The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, April 08, 1981, Page Page 2, Image 2
News B
use signs 6
(AF) ? South Carolina
signed the big man he sai
Gamecocks into a collegc
Foster said Monday t
Brittain of Clearwater,
agreement. Brittain led
ucnauur cm
(AP) - State Sen. Dewi
an amount of dissentior
Reorganization Commis
bining the College of
University of South Caro
Wise, D-Charleston, s
recommended twice by i
for one reason or ano
followed through on the r
Wise admitted that th
study of its feasibility ha
both schools.
Also backing the stu
Commerce, Wise said.
The senator said he ha
the faculties at MUSC
Wise said when he spoke
didn't get stoned or shot;
Arnold popi
FORT MADISON, low
get out, there may be a s
of inmates calling them
$1.18 million Lee County,
State Sen. Lowell Jui
Judge David Hendrickso
Arnold by serving one dc
the jail's security befon
later in the weekend.
Both escaped.
The two, along with
playing cards in the jc
decided to break out.
"As I said to the jud
Junkins said. So, the gr
and asked an unseen gua
"Who is it?" the guard
"It's Arnold. Open the
opened and off went the t
"There's no question I
without knowing who i
probably one of the most
II,. --I?_:rf
lie ScllU IIIC M1CIIII lb
spot."
yiore sex or
JACKSONVILLE. \.<
upcoming child-moh
collaborator Robert G
hearing Monday that Ga
with other children.
"We have informatic
mitted other such acts w
are reluctant to come foi
case," Onslow County D
said.
An Onslow County gr;
jndiana man Feb. 2\\. U
decent liberties with a
degree sexual offense,
first -degi ee sex offense .
G;u wood, who has mi
present for Mondav 's he;
DLTI charge
CAVCE (AIM - Staie f
contest his arrest on a di
before a city court jury h
The Beaufort County 1;
trial could lead to a cour!
Graves was arrested c
from the Legislature IV
legislative immunity as
guilty he may appeal on i
"Of course if the jury
anything to appeal," Gra
staie r our-A cnampionsi
averaging 22 points and 1
A pleased Foster said,
highly recruited, and a |
ability to have a good futi
It was reported Britt
Florida, Florida State, CI
He will join four other 1
seniors: Zam Fredrick,
Kevin Dunleavy. Also oi
and two juniors.
Perlotte hoi
(AP) ? After surger
player every South Ca
Gamecocks' pass deferc
the playing field.
Senior Robert Perlott*
was never hurt.
After the three-year
season, South Carolina 1
opponents threw and
remembers those ganu
patting backs. Not much
He was the most-wat
spring workout. "People
back. I don't mind the
means they're concerned
O r* r\ 4- /-v n /% /
nief s
-11 center
basketball Coach Bill Foster has
/s needed to continue building the
; power.
hat 6-11, 215-pound center Mike
Fla., has signed a scholarship |
Clearwater High School to the i
hip and a 32-3 record this winter, j
3 rebounds.
"He is hichlv resDected and was
player with that kind of size and i
jrc."
ain chose South Carolina over
lemson, Virginia and Louisville,
freshmen on a squad that lost two j
the nation's leading scorer, and
n board will be five sophomores
pes for comeback
y for torn knee ligaments, the
irolina fan hopes will turn the
?e into a dreaded unit is back on
i says he intends to play as if he
starter went down late in the
ost two of its last three games as
threw and threw. Perlotte
3s: "standing on the sidelines,
fun."
phoH nlotmr in Cnftirrln.fV r; * "
vnv^ piu^v,i in oaiuiuaj s ill 91 (
want to know about my coming,
attention, it's good to hear. It
I," the Greenwood native says.
lorsing study
ey Wise Tuesday, noting "there is
l in Charleston," asked the state
>sion to endorse a study of cornCharleston
and the Medical
lina.
aid linking the schools has been
i private consulting firm, but that
ther the Legislature has never
ecommendation.
e idea is controversial but that a
s been endorsed by the trustees of
idy is the Trident Chamber of
s "gotten good solid interest from
and the College of Charleston."
: to instructors at both schools, "I
at."
liar name at jail
a (/\P) ? Once word of this one
ignificant increase in the number
selves Arnold at the brand new,
Jail.
mins, u-Monirose, ana District
n volunteered to help Sheriff Bud
ly in jail to help with a test-run of
3 it was opened for real inmates
a probation officer, had been
lil's recreation area when they
ige, you gotta try the obvious,"
oup walked over to an intercom
rd to open the door.
asked.
door," came the reply. The door
rio.
they'll ever open that door again j
s there," Junkins said. "That's
secure places there is now."
"happy that we showed a weak
imes alleged
L\ (AP) - The prosecutor in the
^station trial of convicted
arwood told a Superior Court ;
irwood has committed sex crimes
m that the defendant has comith
other children, but the parents
rward because of the nature of the
istrict Attorney William Andrews
and jury indicted the :i4-year-o)d
[e is charged him with taking m7
year old girl, attempted firstattempted
first-degree rape and
r. an Aug 7, incident
lintained his inn'Wiif; v?! 8
irings. 1
co ]"i. lestod.
tep .). Wilton (?raves says he v. 11)
'iving-under-the-influence charge
ere this week.
awrnaker says the outcome of the
: test on legislative immunity.
?n thi> pharon u?hilo ( (rininn
'II Vll\/ VIIMI TTIIUV V4I I Vlll^ H'./lIK* |
[arch 26. He says he won't use |
a defense, but says if he's found
mmunity grounds.
finds me innocent, I won't have |
ves says.
..?I y i t.iAiAUM.'.l.Vv'.*.* I * i in u i n t ?itfd it >
Private
for 'nev
MONCURE, N.C. (AP) ? A private
funeral service was held Tuesday
afternoon for Mark F. Ethridge Sr.,
form or* nilKlichor onrl ohoirmnn nf
vaav kva mvi pVIMIlOlAVl UtIV4 VllUli IIIQII Vi
the board of The Courier-Journal and
Louisville Times Co., who died
Sunday at the age of 84.
Ethridce was born on April 22, 1896,
in Meridran, Miss.
A family spokesman said the service
for relatives was held at
Ethridge's home in Chatham County.
"He was a real newspaper genius,"
said Barry Bingham Sr., chairman of
the board of the pnmnanv "Hp inst
lived for newspaper work."
Ethridge went to Louisville as
general manager in 1936 and was
named vice president and general
manager of the newspapers a year
later, publisher in 1942 and chairman
of the board in 1961. He was
previously employed at the Richmond
(Va.) Times-Dispatch.
Ethridge maintained a position on
*
""J
I- USC head football coach Jim <
practice began Saturday and
Stadium. (Photo by Chip Lowell
Board rec
for highei
(AP) ? A film library to which tl
house the University of on Higl
South Carolina's sidersit
Movietonews collection and The
a new chemistry building at settles
Clemson University were opinion
among seven higher General
education projects and oth
recommended Tuesday by Morris
the state Budget and Control previou:
Board. that hi|
The board recommended being si
that $26.1 million in campital could be
inprovement bonds be The
authorized for the projects, higher
Today at US
USC tennis - Carolina men
State at 2 p.m. in the Sam 1
Stadium.
? Health Week - "Health
hi^'hli^hts th*' third da> of
F.,>ru'f>:?t<nt Week in K
i ? J i ? l < t; K i i 1 i >> i 1 I i) . i I I . It' .< ill
?> HK Film "The .Uricitr.
p.m. tor 75 ct'iits ;?iui al 7 am'
$1.
weather
Wednesday: Fair and mild. I
High in the 70s.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy. Lo\
40s. High in the 70s.
% \SSWW
funeral
yspaper
the company's board until about a
year ago although he retired from
newspapers in 1963, after 27 years at
the too of company management.
Ethridge had planned to teach at
the University of North Carolina in
Chapel Hill when he left Louisville in
1963, but instead he took a position as
vice president and editor for Newsday
at Garden City, N Y.
He did teach at North Carolina's
journalism school between 1964, when
he retired from active newspaper
work, and in 1968.
His career began in Meridian,
where he delivered newspapers for
the Meridian Dispatch when he was 10
years old.
Ethridge later worked for the
MpriHian Star thp Pnliimhnc (Cla ^
Enquirer-Sun, The Macon (Ga.)
Telegraph, The Washington Post,
Consolidated Press and New York
Sun.
Carl en surveys his players during sp
will conclude May 2 with a 10 a. n
)
ommends
r education
he state Commission totaling $63.9 milli
her Education con- building and ec
s top priorities. projects. Morris ui
action apparently the top seven b
a difference of mended to th<
between Comptroller Legislative Bom
I Earle E. Morris Jr. mittee, which will
ler board members, bond bill,
complained at two Tuesday's
s board meetings mendations would
?her education was budget board's
ighted so new prisons requests to just $10
i built. The board las
board considered recommended $80.
education requests in bonds for oth
' ???11 agencies, with $3:
C going to the Depai
Corrections.
At the same t
i against Penn board trimmed $7
)aniels Tennis [rorn. .the s
bonded indebted
retracting bonds w
, f> . been authorized
nd the Body issued
\ S( v Hen Uh Hud^e! ho,wd !
u-se)' House 1. <. v-:o; Wiii;,tii,
!V e C ) A 115 c I . (i (. (1
previously ivsuec
a'ith"!t?v be cut
! ? 1 i. mill /.I
! !)::;<! j>.in. ior I Health, (he Dc-pai
Education and tli
board itself.
Among the new
which received th
A)w in the go-ahead Tuesday >
-Phase II of <
center at Lander
v in the upper- $5.4million.
-A College of (
' science center, $4.7
service
genius'
He served as vice president and
director of The Associated Press from
1950 until 1960. He also was president
of the National Association of
Broadcasters in 1938. Since March
1954, ne nas oeen a trustee of the Ford
Foundation.
Survivors include his wife, Willie
Snow Ethridge, the author of about 15
books, many of them on travel.
Also surviving are three children,
Mark F. Ethridge Jr. of Columbia,
S.C., David Ethridge of Key West,
Fla., and Georgia E. Schneider of
Pittsburgh.
Mark Ethridge Jr., a journalism
professor at the University of South
Carolina, has served as editor of the
Detriot Free Press, the Akron (Ohio)
Inurna! on/1 TUn Dnl?:-l.
UVMVUH UVUl * OliU A 11^; lUIIClgll
Times.
Other survivors are 14 grandchildren,
including Mark Ethridge
III, managing editor of The Charlotte
(N.C.) Observer.
"X. 1
!
v
j miii
* iaili>f "
ring practice yesterday. Spring ||
?. scrimmage at Wi/iiams-Brice J
projects
ifacilities
on for 30 -Acquisition and
juipment renovation of an old
*ged that elementary school by USCj
recom- Beaufort, $1.9 million.
3 Joint -Renovation of Le Tellier
d Com- Hall, the engineering
write the building at The Citadel, $1
million.
recom- -Site work at Midlands
swell the Technical College's Airport
5 bond campus near Columbia,
6 million. $475,000.
t week At Riley's suggestion, the
6 million board let the Aeronautics
ler state Commission keep about
3 million $800,000 in previously
tment of authorized bonds. But it cut
the commission's new
ime, the bonding authority from $1.5
.3 million million to $750,000.
current
ness by The USC film library
hich have would house a collection of
but not Movietone documentary
newsreels, which were
>\<ouliv<' valued at between $w>
!\itnam million and *i(K) mi !ln>i:
thai whi-f! TvvnlK'tl; (Vjilury
i ilo:i.itc(! them to M^
U'-V (ilf i H: . .";ir]y 111 I OHO
Mental Iv? ?. > : aid the board
tment oi should continue looking at
ie budget existing buildings that could
be used to house the film
projects library. He said he preferred
e board's that approach to building a
,vere: new facility.
i college The old Mount Vernon Mill
College, in Columbia, which will be
vacated in June, is under
Charleston consideration for housing the
million. library and a state museum.