<?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="00057343_0001"/>
She ?aat (Earalttuan<lb/>
U<lb/>
K<lb/>
Vol. 55No.? 6 Pages<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Wednesday, May 27, 1981<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Budgets<lb/>
Media Board Haggles<lb/>
Over Money Requests<lb/>
B DEBORAH HOT A LING<lb/>
News rdilor<lb/>
The Media Board met Monday<lb/>
afternoon and approved the propos-<lb/>
ed budget for The East Carolinian<lb/>
in the 1981-82 school year. The<lb/>
board also discussed the need for an<lb/>
acting general manager of WZMB<lb/>
radio station and the delays in the<lb/>
Buccaneer's production.<lb/>
The board approved the adjusted<lb/>
budget for The East Carolinian with<lb/>
the exception of the Rebel's request<lb/>
for S200 for a banquet and an addi-<lb/>
tional SI00 for a photographer. The<lb/>
board also moved to continue<lb/>
discussion on The East Carolinian's<lb/>
Regular Student Wages request at a<lb/>
later date.<lb/>
The East Carolinian submitted an<lb/>
adjusted proposed budget in which<lb/>
an additional SI4.816.20 was cut.<lb/>
The newspaper eliminated or<lb/>
lowered the pav of eight statf posi-<lb/>
tions in order to balance their<lb/>
budget. The accepted budget re-<lb/>
quires S40,013.80 in order to help<lb/>
meet the required budget of<lb/>
SI45,013.80. The SI05,000.00 dif-<lb/>
ference will be met by total revenue<lb/>
such as advertising.<lb/>
With these adjustments, Paul<lb/>
Breitman, financial adviser for the<lb/>
Media Board, informed the board<lb/>
that the budget is now balanced.<lb/>
Barrie Byland, editor of this<lb/>
year's Buccaneer, was asked to ex-<lb/>
plain why the yearbook staff had<lb/>
not been meeting their set deadlines<lb/>
with the printer. The March 30<lb/>
deadline was not met and as of this<lb/>
date, 14 pages have been sent to the<lb/>
printer. The final deadline is July 13<lb/>
at w hich time 368 pages are expected<lb/>
to be turned in for printing.<lb/>
Byland told the board that the<lb/>
staff's performance was her repon-<lb/>
sibility as an editor but that many of<lb/>
the problems dealt with a lack of<lb/>
writers and trouble in getting the<lb/>
writers to produce material. She<lb/>
told the board that the deadlines<lb/>
would be reset until July 13 and that<lb/>
many of the sections had already<lb/>
been researched but the articles had<lb/>
not been written yet. The sports sec-<lb/>
tion has not been worked on<lb/>
although the academic sections were<lb/>
basically laid out and the depart-<lb/>
mental section articles had been<lb/>
researched.<lb/>
"1 have the responsibility of put-<lb/>
ting out a yearbook and it will be<lb/>
put out Byland stated. "We<lb/>
should have 80 or 90 more pages by<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Byland guaranteed the board that<lb/>
the yearbook wouldn't be much<lb/>
later in being submitted for printing<lb/>
See MEDIA, Page 2<lb/>
Paraphenalia<lb/>
Law Passes<lb/>
Photo by ROCHEL ROLAND<lb/>
Pass the Pipe; Not the Law<lb/>
bumper stickers were unsuccessful.<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI) Rep. Joe<lb/>
Hackney of Orange County believed<lb/>
it unfair that a person convicted of<lb/>
possessing drug paraphernalia could<lb/>
receive a harsher penalty than a per-<lb/>
son convicted of possessing mari-<lb/>
juana.<lb/>
Hackney proposed an amend-<lb/>
ment to make the penalties the<lb/>
same.<lb/>
The House rejected Hackney's<lb/>
amendment Monday night and then<lb/>
quickly voted 111-3 to give final ap-<lb/>
proval to a bill outlawing the sale,<lb/>
manufacture and possession of drug<lb/>
paraphernalia.<lb/>
The measure now goes back to the<lb/>
Senate for concurrence with House<lb/>
amendments.<lb/>
Items affected by the bill include<lb/>
"roach clips" to hold marijuana<lb/>
cigarettes, scales to weigh drugs,<lb/>
rolling papers and water pipes.<lb/>
Many products not normally related<lb/>
to drugs, such as plastic bags, also<lb/>
would be illegal if authorities could<lb/>
prove the possessor intended to use<lb/>
them for storing drugs.<lb/>
Hackney's amendment would<lb/>
have changed the penalty for posses-<lb/>
sion of drug paraphernalia from a<lb/>
maximum of $500 and one year in<lb/>
prison to a $100 fine and 30 days in<lb/>
jail. He said the reduced penaltv<lb/>
would apply only to possession o'<lb/>
drug paraphernalia, not manufac-<lb/>
ture or sale.<lb/>
Craven County Rep. C hns S.<lb/>
Barker said part of the intent of the<lb/>
bill is to act as a deterrent.<lb/>
He said a "big stick" is needed to<lb/>
keep the state's young people away<lb/>
from drugs.<lb/>
"One hundred dollars is not a big<lb/>
stick he said.<lb/>
The amendment was defeated by<lb/>
an 84-29 vote.<lb/>
Opposing final approval oi the<lb/>
bill was Wake County Rep Daniel<lb/>
T. Blue Jr fellow Wake County<lb/>
legislator Allen Adams and Nor-<lb/>
thampton Rep. C. Melvin Creecy.<lb/>
In other action Monday, the<lb/>
House gave tentative approval to a<lb/>
measure allowing the names of ser-<lb/>
vice stations along interstate<lb/>
highways to be placed on signs own<lb/>
ed, controlled and erected hv the<lb/>
Department of Transportation.<lb/>
The Senate, with no debate, ap<lb/>
proved a bill giving the savings and<lb/>
loan industry a $7.3 million break<lb/>
by changing the way it is taxed.<lb/>
The Senate approved the meaure<lb/>
by a 38-1 vote with only Sen. W.D<lb/>
Mills of Onslow Count) voting<lb/>
against it.<lb/>
Savings and loan asociations now<lb/>
pay an excise tax, plus a tax oi<lb/>
cents for every $100 dollars held on<lb/>
deposit. The bill changes it to a<lb/>
franchise tax and a 6 percent income<lb/>
tax<lb/>
Work-Study Cut Cripples Library Services<lb/>
Joyner Library<lb/>
.is the scene of some confusion since the work-study<lb/>
Bv KIT KJMBERLY<lb/>
st.ff Writer<lb/>
Although the termination of the<lb/>
work study program on the East<lb/>
Carolina campus served a financial-<lb/>
ly crippling blow to many students,<lb/>
students were not the only ones af-<lb/>
fected.<lb/>
The cut in manpower hours has<lb/>
taken its toll on many campus in-<lb/>
stitutions, one of which is Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
Since the beginning of April,<lb/>
when the program ended, Joyner<lb/>
Library has suffered a severe shor-<lb/>
tage in student help. According to<lb/>
Dr. Eugene Brunelle, director of the<lb/>
library, the decision was made to cut<lb/>
student hours rather than fire stu-<lb/>
dent help. Under this policy student<lb/>
hours were cut from 15 to 20 hours<lb/>
to 10 hours or less per week.<lb/>
Even with this student help, the<lb/>
library staff is still insufficient. The<lb/>
regular library hours have been cut<lb/>
to eliminate Saturday mornings,<lb/>
when the library is rarely used. In<lb/>
order to keep the buildings open as<lb/>
long as possible, some sections, such<lb/>
as periodicals, are being closed ear-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
However, some sections, such as<lb/>
circulation, must stay open Accor-<lb/>
ding to Mrs. Dorothy Brockmann,<lb/>
hardest hit by the loss of manpower.<lb/>
In order to have the circulation<lb/>
desk, the stacks, and the reserve<lb/>
room operating at full efficiency,<lb/>
they need about 20 students working<lb/>
20 hours per week.<lb/>
What they have, Mrs. Brockmann<lb/>
said, is about 10 students working<lb/>
10 hours per week. Circulation is<lb/>
having problems keeping books<lb/>
shelved, and they don't have time to<lb/>
"read" the shelves, the necessary<lb/>
method used to keep the books in<lb/>
order. Also, the library was in the<lb/>
process of changing from the Dewey<lb/>
Decimal to the Library of Congress<lb/>
cataloguing system, a project which<lb/>
has had to be abandoned for the<lb/>
time being.<lb/>
The work-study program, which<lb/>
was terminated in April, is 80 per-<lb/>
cent federally funded and 20 percent<lb/>
state funded. About 50 students<lb/>
were cut 10 hours per week, totall-<lb/>
ing 500 hours in manpower cuts.<lb/>
The reason the library has been<lb/>
able to employ any student help at<lb/>
all is due to the funds provided by<lb/>
the self-help program. This pro-<lb/>
gram, unlike work study, is institu-<lb/>
tionally financed, and is more flexi-<lb/>
ble than work study.<lb/>
cut. Dr. Brunelle said that one of<lb/>
the setbacks was the suddenness of<lb/>
the cut. Had departments known<lb/>
ahead of time, they could have<lb/>
divided their funds more evenly<lb/>
throughout the semester.<lb/>
The major reason given for the<lb/>
termination of work study is what<lb/>
Robert Boudreaux, director of stu-<lb/>
dent financial aid, coined as over-<lb/>
committment of funds. Each<lb/>
semester, financial aid funds are<lb/>
over-committed by as much as 35<lb/>
percent, which allows for students<lb/>
who drop out or fail to utilize all of<lb/>
their financial aid.<lb/>
In the last few years, however,<lb/>
more and more students have re-<lb/>
quired all of the funds atied to<lb/>
them. Also, even though the finan-<lb/>
cial aid budget has remained consis-<lb/>
tent over the years, minimum wage<lb/>
has increased, cutting tunds even<lb/>
more.<lb/>
As to future student help in the<lb/>
library, Dr. Brunelle said that the<lb/>
outlook is not clear. The new<lb/>
1981-82 fiscal school year begins se-<lb/>
cond summer session, and is tairly<lb/>
optimistic, but Dr. Brunelle stated:<lb/>
"We don't know what the federal<lb/>
government is going to do As the<lb/>
provide 80 percent of the work<lb/>
study funding, their actions are<lb/>
crucial to the program.<lb/>
Accident Results<lb/>
In Professor's Death<lb/>
program was cut.<lb/>
Delinquent Payments Cause Problems<lb/>
By Karen W endt<lb/>
AukImi Nr? Mitor<lb/>
The SGA loan system has<lb/>
undergone changes in the past year<lb/>
and is looking forward to making<lb/>
more in the future. Unfortunately<lb/>
one of the problems that they are<lb/>
having difficulties solving is the one<lb/>
of delinquent loan payments.<lb/>
In February of 1980 a total of<lb/>
$1,220 in loans was "charged off"<lb/>
according to SGA treasurer Kirk<lb/>
Little. By charging off the loans, the<lb/>
loans were deemed uncollectable,<lb/>
usually due to the student dropping<lb/>
out or graduating. Though contact<lb/>
was attempted through both the of-<lb/>
fices of the SGA and those of the<lb/>
to students, no questions asked, for<lb/>
the amount of $25. This loan is ex-<lb/>
pected to be paid back at the end of<lb/>
a month with the addition of a one<lb/>
dollar service charge. If the loan is<lb/>
not repaid by the date due a ten per-<lb/>
cent surcharge is added per year. A<lb/>
total of $520 was charged off this<lb/>
fund.<lb/>
The surcharges are used to pay<lb/>
for the costs of processing the loan<lb/>
and for the letters sent out for delin-<lb/>
quent loans. According to the Stu-<lb/>
dent Fund Accounting Office a total<lb/>
of $2,446.85 was added to the loan<lb/>
fund which was made by the sur-<lb/>
charges and the interest charged to<lb/>
the students.<lb/>
SGA attorney, the person could not At the present time the SGA has<lb/>
be located or still failed to repay the seVeraI ways of attmpting to gat the<lb/>
loan. loans repaid. At the first day that<lb/>
A standard SGA loan is available tne ioan js overdue a letter is issued<lb/>
ii? to tne student asking for their repay-<lb/>
?f"15 ment. This letter serves as a<lb/>
"W 'fif IflCiffpt reminder for many students.<lb/>
VII ?? 1QIVV If the loan still goes unpaid the<lb/>
'mmmmmmmmmm'ailm ?qA can "tag"the students records.<lb/>
By "tagging" the records they make<lb/>
Editorials3 it impossible for the student to<lb/>
Features 4 register.<lb/>
Sports5 If the loan still goes unpaid it is<lb/>
Classifieds6 turned over to an attorney retained<lb/>
by the SGA who takes over the at-<lb/>
tempts to regain the money.<lb/>
The SGA "confidential loan<lb/>
system also charged off a total of<lb/>
$700. With the system that was in<lb/>
effect at that time, loans were made<lb/>
available to students who were deal-<lb/>
ing with a problem pregnancy to be<lb/>
used to help pay for delivery costs or<lb/>
an abortion. The borrower was ex-<lb/>
pected to repay the loan at the end<lb/>
of a six-month period with a five<lb/>
dollar service charge added.<lb/>
However the SGA confidential<lb/>
loan is no longer in existence. In its<lb/>
place the SGA Emergency Medical<lb/>
Loan was developed by a panel of<lb/>
advisors and officials, university<lb/>
counselors, health service officials<lb/>
and a representative from the cam-<lb/>
pus ministry.<lb/>
The new loans can be used for all<lb/>
types of medical emergencies, as<lb/>
long as the need is certified by the<lb/>
Student Health Service. The loans<lb/>
are still available for pregnancy-<lb/>
related problems, but they also<lb/>
cover such things as a new pair of<lb/>
glasses or dental work on a broken<lb/>
tooth. The loans are available for<lb/>
any amount up to $150.<lb/>
In another change in the system,<lb/>
the SGA treasurer is no longer re-<lb/>
quired to know the medical problem<lb/>
in order to authorize the loan. When<lb/>
the old system was in operation the<lb/>
SGA recieved a barrage of criticism<lb/>
for its policy of demanding that the<lb/>
treasurer know the emergency, in<lb/>
fear of a breach of confidentiality.<lb/>
On the current application the<lb/>
student is required to get a signature<lb/>
from the Student Health Center cer-<lb/>
tifying that the student does have a<lb/>
medical problem. The completed<lb/>
form is then brought to the SGA<lb/>
treasurer and, provided the money<lb/>
is available, he signs the form which<lb/>
authorizes that the check be written.<lb/>
The loan must be paid back at the<lb/>
end of six months and a five dollar<lb/>
service charge is made for the loan.<lb/>
Problems still plague the loan<lb/>
system, however. Though the SGA<lb/>
yearly sets aside a certain amount to<lb/>
be used for SGA loans and<lb/>
Emergency Medical loans each year,<lb/>
the SGA ran out of funds for the<lb/>
SGA loan system in October of last<lb/>
year. When a buildup of at least one<lb/>
thousand dollars is again built up<lb/>
the loans are again offered to the<lb/>
students. But the loan payments<lb/>
drift in and there is not any certainty<lb/>
of when the loans will be available.<lb/>
A private memorial service was<lb/>
held on Sunday for the family and<lb/>
friends of Dr. James Clay Young,<lb/>
30, assistant professor in the<lb/>
Department of Sociology and An-<lb/>
thropology who died on May 18.<lb/>
Young died as a result of com-<lb/>
plications which occurred after a<lb/>
swimming accident on May 10. Ac-<lb/>
cording to reports Young and his<lb/>
wife, Linda Garro, were swimming<lb/>
in the surf near Palatka, Fla. when<lb/>
heavy currents overcame them.<lb/>
Surfers pulled them from the water<lb/>
and helped to resuscitate Young who<lb/>
had been underwater an estimated<lb/>
ten minutes.<lb/>
After the accident the couple was<lb/>
taken to St. Augustine Hospital<lb/>
where Ms. Garro was treated and<lb/>
released. Young's condition was<lb/>
listed as critical. He was later<lb/>
transferred to Jacksonville Baptist<lb/>
Medical Center where complications<lb/>
set in as a result of the accident.<lb/>
Young had been a member of the<lb/>
ECU faculty since 1978. He taught<lb/>
classes in Introduction to An-<lb/>
thropology, Medical Anthropology<lb/>
and Comparative Religion.<lb/>
Young held degrees in An-<lb/>
thropology from the University of<lb/>
California-Riverside, and Califor-<lb/>
nia State University. He specialized<lb/>
in health care in developing areas,<lb/>
Medical Anthropology, Cognitive<lb/>
Anthropology and Latin America.<lb/>
He had published one book,<lb/>
"Medical Choice in a Mexican<lb/>
Village" and collaborated on<lb/>
"Instructor's Resource Book For<lb/>
Sociology<lb/>
In 1981 Young organized and<lb/>
chaired a symposium on the<lb/>
Ethnography of Health Care deci-<lb/>
sions at a meeting of the American<lb/>
Anthropological Association. He<lb/>
was a member of this organization<lb/>
as well as the Society for Applied<lb/>
Anthropology and the societv for<lb/>
Medical Anthropology.<lb/>
Young's doctoral thesis was titled<lb/>
"Health Care In Pichataro: Medical<lb/>
Decision Making in a Tarwsean<lb/>
Town of Michoacan Mexico. Dur-<lb/>
ing his education he was presented<lb/>
numerous grants and Fellowships.<lb/>
He is survived by his wife; his<lb/>
parents, James and Elizabeth<lb/>
Young of Long Beach, Calif and<lb/>
two sisters, Elizabeth Young of<lb/>
Long Beach and Patricia Beonde of<lb/>
Palatka, Fla.<lb/>
Photo by MARIANNE BAINES<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dr. James Clay Young<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057343_0002"/><lb/>
I!<lb/>
niy<lb/>
9<lb/>
 tat!<lb/>
M<lb/>
<lb/>
?t?? iEaat (Eamlintan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, emmutcm<lb/>
JlMMY DuPREE, Managing tdilor<lb/>
Chuck Foster, a-ama Deborah Hotaling, v, ???,<lb/>
Chris Lichok, unqo William Yelverton v??j??"<lb/>
Ai ison Bartel, Prucllon -Himv Steve Bachner. mmuw<lb/>
Ma 27, 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Media Budgets<lb/>
Alternative Financing One Solution<lb/>
Much to the relief of those involv-<lb/>
ed with East Carolina's media,<lb/>
budgets for the upcoming year have<lb/>
finally been approved by the Media<lb/>
Board. As it now stands, the board<lb/>
has a surplus in excess of $5,000.<lb/>
Achieving a balanced budget was<lb/>
no easy task, however, and<lb/>
necessitated budget cuts by all the<lb/>
media. These ranged from The East<lb/>
Carolinian's S14,000 worth of cuts<lb/>
to The Ebony Herald's $130.<lb/>
These cuts, no matter what the<lb/>
size, hurt and will undoubtedly af-<lb/>
fect the quality of next year's<lb/>
publications and radio station, The<lb/>
difficulty of achieving a balanced<lb/>
budget, despite the increase in stu-<lb/>
dent fees received by the Media<lb/>
Board this year, spells trouble for<lb/>
the coming years.<lb/>
If balancing the budget was so<lb/>
difficult this year, even with the fee<lb/>
increase, what will happen next year<lb/>
when there is no increase? As<lb/>
everyone knows, money is tight all<lb/>
around, and inflation is fast driving<lb/>
up printing costs. Obviously the<lb/>
Media Board cannot request a fee<lb/>
increase every year; the buck has to<lb/>
stop somewhere.<lb/>
In solving these problems, the<lb/>
board has two routes of action that<lb/>
it can take; eliminating at least one<lb/>
medium or finding an alternative<lb/>
form of financing.<lb/>
Eliminating media would certain-<lb/>
ly be an unpopular move and should<lb/>
be avoided if at all possible.<lb/>
Therefore, most viable and practical<lb/>
solution is an alternative form of<lb/>
financing.<lb/>
As things stand, The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian is the only medium at ECU<lb/>
that produces a significant amount<lb/>
of revenue. Through advertising<lb/>
receipts, the newspaper has been<lb/>
able to produce about two-thirds of<lb/>
the revenue necessary to support<lb/>
itself this year.<lb/>
Our purpose in pointing this out<lb/>
is not to beat our own drum but<lb/>
rather to point out that other media<lb/>
can help ease the financial burden<lb/>
by selling advertising.<lb/>
This would apply primarily to<lb/>
The Buccaneer and The Ebony<lb/>
Herald. Neither of these publica-<lb/>
tions now has plans to sell advertis-<lb/>
ing during the coming year. Both<lb/>
should take a serious look at the<lb/>
possibility.<lb/>
Advertising revenue is money in<lb/>
the bank and can help ease the<lb/>
financial burden put on students.<lb/>
Selling advertisements may not be<lb/>
easy, but the market is there for<lb/>
those willing to seek it. Of course, it<lb/>
is easier to rely on the students and<lb/>
The Media Board to provide funds,<lb/>
but the time has come when<lb/>
everyone must asked to do<lb/>
everything possible to ease financial<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
In short, the media at ECU need<lb/>
to start carrying more of their own<lb/>
weight.<lb/>
'Implements of Crime'<lb/>
In a move of utter ridiculousness,<lb/>
the state House saw fit to pass a bill<lb/>
Monday that will outlaw the sale,<lb/>
possession and use of paraphernalia<lb/>
related to the use of marijuana. The<lb/>
Senate had earlier passed a similar<lb/>
version of the bill.<lb/>
If the two chambers can iron out<lb/>
the differences, the bill will go to<lb/>
Gov. Jim Hunt, who has expressed<lb/>
support for it.<lb/>
So in a day and age when many<lb/>
states are moving to decriminalize<lb/>
marijuana, our state legislators, in<lb/>
picture-perfect reactionary manner,<lb/>
have seen fit to pass a bill that<lb/>
would levy harsher penalties for the<lb/>
possession of paraphernalia than<lb/>
for the possession of the drug itself.<lb/>
Such a move is typical of North<lb/>
Carolina's often regressive politics.<lb/>
It seems that word may not have<lb/>
reached North Carolina that mari-<lb/>
juana is not the root of all evil and<lb/>
that it does not induce "reefer<lb/>
madness<lb/>
One legislator called parapher-<lb/>
nalia the "implements of crime<lb/>
Another said that such a law would<lb/>
provide a "big stick" to deter<lb/>
children from drug use.<lb/>
This reasoning does not jibe from<lb/>
a logical point of view. Laws alone<lb/>
do not deter action; they must be<lb/>
backed up by popular sentiment.<lb/>
So perhaps the ultimate irony of<lb/>
the situation is that if the bill does<lb/>
become law, it? like other attempts<lb/>
to legislate morals? is likely to be a<lb/>
dismal failure.<lb/>
As a law the bill's main result<lb/>
might be to foster a booming black<lb/>
market for drug paraphernalia in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Helms Forces Oppose Proposal<lb/>
By CLAUDE SITTON<lb/>
Jesse Helms likes to tell the folks back<lb/>
home he's busy in Washington getting<lb/>
government off their backs. That's the<lb/>
senator's way of saying he's pushing for<lb/>
government-blessed prayer in the schools,<lb/>
an Uncle Sam standing between women<lb/>
and their doctors, and similar federal af-<lb/>
fronts to personal liberty.<lb/>
But neither Helms nor his political<lb/>
tailgaters are so busy that they can't find<lb/>
time to supply aid and agitation to a cam-<lb/>
paign aimed at the senator's likely oppo-<lb/>
nent in the 1984 run for Helm's seat. This<lb/>
effort is being waged by various scruffy<lb/>
bands of naysayers in search of nothing so<lb/>
much as a free lunch.<lb/>
One such group calls itself the Commit-<lb/>
tee Against the Gas Tax. Anyone devoted<lb/>
to truth in packaging would label it Politi-<lb/>
cians for Potholes, but never mind. Their<lb/>
ostensible target is Governor Hunt's pro-<lb/>
posal to save the state's highway system<lb/>
from wrack and ruin by adding 3 cents to<lb/>
the 9-cent tax on motor fuels.<lb/>
Helms and his Raleigh sidekick, Tom<lb/>
Ellis, see quite another opportunity. That's<lb/>
the chance to pin a sticker reading "Hunt's<lb/>
tax" on the plan to rescue the Highway<lb/>
Fund from imminent bankruptcy. So<lb/>
they've armed the Committee Against the<lb/>
Gas Tax with at least $10,000 and the<lb/>
Helms Congressional Club's own choice of<lb/>
radio commercials on which to spend it.<lb/>
Tar Heels know what's on tap. It's a<lb/>
rerun of the hitem-low-and-often show<lb/>
with which the Helms machine defeated<lb/>
former Sen. Robert Morgan. Pols still<lb/>
marvel over that political lynching, com-<lb/>
mitted as it was by and for Helms, who<lb/>
was quoted the other week by Time as hav-<lb/>
ing said of himself in typical humble-pie<lb/>
manner, "I'm a lousy politician and a ter-<lb/>
rible speaker<lb/>
The pro-pothole crowd's approach is<lb/>
simplicity itself: juggle the figures, nudge<lb/>
the facts and count on suckers to take the<lb/>
bait. No one is supposed to recall that it<lb/>
was the Republican administration that ad-<lb/>
ded 10 to 15 cents a gallon to the price of<lb/>
gasoline by decontrolling oil. No one is<lb/>
supposed to remember that it was Helms,<lb/>
other Republicans, and Boll Weevile<lb/>
Democrats who approved a budget that<lb/>
lops off much of the federal highway<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Both the Committee Against the Gas<lb/>
Tax and a like-minded group, Concerned<lb/>
Citizens for No Tax Increase, argue that a<lb/>
General Fund "surplus" can be used to<lb/>
revive the Highway Fund. That's no<lb/>
surplus at all. Instead, it's money already<lb/>
designated for pay raises for teachers and<lb/>
state employees, other operating costs, and<lb/>
the cushionnecessary to meet the constitu-<lb/>
tional requirement of a balanced budget.<lb/>
Moreover, this credit balance in the<lb/>
General Fund account already has beeen<lb/>
endangered by the federal budget cut refer-<lb/>
red to above. That's why the Legislature<lb/>
has postponed the pay raises. The prospect<lb/>
now is that the state may have to dip into it<lb/>
to maintain minimum education and<lb/>
health services that heretofore have<lb/>
depended on federal support.<lb/>
W. David Stedman, the millionaire cot-<lb/>
ton mill boss from Asheboro who created<lb/>
Concerned Citizens, distorts the issue even<lb/>
further. His propaganda gives an exag-<lb/>
gerated picture of taxes in North Carolina<lb/>
by concentrating on this or that individual<lb/>
levey and ignoring the fact that state taxes<lb/>
finance manyjublic services that are paid<lb/>
for in other states by local taxes.<lb/>
The answer to this barrage of misleading<lb/>
statistics is simple and straightforward. It<lb/>
comes from the Tax Foundation, a<lb/>
business and industrial research group bas-<lb/>
ed in Washington. The foundation ranks<lb/>
North Carolina's per capita state and local<lb/>
tax burden among the five lowest in the na-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Stedman and his Stedman Corporation<lb/>
have profitted handsomely from the good<lb/>
roads, good schools and other services pro-<lb/>
vided by the state. Products from his 12<lb/>
textile and apparel plants are hauled to<lb/>
market by trucks that no doubt contribute<lb/>
their share of potholes and worn asphalt to<lb/>
the highway system. Yet, he now opposes<lb/>
paying his fair share to support those ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
If the efforts of Stedman, Helms, and<lb/>
company succeed, the highway system will<lb/>
be destroyed by neglect. Perhaps Stedman<lb/>
thinks that when the result becomes ap-<lb/>
parent he and his profits will have departed<lb/>
for some fat cat's tax shelter. Perhaps<lb/>
Helms thinks that he, too, will be beyond<lb/>
reach, with another six-year lease on his<lb/>
Senate seat. If North Carolinians permit<lb/>
this to occur, it is they who will be left to<lb/>
pay the price of monetary avarice and<lb/>
political greed.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Claude Sitton is the<lb/>
Managing Editor oj The News And<lb/>
Observer in Raleigh.<lb/>
Reagan Brings 'Meanness' To Law<lb/>
"sorrv fell , cmmx. vm m me seu wm pipes, the ohix kxeptawe wa fnwwtttitA<lb/>
1 aw STIU EU ARE SHOT HAtEfc, fWrZU? STICKS, CCKKSCttUh AND WANN 6NVTW)! "<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
If the 1970s, with its preoccupation with<lb/>
self, was the Me Decade, the 1980s, follow-<lb/>
ing the conservative obsession with revers-<lb/>
ing the gains of the past 50 years for the<lb/>
disenfranchised, may go down in history as<lb/>
the Mean Decade. Both impulses?getting<lb/>
yours, and keeping others from getting<lb/>
theirs?are selfish. But while the<lb/>
fashionable selfishness of the seventies<lb/>
took the form of apolitical withdrawal, the<lb/>
eighties are shaping up as a time to lash<lb/>
out.<lb/>
With Ronald Reagan's punitive budget,<lb/>
meanness is being written into law. The<lb/>
natural world is to be cut and burned for<lb/>
profit, food stamps denied to hungry peo-<lb/>
ple, affirmative action stalled, public legal<lb/>
services dismantled, funding for the arts<lb/>
squashed, Social Security wounded,<lb/>
perhaps fatally. Reagan's attack on Social<lb/>
Security is a direct violation of his cam-<lb/>
paign pledge to maintain the system as a<lb/>
safety net for the elderly poor. That pro-<lb/>
mise, it turns out, is worth about as much<lb/>
as a 1981 dollar.<lb/>
Why, even corporate executives claim<lb/>
they are being squeezed by inflation. Ac-<lb/>
cording to a survey by Ernst &amp; Whinney, a<lb/>
New York accounting firm, over half of a<lb/>
group of executives with average yearly in-<lb/>
comes of $88,000 complain that their stan-<lb/>
dard of living is declining. Twenty-three<lb/>
percent say they are tightening their belts<lb/>
at home and on the job. You do wonder<lb/>
how they get by.<lb/>
In reality, the Reagan administration is a<lb/>
government of the rich, by the rich and for<lb/>
the rich, and has been so since day one,<lb/>
when the mink coats and top hats crowded<lb/>
Washington for the Inauguration. Not<lb/>
since the mean-spirited Republican trium-<lb/>
virate of Harding, Coolidge and Hoover<lb/>
has privilege been so nakedly enshrined in<lb/>
the White House.<lb/>
No one who has truly followed Reagan's<lb/>
career as governor of California and stump<lb/>
American<lb/>
Journal<lb/>
speaker for General Electric should be sur-<lb/>
prised at the swiftness and thoroughness<lb/>
with which he has turned the ship of state<lb/>
to the right. Post-election assurances by<lb/>
myopic seers like James Reston of The<lb/>
New York Times and The Washington<lb/>
Post's David Broder that Reagan would<lb/>
prove to be a moderate compromiser once<lb/>
he reached Washington have been shown<lb/>
to be transparently false. The president is<lb/>
as he has long been: an ideologue of the far<lb/>
right.<lb/>
In theory, conservatives such as Reagan<lb/>
oppose high government spending and ex-<lb/>
tensive government regulation. In practice,<lb/>
as the early months of the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration have demonstrated, conser-<lb/>
vatives oppose only certain kinds of<lb/>
government spending and regulation.<lb/>
Military spending-let's not call it defense,<lb/>
no one is attacking us-is at an all-time<lb/>
high. Budget cutter David Stockman has<lb/>
asked Congress for more money for his of-<lb/>
fice. And lavish federal subsidies to<lb/>
politically powerful interests such as the<lb/>
tobacco industry continue to be granted.<lb/>
Those who will suffer most from<lb/>
Reagan's punitive policies are those with<lb/>
the least to lose: the old, the poor, racial<lb/>
minorities, women, working people.<lb/>
Together, those groups constitute a ma-<lb/>
jority.<lb/>
Unlike the moneyed elite that runs Penn-<lb/>
sylvania Avenue and Wall Street, however,<lb/>
the less affluent haven't organized<lb/>
themselves into an effective political force.<lb/>
Until and unless they do, the humanitarian<lb/>
features of American society will continue<lb/>
to be attacked.<lb/>
The consequences of scuttling social<lb/>
programs and concentrating even more<lb/>
power in the hands of the corporate giants<lb/>
are predictable. They include higher infla-<lb/>
tion sparked by cost-inefficient military<lb/>
spending, a sharp rise in occupational ac-<lb/>
cidents and -disease and the continued<lb/>
growth of violent crime, much of it seem-<lb/>
ingly senselessthe final acts of persons<lb/>
with no hope, whose desperation can touch<lb/>
even presidents and popes. If the ad-<lb/>
ministrative responds by lashing out with<lb/>
ever more punitive laws while ignorning<lb/>
the underlying causes of crime, the situa-<lb/>
tion can only get worse.<lb/>
It's not much to look forward to, this<lb/>
scenario. But such is the American future<lb/>
if the Mean Decade is allowed to unfold<lb/>
unchecked.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes oj verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorfs). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. Alt let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
days.<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057343_0003"/><lb/>
?V<lb/>
1<lb/>
1 HI I AST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
MAY 27, 1981<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
'Excalibur'<lb/>
Despite Flaws, Film Shines<lb/>
By KATHY Wl 1 KK<lb/>
Muff riler<lb/>
Director John Boorman has realized a dream-not<lb/>
something nist anyone can manage to do. Like many<lb/>
others through history, Boorman was obsessed with the<lb/>
ieeends of King Arthur. However, his obsession went a<lb/>
step further; he dreamt of making the perfect movie to<lb/>
bring the legend to life.<lb/>
Whether or not he succeeded in making the perfect<lb/>
Arthurian movie is a matter that may be debated, but,<lb/>
in any case, the result of Boorman's dream is<lb/>
"Excalibur now playing at Greenville's Plaza<lb/>
Cinema.<lb/>
"Excalibur" is the most recent screen adaptation of<lb/>
the Arthurian legend, the screenplay a combination of<lb/>
the talents of Boorman and Raspo Pallenburg.<lb/>
Arthurian devotees ma) hope to find in "Excalibur"<lb/>
a believable, realistic presentation of the legends. If this<lb/>
is so, they ma well be disappointed. For all its beautiful<lb/>
cinematography and excitement, "Fxcalibur" will pro-<lb/>
bably leave Arthurian tans unsatisfied and awaiting the<lb/>
arrival of the definitive Arthurian movie.<lb/>
Probably no one could find fault with the physical ap-<lb/>
pearance of "Excalibur It is enchanting, depicting the<lb/>
world oi Arthur as a sort oi Celtic Never-Never Land, a<lb/>
world realistic m appearance but where all sorts of<lb/>
magical things can happen. Through silvery mists, in<lb/>
awkward, pre-medieval castles, the story unfolds. In-<lb/>
deed, the settings of "Excalibur" achieve a degree of ac-<lb/>
curacy never before seen in Arthurian films.<lb/>
The costumes, too, show that some consideration was<lb/>
given to historical authenticity. This viewer, for one,<lb/>
found it extremelv refreshing not to see the Arthurian<lb/>
characters cavorting in outfits which would more pro-<lb/>
perly belong in a presentation of "Richard 11<lb/>
Certain members of the cast, composed largely oi<lb/>
unknowns, bring "Excalibur" to life and make it,<lb/>
despite its faults, a movie well worth seeing. The viewer<lb/>
can expect new and sometimes innovative interpreta-<lb/>
tions ot the legendarv figures. Nicol Williamson, the<lb/>
film's single star turns Merlin into a disturbingly im-<lb/>
patient and irritating fellow .<lb/>
Despite most viewers' ideas of Merlin as a kindly old<lb/>
man. this new lnterpretation-surprisingly-works rather<lb/>
well. Arthur is portrayed by Nigel Terry, widely seen by<lb/>
audiences more than ten years ago as the slovenly, dim-<lb/>
witted Prince John in the Academy Award-winning<lb/>
"The Lion in Winter<lb/>
Terry's Arthur may well be picked to pieces by critics.<lb/>
He lacks fire, power; it is hard to believe this Arthur<lb/>
could unify Britain. Still, he has the gentleness and quiet<lb/>
intelligence we have come to expect. Perhaps most<lb/>
noteworthy of all the cast is Cherie Lunghi.<lb/>
She brings glorious new life to Guinevere, making of<lb/>
her a strong woman, beautiful and desirable, but not<lb/>
fragile in the least. This Guinevere is sturdy and<lb/>
capable; she is real. The rest of the cast, including two<lb/>
Boorman family members, fail, for the most part, to br-<lb/>
ing any sort of humanity to their characters. Even<lb/>
Lancelot is bland.<lb/>
Largely, all the ingredients for an excellent film are<lb/>
present in "Excaliburand the film is, without doubt,<lb/>
entertaining and fascinating to behold. Yet, excellence is<lb/>
not achieved. Why?<lb/>
One main reason is simply this-confusion. It seems as<lb/>
if Boorman could not decide whether to make the film<lb/>
realistic or fantastic, so he made it both, and in disturb-<lb/>
ing combinations.<lb/>
For instance, a medieval village is realisticly depicted<lb/>
in one scene; some time later we are shown Arthur's cas-<lb/>
tle at Camelot which, among other artifacts, boasts a<lb/>
Round Table apparently made out of some material like<lb/>
plexiglas and chrome. Also, for viewers unfamiliar with<lb/>
Arthurian legends, some of the situations and<lb/>
characters may lack adequate explanations.<lb/>
For more critical viewers, real Arthurian devotees,<lb/>
the lack of theme may seem unforgiveable. The civiliz-<lb/>
ing influence of Arthur, except in the presence of his<lb/>
futuristic Camelot, is almost entirely overlooked.<lb/>
A few painfully obvious Arthur-Christ comparisons<lb/>
are made, but beyond this, in his attempt to create the<lb/>
perfect Arthurian movie, it seems that Boorman has, so<lb/>
to speak, made a bunch of trees but overlooked the<lb/>
forest. "Excalibur" is filled with thrills, wonder, and<lb/>
beauty, but lacks real meaning. The Arthurian legend<lb/>
becomes just an interesting story.<lb/>
Is "Excalibur" worth seeing, then? The answer can<lb/>
only be yes. Despite its failures, its successes-its stunn-<lb/>
ing cinematography, characters, sets, excitement-make<lb/>
it a film quite unlike any other.<lb/>
"Excalibur John Boorman's dazzling screen adaptation of Malory's I.e Morte Darthur, will be playing an<lb/>
extra week at Greenville's Plaza Cinema.<lb/>
Meet The Voice Of 'American Top 40' Radio<lb/>
B RICHARD MAHLER<lb/>
LOS ANGELES, C A K PS)?You<lb/>
wouldn't recognize the face, but the<lb/>
voice is possibly the most frequently<lb/>
heard one in the history of the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
It belongs to Casey Kasem, who's<lb/>
been coming at you over the radio<lb/>
with "The American Top 40 a<lb/>
weekly syndicated countdown of<lb/>
top-selling records on more than 950<lb/>
stations around the world, for 11<lb/>
years now. A televised version of the<lb/>
show has been out for a year.<lb/>
"Hollywood will always represent<lb/>
dreams to people says Kasem in<lb/>
explaining why his countdown for-<lb/>
mat, in which songs are introduced<lb/>
with colorful anecdotes about the<lb/>
recording artist involved, is so suc-<lb/>
cessful. "Our show is about positive<lb/>
aspects of people's lives. We avoid<lb/>
anything that would shed a bad light<lb/>
on a group or individual<lb/>
Consequently, he's "very<lb/>
careful" in avoiding controversy<lb/>
and "exploitation He'll "argue<lb/>
for an hour to prevent one word<lb/>
from running in the program that<lb/>
might insinuate something that I<lb/>
don't want people to have in their<lb/>
heads about a person he stresses.<lb/>
Kasem believes the accent on the<lb/>
positive explains AT40's, as it's<lb/>
known among radio syndicators,<lb/>
wide appeal.<lb/>
"Our biggest fans are people in<lb/>
the business Kasem says. "They<lb/>
know if we say something it's going<lb/>
to be truthful and completely check-<lb/>
ed out<lb/>
It's checked out by his staff of<lb/>
four writers, stationed in New York<lb/>
and Los Angeles.<lb/>
Kasem is deeply aware of the<lb/>
trials and tribulations of making it<lb/>
in the music business. Starting as an<lb/>
actor and sound effects man in the<lb/>
studios oi his native Detroit, he<lb/>
worked at several television and<lb/>
radio stations before se'tlmg in San<lb/>
Francisco in the early sixties.<lb/>
One day the program director at<lb/>
KEWB there told Kasem, who had<lb/>
been using comedy and character<lb/>
voice on his Top 40 show, to forget<lb/>
the jokes and come up with<lb/>
something different  fast.<lb/>
"I had no idea what I would do<lb/>
Kasem recalls. "I saw a copy oi<lb/>
Mho's Who in Pop Music lying in<lb/>
the garbage can. It listed things like<lb/>
the real names of artists and their<lb/>
home towns. And at the start of the<lb/>
show, 1 started teasing<lb/>
The "tease bio" concept was an<lb/>
overnight success, with Kasem using<lb/>
anecdotal introductions to the<lb/>
songs, followed b the "pay-off"<lb/>
after the song is played.<lb/>
The approach look him south t<lb/>
KRLA, then the top rock station in<lb/>
Los Angeles. Between 1965 and 196"<lb/>
he hosted a syndicated tv dance<lb/>
show called "Shebang and in Ju-<lb/>
ly, 1970, the first syndicated version<lb/>
of "American Top 40" was releas-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
"It was the wrong place at the<lb/>
wrong lime Kasem reflects now.<lb/>
"Top 40 was a dirty word. It was<lb/>
passe. Everybody told me that term<lb/>
was the death knell<lb/>
But Kasem had faith. "I never<lb/>
believed that disco jockies or lop 40<lb/>
would disappear. It's got deeper<lb/>
roots than any kind oi music 1 can<lb/>
think of<lb/>
He was correct. From the initial<lb/>
seven stations it played on, A140<lb/>
lias grown to roughly 500 stations in<lb/>
the U.S plus 400 affiliates of the<lb/>
Armed Forces Radio Network. The<lb/>
show is not only profitable for local<lb/>
stations - it is the top-rated show in<lb/>
some markets, and thus commands<lb/>
top advertising rates  but it helps<lb/>
clue program directors into new<lb/>
music trends.<lb/>
All of which gives Kasem a rosy<lb/>
view of the industry. "I don't hear<lb/>
the blandness or the sameness in<lb/>
radio that some people say they do.<lb/>
"Fortunately, all my careers are<lb/>
going at full tilt Kasem<lb/>
understates, as he looks forward to<lb/>
still more projects. "I think down<lb/>
the line I'll certainly be doing more<lb/>
acting and producing He hopes<lb/>
one day to portray fellow Lebanese-<lb/>
American Ralph Nader in a film<lb/>
biography <lb/>
TV's Background Noise Often<lb/>
Serves As Electric Study Aide<lb/>
Carly Simon In Concert Film<lb/>
Music stars Carly Simon, Jackson Browne, Crosby, Stills and<lb/>
Nash, the Doobie Brothers, John Hall, Graham Nash, Bonnie<lb/>
Raitt, Gil Scott-Heron, Bruce Springsteen, James Taylor, Jesse<lb/>
Colin Young, and a host of others join for the film "No Nukes"<lb/>
which will be shown tonight at 9 p.m. in Mendenhall's Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre. Footage is included from the five anti-nuclear concerts<lb/>
held at Madison Square Garden in 1979. On Monday night, June 1,<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee will present "The Buddy Hol-<lb/>
ly Story" starring Gary Busey. Admission for the films is by ID and<lb/>
Activity Card or MSC Membership Card. All summer films will be<lb/>
shown in Hendrix Theatre on Monday and Wednesday nights.<lb/>
By DAVID NORR1S<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The argument raging over television violence and its harmful effects on<lb/>
our society has escalated in recent months. Many people think that the<lb/>
constant flow of violence on TV watched by so many people is making<lb/>
ours a more violent society.<lb/>
There is one thing that I think helps keep TV from affecting our lives as<lb/>
much as it might: the fact that most people don't pay attention to the<lb/>
shows they are watching.<lb/>
Think about the number of times that you've come into a room where<lb/>
someone was watching TV and couldn't tell you what program was on,<lb/>
who was in it or anything that happened in it. (That will teach you to come<lb/>
in after that show's started.)<lb/>
It seems that many people use television simply as background noise. A<lb/>
simple turn of a knob (and alot of frantic fiddling with the fine tuning and<lb/>
the antenna) can really liven up a dull, quiet room. Or, it could also drown<lb/>
out alot of racket (like from living in a dorm or some other outlandishly<lb/>
noisy place.)<lb/>
LcAKrirob f)eovr Coiicgc Trie Hw ia)aj<lb/>
There are good things about the idea of looking on TV as a mere<lb/>
background hum, instead of something to watch intently. For one thing,<lb/>
people can get lots of reading done. Also, people can be spared some of<lb/>
the sex and violence of TV, unless they read sexy, violent books.<lb/>
The radio also can serve as a more-or-less unobtrusiv e background noise<lb/>
for many people. I'm used to working in studios in the art building, which<lb/>
can be unbelievably dead and quiet if one is working alone. Even the worst<lb/>
songs on the radio are somewhat welcome then, since they provide a little<lb/>
relief from the silence.<lb/>
Despite the thousands of study handbooks that say that people must<lb/>
have absolute quiet to study, most of us seem to work a little better with a<lb/>
TV or radio going. (The same guidebooks say not to eat while studying,<lb/>
and not to study without sitting up straight. 1 never paid any attention to<lb/>
them.)<lb/>
Having TV and radio to provide an electronic barrier of sound is one of<lb/>
the great changes that this century's technology has brought about. Just<lb/>
imagine living in, for example, the colonial days. People had to read and<lb/>
study in silence, unless they could afford to hire people to stand around<lb/>
making noise.<lb/>
6N 9ahv Nofi.K?)<lb/>
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O<lb/>
THH EAST C'AROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MAY 27, 1981<lb/>
Bucs Ready For Summer League<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Defense like this will play a big role in the Pirates' summer league season.<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Sport Editor<lb/>
With the possibility of a major<lb/>
league player's strike, the die hard<lb/>
baseball fan should not give up<lb/>
hope. The North Carolina Summer<lb/>
League should provide enough ex-<lb/>
citement to keep fans coming to the<lb/>
ballpark throughout the hot sum-<lb/>
mer months.<lb/>
And in the thick of this excite-<lb/>
ment should be the Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina with Coach Gary Overton<lb/>
at the helm. The Pirates were 18-11<lb/>
last season, and Overton expects his<lb/>
club to be a strong contender for the<lb/>
upcoming one.<lb/>
"Our defense should be the key<lb/>
for a successful season Overton<lb/>
noted. "It will be pretty strong, and<lb/>
we also have good speed in the out-<lb/>
field<lb/>
In the middle of the Buc defense<lb/>
could be catcher Jack Curlings, a<lb/>
transfer from Guilford. "We ex-<lb/>
pect power from Jack Overton<lb/>
said. "His strong arm is his biggest<lb/>
asset. He will gain experience in<lb/>
handling pitchers this summer<lb/>
which will help us next spring. He<lb/>
will be a big help in handling the<lb/>
voung pitchers.<lb/>
The Bucs, Overton said, will be<lb/>
very inexperienced on the mound.<lb/>
The top three pitchers, Bill Wilder,<lb/>
Bob Patterson and Kirk Parsons<lb/>
won't be performing in the North<lb/>
State League this summer.<lb/>
Wilder and Patterson will be pit-<lb/>
ching in the Valley League this sum-<lb/>
mer, a league that boasts the best<lb/>
players from the East Coast. Hitting<lb/>
star John Hallow will also join his<lb/>
teammates in this league for the up-<lb/>
coming season.<lb/>
Another Buc stalwart, shortstop<lb/>
Kellv Robinette, will be playing in a<lb/>
"little" different summer league<lb/>
this summer ? the Alaskan League.<lb/>
This league, in which players are in-<lb/>
vited to participate, has the best<lb/>
players in the country. Such major<lb/>
league stars as Dave Kingman, Fred-<lb/>
dy Lynn and Bob Horner played<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Even with the absence of these<lb/>
stars, the Bucs have good hitters in<lb/>
junior Todd Evans and rising<lb/>
sophomore Todd Evans. Hendlev<lb/>
hit a solid .300 for the Pirates this<lb/>
past spring.<lb/>
Kirk Parsons, 8-3 this past spring,<lb/>
will be the main man on the mound<lb/>
for the Pirates. Behind Parsons are<lb/>
Robbie Harper (2-2) and Mike<lb/>
Lloyd (2-0). Overman said he was<lb/>
hoping former Greenville Rose pro-<lb/>
duct Mike Williams will return to<lb/>
the form that caused him to be o<lb/>
highly-recruited.<lb/>
Overman said that Charlie Smith,<lb/>
a designated hitter last spring, will<lb/>
also do some pitching for the Bucs.<lb/>
"He did a great job for us last sum-<lb/>
mer Overman said.<lb/>
Other prospects on the mount are<lb/>
walk-ons Glenn McConnel and An-<lb/>
thony Willis.<lb/>
The Pirates will have an ex-<lb/>
perienced infield this summer.<lb/>
Hendley will be at third, Mike Sor-<lb/>
rel at second and Pete Persico will<lb/>
play shortstop. All these players<lb/>
received considerable playing time<lb/>
during the spring.<lb/>
Overman pointed to the outfield<lb/>
as an important key for the Pirates.<lb/>
Greenville native Mark Shank and<lb/>
Wilson native Robert Wells make<lb/>
up a speedy defensive combination.<lb/>
The Pirate coach says that Wilm-<lb/>
ington, 32-15 this past spring, and<lb/>
always powerful North Carolina<lb/>
will be the favorites in summer<lb/>
league action. Wilmington returns<lb/>
nearly every starter while Carolina<lb/>
kept many of their stronger ones.<lb/>
Pirates Ink Four Eastern Carolina Stars<lb/>
B WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Sports Kdltor<lb/>
The Pirate coaching staff has<lb/>
done a little home cookin' and land-<lb/>
ed four area baseball stars that will<lb/>
help the team in the outfield, on the<lb/>
mound and in the infield, head<lb/>
coach Hal Baird has announced.<lb/>
The four players, all from eastern<lb/>
North Carolina, are pitchers<lb/>
Charles "Chubby" Butler of<lb/>
Roanoke Rapids and Bobby David-<lb/>
son of Fayetteville E.E. Smith, out-<lb/>
fielder Craig Brown of Goldsboro<lb/>
and infielder Johnnv Banks of<lb/>
Garner.<lb/>
The Bucs, 28-15 in 1981, were look-<lb/>
ing for more speed in the outfield<lb/>
and strength on the mound. Depth<lb/>
was also needed for the infield. The<lb/>
Pirate coaches believe they have suc-<lb/>
ceeded in all three of these areas.<lb/>
Brown, who will also play foot-<lb/>
ball for the Pirates, was a four-year<lb/>
starter and two season all-star for<lb/>
Mike Glover's Goldsboro High<lb/>
team. Scouts say he possesses im-<lb/>
pressive speed, a good arm and a<lb/>
quick bat. "Brown is a very physical<lb/>
player assistant coach Gary Over-<lb/>
man said. "He will help us right<lb/>
away.<lb/>
The 6-2, 185 pounder will pro-<lb/>
bably go in the major league draft.<lb/>
Butler is a sleeper, Overman said.<lb/>
He led his team to the state playoffs<lb/>
with his strong arm. "He throws<lb/>
hard Overman pointed out. " We<lb/>
got him very early. He will help us<lb/>
when he smoothes out his techni-<lb/>
que<lb/>
Davidson, a highly-recruited 6-0,<lb/>
175-pound hurler, is a "polished"<lb/>
pitcher. "He has a very good<lb/>
delivery and a good command of his<lb/>
pitches Overman said. "He is a<lb/>
very smoothe, mature pitcher. He<lb/>
could pitch right away for us<lb/>
Overman said the coaching staff<lb/>
was pleased to have signed pitchers<lb/>
of this calibre. The Pirate assistant<lb/>
labeled the incoming freshman as a<lb/>
"big catch<lb/>
Banks was the first player the<lb/>
Pirates signed. The 5-11,165-pounder<lb/>
hits left and throws right. His hit-<lb/>
ting caught the eye of the Pirate<lb/>
staff. His lefthanded bat will be an<lb/>
asset to the team next year, Over-<lb/>
man said.<lb/>
Pirate Baseball Notes: The Bucs<lb/>
open up their summer league com-<lb/>
petition June 6 when they travel to<lb/>
Raleigh for a game against the<lb/>
Seahawks from the University of<lb/>
North Carolina-Wilmington. The<lb/>
Bucs finished with an 18-11 record<lb/>
last summer A major league<lb/>
tryout camp will be held at Harr-<lb/>
ington Field at 10 a.m. on Saturday,<lb/>
June 6. The Major League Scouting<lb/>
Bureau, representing 17 major<lb/>
league clubs, will conduct the camp<lb/>
with the aid of the East Carolina<lb/>
baseball coaching staff.<lb/>
Players 16-25 are invited to the<lb/>
tryouts. All players must provide<lb/>
their own uniforms and equipment.<lb/>
American Legion players must<lb/>
present a letter of permission from<lb/>
their coach or company com-<lb/>
mander .<lb/>
A Tale of Two Pirates<lb/>
Hall, Carter Now Teach Others<lb/>
By CHRIS HOLLOMAN<lb/>
Anbtaal Sport Mitor<lb/>
I<lb/>
Since the conception of college<lb/>
athletics in the latter part of the 19th<lb/>
century, the debate over the student-<lb/>
athlete has raged on. Stories are told<lb/>
time and time again of the athlete<lb/>
that played sports for three or four<lb/>
years and then had nothing to show<lb/>
for the effort. Many athletes may<lb/>
not have graduated or had hoped to<lb/>
end up playing their sport in the<lb/>
professional leagues.<lb/>
Still there is another question to<lb/>
be asked about college athletics: can<lb/>
a college athlete work hard to<lb/>
perfect his or her skills on the<lb/>
athletic field and use their athletic<lb/>
experience in everyday life as they<lb/>
would their education?<lb/>
This question can be answered by<lb/>
the story of two former East<lb/>
Carolina footbaJl players-Charlie<lb/>
Carter and Gerald Hall<lb/>
Hall and Carter had a lot in com-<lb/>
mon when they started for Pat<lb/>
Dye's Pirates during the latter part<lb/>
of the 1970s. Both players were<lb/>
eastern North Carolina products,<lb/>
Hall coming to ECU from Edenton,<lb/>
and Carter hailing from Fayet-<lb/>
teville. Both athletes started in the<lb/>
i Pirate secondary, and both excelled<lb/>
at their respective positions, Hall at<lb/>
free safety and Carter at corner-<lb/>
back.<lb/>
Hall, who played for the Pirates<lb/>
from 1975 until 1978, was con-<lb/>
sidered one of the top defensive<lb/>
backs in the country while playing<lb/>
for ECU. For example, during his<lb/>
senior year, Hail topped the number<lb/>
two-ranked Pirate secondary in<lb/>
tackles with 69. He also had four in-<lb/>
terceptions, six knock downs, caus-<lb/>
ed three fumbles and recovered<lb/>
another. He also finished hes senior<lb/>
year ranked Fifth in the country in<lb/>
punt returns with a 13.3 yards per<lb/>
return average. His average was 12<lb/>
yards a game.<lb/>
Carter also had a solid career at<lb/>
East Carolina, starting from 1977<lb/>
until 1979. During the 1978 football<lb/>
season, Carter topped the Pirates in<lb/>
interceptions with five, as will as<lb/>
recording 43 tackles, four<lb/>
r m u ii nmhr 11 causes a fumble against N.C. State. When Hall knockdowns and two fumble<lb/>
team with 55 tackles.<lb/>
But now that their football play-<lb/>
ing days are over, how has playing<lb/>
an intercollegiate sport affected<lb/>
their lives?<lb/>
Hall, who is a physical education<lb/>
teacher for grades kindergarden<lb/>
through five at Belvior Elementary<lb/>
School, also felt that the fact he was<lb/>
a former athlete helped grab his<lb/>
young students ears.<lb/>
"Because 1 used to play football,<lb/>
the kids I teach look up to me and<lb/>
feel like they know me better than<lb/>
someone they had not heard of<lb/>
beforeHall said. "A big part of<lb/>
education is trying to get the child to<lb/>
listen to the teacher and because the<lb/>
children respected me for playing at<lb/>
East Carolina 1 have had good com-<lb/>
munication with them Hall said.<lb/>
Carter has also had a chance to<lb/>
use the experience he gained on the<lb/>
playing field in everyday life.<lb/>
Carter, who will soon graduate in<lb/>
Special Education, is currently<lb/>
working with handicapped and<lb/>
special people at the Adult<lb/>
Develmental Activity Program<lb/>
Center in Greenville, also known as<lb/>
the ADAP Center. He has also<lb/>
found that lessons learned on the<lb/>
playing Field have helped him with<lb/>
his work.<lb/>
"Playing football was a big help<lb/>
to me because in order to be able to<lb/>
participate I had to study and work<lb/>
hard on the playing fieldCarter<lb/>
said. "Football requires so much of<lb/>
a person both physically and men-<lb/>
tally that you learn to work hard no<lb/>
matter what you end up doing.<lb/>
"The hard work and patience I<lb/>
learned at East Carolina has been a<lb/>
big help to me while working with<lb/>
people at the ADAP Center.<lb/>
"Patience and hard work are two<lb/>
very important considerations when<lb/>
working in special education<lb/>
Carter explained. "Playing sports<lb/>
in school helped me to develop both<lb/>
of these traits as well as teaching me<lb/>
the value of hard work<lb/>
Thus in these times of football<lb/>
scandles and the doctoring of<lb/>
academic records, two former<lb/>
athletes have taken what they learn-<lb/>
ed on the playing field and put it to<lb/>
work in making life not only better Charlie Carter learned hard work and patience while playing rootbalt for<lb/>
for themselves but also for the ones East Carolina. Carter uses those skills to help the mentally handicapped.<lb/>
4they teach. ????????????????-<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057343_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THI EAST C Kul ll V<lb/>
M-U<lb/>
1 vj-i 1<lb/>
Scorecard<lb/>
Informal Retreulion facilities<lb/>
l'llM( VI HIM-NM'KOCRAM<lb/>
t i<lb/>
HI Mli'N M ? 1MMIN.<lb/>
Men<lb/>
t 4 it<lb/>
VU<lb/>
, 1 KOI i 1 SSI S<lb/>
 u i -hi. conditioning,<lb/>
 lav meel<lb/>
M I I<lb/>
M<lb/>
A<lb/>
I s f, <lb/>
w<lb/>
at ton<lb/>
M lrl<lb/>
112<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
M?<lb/>
: <lb/>
 f 18<lb/>
5  h <lb/>
S ss loss<lb/>
Date<lb/>
26-6lti<lb/>
SUMMER RFC RFATION<lb/>
Baseball<lb/>
American League<lb/>
?art<lb/>
w L Pet o?<lb/>
Baltimore 34 14 ?M<lb/>
Cleveland 21 13 All 1<lb/>
New York 23 16 SW l'l<lb/>
Milwaukee ? II 5S0 3<lb/>
Boston 21 II SM 3<lb/>
Detroit 21 20 512 ui<lb/>
Toronto 12 ? 2S6 14<lb/>
Wet!<lb/>
Oakland 30 16 652 ?<lb/>
Chicago 22 16 5?9 4<lb/>
Te??$ 22 16 57? 4<lb/>
Cal.fornia 21 23 47; I<lb/>
KansasCltv 11 22 333 12-j<lb/>
Seattle 13 27 325 14<lb/>
Minnesota 12 27 JM 14")<lb/>
Sunday ? Games<lb/>
Detroit 8 5. Baltimore 2-3<lb/>
Milwaukee 2 10. Boston l 7. 1st<lb/>
game 14 innings<lb/>
Cleveland 12. New York 5<lb/>
Kansas City 6. Minnesota 4<lb/>
Oakland 6-5. Toronto 5-0. 1st game<lb/>
13 innings<lb/>
Chicago 10. California 2<lb/>
Teas5. Seattle 3<lb/>
Monday's Revwlrs<lb/>
Detroit 12. Milwaukee 3<lb/>
Oakland 5, Chicago 2<lb/>
Cleveland at Boston, night<lb/>
New York at Baltimore, night<lb/>
Minnesota at Texas, night<lb/>
Kansas City at Seattle, 1st game,<lb/>
night<lb/>
Kansas City at Seattle. 2nd game<lb/>
night<lb/>
Toronto at California, nigtit<lb/>
Today's Games<lb/>
Cleveland (Garland 2-4) at Boston<lb/>
(Eckerslev 4 3). 7 30p m<lb/>
New York (Nelson 1-0) at Balti<lb/>
more (McGregor 5-11.7 30 P m<lb/>
Detroit (Wilcox 5-4) at Milwaukee<lb/>
(Vuckovich4-2), i 30 pm<lb/>
Minnesota (Redtern 3 4) at Texas<lb/>
(Jenkins 2 3). 8 35 p m<lb/>
Chicago (Burns 4 2) at Oakland<lb/>
(Kingman 2 3). 10 30 P m<lb/>
Toronto (Leal 2 5) at California<lb/>
(Raull) 10 ?p.m<lb/>
Kansas City (Leonard 4-5) at Seat<lb/>
fie (Abbott 14). 10 35 pm<lb/>
National League<lb/>
East<lb/>
W L Pet GB<lb/>
St Louis 22 12 647 -<lb/>
Philadelphia 24 17 S85 l'i<lb/>
Monfeai 21 18 538 3' j<lb/>
Pittsburgh t? 18 47! 6<lb/>
New York 12 25 324 11<lb/>
Chicago ? 28 343 14' i<lb/>
West<lb/>
Los Angeles 30 17 714<lb/>
Cincinnati 2J 18 51 6 i<lb/>
S?-rancisco 23 21 523 8<lb/>
Atlanta 19 20 487 v ,<lb/>
Houston 20 22 476 10<lb/>
San Diego 17 25 405 13<lb/>
Sunday Games<lb/>
Cincinnati 3 3. Los Angeles 7 10<lb/>
Pittsburgh 7. Philadelphia l<lb/>
San Diego 7 Atlanta 5<lb/>
New York 3. St Louis I 10 .nn.ngs<lb/>
Chicago 6. Montreal 2<lb/>
San Francisco 2 Houston l<lb/>
Monday's Results<lb/>
New York 13. Philadelphia 3<lb/>
Chicago 10 Pittsburgh ?. 11 innings<lb/>
St Louis at Montreal, night<lb/>
Los Angeles at Atlanta, night<lb/>
San Francisco at Cincinnati, night<lb/>
San Diego at Houston, night<lb/>
Today's Games<lb/>
Pittsburgh (Camacho 0-0) at Ch:<lb/>
cago (Krukow 1-5), 1 35 p.m<lb/>
St. Louis (Martin 1-0) at Montreal<lb/>
(Rogers 4-31. 7 35 p m<lb/>
Los Angeles (Reuss 4-1) at Atlanta<lb/>
(Boggsl-7) 7 3Sp m<lb/>
San Francisco (Griffin 3-3) at On<lb/>
cinnati (Moskau 2 1)7 35 P m<lb/>
The Kasl Carolinian<lb/>
I ihr ampul . omimmtt<lb/>
aim 'v<lb/>
HuDirsrit-a evni Tuesday and<lb/>
Ihursoay during the academic<lb/>
?ea' and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ticial newspaper ol Fast<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated and published tor and<lb/>
by the students nt East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business 35 yearly<lb/>
All others ?5 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenvi'ie N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian oftn.es<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Building on 'he campus Of ECU,<lb/>
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ACROSS FROM DBS PARK PHONE 152 144<lb/>
Ow " Mon Fn 9am til S 30 p m<lb/>
Also m Berkley Mall Golds boro and Kins ton<lb/>
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iscuit<lb/>
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Open Mon. Fri. 7 a.m7 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 7 a.m. 2 p.m. ? Closed Sunday<lb/>
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Items and Prices<lb/>
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CLASS RINGS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057343_0006"/><lb/>
THhFASl I ARCH INIAN<lb/>
MA 27, 1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
EXTRA! EXTRA!<lb/>
6t? Eas' Carolinian u your link to<lb/>
E??t Carolina University Keep in<lb/>
touch by iubtcribing to The East<lb/>
Carolinian with our reduced iates<lb/>
from last year J0 toi an in<lb/>
iiiviOuai subscription and 130 Km a<lb/>
business subscription stay<lb/>
abreast of what's hippenmq at<lb/>
ECU All new subs r iptions will<lb/>
begn July I tor the cnl r? ? s. ,<lb/>
year Don ' be left out n the i old<lb/>
SutKM r.te Now'<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
1 he hmbasMoors ?<lb/>
IS Tnursday Ivne ? 00 I'M<lb/>
? . or Slaughter ?<lb/>
WN t 5th Street<lb/>
CHESS<lb/>
We have moved' Yes the<lb/>
Greenv.lie Chess Club is now<lb/>
i(H ateo in the basement ol Ihe<lb/>
Senior Citizens Center on theor<lb/>
nu i i th rinu t.reene We meet<lb/>
regularly at ' li on Monday<lb/>
nights it s just a short walk trom<lb/>
t ampus Join us'<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
7 ake a break ti om h,gh prn.es at<lb/>
Mendenhall stuoeni Center h you<lb/>
? ke  bow - play billiards oi : ? v<lb/>
table tennis you can save at<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
fcvery Friday afternoon trom<lb/>
I 00 PM until 4 00 PM,<lb/>
Mendenhall s low prices are<lb/>
i educed 1-3 tor bowling table ten<lb/>
nis and billiards All ECU<lb/>
students Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center members and guests can<lb/>
lave tun at their favorite sport for<lb/>
13 OFF the regular price on<lb/>
Discount Day<lb/>
Aiso loi t-cu faculty and staff<lb/>
MSC memhers every Wednesday<lb/>
evening is Faculty Staff Day in<lb/>
the Bowling Center Bowl two (2)<lb/>
games at the regular price and get<lb/>
the third (3) game tree from 5 00<lb/>
PM until B 00 PM every Wednes<lb/>
day<lb/>
Media Board Approves Budget<lb/>
Continued from Page I<lb/>
than the end of July. Aftei July 13,<lb/>
the printing costs will increase a<lb/>
penalty tor lateness<lb/>
The board also discussed WMH<lb/>
tadio station's lack of a general<lb/>
manager for the summer sessions<lb/>
Suggestions were made that a tern<lb/>
porar replacement be brought in or<lb/>
that Cilenda Killingsworth, last<lb/>
ear's general manager, fill in foi<lb/>
Sam Barwiek, the present general<lb/>
manager, while he is awa tor the<lb/>
summer killingsworth, however, is<lb/>
not a student this summer and is<lb/>
working full time at Cherry Point<lb/>
She informed Vice Chancellor<lb/>
Elmer Meyer earlier this month that<lb/>
she would be willing to handle cor-<lb/>
respondence and business matters<lb/>
on a suggested once-a-week basis.<lb/>
I ntil more information is submit-<lb/>
ted to the board concerning a tem-<lb/>
porary replacement, no decision will<lb/>
be made.<lb/>
Chap Ciurley, head of the Photo<lb/>
1 ab, requested that money from<lb/>
one line in his budget be moved to<lb/>
other lines in order to cover bills<lb/>
from last year. The board agreed to<lb/>
his request.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Souths No 6 A Rock Nightclub<lb/>
WED. -<lb/>
HOODSWAMP REC. ARTISTS<lb/>
SUPER GRIT<lb/>
(12 PRICE FOR ECU STUDENTS)<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
MOONLIGHT REC. ARTISTS<lb/>
THE FABULOUS<lb/>
KNOBS<lb/>
FRISAT.<lb/>
SUBWAY<lb/>
SUN. -<lb/>
SAAD'SSBOfc<lb/>
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ShB! rjhos Ami O.i, ,M. (J.i<lb/>
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Cohu, Bool JJi 9S<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
'Ml S t.iiis Street<lb/>
?i5:VttWk'<lb/>
lbs flaming Center heus been here for you elnoe 1974<lb/>
providing prtvale, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of aD ages, at a reasonable ooel<lb/>
lb Homing Center we're here when you need ua<lb/>
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? .1 ??? I IIHW I ? I HI ? ?!?! ?MH II I.l.l ? !? ? 1.1.1 ?<lb/>
THE FLEMING CENTER<lb/>
TEASER<lb/>
(Female Lead)<lb/>
TUES. -<lb/>
SUNNDANCER<lb/>
(Phoenix Room)<lb/>
 1 t B<lb/>
4T<lb/>
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fevatAtaricuvfote<lb/>
TACO SPECIAL<lb/>
WE GO LOCO EVERY<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
TACOS 39C eo. or 4 for 1<lb/>
3V<lb/>
512 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Next to Toyota East ? 756-2072<lb/>
Big Savings<lb/>
at your<lb/>
Hometown<lb/>
Pizza Hut<lb/>
oo<lb/>
$00<lb/>
OFF ANY LARGE<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
OFF ANY MEDIUM<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
OFF ANY SMALL<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
Two Locations in<lb/>
2601 E. 10th<lb/>
752-4445<lb/>
305 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756-4320<lb/>
Offer Expires May 31, 1981<lb/>
:<lb/>
TASTE<lb/>
Your Favorites<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
Chopped<lb/>
Sirloin Steak<lb/>
with r hnirp of 2 wgetartUs May M only<lb/>
$019<lb/>
2<lb/>
$029<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Roast Round<lb/>
of Beef<lb/>
uith neu. brou'ried pofai'n-s<lb/>
2<lb/>
rvr<lb/>
Where America Comes Home To Lat!<lb/>
Serving daily 11 am H p m i<lb/>
? 10 r I uidv &amp; SdtlH<lb/>
1 t<lb/>
biss 2' <lb/>
( aroiirta r ??t Mali .<lb/>
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Wnl Haven Md<lb/>
&amp; N Carolina H?v 1 1<lb/>
Grrrnvlllt NC ' '<lb/>
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ALWAYS FRESH<lb/>
DAIRY FOOD<lb/>
L.<lb/>
H elcome Back<lb/>
Students<lb/>
We would like to take this opportunity<lb/>
to welcome you back with these Over<lb/>
ton's specials, and invite you to come by<lb/>
and do your shopping with us. Overton's<lb/>
has everyday low prices or over 500<lb/>
items, plus farm fresh produce and<lb/>
Greenville's best meats<lb/>
We're conveniently located 2 blocks<lb/>
trom ECU, at 211 Jarvis Street. And<lb/>
we'll be glad to cash your checks with an<lb/>
I.D. Come see us today!<lb/>
'Home of Greenville's Best Meats"<lb/>
Clip This Coupon<lb/>
Heinz<lb/>
Ketchup<lb/>
98C<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
12 pack ? 12-Oz. Cans<lb/>
$4<lb/>
19<lb/>
Grade "A" Jumbo<lb/>
Eggs<lb/>
78<lb/>
COCA-COLA<lb/>
16 Oz. Carton of 8<lb/>
98 C<lb/>
Plus Deposit<lb/>
with this coupon and $7.50 food order. Without<lb/>
coupon $1.78 plus deposit. Limit one carton at sale<lb/>
price ? expires 5-30-81.<lb/>
Ught n'Ltvery ,<lb/>
Sealtest ? All Flavors<lb/>
Light N Lively<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
$139<lb/>
12 Gallon<lb/>
Morrell<lb/>
Franks<lb/>
Morrell<lb/>
Bologna<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
89 C<lb/>
Heavy Western<lb/>
Sirloin or<lb/>
T-Bone Steaks<lb/>
i<lb/>
Hi-Dri<lb/>
Paper Towels<lb/>
Gt. Roll<lb/>
48<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
1ll<lb/>
Dixie Crystals<lb/>
SUGAR<lb/>
$158<lb/>
5 Lb. Bag<lb/>
Limit one please with $7 50 food order.<lb/>
vIm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057343_0007"/>
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