctious crowd marched to the ad-<lb/>
ministration building, looking to<lb/>
some like a lynch mob, but broke in-<lb/>
to cheers when Zacharias stepped<lb/>
out of the buildine.<lb/>
<lb/>
??p v v M?v, 5iop,K<lb/>
? l??. CM( k fl ' ;??<lb/>
 t' ? ?<lb/>
? S'? <lb/>
??????.1<lb/>
BENNIES<lb/>
crrco<lb/>
WRECKER<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Atlanta's Death<lb/>
Count To 24<lb/>
THE LAST CAROLINIAN APRII 21. 1981<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
street because he felt<lb/>
sure "he's (the killer or<lb/>
killers) going to strike<lb/>
again<lb/>
Burton said there<lb/>
was no evidence of ex-<lb/>
ternal trauma to the<lb/>
body other than it be-<lb/>
ing snagged on debris<lb/>
in the river. The body,<lb/>
discovered by a couple<lb/>
test-driving a motor-<lb/>
bike, was lodged<lb/>
against a tree on the<lb/>
river bank, forming a<lb/>
dam.<lb/>
He said the autopsy<lb/>
did reveal something of<lb/>
what the youth ate<lb/>
before he died. He<lb/>
declined to elaborate<lb/>
but said "it is the kind<lb/>
of thing that will be<lb/>
helpful in tracing the<lb/>
(boy's) last steps<lb/>
He said he found no<lb/>
evidence of sexual<lb/>
abuse on Bell's body<lb/>
nor in those of the<lb/>
several other victims he<lb/>
has examined.<lb/>
"There have been a<lb/>
lot of rumors about the<lb/>
genital organs in the<lb/>
children that have been<lb/>
found dead Burton<lb/>
said. "Of all those<lb/>
(autopsies) that I have<lb/>
personally done and<lb/>
been completely intact<lb/>
as in this case of Joseph<lb/>
Bell<lb/>
He did say, however,<lb/>
that the decomposition<lb/>
prevented a determina-<lb/>
tion as to whether there<lb/>
might have been other<lb/>
abuse.<lb/>
"The body had been<lb/>
in the river for such a<lb/>
long time, it is not the<lb/>
kind of case that lends<lb/>
itself to a lot of<lb/>
evidence he said, ad-<lb/>
ding that the tissue<lb/>
from the body would<lb/>
be more closely ex-<lb/>
amined.<lb/>
Meanwhile, about<lb/>
200 volunteers<lb/>
recruited by the United<lb/>
Youth Adult Con-<lb/>
ference, which<lb/>
organizes weekend<lb/>
searches, began their<lb/>
neighborhood patrols<lb/>
Monday in hopes of<lb/>
preventing any more<lb/>
children from benim<lb/>
killed.<lb/>
Eddie Dodson, an<lb/>
organizer, said about<lb/>
50 volunteers were<lb/>
trained and cleared by<lb/>
police about two weeks<lb/>
ago and and the re-<lb/>
maining 150 began<lb/>
their patrols Monday.<lb/>
it HI &amp; <lb/>
ill' IJII<lb/>
Buffet Specials All You Can Eat<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
MonTues.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
11:30 - 2:00 Soup-Salad-Pizza<lb/>
6:00 - 8:30 Soup-Salad-Pizza<lb/>
12:00 - 2:00 SpagSalad Pizza<lb/>
Wednesday Spaghetti Day 11.00 - 11:00<lb/>
Spaghetti-Toast Coffee or Tea<lb/>
All You Can Eat $2.49<lb/>
Thursday Lasagna Day 11:00 - 11:00<lb/>
Buy One Lasagna At Regular Price Get<lb/>
Second One For A Dollar<lb/>
Phone 758-6266<lb/>
1840 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
optjoars<lb/>
?K<lb/>
ofi<lb/>
10 Discount to Students &amp; Facualty<lb/>
Over 1,000 Frames to choose from<lb/>
Single Vision-White Glass Lenses$19.50<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses ? White Glass$30.50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Lenses$26,50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Extra$32.50<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses Photo GrayS38 SO<lb/>
Soft Contact Lenses<lb/>
$79.95<lb/>
CLEAR-VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
aMINVH.il C 8'WniWl t?tt OW)y grncmoMM<lb/>
?rr?ieiiito?o?Ai.OLt m-n -?'t?V?ZJ1 ,<lb/>
WHSMSt nw-i?w mm jvn rnm '<lb/>
tMaw nun tbfwr?lM' ?? "?<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
ZT SHIRT<lb/>
Reg. $20.00<lb/>
Now<lb/>
$16.99<lb/>
Lacoste Your favorite<lb/>
look. The famous<lb/>
v alligator shirt in lots of<lb/>
fabulous colors of the<lb/>
rainbow.<lb/>
 <lb/>
t i<lb/>
MONTUC5. - AVAILABLE FOR<lb/>
PRIVATE PARTIES - PAPA KATZ WILL<lb/>
CATER ANY PARTY OR FUNCTION. WE<lb/>
ALSO HAVE A MOBILE D.J FOR ANY<lb/>
PARTY ANYTIME.<lb/>
WfcCL - "ORIGINAL LADIES' LOCKOUT"<lb/>
- 8.30-10:00 - LADIES ONLY - GENTS<lb/>
IN AFTER 10:00.<lb/>
THURS. - "SUPER COLLEGE NIGHT-<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE SrG EPS - DOORS<lb/>
OPEN FROM 8:30 to 1:00 - NOW WITH<lb/>
THE BIGGEST SHAG CONTEST IN GREEN-<lb/>
VILLE. COME OUT FOR THE DANCE OFF<lb/>
MAIN DANCE OFF ON MARCH 19th<lb/>
WITH OVER $300 00 IN CASH &amp; PRIZES.<lb/>
FRI. <lb/>
SUPER CHICKEN PICKIN' at<lb/>
The KATZ. Doors open at 3:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
COMING MAY 12th<lb/>
The Band Of<lb/>
Oz"<lb/>
There's More<lb/>
Elbow Room in<lb/>
Our Attic!<lb/>
River Bluff Rd.<lb/>
Behind putt Putt<lb/>
758-7912<lb/>
"A Touch<lb/>
Of Class<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION<lb/>
All member j will be entitled to 1 guests per evening Neat dress<lb/>
and proper identification wilt be required of ail members and<lb/>
guests<lb/>
This special INTRODUCTORY MEMBERSHIP is only $1.M.<lb/>
All applications and dues mutt be returned to this address: P.O.<lb/>
Box lMl, Greenville NX I7U4. NX Slate Law requires a thirty<lb/>
day membership waiting period from dele el application lor<lb/>
clubs with brown bagging permits<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP -??<lb/>
AoMtrm<lb/>
? Occupation.<lb/>
I ?J-VaVl<lb/>
I nofvfti ,<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
DAT!<lb/>
SJCNATUM<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057338_0004"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
19<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
?5<lb/>
Photo By JON JORDAN<lb/>
Nickj Francis, left, receives a commendation from Chancellor I homas Brewer, center, and board of<lb/>
trustees member Ashlev Kutrell. right, for outstanding service to the university.<lb/>
Professor Studies Problems<lb/>
issues affecting<lb/>
North Carolina's sea<lb/>
scallop fishermen<lb/>
(shellstockers) and pro-<lb/>
cessors vull he studied<lb/>
by an last Carolina<lb/>
I niversitj professor, as<lb/>
part of the I NC Sea<lb/>
Crant Program.<lb/>
Dr. John Maiolo.<lb/>
chairman of the ECU<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Sociology and An-<lb/>
thropology, has been<lb/>
awarded a $5,460 gran:<lb/>
tor the studs, which<lb/>
will involve investiga-<lb/>
tion of impending<lb/>
legislation which, will<lb/>
"greatly affect the op-<lb/>
tion many shrimpers<lb/>
have tii switch to sea<lb/>
scalloping in the mid<lb/>
and North Atlantic<lb/>
when shrimping is<lb/>
poor<lb/>
"These fishermen<lb/>
?k the scallops in<lb/>
their shells tor<lb/>
transport to North<lb/>
Carolina for process-<lb/>
ing Maiolo said.<lb/>
"About 1,000 North<lb/>
C arolimans are involv-<lb/>
ed in the industry,<lb/>
ni.m of whom are<lb/>
women<lb/>
Maiolo will examine<lb/>
the effects of different<lb/>
policies, designed to<lb/>
improve the total<lb/>
economic yield b<lb/>
restricting harvesting to<lb/>
larger scallops.<lb/>
One ot the policies<lb/>
will "clearly create<lb/>
hardship" for North<lb/>
Carolinians, he said.<lb/>
His objective is to<lb/>
discover the point at<lb/>
which the vield will in-<lb/>
crease but economic<lb/>
hardship to North<lb/>
Carolinians be kept at a<lb/>
minimum.<lb/>
"There is no ques-<lb/>
tion that something<lb/>
must be done to im-<lb/>
prove the sea scallop<lb/>
stocks Maiolo savs.<lb/>
"But to create a policy<lb/>
where all of the benefits Carolina shellstockers designed to develop a<lb/>
go to New 1 ngland and processors. total picture of North<lb/>
fishermen, while all the "The research is part Carolina fishing oc-<lb/>
hardship falls on the of a series of projects cupations.<lb/>
shoulders ol North which Maiolo directs.<lb/>
Opinions Voiced<lb/>
Against Tuition Hikes<lb/>
With a flair for the dramatic, the<lb/>
comical and the ridiculous, students<lb/>
across the country are registering<lb/>
their opposition to almost universal<lb/>
tuition hikes.<lb/>
About 35 Cornell U. students<lb/>
tried to voice then dismay over a<lb/>
tuition hike by turning in checks<lb/>
printed on T-shirts to the school<lb/>
treasurer's office. 1 he students, in-<lb/>
cluding two women wearing only<lb/>
brassieres undei theii protest shirts,<lb/>
marched into the bursar's office and<lb/>
symbolically stripped the specially<lb/>
printed shirts of! their hacks. Cor-<lb/>
nell officials gave each student a<lb/>
receipt acknowledging the protest,<lb/>
but said students would have to turn<lb/>
in regular checks to avoid paving the<lb/>
extra SI 5 needed to process each<lb/>
T-shirt at a bank. Protest leaders<lb/>
sa their goals, which included<lb/>
media attention, were accomplished<lb/>
even if the T-shirts weren't ac-<lb/>
cepted.<lb/>
Media attention was also the goal<lb/>
of students at nine campuses within<lb/>
the State U. ot New York svstem as<lb/>
they protested in-state tuition rates<lb/>
of $1,050 h symbolically seceding<lb/>
from SUN and joining the (. alifor-<lb/>
ma university system. I he protest<lb/>
was led by the Student Association<lb/>
of State Universities (SASU), which<lb/>
chose California as a new home<lb/>
because tha' stale "has a real com-<lb/>
mitment to higher education savs<lb/>
SASl President Jim Stern. One ot<lb/>
the seceding schools, SUNY-<lb/>
Binghamton, announced the I . ot<lb/>
Wisconsin as its preferred foster<lb/>
parent.<lb/>
More traditional protest marches<lb/>
took place on man) campuses, in-<lb/>
cluding North I exas State U where<lb/>
2(H) students marched to chants ol<lb/>
"No more and "Impeach<lb/>
(University President) Alexander"<lb/>
Atlanta's Death<lb/>
Count To 24<lb/>
HE EAST AKOI 1NIAN<lb/>
APRIL 21. 1981<lb/>
i in: .<lb/>
as part of Students Against Tuition<lb/>
lax Day.<lb/>
-t the U. of Pennsylvania,<lb/>
however, students bypassed noisy<lb/>
protests for a more reasoned ap-<lb/>
proach. The student government<lb/>
there launched two separate efforts<lb/>
to identify areas where tuition<lb/>
money is being misspent, in hopes<lb/>
ol keeping down future costs, says<lb/>
lee Brown, a member of the<lb/>
University Council Steering Com-<lb/>
mittee. One such effort. Operation<lb/>
Golden Fleece, is modeled after<lb/>
Wisconsin Sen. William Proxmire's<lb/>
national efforts to eliminate waste.<lb/>
The other examines how university<lb/>
money is spent, or misspent, savs<lb/>
Brown, lor example, students<lb/>
discovered that faulty sump pumps<lb/>
are causing extremely dangerous<lb/>
conditions m the basement of a dor-<lb/>
mitorv . "Our investigation points to<lb/>
a general problem? that the univer-<lb/>
sity makes an investment in equip-<lb/>
ment, but too often buys cheaper<lb/>
materials and doesn't follow<lb/>
through on maintenance says<lb/>
Brown. "In the long run, that ends<lb/>
up costing a lot more money A<lb/>
report on the dorm conditions has<lb/>
been tiled with the administration,<lb/>
which has not vet responded. Brown<lb/>
savs.<lb/>
Not all anti-tuition hike efforts<lb/>
pit students against administrators,<lb/>
though. At Western Kentucky U<lb/>
more than 200 students braved<lb/>
ll-degree temperatures to attend a<lb/>
"Back Zack" rally expressing sup-<lb/>
port for University President<lb/>
Donald Zacharias' efforts to get<lb/>
more money for higher education<lb/>
from slate government. The ram-<lb/>
bunctious crowd marched to the ad-<lb/>
ministration building, looking to<lb/>
some like a lynch mob, but broke in-<lb/>
to cheers when Zacharias stepped<lb/>
out of the buildine.<lb/>
Continued From Page I<lb/>
street because he felt<lb/>
sure "he's (the killer or<lb/>
killers) going to strike<lb/>
again<lb/>
Burton said there<lb/>
was no evidence of ex-<lb/>
ternal trauma to the<lb/>
body other than it be-<lb/>
ing snagged on debris<lb/>
in the river. The body,<lb/>
discovered by a couple<lb/>
test-driving a motor-<lb/>
bike, was lodged<lb/>
against a tree on the<lb/>
river bank, forming a<lb/>
dam.<lb/>
He said the autopsy<lb/>
did reveal something of<lb/>
what the youth ate<lb/>
be! ore he died. He<lb/>
declined to elaborate<lb/>
but said "it is the kind<lb/>
of thing that will be<lb/>
helpful in tracing the<lb/>
(boy's) last steps<lb/>
He said he found no<lb/>
evidence of sexual<lb/>
abuse on Bell's body<lb/>
nor in those of the<lb/>
several other victims he<lb/>
has examined.<lb/>
"There have been a<lb/>
lot of rumors about the<lb/>
genital organs in the<lb/>
children that have been<lb/>
found dead Burton<lb/>
said. "Of all those<lb/>
(autopsies) that I have<lb/>
personally done and<lb/>
been completely intact<lb/>
as in this case ot Joseph<lb/>
Bell<lb/>
He did say, however,<lb/>
that the decomposition<lb/>
prevented a determina-<lb/>
tion as to whether there<lb/>
might have been other<lb/>
abuse.<lb/>
"The body had been<lb/>
in the river for such a<lb/>
long time, it is not the<lb/>
kind of case that lends<lb/>
itself to a lot oi<lb/>
evidence he said, ad-<lb/>
ding that the tissue<lb/>
from the body would<lb/>
be mine closely ex-<lb/>
amined.<lb/>
Meanwhile, about<lb/>
200 volunteers<lb/>
recruited by the United<lb/>
Youth Adult Con<lb/>
ference, which<lb/>
organizes weekend<lb/>
searches, began their<lb/>
neighborhood patrols<lb/>
Monday in hopes of<lb/>
preventing any more<lb/>
children from being<lb/>
killed.<lb/>
I ddie Dodson, an<lb/>
organizer, said about<lb/>
50 volunteers were<lb/>
trained and cleared by<lb/>
police about two weeks<lb/>
ago and and the re-<lb/>
maining 150 began<lb/>
their patrols Monday.<lb/>
Buffet Specials All You Can Eat<lb/>
MonFri. ll:30 - 2:00 Soup-Salad-Pizza<lb/>
MonTues. 6:00 - 8:30 Soup-Salad-Pizza<lb/>
Sunday 12:00 - 2:00 SpagSalad Pizza<lb/>
Wednesday Spaghetti Day 11:00 - 11:00<lb/>
Spaghetti-Toast Coffee or Tea<lb/>
All You Can Eat $2.49<lb/>
Thursday Lasagna Day 11:00-11:00<lb/>
Buy One Lasagna At Regular Price Get<lb/>
Second One For A Dollar<lb/>
Phone 758-6266<lb/>
1840 E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
OPTICIANS<lb/>
10 Discount to Students &amp; Focuolty<lb/>
Over 1,000 Frames to choose from<lb/>
Single Vision-White Glass Lenses $19 iO<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses ? White Glass$30.SO<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Lenses$26,50<lb/>
Single Vision Photo Gray Extra$32.SO<lb/>
Bifocal Lenses Photo Gray$38.50<lb/>
Soft Contact Lenses<lb/>
$79.95<lb/>
CLEAR-VUE OPTICIANS<lb/>
QrwrnW tier Oitfy<lb/>
SMiNVKlC m c<lb/>
nrrsiciAai ouAO?uieii<lb/>
?VHOMIO ?<lb/>
??? fur<lb/>
wapi<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
17&amp;<lb/>
m shirt<lb/>
Reg. $20.00<lb/>
Now<lb/>
$16.99<lb/>
Lacoste Your favorite<lb/>
look. The famous<lb/>
k alligator shirt in lots of<lb/>
fabulous colors of the<lb/>
rainbow.<lb/>
a<lb/>
MONTUfi - AVAILABLE FOR<lb/>
PRIVATE PARTIES - PAPA KATZ WILL<lb/>
CATER ANY PARTY OR FUNCTION. WE<lb/>
ALSO HAVE A MOBILE D.J. FOR ANY<lb/>
PARTY ANYTIME.<lb/>
WfDL - "ORIGINAL LADIES' LOCKOUT"<lb/>
- 8:30-10:00 - LADIES ONLY - GENTS<lb/>
IN AFTER 10:00.<lb/>
THURSx - "SUPER COLLEGE NIGHT"<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE StG EPS - DOORS<lb/>
OPEN FROM 8:30 to 1:00 - NOW WITH<lb/>
THE BIGGEST SHAG CONTEST IN GREEN-<lb/>
VILLE. COME OUT FOR THE DANCE OFF<lb/>
MAIN DANCE OFF ON MARCH 19th<lb/>
WITH OVER $300 00 IN CASH &amp; PRIZES.<lb/>
FRI. <lb/>
SUPER CHICKEN PICKIN' at<lb/>
The KATZ. Doors open at 3:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
COMING MAY 12th<lb/>
The Band Of<lb/>
Oz"<lb/>
There's More<lb/>
Elbow Room in<lb/>
Our Attic!<lb/>
River Bluff Rd.<lb/>
Behind Putt Putt<lb/>
758-7912<lb/>
"A Touch<lb/>
Of Class"<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION<lb/>
All members will be entitled to 1 guests per eveninf. Neat dress<lb/>
and proper identification will be required ol all members and<lb/>
guests<lb/>
This special INTRODUCTORY MEMBERSHIP is only H 90<lb/>
All applications and dues must be returned to this address: P.O.<lb/>
Box 141, OreenviMe N.C. ?7fM. NC. State Law requires a thirty<lb/>
day membership waiting period trom date el application tor<lb/>
clubs with brown bagging permits<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP -?<lb/>
? OCCtnKrtKMt.<lb/>
I nOBVIil  ,<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
MutK<lb/>
DAT!<lb/>
StONATUm<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
 fc.ei?<lb/>
m dp. ?? .ml<lb/>
s<lb/>
<pb facs="00057338_0005"/><lb/>
3Uj iEaat (Earoltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
PAUl LlNCKE, Dvtctoro) AdhMttamtt<lb/>
Chris Lichok, Busmen t<lb/>
Ai ison Baku 1. .?? ? ?<lb/>
Pahi Coi i ins, gmmmj mmmh<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE, mmcvmheo'<lb/>
Deborah Hotaunc?, e?tdmr<lb/>
C'HARl I S CHANDl FR S.rH ?,l.r<lb/>
David Norris, ??(?? ??<lb/>
April 21, IWI<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Charlie Sherrod<lb/>
Former President Leaves<lb/>
A Trail Of Controversy<lb/>
Now that SGA President Charlie<lb/>
Sherrod's year in office has come to<lb/>
an end, the students, faculty and ad-<lb/>
ministration of East Carolina<lb/>
University can hardly be blamed if<lb/>
they breathe a collective sigh of<lb/>
relief. In recent weeks Sherrod's<lb/>
name has been mentioned again and<lb/>
again in connection with a list ot<lb/>
dubious achievements.<lb/>
During most of his term oi of-<lb/>
fice, Sherrod purred happily along,<lb/>
apparently keeping his nose clean.<lb/>
But he seems to react to SGA elec-<lb/>
tions the way a werewolf does to a<lb/>
full moon, there are few specifics<lb/>
that can be held against Sherrod,<lb/>
but a cloud of suspicion has never-<lb/>
theless hung over his administra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Take for instance his alleged role<lb/>
in altering Kirk Little's campaign<lb/>
advertisement that appeared in The<lb/>
East Carolinian. Though the ECU<lb/>
Honor Council found Sherrod not<lb/>
guilty of substituting one picture for<lb/>
another in the advertisement, he did<lb/>
admit to handling the picture that<lb/>
appeared in the ad. He also joked<lb/>
with several staff members that it<lb/>
might be funny if Little were shown<lb/>
wearing an Air Force ROTC<lb/>
uniform.<lb/>
Neither of these actions is a<lb/>
crime. But as SGA president, Sher-<lb/>
rod should never have placed<lb/>
himself in such a compromising<lb/>
situation. He should never have<lb/>
been at the newspaper office for so<lb/>
long that night (more than two<lb/>
hours), especially since he was a<lb/>
campaign worker for Little's oppo-<lb/>
nent, Angela Pepe.<lb/>
He was at the office to deliver a<lb/>
letter for the "Campus Forum" but<lb/>
stayed long past the time necessary<lb/>
to accomplish such a task.<lb/>
Then in a related event last week,<lb/>
two members of the Review Board<lb/>
accused Sherrod of trying to in-<lb/>
fluence their decision on whether or<lb/>
not to grant Pepe's appeal for a se-<lb/>
cond run-off in the the treasurer's<lb/>
race. Sherrod said he discussed the<lb/>
matter with several board members<lb/>
in a "public conversation" but<lb/>
denied .trying to influence their<lb/>
votes. But as a partisan member of<lb/>
Pepe's campaign team, he should<lb/>
have refrained from discussing the<lb/>
case with them at all. His position as<lb/>
SGA president carries great in-<lb/>
fluence whether he used it con-<lb/>
sciously or not.<lb/>
Another of Sherrod's dubious<lb/>
achievements in recent weeks has<lb/>
been his preferment of charges<lb/>
against Little. Sherrod had claimed<lb/>
that Little had slandered his reputa-<lb/>
tion by accusing him of altering the<lb/>
advertisement Sherrod spoke<lb/>
repeatedly of his intention to "clear<lb/>
mv good name But when it came<lb/>
time to heat the charges, Sherrod<lb/>
suddenly dropped them. He later<lb/>
said, "I dropped my charges against<lb/>
Kirk Little because the time of the<lb/>
trial conflicted with my political<lb/>
science honor society banquet<lb/>
After hearing this statement one<lb/>
wonders just how serious Sherrod<lb/>
was about "clearing his name<lb/>
Furthermore, such a cavalier state-<lb/>
ment shows little respect for the<lb/>
judicial process or the people who<lb/>
run it.<lb/>
But perhaps Sherrod's most<lb/>
cavalier act was his attempt to name<lb/>
Robert Swaim to the Media Board<lb/>
as the SGA representative. (Swaim<lb/>
was not able to take the position<lb/>
because the provision allowing such<lb/>
a change has never officially passed<lb/>
the Media Board.) Sherrod said he<lb/>
named Swaim as his proxy to the<lb/>
board as a protest of its actions. But<lb/>
whatever the reason, the move was a<lb/>
perfect example of the petty politics<lb/>
Sherrod has been chastised for<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
Such a move was obviously not<lb/>
made with the best interests of the<lb/>
student body in mind. And after all,<lb/>
it was the students whom Sherrod<lb/>
was elected to serve.<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
-mi i<lb/>
"Ml FATHER PKSSED IT ON TO ME, 50 I SUESS I LL HAVE TO W?o<lb/>
rr on to you and you'll have to pass it on to your kids.<lb/>
WHO WILL PASS IT ON TO THEIR KIDS. WHO WILL <lb/>
Club Attempts To Prevent Mining<lb/>
By RICHARD REEVES<lb/>
I'nitenal Press sndlc?lc<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? The Sierra Club is<lb/>
suing the federal government in an attempt<lb/>
to prevent mining in a wilderness area in<lb/>
northwest Montana. The plaintiffs, accor-<lb/>
ding to papers filed in U.S. District Court,<lb/>
include 12 grizzly bears.<lb/>
Sounds like more snail-darter<lb/>
foolishness to me. But then so do a lot of<lb/>
things being said these days around<lb/>
Washington by the new guardians of our<lb/>
natural resources, the appointees of<lb/>
Ronald Reagan; the same Mr. Reagan who<lb/>
once said if you've seen one redwood tree<lb/>
you've seen 'em all.<lb/>
Take James Watt, the new secretary of<lb/>
the interior. He spoke last month to an en-<lb/>
thusiastic conference of the companies that<lb/>
run concessions in national parks. The<lb/>
subject, at that moment, was horse trails,<lb/>
but Secretary Watt expanded the discus-<lb/>
sion to include his own opinion of the<lb/>
mistake God made in putting together the<lb/>
great outdoors.<lb/>
"You folks will quickly understand why<lb/>
I bring so much controversy and flak<lb/>
Watt said. "I don't like to paddle, and 1<lb/>
don't like to walk<lb/>
Well, Mr. Secretary, we could build a<lb/>
freeway through Yosemite National Park.<lb/>
It would make it more convenient for the<lb/>
lumber company trucks.<lb/>
What trucks? The ones they are going to<lb/>
need to get out all the trees that John<lb/>
Crowell is apparently ready to let the com-<lb/>
panies cut down on public lands. Crowell<lb/>
is Reagan's nominee as assistant secretary<lb/>
of agriculture for natural resources and en-<lb/>
vironment, the official in charge of the<lb/>
U.S. Forest Service.<lb/>
The Forest Service now allows private<lb/>
companies to take between 10 billion and<lb/>
12 billion board-feet a year from public<lb/>
lands and has projected that in 50 years<lb/>
perhaps 16 billion board-feet could<lb/>
reasonably be taken out per year. During<lb/>
his confirmation hearings. Crowell said he<lb/>
thought 35 billion board-feet could be<lb/>
taken out each year.<lb/>
The largest of those private lumber com-<lb/>
panies working on private lands, inciden-<lb/>
tally, is the Louisiana-Pacific Corp. of<lb/>
Portland, Ore. Crowell was an attorney<lb/>
for Louisiana-Pacific before his appoint-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
There is going to be a tremendous battle<lb/>
over the national parks and other public<lb/>
lands during the Reagan years. These are<lb/>
very tough, development-oriented people<lb/>
who have ,pent years talking up the<lb/>
"Sagebrush Rebellion" ? the Western<lb/>
movement to return millions of square<lb/>
miles in federal lands to state control. But<lb/>
there always has been a dark side to that<lb/>
revolt: It's the oil companies, the mining<lb/>
companies, the lumber companies and the<lb/>
developers who want the use of that land.<lb/>
Reagan has always sided with the<lb/>
developers ? or, depending on your view-<lb/>
point, the exploiters ? against responsible<lb/>
conservationists ? or, again depending on<lb/>
your viewpoint, crazed environmentalists.<lb/>
Now the administration and its friends in<lb/>
Congress, particularly Sens. Jesse Helms,<lb/>
chairmain of the Agriculture Committee,<lb/>
and James McClure, chairman ot the<lb/>
Energy Committee, are pushing ahead on<lb/>
all fronts to open public lands, waters and<lb/>
parks to saws and drills and trucks and.<lb/>
probablv, McDonald's, too.<lb/>
One of the first indications was the new<lb/>
budget appropriation to purchase land foi<lb/>
parks already authorized by Congress. Ihe<lb/>
total for the new acquisitions, zero.<lb/>
That, with continuing rising land prwev<lb/>
could effectively destroy all or parts ol a<lb/>
half-dozen parks 1 can think oi. Gateway<lb/>
in New York and New Jersey, the Santa<lb/>
Monica Moutains, Redwood National and<lb/>
Golden Gate in California; Padie Island in<lb/>
Texas; and the Cape Cod National<lb/>
Seashore in Massachusetts<lb/>
Maybe some of tKul is right and<lb/>
necessary. But how can we tell whether<lb/>
Reagan and his merry men are sensibh<lb/>
opening public lands to reasonable ex-<lb/>
ploration and development, or are just tur-<lb/>
ning millions and millions of acres over to<lb/>
greedy environmental rapists? Well, one<lb/>
way is to pay attention to organization<lb/>
like the Sierra Club and the Sierra Club<lb/>
Legal Defense Fund.<lb/>
"We won't stop them said Tim<lb/>
Mahoney, the club's Washington represen-<lb/>
tative. "But we will be there, and if we<lb/>
think that they are overstepping the law,<lb/>
we'll see them in court<lb/>
1 decided not to laugh about the grizzlies<lb/>
in Montana, and 1 sent another S25 to the<lb/>
Sierra Club. Watch those guys tor me. will<lb/>
you?<lb/>
False Prize Winner Teaches Lesson<lb/>
By CLAUDE SITTON<lb/>
The liar, that thief of truth, is always<lb/>
with us. For Janet Cooke, now formerly of<lb/>
The Washington Post, the horrible truth of<lb/>
drug abuse in the slums of the nation's<lb/>
capital was not horrible enough. So she<lb/>
took it and gussied it up.<lb/>
This reporter, and it hurts to link that<lb/>
word to such a dishonorable venture, peck-<lb/>
ed around among the scraps of informa-<lb/>
tion that she had gathered from social<lb/>
workers. And from these scraps, she<lb/>
created a fictional family.<lb/>
There was momma, the junkie pro-<lb/>
stitute, momma's lover, the dope pusher<lb/>
and Little Jimmy, the 8-year-old tyke who<lb/>
needed his daily fix of heroin.<lb/>
The world knows the rest, that the<lb/>
editors of The Post overcame nagging<lb/>
doubt about the story's authenticity,<lb/>
displayed this fiction on Page One and the<lb/>
submitted it for and won a Pulitzer Prize.<lb/>
All of this while city officials and the<lb/>
police were protesting that no such family<lb/>
existed.<lb/>
Now, the fame that came with the prize<lb/>
had unmasked this fraud and turned to<lb/>
notoriety for its perpetrator. The Post has<lb/>
accepted Miss Cook's resignation, publish-<lb/>
ed a front page admission of error and an<lb/>
editorial page apology and begun inquiry<lb/>
aimed at developing safeguards that would<lb/>
help to prevent a recurrence.<lb/>
So where does this leave Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
North America and their newspaper?<lb/>
Undoubtly, all newspapers will suffer.<lb/>
When a great tree of the forest falls, all<lb/>
others quake. However, readers would<lb/>
deceive themselves if they looked on<lb/>
Cooke's deception of her newspaper and<lb/>
her readers as typical or commonplace in<lb/>
the reporting process.<lb/>
The Cooke story was not the first news<lb/>
feature woven out of whole cloth and, un-<lb/>
fortunately, it will not be the last. But they<lb/>
are thankfully rare.<lb/>
The far more common problems that<lb/>
erode reader confidence in the press arise<lb/>
mostly from transgressions made in ig-<lb/>
norance and thoughtlessness. Most involve<lb/>
failure to adhere to that Golden Rule of<lb/>
journalism, which holds that reporters and<lb/>
editors must treat themselves with ac-<lb/>
curacy, fairness and balance.<lb/>
There are reporters who, in their<lb/>
eagerness to report not only the fact but<lb/>
the truth about the fact, let opinion slip in-<lb/>
to the news. There are those who become<lb/>
too friendly with their sources, be it the<lb/>
desk sergeant of police or the governor.<lb/>
Then, there are editors who nod over<lb/>
their pencils. There are others who no<lb/>
longer can muster the courage to say what<lb/>
needs to be said. And there are still others<lb/>
who have to accept their special view of<lb/>
reality and recognize no other. There are<lb/>
publishers who fall victim to the same<lb/>
habits and who stray across the thin line<lb/>
that divides community service from a<lb/>
more active role that has the appearance at<lb/>
least of a conflict of interest.<lb/>
The press sees these pitfalls and is con-<lb/>
cerned by them. As chairman of the ethics<lb/>
committee of the American Society of<lb/>
Newspaper Editors, 1 have been working<lb/>
during the past year with other members to<lb/>
produce a book on ethical practice-<lb/>
"Playing It Straight The book was writ-<lb/>
ten by John Hulteng, a former editorial<lb/>
page editor and now a professor of com-<lb/>
munications at Stanford University who is<lb/>
considered one of the nation's authorities<lb/>
in this field.<lb/>
The book comes at an opportune time<lb/>
for newspapers, which have been shocked<lb/>
into new awareness that they must guard<lb/>
against both the liar and those more subtle<lb/>
theives of press credibility.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Claude Sition is the<lb/>
editor oj The News And Observer in<lb/>
Raleigh. This column appeared in the Sun-<lb/>
day April 19 edition oj that paper.<lb/>
Assassination Attempt<lb/>
Sparks Control Talks<lb/>
By PAUL COLLINS<lb/>
Inevitably, the attempt on President<lb/>
Reagan's life has brought renewed talk of<lb/>
the need for gun control. Each time a<lb/>
famous person is the victim of gun-related<lb/>
violence the issue is brought up with<lb/>
renewed vigor, but after the initial shock<lb/>
and indignation have died down it fades<lb/>
once again into obscurity.<lb/>
When John Lennon was assassinated<lb/>
last December Reagan deplored such<lb/>
violence but said he did not feel the need<lb/>
for stronger gun control laws. Perhaps he<lb/>
will feel differently now that the issue has<lb/>
hit a little closer to home.<lb/>
John Hinckley, the president's alleged<lb/>
assailant, provides a perfect example of<lb/>
why gun control is necessary.<lb/>
Hinckley was allowed to purchase the<lb/>
gun he allegedly used to shoot Reagan and<lb/>
three others despite the fact that he was a<lb/>
former mental patient. He had also been<lb/>
arrested several months earlier with a suit-<lb/>
case full of weapons in a city where Jimmv<lb/>
Carter was scheduled to appear.<lb/>
Does the Constitution guarantee the<lb/>
right of someone like Hinckley "to keep<lb/>
and bear arms"? Hardly.<lb/>
Contrary to what the National Rifle<lb/>
Association would have us believe, most<lb/>
advocates of gun control do not endorse a<lb/>
total ban of private ownership of firearms.<lb/>
But the use of firearms is potentiallv<lb/>
dangerous and should therefore be<lb/>
regulated.<lb/>
The present crazy-quilt of state laws is so<lb/>
ineffective as to be worthless. What is<lb/>
needed is a single federal law requiring that<lb/>
all owners of firearms be licensed. If we<lb/>
can license hairdressers we can cer?ainlv<lb/>
license owners of lethal weapons.<lb/>
Eteonore klar<lb/>
Diane kurv.<lb/>
shown Ihis V <lb/>
lusion Both<lb/>
Th<lb/>
Hs lV<lb/>
1 <lb/>
1; <lb/>
keep dus! and<lb/>
but thev<lb/>
Triv<lb/>
B 1 V<lb/>
andWII I 1<lb/>
pay.<lb/>
vou S '<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
-<lb/>
"Bo<lb/>
'?A<lb/>
"Gi<lb/>
was Dot<lb/>
dep<lb/>
med<lb/>
5<lb/>
'?A<lb/>
1 01<lb/>
Ro<lb/>
Bra<lb/>
B STfl<lb/>
"I hank v 1<lb/>
diencc We'<lb/>
Everything's<lb/>
swell' One c<lb/>
1 ane had rer<lb/>
more than <lb/>
responsivenes<lb/>
appeared wi<lb/>
last Saiurda-<lb/>
disheveled ati<lb/>
side. Ihe tivj<lb/>
touring tot<lb/>
without an)<lb/>
But ds.<lb/>
of the road<lb/>
crowd, The<lb/>
an energetic<lb/>
set. The assi<lb/>
surprising pj<lb/>
voice was ai!<lb/>
pranced am<lb/>
band's tweil<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057338_0006"/><lb/>
<lb/>
,<lb/>
Ig<lb/>
lelms,<lb/>
iint tec,<lb/>
oi the<lb/>
Lad on<lb/>
rrs and<lb/>
ne new<lb/>
and foi<lb/>
!SS. The<lb/>
prices,<lb/>
a a<lb/>
tnta<lb/>
nal and<lb/>
,i in<lb/>
mal<lb/>
hi and<lb/>
her<lb/>
sensibly<lb/>
er to<lb/>
i<lb/>
I mi<lb/>
:sen-<lb/>
: we<lb/>
wu<lb/>
on<lb/>
. UCc-<lb/>
was writ<lb/>
editorial<lb/>
time<lb/>
shocked<lb/>
sard<lb/>
more subtle<lb/>
on is the<lb/>
erver in<lb/>
eared inSun<lb/>
)ui paper.<lb/>
t<lb/>
lact that he was a<lb/>
le had also been<lb/>
arher with a suit-<lb/>
where Jimmv<lb/>
(appear.<lb/>
In guarantee the<lb/>
iuckley "to keep<lb/>
National Rifle<lb/>
us believe, most<lb/>
do not endorse a<lb/>
rship oi firearms.<lb/>
ns is potentiallv<lb/>
Id therefore be<lb/>
of state laws is so<lb/>
rthless. What is<lb/>
I law requiring that<lb/>
K licensed. If we<lb/>
we can certainly<lb/>
Iweapons.<lb/>
THl t AS1 C AROl IN1AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
AI'KII 21. iyxi<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
'Peppermint Soda 'Illusion'<lb/>
Comprise French Twin Bill<lb/>
Fleonore Klarwein. Odile Michel and Anouk Ferjac in a scene from<lb/>
Diane Kurys' award winning "Peppermint Soda The film will be<lb/>
shown this Wednesday night at 9 p.m. following Renoir's "Grand Il-<lb/>
lusion Both films will be shown in the Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
This Wednesday night. April 22,<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre, the Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee will present a<lb/>
French Double Feature including<lb/>
Jean Renoir's classic film of 1937,<lb/>
"Grand Illusion" (rescheduled<lb/>
from April 1) beginning at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Following "Grand Illusion at 9<lb/>
p.m is Diane Kurys' award winn-<lb/>
ing "Peppermint Soda" (1978).<lb/>
Admission for both films is by ID<lb/>
and Activity Card for students and<lb/>
MSC Membership Card for faculty<lb/>
and staff.<lb/>
A war film without a single battle<lb/>
scene, "Grand Illusion" focuses on<lb/>
French prisoners during WW1 and<lb/>
the cultured German commandant<lb/>
(Erich von Stroheim) in charge of<lb/>
their prison camp.<lb/>
Von Stroheim respects one of his<lb/>
prisoners, an aristocratic French<lb/>
career officer (Pierre Fresnay). as<lb/>
his equal, and Renoir examines dy-<lb/>
ing codes of chivalry and<lb/>
disintegrating class structure<lb/>
through their relationship in this<lb/>
classic drama.<lb/>
In his essay on Renoir, Cierald<lb/>
Mast (A Short History of the<lb/>
Movies, pages 250-256) discusses<lb/>
the cinematic technique in "Grand<lb/>
Illusion<lb/>
"Music is one o' the film's leit-<lb/>
motifs. The musical trifle, 'Frou,<lb/>
I-rou, Frou,1 recurs several times.<lb/>
Another unifying tune is Tl etait un<lb/>
petit navire which we hear for the<lb/>
first time as Boeldieu's ruse to help<lb/>
MarechaJ and Rosenthal escape.<lb/>
"Boeldieu plays the song on his<lb/>
little toy flute; the tune diverts<lb/>
Rauffenstein's attention, but leads<lb/>
to the French captain's death.<lb/>
I ater, on the icy road, when the<lb/>
crippled Rosenthal and the impa-<lb/>
tient Mareehal quarrel and threaten<lb/>
to separate, Rosenthal starts sing-<lb/>
ing, Tl etait tin petit navire in de-<lb/>
fiance and anger.<lb/>
"As Mareehal stalks away from<lb/>
his lame comrade he unconsciously<lb/>
starts to sing the same song. I he<lb/>
Diane Kurys' "Peppermint<lb/>
Soda" is an effervescent concoction<lb/>
with a surprising kick to it. An<lb/>
unheralded first film by an<lb/>
unknown 29-year-old director, it<lb/>
went on to become the biggest gross-<lb/>
song ultimately brings Mareehal ing film in I-ranee and winner of the<lb/>
Prix Louis Delluc (Best Picture),<lb/>
followed by an equally unexpected<lb/>
success in the U S<lb/>
The film's free-flowing, matter-<lb/>
of-fact episodic structure has been<lb/>
back to his wounded comrade; he<lb/>
will not desert him again.<lb/>
"Consistent visual imagery is<lb/>
another source of the film's unity.<lb/>
Renoir's camera contrasts things<lb/>
that are hard, cold, and dead with compared to that of a scrapbook.<lb/>
The Trouble With Glasses<lb/>
Life Through The Eyes Of The Nearsighted<lb/>
B DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
rtalnrt's t dilor<lb/>
I'm not one to malign eyeglasses-<lb/>
without them, anything more than a<lb/>
couple o inches from my face<lb/>
dissolves into what looks like im-<lb/>
pressionist painting. Still, wearing<lb/>
glasses can have some annoying side<lb/>
effects.<lb/>
The world occassionallj has a<lb/>
tendency to turn slightly foggy to<lb/>
me. since 1 forget to clean my<lb/>
glasses until thev block out nearly<lb/>
all the light.<lb/>
I requenl cleaning can become<lb/>
necessarv, since glasses attract dust<lb/>
prettv easily. Windy days that raise<lb/>
lots o dust or a vvalk through a<lb/>
wood-working shop leave an im-<lb/>
mediate film of gravness on the<lb/>
lenses.<lb/>
It would seem like glasses would<lb/>
keep dusi and stuff out of my eyes,<lb/>
but they don't. Dust particles are<lb/>
pretty smart, and can easily sneak<lb/>
around the lenses. Another odd<lb/>
thing about my glasses is that rain-<lb/>
drops always fall on the inside of<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Rain doesn't wash glasses, as the<lb/>
uninitiated might think; it just sort<lb/>
of leaves spots and streaks. (Water<lb/>
fountains that spray in people's<lb/>
faces also leave spots and streaks.)<lb/>
Some day, I want to get a hat with a<lb/>
large enough brim to catch rain-<lb/>
drops. 1 don't know if there are any<lb/>
hats large enough to stop fountains<lb/>
from splattering on my glasses,<lb/>
though<lb/>
Another thing that gets glasses<lb/>
dirty is loaning them to people. It<lb/>
seems like everybody who wants a<lb/>
cheap thrill wants to try on your<lb/>
glasses, or they like to switch glasses<lb/>
and compare stories about bad vi-<lb/>
sion.)<lb/>
The problem with loaning glasses<lb/>
to people who aren't used to them is<lb/>
that they leave fingerprints all over<lb/>
them. Sometimes, they realize this,<lb/>
and wipe them o' which usually<lb/>
just smears the fingerprints all over<lb/>
them.<lb/>
I osing your glasses can be a<lb/>
traumatic experience. I've lost mine<lb/>
only a couple of times, and only in<lb/>
my own room, but that was bad<lb/>
enough. The whole tiling boils down<lb/>
into a "Catch-22" situation: I can't<lb/>
see well enough without my glasses<lb/>
to be able to look for them.<lb/>
The first time I lost my glasses<lb/>
was during my freshman year. After<lb/>
functioning haphaardiv in a blurry<lb/>
world for a whole morning, a guy<lb/>
who lived in my hall dropped by the<lb/>
room, sat down, and said. "There<lb/>
they are They had fallen o' my<lb/>
desk and were hung up in the wire o<lb/>
the telephone beside the desk.<lb/>
I lost them again this year, but<lb/>
this was because my room is in such<lb/>
a mess that anything could get lost<lb/>
in it.<lb/>
Breaking glasses is almost as bad<lb/>
as losing them. Once, I had to get<lb/>
the hinge on the frame of my glasses<lb/>
fixed. If you think waiting in an of-<lb/>
fice is bad, you should try it without<lb/>
being able to see anything. There<lb/>
was a table full o interesting<lb/>
magazines like "Lensgringer's<lb/>
Review and I couldn't even see<lb/>
them, since my glasses were being<lb/>
worked on.<lb/>
Another problem with glasses is<lb/>
that it's hard to wear 3-D glasses on<lb/>
top of them, so you miss out on 3-D<lb/>
movies.<lb/>
There are alternatives to wearing<lb/>
glasses, the cheapest of which is to<lb/>
get used to walking into things.<lb/>
A somewhat more exotic idea is to<lb/>
wear a monacle. Ever since I saw<lb/>
Colonel Klink on "Hogan's<lb/>
Heroes I have always been<lb/>
curious about monacles. Questions<lb/>
like "How do they keep them from<lb/>
falling oi'T' and "Why don't they<lb/>
just wear glasses?" came to mind.<lb/>
Contact lenses are a popular alter-<lb/>
native to glasses, but I worry too<lb/>
much about losing them. About the<lb/>
only way to detect a lost lens is the<lb/>
little crunch it makes you step on it.<lb/>
things that are soft, warm, and<lb/>
vital.<lb/>
"The story is set in winter; the<lb/>
consistent pictures of snow and<lb/>
frozen ground throw their cold,<lb/>
damp shadow over the entire film.<lb/>
The two escaped prisoners must<lb/>
struggle across an immense meadow<lb/>
of snow to reach safety in<lb/>
Switzerland. Vet ironically, the<lb/>
Swiss border, the place of refuge, is<lb/>
invisible. It is impossible to<lb/>
distinguish different nations<lb/>
beneath a common blanket of snow .<lb/>
"Only the German officer's an-<lb/>
nouncement that the two have made<lb/>
it informs us where the snow of Ger-<lb/>
many ends and the snow o<lb/>
Switzerland begins. That one can<lb/>
make such nationalistic distinctions<lb/>
between things that are really the<lb/>
same is one of the film's grand illu-<lb/>
sions, an illusion that freezes the<lb/>
human heart and condition to<lb/>
death.<lb/>
"In a film so full ot disastrous<lb/>
political illusions, it is difficult to<lb/>
determine which is the 'grand' one.<lb/>
That war can resolve political<lb/>
issues? That national boundaries ex-<lb/>
ist? That national boundaries do not<lb/>
exist? That class distinctions do not<lb/>
exist? That national distinctions are<lb/>
stronger than class distinctions?<lb/>
"Whichever of these intentionally<lb/>
paradoxical illusions is the grander.<lb/>
"Grand Illusion" pointedly con-<lb/>
demns the decadent, wasteful ar-<lb/>
tificiality of the ruling class that has<lb/>
caused the very war that will kill it.<lb/>
"With World War I. the<lb/>
aristocracy of Europe committed<lb/>
elegant suicide. To turn life into a<lb/>
cold murderous game with a series<lb/>
of artificial rules is ultimately to<lb/>
turn life into death<lb/>
The story centers on the friends,<lb/>
family, classes, vacations, sulks,<lb/>
misconceptions, pop records, bad<lb/>
grades, adventures, and misadven-<lb/>
tures of a Trench-Jewish schoolgirl<lb/>
from summer to summer in the<lb/>
epochal year of 1963.<lb/>
The originality and accuracy of<lb/>
Ms. Kurys' vision of adolescence<lb/>
immediately moved critics to place<lb/>
her in the company of Jean Vigo<lb/>
and Francois Truffaut, and, indeed,<lb/>
her announced intention to film a<lb/>
sequel, "Molotov Cocktail" (which<lb/>
has already been completed), has<lb/>
aroused the film's admirers with the<lb/>
anticipation ot an autobiographical<lb/>
series on the level o' Truffaut's An-<lb/>
toine Doinel films:<lb/>
Janet Maslin of The New Vork<lb/>
Times calls "Peppermint Soda"<lb/>
"an expert, utterly charming<lb/>
movie Film critic Andrew Sarris<lb/>
of The Village Voice says, "the<lb/>
nymphet-watcher in me was<lb/>
shamefully stirred by the grace and<lb/>
energy of all these extraordinarily-<lb/>
attractive young females. There is<lb/>
something marvelously matter-of-<lb/>
fact about the movie as it scatters its<lb/>
insights with a very casual in-<lb/>
telligence that one does not see on<lb/>
the screen very often these days<lb/>
As far as Kurys' technique is con-<lb/>
cerned, she shows that the cinema<lb/>
has now developed far enough to do<lb/>
without all the props that have been<lb/>
used to help the audience unders-<lb/>
tand what is happening.<lb/>
She shows that audiences can<lb/>
follow jumps in the story and are<lb/>
not worried if finally she docs not<lb/>
tie up all the loose ends. Her inten-<lb/>
tive use of what can be done with<lb/>
images and sounds is also masterful.<lb/>
Trivia Quiz For Western Fans<lb/>
B DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
and WILLIAM YELVERTOIN<lb/>
It. see it you varmints have been<lb/>
pay in' attention during all these TV<lb/>
westerns over the years, we've<lb/>
rounded-up a list of questions for<lb/>
you. Score; 0-4 - Go East, Young<lb/>
Man: 5-9 - even a dumb dude<lb/>
should've done better than that;<lb/>
10-14 - Good work, Kemosabe 15<lb/>
or more correct - fastest memory in<lb/>
the West.<lb/>
1. What was the name of the<lb/>
ranch on "The Virginian"?<lb/>
2. Name Ben Cartwright's three<lb/>
sons from the early days of<lb/>
"Bonanza<lb/>
3. Who played Doc Adams on<lb/>
"Gunsmoke"? Tor a bonus, what<lb/>
was Doc's real first name?<lb/>
4. Who was Matt Dillon's<lb/>
deputy on "Gunsmoke" who also<lb/>
ran a gun shop and dabbled in<lb/>
medicine?<lb/>
5. What was the name of the<lb/>
Indian chief in "F Troop"?<lb/>
6. Who played Tonto on "The<lb/>
I one Ranger" I V shows (and some<lb/>
movies, too)?<lb/>
7. What company was famous<lb/>
for sponsoring "Death Valley<lb/>
Days"?<lb/>
8. What well-known president<lb/>
of the United States once hosted<lb/>
"Death Valley Days"? (We thought<lb/>
we'd throw in an easy one.)<lb/>
9. Who was Captain<lb/>
Parmenter's girlfriend on "F<lb/>
Troop"?<lb/>
10. Who played Bart Maverick?<lb/>
11. What famous country singer<lb/>
sang the theme song to "The<lb/>
Rebel"?<lb/>
12. Peter Graves' brother played<lb/>
a marshal on TV for many years.<lb/>
Who is he?<lb/>
13. Name the actor who played<lb/>
Doctor Loveless on "The Wild Wild<lb/>
West<lb/>
14. What town was closest to the<lb/>
Ponderosa Ranch on "Bonanza"?<lb/>
15. Who were the two more-or-<lb/>
less reformed outlaws on "Alias<lb/>
Smith And Jones"?<lb/>
16. On "Kung Fu Caine was<lb/>
looking for somebody. Who was it?<lb/>
17. Tim Matheson and Kurt<lb/>
Russell starred in a short-lived<lb/>
western a few years ago, about two<lb/>
men searching for their sister who<lb/>
had been kidnapped by Indians.<lb/>
What was the name of the show?<lb/>
18. Chuck Connors starred in a<lb/>
series about an army officer unjust-<lb/>
ly kicked out from the service for<lb/>
cowardice. Name the series.<lb/>
19. Who played Hec Ramsey?<lb/>
20. Who played Paladin on<lb/>
"Have Gun, Will Travel"?<lb/>
?uibSb auoofl pjcq.iy<lb/>
0c auoog pjeipiy 61 PPi'CJfl<lb/>
'81 ?J??6?U 'L P1UEC1 Joqiojq<lb/>
sin '91 Gin.) PIN PlIB saH 1BM!U<lb/>
-urh il MD R!U!J!A tl minQ<lb/>
ieaqD!i ei s?UJV saiuRf z qstr)<lb/>
Auuqofn jauJEQ sauref oi HBf<lb/>
j38utM,Y '6 ub3b3j pinuox 8 dBOS<lb/>
xBioe  $p3qJ3M!S t!f '9 313<lb/>
Pli.W s u3!Jfl.O iw3tsj t u3lBf SBVl<lb/>
woqs aqj uo 3iueu jsjij siq tauojs<lb/>
uinqjilM i ("SJB3X waj r ttjjB woqs<lb/>
aqi ij3 'sjjaqoy ipujd Xq p3.Ed<lb/>
'uiupv) uiepy put? 3of 3n 'ssoh<lb/>
Z quicy qoiqs I :S1TASNV<lb/>
Robin Lane Rocks The Attic;<lb/>
Bramlett And English Tonight<lb/>
B STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
"Thanks. You've been a swell au-<lb/>
dience. We've had a swell time.<lb/>
Everything's been just swell- really<lb/>
swell One could detect that Robin<lb/>
Lane had rendered these lines with<lb/>
more than just a touch of sardonic<lb/>
responsiveness. The Boston rocker<lb/>
appeared with her"Chartbusters"<lb/>
last Saturday at The Attic looking<lb/>
disheveled and a bit on the weary<lb/>
side. The five-piece band has been<lb/>
touring for nearly two years now<lb/>
without any extended break.<lb/>
But despite the exhausting effects<lb/>
of the road and a rather insensitive<lb/>
crowd, The Chartbusters delivered<lb/>
an energetic, if a bit abbreviated,<lb/>
set. The assurance and continually<lb/>
surprising power of Robin Lane's<lb/>
voice was always in evidence. She<lb/>
pranced and strutted through the<lb/>
band's twelve song set with her<lb/>
endearing tough-girl stiffness, and,<lb/>
donning her guitar, threw in an oc-<lb/>
casional riff. During the band's an-<lb/>
them, "When Things Go Wrong<lb/>
Lane was riveting. Backed by four<lb/>
guitars and some hydraulic percus-<lb/>
sion work, she sang of emotional<lb/>
con fusion in a husky, resonant,<lb/>
uncertain voice that was far more<lb/>
honest and moving than anything<lb/>
else she did.<lb/>
To cap off the evening the band<lb/>
chose the title cut from their new<lb/>
album. Imitation Life, pushing it<lb/>
home with the strength and grace of<lb/>
a veteran group. Lane sang it well<lb/>
enough to hit you straight in the<lb/>
heart and to stun those in the crowd<lb/>
who had been standing idly for the<lb/>
better part of the performance. It<lb/>
was a gutsy display, part of a far<lb/>
gutsier evening than expected.<lb/>
Refuge recording artists Joe<lb/>
English and Bonnie Bramlett will be<lb/>
performing tonight at The Attic in<lb/>
downtown Greenville. The two solo<lb/>
artists have been brought together<lb/>
for a massive tour that marks their<lb/>
Attic appearance as the only North<lb/>
Carolina date for the pair.<lb/>
Bramlett @ English:<lb/>
New LP's On The Hay<lb/>
The first two albums on the<lb/>
Refuge label, English's newly releas-<lb/>
ed "Lights In The World" and<lb/>
Bramlett's soon-to-be-released LP,<lb/>
show a new direction in two well-<lb/>
established artist's solo careers.<lb/>
The combination of Joe's jazz-<lb/>
rock drumming and vocals with<lb/>
Bonnie's powerful R &amp; B vocals<lb/>
have produced an exciting stage<lb/>
presentation of two world-class per-<lb/>
formers.<lb/>
Joe English has been a predomi-<lb/>
See ENGLISH, page 6. col. 7<lb/>
Clockwise from top: Warner Brothers recording artists Robin Lane and the t<lb/>
English; singer Bonnie Bramlett. Lane gave an exciting performance Saturday n<lb/>
have teamed-up for a tour that includes the only North Carolina date for the<lb/>
hartbusters; drummer Joe<lb/>
ight. Bramlett and English<lb/>
Juo tonight at The Attic.<lb/>
NWMWMIMMM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057338_0007"/><lb/>
1 HI i S! CAROI IN1AN<lb/>
APRI1 21, 11<lb/>
LEHZrJiNG A sour Coll?G? Tht tijgg V?y<lb/>
j5v Pvit? AAtfis<lb/>
Bonnie and Joe At Attic<lb/>
( 5ooghT You ?)<lb/>
Efr?H f(L?S?rri swpy<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE Snare drum Pearl<lb/>
top ot the tine Extra deep Ex<lb/>
cond Call 757 3210<lb/>
FOR SALE Jensen Tri Axial 6 bv<lb/>
? m speakers New. still in box<lb/>
S80 Call 75 6136<lb/>
FOR SALE 1971 Fiat 124. needs<lb/>
transmission less than 3 000 miles<lb/>
on overhaul Call 752 4400 alter<lb/>
t 00 p m $800 firm<lb/>
FOR SALE Rotel 60 watts stereo<lb/>
ver with 4 channel<lb/>
capability ?'25 Soundesign<lb/>
8 track player recorder S50 BIC<lb/>
beltdrive turntable 575 Marantz<lb/>
75 watt 3 way speakers, 2 years<lb/>
eld shqht cabinet damage, ex<lb/>
cellent sound 5200 tor set Call<lb/>
Dave at 756 6455 or come by M 2<lb/>
Oakmont Squat u Apts after 5pm<lb/>
FOR SALE Siamese kittens<lb/>
seven weeks old. chocolate point<lb/>
Call 752 7218 after 5pm<lb/>
FOR SALE Yashica Mat 124 G<lb/>
twin lens reflex camera Great<lb/>
tor art student Asking 590 Only<lb/>
used twice. Call Lmdi 758 6445<lb/>
FOR SALE Stereo Opton.ca<lb/>
tuner Optomca integrated amp<lb/>
Also. BIC ?60 turntable and BIC<lb/>
vp 4 ?;?. akers 5350 or best otter<lb/>
Call ?5S 1259 and ask tor Kelvin<lb/>
FOR SALE PIONEER 880<lb/>
STEREO RECIEVER Nice 60<lb/>
watts a channel Only 6 months<lb/>
old Call 757 3210<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
HOOM4TES WANTED 2 male or<lb/>
roommates wanted to<lb/>
sir, -urfcious 3 bedroom house<lb/>
Ounnq summer and( ortall<lb/>
Convenient location to Carolina<lb/>
East Mall and Pitt Community<lb/>
580 month during sum<lb/>
met one third utilities and 56C<lb/>
month ore fourth utilities during<lb/>
the fall Can 756 9011 after 5 pm<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTFO 2 bedroom apt in<lb/>
Wilson Acres 4 blocks from cam<lb/>
pus 5145 mo plus one half<lb/>
utilities Call 752 9194 after 4 30<lb/>
APT FOR LEASE 60C<lb/>
Georgetown Runs from mid May<lb/>
to Mid August Call 758 0323<lb/>
ROOMMATES WANTED Nice<lb/>
house on 4fh St near campus and<lb/>
downtown From mid Ma, to mid<lb/>
August Call 752 2659<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMAT,E<lb/>
WANTED Only 577 per month<lb/>
plus one third utilities Private<lb/>
room, air condition Within walk<lb/>
mg distance ot campus For sum<lb/>
mer only Call 752 9151 or 752 6105,<lb/>
ask for Becky Beth or Susan<lb/>
PERSONS NEEDED 2 or 3 peo<lb/>
pie to sub lease apt for summer.<lb/>
Located on E 3rd Street 2<lb/>
bedrooms part furnished Water<lb/>
included in rent For more intor<lb/>
mation call 758 7755<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED N Summit! St 582 50<lb/>
plus one third utilities Washer<lb/>
and dryer Available May 1st<lb/>
Call 758 5692<lb/>
SUBLEASE 1 bedroom unfur<lb/>
n.shed Village Green Apt on 10th<lb/>
St Leaving school with ' months<lb/>
left on lease Asking 5145 for<lb/>
deposit Rent is 5190 month Call<lb/>
nights 758 6784<lb/>
APT FOR SUBLEASE Dui mg<lb/>
summer from May to September<lb/>
River Bluff Apts Call 758 6728<lb/>
WANT TO SUB LEASE 3 respon<lb/>
sible UNC CH students wish to<lb/>
sublet spacious, nice apt or house<lb/>
while working at Pitt Co Hospital<lb/>
this summer Preferred furnish<lb/>
ed Call 967 2059 or 942 7785<lb/>
LARGE BEDROOM For rent, air<lb/>
conditioned Utiht.es included<lb/>
Across from campus Call<lb/>
758 2585<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED To share 2 bedroom<lb/>
apt at Village Green for tht- sum<lb/>
mer Completely furnished<lb/>
piiyate room Pay $80 rent and<lb/>
one halt utilities Call 752 1047<lb/>
SUBLEASE FOR SUMMER<lb/>
NICE 2 bedroom furnished apt<lb/>
Air near campus ECU bus Call<lb/>
752 4989<lb/>
SUBLEASE FURNISHED APT<lb/>
For summer 2 bedrooms Air.<lb/>
near campus and ECU bus Call<lb/>
752 4989<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT $75 month<lb/>
plus one sixth utilities Suave kit<lb/>
Chen and bath Call 758 3545<lb/>
APT FOR SUBLEASE 2<lb/>
bedroom Call 758 4640<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED To share<lb/>
3 bedroom house on Chestnut St<lb/>
575 plus one third utilities Must<lb/>
have bedroom furniture Call<lb/>
758 4259<lb/>
FREE HALF MONTH RENT In<lb/>
new townhouse apt on River Bluff<lb/>
Rd 2 bedrooms, one and half<lb/>
baths appliances. waher dryer<lb/>
hookups, cable TV hookups,<lb/>
secluded area Regular monthly<lb/>
rent is $280 Call for details offer<lb/>
limited JL Harris and Sons.<lb/>
Inc , Realtors, 204 W 10th. St<lb/>
758 4711<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT May to Aug<lb/>
$75 month Call 758 4140<lb/>
NEED TO MOVE IN WITH<lb/>
established female roommate<lb/>
beginning August 15 Will share<lb/>
half expenses. Call 637 5521<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED For summer 3<lb/>
bedroom duplex 5 blocks from<lb/>
campus $58 00 per month plus one<lb/>
half utilities 758 0267<lb/>
FOR RENT 2 bedroom<lb/>
townhouse apts One and half<lb/>
baths appliances, cable TV<lb/>
hookups, washer dryer hookups<lb/>
very near ECU 5300 per monih.<lb/>
lease and security deposit re<lb/>
quired J L Harris and Sons. Inc<lb/>
Realtors 204 W 10th 7584711<lb/>
FOREST MANOR APTS FOR<lb/>
RENT includes pool facilities for<lb/>
the summer Call 757 6824 during<lb/>
the day or 756 5577 during the<lb/>
evening<lb/>
FOR RENT Spacious 3 bedroom<lb/>
elegant house Suitable lor 3 or 4<lb/>
persons Hail a block from the<lb/>
campus $400 plus deposit Call<lb/>
756 0788 after 3 pm<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT 2 rooms in<lb/>
house located at 1009 Forbes St<lb/>
available for summer or all year<lb/>
round One block from campus<lb/>
Rent plus one fourth utilities Pets<lb/>
are allowed Male or female<lb/>
758 2446. ask tor Rudy<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
BANDS UNLIMITED BOOKING<lb/>
AGENCY: Is now booking bands<lb/>
for the spring, summer, and fall<lb/>
We cater to every different<lb/>
musical need and price range We<lb/>
provide bands thai range from<lb/>
Beach, Top 40. to easy listening<lb/>
and country The quality of a band<lb/>
can insure the success ol your par<lb/>
ty Let the Pros at BANDS<lb/>
UNLIMITED get the right band<lb/>
tor your next party Call 757 3210<lb/>
ROADIES Where bands make it<lb/>
rock ROADIES makes it roll!<lb/>
200 W Walnut St Downtown<lb/>
Goldsboro, phone 734 4551<lb/>
GUITAR PLAYER WANTED<lb/>
Money making Top 40, Beach<lb/>
band Vocal ability a must Call<lb/>
757 3210<lb/>
YOUR CAREER What are you<lb/>
doing this summer to prepare lor<lb/>
it? Find out why IBM, Xerox, Pro<lb/>
ctor and Gamble Uptohn and hun<lb/>
dreds ot others want students that<lb/>
have worked with us<lb/>
NEED PROFESSINAL TYPIST?<lb/>
Will do term papers, thesis,<lb/>
manuscript, etc Call Susan Byers<lb/>
758 8241 or 758 5488<lb/>
NEED ENTERTAINMENT' Con<lb/>
tact Eastern Music Services And<lb/>
Production Agency Large vane<lb/>
ty ol bands available, all styles<lb/>
Call 758 5676<lb/>
ELBO ROOM The best time in<lb/>
town! The great Wednesday Night<lb/>
HUMP NITE SPECIALS<lb/>
Thursdays are always SUPER!<lb/>
Friday alternoons are still ROCK<lb/>
ING and ROLLING Sunday is<lb/>
Still LADIES NiTE'<lb/>
LOST A silver colored diamond<lb/>
shaped, small ring II found<lb/>
PLEASE call 757 3155 Has sen<lb/>
timental value<lb/>
YOUR CAREER What are you<lb/>
doing this summer to prepare lor<lb/>
it? Find out why I BM Xerox, Pro<lb/>
ctor and Gamble. Upiohn and hun<lb/>
dreds ot others want students that<lb/>
have worked with us For inter<lb/>
view call 758 4513<lb/>
HAS REAGAN S BUDGET CUT<lb/>
CAUGHT?YOU SHORT' Then<lb/>
get a high paying summer Ob with<lb/>
a good Ob recommendation For<lb/>
interview call 758 4513<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY Used<lb/>
lightwieghl 10 speed Call<lb/>
758 9469, leave message lor Gary<lb/>
OVERSEAS JOBS Summer year<lb/>
round Europe, S America<lb/>
Australia. Asia Ail fields<lb/>
$500 $1200 monthly Sightseeing<lb/>
Free information write IJC Box<lb/>
52 NC 4, Corona Del Mar, Ca<lb/>
92625<lb/>
DISCOS We have the best soun<lb/>
ding disco in Eastern N C<lb/>
Reasonable rates. Let us supply<lb/>
the music at your next dance or<lb/>
party Call BANDS<lb/>
UNLIMITED<lb/>
LOOK GOOD ON PAPER<lb/>
Resumes, term papers applica<lb/>
tions, etc Professionally typed<lb/>
WRITE RIGHT 756 9946<lb/>
KEYBOARD PLAYEF<lb/>
WANTED Top 40 crossover coun<lb/>
try. Serious inquiries only Call<lb/>
758 8772<lb/>
ARE YOU MOVING soon and<lb/>
need help with a truck and labor (w<lb/>
We specialize in college moves lor<lb/>
students on a budget! Call 758 3684<lb/>
tor more intormation<lb/>
SEEKING EMPLOYMENTS. Our<lb/>
computer can match your skills<lb/>
and interests with local 0bs<lb/>
Thomas and Thomas Vocational<lb/>
Assessment 753 4995<lb/>
TO THE PERSON who took the<lb/>
empty keg and tap from the party<lb/>
Saturday night on Elm Street you<lb/>
have a choice A) Return it and no<lb/>
questions will be asked B Call<lb/>
758 3684 and I will pick it up C) Do<lb/>
nothing and I will turn your name<lb/>
over to the police and press<lb/>
charges! Try me and see! Bubba<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS CAN BE PUR<lb/>
CHASED FROM 2 00 3 00 M F<lb/>
ONLY AT THE EAST CAROLI<lb/>
NIAN OFFICE OR BY MAIL<lb/>
ADS MUST BE IN BY 2 00 THE<lb/>
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION<lb/>
TO GET IN THE NEXT ISSUE<lb/>
Classified Ad Form<lb/>
PRICE $100 lor 15 words. 05 lor<lb/>
each additional word<lb/>
Make checks payable to The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Abbreviations count as one word<lb/>
as do phone numbers and<lb/>
hyphenations<lb/>
Continued from page 5<lb/>
nant force in rock 'n<lb/>
roll for almost fifteen<lb/>
years, from his day's<lb/>
with "The Jam Fac-<lb/>
tory" (on Epic<lb/>
Records) to "Paul Mc-<lb/>
Cartney &amp; Wings" to<lb/>
"Sea Level" (on Ar-<lb/>
tista Records); and now<lb/>
as a solo artist with<lb/>
Refuge Records.<lb/>
He has played and<lb/>
sung on over twenty<lb/>
gold and platinum<lb/>
albums and was part ol<lb/>
the Wings Over<lb/>
America tour which set<lb/>
national attendance-<lb/>
records (over three<lb/>
million) and an indoor<lb/>
attendance mark at the<lb/>
Seattle Kingdome.<lb/>
B o n n i e B r a m I e 11<lb/>
started her professional<lb/>
career as one of 1 ina<lb/>
Turner's back-up<lb/>
singers in the early six-<lb/>
ties. She went on to<lb/>
Mail to<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Classified Ads<lb/>
Old South Building<lb/>
Greenville NO 27834<lb/>
The<lb/>
s<lb/>
Technical<lb/>
Electronics<lb/>
And<lb/>
Maintenance,<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
756-138V<lb/>
Audio,Video,<lb/>
&amp; 2 Wai<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
Maintenance<lb/>
(Preventive to<lb/>
Overhaul)<lb/>
Services directed H' a M<lb/>
( law rC( licensed lechni-<lb/>
i-ian. siudenl of Vpplifd<lb/>
Phssic- ?l Kasl Carolina<lb/>
I nisersils.<lb/>
( onvenietev Located<lb/>
11 Block Off Campus<lb/>
Pick-l p and Deliver)<lb/>
Available<lb/>
90 I)a Warrant)<lb/>
Period<lb/>
marr) Delaney<lb/>
Bramlett and they<lb/>
became the famed six-<lb/>
ties' team oi "Delaney<lb/>
&amp; Bonnie<lb/>
heir band consisted<lb/>
oi and tosteted many<lb/>
great rock 'n roll ar-<lb/>
tists, including Dave<lb/>
Mason, Eric Clapton,<lb/>
Leon Russell, Duane<lb/>
Allman, and Rita<lb/>
Coolidge (who was one<lb/>
of Bonnie's back-up<lb/>
singers). "Delaney &amp;<lb/>
Bonnie &amp; Friends"<lb/>
recorded albums tor<lb/>
ATO (Atlantic), Col<lb/>
umbia, and A ik M<lb/>
SAAD'SSHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
I I 3 Grande Ave<lb/>
"7581228<lb/>
QualityRepair<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
South' No. 6<lb/>
Rock Nightclub A<lb/>
ties. April, 21 U<lb/>
BONNIE BRAMLETT &amp; JOE ENGLISH<lb/>
Capital Refuge Recording Artists Tue , April 21<lb/>
VAed.A Ihurs.<lb/>
GOOD HUMOR BAND<lb/>
(K I FREE! on Wed.<lb/>
The Media Board is<lb/>
presently accepting<lb/>
applications for<lb/>
Media Board<lb/>
Day Representative<lb/>
Applications may be picked<lb/>
up in the Media Board of-<lb/>
fice in the Publications<lb/>
Bldg. from 8-1 and 2-5<lb/>
Monday thru Friday. <lb/>
E<lb/>
V hC rVWW "<lb/>
I hai<lb/>
last Frid<lb/>
! a<lb/>
N I<lb/>
Field<lb/>
swept<lb/>
Wolfpa -<lb/>
piLr<lb/>
ing<lb/>
the<lb/>
She;<lb/>
give '<lb/>
Jea;<lb/>
one<lb/>
run<lb/>
I<lb/>
wh<lb/>
tV? . ?<lb/>
ALWAYS FRESH<lb/>
DAIRY FOODS<lb/>
l<lb/>
Home of Greenville's Best Meats'9<lb/>
Clip This Coupon<lb/>
Heavy Western Sirloin<lb/>
or T-Bone Steaks<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
$2<lb/>
19<lb/>
Overtoil's Super Buck<lb/>
Coca-Cola - 16 oz carton of 8<lb/>
$1.00 plus deposit with this<lb/>
coupon and $7.50 food order.<lb/>
Without coupon $1.79 plus<lb/>
deposit.<lb/>
Limit one per customer. Expires 4-25-81<lb/>
Overton's Finest Full Cut<lb/>
Round Steak<lb/>
$179<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Shasta Drinks<lb/>
All Flavors<lb/>
12 oz. cans<lb/>
6 $1.48<lb/>
Campbell's Cream<lb/>
of Mushroom Soup<lb/>
10 oz.<lb/>
28 r<lb/>
Sealtest Ice Cream<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
-<lb/>
Large California Broccoli<lb/>
bunch 70<lb/>
Snow White Cauliflower<lb/>
ea.<lb/>
!<lb/>
it A "<lb/>
Grade "A<lb/>
Medium Eggs<lb/>
58C<lb/>
Dozen<lb/>
$1.88<lb/>
 Duke's<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
?98?<lb/>
o<lb/>
Pavt<lb/>
At Bi<lb/>
B CHAR1<lb/>
rhe ! ?<lb/>
hall team lo<lb/>
tan! .<lb/>
with lh<lb/>
morn ,<lb/>
athletu<lb/>
moni <lb/>
Ju<lb/>
past<lb/>
1 -el;<lb/>
.<lb/>
Cren<lb/>
rech.<lb/>
true<lb/>
coach Dave (<lb/>
in a morning<lb/>
to replace Bv<lb/>
1 he new<lb/>
mentot said H<lb/>
take the new<lb/>
ed that he w<lb/>
Pirate.<lb/>
"1 am <lb/>
assume the j<lb/>
Abbey' he<lb/>
statement<lb/>
represents a<lb/>
ward in I<lb/>
career I ht<lb/>
athletic ti<lb/>
lege are well<lb/>
well deserved!<lb/>
"1 hae h;<lb/>
fruitful vears<lb/>
continued.<lb/>
sonah rewat<lb/>
work with C<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057338_0008"/><lb/>
t A ttic<lb/>
son, Eric Clapton,<lb/>
ell, Duane<lb/>
and Rita<lb/>
m fu was one<lb/>
Bonnie's back up<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
i Fri rids"<lb/>
for<lb/>
v t I 1H! U I I ol-<lb/>
&amp; M<lb/>
TiTIC<lb/>
fOE ENGLISH<lb/>
rHE I-AST CAROl 1N1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
APRll 21, 1981 Page<lb/>
ECU Wins 14th Straight Over Pack<lb/>
IS<lb/>
ng<lb/>
r<lb/>
ive<lb/>
picked<lb/>
lard of-<lb/>
ications<lb/>
bid 2-5<lb/>
Wheww w<lb/>
1 hat's the best way to describe<lb/>
last Friday's double-header between<lb/>
East Carolina's lady Pirates and<lb/>
N.( . State at the ECU Softball<lb/>
Field. I he number one-ranked<lb/>
Pirates prevailed, however, as they<lb/>
swept two games from the<lb/>
Wolfpack bv scores ot 4-3 and 1-0 to<lb/>
pick up their 33rd and 34th victories<lb/>
lj the season against three defeats.<lb/>
1 he Pirate were trailing, 3-1, go<lb/>
into the bottom oi the sixth in<lb/>
the first game when Cynthia<lb/>
Shepard belted a three-run homer to<lb/>
give the team the m.<lb/>
In the second game, ECU pitcher<lb/>
leanette Roth limited State to just<lb/>
one single as the Pirates picked up a<lb/>
run in the bottom ot the first to nip<lb/>
Pack.<lb/>
"We came through offensively<lb/>
when we had to said a relieved<lb/>
coach Alita Dillon. "I wasn't overly<lb/>
pleased with our defense, though<lb/>
The Pirate coach said she wasn't<lb/>
surprised by the closeness of the two<lb/>
games. "1 was surprised at the 1-0<lb/>
game, though she added. "I<lb/>
thought it would be at least 6-5, or<lb/>
something like that, because State<lb/>
has been playing well, plus they<lb/>
have some good hitters<lb/>
The Lady Pirates jumped ahead<lb/>
o the Wolfpack 1-0 in the bottom of<lb/>
the first when catcher Fran Hooks<lb/>
walked and moved to second on a<lb/>
Mary Powell single to left. Hooks<lb/>
later scored when Mitzi Davis singl-<lb/>
ed to left.<lb/>
1 he) held that 1-0 lead until the<lb/>
State half of the fourth when the<lb/>
Pack scored two runs o two Pirate<lb/>
errors plus a couple of kev hits.<lb/>
Pirate outfielder Kathy Riley made<lb/>
a nice play on a hard hit ball to left<lb/>
to end the inning.<lb/>
State upped its lead to 3-1 in the<lb/>
top of the fifth when the Pirates<lb/>
committed a two-base error, and the<lb/>
Wolfpack came through with a key<lb/>
hit to left.<lb/>
Powell opened the Buc half of the<lb/>
sixth by rapping a base hit to left.<lb/>
Davis hit a roller down the left field<lb/>
line to advance pinch-runner Pillion<lb/>
Barnes to third. That brought up<lb/>
Shepard, who belted a three-run<lb/>
homer to give the Pirates a 4-3 lead.<lb/>
State threatened for the last time<lb/>
in the top of the seventh when they<lb/>
had runners on first and second. A<lb/>
double-play bv the lady Pirates<lb/>
ended the game.<lb/>
Roth was the winning pitcher for<lb/>
the Pirates, who have beaten State<lb/>
14 straight times during the last two<lb/>
seasons.<lb/>
1 eading hitters for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates in the first game were<lb/>
Powell, who was three-for-three,<lb/>
and Davis who was two-for-three.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates scored the only<lb/>
run of the game in the first inning of<lb/>
the nightcap. Maureen Buck opened<lb/>
the inning with a base hit to left.<lb/>
Powell then lined out, but Davis<lb/>
followed with a hit to right to put<lb/>
runners on first and third. Shepard<lb/>
came through again, as she drove in<lb/>
Buck with a base hit to left, and the<lb/>
Pirates were up 1-0.<lb/>
State threatened in their half of<lb/>
the first, but second baseman<lb/>
Ginger Rothermei went far to her<lb/>
right to take a base hit away from<lb/>
the Wolfpack. Riley ended the inn-<lb/>
ing by making a fine running catch<lb/>
on a long drive to deep left field.<lb/>
The rest of the game proved to be<lb/>
a defensive struggle. State opened<lb/>
their half of the seventh with a walk,<lb/>
but the rally was killed by a ground<lb/>
ball the Pirates turned into a double<lb/>
play (pitcher to second to first).<lb/>
Roth also hurled the second game<lb/>
to pick up her 20th win against only<lb/>
one loss.<lb/>
The Pirates now travel to Graham<lb/>
for the NCAIAW Qualifying Tour-<lb/>
nament this Friday and Saturday to<lb/>
vie for a berth in the Region II com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
"We will benefit from the ex-<lb/>
perience we gained in last year's<lb/>
tournament Dillon pointed out.<lb/>
"That will help our confidence.<lb/>
We're prepared, and we're healthy,<lb/>
but you have to execute to win. If<lb/>
we don't win, then there must have<lb/>
been a major breakdown<lb/>
Dillon also commmented on the<lb/>
large crowd at the double-header<lb/>
with State. "It could have been<lb/>
larger she added, "but the Easter<lb/>
break kept a lot of students away<lb/>
The Pirates' sweep of State mark-<lb/>
ed the end of the regular season and<lb/>
gave the team a 21-0 record against<lb/>
intra-state competition.<lb/>
" <lb/>
Lady Pirate<lb/>
Head Coach<lb/>
Alita Dillon<lb/>
A?W?t ?<lb/>
<lb/>
vi<lb/>
VoV<lb/>
33MPW!<lb/>
Suffer Unusual Shutout<lb/>
Pirates Split Doubleheader<lb/>
ECU Coaeh Hal Baird<lb/>
Photo By DREW RUVBLEY<lb/>
The Last Carolina baseball team<lb/>
split a doubleader with Campbell<lb/>
yesterday but lost much more than<lb/>
just one ball game.<lb/>
The Pirates took the opener, 2-1,<lb/>
but lost the nightcap, 9-0. marking<lb/>
the first time in 75 games that the<lb/>
team has been shutout.<lb/>
In the opener, the Pirates fell<lb/>
behind in the top cf the sixth when<lb/>
Campbell's Herb Williams walked,<lb/>
advanced to second on an error and<lb/>
scored when Camel second baseman<lb/>
Kelly Hoffman lashed an RBI dou-<lb/>
ble<lb/>
The Bucs tied it up quickly,<lb/>
though, in the bottom o the sixth.<lb/>
With one out, Mike Sage doubled,<lb/>
moved to third on a ground out and<lb/>
scorred on I odd Hendley's RBI<lb/>
single.<lb/>
The Pirates won the game in<lb/>
dramatic fashion in the bottom of<lb/>
the seventh, the final regular inning<lb/>
in an doubleheader in NCAA<lb/>
baseball.<lb/>
Designated hitter Charlie Smith<lb/>
singled and was replaced on the base<lb/>
paths by pinch runner Mark Shank,<lb/>
who promptly stole second.<lb/>
Centerfielder Robert Wells at-<lb/>
tempted to sacrifice Shank to third<lb/>
but ended up with an RBI instead<lb/>
when Campbell pitcher Parrin Clon-<lb/>
inger threw the ball away in his at-<lb/>
tempt to nail Wells at first base.<lb/>
Shank went all the way home as<lb/>
the game ended with the Pirates vic-<lb/>
torious by a 2-1 margin.<lb/>
Rick Ramey got the win for the<lb/>
Pirates, hurling an impressive three-<lb/>
hitter to up his record to 5-2.<lb/>
"Rick pitched a great game<lb/>
said ECU coach Hal Baird. "I think<lb/>
he was geared up for this one<lb/>
because of his last outing (Baptist<lb/>
scored four runs in the top of the<lb/>
first against him<lb/>
The win marked the third in a row<lb/>
over the Camels for the Pirates. An<lb/>
error aided the Buc cause in the win<lb/>
but many of them certainly proved<lb/>
an undoing for ECU in the second<lb/>
game.<lb/>
In the nightcap the Camels<lb/>
jumped off to an early lead, scoring<lb/>
seven runs in the second inning<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
Of those seven runs, only one was<lb/>
earned. Those seven crossed the<lb/>
plate via only three Campbell hits.<lb/>
Two walks by ECU pitching and<lb/>
two errors by Pirate fielding were<lb/>
the difference.<lb/>
For the game the Camels collected<lb/>
ten hits, six of which were doubles.<lb/>
Bob Patterson took the loss for<lb/>
the Pirates, dropping his only deci-<lb/>
sion against tour wins despite pit-<lb/>
ching only one and a third innings.<lb/>
Joe Stephenson checked the<lb/>
Pirates with a four-hitter, going the<lb/>
distance to up his mark to 5-2.<lb/>
The Pirates, still carrying faint<lb/>
hopes of a post-season bid, moved<lb/>
to 24-10 with the split while Camp-<lb/>
bell now stands 19-22.<lb/>
ECU coach Baird was obviously<lb/>
disappointed with the surprising<lb/>
shutout of his club.<lb/>
"We didn't get good pitching and<lb/>
didn't score many runs he said.<lb/>
"There's not much you can say<lb/>
about that. We probably took<lb/>
ourselves out ol it with some bad<lb/>
defensive plays Still, if you don't<lb/>
score you're not going to win many.<lb/>
The Bucs now must take on Davis<lb/>
&amp; LIkins. a team that sports a 15-0-1<lb/>
mark, in a 7 p.m. contest tonight<lb/>
(Tuesday) at Harrington field.<lb/>
Buc Shortstop Kelly Robinette<lb/>
Instant Replay<lb/>
Odom Loses A 2nd Aide, Signs 4th Recruit<lb/>
Pay ton Named Coach, AD<lb/>
At Belmont Abbey College<lb/>
B CHAKI.KS CHANB1.KR<lb/>
sport tdtior<lb/>
The Last Carolina basket-<lb/>
ball team lost its second assis-<lb/>
tant coach in less than a week<lb/>
with the announcement this<lb/>
morning of Pirate aide Eddie<lb/>
Payne as the new head coach<lb/>
and athletic director at Bel-<lb/>
mont Abbey College.<lb/>
Just last Wednesday the<lb/>
other ECU assistant of the<lb/>
past two seasons, George<lb/>
Felton, was named the top<lb/>
aide on Coach Bobby<lb/>
Cremins' staff at Georgia<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
Payne, who came to ECU<lb/>
three years ago with head<lb/>
coach Dave Odom, was named<lb/>
in a morning press conference<lb/>
to replace Bobby Hussey, the<lb/>
new head coach at Davidson.<lb/>
The new Belmont Abbey<lb/>
mentor said he was pleased to<lb/>
take the new position but add-<lb/>
ed that he would miss being a<lb/>
Pirate.<lb/>
"I am very pleased to<lb/>
assume the duties at Belmont<lb/>
Abbey he said in a written<lb/>
statement. "This action<lb/>
represents a positive step for-<lb/>
ward in my professional<lb/>
career. The academic and<lb/>
athletic traditions of the col-<lb/>
lege are well documented and<lb/>
well deserved.<lb/>
"I have had two extremely<lb/>
fruitful years at ECU Payne<lb/>
continued. "It has been per-<lb/>
sonaly rewarding for me to<lb/>
work with Coach Odom, our<lb/>
players and the entire com-<lb/>
munity of East Carolina<lb/>
University. I will remain much<lb/>
more than a casual observor,<lb/>
more like an avid fan<lb/>
Odom had congratulations<lb/>
yet sorrow for Payne's new<lb/>
appointment, much as he did<lb/>
when Felton's move was an-<lb/>
nounced.<lb/>
"Once again our program<lb/>
has lost a faithful friend and<lb/>
coach. Eddie's loss leaves a<lb/>
terrific void on our basketball<lb/>
staff which will be difficult to<lb/>
fill. But, as was the case with<lb/>
George Felton's resignation,<lb/>
we are happy to see our staff<lb/>
improve themselves profes-<lb/>
sionally<lb/>
Payne came to the Pirates<lb/>
after serving for one year as a<lb/>
head coach at Truett-<lb/>
McConnel Junior College in<lb/>
Cleveland, Ga. Payne's club<lb/>
posted a 25-5 record in his on-<lb/>
ly year there.<lb/>
Before going to Truett-<lb/>
McConnel, Payne served as an<lb/>
assistant at CTemson under Bill<lb/>
foster.<lb/>
Before going into coaching<lb/>
Payne played college ball<lb/>
himself at Wake Forest, mak-<lb/>
ing the All-ACC Tournament<lb/>
team his senior year.<lb/>
The location of Belmont<lb/>
Abbey is a real convenience<lb/>
for Payne. The school is<lb/>
located jut outside of his<lb/>
hometown of Charlotte.<lb/>
Belmont Abbey has one<lb/>
very well known ex-coach. Al<lb/>
All-State Guard Peartree<lb/>
To Bring Abilities To Pirates<lb/>
Takes Dual Role<lb/>
ECU assistant basketball coach Eddie Payne was named this<lb/>
morning as the new head coach and athletic director at Bel-<lb/>
mont Abbey College.<lb/>
McGuire, the longtime Mar-<lb/>
quette coach who led the War-<lb/>
ners to the 1977 national<lb/>
championship and is now a<lb/>
NBC-TV color commentator,<lb/>
was once at the BAC helm.<lb/>
There has been no timeline<lb/>
set for the filling of the two va-<lb/>
cant assistant's positions at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
East Carolina basketball<lb/>
coach Dave Odom announced<lb/>
the signing of his fourth and<lb/>
final recruit of the season Fri-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Bruce Peartree, a 6-0<lb/>
165-pound All-State guard<lb/>
from Pantego, is the only<lb/>
backcourt player signed by<lb/>
Odom this year.<lb/>
Peartree, a point guard,<lb/>
averaged 15.6 points, 11<lb/>
assists and six rebounds per<lb/>
game this past season for state<lb/>
1-A champion Pantego High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
He has, in fact, led Pantego<lb/>
to back-to-back state titles.<lb/>
Coach Al Baker's team went a<lb/>
perfect 32-0 this year and has<lb/>
won three of the last four 1-A<lb/>
state titles.<lb/>
Peartree received several<lb/>
honors on the way to the title,<lb/>
being named MVP in every<lb/>
tournament Pantego par-<lb/>
ticipated in.<lb/>
Even more accolades came<lb/>
his way after the season was<lb/>
over. For the thtrd consecutive<lb/>
year, Peartree was named to<lb/>
the All-East team by Raleigh's<lb/>
News and Observor.<lb/>
He was also named to the<lb/>
'10-man All-State team by The<lb/>
Greensboro Daily News and<lb/>
was named the Area Player of<lb/>
the Year by The Washington<lb/>
Daily News for his efforts as a<lb/>
senior.<lb/>
Peartree became well-<lb/>
known at Pantego for his ball-<lb/>
handling and leaping abilities.<lb/>
ECU mentor Odom was ob-<lb/>
viously pleased with the sign-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"Bruce combines excellent<lb/>
athletic talent and ball-<lb/>
handling skills with great court<lb/>
savvy Odom said.<lb/>
"Obviously, Bruce is a pro-<lb/>
duct of his environment. Com-<lb/>
ing from Pantego High and<lb/>
being schooled by coach Al<lb/>
Baker has provided him with<lb/>
great fundamentals to be a<lb/>
team basketball player.<lb/>
"Bruce is from a team and<lb/>
community that is used to win-<lb/>
ning and this will bring Bruce<lb/>
to us with an air of con-<lb/>
fidence<lb/>
Odom dded that Peartree<lb/>
should be able to handle the<lb/>
big transition from 1-A high<lb/>
school ball to major college<lb/>
basketball.<lb/>
"Although the transition<lb/>
from high school to college is a<lb/>
big one, Bruce's background<lb/>
will allow him to make the step<lb/>
a smooth one<lb/>
Odom now has a virtual<lb/>
overflow roster for next<lb/>
season, losing only one player<lb/>
from this year's club and sign-<lb/>
ing three frontcourt players in<lb/>
addition to Peartree.<lb/>
The other signees are center<lb/>
6-10 D?vid Reichenecker of<lb/>
Niceville, Fla 6-7 forward<lb/>
Charles Green of Catonsville<lb/>
Community College in<lb/>
Baltimore, Md. and 6-9 center<lb/>
Al Mack of Hilbert Junior<lb/>
College in New York.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057338_0009"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
1 Ml- AS! I AROl INIAN<lb/>
APKIi 21, ls?8l<lb/>
COPIES<lb/>
Clemson Wins Title<lb/>
ci emson, s.c.<lb/>
(111) li vas nearh im-<lb/>
possible for Clemson to<lb/>
lose it- second straighi<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference men's tennis<lb/>
tournament because it<lb/>
had so many playei s in<lb/>
the finals.<lb/>
 ictories h Peter<lb/>
Pristach, Jean<lb/>
Desdunes and Rick Ru<lb/>
deen boosted then team<lb/>
Sunda to a tourney<lb/>
total ol bO points and<lb/>
ensui ed the 1 tgei s'<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
c lem-<lb/>
Kid<lb/>
loin<lb/>
singles players and a<lb/>
doubles team fighting<lb/>
for nine titles in the<lb/>
finals.<lb/>
Pristach ma) have<lb/>
had the biggest victor)<lb/>
oi th( ourney for<lb/>
Clemson in his head-to-<lb/>
head battle with Wake<lb/>
est's 1 and Dunlop.<lb/>
1 he Deacons went<lb/>
into the finals five<lb/>
Us behind the<lb/>
1 iget  and Pristach<lb/>
erased am ake Foresl<lb/>
chances with his 7-6,<lb/>
6 ; defeat oJ Dunlop in<lb/>
the Vs (s flight.<lb/>
W ake orest finished<lb/>
nd with 51 points,<lb/>
wed b irginia<lb/>
48, North Carolina 4<lb/>
Duke 45. N.C. State<lb/>
41, Maryland 21 and<lb/>
Georgia I ech 11.<lb/>
Geofl Mcdonald of<lb/>
 irginia was judged<lb/>
most valuable AC V<lb/>
tennis playei ol the<lb/>
year and won the tour-<lb/>
nament sportsmanship<lb/>
award.<lb/>
McDonald won the<lb/>
No 1 smiles crown<lb/>
with an easy 6-3, 6-1<lb/>
match over Clemson's<lb/>
Pendei Murphy.<lb/>
Wake Forest's Jim<lb/>
1 eighton w.is awarded<lb/>
the coach ol -the yeai<lb/>
a w a i d.<lb/>
Desdunes won the<lb/>
No. 3 flight with a b 4,<lb/>
6 1 victor) ovei Scott<lb/>
Fleming ol N.C. State.<lb/>
It was the 1 leer's third<lb/>
straight set victory of<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
Rudeen defeated<lb/>
I igei Buford of North<lb/>
Carolina 2-6, 6-4, 6-4<lb/>
foi the No. 5 singles<lb/>
crown.<lb/>
N.C. State's Mark<lb/>
Dillon won the No. 2<lb/>
singles title with a 6-1,<lb/>
6-2 victory ovei Allen<lb/>
Far four of Wake<lb/>
forest, then combined<lb/>
with Andy Andrews to<lb/>
give the Wolf pack the<lb/>
No. 1 doubles title.<lb/>
Dillon and Andrews<lb/>
beat 1 at tour and lorn<lb/>
Keiffer ot Wake forest<lb/>
f 2,7-6.<lb/>
Dillon was the only<lb/>
competitor to win both<lb/>
 singles and a doubles<lb/>
crown in the tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
1 he Deacons' Phil<lb/>
Raiford won the No. 4<lb/>
singles title by<lb/>
defeating Brent Hen<lb/>
dncks of Virginia 7-5,<lb/>
2-6, 6-2.<lb/>
The Duke duo ot<lb/>
Dubins won the No. 2<lb/>
doubles title with a 6-2.<lb/>
7-6 defeat of larheels<lb/>
Buford and Ron li-<lb/>
ft Raftjq S4m<lb/>
Copy Center<lb/>
Copies<lb/>
. . . 4.25c<lb/>
100 OR MORE<lb/>
1 TO 99<lb/>
on B??' t Mtaa<lb/>
wrioi?ui? ??(?! tec S?t?? SO it B?9<lb/>
Keg 01 k e Detivei , 24 Hrs<lb/>
ra<lb/>
Mark llur and Ross skine.<lb/>
VJ<lb/>
1 ireenv . h ipel Hit<lb/>
?b?-B77V  -9791<lb/>
COPIES<lb/>
 :7i<lb/>
m<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for you slnoe 1974.<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of all ages at a reasonable oost<lb/>
Saturday abortion boon<lb/>
The<lb/>
early pr<lb/>
bog mrtto<lb/>
Fleming Center we're here when you i<lb/>
Pan W-6650 In Fjdelgfr anytime.<lb/>
need us<lb/>
m:i<lb/>
FLEMING CENTER<lb/>
Sports Writers Needed<lb/>
For summer issues of the hast<lb/>
( arolinian. Apply in person at our<lb/>
offices in the Old South Building.<lb/>
An Kqual Opportunity Employer<lb/>
Dr. G. Robert Vines<lb/>
Optometrist<lb/>
Professional Vision Care<lb/>
Where Quality is Affordable<lb/>
Complete Visual Examination<lb/>
Contact Lenses<lb/>
Call For Contact lens<lb/>
and Free Information<lb/>
756-6638<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Western Sizzlin<lb/>
Steak House<lb/>
"The Family Steak House"<lb/>
f<lb/>
t<lb/>
BEST PRICES AND<lb/>
SELECTION IN AREA<lb/>
ON ALLIGATOR LACOSTE<lb/>
SHIRTS FOR MEN, WOMEN<lb/>
&amp; CHILDREN<lb/>
see GORDON FULP<lb/>
LOCATED AT<lb/>
GREENVILLE COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
OPEN: 8:00 A.M. UNTIL DARK<lb/>
756-0504<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
A<lb/>
THE<lb/>
EXPERIENCE<lb/>
OFA<lb/>
LIFETIME.<lb/>
Now that you've got it, put<lb/>
it to work Share it with<lb/>
poor people in Peace<lb/>
Corps nations who need<lb/>
your experience in teach-<lb/>
ing, electronics, farming,<lb/>
family skills and many<lb/>
other areas. Help make a<lb/>
difference Call Peace<lb/>
Corps.<lb/>
4<lb/>
THURSDAY SPECIAL<lb/>
12 8oz. Chopped Sirloin; Served<lb/>
With or Without Mushroom<lb/>
Gravy, King Baked Potatoe or<lb/>
French Fries and Toast.<lb/>
$1.79<lb/>
??<lb/>
Giossy or silk finish<lb/>
is available<lb/>
COME TO THE STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
FOR FAST. QUALITY PHOTO FINISHING f?T<lb/>
EVERY DAY LOW PRICES<lb/>
12 exp. color film 2.99<lb/>
20 exp. color film 4.55<lb/>
24 exp. color film 5.46<lb/>
36 exp. color film 7.84<lb/>
We offer complete film processing services:<lb/>
Black &amp; White, Color Slides, Movies, Enlargements, Reprints<lb/>
Satisfaction Guaranteed<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
owned and operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
 HUKjUAl UNLi <lb/>
Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
55 Item Salad Bar and Take Out Service<lb/>
264 By-Pass 756-0040 2903 E. 10th St. 758-2712<lb/>
LADY PIRATE<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
First Annual<lb/>
Awards Banquet<lb/>
Help Say Goodbye<lb/>
To The 17th Ranked<lb/>
1980-81 Squad<lb/>
7 p.m. Tuesday April 28<lb/>
At Western Sizzlin'<lb/>
For Reservations, Call 757-6384<lb/>
April, 22nd,23rd,24th<lb/>
Student Supply<lb/>
Store Lobby<lb/>
<pb facs="00057338_0010"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>