Fountainhead, September 19, 1972


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Over 5300 registered
Parking problems mount
Over 5,300 registered vehicles must
vie for the estimated 2,500 campus
parking spaces, according to the Traffic-
Office.
The registration totals include 1.919
vehicles listed as "staff
Approximately 1,510 day students
and 1,306 dorm students are also
registered.
Chief of Campus Security Joe Calder
stated that there were more parking
stickers issued than the number of
parking spaces available, but that this
was done on "all" campuses. According
to Calder, "the parking stickers are not a
license to park, but a license to hunt (for
(in" pnoto Dy Ko?t Mann)
parking apace) He '?vtimated that in
order to guarantee each student a place
to park, the charge would have to be
approximately $150-200, as compared
to the current $5 charge.
Staff parking privileges are free
Parking spaces have been made even
scarcer by the construction activities for
the new Union. Supplies are being stored
within a fenced area that was once used
for parking. To ease the problem a dirt
lot behind the cafeteria has been opened
to day students, women's dorm
residents, and residents of Slay. Fifty
additional spaces will be completed next
month beside the Drama building. Also.
the ifniversity is purchasing property on
the north side of Eighth Street which
will be used for parking.
Calder rates the presence of
unregistered vehicles on campus as one
of the major parking problems. He said
that if the unregistered vehicles were
removed, there would be more room for
the registered vehicles to park. Calder
noted that fifty percent of the parking
areas have been designated "Towing
Enforced" sectors, and unregistered
vehicles would be towed away on the
first offense in these areas.
Parking violation fines have been
maintained at last year's levels, $2.00 for
"wrong zone' parking. $5.00 for
unregistered vehicle parking, and $5.00
for "no parking" violations.
Copies of campus traffic regulations
are available in the Traffic Office in
Wright building.
SLAV DORMITORY STUDENTS find ???d, ai ?M ?,i?ci?? ,? ihrir parkin probl
Fahrner rated 'excellent' by students
By Pat Crawford
Stalf Writer
Two outstanding members of the E(T
faculty have received awards for teaching
excellence as a result of last Spring's
student evaluation of instructors.
The recipients of the two $500
teaching awards are Instructor Louise
Aahton Levey of the School of
Education's special education faculty
and Dr. Alvin A. Fahrner of the
Department of History.
This is the first year in which the
awards, sponsored by the ECU Alumni
Association, have been given.
Dr. Fahrner holds degrees from
Hampden-Syd ney College and
UNC Chapel Hill; his field of
specialization is Southern U.S. history.
Both awards were presented on Sept.
5 at the first ECU faculty meeting of the
year, held in the Wahl-Coates
auditorium.
The ECU Alumni .Association had
announced that they would give two
awards to outstanding teachers, and the
Provost appointed an ad hoc committee
to determine a system of evaluation. A
special committee then drew up
questions to be answered by the students
to judge instruction.
The data on those instructors scoring
highest was sent to a sub-committee
which selected the two top faculty
members Mrs. Levey and Dr. Fahrner.
Beaming above his wide green, yellow
and red-splotched tie. Dr. Fahrner
explained how he found his wayto ECU.
"I was born in West Virginia and was
reared in Virginia he said. "I spent
seven years in the Navy and was at Pearl
Harbor on Dec. 7. 1941 World War II
caught me unawares in my underwear
He had been teaching in South
Carolina when he came to East Carolina
for an interview.
"I liked it he said, i liked the idea
that I could emphasize teaching, and I've
been emphasizing it ever since
This marks Dr. Fahrner's 13th year at
ECU. His formula for teaching
excellence is a simple one, "History isn't
only interesting and exciting, but it's
necessary so that a person can be
completely educated he said.
"A student should be made to feel
that he or she is very, very important,
and isn't a number, but a person
Fahrner believes in the importance of
the student, and claims the instructor or
university is secondary.
"The only reason I'm in the classroom
is because there are students in that
class he said. "I enjoy seeing a student
do well and get no satisfaction when
students do poorly
Fahrner's enthusiasm and ability to
put others at ewt have made him
popular and respected among American
History students. Students have been
known to undergo the rigors of
Drop-Add in an effort to squeeze into
his classes.
The Spring evaluation is testimony
enough to Fahrner's appeal and success
as a teacher. The comments written by
his students are all in praise of some
facet of Fahrner's teaching. One student
mentions his ability to make history
interesting; another says, "He dresses
nicely Fahmer, in green jacket, gold
pants and brilliant tie, provides perfect
evidence for the statement.
But one five-word sentence seems to
summarize Fahrner's achievement. As a
suggestion for improving the university
system, one student simply wrote. "Get
more instructors like Fahrner
It seems that the evaluators knew
what they were doing.
DR. ALMN FAHRNER in seen here receiving a plaque from Robert L. Jones.
Say it ain't so, Joe
Are you a bike-rider? If you are, you
are now classified as a motor vehicle and
must ride your bike on the road, along
with the stream of traffic, and obey the
same laws that apply to motor vehicles.
Yet, for some strange reason, pedestrians
and motorists treat cyclists like some
sort of foreign invaders that are
supposed to vaporize whenever
confronted by said pedestrians or
motorists.
For instance, pedestrians, those
mindless wonders who stroll from curb
to curb, often waltz right out in front of
the cycler, without so much as a stop,
look or listen. Cars are even worse. They
back into bikes, or force them into the
curb, or come up from behind heaving
and panting-blasting on the horn, or
they pull the neat trick of opening their
door into the cycler's path.
The offenders have various defenses
for these accusations. Among them are
that bikes are too small to be seen well.
These people just don't look hard
enough. Others even bring up the old
complaints of cycles being on the
sidewalk, or going the wrong way down
a one-way street. These complaints are
not the issue. If a bike is on the street,
going the right way, it should be treated
as a motor vehicle.
All the offenses against the cycler
have caused much frustration to him.
One person said that the next time
someone opened a car door on him while
he was riding his bicycle, he was going to
leap off and let the bicycle do whatever
damage it could on the erring car andor
its operator. In answer to the question of
what a cycler should do if a person
walked in front of his bike, Mr. Joe
Calder, Director of Security, replied, "I
guess you'd just have to hit him
Cycles should be treated as motor
vehicles if they are on the road, going in
the right direction. So, watch out for the
bicycles, and the 1,000 cyclers in
Greenville will appreciate the effort.

c
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By GAIL GREGORY
Statt Writer
GREENVILLE, N CAROLINA
VOLUME IV, NUMBER 4
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1972
Joyner offers computer based
information retrieval service
Through a new service offered by
Joyner Library, all students, faculty, and
other interested persons may receive a
new type of assistance at a nominal
charge. This assistance, called The
Computer Searching Service, is a
computer bawd information retrieval
system, which has been designed to
familiarize students and others with
information retrieval It is more
specialized than the Reader's Guide"
and offers many different topics ranging
from education to medicine.
The searching service has been set up
through special arrangement with the
North Carolina Science and Technology
Research Center. Research Triangle Park.
North Carolina. Instead of spending
valuable hours searching through
different material, a student working on
a term paper or master thesis can simply
fill out an information sheet in the
library and. for a fee of fifteen dollars.
will receive all available information on
his subject within a week. The fee for
faculty members and all others, however,
is slightly higher.
Only scholarly magazines such as
government reports and pollution
magazines are available through the
service. "Life "Look and other
"popular" magazines are not used.
Searches of the files of the Educational
Resources Information Center (ERIC),
The Department of Defense
Documentation Center (DDC). the
Institute of Textile Technology (ITT),
the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA), the National
Library of Medicine (NMLi, Chemical
Abstracts Service iCACl. among others,
are available. Subjects represented in the
files include Klementarv and Secondary
Education. Physical Therapy,
Metallurgy. Chemistry, Health Affairs.
Psychology, Medicine, Library Science,
Textiles, Aerospaci rechnology,
Conservation, Water Resources, and
many other topics.
According to Ralph I, Si ott of the
Joyner Library, the service was originally
set up to help such companies as Du
Pont and Burlington Mills in research
However, the government decided that it
would be very helpful to students doing
r.?March and would also train North
Carolina students in using computer
tools, which could be useful m their
future work.
Actually, students are receiving the
computer searching service at a discount.
The cost to run the service is really
ninety dollars per student. Students pay
only fifteen dollars, and it takes the
computer around five minutes
(sometimes ten minutes) to run a search.
The state is subsidizing the other money.
Scott, however, feels that the service
could be free. He believes that the state
could subsidize all of the fees. "We're
trying to teach students to use service
machines, so the cost should be reduced.
I hope that in the future, it can possibly
be free Scott stressed the fact that the
service's importance is definitely worth
fifteen dollars, regardless, and he hopes
that all interested persons will come in
and take advantage of this opportunity.
Union forms new committee to
coordinate publicity activities
Do you have any type of literary,
artistic, or oral ability? Do you have a
creative drive to do something? Get
involved. The newly formed Student
Union Publicity Committee needs you'
The Publicity Committee is a new idea
this year It is basically a service to the
other committees. A member of the
Publicity Committee will serve on each
of the other committees in an adv isory
role.
The idea is that members of the
Publicity Committee will help the other
committees coordinate their advertising
and publicity. The committee develops
advertising and publicity campaigns to
inform the university community about
Published, appointed
the events sponsored by all committees.
The committee met for the first time
Monday night to decide on the best
approach to inform the university-
community of the events sponsored by
the Student Union. At this meeting
Marilyn Maxwell was decided on at
chairman. Thi committee found that
they were faced with a lot of work and
more members are needed.
The Student Union advertising will be
developed to its fullest. The committee
will also be responsible for a monthly
publication of the Entertainer. The
committee will utilize all media forms.
Any and ail interested persons are
asked to contact the Student I'nion
office in 214 Wright Annex.
Geology profs recognized
Dr. B. A. Bishop, Associate Professor
of Geology at East Carolina University,
authored a recently published paper,
entitled "Petrography and Ongin of
Cretaceous Limestones. Sierra de
Picachos and Vicinity, Nuevo Leon.
Mexico The paper, which appears in
the Junel issue of the "Journal of
Sedimentary Petrology contains a
description and classification of the
various types of limestones based on thin
section petrography. The environment of
deposition for the fine-grained
Cretaceous limestones is interpreted to
have been a basin in which the depth of
water was several hundred feet. Much of
the carbonate mud is believed tp have
come from coccolithophores. extremely
small calcareous pelagic microorganisms
that have inhabited the surface waters of
the oceans from the Jurassic to the
present.
Scott W Snyder has joined the faculty
of the Department of Geology at East
Carolina University as an .Assistant
Professor. Snyder attended public school
in Canton, Ohio and obtained his
undergraduate degree from the College
of Wooster, Wooster. Ohio. Snyder's
graduate work was at Tulane University.
New Orleans. Louisiana where he was
awarded the Master of Science degree in
Geology in 1968. He is presently
completing work on his doctoral
dissertation on Planktonic Foraminifera
in Surface Sediments of the Gulf of
Mexico.
Snyder is mained to the former Lorna
Richmond of Canton, Ohio, and they
have one daughter. Kimberly Ann.
During his graduate studies, Snyder was
a National Defense Educational Act Title
IV Fellow. He is a member of Sigma
Gamma Epsilon and Sigma XL
ctan pnoto Dy Hots Mann)
CYCLERS VIOLATING one way street warning run risk of ticket. . .or worse.





i a' -
Acuff gilds golden memories
By BOB MARSKE
SI4"
vr mi tudenti parent, tecult)
and fans thrilled to the lound of Roy
A utr and the Smoky Mountain Boyi
last Saturday in .1 free concert on the
mall, ai Kci began iti miniconcert
leaaon Complete with Acuff'i yoyo
routine, Iils fiddle balancing act, and
such old favorites as The U abash
Cannonball" and 'The Great Speckled
Bird thii year'i parent' daj rtarted
successfully
Mr. Acuff has ipent 34 years in
Nashville's "Grand old Opry' and nearly
10 on the profeaiional stage For most of
thoae vears, he has traveled with the
same group of men, many of whom were
with him in Saturday's concert, This
concert was significant for two reasons
Not only was it the first of this year's
?eaaon, but it marked the 30th
anniversary of Acuff'i only other
Greenville concert, which was held in
1942.
NO ELECTRIC INSTRUMENTS
The Smoky Mountain Boys use no
electric instruments, but only because
there are s few country music players
skilled in their use The instruments
which they do use are the piano, many
fiddles, chromatic and straight
harmonicas, a five-stringed banjo, a
Spanish guitar, nd a dobro, This dobro,
often referred to as .1 Hawaiian guitar, is
played masterfully by Pete "Oswald"
Kirbv. the oldest member of the troupe.
ROY ACl FF AM) THE SMOKY MOUNTAIN HOYS charmed many on Parent's Day.
on the piano and harmonica; Charlie
Collins and Gene Martin on the guitar
The other members are Howard
Forrester on the fiddle; Jimmy Riddle
and vocal; and Onie Wheeler with a
harmonica and vocal and songwritmg
talents to complete the Smoky Mountain
Boys
Perhaps id' equal interest was the
audience. Individuals from every group
were present. There were old country
music fans, children of tomorrows
generation, blacks, whites, and people
from every age and background, all
groovin' on Roy Acuff.
.?
GOOSE CREEK SYMPHONY has a feeling they want to share Friday at 8 p.m.
Goos??raek Symphony
They sing of a feeling
Photography by Ross Mann
u?-
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This concert was set up by the
miniconcert committee. It is their hope,
through concerts such as this, to end
East Carolina's reputation as a suitcase
college, where many students go home
every weekend. The committee's next
major attraction will be Oct. 26, when
Charlie Byrd will appear in another free
concert on the mall.
? ?????
Not a town, less than a village. Goose
Creek is a small, quiet sort of place in
southern Kentucky. Clean, sweet air and
the smell of new-mown grass, early
evenings and the buzz of crickets off in
the bushes Goose Creek is the kind of
place a lot of people are looking for.
"A while back, Ritchie Hart came out
of Goose Creek and went to Phoenix.
Arizona; he settled down, and he plans
to stay there. But Ritchie kept
remembering about being young Back in
Goose Creek and how good it feels, and
he wanted to share the feeling; he
wanted to tell somebody about it.
So Ritchie Hart found some other
people who seemed to know all about
the Goose Creek kind of feeling. Five
other people who knew just what
Ritchie meant; and it was nice liecause
they were all living in Phoenix, too.
They got together and started talking
and writing and singing about Goose
Creek.
Now Ritchie's friends had come from
a number of important places. Fred
Weisz started back in Port-of-Spam.
Trinidad. Somewhere he learned about
Goose Creek, He brought a fiddle and a
banjo and a bass and a guitar and a lot of
playing time with him. Now he spends
his time singing about Goose Creek.
Doug Haywood is pretty young,
really anyway, it seems you should have
lived more than 20 years to know as
much as he does about Goose Creek.
Doug was looking around for some
friends who liked down-home kind of
music, and the Goose Creek people were
just what he had in mind. When he is not
wnting. he's playing the clarinet and the
guitar and the mandolin and singing of
course.
Poor old M.ckey McGee. they did an
album and forgot all about putting his
name on the cover with the rest They
did not forget to include his drums when
it got right down to the playing, though
and he says he doesn't really mind too
much when they all call him the lonely
drummer.
The Symphony completes the Goose
Creek feeling with Paul Howard playing
clarinet, guitar and dobro, along with
Bob Henke doing his guitar, organ,
piano, and jews harp.
Oh, yes. There's one more very
important member of Goose Creek
Symphony Beauty. Beauty is a blue
tick hound, really an ugly dog, but she
has character, and she obviously likes
music, getting nght up on stage and
watching the Goose Creek people with
moist adoration.
Beauty and the Symphony begin
showtime at 8 p.m Friday, September
22 at Minges Coliseum Student and
guest tickets are on sale now at the
Central Ticket Office for $2 and $3
respectively. Public ticket are also on
sale at the Record Bar in Pitt Plaza.
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Applications are being accepted
for

class officers and SGA Legislatu
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re
in the SGA office, room 303 Wright Annex. I
9:00-4:00
Deadline is Thursday, September 21.
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C&ffflSE(8?fl
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ECU FIGHT SONG
Stand up and cheer for East Carolina
Fight on to Pirate victory
Oh Pirate team there is no finer
In all of Pirate history
Go out and win for East Carolina
For win or lose we're all for you
So for the Purple and Gold we will FIGHT!
Fight! Fight! HEH! Fight on to victory.
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LLY
on the MaJI
join us for
ored by the
ittee.
vIG
Carolina
iner
olina
you
ve will FIGHT!
n to victory.
Bucs unbeaten in two games
Fountainhead, TuestUy, September 19, 1972, Page 5
MAW WITH A
FORM
c X
u
E ?
9
may
as a
it the
)
ou
WASH
I
By DON TRAUSNECK
SpurU I dltOI
Defense! Defense!
Defense!
This relatively new
spectator chant became
the by-word for ECU in
Ficklen Stadium Saturday
night as the Piratei
whitewashed Southern
Illinois 16-0.
It was the defense
which overcame the
frustrations of a sputtering
offense for ECU's second
Benefit students
Defensive effort paces 16-0 win
straight win in the still
young season
Item one. Going against
a veteran team which
averaged 22.6 points per
game in 1971, the Pirates
handed Sill its first goose
egg since Tampa did it in
1969 some 27 games ago.
It was ECU's first shutout
since mid-1970.
Item two. By holding
Sll' to minus seven yards
on the ground, the Pirates
have an amazing two-game
mark of 14 yards allowed
rushing.
Also, the S a lukil
managed only 44 yards in
total offense, 111 fewer
than VMI had in ECU's
previous win.
Furthermore, the ECU
goal has not been crossed
this season.
Item three. Rusty
Markland, Mike Myrick
and Danny Kepley picked
'jff enemy passes and
Butch Strawderman nearly
did the same in the SIU
Check-out rooms opened
Students who formerly
were unable to participate
in leisure time sports
activities due to a lack of
equipment or facilities are
the beneficiaries of a new
check-out program
instituted recently at
Minges and Memorial
Gyms.
Items from footballs
and basketballs to golf
clubs are available in the
equipment rooms located
on the main floor of
Minges and downstairs in
Memorial Gym.
Students may obtain
this equipment from 8
a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays, 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturdays
and from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Sundays.
Gym and recreation
areas are open for student
use during these hours
unless a class or organized
athletic or intramural
activity is being conducted
there at the time.
"We have had an
extremely good response
to this program and only
one item has been lost
said Dr. Edgar Hooks,
chairman of the health and
physical education
department. "If the
students work with us and
show responsibility toward
the equipment, we can
have a great many items
for their advantage
Hooks noted that
faculty and staff may also
use the equipment, but it
is primarily for the use of
students, upon showing ID
and activity cards.
No one outside the
University community
may use the equipment or
facilities, even if they are
with students, and regular
checks are made of people
engaged in the activities.
Dressing rooms in the
gyms are also available for
student use.
However, Hooks
reminds students that they
should lock up their
personal gear when using
the facilities. He also
requests that equipment
be returned the- same day
in which it is acquired.
Jack Boone of the
physical education
department has charge of
the equipment rooms, and
he urges students with
questions or requests to
visit the rooms and see
what is available.
Future plans for the
check-out program include
the addition of ordinary
items such as frisbees and
the construction of an
archery field.
end zone. Fumbles
recovered by Mike Shea
and Cary Godette also did
much tc put pressure on
?he Salukis.
Item four. Southern
Illinois' initial first down
came on a penalty with
less than five minutes left
in the first half. Of six
Saluki first downs in the
game, three came in SIU's
final first half possession.
In third down situations,
the Salukis failed to
convert in 11 attempts.
ECU went nine for 22
Item five. Southern
Illinois moved into Pirate
territory only twice all
night once on a fumble in
the finaJ period and once
in the second period on a
legitimate drive, when SIU
collected those three first
downs.
On the earlier occasion,
the Salukis penetrated to
the ECU 22, but an alerted
defense stiffened and a
field goal attempt failed.
So inspired was the play
of the defensive unit that
it overshadowed a record
breaking performance by
place kicker Ricky
McLester.
FIELD GOALS
The six-foot Oakboro
freshman booted three
field goals in the game, all
in the first half, and set
team and individual
records. He is one boot
short of the individual
career mark after tying
team and individual season
records.
McLester's first field
goal came from 37 yards
out with 14:09 left in the
first half after a Pirate
drive was stalled on the
SIU 21. He added two
25-yard field goals, each
after an SIU turnover set
the Pirates in good field
position, and it was 9-0 at
th- half.
The game's only
touchdown came midw;jy
in the third quarter as
quarterback Carl
Bummerell flew over both
lines from one foot out.
The play capped a 13-play,
60-yard drive, the best of
the game, and McLester
added his 10th point for
the final addition to the
scoreboard.
Although neither team
threatened the rest of the
night, the wildly partisan
16,509 fans, including one
of the most enthusiastic
student cheering sections
in recent years, reared
their approval as the
Pirates completed their
domination of the Salukis.
OFFENSE
Offensively for the
PiraU-s, the night belonged
to Les Strayhorn who
carried 33 times for 101
yards. In a game in which
the Pirates gained 252
yards on the ground,
Strayhorn took over the
team rushing leadership
from Carlester Grumpier.
Strayhorn's SIU
counterpart, George
Loukas, was the leading
Saluki rusher with 15
yards, far below his norm
after gaining 1,052 yards
on the ground last year.
Through the air lanes,
Summerell was not quite
as impressive as usual,
hitting only four of 16
tosses despite five more
attempts.
ECU head coach Sonny
Buc hooters blast by Marines 7-1
as season opener fast approaches
NEW CHECK-OI
education depart
rooms in Minges
athletic equipment
takes advantage of
(Staff photo by Ross Mann)
r ROOMS: The health and physical
merit recent!) opened check-out
Coliseum and Memorial Gym for
for student use. Here, a student
the sot-up during a recreation break.
New column set
Beginning Thursday,
this page will have a
once-a-week column about
activities not directly
Baseball
practice
has begun
Varsity baseball tryouts
have begun for the 1973
season.
Freshmen and other
eligibles desiring to try for
positions should contact
head coach Earl Smith at
his office in the Scales
Field House annex
Athletes competing in a
fall sport may try out at a
later date, when their
season is over.
related to the ECU athletic-
department.
There will be features
and news articles about
hunting, fishing, auto
racing, boating, and other
areas of general interest to
the student body.
Anyone interested in
writing such a column on a
weekly or occasional basis
should contact sports
editor Don Trausneck in
the Fountainhead office,
second floor Wright.
Thursday: a reprint
from Wildlife in North
Carolina.
It was a field day for
the ECU soccer team
Saturday as the Pirates
traveled to Jacksonville to
play the New River Marine
Corps Air Station team.
In kicking off their
1972 pre-season slate
before a partisan crowd,
the ECU booters stuck to
the kind of ball control
game head coach John
Lovstedt and assistant Ed
Wolcott have stressed since
the beginning of practice
some three weeks ago.
Less than a minute into
the game, the Marines
drew first blood on a
25-yard chip shot which
dropped behind goalie
Walter McCauley and into
the nets for a fluke score.
With their spirits not
dampened, the Buc
booters bounded right
back by reeling off seven
consecutive crucial goals.
Right forward Jeff
Kunkler converted for the
first Pirate goal on a
10-yard shot after a pass
from Tom O'Shea. For the
go-ahead second goal,
O'Shea rippled the net on
a fine assist from Kunkler.
With the d ef ense
playing superbly, the Buc
booters were able to keep
the ball in the attack half
of the field consistently.
Before the first 45-minute
half was over, the potent
Pirate attack had added
three more goals.
POWER FOOT
The third score was
again the result of the
powerful Kunkler foot on
a pass from right wing
Dave Myles.
Myles came right back
with the next score on an
unassisted shot from some
20 yards out. Then, as if
he were not satisfied,
Myles added the fifth
Pirate goal minutes later
on another fine shot.
Scoring slowed in the
second half, but the
booters were able to
produce two more goals.
Freshman Danny
O'Shea drilled in a shot
from his right wing
position after a
tailor-made pass from
halfback Bill Valentine.
The final goal was
contributed once more by
last year's leading scorer,
Tom O'Shea, who placed a
shot perfectly in the left
hand comer of the goal
after an assisting pass from
Jeff Kunkler.
ACCURATE PASSING
Accurate passing ability
made the majority of the
Pirate goals possible. The
entire team demonstrated
passin'g accuracy,
particularly left wing Rick
Johnson and middle
halfback Tom Tozer, two
very promising freshmen.
The tight Pirate defense,
led by outstanding
fullback lettermen Bob
Poser and Brad Smith,
coupled with freshman
Bob Gebhardt to
effectively restrict the
penetration of the Marine
attack.
With the game a
non-league encounter, the
Bucs were able to play
more than the league
maximum 16 players. This
gave the coaches a look at
the entire squad and they
seemed pleased at the
depth this year's team
contains.
SATISFACTION
Lovstedt expressed
satisfaction at the team's
passing and ball control
ability. It was evident that
the drills installed by
coaches John Lovstedt and
Ed Wolcott are beginning
to take form in game
situations.
Citing individual stars
was difficult as it was
definitely a team effort.
The booters will host
the Marines in another
scrimmage Saturday at
2:00 p.m. on the Pirates
home field before taking
on UNC Monday in their
first regular season
encounter.
PRO BASKETBALL
Soonsofi'd By The Greenville Jayceet
CAROLINA
COUGARSiaba)
LV A. A A A
Vs.
KINGS
SUPPORT ATHLETICS
HIGH SCHOOL
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210 E. 5th St.
ISP0RTING GOODS
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Telephone 752-4156
KANSAS CITY
OMAHA KINGS nba yl!y
1 WED. NIGHT
SEPTEMBER 27th
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MINGES COLISEUM
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
TICKET PRICES
ADVANCE GATE
Reserve 4.00 500
Adult 3.00 4 00
Student & 2.00 3 00
Child
Tickets available at Central Ticket Office,
and Athletic Department Ticket Office.
Randle, who will send his
team against Appalachian
State in Ficklen Stadium
Saturday night, could
hardly be heard above tin
din in the post game
dressing room. But he had
much praise once again for
his undefeated squad.
FOR REAL
"We may be few in
numbers, but we are for
real he said. "This win
tonight convinced me. We
played a team that was
bigger, stronger and more
physical, and I think we
played them to the hilt It
is the greatest effort I have
ever seen at East
Carolina
Randle noted that there
will be no letdown for the
next game and said that
though ECU is a small
team, "they arc in good
condition. You did not see
any drooping heads
tonight
Saturday's Youth Night
battle is scheduled for a
7:30kickoff.
(Sl? photO By Ross Ujnn
BREAKS IT I Pi ECl linebackei Man (Butch)
Strawderman reach ei to knock down a pate jut leaving
the hand of the Southern Illinois quarterback Saturda)
mclit Strawdernuwi v?ac ?ucceeafu and, on another
occasion, neailv picked oil a pahs in the Saluki end BOM
lor a score.
Football club tops Carolina
in impressive season opener
ECU began defense of
its club football
championship with a 32-7
win over Carolina
Saturday on the winners'
field.
It was the season opener
for both clubs.
Led by the running of
Mike Weirich and the
passing of Dennis Lynch,
the Pirate club exploded
for a 26-0 fourth quarter
lead before the Tar Heel
Club was able to score.
Only a 53 yard scoring
bomb prevented an ECU
shutout.
The Tar Heels actually
began the scoring for ECU
as a Carolina punter was
out of the end zone before
getting h m kick off. ECU
made it 10-0 with 10
minutes left in the first
half.
Quarterback Lynch
passed to his brother,
tailback Mike Lynch, for
the score on a 41-yard
gem. Weirich went over for
the conversion.
During the half-time
break, ECU head coach
Tom Michel told his
players. "We're going to
take a snowball and roll it.
and there is no one going
to stop us
The squad seemed to
heed his words, marching
63 yards in 13 plays for a
score after taking the
second half kickoff.
It was 16-0 after Lynch,
looking like a Roger
Staubach and dropping
back to his 30 while
eluding tackles, flipped an
eight yard toss to Lin
Spears in Lhe end zone.
GJenn "Batman" Batten's
conversion made the score
18-0.
After ECU held on the
next series and forced
Carolina to punt. John
Masotti blocked the kick
and ran it 27 yards into
the end zone for a score.
Lynch passed to Tom
Hayes for a 26-0 lead.
Moments later Carolina
got its only tally on the
53-yard pass, but BCD
came right back with eight
minutes left to close the
scoring.
Greg Fuderer, taking a
tosr. from Chip Isaacs,
eluded a few tackles and
went into the end zone at
the end of a 43-yard play.
Quarterback Lynch ran
for the extra point but
wound up two yards short.
Michel was pleased with
his team's performance,
noting that the players had
only been working
together about nine days.
"Carolina had about a
week and a half of practice
on us and that reaJiy had
me scared he said. "But
we played sound,
fundamental football,
making only normal
mistakes. I think we will
be real powerful
Congratulations
ECU
Pirates
with
Pioneer
wrw
2 - $
Special Student
Prices
Cn
Systems
We Operate Our
Own
Repair Shop
Financing
Available


Title
Fountainhead, September 19, 1972
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
September 19, 1972
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.194
Location of Original
University Archives
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39641
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
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