<?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="00057347_0001"/>
She<lb/>
lintan<lb/>
tf<lb/>
Vol SSNo 6 Pages<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Thursday June 25, 1981<lb/>
New Drama Building Named<lb/>
After Memorable President<lb/>
New Drama Building Named<lb/>
.dedicated to East Carolina mentor.<lb/>
By FRANCE1NE PERRY<lb/>
ECU Nri?sB?re?y<lb/>
When East Carolina University<lb/>
dedicates its newly enlarged theatre<lb/>
arts center to its fifth president,<lb/>
John Decatur Messick, in August, it<lb/>
will pay tribute to one of the most<lb/>
dynamic and colorful leaders in the<lb/>
institution's 74-year history.<lb/>
During Messick's administration,<lb/>
1947-1960. he turned a small teachers<lb/>
college of 1400 students, affec-<lb/>
tionately (and derisively) known as<lb/>
"Ee-Cee-Tee-Cee" into the state's<lb/>
third largest campus.<lb/>
From his retirement home in<lb/>
Wilmington, former President<lb/>
Messick, now 84, maintains a keen<lb/>
interest in East Carolina, whose ad-<lb/>
vancement began with Messick's<lb/>
unceasing efforts and constant con-<lb/>
tact with all possible source of<lb/>
help? citizens, lawmakers, private<lb/>
foundations, and state and federal<lb/>
agencies.<lb/>
"East Carolina was already more<lb/>
than a teacher's college when 1 went<lb/>
there Messick recalls, noting that<lb/>
since 1941, students could take<lb/>
Bachelor of Arts degrees in various<lb/>
liberal arts.<lb/>
But the school was sorely in need<lb/>
of vigorous leadership. After the 25<lb/>
years under its effective first presi-<lb/>
dent. Dr. Robert Herring Wright, it<lb/>
was beset by administrative and<lb/>
financial woes during the brief<lb/>
terms of three succeeding<lb/>
presidents.<lb/>
A careful search process resulted<lb/>
in the auspicious choice of tall,<lb/>
silver-haired John Messick. At the<lb/>
time of his selection, he was describ-<lb/>
ed as "cheerful, friendly, dignified<lb/>
in manner and handsome in ap-<lb/>
pearance according to a college<lb/>
news release.<lb/>
Messick's qualifications were ex-<lb/>
cellent: education at Elon College,<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill and New York<lb/>
University, and experience as dean<lb/>
of instruction at the progressive<lb/>
Montclair. N. J State Teachers<lb/>
College. A native of Beaufort<lb/>
County, Messick had an insightful<lb/>
grasp of eastern North Carolina's<lb/>
culture and concerns? a gift which<lb/>
was to prove invaluable to him dur-<lb/>
ing his struggle to expand the little<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
One of Messick's most significant<lb/>
undertakings was to push through<lb/>
the N.C. General Assembly a bill<lb/>
changing the school's name from<lb/>
"East Carolina Teachers College"<lb/>
to "East Carolina College Other<lb/>
BA degree-granting teachers col-<lb/>
leges were undergoing name<lb/>
change, but East Carolina was the<lb/>
first teachers college in North<lb/>
Caolina to do so.<lb/>
While the name change was im-<lb/>
portant, the new president was after<lb/>
more substantial recognition from<lb/>
the legislature. Messick and his<lb/>
trustees frequently lobbied for in-<lb/>
creased appropriations.<lb/>
In January, 1953, Messick cited<lb/>
figures which showed that ECC's<lb/>
share of funds per student enrolled<lb/>
was less than for any other state-<lb/>
supported white college except Ap-<lb/>
palachian State. "It is not that the<lb/>
other campuses need less, but that<lb/>
ECC needs more he explained.<lb/>
When East Carolina's tiny library<lb/>
facility seemed to shrink with swell-<lb/>
ing enrollment and library holdings,<lb/>
Messick pleaded for and finally<lb/>
recieved an $814,000 state ap-<lb/>
propriation for a new building. So<lb/>
while money was no problem,<lb/>
critical post-war building supplies<lb/>
were; there could be no construction<lb/>
without steel.<lb/>
Students were crowding each<lb/>
other in the cramped library facility<lb/>
and many volumes were stacked on<lb/>
the floor for want of space, a situa-<lb/>
tion which might have continued<lb/>
had not Messick learned that Dr.<lb/>
Ernest Hollis, head of higher educa-<lb/>
tion in HEW, was to be given the<lb/>
task of steel allocation.<lb/>
In a cordial letter to Hollis,<lb/>
Messick invited him tQ speak at East<lb/>
Carolina's spring commencement<lb/>
See Messick, Page 2<lb/>
Possible A ddition<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Dining, BallroomsProposed<lb/>
Bv KAREN WENDT<lb/>
Though it is still in the early<lb/>
staces, the Student Services Sub-<lb/>
Commission has recommended to<lb/>
the ECU Planning commission that<lb/>
an addition be made to Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center some time in the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
"No decision has been made ex-<lb/>
cept to study it according to<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, associate dean<lb/>
in charge of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
The recommendation asked for<lb/>
the addition of three main areas: a<lb/>
full-service dining facility, a<lb/>
ballroom and additional meeting<lb/>
rooms.<lb/>
At present there is no full-service<lb/>
dining facility on the north end oi<lb/>
campus. This proposed facility<lb/>
would offer the same services as the<lb/>
cafeteria in Jones dorm.<lb/>
Alexander feels that the ballroom<lb/>
could take the place of Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, which after its renova-<lb/>
tions will have permanent seating.<lb/>
Lester Nail, SGA president said<lb/>
that at this time the SGA could not<lb/>
endorse or go against the recom-<lb/>
mendation. He said that the pro-<lb/>
posal is still in its early stages and<lb/>
said that he desires student opinion<lb/>
on the proposal.<lb/>
He stated that at the present time it<lb/>
is too early to tell much about the<lb/>
proposal since it has yet to be decid-<lb/>
ed as to where the money will come<lb/>
from the finance the facility and<lb/>
who will sponsor the construction.<lb/>
Nail felt that there was a need for<lb/>
more meeting rooms than the pre-<lb/>
sent facility can provide. The pro-<lb/>
posed meeting rooms would be in<lb/>
the same style as those which<lb/>
already exist in the center.<lb/>
Alexander did concede that a lot<lb/>
of things needed to be considered<lb/>
before the proposal was finalized,<lb/>
citing the costs of building, basic<lb/>
operational costs and staffing the<lb/>
facility.<lb/>
The idea of an addition began<lb/>
with the Student Union and Student<lb/>
Center task force, a group that in-<lb/>
cludes representatives from the<lb/>
residence life program, dining ser-<lb/>
vices, public safety and 10 other<lb/>
campus organizations. Work was<lb/>
begun on the proposal about a year<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Though no definite plans have<lb/>
been made, Alexander believes that<lb/>
if the addition is approved and built<lb/>
it will be added onto the south side<lb/>
of the building.<lb/>
"Even aspect has been dealt<lb/>
with Alexander said of the pro-<lb/>
iect.<lb/>
kHe also stated that he believed<lb/>
that the ballroom could enhance the<lb/>
services of the center, such as the<lb/>
yearly Madrigal Dinners.<lb/>
U.S. Post Office<lb/>
Receives Go Ahead<lb/>
On Nine Digit Zips<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPD The<lb/>
Reagan administration has flashed a<lb/>
green light ?'or voluntary use of the<lb/>
mne-digit ZIP code, it was disclosed<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
The Office of Management and<lb/>
Budget, in a letter to Postmaster<lb/>
General William Bolger, said the<lb/>
longer postal zone code is in line<lb/>
ith the administration's guidelines<lb/>
that a regulation create more<lb/>
benefits than it costs.<lb/>
The longer code is expected to be<lb/>
used mainly by businesses in its ear-<lb/>
ly stages. It provides more specific<lb/>
sorting information, directing mail<lb/>
to specific blocks or buildings.<lb/>
"We have reviewed your revised<lb/>
regulators impact analysis, and on<lb/>
that basis, have concluded that your<lb/>
ZIP-plus-four is in accord with the<lb/>
president's regulatory P"ncPles-<lb/>
said James C. Miller III, OMB sad-<lb/>
ministrator for information and<lb/>
regulators affairs.<lb/>
In the letter, dated Tuesday,<lb/>
Miller said OMB had two concerns<lb/>
including the cost and efficiency of<lb/>
new equipment, and service given to<lb/>
mail with the present five-digit ZIP,<lb/>
the new ZIP-plus-four, and mail<lb/>
without a ZIP code.<lb/>
"Your staff has assured us that<lb/>
any service differentials that do ob-<lb/>
tain will not reflect the deteriora-<lb/>
tion in the service provided to ex-<lb/>
isting mail categories Miller said.<lb/>
"We trust you will monitor the<lb/>
situation and report to us any pro-<lb/>
blems that may develop<lb/>
I<lb/>
Miller's letter followed requests<lb/>
to the Postal Service to provide a<lb/>
regulatory impact analysis of the<lb/>
longer ZIP code. Bolger had told<lb/>
OMB that since the use of the new<lb/>
ZIP code would be purely volun-<lb/>
tary, it would not have a regulatory<lb/>
impact on anyone.<lb/>
WMZ A r1sni"p A Postal Service spokesman said<lb/>
W(Z ZlpOlOgl,C Wednesday that order forms have<lb/>
been distributed for businesses to re-<lb/>
quest tapes listing addresses with<lb/>
9-digit ZIP. "We have not released<lb/>
any tapes as yet. When the orders<lb/>
start coming in, we will begin filing<lb/>
them the spokesman said.<lb/>
The Postal Service plans to begin<lb/>
?making available ZIP-plus-four<lb/>
tapes to individuals late this year or<lb/>
early next year.<lb/>
The staff of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian would like to apologize<lb/>
for the lateness of this week's<lb/>
issue, which was due to a<lb/>
malfunction of our typeseting<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
We would also like to thank<lb/>
The Havelock Progress and<lb/>
publisher Eugene Smith for<lb/>
the use of their facilities.<lb/>
Atlanta<lb/>
Official Task Force Says It<lb/>
Will Not Slow Investigation<lb/>
REGISTRATION<lb/>
ATLANTA (UPI) Two top<lb/>
Atlanta officials said today the ar-<lb/>
rest of Wayne B. Williams in the<lb/>
death of one of the 28 young blacks<lb/>
slain in the last two years has done<lb/>
nothing to slow the year-long special<lb/>
task force investigation.<lb/>
"We have not slowed down one<lb/>
inch Public Safety Commissioner<lb/>
Lee P. Brown told his regular week-<lb/>
ly briefing for reporters. "We are<lb/>
going full speed ahead. We are pro-<lb/>
bably working in more directions<lb/>
and faster and harder than before<lb/>
In Washington, Atlanta Mayor<lb/>
Maynard Jackson met with Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan to thank him for the<lb/>
federal aid involved in the investiga-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Jackson told Reagan the arrest of<lb/>
Williams, who was bound over to<lb/>
the grand jury Tuesday for the slay-<lb/>
ing of the latest victim, Nathaniel<lb/>
Cater, was "a significant step but<lb/>
added, "we still have 27 cases that<lb/>
are on the docket in connection with<lb/>
the assaults and are conducting a<lb/>
serious and continuing investiga-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Brown, somewhat snappish with<lb/>
reporters, gave only short answers<lb/>
to queries about reports of a pro-<lb/>
posed reduction in the FBI effort<lb/>
following Williams' arrest. He was<lb/>
also asked about continuing reports<lb/>
that Williams' arrest was prompted<lb/>
by pressure from Vice President<lb/>
George Bush and Gov. George<lb/>
Busbee.<lb/>
The commissioner said he had<lb/>
"been very pleased with FBI in-<lb/>
volvement" in the investigation and<lb/>
added, "I'm not aware of their pull-<lb/>
ing out. I have no reason at all to<lb/>
believe that it (the presence) will not<lb/>
continue<lb/>
In Washington, Jackson was also<lb/>
asked about a possible FBI pullout<lb/>
and said, "that would be entirely<lb/>
contrary to what our understanding<lb/>
is<lb/>
The mayor went on to explain,<lb/>
"our understanding is that the FBI<lb/>
is committed tn the task force<lb/>
operation until the 27 other cases<lb/>
have been solved or substantially<lb/>
solved.<lb/>
Brown said all material taken<lb/>
from Williams' northwest Atlanta<lb/>
home in two separate searches had<lb/>
been turned over to the crime lab,<lb/>
and said police were still watching<lb/>
the house at the request of Williams'<lb/>
retired schoolteacher parents who<lb/>
also live there.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Sports5<lb/>
Classifieds <lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 25, 1981<lb/>
Messick Receives Dedication<lb/>
DR JOHN D MESSICK<lb/>
Reagan's Speech Writer Leaves<lb/>
To Pursue Other Interests<lb/>
WASH1NGT O N himself sort of a con- say much newsworthy.<lb/>
(UPI) President Reagan sultant He has no in- It was much the same<lb/>
needs a speech writer. tention of staying on per- al Wesi Point. There<lb/>
He had one, but he manently, he says. were those who guessed<lb/>
qUI Still, there has been a Reagan might use the<lb/>
Now Reagan and the good deal of criticism forum at the U.S.<lb/>
administration are stuck, about Reagan's speeches Military Academy to<lb/>
The problem became lately. And although deliver a foreign policy<lb/>
apparent over the much of the complaining speech. He did not.<lb/>
weekend when former has been done by He chose instead to<lb/>
speechwriter Kenneth reporters, even an objec- stump for better pay for<lb/>
khachigian was seen get- the observer might the military a subject un-<lb/>
ting off Reagan's detect a lack ofdoubtedly dear to the<lb/>
helicopter from Camp substance in his remarks, hearts of the assembled<lb/>
David when it touched One line in a speech cadets.<lb/>
down at the White last month to graduates<lb/>
House. at the University of Reagan told a reporter<lb/>
Khachigian left the ad- Notre Dame stirred up at his last news con-<lb/>
ministration earlier tins some dust. It was the one terence he is comtortable<lb/>
spring to pursue his own about how Western vMth his foreign policy<lb/>
business interests ou; in civilization will no longer and sees no need to ar-<lb/>
California. H dome so, compete with com- ticulate it in a speech,<lb/>
he created a void that has munism, but will simply However, he cannot<lb/>
vet be closed. "transcend" it. assign- continue to give com-<lb/>
Ihere are a number of imz it a place in the mencement speeches to<lb/>
candidates tor the job. historv books as a "sad. graduates. He will even<lb/>
But it is clear that the biarre chapter tually have to make clear<lb/>
position remains open. The line was in- his administrations<lb/>
Khachigian says he terspersed among policy on a number ot<lb/>
wants to avoid publicity reminiscences about issues.<lb/>
about his re-emergence, Knute Rockne, Notre<lb/>
arguing that it may look Dame and his days in<lb/>
like he is undercutting college. Its significance<lb/>
several of the full-time was almost lost in the<lb/>
speechwnters already on fluffy rhetoric.<lb/>
Reagan's staff. I ater, at his news con-<lb/>
But the president ference, Reagan explain-<lb/>
relied heavily on ed the line as meaning<lb/>
Khachigian during the that the beginning of the<lb/>
campaign and appear to end is nearing tor corn-<lb/>
want his counsel once munism.<lb/>
more. For the most part,<lb/>
Khachigian. who used however, the president<lb/>
to pen the remarks of took pains to explain<lb/>
Richard Nixon, calls how he did not want to<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
and bring his<lb/>
wife also, to be house<lb/>
guests of t!ie Messicks<lb/>
in the president's<lb/>
residence.<lb/>
"While he was there,<lb/>
I got his promise for<lb/>
the steel for the library,<lb/>
and he followed<lb/>
through said<lb/>
Messick. "Soon<lb/>
thereafter, the state<lb/>
budget officer, D. S.<lb/>
Coltrane, and Gover-<lb/>
nor (Kerr) Scott wanted<lb/>
steel for UNC and fail-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Coltrane remarked<lb/>
that Messick must have<lb/>
got his steel "through<lb/>
persistence "I got it<lb/>
through foresight<lb/>
Messick says.<lb/>
The dedication of the<lb/>
new library on March<lb/>
8, 1955. coinciding with<lb/>
the 48th anniversary of<lb/>
East Carolina's foun-<lb/>
ding, was a gala affair.<lb/>
Special guests included<lb/>
legislators from as far<lb/>
away as Buncombe,<lb/>
Davidson and Union<lb/>
Counties.<lb/>
Messick's efforts<lb/>
were spurred by in-<lb/>
creasing student de-<lb/>
mand upon East<lb/>
Carolina College.<lb/>
More and more<lb/>
students, including<lb/>
veterans with educa-<lb/>
tional benefits, applied<lb/>
for admission.<lb/>
While classroom<lb/>
space was ample, East<lb/>
Carolina suffered a<lb/>
severe lack of housing<lb/>
space, on and off cam-<lb/>
pus, so hundreds of ap-<lb/>
plicants had to be turn-<lb/>
ed away each year dur-<lb/>
ing the early and<lb/>
mid-1950's.<lb/>
Messick appealed<lb/>
several times to Green-<lb/>
ville's citizens to rent<lb/>
their "unused rooms"<lb/>
to students as enroll-<lb/>
ment doubled, tripled,<lb/>
then quadrupled. He<lb/>
was able to get funds<lb/>
for five new student<lb/>
dormitories and an ad-<lb/>
dition to another.<lb/>
In all, East Carolina<lb/>
acquired 10 new<lb/>
buildings during the<lb/>
Messick years,<lb/>
modified eight others,<lb/>
purchased 80 acres of<lb/>
land, doubled the size<lb/>
of its library holdings,<lb/>
tripled its number of<lb/>
faculty members and<lb/>
instituted 200 new<lb/>
scholarship programs.<lb/>
Always interested in<lb/>
technology as a tool for<lb/>
education, Messick<lb/>
established a closed-<lb/>
circuit television system<lb/>
and campus public<lb/>
radio station. ECC<lb/>
became the first cam-<lb/>
pus in the Southeast to<lb/>
offer courses via com<lb/>
mercial television.<lb/>
New courses were<lb/>
developed, resulting in<lb/>
more degree programs<lb/>
and pre-professional<lb/>
curriculum. As ECC<lb/>
grew, Messick stayed in<lb/>
close touch with the<lb/>
general public and<lb/>
other educators, giving<lb/>
speeches, writing ar-<lb/>
ticles and completing a<lb/>
book which was<lb/>
published by the Duke<lb/>
University Press.<lb/>
His vision of East<lb/>
Carolina was pro-<lb/>
phetic? even as he<lb/>
worked to strengthen<lb/>
the basic science pro-<lb/>
grams and establish a<lb/>
nursing school which<lb/>
received approval in<lb/>
1959, his long-range<lb/>
view was that East<lb/>
Carolina might some-<lb/>
day achieve a two-year<lb/>
medical school. As far<lb/>
back as 1953, Messick<lb/>
urged at a civic gather-<lb/>
ing in Rocky Mount<lb/>
that East Carolii . be<lb/>
allowed "to assume the<lb/>
proportions of a<lb/>
university<lb/>
Inevitably, as the col-<lb/>
lege grew, Messick<lb/>
caused some consterna-<lb/>
tion among budget-<lb/>
minded officials and<lb/>
competitors for the<lb/>
education dollar at<lb/>
other campuses. He<lb/>
was told by a Con-<lb/>
solidated University<lb/>
chancellor that the<lb/>
"State Board of Higher<lb/>
Education was brought<lb/>
into being to clip our<lb/>
progress<lb/>
There were disap-<lb/>
pointments and delays,<lb/>
but Messick, un-<lb/>
daunted, achieved great<lb/>
popularity among<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
citizens. A November,<lb/>
1958, poll sponsored by<lb/>
"The State" magazine<lb/>
revealed that John<lb/>
Messick, along with<lb/>
Billy Graham, Carl<lb/>
Sandburg, Sam Ervin<lb/>
and Andy Griffith, was<lb/>
one of the "ten most<lb/>
interesting Tar Heels<lb/>
He was the only<lb/>
educator in the top ten.<lb/>
Messick was men-<lb/>
tioned as a possible suc-<lb/>
cessor to Gordon Gray<lb/>
as president of the Con-<lb/>
solidated UNC system<lb/>
in 1955, and a few years<lb/>
later, some Greenville<lb/>
leaders wanted him to<lb/>
try for the Democratic<lb/>
gubernatorial nomina-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
But in October, 1959,<lb/>
when Messick suddenly<lb/>
announced his wish to<lb/>
resign as ECC presi<lb/>
dent, it was with no<lb/>
stated intention to rise<lb/>
into a more demanding<lb/>
position.<lb/>
He had enjoyed the<lb/>
"loyal cooperation of<lb/>
almost everyone involv-<lb/>
ed in the on-going pro-<lb/>
gram at ECC he told<lb/>
the trustees, but he had<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
erng iherumpuscommunny<lb/>
since 1925<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
mg the summer.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
ticial newspaper ot East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated and published tor and<lb/>
by the students ot East Carolina<lb/>
university<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business 135 yearly<lb/>
All others S25 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campvis Of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville N C<lb/>
?.?. hone 7 ??. j7 ??<lb/>
mikes' bike shop<lb/>
Complete line of tools &amp;<lb/>
accessories. Years of<lb/>
experience fixing<lb/>
Greenville's bikes.<lb/>
Guaranteed Service.<lb/>
752-5291<lb/>
HL.<lb/>
HER<lb/>
this college ring sale had to be perfect foWou.<lb/>
Lyvere difficult. "Never ate vegetablesshe said. "I<lb/>
ling for you was a tough assignment.<lb/>
jgh as our toughest customer. Our rings are custoi<lb/>
ced by a lifetime warranty. if<lb/>
. about a college ring, we can make your decision eat<lb/>
fget a terrific deal when you trade in your 10K gold h<lb/>
'er<lb/>
sch(<lb/>
You<lb/>
most del<lb/>
Butd(<lb/>
jse from dozens<lb/>
I student. Even<lb/>
us. Thank your<lb/>
 . m i<lb/>
styles. We've got something for the<lb/>
n<lb/>
rther.<lb/>
rA<lb/>
Women risk getting certain<lb/>
kinds of cancer. That's why you<lb/>
should talk with your doctor about<lb/>
how you can protect yourself<lb/>
Doin monthly breasi<lb/>
self-examination and getting rrul.u<lb/>
cancer checkups are good ways to<lb/>
stay healthy And if youve goi<lb/>
your health, youvegol it all!<lb/>
i<lb/>
Am,<lb/>
CLASS RINGS!<lb/>
ECU OFFICIAL CLASS RING<lb/>
!ECU Student Supply Store Lobby<lb/>
June 25th and 26th<lb/>
suffered frustration<lb/>
often when "it was im-<lb/>
possible to obtain suffi<lb/>
cient appropriations"<lb/>
for East Carolina. "1<lb/>
am tired of being<lb/>
tired he said.<lb/>
Although he had<lb/>
reached retirement age,<lb/>
Messick continued for<lb/>
another 10 years in<lb/>
leadership roles, as<lb/>
assistant director of 'he<lb/>
National Committee on<lb/>
Special Education and<lb/>
Rehabilitation at Lyn-<lb/>
donville, Vermont,<lb/>
State Teachers College<lb/>
and the developing of<lb/>
Oral Roberts Universi-<lb/>
ty, Tulsa, Okla.<lb/>
As ORU's executive<lb/>
vice president and<lb/>
dean, Messick had im-<lb/>
mense funds to support<lb/>
his ideas, which includ-<lb/>
ed an electronic dial ac<lb/>
cess system and learn-<lb/>
ing resources center<lb/>
lauded by the Carnegie<lb/>
Commission on Higher<lb/>
Education as "the first<lb/>
great technological<lb/>
revolution in education<lb/>
in five centuries<lb/>
il Cmootl?9?4 Fauiu?s An<lb/>
Sntrts Sleeping Bags Backpacks<lb/>
Camping Equipment St?a? To?a<lb/>
Shoes Dishes Ana Over 700 Dif-<lb/>
ferent New And Used items<lb/>
Co?Do, Boo'sSM 45<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1M1 S r?ani Street<lb/>
Messick's long career<lb/>
in education was<lb/>
motivated by his un-<lb/>
wavering belief in a<lb/>
statement made by<lb/>
Aristotle, which<lb/>
Messick quoted in a<lb/>
1950 address at the New<lb/>
York University School<lb/>
of Education. "All<lb/>
who have meditated on<lb/>
the art of governing<lb/>
mankind have been<lb/>
convinced that the fate<lb/>
of empires depends on<lb/>
the education of<lb/>
south "<lb/>
SAAIVSSHOU<lb/>
RKPAIR<lb/>
113 Grande Ave<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
Quality ' Repair<lb/>
IN5<lb/>
"Drivers employed<lb/>
by large trucking<lb/>
companies hrnd annual<lb/>
average earnings ot about<lb/>
$18,3O0<lb/>
in ?874"<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
l?th WEEK OF-<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
H76 00 all inclusive<lb/>
pregnancy teit, birth con<lb/>
Irol and problem<lb/>
pregnancy counseling<lb/>
For turther information<lb/>
call 832 0S3S (toll tree<lb/>
number 800 221 25?8i bet<lb/>
ween 9 A M 5 P M<lb/>
weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGH yVOME N S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh N C<lb/>
Ai r<lb/>
-<lb/>
aft-<lb/>
NOFUTURf? hattfart?<lb/>
 ? -<lb/>
Revco Tt actor -Trailer Training. Inc<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
(919) 752-5568<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
NOW!<lb/>
? ,ou need money, c n.der selling your gold and silver valuables And here s a good<lb/>
way to get EXTRA CASH<lb/>
SILL YOUR<lb/>
$<lb/>
m<lb/>
in ?<lb/>
,?<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
Almost everyone his i high school or colligo class ring<lb/>
they don! wear anymore. Check your dresser drawers<lb/>
and bring your class ring Into Coin &amp; Ring Man. We're<lb/>
your professional buying service and we guarantee you<lb/>
fair prices and good strvict.<lb/>
r M.THI.SPOT<lb/>
101 HWttit, VAWOlB-AJYTIiW;<lb/>
HAMiBI0It4I.1tK.<lb/>
$ GOLD $<lb/>
. tIKS ? MCKUCIS ? HATOKS ? MAOOBtS<lb/>
. cuss ma ? wibboxbabbs ? hbtai<lb/>
coti ? siaciuts ? neocMS ? loans<lb/>
chums ? uumts ? cw ubks ? kumu<lb/>
i<lb/>
PAYSMOOM-TMBOOT<lb/>
CASH IN ITIM1MAMW<lb/>
STIRLING SILVER<lb/>
nc.wusi of common<lb/>
? COFFEE SERVICES ? GOBLETS<lb/>
? RINGS ? SPOONS ? TRAYS ? KNIVES<lb/>
? FORKS?NECKLACES?BRACELETS<lb/>
? FRANKLIN AN0 HAMILTON MINT<lb/>
MERCHANDISE<lb/>
Coe.????? ??c c- -1 ? ??????' ??. ?mi?i<lb/>
&amp; RING<lb/>
- OF KEV SALES COc<lb/>
AHt 9. CUAMCCT OPINS JOb J0MUN SAA<lb/>
401 I. EVANS ST. nunMc7MWnl<lb/>
.harmony MnunurmPHONE 752-3855<lb/>
OUR PROFESSION AL PERMANENT DEALER <lb/>
I<lb/>
T<lb/>
How<lb/>
SI<lb/>
it? Si<lb/>
cir<lb/>
ha; '<lb/>
canei<lb/>
ed ?<lb/>
had spem<lb/>
Buc'<lb/>
pic il<lb/>
ver<lb/>
this a<lb/>
T)<lb/>
sp I<lb/>
occur i<lb/>
year <lb/>
of th I<lb/>
end<lb/>
had<lb/>
h<lb/>
la-<lb/>
staff me<lb/>
yearb <lb/>
Board<lb/>
Ol<lb/>
needs u<lb/>
which th<lb/>
gress<lb/>
another<lb/>
out onci<lb/>
system tl<lb/>
mal ? j<lb/>
I<lb/>
sul<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
pr<lb/>
( ai<lb/>
Of<lb/>
ten<lb/>
pa Ail<lb/>
nual<lb/>
I<lb/>
ba I<lb/>
<lb/>
and<lb/>
he<lb/>
i<lb/>
I <lb/>
hr <lb/>
??<lb/>
rendc<lb/>
marat<lb/>
ken<lb/>
lpha<lb/>
I amH<lb/>
das a<lb/>
presets,<lb/>
plaqu<lb/>
tton<lb/>
Thei<lb/>
raismj<lb/>
tunati<lb/>
Rev<lb/>
admii<lb/>
the I<lb/>
separj<lb/>
some!<lb/>
U.S.<lb/>
FiciaU<lb/>
Soutl<lb/>
west<lb/>
will<lb/>
erodij<lb/>
Alt<lb/>
T Y<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0003"/><lb/>
<lb/>
ng career<lb/>
on was<lb/>
his un-<lb/>
lief in a<lb/>
;ide by<lb/>
which<lb/>
feed in a<lb/>
the New<lb/>
,i y School<lb/>
jn "All<lb/>
j aed on<lb/>
lovernmg<lb/>
iave been<lb/>
L he fate<lb/>
pepends on<lb/>
on of<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
MR<lb/>
nde Awe<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
1<lb/>
 trucking<lb/>
nmd annual<lb/>
mg of abtH<lb/>
if I97?<lb/>
?<lb/>
ilie<lb/>
5568<lb/>
lllf<lb/>
firs<lb/>
n<lb/>
lyou<lb/>
ILETS<lb/>
S-HNIViS<lb/>
MUCIIETS<lb/>
Ion MtNT<lb/>
UMUN SAI<lb/>
753866<lb/>
?tie last Ear0liman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, ?? ?c?y<lb/>
Jimmy DuPREE. mmum?<lb/>
Chuck Foster. ??. ? mmi, Deborah Hotaling. m. n<lb/>
CHRIS LlCHOK. ?,?. H. WILLIAM YELVERTON v M<lb/>
ALISON BARTEL. Pro.cuo? S4,?aer STEVE BACHNER. MM M?<lb/>
June 25. 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
The Buc<lb/>
Preventing Future Problems<lb/>
How would you feel if you spent<lb/>
$13,000 and didn't get anything for<lb/>
it? Such a thought is rather blood-<lb/>
curdling, but that's what almost<lb/>
happened with this year's Buc-<lb/>
caneer.<lb/>
When Barrie Byland resigned as<lb/>
editor of the yearbook last week she<lb/>
had spent nearly that much of the<lb/>
Buc's $64,000 budget and had com-<lb/>
pleted only 13 pages. There was a<lb/>
very real possibility that the book<lb/>
would not come out at all and that<lb/>
this already expended money would<lb/>
go down the tubes.<lb/>
This is not merely far-fetched<lb/>
speculation? just such a situation<lb/>
occurred during the 1977-78 school<lb/>
year when Susan Rogers was editor<lb/>
of the book. When she left at the<lb/>
end of the year, work on the Buc<lb/>
had not been completed. No one<lb/>
found out until the next fall,<lb/>
however, and by that time it was too<lb/>
late. No yearbook.<lb/>
This year only complaints from<lb/>
staff members and a letter from the<lb/>
yearbook's printer tipped the Media<lb/>
Board off.<lb/>
Obviously, some sort of system<lb/>
needs to be established through<lb/>
which the board can monitor pro-<lb/>
gress on the Buccaneer and Rebel,<lb/>
another publication that only comes<lb/>
out once a year. Under the present<lb/>
system the Media Board has no for-<lb/>
mal means to guard against such<lb/>
situations. The board has set up a<lb/>
subcommittee to study the problem.<lb/>
This committee is faced with the<lb/>
sticky problem of finding a way to<lb/>
prevent further such problems<lb/>
without compromising the authority<lb/>
of the editors of these publications.<lb/>
In choosing a solution the board<lb/>
must make absolutely certain that it .<lb/>
does not interfere with editorial or<lb/>
other decisions that rightfully<lb/>
should be made by the editor.<lb/>
The best solution might be to<lb/>
establish a contract between the<lb/>
editor and the board. This contract<lb/>
would spell out the responsibilities<lb/>
of the editor? primarily that a<lb/>
publication be put out.<lb/>
The contract could also contain a<lb/>
provision that the editor establish<lb/>
deadlines and inform the board<lb/>
periodically of progress toward<lb/>
meeting them. If the board were to<lb/>
take part in establishing the<lb/>
deadlines, however, it would be<lb/>
guilty of overstepping its authority.<lb/>
When the Media Board hires an<lb/>
editor, a certain amount of trust<lb/>
must be given to that person. The<lb/>
board is not a "babysitter If it<lb/>
tried to perform such a function,<lb/>
asy editor would be rightfully of-<lb/>
fended.<lb/>
By the same token, many editors<lb/>
frown on the suggestion that stu-<lb/>
dent publications need advisers to<lb/>
oversee their operations. The feeling<lb/>
is that "advisers" often become<lb/>
"editors and the valildity of the<lb/>
term student publication becomes<lb/>
lost in the shuffle.<lb/>
Students, after all, are adults and<lb/>
must be trusted with responsibility.<lb/>
But adults make mistakes, and<lb/>
hopefully the guidelines mentioned<lb/>
above can be enough to prevent<lb/>
these mistakes from being too costly<lb/>
to the students of ECU.<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Fraternities Praised<lb/>
1<lb/>
On behalf of the Easter Seal Society<lb/>
of North Carolina, I would like to ex-<lb/>
tend this special word of thanks to Kap-<lb/>
pa Alpha Psi and Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
fraternities and company for their hard<lb/>
work and dedication to the Second An-<lb/>
nual Miller Softball Marathon for<lb/>
Easter Seals.<lb/>
Played last weekend on four city fields<lb/>
for two days in a blistering heatwave,<lb/>
the event attracted 70 soft ball teams and<lb/>
raised $18,500.<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi served as the<lb/>
backbone of the softball marathon by<lb/>
providing a flow of working volunteers<lb/>
at the fields, an equipment strike crew<lb/>
and a leadership organization that<lb/>
helped to move the event to its successful<lb/>
conclusion.<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha hosted the<lb/>
hospitality component by opening their<lb/>
house and helped to serve more than<lb/>
2,000 players and fans. Lambda Chi also<lb/>
rendered critical support to the<lb/>
marathon headquarters unit.<lb/>
Keith McCorkle, president of Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Psi, and Dan Brown, president of<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha, were present Sun-<lb/>
day afternoon at the marathon awards<lb/>
presentation where they each received a<lb/>
plaque in recognition of their contribu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The special efforts of these two<lb/>
organizations made for a quality fund-<lb/>
raising event. Easter Seals has been for-<lb/>
tunate to have them serve as the founda-<lb/>
tion of our marathon volunteer team.<lb/>
JEFFREY L. PEYTON<lb/>
Easter Seals Regional Director<lb/>
with such matters as human rights, it is<lb/>
impossible for a super power like the<lb/>
U.S a nation that has always condemn-<lb/>
ed apartheid and aggression, to turn<lb/>
around and stand in suppon of the most<lb/>
evil system of racial oppression in the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
This U.S. plan to establish closer ties<lb/>
with racist South Africa, and the recent<lb/>
declaration of the plans under way for<lb/>
U S. arms sales to that country is only<lb/>
going to help perpetuate world-wide<lb/>
racial descrimination policies, and may<lb/>
even stir renewed racial tensions in this<lb/>
country itself.<lb/>
The American people must demand a<lb/>
clear-cut foreign policy from their<lb/>
government. Is America now abandon-<lb/>
ing its belief in the equality of mankind?<lb/>
Has aggression, such as demonstrated<lb/>
by Israel in the Iraq raid become accep-<lb/>
table by the foreign policies of the<lb/>
United States?<lb/>
It seems to me that President Reagan<lb/>
is pushing too hard in his aim to restore<lb/>
confidence and faith in the American<lb/>
nation. A people do not have to be on<lb/>
the bad guy's side in order to prove that<lb/>
they are tough.<lb/>
Human rights supporters must act<lb/>
now. I want to re-emphasize the call by<lb/>
Bishop Desmond Tutu of the South<lb/>
African council of churches for black<lb/>
sports and entertainment figures to<lb/>
boycott and condemn South African<lb/>
events. There is no doubt left that black<lb/>
liberation is in our own hands.<lb/>
SAFARI MATHENGE<lb/>
Junior, SLAP<lb/>
Policy Protested<lb/>
Recent developments in the Reagan<lb/>
administration have left no doubt that<lb/>
the U S. is now ambitious to restore the<lb/>
separationist South African regime into<lb/>
some respectability in the world. The<lb/>
U.S. is taking a big step backward in ot-<lb/>
ficiaUy admitting the white minority<lb/>
South African government into the<lb/>
western alliance. This unfortunate move<lb/>
will inevitably deteriorate the already<lb/>
eroding U.SAfrican relations.<lb/>
Although the president made it clear<lb/>
in his earlier speeches that his govern-<lb/>
ment would not be deeply concerned<lb/>
 KN0UI THE PRESIDENT PROMISED TO<lb/>
APPOINT h UOMN TO THE SUPREME COURT BUT<lb/>
.&amp;Mt?m?mm&amp;8i<lb/>
Middle<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 of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. <lb/>
By LISA PENT<lb/>
If two of the budget cuts President<lb/>
Reagan has recently proposed are pass-<lb/>
ed, 1 will not be able to attent<lb/>
Georgetown University next year. The<lb/>
reason is this: the average cost per year<lb/>
at Georgetown and most of the nation's<lb/>
private universities is $10,000. For the<lb/>
rich, this this not a problem; their own<lb/>
resources can meet the expense. For the<lb/>
poor, it is an inconvenience because they<lb/>
must fll out many financial aid forms.<lb/>
For the middle-class student like me, the<lb/>
$10,000 yearly cost is a great problem<lb/>
because, unlike the rich, my own<lb/>
resources cannot meet the expense, and,<lb/>
unlike the poor, I am not eligible for<lb/>
most financial aid.<lb/>
What, then, does a middle-class stu-<lb/>
dent do? First of all, he works as many<lb/>
hours as he can during the school year<lb/>
and full-time during the summer. Se-<lb/>
cond, he takes out a student loan.<lb/>
Third, he claims financial independence<lb/>
from his parents so that he might receive<lb/>
a government grant. And fourth, he<lb/>
hopes that some unexpected expense<lb/>
doesn't arise.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the unexpected ex-<lb/>
pense that I had hoped wouldn't arise<lb/>
has. President Reagan wants to cut two<lb/>
programs, the Basic Educational Oppor-<lb/>
tunity Grant Program (BEOG) and the<lb/>
Federally Insured Student Loan Pro-<lb/>
gram, both of which make it possible for<lb/>
me to attend a reputable institution like<lb/>
Georgetown. If they are cut, the Ivy<lb/>
League schools will cater to an in-<lb/>
finitesimally small percentage of the<lb/>
population, the rich and the poor.<lb/>
The BEOG program awards, upon<lb/>
demonstration of need, $200 to $1,800<lb/>
per school year to college students. The<lb/>
federally insured loans are obtained<lb/>
from the student's home stte. These are<lb/>
low-interest loans, around 7 percent,<lb/>
which the student isn't required to begin<lb/>
repaying until nine months after gradua-<lb/>
tion. A student is entitled to $2,500 dur-<lb/>
ing any single school year and not more<lb/>
than $7,000 during total undergraduate<lb/>
study.<lb/>
Here is where the problem begins.<lb/>
President Reagan has suggested that<lb/>
both programs be cut in terms of total<lb/>
dollars and that the criteria upon which<lb/>
need is demonstrated bocome more<lb/>
Memories<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Many Americans would like to forget<lb/>
the Vietnam war, but like a recurring<lb/>
nightmare, the fallout from the war just<lb/>
won't go away. That was made un-<lb/>
mistakably clear when Veterans Ad-<lb/>
ministration police evicted fasting Vietnam<lb/>
veterans from Los Angeles' Wadsworth<lb/>
Hospital after the vets camped on the<lb/>
hospital lawn, demanding greatly improv-<lb/>
ed health care and expanded benefits. On-<lb/>
ly 35 vets took part in the protest-a tiny<lb/>
fraction of the four million who served in<lb/>
Vietnam-but the demonstrators spoke for<lb/>
many vets with their dramatic act<lb/>
Simply put, America has used-and is<lb/>
using-Vietnam vets shamefully. Thrown<lb/>
into an unjust and unpopular war, sprayed<lb/>
with toxic chemicals, mustered out with<lb/>
dim prospects of getting decent jobs, shun-<lb/>
ned by "hawks and doves alike, hit by<lb/>
devastating psychological problems and<lb/>
disease and, finally, fobbed-off by an un-<lb/>
caring federal bureaucracy, Vietnam<lb/>
veterans have been drafted as society's<lb/>
guinea pigs. That's why vet James<lb/>
Hamilton, apparently mad with frustra-<lb/>
tion, drove his jeep into the Wadsworth<lb/>
lobby in March, then died of an overdose<lb/>
of pills and alcohol last month. And that's<lb/>
why the vets went on their hunger strike-<lb/>
restrictive. For example, the BEOG pro-<lb/>
gram currently rewards students whose<lb/>
family income is $25,000 or less. This<lb/>
prerequisite is disputable in its present<lb/>
form. The government assumes that a<lb/>
family with an income of $35,000 a year<lb/>
can afford to send even one child to a<lb/>
private university at $10,000 a year.<lb/>
Now the president wants to reduce the<lb/>
cutoff mark for aid to perhaps $20,000 a<lb/>
year. (The exact amount is notyet<lb/>
known.) This restriction will exclude<lb/>
students from middle-income families<lb/>
entirely and a percentage of the students<lb/>
from lower-income families as well.<lb/>
To date, the Federally Insured Stu-<lb/>
dent Loan Program has been the saving<lb/>
grace for the middle class. If a family<lb/>
that earns$35,000 a year wants to send a<lb/>
child to a private university at $10,00 a<lb/>
year, it must take out a loan and pay the<lb/>
balance from its personal funds. The<lb/>
family currently isn't eligible for federal<lb/>
grant monies? unless the student is<lb/>
finalcialy independent? and will bee<lb/>
less so if President Reagan's proposal<lb/>
passes. Further more, it the student ap-<lb/>
plies for aid from his school, he will be<lb/>
one of the last in line for aid? that is, if<lb/>
he is eligible for any at all. The only<lb/>
alternative is a low-interest.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the Federally Insured<lb/>
Student Loan Program is currently hav-<lb/>
ing a problem with students who default<lb/>
on repayment. However, the answer is<lb/>
not to cut the program or reduce the<lb/>
amount a student may borrow. Two<lb/>
alternatives to cutting this essential pro-<lb/>
gram are to require the parents to co-<lb/>
sign for the loan and to make those low-<lb/>
interest loans available to the parents to<lb/>
use for the student's tuition.<lb/>
Again, if the Federally Insured Stu-<lb/>
dent Loan Programs were cut, the mid-<lb/>
dle class would be the hardest hit. If the<lb/>
BEOG program were cut, some of the<lb/>
middle class and most of the students<lb/>
from lower-income families would be af-<lb/>
fected. Both of these programs have<lb/>
bad a positive effect of minority and<lb/>
lower-income student enrollment; thus,<lb/>
a negative impact if they are reduced.<lb/>
For example, in an article about student<lb/>
financial aid, George Neill, columnist<lb/>
for Phi Delta Kappan, says, "between<lb/>
1968 and 1978 the percentage of blacks<lb/>
enrolled in colleges and universities at<lb/>
the undergraduate level increased a<lb/>
phenomenal 300 percent. This increase<lb/>
can be attributed directly to a boost of<lb/>
$3.8 billion in federal appropriations for<lb/>
student aid between 1973 and 1980. Dur-<lb/>
ing the same period, guaranteed student<lb/>
loans increased 400 percent? from $1.1<lb/>
billionto $5.5 billion<lb/>
Clearly, the previous two adminstra-<lb/>
tions recognized the need for increased<lb/>
student aid. The Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion, on the other hand, in eliminating<lb/>
many of the unnecessary government ex-<lb/>
penditures, has chosen to decrease stu-<lb/>
dent financial aid. However, of the<lb/>
$14.2 billion allotted for education in<lb/>
the 1980 budget, only 22 percent went to<lb/>
student loans and grants. The remaining<lb/>
78 percent went to the states for elemen-<lb/>
tary and intermediate educa-<lb/>
tion. Moreover, the monies from the<lb/>
federal government for local education<lb/>
are further supplemented by the in-<lb/>
dividual states. Thus, if the state funds<lb/>
were combined with federal funds, the<lb/>
college student actually receives less than<lb/>
22 percent of the total funds allocated<lb/>
for education.<lb/>
In any case, if President Reagan s ob-<lb/>
jective is to cut the excess from the<lb/>
Education Department, he should look<lb/>
down avenues other than the one leading<lb/>
to student financial aid. Tuition costs<lb/>
alone have risen all oner the country as<lb/>
much as 15 percent, which in the case of<lb/>
Georgetown University means an addi-<lb/>
tional $750 for each student.<lb/>
Today, most students have some type<lb/>
of financial aid package? i.e loan,<lb/>
grant, work study or scholarship. Thus,<lb/>
a reduction in funds or an increase of<lb/>
restrictions to obtain them on the Basic<lb/>
Educational Opportunity Grant Pro-<lb/>
gram or the Federally Insured Student<lb/>
Loan Program will exclude the middle<lb/>
class from the nation's private univer-<lb/>
sities, and only a select group of students<lb/>
will be able to attent them? namely, the<lb/>
upper- and lower-income students. My<lb/>
financial aid officer spelled out the<lb/>
situation quite clearly: "You won't be<lb/>
able to afford this school next year<lb/>
And, indeed I won't, if these two essen-<lb/>
tial programs are cut.<lb/>
(Lisa Pent is a student at Georgetown<lb/>
University. This article is reprinted with<lb/>
permission from The Washington Post.)<lb/>
so there will be no more James Hamiltons.<lb/>
What the vets are calling for is sweeping<lb/>
in scope, but simple in design. They want<lb/>
belated recognition for the sacrifices they<lb/>
have already made and concrete support to<lb/>
help ease their suffering in the years ahead.<lb/>
Among the vets' demands are calls for: <lb/>
? an investigation into Hamilton's<lb/>
death. Protesting veterans say it was trig-<lb/>
gered by the VA's refusal to certify as<lb/>
service-related a hearing loss Hamilton<lb/>
said he suffered in Vietnam.<lb/>
? an investigation into the abysmal<lb/>
quality of health care in the VA system in<lb/>
general. .<lb/>
? readily available treatment for vets at-<lb/>
flicted with what doctors call "delayed<lb/>
stress syndrome which causes many to<lb/>
become uncontrollably angry or depressed.<lb/>
? a full-dress study of the effects of the<lb/>
chemical herbicide Agent Orange, used<lb/>
widely in Southeast Asia during the war,<lb/>
and blamed for a variety of ailments, rang-<lb/>
ing from headaches to cancer. (Ironically,<lb/>
the most dangerous indredient in Agent<lb/>
Orange, the chemical diosix, was a<lb/>
byproduct of the manufacturing process<lb/>
that didn't harm plants, only people. It<lb/>
was left in the finished product by the her-<lb/>
bicide's manufacturers to cut production<lb/>
costs.)<lb/>
?a personal meeting with President<lb/>
Reagan- a noted Vietnam war hawk who<lb/>
couldn't say enough about "our boys"<lb/>
when they were fighting in the jungle half a<lb/>
world away 15 years ago.<lb/>
So far, the main show of support for the<lb/>
protesting vets has come not from the<lb/>
president, nor from traditional veterans'<lb/>
organizations like the American Legion<lb/>
and Veterans of Foreign Wars, but from<lb/>
people such groups despised during the<lb/>
war years. Peace advocates such as black<lb/>
activist Dick Gegory, for example, joined<lb/>
the hunger strikers when their protest<lb/>
shifted to a Los Angeles church after the<lb/>
eviction from Wadsworth Hospital.<lb/>
Ob ervers who thought antiwar activists<lb/>
like Gregory would be the last people on<lb/>
earth to support men who fought a war<lb/>
they opposed shouldn't really be surprised<lb/>
by this turn of events. While the peace<lb/>
movement often . criticized American<lb/>
soldiers for fighting in Vietnam, it didn't<lb/>
condemn them. Most activists recognized<lb/>
that the majority of soldiers were draftees,<lb/>
and that many were working class and<lb/>
minority youths with little choice but to<lb/>
fight the battles that vhiter, richer, older<lb/>
and better-educated men managed to<lb/>
avoid.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0004"/><lb/>
JUNE 25, 1981<lb/>
THE DAILY PLANET<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Earth Saved!<lb/>
Superman Once Again<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
"Superman H" is a super movie too, just like<lb/>
"Superman I It has all the excitement, scope and<lb/>
spectacular special effects of it's predecessor.<lb/>
The same cast is back-Christopher Reeve is the kid<lb/>
from Krypton, Margot Kidder is lovely Lois Lane, and<lb/>
Gene Hackman is lethal Lex Luthor. The only absence<lb/>
is Marlon Brando, who evidently wanted too super a<lb/>
salary for his small part.<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
The heroic Man of Steelflying with our nation's colors following another of his incredible triumphs.<lb/>
Whereas "Superman I" was directed by Richard<lb/>
Donner, "Superman II" is carefully crafted by Richard<lb/>
Lester. Knowing the director of "A Hard Day's Night"<lb/>
and "A Funny Thing Happened On the Way to the<lb/>
Forums love of offbeat humor, I was afraid he<lb/>
wouldn't take Superman seriously enough. However,<lb/>
Part II, in parts, is more serious than Part I, attempting<lb/>
at times to understand what it must feel like to be the<lb/>
most powerful man alive.<lb/>
The serious stuff starts when Superman (GASP!)<lb/>
Loses His Powers. He willingly reneges on his awesome<lb/>
abilities in order to make love to Lois. (No, not because<lb/>
otherwise he might orgasm her to death; he does it due<lb/>
to Kryptonain laws against miscegenation.)<lb/>
Supes has much soul-searching and teeth-gnashing to<lb/>
do when he finds out that while he was busy romancing,<lb/>
three super villians have attacked Earth. Powerless, the<lb/>
Man of Steel becomes the Man of Mud.<lb/>
The villians are Kryptonian criminals who have all the<lb/>
powers Superman once had. Zod, Ursa and Non<lb/>
(Terence Stamp, Sarah Douglas and Jack O'Halloran)<lb/>
come across as a sort of super punk group in their<lb/>
flashy, all-black outfits. Sexy Ursa seems like a Super-<lb/>
bad Blondie, a masochist's wet dream come to life.<lb/>
Of course, Reeves eventually regains his strength and<lb/>
goes after the bad guys, resulting in some battle scenes<lb/>
which are a marvel to watch and must have been mad-<lb/>
dening to film. "Superman II" is excellent entertain-<lb/>
ment, in turns supenseful, awe-inspiring and funny.<lb/>
My only complaint with the film is that it is full of in-<lb/>
consistencies and mysteries. For instance, at one point,<lb/>
Zod emits some sort of anti-gravity ray, causing an<lb/>
unluckv victim to dangle helplessly in mid-air. How did<lb/>
Zod do so? He is supposed to have the same powers as<lb/>
Superman, but Superman exhibits no such powers. It<lb/>
could not be a power common to all Krypotnians, since,<lb/>
again, Superman could do so. The villian wasn't<lb/>
holding any type of weapon either. There are several<lb/>
such faults in the film.<lb/>
Other than these minor mistakes, the movie is a ter-<lb/>
rific two-hour escape from reality, fun for kids of all<lb/>
ages.<lb/>
The Super Saga Of The Man Of Steel<lb/>
Bv JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Superman is a most intriguing fic-<lb/>
tional character. Created in 1933 by<lb/>
two 17-year olds, Jerry Siegel and<lb/>
Joe Shuster, Superman has become<lb/>
a national institution, celebrated in<lb/>
countless comics, toys, TV shows,<lb/>
and now, two popular movies with a<lb/>
third on the way. Why is Superman<lb/>
one of the most famous literary<lb/>
creations of the 20th century? What<lb/>
is Superman's secret?<lb/>
"The Superman fantasy<lb/>
stimulated a host of intellectuals to<lb/>
write interpretations analyzing, in<lb/>
terms of Nietzschean and Freudian<lb/>
philosophy, what any child could<lb/>
have told them wrote Jim<lb/>
Steranko in his "History of Com-<lb/>
ics "The truth was that Siegel and<lb/>
Shuster's imaginary world tended to<lb/>
be more Alderian that Freudian; the<lb/>
drive wasn't for sex but for power-<lb/>
for the ability to dominate their en-<lb/>
vironment through sheer brute<lb/>
strength<lb/>
Jules Feiffer, in his classic "The<lb/>
Great Comic Book Heroes sees<lb/>
Superman's secret identity as the<lb/>
secret of his success. Unlike most<lb/>
fantasy heroes, the Man of Steel is<lb/>
not in reality a normal human who<lb/>
puts on a colorful costume and<lb/>
becomes a Superheroe-the opposite<lb/>
is true in his case. Says Feiffer:<lb/>
"Did Superman become Clark<lb/>
Kent in order to lead a normal life,<lb/>
have friends, be known as the nice<lb/>
guy, meet girls? Hardly. There's too<lb/>
much of the hair shirt in the rold,<lb/>
too much devotion to the im-<lb/>
primatur of impotence-an insight,<lb/>
perhaps, igto the fantasy lif ejsf the<lb/>
Man of Steel. Superman as "a secret<lb/>
masochist? Field for study there.<lb/>
For if it was otherwise, if the point,<lb/>
the only point, was to lead a<lb/>
"normal life why not a more<lb/>
typical identity? How can one be a<lb/>
cowardly star reporter, subject to<lb/>
fainting spells in time of crisis, and<lb/>
not expect to raise serious ques-<lb/>
tions?<lb/>
The truth may be that Kent ex-<lb/>
isted not for the purpose of the story<lb/>
but for the reader. He is Superman's<lb/>
opinion of the rest of us, a pointed<lb/>
caricature of what we, the non-<lb/>
criminal element, were really like.<lb/>
His fake identity was our real one.<lb/>
That's why we loved him so. For if<lb/>
that wasn't really us, if there were<lb/>
no Clark Kents but only lots of<lb/>
glasses and cheap suits which, when<lb/>
removed, revealed all of us in our<lb/>
true identies-what a hell of an im-<lb/>
proved world it would have been<lb/>
What do Superman's inventors<lb/>
say? In an article in a 1975 issue of<lb/>
Mediascene magazine, Jerry Siegel<lb/>
said this about his brainchild:<lb/>
"What led me into conceiving<lb/>
Superman in the early thirties?<lb/>
Listening to President Roosevelt's<lb/>
'fireside chatsbeing unemployed<lb/>
and worried during the depression<lb/>
and knowing hopelessness and fear.<lb/>
Hearing and reading of the oppres-<lb/>
sion and slaughter of helpless, op-<lb/>
pressed Jews in Nazi Ger-<lb/>
manyseeing movies depicting the<lb/>
horrors of privation suffered by the<lb/>
downtroddenreading of gallant,<lb/>
crusading heroes in the pulps, and<lb/>
seeing equally crusading heroes on<lb/>
the screen in feature films and<lb/>
movie serials (often pitted against<lb/>
malevolent, grasping, ruthless<lb/>
madmen). I had the great urge to<lb/>
helphelp the despairing masses,<lb/>
somehow.<lb/>
"How could I help them, when I<lb/>
could barely help myself?<lb/>
"Superman was the answer. And<lb/>
Superman, aiding the downtrodden<lb/>
and oppressed, has caught the im-<lb/>
agination of a world<lb/>
What Siegel said is what J see "a<lb/>
the secret of Superman: he is a<lb/>
Super-Savior. Like Moses, he was<lb/>
saved from destruction as an infant<lb/>
by being cast off into the void in a<lb/>
protective vessel. Like Jesus, he was<lb/>
sent by his father in the sky to help<lb/>
us hapless mortals. Superman<lb/>
Saves.<lb/>
School Movies: Learning Aid<lb/>
Providing Camouflage For Sleepy Scholars<lb/>
By DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
Antiunl F?uf? Editor<lb/>
One of the disappointments of my college<lb/>
career was the lack of movies that plagued most<lb/>
of my classes. With the rather obvious exception<lb/>
of film history courses, we hardly ever had<lb/>
movies to break the tedium of sitting around in a<lb/>
classroom.<lb/>
Movies are not only an excellent visual learn-<lb/>
ing aid, but they are lots of fun as well. Even if<lb/>
the movie is dull, there is still plenty of entertain-<lb/>
ment in watching teachers match wits with some<lb/>
of the projectors.<lb/>
Movie projectors that are affiliated with<lb/>
educational institutions are different from<lb/>
regular projectors. School projectors seem to be<lb/>
older, more complicated, more temperamental<lb/>
and much more irritating to operate than the<lb/>
same projector would be in someone's home.<lb/>
1 think the projectors in my elementary school<lb/>
were among the worst anywhere. Most of the<lb/>
teachers refused to mess with them, leaving it to<lb/>
one of the students. There was always at least<lb/>
one kid in each class who understood the<lb/>
mysteries of coaxing one of those cantankerous<lb/>
projectors into more or less running a movie.<lb/>
Different projectors specialized in different<lb/>
ways of lousing up a movie. Some liked to stay<lb/>
perpetually out of focus. Others liked to distort<lb/>
the sound into a deafening blend of shakey music<lb/>
and dialogue. The more destructive models<lb/>
sometimes shredded large sections of film, or let<lb/>
the take-up wheel jam, spilling the whole movie<lb/>
all over the floor.<lb/>
For a couple of years, my elementary school<lb/>
had a tradition of having a movie day each Fri-<lb/>
day. The whole student body would file into the<lb/>
auditorium to watch three movies. The fact that<lb/>
this was usually the high point of the week for us<lb/>
shows how exciting our school careers were at the<lb/>
time.<lb/>
The movies picked for the movie day showings<lb/>
were a pretty strange bunch. A typical day's fare<lb/>
might have consisted of a film on crop rotation,<lb/>
a movie on "Daily Life In Today's India" and<lb/>
perhaps something light such as "Long Division<lb/>
Can Be Fun" to round out the triple feature. I<lb/>
somehow get the feeling that the movies were<lb/>
chosen at random.<lb/>
Some of those movies, like the one on crop<lb/>
rotation, were helpful sometimes ? you never<lb/>
know when you might have to rotate some crops.<lb/>
Other movies, though, weren't too great,<lb/>
especially the thirty-year-old geography films.<lb/>
That "Daily Life In Today's India" had a map<lb/>
of India with a British flag flying over it. This<lb/>
was okay, since the globes in our classrooms had<lb/>
countries like British India and French Indochina<lb/>
on them too.<lb/>
Math movies were among my least favorite<lb/>
films. It's hard to make an interesting movie<lb/>
about some guy who stands at a chalkboard and<lb/>
draws math problems on it for twenty minutes.<lb/>
We didn't get many history n.ovies, except for<lb/>
the geography movies I mentioned above. I do<lb/>
remember one about the French and Indians War<lb/>
that consisted solely of maps, one after another.<lb/>
The narrarator would describe a campaign or a<lb/>
battle, and the only action on the screen would<lb/>
be a dotted line marching along the route of, say.<lb/>
General Braddock's expedition.<lb/>
Now and then they had a pulsating splatter<lb/>
mark to represent a battle, and then a dotted line<lb/>
slinking along the route of an army's retreat.<lb/>
(We saw this one backwards, too, but it wasn't<lb/>
much fun.)<lb/>
If we were lucky, we got to see a real tuli-<lb/>
length movie. The trouble was, the only one they<lb/>
could get was "Heidi with Shirley Temple or<lb/>
somebody like that. My mother told me that she<lb/>
had to watch that movie when she was in elemen-<lb/>
tary school, and got just as tired of it.<lb/>
In high school, we had a better variety of<lb/>
movies. (And, somebody told the moviemakers<lb/>
about the British leaving India.) One movie that<lb/>
was a big favorite then was one about the<lb/>
Monroe Doctrine that had George Reeves (he<lb/>
was Superman on the old TV show, in case you<lb/>
don't read trivia quizzes) in a bit part. I think he<lb/>
was a boyfriend of James Monroe's daughter or<lb/>
niece, and the actor who played Monroe explain-<lb/>
ed the doctrine to him.<lb/>
We also got to see a "Julius Caesar" with<lb/>
Marlon Brando as Mark Antony, and a good<lb/>
"Romeo and Juliet" that didn't have anybody<lb/>
we recognized it it.<lb/>
In college, though, they just never seemed to<lb/>
See MOVIES, Page 6<lb/>
Richard Pry or Live In Concert<lb/>
This Monday, June 29, at 9 p.m. in Mendenhsll Student Center's<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre, The Student Union Films Committee will present<lb/>
"Richard Pryor Filmed Live In Concert The movie is an<lb/>
hilarious account of Pryor's best stand-up routine, captured live in<lb/>
Los Angeles, California.<lb/>
LerAJG IftoviT Coucgc. Th? HAfio ia;?i<lb/>
6V OfiNW Mjtis<lb/>
OUrt fWOSfcT COUrOCIL S<lb/>
SeTOJG T(CK?Tb TO A<lb/>
bEAfOOfi GfvJ0??<lb/>
(AJHTT A ??T V?AL<lb/>
I ca HA?0q t?uij? rrf<lb/>
Lunatic Press Inspires<lb/>
Threats To Its Staff<lb/>
(CPS)-Anonymous callers accused seven staff members of Cornell<lb/>
University's humor magazine, the Lunatic, of racism and threatened their<lb/>
safety after the magazine printed a mock advertisement depicting Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan members surrounding a flaming cross.<lb/>
Two weeks after the ad appeared April 8th, all seven people received<lb/>
calls within a few hours of each other. Some warned of bombs or "broken<lb/>
necks while other callers were "more reasonable according to Lunatic<lb/>
editorial board member dam Castro.<lb/>
The timing of the threats led staff members to believe the callers<lb/>
"worked in connection with each other he adds.<lb/>
Castro says they were surprised by the reaction, noting the ad was meant<lb/>
to "compare the atrocities of Nazi Germany to the actions of the KKK<lb/>
The ad suggested Klan members who've "had a long hard day lynching<lb/>
niggers" should relax with a "Genocide Cream Ale, imported from Ger-<lb/>
many,of course<lb/>
The ad "was not meant to be taken at face value Castro asserts.<lb/>
Th<lb/>
Wd<lb/>
Cm<lb/>
eith<lb/>
Opci<lb/>
he ?<lb/>
David<lb/>
can do<lb/>
c. ??<lb/>
prestigious<lb/>
He sli<lb/>
began he w<lb/>
lost hi<lb/>
He never<lb/>
was a macl<lb/>
His 1<lb/>
recorded i<lb/>
thud ti<lb/>
he did<lb/>
I egend bi<lb/>
under<lb/>
mined <lb/>
Pe:<lb/>
Burns,<lb/>
tried to b'<lb/>
Spaniard<lb/>
drive. Bui<lb/>
in the deej<lb/>
Graham<lb/>
and secon<lb/>
Then. Bui<lb/>
were tied<lb/>
Th<lb/>
Open "<lb/>
from the<lb/>
even smiie<lb/>
'Wot<lb/>
fathei<lb/>
him<lb/>
game<lb/>
Then,<lb/>
was<lb/>
N l<lb/>
speak I<lb/>
either, u<lb/>
H <lb/>
with h;<lb/>
doe-n<lb/>
plavs hkj<lb/>
he parrc<lb/>
his. he<lb/>
I-ord<lb/>
ran<lb/>
wars mci<lb/>
he h I<lb/>
recruit!<lb/>
?Notre<lb/>
blue -en<lb/>
another<lb/>
who '<lb/>
fav<lb/>
? Micrnj<lb/>
drooln<lb/>
can v<lb/>
?Okiatj<lb/>
best del<lb/>
Casiilal<lb/>
Oklah<lb/>
"<lb/>
mvc bi<lb/>
? XlaW<lb/>
(6-4.<lb/>
all pc<lb/>
? Florij<lb/>
Pell'<lb/>
KOI<lb/>
Siant<lb/>
Poo<lb/>
bell 1<lb/>
N.C<lb/>
and<lb/>
Roil<lb/>
summ<lb/>
of .5;<lb/>
hittinj<lb/>
Tii<lb/>
State<lb/>
has 111<lb/>
Dale<lb/>
folio<lb/>
three<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0005"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
n<lb/>
?ecause<lb/>
it due<lb/>
thing to<lb/>
lancing.<lb/>
ess, the<lb/>
le all the<lb/>
lc Non<lb/>
loran)<lb/>
their<lb/>
uper-<lb/>
jlife.<lb/>
gih and<lb/>
scenes<lb/>
in mad-<lb/>
itertain-<lb/>
i in-<lb/>
le point,<lb/>
s.ng an<lb/>
ow did<lb/>
iwcrs as<lb/>
wers It<lb/>
nee,<lb/>
wasn't<lb/>
several<lb/>
a ter-<lb/>
1s of all<lb/>
<lb/>
? to<lb/>
ses.<lb/>
vhen I<lb/>
er And<lb/>
trodden<lb/>
the im-<lb/>
I see M<lb/>
-e is a<lb/>
he was<lb/>
km infant<lb/>
yoid in a<lb/>
he was<lb/>
to help<lb/>
perman<lb/>
ft)<lb/>
Cornell<lb/>
;ned their<lb/>
Ku Klux<lb/>
received<lb/>
'broken<lb/>
 unalic<lb/>
le callers<lb/>
meant<lb/>
kkK<lb/>
nching<lb/>
Ger-<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JUNE 25, 1981 Page 5<lb/>
William<lb/>
Yelverton<lb/>
The Aussie Wh<lb/>
Won The Open<lb/>
George Burns couldn't stop him. Bill Rogers couldn't<lb/>
either. Even the Golden Bear, Jack Nicklaus, couldn't<lb/>
do it. Nobody could stop David Graham in the U.S.<lb/>
Open last weekend. And there's only one reason why:<lb/>
he was perfect.<lb/>
No ifs, ands or buts. When a player as consistent as<lb/>
David Graham is hits all 18 greens, there's nothing you<lb/>
can do about it. That perfection gave him a paycheck of<lb/>
$55,000, but more importantly, he won one of the most<lb/>
prestigious golf tournaments in the world.<lb/>
He shot rounds of 68-68-70-67. When the last round<lb/>
began he was three strokes behind Burns, but he never<lb/>
lost his composure? he was as serious as he always is.<lb/>
He never smiled. He didn't let anything distract him. He<lb/>
was a machine.<lb/>
His 7-under-par was the second lowest score ever<lb/>
recorded at the Open, and his victory marked only the<lb/>
third time a foreigner had won this tournament. To win,<lb/>
he didn't let Nicklaus intimidate him, even when the<lb/>
I egend birdied two consecutive holes to go to three<lb/>
under, compared to Graham's five under. No, the deter-<lb/>
mined Aussie just griaed his team and played his game.<lb/>
Perfect David Graham.<lb/>
Burns, who led after the second and third rounds,<lb/>
tried to be another Severiano Ballesteros, the young<lb/>
Spaniard who miraculously saves pai after an erratic<lb/>
drive. Burns suffered from poor tee shots that left him<lb/>
in the deep rough time and time again.<lb/>
Graham could not be stopped. He birdied the first<lb/>
and second holes to move to within one stroke of Burns.<lb/>
Then, Burns bogeyed No. 4, and the two front-runners<lb/>
were tied at 6-under.<lb/>
The 14th hole, a par four, 414-yarder, unveiled a new<lb/>
Open champion. He dropped his second shot four feet<lb/>
from the pin and calmly sank it for a three. He didn't<lb/>
even smile.<lb/>
"Not bad for a man whose<lb/>
father vowed never to speak to<lb/>
him again if he played the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
<lb/>
Then, on the next hole he hit a beautiful iron shot that<lb/>
was about 6 feet from the cup. Birdie.<lb/>
Not bad a for a man whose father vowed never to<lb/>
speak to him again if he played the game. "He didn't<lb/>
either, for 15 years" Graham was quoted as saying.<lb/>
He has admitted that he never lets emotion interfere<lb/>
with his profession. He's no Lee Trevino, and he<lb/>
doesn't play with the flamboyancy of a Ballesteros. He<lb/>
plays like David Graham: serious, straightforward and<lb/>
he parred the last hole and the championship was surely<lb/>
his, he smiled. Perfect David Graham.<lb/>
Ford Motor Companv Marketing Researcher Joe Ter-<lb/>
ranova makes his hobby keeping tabs on the recruiting<lb/>
wars incollege football. In a national sports publication,<lb/>
he has come out with the schools he thinks had the best<lb/>
recruiting years in the country:<lb/>
? Notre Dame. Rookie Coach Gerry Faust signed such<lb/>
blue-chippers as quarterback Ken Karcher, "possibly<lb/>
another Joe Willie and running back Chris Smith,<lb/>
who "may be the only player in America to compare<lb/>
favorably with Herschel Walker<lb/>
?Michigan. Running backs Rick Rogers "left scouts<lb/>
drooling" and Brian Mercer "easy to bring down if you<lb/>
can catch him" are heading to the Wolverines.<lb/>
?Oklahoma. Signees include Greg Sims, "probably the<lb/>
best defensive lineman in the state of California Tony<lb/>
Casillas "garnered equal accolades in the state of<lb/>
Oklahoma" and Lawrence Hardin and Keith Stanberry<lb/>
"vicious hitters and the most highly sought-after defen-<lb/>
sive backs in the Lone Star State<lb/>
?Alabama. "David Gilmer (6-5, 255), Hardy Walker<lb/>
(6-4, 270) and noseguard Chuck McCall (6-2, 240) are<lb/>
all possible All-America candidates Enough said.<lb/>
?Florida. "If they ever award one of (Coach Charley)<lb/>
Pell's young line recruits a game ball, he'll probably it<lb/>
Rounding out the top 10 were Florida State, USC,<lb/>
Stanford, Pittsburgh and Texas.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Poop from the North Mate Summer League: Camp-<lb/>
bell leads the league with an 8-4 record, followed by<lb/>
N.C. State at 6-4, Wilmington and East Carolina at 5-6,<lb/>
and North Carolina is in last place with a 4-8 mark.<lb/>
Ronnie Lee of State is swinging the hottest bat this<lb/>
summer. He's leading the league in hitting with a mark<lb/>
of .522. Campbell has three hitters in the top five, all<lb/>
hitting over .400.<lb/>
Tim Whitehead of Wilmington and Tracy Black of<lb/>
State arc co-leaders in the runs scored department. Each<lb/>
has 11. Mike Sorrell of East Carolina is second with 10.<lb/>
Dale of Campbell leads the league in homers with four,<lb/>
followed by teammates Strickland and Hoffman with<lb/>
three and two respectively.<lb/>
Bucs Rally Past<lb/>
Camels In Wild One<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU's Jay Carraway heads for horn?.<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Sports MMor<lb/>
To hit or not to hit. That is the<lb/>
question. And Pirate baseball coach<lb/>
Gary Overton may have found the<lb/>
right answer.<lb/>
Hit was exactly what the Pirates<lb/>
did at Buies Creek Monday night.<lb/>
Scoring 10 runs in the top of the<lb/>
seventh inning, the Bucs' rally paid<lb/>
off to the tune of a 19-10 slugfest win<lb/>
over the Camels of Campbell.<lb/>
The victory upped the Pirates'<lb/>
record to 5-6 on the season.<lb/>
The Pirates hit well again in a<lb/>
double-header split with North<lb/>
Carolina last Sunday. ECU defeated<lb/>
the Tar Heels 9-2 in the First game<lb/>
and had an 8-2 lead in the second<lb/>
before Luke Rosnake's grand slam<lb/>
gave UNC a 12-8 victory.<lb/>
In the opener, the Bucs jumped<lb/>
out to a 4-0 lead in the top of the<lb/>
First and never relinquished the lead.<lb/>
The Pirates scored two runs in the<lb/>
second and added two more in the<lb/>
fourth to cap the scoring.<lb/>
The Buc barrage was started by a<lb/>
Mike Sorrell double. Todd Hendley<lb/>
followed with a single to score Sor-<lb/>
rel and put the Pirates up 1-0.<lb/>
Hendley then scored on a wild pitch<lb/>
before Jay Carraway walked to load<lb/>
the bases. Charlie Waynick also<lb/>
walked, forcing home Smith and<lb/>
Pete Persico, who reached base on<lb/>
an error.<lb/>
The Tar Heels scored once in the<lb/>
j bottom of the third to narrow the<lb/>
fmargain to 6-2, but the Bucs storm-<lb/>
ed back to score two more times and<lb/>
stop the rally.<lb/>
Rick Ramey picked up the win for<lb/>
the Bucs by going the distance and<lb/>
allowing only two earned runs and<lb/>
six hits.<lb/>
Hitting leaders for the Pirates<lb/>
were Sorrel, Hendley, Evans and<lb/>
Carraway, each collecting two.<lb/>
In the nightcap, ECU saw an 8-2<lb/>
lead dwindle to 8-7 when UNC<lb/>
scored five runs in the fifth inning<lb/>
before the Tar Heels tied the game<lb/>
in the sixth. The winning grand slam<lb/>
came in the seventh.<lb/>
The Pirates grabbed a 4-1 lead in<lb/>
the second when Persico walked,<lb/>
moved to second on an error and to<lb/>
third on Waynick's sacrifice. Mark<lb/>
Shank then belted a home run over<lb/>
the rightfield fence.<lb/>
The Bucs added two more runs in<lb/>
the third and two more in the fifth<lb/>
before the Tar Heels began to rally.<lb/>
The Pirates could collect but six<lb/>
hits compared to 15 for the Tar<lb/>
Heels.<lb/>
The Bucs found their trip to<lb/>
Raleigh last Thursday afternoon to<lb/>
be an unwelcome one as N.C. State<lb/>
whallopped them 10-3.<lb/>
Tim Barbour's three-run homer,<lb/>
a 340-foot drive, did much of the<lb/>
damage, as did Ronnie Lee's three-<lb/>
for-three performance at the plate.<lb/>
Right-hander Robert Bowman,<lb/>
pitching for the first time in the<lb/>
summer season, allowed East<lb/>
Carolina only seven hits and struck<lb/>
out six in going a strong six innings.<lb/>
Reliever Mike Parrott retired all<lb/>
three batters he faced in the seventh.<lb/>
Kirk Parsons took the loss for<lb/>
East Carolina, his second without a<lb/>
win. He allowed five runs, four of<lb/>
them earned.<lb/>
The Pirates' bat went on strike<lb/>
during a Friday night encounter<lb/>
with Campbell. The Bucs collected<lb/>
only one hit off Darin Clonger in<lb/>
the Camels' 7-2 victory.<lb/>
However, Campbell could only<lb/>
get seven hits off two ECU pitchers.<lb/>
starter Charlie Smith and reliever<lb/>
Robbie Harper. Five of them came<lb/>
in a big fourth inning when the<lb/>
Camels scored seven times.<lb/>
The Pirates did manage a 1-0 lead<lb/>
in their half of the second. Smith led<lb/>
off with a walk, and Jay Carraway,<lb/>
pinch running, advanced to second<lb/>
with two outs. Persico hit a<lb/>
grounder between first and second<lb/>
into right. Rightfielder Tim Handy<lb/>
kicked the ball away, allowing Car-<lb/>
raway to score.<lb/>
After losing three straight games,<lb/>
the Bucs got back on the winning<lb/>
track by defeating North Carolina<lb/>
7-3 last Wednesday night in<lb/>
Pikeville.<lb/>
Rick Ramey, starting for the se-<lb/>
cond time, picked up his first win,<lb/>
going the first five innings. Smith<lb/>
and Harper eached hurled an inning<lb/>
of relief.<lb/>
The Bucs provided fireworks by<lb/>
hammering two home runs, one by<lb/>
Mike Sorrell and another by Jack<lb/>
Curlings. ECU managed eight hits<lb/>
off Carolina hurlers.<lb/>
Sorrel gave the Pirates a 1-0 lead<lb/>
with his home run. Carolina,<lb/>
however, scored three runs in the se-<lb/>
cond inning, but the Bucs came<lb/>
back to score four more times in the<lb/>
fourth inning to take the lead for<lb/>
good, 5-3.<lb/>
Sorrell and Curlings each col-<lb/>
lected two hits for the Pirates.<lb/>
Overton feels his team is starting<lb/>
to hit again. "More or lesss, they<lb/>
were in a general slump, but beating<lb/>
Campbell was a fine opportunity to<lb/>
bunch up the league some<lb/>
Next action for the Pirates occurs<lb/>
Thursday night when they host<lb/>
North Carolina in a double-header<lb/>
at Harrington Field. Gametime is 6<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
State, UNC Must Fill Gaps<lb/>
By CHRIS HOUMAN<lb/>
Editor's Note These are the second and third<lb/>
reports in a series previewing East Carolina's 1981<lb/>
football opponents.<lb/>
As far as the Pirates and Tar Hee!s are concern-<lb/>
ed, this is it. On Sept. 12 at 1:00 in Kenan<lb/>
Stadium, East Carolina and North Carolina will,<lb/>
meet for the last time. It will be an emotional<lb/>
game, not just from a rivalry standpoint, but also<lb/>
because of the fact that Carolina is dropping the<lb/>
Pirates from future football dates.<lb/>
But what about the Pirates chances against a<lb/>
team that went 11-1 last season, including a bowl<lb/>
victory over Texas?<lb/>
First of all head coach Dick Crum lost quite a<lb/>
bit of talent on the defensive line including first-<lb/>
round draft pick and All-America Lawrence<lb/>
Taylor. On offense however, UNC retains seven<lb/>
starters on the offensive platoon that led the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference in total offense,<lb/>
rushing offense and scoring last season.<lb/>
When you talk about the upcoming Tar Heel of-<lb/>
fense you have to talk about tailback Kelvin<lb/>
Bryant and quarterback Rod Elkins. Last season<lb/>
Bryant, a native of Tarboro, N.C, ran up 1,039<lb/>
yards despite the fact that he shared playing time<lb/>
with "Famous" Amos Lawrence. Bryant alsc<lb/>
averaged 5.9-yards a carry. He was second in the<lb/>
ACC in all-purpose running and third in rushing<lb/>
and scoring( 12 touchdowns). He was All-ACC last<lb/>
season as well.<lb/>
Elkins, who was thrust into a starting position<lb/>
last year because of injuries to the starting<lb/>
quarterback, tied for the ACC passing lead with<lb/>
1,002 yards and 11 touchdowns. Elkins completed<lb/>
60 of 81 passes.<lb/>
Elkins is also known as a good scrambling<lb/>
quarterback and that ability may be tested more<lb/>
this year than last. The offensive line that pro-<lb/>
tected Elkins so well (he was sacked only three<lb/>
times) lost two of its top players, Ron Wooten and<lb/>
Rick Donnalley.<lb/>
Wooten was an All-America selection and Don-<lb/>
nalley was All-ACC and considered one of the<lb/>
best centers to ever play the game at Carolina.<lb/>
Even with these losses Crum isn't too concerned<lb/>
because he has a good group of talent to fill in the<lb/>
gaps. They are tackles David Drechsler and Mike<lb/>
Marr and guard Ron Spruill. Marr, however, suf-<lb/>
fered an injury during spring practice and may not<lb/>
play this fall.<lb/>
If Marr can't answer the call this fall, then the<lb/>
Heels will line up with Drechsler and Brian Blados<lb/>
at the tackles, Spruill and Steve McGrew at guard<lb/>
and Brian Johnston at center.<lb/>
Starting tight end, Shelton Robinson, will be in<lb/>
his position for the third year in a row although he<lb/>
is used as a blocker and not a pass receiver.<lb/>
The only missing key in the UNC backfield will<lb/>
be at the fullback position where graduation took<lb/>
Billy "the Horse" Johnson. Johnson, a 253<lb/>
pound bull, will be hard to replace. The Heels will<lb/>
probably go with Alan Burrus, a 5-11, 200<lb/>
pounder, who is very quick.<lb/>
It is believed that with the experience that Elkins<lb/>
gained last year that the passing game will be a big<lb/>
factor. UNC has the receivers to do the job too.<lb/>
At the wide receiver positions will be Victor<lb/>
Harrison and Jon Richardson.<lb/>
Last season, Harrison finished .he year with 16<lb/>
grabs and Richardson chipped in with 15.<lb/>
Cnim's real problem area this fall will no doubt<lb/>
be a defensive line destroyed by graduation. Only<lb/>
one starter, defensive end Calvin Daniels, returns<lb/>
from a defensive front that reigned over the ACC.<lb/>
Making matters worse is the fact that there is only-<lb/>
one letterman in the fold, Jack Pary, to choose<lb/>
from. The Tar Heels will be forced to go with an<lb/>
inexperienced group of linemen, including Joe<lb/>
Con well, Wendelle Battle and Bill Lawson.<lb/>
At the linebacker position All-ACC back Dar-<lb/>
rell Nicholson returns as well as starter Lee Shaf-<lb/>
fer. If the line doesn't develop during the season<lb/>
these two will provide the brunt of the stops for<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
In the secondary, Bill Jackson and Greg Poole<lb/>
return with help from Darryl Lucas and Walter<lb/>
Black<lb/>
Overall, it appears that the Tar Heels will field a<lb/>
good team this fall but the loss of the 1980 UNC<lb/>
defense will be felt when the season starts. The of-<lb/>
fense has to take the pressure off of the young<lb/>
defense to give it time to develop. In other words.<lb/>
North Carolina will only be as good as their young<lb/>
defensive and offensive lines allow them to be.<lb/>
three touchdowns. Dee Whitley and Randy Phelps<lb/>
will be in line to replace Curtis Rein at the flanker<lb/>
position.<lb/>
At the important tight-end spot, Rufus Friday<lb/>
and Bobby Longmire will fight for playing time<lb/>
though neither player has caught a pass for the<lb/>
Pack. Both are trying to fill the shoes of Lin<lb/>
Daw son.<lb/>
The running back (or tailback) spot will be man-<lb/>
ned by one of three candidates. They are Andre<lb/>
Marks, Chris Brown and bullish Dwight Sullivan.<lb/>
If these players don't produce then Joe Mclntosh,<lb/>
one of the state's most recruited high school foot-<lb/>
ball players is waiting in the wings.<lb/>
The returnees to the offensive line include All-<lb/>
ACC tackles Chris Koehne and Todd Eckerson<lb/>
and Doug Howard and Earnest Butler at the<lb/>
guards.<lb/>
On the defensive side of the ball the Pack could<lb/>
well rate as one of the top defensive teams in the<lb/>
country by season's end. No less than nine starters<lb/>
return for the 1981 season, and that doesn't in-<lb/>
clude Donnie LeGrande and Eric Williams, who<lb/>
were regulars on the '79 ACC title team. In addi-<lb/>
tion to these players, all four of last year's starters<lb/>
in the secondary are back in the fold. They include<lb/>
Dee Dee Hoggard, Perry Williams, Hillery<lb/>
Honeycutt and Louis Meadows.<lb/>
Last season Monte Kiffin entered the NC State<lb/>
head coaching position with a major rebuilding<lb/>
job in the offering. Kiffin's 1980 version of the<lb/>
Wolfpack was predicted to finishing near the bot-<lb/>
tom of the ACC and win three or four<lb/>
games. Kiffin had other ideas, however, and<lb/>
after the Pack went through a mid-season slump<lb/>
they came on like gang-busters near the end. That<lb/>
late season frolic included a close 21-13 loss to j<lb/>
Penn State, a 38-21 win over Duke and a 36-14 win<lb/>
over East Carolina. All this resulted in a 6-5 mark<lb/>
for the man who replaced the late Robert "Bo"<lb/>
Rein.<lb/>
This year the Wolfpack has the numbers to be a<lb/>
conference contender if all the right combinations<lb/>
fall into place.<lb/>
The State offense will return all but Frank Sisto<lb/>
on the offensive line, and at the quarterback posi-<lb/>
tion, Tol Avery will get the call once again. Avery<lb/>
was fourth in the ACC in total offense as a<lb/>
sophomore last season. He threw for 1,114 yards t <lb/>
with a 53 percent completion rate and ran for 456<lb/>
more.<lb/>
The one big difference on offense will be the<lb/>
formation used by State. The veer, which was<lb/>
brought from William and Mary by Lou Holtz in<lb/>
1972 has been discarded for the "I" formation.<lb/>
"We're going to the I-formation for a number<lb/>
of reasons explained Kiffin. "We can throw the<lb/>
play-action pass better because we can get the<lb/>
quarterback off the line of scrimmage quicker. We.<lb/>
can also run some option out of the I, and we can<lb/>
utilize our quarterback to his full talents, yet not<lb/>
ask that much of him by working him all the time<lb/>
Also, I feel the defense has caught up somewhat<lb/>
with the veer<lb/>
Avery will again this year have the talents o<lb/>
split end Mike Quick to aid his passing game. Las<lb/>
year Quick caught 43 passes for 632 yards and<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0006"/><lb/>
T Ht I SI C ROl INIAN<lb/>
ll M 25, 1981<lb/>
All-Star G a m e S e t<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium will<lb/>
he the place to be this<lb/>
Saturday night at S<lb/>
when the best high<lb/>
school talent in the<lb/>
state will be matched<lb/>
against each other in<lb/>
the Boy's Home All-<lb/>
Star Football Game.<lb/>
Heading the North<lb/>
?squad will b e<lb/>
Associated Press North<lb/>
Carolina Player of the<lb/>
N ear Joe Mclntosh.<lb/>
I he 6-0. 185-poundei<lb/>
from I exington has<lb/>
signed to pla at N.C.<lb/>
Suite next tall.<lb/>
All-State performei<lb/>
 ince Evans will lead<lb/>
the South squad.<lb/>
Evans, one o! the most<lb/>
highly-recruited backs<lb/>
in the suite i- from<lb/>
Fayetteville Pine<lb/>
Forest, and like Mcln-<lb/>
tosh, has signed to pla<lb/>
with the Wolfpack next<lb/>
season.<lb/>
ron O a k e s o1<lb/>
Vance Senioi High<lb/>
School will be the head<lb/>
coach for the North<lb/>
squad Assisting him<lb/>
are Bud Deters of<lb/>
Roanokc Rapids,<lb/>
Glenn Nixon o t<lb/>
Clayton and Bob Sapp<lb/>
of Currituck.<lb/>
Bob Paroli ? ill coach<lb/>
the North. His<lb/>
assistants include Bob<lb/>
Marr of Cherokee.<lb/>
I arry Tomason of<lb/>
North Rowan and Jim<lb/>
Henderson of<lb/>
Chocowinity.<lb/>
The plavers began ar-<lb/>
riving Sunday and will<lb/>
practice from 9 to 11<lb/>
a.m. every day this<lb/>
week on the ECU and<lb/>
Rose High practice<lb/>
facilities. An afternoon<lb/>
session may also be<lb/>
held, depending on the<lb/>
heat.<lb/>
All but two all-stars<lb/>
arrived Sunday. Henry<lb/>
loo Too. a 6-1, 211-<lb/>
pound guard from<lb/>
Wilmington-Hoggard<lb/>
will not play, as he is<lb/>
recovering from knee<lb/>
surgery. John Grier, a<lb/>
6-0 205-pound running<lb/>
back from Cabarrus<lb/>
will miss the game due<lb/>
to sickness.<lb/>
Joining Evans on the<lb/>
South squad is Lance<lb/>
Smith, a highly-touted<lb/>
tackle from A.L.<lb/>
Brown High School in<lb/>
Kannapolis. The 6-4,<lb/>
280-pounder will play<lb/>
for the Tigers of Loui-<lb/>
siana State next fall.<lb/>
More than 30,000<lb/>
tickets are on the<lb/>
Tennis Planned<lb/>
Sl i OMl SESSION (June 25 July 29)<lb/>
ACTIVITY<lb/>
CoRec Volleyball<lb/>
CoRec Racquetball<lb/>
Putt Pun Fournev,<lb/>
Water Volleyball<lb/>
CoRec Softball rourn<lb/>
Badminton rourn.<lb/>
3 on 3 Basketball<lb/>
I ennis Doubles<lb/>
Prediction Run<lb/>
I IMS<lb/>
6-P<lb/>
7 s<lb/>
7-9<lb/>
7 9<lb/>
6:30<lb/>
5:15-6:15<lb/>
5:15-6: Is"<lb/>
8:00-9:00<lb/>
8:00-9:00<lb/>
I ()(. Al 1CV<lb/>
r&amp;R vlall<lb/>
I R MC c is<lb/>
WR Hwy.33<lb/>
LV MG Pool<lb/>
M.r IM lids<lb/>
r-R Ni<lb/>
r-R mg<lb/>
IK CHCts.<lb/>
IR Univ. Tr.<lb/>
1 NTRY DAD S<lb/>
7 7<lb/>
 7<lb/>
 S<lb/>
 13<lb/>
 14<lb/>
1 21<lb/>
7 21<lb/>
7 21<lb/>
BEGINS<lb/>
625-73<lb/>
6 25-73<lb/>
6 25-77<lb/>
6 25-7 3<lb/>
6 30-7 10<lb/>
7 7- 17<lb/>
7 7-7 17<lb/>
7 77 22<lb/>
Movies Aid Learning<lb/>
Continued From Page 4<lb/>
hac main movies in class. (No<lb/>
wonder 1 never got enough sleep).<lb/>
rhe first I got to see here were in an<lb/>
anthropolog course 1 look during<lb/>
hman yeai When 1 took a<lb/>
ni anthropolog course the<lb/>
next yeat. ihe rai ame movies<lb/>
lin<lb/>
(me - ear. we got to see two<lb/>
movies on the Salem W itch I rials,<lb/>
but that good start seemed to ex-<lb/>
haust all the I .S. histon films and<lb/>
we didn't get an more<lb/>
Most of the educational movies<lb/>
were noi real exciting, bui we did gel<lb/>
to see some good disaster movies in<lb/>
geologx 1 here was a real good one<lb/>
ol a volcanic eruption in Hawaii and<lb/>
anothei with some pretty nift<lb/>
avalanches<lb/>
It's hard to remember all the iats<lb/>
thai I learned from school movies<lb/>
ocr the years, since ihe all tend to<lb/>
blur together, but the did teach me<lb/>
one valuable skill: how to make<lb/>
shadow puppets on the screen alter<lb/>
the moie ends.<lb/>
market. ,Of that<lb/>
amount. 8,000-12.000<lb/>
are being sold state-<lb/>
wide, and another<lb/>
11,000 were given to Pitt<lb/>
County students.Nine<lb/>
thousand tickets are be-<lb/>
ing sold in the Green-<lb/>
ville area.<lb/>
There will be 35<lb/>
players on each squad<lb/>
for the 19th annual<lb/>
classic.<lb/>
Tickets are $3 in ad-<lb/>
vance and $4 at the<lb/>
stadium. The game will<lb/>
feature one of the most<lb/>
talented groups of<lb/>
athletes ever assembled<lb/>
for the game<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
SMOR T TERM LEASES<lb/>
Available tor sharing house across<lb/>
trom campus Call 7SJ 021 or<lb/>
7S6 40S7<lb/>
PAPERS TYPED For students<lb/>
1019 E Wright Rfl Call 753 6733<lb/>
JUST YOUR TYPE Fast, ac<lb/>
curate, professional typing<lb/>
Research papers, resumes, let<lb/>
ters, etc WRITE RIGHT<lb/>
7 St 9946<lb/>
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE 1979<lb/>
Oakwood 12X60 in wooded park 10<lb/>
mm from ECU. two bedrooms,<lb/>
heat pump, screens and storms<lb/>
GE range, retng. washer and<lb/>
dryer under service contract to<lb/>
4 83 Dinette set. all like new S2S00<lb/>
down balance owner financed at<lb/>
13 percent 752 6735 or 467 2354<lb/>
BASS GUITARIST Country and<lb/>
top 40 band, local act. established<lb/>
artist Mostly weekends 758772<lb/>
FEMALE STUDENTS for sum<lb/>
mer session needed to rent room n<lb/>
tour bedroom two bath house<lb/>
located two blocks trom campus<lb/>
S85 per month Call 758 7010 or in<lb/>
Fayetteville 1 800 682 3460 ask tor<lb/>
Mrs J Sharpe<lb/>
FOR SALE ladies bicycle 5<lb/>
speed 560 Call 757 3436<lb/>
PAPERS TYPED Accurate, pro<lb/>
tessional lypmg Reasonable<lb/>
rates Call 753 9665<lb/>
J J I love you<lb/>
Football 81 Invades Ficklen Stadium Saturday Night<lb/>
TAKE A BREAK FROM VOL RSTl DIES A V<lb/>
THE COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
Featuring: Hugh Evans<lb/>
Monday. June 29 9:00-10:00 p.m<lb/>
Room 115. Mendenhal!<lb/>
Admission FREE Free Snacks<lb/>
Pickard Wins<lb/>
 s s i s t a n t L ad <lb/>
Pirate basketball coach<lb/>
Sherri Pickard brought<lb/>
home a championship<lb/>
Sat . in more<lb/>
wathan one<lb/>
Pickard captured the<lb/>
Women's National<lb/>
Softball Home-Run<lb/>
Hitting Championship<lb/>
in Oklahoma Or. She<lb/>
defeat ed 1 u I sa's<lb/>
Shirle Rose, 16-14.<lb/>
Dick Bartel ol San<lb/>
?ntonio won the men's<lb/>
competition as he<lb/>
belted homers on his<lb/>
first two swings of a<lb/>
five-swing playoff. He<lb/>
defeated Don Arndt ol<lb/>
?iiis 1 ord, v V<lb/>
the end gulation,<lb/>
both men had 2 2<lb/>
homers in 55 swings.<lb/>
Third place went to<lb/>
Dan Daniels ol Kings<lb/>
Bech, Calif who<lb/>
belted r homers.<lb/>
re re s a Held o f<lb/>
Anoka. Minn was the<lb/>
third-place finisher.<lb/>
she hit 12 round-<lb/>
tnppers.<lb/>
Pickard has just<lb/>
completed her first yeai<lb/>
 i! She same to<lb/>
Greenville aftei serving<lb/>
as head women's<lb/>
basketball coach at<lb/>
Raleigh Millbrook. she<lb/>
is a graduate of N.C<lb/>
State, where she was art<lb/>
all state performer in<lb/>
volleyball, softball and<lb/>
bsketball.<lb/>
She was named Most<lb/>
Valuable Player of the<lb/>
national tournament<lb/>
last summer. Her team,<lb/>
Rubi-Ott's, won the ti-<lb/>
tle.<lb/>
Pickard and Bartel<lb/>
won expense paid trips<lb/>
to Santa Clara. Calif<lb/>
for the World Games I.<lb/>
a competition that w ill<lb/>
feature 17 different<lb/>
sports, rhe competi-<lb/>
tion will begin July 24<lb/>
and continue until<lb/>
?lllHlsI 2.<lb/>
1<lb/>
ranaN<lb/>
The Fleming Center has been here for you slnoe 1974.<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of an ages, at a reasonable oost<lb/>
Saturday abortion boor<lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when you need us<lb/>
Oan7Bl-aSBOtnyala4gh<lb/>
THE rr.nnvmya CgWIgB<lb/>
Your Way to<lb/>
the Great<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLtN'<lb/>
Steakhouse<lb/>
far<lb/>
67<lb/>
STROH'S LIGHT OR<lb/>
Body on Tap , Stroh's Beer Coca-Cola<lb/>
TAB. SPRITE. MR PIBB.<lb/>
MELLO YELLO OR<lb/>
SHOWBOAT<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIAL<lb/>
MonFri. 11:00-2:00<lb/>
4 oz. USDA Sirloin waking<lb/>
baked potato or trench tries and Texas toast<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
Free Iced Tea with College l.D.<lb/>
Offer good any time.<lb/>
Take Out Serv.ce 2903 E. 10th St 758-2712<lb/>
264 By Pass 756-0040<lb/>
Hours It 00 am 10 00 pm Mon Thurs<lb/>
10 00a m 11 OOp m Fri Sun <lb/>
Pork &amp; Beans<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
SERVE N SAVE<lb/>
Wieners<lb/>
2-Ltr.<lb/>
N R.<lb/>
Btl<lb/>
'SAVE<lb/>
Records &amp; Tapes<lb/>
YELLOW<lb/>
Sweet Corn<lb/>
In<lb/>
Husk<lb/>
Ear<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
dadiou<lb/>
  ?s<lb/>
iS&amp;S!<lb/>
TMrsD0PEN 8 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAY<lb/>
9 AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0007"/><lb/>
Buy two,<lb/>
 n mjfc aflfc<lb/>
get one FREE!<lb/>
$2.29 VALUE - HALF GALLON<lb/>
ELSIE BRAND SQUARE CARTON<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
17C OFF SLICED AMERICAN SINGLES<lb/>
Borden<lb/>
Cheese ??. $1<lb/>
Why Pay $1<lb/>
KRAFT ASSORTED<lb/>
Barbecue<lb/>
Sauces i.? 75c<lb/>
Why Pay $1.05<lb/>
TETLEY<lb/>
Tea oo c, $1??<lb/>
Why Pay $2.09<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
Liquid<lb/>
Slender ??? 35l<lb/>
Why Pay 59C Each<lb/>
Food Town<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
Creamer ? 99c<lb/>
Why Pay $1.49<lb/>
ABSORBENT<lb/>
Rally<lb/>
Towels r 49c<lb/>
Why Pay 59<lb/>
LIGHT N LIVELY<lb/>
Cottage<lb/>
Cheese ?, 1<lb/>
Why Pay $1.59<lb/>
20C OFF LABEL<lb/>
Liquid<lb/>
Lux aao, 89c<lb/>
Why Pay $1.33<lb/>
TEXAS PETE<lb/>
Hot Dog<lb/>
Chili co, 3$l<lb/>
Why Pay 289C<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
South Park<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
115 E. Red Banks Road<lb/>
Monday thru Saturday<lb/>
8.00 A.M. 'til 10:00 P.M.<lb/>
USDA Choice Boneless Beef Round<lb/>
SJ98<lb/>
Full<lb/>
Round Steak Cantaloupe<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0008"/><lb/>
CHOICE MEATS<lb/>
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF ROUND FULL CUT CHOICE<lb/>
Round ?<lb/>
Steak  $1 ?8<lb/>
Why Pay $2.99<lb/>
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF ROUND<lb/>
Rump<lb/>
Roast u, $268<lb/>
Why Pay $2.99<lb/>
USDA CHOICE FAMILY PACK USOA<lb/>
Cubed<lb/>
Steaks ?, $2? ?a??<lb/>
Why Pay $2.99<lb/>
ImuIiu 1 - J ??? Aug. Wt. Smtthftata"<lb/>
Armour Ham i. 2.09 Ham Sausage<lb/>
B?lofn?B??f lolofiuiP tf F SmlfhftaM<lb/>
 Spif?4 LuncheonLUer Cheese SoCOtt<lb/>
i j Armour Meats ox. 69$ ?mftiifiM<lb/>
 Armour Luter's Franks<lb/>
Peppertml s ox. M smithfuui Lut?r'f<lb/>
Hormei Beej Franks<lb/>
Cooked Ham 4 ox. 99C Food Taum Hot, M,w<lb/>
FMPV Jfe Stack P?PPr SaUSagC<lb/>
- 1 in ????? ? 1 fformel Ham 4 . 9W Su,lft<lb/>
R?d Pepper SlZZlean<lb/>
Hormel Ham 4 ox. 99C TlIbU TrflU<lb/>
Glazed &amp; Smoked SteaUVmm<lb/>
?- HormelHam 4ox. 1.09 Juhnee smoked<lb/>
$?IDS Of PkOVC Ham Pottl?fSous?g? Pattl?i $flUilC?<lb/>
FRESH GROUND DAILY Ham and Cheese Pattle,<lb/>
 -I Hormel 12 ox. 1.59<lb/>
Ground <lb/>
Beef L5118<lb/>
 Why Pay $1.48  ;akjrg$ ?<lb/>
GRADE A HOLLY FARMS - WTf vj&amp;pA X Vlfc' <lb/>
Chicken 1??<lb/>
Livers l?. 79c fll Myf1 t aw <lb/>
Wh,P.y1.09 Wg ? WjL- M0E4?TJ,<lb/>
OR ADE ? HOLLY FARMS 4j-5 -W.f$$Sl?- <lb/>
Chicken -fl i, I2f5f <lb/>
Breast  sl29 -trWJSaSm<lb/>
I I aVr  ??-x<lb/>
? I 1 llNi V<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS GRADE A  '<lb/>
Mixed Fryer 0 ??<lb/>
Parts L 5?s<lb/>
Why Pay 68C<lb/>
12 Ox. 1.09<lb/>
? ox. 1.29<lb/>
? ox 99<lb/>
12 Ox. 1.19<lb/>
u,990<lb/>
12 Or 1.39<lb/>
14 ox. 2.69<lb/>
Lb 1.19<lb/>
STOC<lb/>
jENOr<lb/>
Revolutionary<lb/>
CRISPNTASIY CRUST PIZIA<lb/>
DEL MONTE<lb/>
Fruit<lb/>
Cocktail<lb/>
59c<lb/>
17 Ox.<lb/>
Why Pay 75C<lb/>
ARCO<lb/>
Peas<lb/>
17 0?.<lb/>
399<lb/>
WhPay 271C<lb/>
RATION DOG FOOD<lb/>
Field<lb/>
Trail<lb/>
$389<lb/>
25 Lb.<lb/>
Why Pay $4.73<lb/>
ASSORTED TOILET TISSUE<lb/>
White<lb/>
Cloud<lb/>
4 Rolls Wv<lb/>
Why Pay $1.27<lb/>
REGULAR OR UNSCENTED NON-AEROSOL<lb/>
Clair<lb/>
Mist<lb/>
40, 79c<lb/>
Why Pay $1.29<lb/>
DEL MONTE<lb/>
Catsup 3, o, 89c<lb/>
? Why Pay $1.19<lb/>
i<lb/>
Jeimonte.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0009"/><lb/>
ATS<lb/>
.v<lb/>
-<lb/>
t&amp;<lb/>
lb Ai-g Wt<lb/>
im Lb. 2.09<lb/>
lofna POP<lb/>
m L?tr Ch??s?<lb/>
feats or 69C<lb/>
12 Or. 1.29<lb/>
3 Ox<lb/>
wc<lb/>
im<lb/>
lam<lb/>
4 Or 99C<lb/>
4 ax WC<lb/>
4 Or<lb/>
99c<lb/>
lam<lb/>
the ft<lb/>
lam 4 oi 1.09<lb/>
fauage Puttie<lb/>
t Pafttri<lb/>
U(h 1.59<lb/>
SmithficUf<lb/>
Ham Sausage n o. 1.09<lb/>
SmlihfirW<lb/>
Bacon<lb/>
SmlthfUUI<lb/>
Luter's Franks u o. 99<lb/>
SmtthflcUi Lutr's<lb/>
Beef Franks<lb/>
Food Town HotMild<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
Sulft<lb/>
Sizzlean<lb/>
Tabl Treats<lb/>
Steah-Umm<lb/>
Jubilee Smoked<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
12 Or 1.19<lb/>
Lb 990<lb/>
12 Or 1.39<lb/>
14 ox. 2.69<lb/>
Lb 1.19<lb/>
?:?<lb/>
STOCK UP NOW!<lb/>
jENOf<lb/>
REYournoNAftf<lb/>
CRISP N TASTY CRUST PILU<lb/>
!?fe w ?<lb/>
DEL MONTE<lb/>
Frait<lb/>
Cocktail<lb/>
ARGO<lb/>
Peas<lb/>
RATION DOG FOOD<lb/>
Field<lb/>
Trail<lb/>
Clair<lb/>
Mist<lb/>
DEL MONTE<lb/>
ORANGE or GRAPE CRUSHFRESCAMR. PIBB<lb/>
REGSUGAR FREE SPRITETABMELLO YELLO<lb/>
Coca-Cola, LB ?9?<lb/>
1 LB. PACKAGE FOOD TOWN<lb/>
Margarine<lb/>
Quarters 3j$t<lb/>
Why Pay 470 Each<lb/>
FRENCH OR THOUSAND ISLAND<lb/>
Pjeiffer<lb/>
Dressing .?, 99c<lb/>
Why Pay $1.39<lb/>
LIGHT CHUNK TUNA<lb/>
Star Kist ? 85c<lb/>
Why Pay 990<lb/>
CUT OR FRENCH DEL MONTE<lb/>
Green<lb/>
oeans 303 c.?<lb/>
285c<lb/>
Why Pay 2990<lb/>
ASSORTED TOILET TISSUE<lb/>
White<lb/>
Cloud<lb/>
REGULAR OR UNSCENTED NON-AEROSOL<lb/>
WHOLE OR CREAM STYLE DEL MONTE<lb/>
Gold<lb/>
COYTl 303 Can 2OC<lb/>
Why Pay 2990<lb/>
DEL MONTE<lb/>
Peas .03 285c<lb/>
wny Fay 2990<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS DRINKS<lb/>
Shasta -? 89c<lb/>
Catsup 32 o, 89c<lb/>
? Why Pay $1.19<lb/>
MAYONNAISE<lb/>
JFG<lb/>
Why Pay $1.19<lb/>
-99c<lb/>
Why Pay $1.29<lb/>
PHILLIPS<lb/>
Pork &amp;<lb/>
Beans<lb/>
16 Oz.<lb/>
399c<lb/>
Why Pay 2810<lb/>
DELICIOUS<lb/>
Jeno's<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
L, $1?<lb/>
Why Pay $1.29<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0010"/><lb/>
Another<lb/>
Free Value<lb/>
TOWN<lb/>
LFPINCSCAA<lb/>
750 VALUE - 15 OZ. STAR<lb/>
Cole Slaw<lb/>
When you buy a Quart<lb/>
Star Brunswick Staw<lb/>
TURKEYTURKEY A CMICKIM CAT FOOD<lb/>
Friskies u. 4$<lb/>
Why Pay 275C<lb/>
Creamy DeluHgi<lb/>
?Fosnnc<lb/>
Penobotcot u;Ch?? or Chlue<lb/>
Ballad Potato to ox. SOC<lb/>
Assorted Cake Mixes<lb/>
Betty Crocker i?.s ox. 73C<lb/>
Betty Crocker Ready To Spread<lb/>
Frostings ?6.$ ox 99?<lb/>
Delirious<lb/>
Bacos<lb/>
Baking Mix<lb/>
Bisquicfe<lb/>
Honey Nut<lb/>
Cherrios<lb/>
Spread Margarine<lb/>
Mrs. Filbert's<lb/>
3-25 Ox. 89C<lb/>
40 Ox. 127<lb/>
14 Ox 1.29<lb/>
2 Lb 1.09<lb/>
-?<lb/>
HoneyNut <lb/>
Cheerios<lb/>
IW<lb/>
BisquicK<lb/>
BUTTERMILK BAKING Ml<lb/>
Buy two,<lb/>
get one FREE.9<lb/>
S2.20 VALUE - HALF GALLON<lb/>
ELSIE BRAND SQUARE CARTON<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
170 OFF SLICED AMERICAN SINGLES<lb/>
Borden<lb/>
Cheese ?. $149<lb/>
Why Pay $1.77<lb/>
KRAFT ASSORTED<lb/>
Barbecue<lb/>
Sauces ? 75c<lb/>
Why Pay $1.05<lb/>
TETLEY<lb/>
Tea 100 c? X6<lb/>
Why Pay $2.09<lb/>
ALL FLAVORS<lb/>
Liquid<lb/>
Slender ?o, 35l<lb/>
Why Pay 59C Each<lb/>
Food Town<lb/>
Coffee<lb/>
Creamer ?. 99c<lb/>
Why Pay $1.49<lb/>
ABSORBENT<lb/>
Rally<lb/>
Towels Rol 49c<lb/>
Why Pay 59C<lb/>
LIGHT N' LIVELY<lb/>
Cottage<lb/>
Cheese .?? sl09<lb/>
Why Pay $1.59<lb/>
200 OFF LABEL<lb/>
Liquid<lb/>
Lux "o. 89c<lb/>
Why Pay $1.33<lb/>
TEXAS PETE<lb/>
Hot Dog<lb/>
Chill ice. 3$l<lb/>
Why Pay 289C<lb/>
South Park<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
115 E. Red Banks Road<lb/>
Monday thru Saturday<lb/>
8:00 A.M. 'til lOOO P.M.<lb/>
USDA Choice Boneless Beef Rou<lb/>
F<lb/>
$198<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Round Ste<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0011"/><lb/>
REFRESHING VALVES<lb/>
BomofM<lb/>
BUSCH<lb/>
J k5V-4i ?? <lb/>
CHENIN BLANC, RIESLING, ZINFANDEL,<lb/>
CHABLIS, BURGUNDY, ROSE, RHINE<lb/>
Taylor Calif.<lb/>
Cellars u,3<lb/>
RED, PINK, WHITE TAYLOR<lb/>
Lake Country<lb/>
Softur3<lb/>
MT. CHABLIS, RHINE, SAUTERNE, NECTAR ROSE,<lb/>
BURGUNDY, CLARET, CHIANTI<lb/>
Almaden<lb/>
3 Liter<lb/>
S?99<lb/>
CHENIN BLANC, ZINFANDEL, FRENCH<lb/>
CLUMBARD, GRENACHE ROSE, CAMAY ROSE<lb/>
MONTEREY BURGUNDY, MONTEREY CHABLIS<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 6 - 12 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Busch$179<lb/>
PACKAGE Of B - 12 OX. CANS<lb/>
Stroh's 19<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 6 - 12 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Stroh Light W<lb/>
PACKAGE OF B - 12 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Schlitz Malt<lb/>
Liquor $Z2S<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 12 - 12 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Carting Black<lb/>
Label $319<lb/>
s?<lb/>
m<lb/>
Almaden<lb/>
1.5 Liter<lb/>
5369<lb/>
CHOW<lb/>
V g-iBf JA1bw ??-?- . (CHOICE<lb/>
mbj bbvbp<lb/>
GRADE A 4 - 7 LBS. AVG. WT.<lb/>
Turkey p,<lb/>
Breast - $139<lb/>
Why Pay S1.59<lb/>
FOOD TOWN IMPORTED<lb/>
Cooked<lb/>
Ham - 3<lb/>
Why Pay $3.59<lb/>
ARMOUR CANNED<lb/>
Ham 3Lb 54<lb/>
Why Pay $599<lb/>
USDA CHOICE BEEF LOIN BONELESS<lb/>
Sirloin<lb/>
Steaks - 5348<lb/>
Why Pay $3.99<lb/>
FRESH PORK<lb/>
Country<lb/>
Ribs - 5148<lb/>
Why Pay $1.58<lb/>
SWIFT<lb/>
Hostess ?<lb/>
Hunt<lb/>
Why Pat<lb/>
Register for a<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Whole Country Ham<lb/>
Each week during Grind Opining wi will<lb/>
hivi 1 drawing lor two FREE Stidlir't Whola<lb/>
Country Himt. Bi luri to riglitir whin you<lb/>
thop it our mw Food Town store<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0012"/><lb/>
VALVES CHOICE PRICES<lb/>
 TACK AGE OF 6 - 12 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Busch sl79<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 6 - 12 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Stroh's $1<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 6 - 12 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Stroh Light 2?<lb/>
PACKAGE OF S - 12 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Schlitz Halt<lb/>
Liquor $22S<lb/>
PACKAGE OF 1 2 - 1 2 OZ. CANS<lb/>
Carting Black<lb/>
Label 3"<lb/>
?W -J<lb/>
TAYL@R<lb/>
SI v -t ??. ?1 ?T<lb/>
ir ,mik 'S<lb/>
MADfcN<lb/>
Iain white maslin<lb/>
SLICED FREE 10-12 LBS. AVO. WT<lb/>
USDA CHOICE BEEF RIB WHOLE<lb/>
Rib Eye<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
S3 99<lb/>
Why P?y $4.00<lb/>
FRESH GROUND DAILY 3 LBS. OR MORE<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Chuck u $168<lb/>
Why Pay S 1.88<lb/>
GRADE A 4 - 7 LBS. AVG. WT.<lb/>
Turkey<lb/>
Breast<lb/>
SLICED, SKINNED A DEVEINED<lb/>
Beef Liver ? 89<lb/>
m Why Pay $109<lb/>
Why Pay $1.59<lb/>
FOOD TOWN IMPORTED<lb/>
Cooked<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
FROZEN OCEAN<lb/>
Perch Filtets ?OM BOCK<lb/>
$139 Corn is It<lb/>
Hens 20 0I. $179<lb/>
Why Pay $1.89<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
$299<lb/>
Why Pay $3.59<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
ARMOUR CANNED<lb/>
Ham 3Lb. 549<lb/>
3 Lb.<lb/>
Why Pay $5.99<lb/>
USDA CHOICE BEEF LOIN BONELESS<lb/>
Sirloin<lb/>
Steaks<lb/>
.?. 348<lb/>
Why Pay $3.99<lb/>
FROZEN '7 LB AVERAGE WEIGHT<lb/>
Whiting Frozen<lb/>
,b S9c Hens , b9c<lb/>
" ? WhyPay89C<lb/>
LEAN AND TENDER PORK<lb/>
Cubed<lb/>
HOUSE OF RAEFORD BONELESS ? V&amp;<lb/>
Turkey Ham Steaks Ml<lb/>
X USDA CHOICE EXTRA LEAN<lb/>
Stew Beef  $18<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Why Pay $2.18<lb/>
FRESH PORK<lb/>
Country<lb/>
Ribs<lb/>
Why Pay $1.58<lb/>
FROZEN CHICKEN<lb/>
Fillets<lb/>
$229<lb/>
SWIFT<lb/>
Hostess<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
Register for a<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Whole Country Ham<lb/>
Each week during Grand Opening we will<lb/>
have a drawing for two FREE Stadler's Whole<lb/>
Country Hams. Be sure to register when you<lb/>
shop at our new Food Town store.<lb/>
4-Lb.<lb/>
Why Pay $8<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0013"/><lb/>
FRESH PIIOMJCE.<lb/>
LARGE JUICY<lb/>
Cantaloupes .<lb/>
qqc<lb/>
TENDER YELLOW<lb/>
Squash - W?<lb/>
FRESH GREEN<lb/>
FRESH GR?" g<lb/>
Broccoli nch o?$<lb/>
FRESH CUCUMBERS OR<lb/>
Peppers<lb/>
5l<lb/>
SWEET JUICY<lb/>
Peaches<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
29t<lb/>
ATLO<lb/>
CALIF)<lb/>
S<lb/>
 v A<lb/>
??<lb/>
R?wwjb(a.<lb/>
IK4' 1 MS? ? A<lb/>
0Krii3<lb/>
fSrn??V<lb/>
LI a ?BSfeii?ft 1<lb/>
V ??'<lb/>
SNOW WHITE<lb/>
Mushrooms -99c<lb/>
Auocadoes 3s<lb/>
SUNKIST<lb/>
Lemons<lb/>
Ea.<lb/>
12C<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0014"/><lb/>
ODVCE<lb/>
AT LOW PRICES<lb/>
X<lb/>
colt<lb/>
Bunch<lb/>
69<lb/>
?SH CUCUMBERS OR<lb/>
eppers<lb/>
5n<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Strawberries ot xI9<lb/>
SNCW WHITE<lb/>
Mushrooms  99c<lb/>
TASTY<lb/>
Avocadoes 3l<lb/>
CALIFORNIA PERLETTE<lb/>
Grapes u, $12<lb/>
SALAD PERFECT CHERRY<lb/>
Tomatoes 59c<lb/>
CRISP ROMAINE<lb/>
Lettuce -39c<lb/>
SWEET JUICY<lb/>
Nectarines u. 59c<lb/>
SWEET TEXAS<lb/>
"?<lb/>
N<lb/>
1<lb/>
?3<lb/>
!?&amp;:?'<lb/>
of<lb/>
:j?$?<lb/>
'<lb/>
Lemons<lb/>
<pb facs="00057347_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>