7, NO. 26 NUARY 1976 Resolution passes Pub Board By BARBARA MATHEWS Staff Writer Pub Bos Thursday resolution to begin ar the possibility of becoming independent of the SGA resolution made by Phil a possible forum to letter to the editor f the Fountainhead, and other means of student about inde status for the media board According to Pub Board chairman results of the investigation SGA in the seems feasible Arrington, includes be aired on WECU yauging feelings pendent Diane Taylor presented to the J if the concept will be asking the SGA for their support before going before the Board of T rustees for final approval,” said Taylor feel the publications are not air deal, and by breaking we 0 find away better Rebel winners selected By JOHN DAYBERRY 4 The Rebel ike the Ge Helena Woodard, a qlish maior. and Kernersville won $50 submittec Richard Wayne prizes to the for poems they agazine Susan Bitner, a senior Eng najor and Bob Glover, a junior English major won prizes in the area of prose works Bitner won a $100 first prize for her Tyger’. Glover won a $50 f for his story For Ray story, “Tyger second Paschal In the prize ontest art division, Matt Smartt, a senior in printmaking, won $100 for his print The Rhinoceros that Ate Cleveland”. Betsy Kurzinger, a senior communications art major won $50 for an intitled photograph the cash winnings, the works published issue of the In addition to tudents will have their the forthcoming nagazine Money for the funded by the N.C according to Jeff Rollins of The Rebel In choosing material selected to win we tried to let the good be our said contest prizes was Council of the Arts editor-in-chief prizes guide rather than the sensational Rollins See Rebel, page 4. Fountainhead wants independence to Arringtor suct ] method f funding would nake publications more responsible Thi method = enfor sibility by letting publications funding es fiscal respor know at the onset the specific said Buccaneer editor Monika Sutherland presented to the Pub Board the results of 4 questionnaire concerning the funding they will have,” he of publications she had sent to various schools in the area Sutherland challenged the ment that all ad revenues collected by publications be turned over to the SGA If | am selling ads, | am doing it to put out a better yearbook for the tudents,” she said Publications are one of the few tangible things students receive in return for their fees The Pub Board expressed ver independent publications require soncern for We will type yf need some yf trative control over an indeper Pub Board, and new methods o tment or possibly election of 30ard members will have according to Taylor yrs and Put to be considered The slitics now involved put ations 4 major con according to Sutherland We need a Pub Board separate from the SGA that between politics and would not be divided publications she said EBONY HERALD DEBATE In other action, the Board tabled a motion to replace the Ebony Herald with a minority section in the Fountainhead According to Arrington, the SGA now publishes the Ebony Herald ir f Pub Board by-laws The matter will be discussed at the next meeting with representatives of the Ebony Herald violation PRINTING CHANGE The Board also heard a bid placed by Fountainhead editor Mike Taylor to print the Fountainhead in Mt. Olive, N.C The F the Daily Reflector transportatio! ountainhead i Including Ould sti save a $150 a week said Taylor NORTH CAROLINA beaches and sounds are among the nation’s least spoiled environments. These boats can be seen in the dim light safe in their berths. S GA Approves EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA THE SMOKE STACK on the ECU campus will no longer belch smoke. The new heating plant on 14th St. is now operational Smoke stack is obsolete Environmental Managemen Section) in June of last coal-burning plant to remair unt June, 1976 See Smoke Stack, page 4 Chesson blamed for budget mistake By KENNETH CAMPBELL ssistant News Editor The Student Government Associ ation’s Appropriations Committee, in a report to the SGA Legislature Monday night, blamed SGA Treasurer Larry Chesson for the $95,000 mistake found in the SGA budget last October The Legislature voted overwhelmingly to accept the report, introduced by Craig Hales, Chairman of the Appropriations Committee act with incorrect figures in appropriation matters from October to December, 1975 and to over-estimate the funds at its disposal by $95,000 The mistake made by Chesson was compounded by a lack of effort to consult advisors who might have found the error much sooner, according to the report | did not receive a copy of the report which had the error,” said ECU auditor Robert Edwards. “If we had received one we might have picked the error out. | think everyone who knows accounting could have picked it up SGA financial advisor, Dr ack Thornton Chesson d figures | think he picked up his cash, CI (Certificates of Deposits, which are notes in the bank stating we have certain fund there at a given time) and earned surplu said iplicated The earned surplus is the cash and CD's In others Chesson added one set figures twice, said Hales The error actually came See SGA, page 4. about wher The error caused the Legislature to 2 FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976 Editorials‘;Commentary Officials beefing up football slate News that athletic officials are trying to get Duke University on the football schedule and to move up the starting date of the grid pact with Wake Forest should be well received by all Pirate football fans. This past season's football schedule was by far the most attractive ever put together for the Pirates. In addition to conference contest the Bucs faced three Atlantic Coast Conference foes in non-loop games and of course everyone knows how Pat Dye’s charges fared in those bouts. The Pirates have faced Wake Forest once before on the gridiron and came away with their first win ever over an ACC football team in 1963 in the first contest ever played in Ficklen Stadium. Pirate athletic officials have been trying to get Duke on the schedule for some time. ECU officials reportedly had a chance to even get the Blue Devils to come to Greenville several seasons ago. But, the Blue Devils reportedly wanted a $50,000 guarantee from the Pirates and ECU officials decided the game would be a losing proposition played in the small confines of Ficklen, especially with $50,000 in money up front just to get the Blue Devils to Pitt County. Beefing up the football slate has been a long, drawnout process for Pirate officials...a task that was not an easy one. Athletic Director Clarence Stasavich tried for years to get State and Carolina on a football contract. First State was added to the schedule, then Carolina. And, this past year ECU faced Virginia for the first time ever in football. This past year a contract with Wake Forest was signed and the starting date for that home-on-home series may be moved up. And, contract talks with Duke are underway. HEY! How'd You GET ALL OF THE CLASSES YOU WANTED ° ae wisi ORAIS | As the late Stasavich explained, there was a day when ACC schools would not talk to the Pirates about getting on the football schedule. But today, the Pirates have either already played, have a contract with or are working on a contract now with five of the seven schools in the loop. Pirate football has come a long way in two major areas. For one, the Pirates can now give these ACC schools about as much competition, sometimes even more, than they can stand. But, just as importantly as the Pirates’ success on the playing field is their success in the stands. State regularly draws one of its largest gates of the season when the Pirates treck up to Raleigh. The Pirates also do just as well in Chapel Hill when they face the Tar Heels. And, ECU even took a good following to Charlottesville in November to face Virginia. ECU has come of age on the playing field and at the game. And, those are apparently characteristics that ACC football teams find increasingly attractive. VIP parking The parking problem around Mendenhall Student Center, which on a good day is bad, was aggrevated even more last Wednesday when the Campus Police put up ropes and blocked off the metered parking spaces. The ropes were up early Wednesday and kept students and other people who have quick business in Mendenhall, from parking. The question of why the parking spaces were blocked off was asked until someone noted that Wednesday also was the day that the ECU Board of Trustees met at Mendenhall. So, the parking spaces were blocked off for the VIP's. With the terrible shape that the dirt parking lots located between Mendenhall and Ninth Street and the Joyner Library and Ninth Street are usually in, we think it would have been a good idea to reserve the VIP’s a parking space in those two muddy lots. The Trustees are supposed to deal with ECU problems. And, parking in those would have given them a first hand look at one problem---and they could have taken part of that problem home with them in their cars from the mud and from the rough ride after the front end alignment of their cars were knocked out driving over the washboard cailed a parking lot. LE a a a NT eT a “Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without government, | should not hesitate a moment ito prefer the latter.” Editor-in-Chief--Mike Taylor Managing Editor--Tom Tozer Business Manager--Teresa Whisenant Production Manager--Jimmy Williams Advertising Manager--Mike Thompson News Editor--Jim Elliott Entertainment Editor--Brandon Tise Features Editor--Pat Coyle Sports Editor--John Evans Thomas Jefferson Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by the Student Govemment Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday during the school year. Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C.27834 Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309 Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students. a = — 1 ACC nN the lready t Now sf x s. For } much n the | Jularly irates 1 they ng to Jame. otball enter, e last ocked early quick ad off is the >, the cated ibrary een a > two And, it one home . ride 1 out without rant (oO iferson FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976 3 "Forum Notes recent student death Student cites growing lack of identity To Fountainhead: After returning from vacation, | picked up Tuesday's Fountainhead and was shocked to read “Student found dead.” But perhaps even more shocking was the somewhat incomplete coverage that it was given. | waited to hear more on this in Thursday’s edition but searched through “Eric Carmen” reviews and trustees’ decisions on athletic policies to find no further mention of this tragic event. (Did it not seem strange to anyone else the he apparently killed himself in a college dorm without anyone noticing?) | can understand how an administra tion might want an event of this nature played down (after all, it was bad for student recruitment); or perhaps, his family could have requested it. But my God, there wasn’t even a brief memoriam mentioning him in his own student paper. However, as it may not seem at this point, my purpose in writing is not just to criticize the coverage (perhaps more is forthcoming.) | believe the issue is far deeper than this. Therefore, | hope to raise a few questions that | feel we must consider. It seems we have fallen into a familiar technological-societal trap here at ECU.; that is, we have grown so rapidly that in many ways we are all in danger of becoming frighteningly anonymous, known only to a computer somewhere. We are so caught up in making the “big time” that very little seems to go to improve what we now nave. It seems that we, the students, like most of society, are in a condition of Student cites increasing activity Homosexual trends noted To Fountainhead and Mr. Noel Thomas Manning: Upon reading Mr. Noel Thomas Manning’s somewhat redundant plea to be disassociated with anything even vaguely homosexual (God forbid!) | was impressed by his brilliant use of the paradox. His purported sympathy was almost obliterated by insensitivity coupled with blatant ignorance about the subject. (| must pat myself on the back for that last statement-its not bad for an emotionally unbalanced mentally depra ved child molester contemplating suicide). The point being Mr. Noel Thomas Manning, that | am a homosexual and was greatly offended by your obvious ignorance of our particular (or should | say queer?) segment of society. | think your point could have been made in twenty-five words or less without indulging in the pursuance of your philosophy of homosexuality and Reader raps Manning’s stand on homosexuality To Fountainhead: To object to all the asinine ideas in Mr. Noel Thomas Manning’s recent written tirade would require a letter as long and boring as his. Accordingly, I’ve decided to write a reply which freshmen cancompletereading beforethey graduate and seniors can complete reading before they die. In stating the obvious fact that some gay people are insensitive and even cruel-as are some membeers of any sexual or social group-Noel Thomas Manning offers examples which can result only from his own = gross ignorance. He refers darkly to “newspaper accounts depicting greusome murders or disfigurements resulting from Sadistic or masochistic involvements,” and he hints direly that “this” is the liberation sought by “Thomas Manning,” author of the letter which Noel Thomas Manning is protesting. i've never been stabbed or beaten by a lover, and only rarely have | been bitten (accidents will happen!), so perhaps I’m prejudiced against Noel Thomas Manning’s viewpoint. Nonetheless, the fact is that sadism and masochism are distinct from homosexuality, although some gays, like some non-gays, have sadistic or masochistic tendencies. Futhermore, to imply that a crime involving homosexuals is a “homosexual crime” is absurd--is Charles Manson known as the perpetrator of “mass heterosexual murders?” Ignorant and condescending “toler- ance is no less cruel than ignorant and condescending bigotry, Noel Thomas Manning. As you noted, “Despite the words of Shakespeare, | believe thereis something in a name. When a good one is ruined, all is lost for some.” Mr. Noel Thomas Manning, as one who fights so frantically to defend his name from misrepresentation and ruin you might imagine the concer of those who are fighting to preserve their love from the same threats. Sincerely Robert Mariner 662753 1107 Evans Street being alienated, of being asleep. It is this condition that corrupt politicians in our society as well as unconcerned administrators and teachers in our schools depend upon. Perhaps now it is time we broke this trend. Let’s wake up and ask some questions and demand some answers. Let us care about each other For instance, why does one of your classes have ninety people in it? Why doesn't one of your professors give a damn about you and why don’t we have some sort of course and teacher evaluation to improve instruction? What part do you have in establishing the curriculum you pay for? And next quarter when you buy your books, ask why the cost is so outrageous and why the university couldn’t provide a book co-op to replace what they call the student (7?) the insinuated damnation of us all. Don't get me wrong, | do appreciate the fact that you don’t hold us in contempt and hope that you could find it in your heart to put in a good word with the Almighty. But back to basics. To start with, my relationships with other women have not only been healthy but, for the most part, extremely satisfying physically, intellec- ually, and emotionally (surprise, surprise), And to say that the U.S. allows homosexuals to exercise their freedom is so ridiculous that it’s almost laughabie. My conception of freedom doesn't include being fired from a job, getting beaten up (both solely on the basis of homosexuality) or living in constant fear of someone finding out that | am gay. Although it took awhile to pick a winner, the inference that we homos are responsible for the majority of the daily atrouhes that occur in our society (especially the part about children- straights seem to love that myth better than the Young and the Restless) won the “Flagrant Misconception” award. Come on Mr. Manning, even you can’t really believe that. We are human, v" oh you yourself admitted, and some of have problems (doesn’t everyone?) But that doesn't justify blaming the entire world’s insanity on us. Get off of your podium and read the fine print. When that illustrious day of reckoning comes about that you are so fond of mentioning, | think | can handle it. What | can’t handle and am damned tired of fighting are self-righteous people like yourself who try to decide what is right or wrong for people like me. | am a homosexual, and frankly | wouldn’t want it any other way. If | can accept myself why can’t you? Penny Purvis 138 Garrett 712738 book store. And by the way, did anyone ever ask you for suggestions in using these profits? This is only the beginning, but we must begin. Your waking up will be resisted, for injustice depends upon its sleeping majority. But perhaps even more, it means waking up to cruelties that we ourselves inflict on fellow students, and remedying them. It involves growing up enough to realize that there are people outside of ourselves, some who are alienated because we don’t care. One of our fellow students has destroyed a life that this university supposedly exists to help him fuifill. it is too late to remedy that now, but not to learn from it. An investigation into this matter may reveal some ills that need healing. Perhaps a widespread study of how to improve student life is in line. (It might cost a little but so did the lights in Fickien and where are our priorities.) Anyway, one among us_ has_ died, somewhat anonymously, and now we have a choice. Do we find another to fill the spot in order to keep on growing or can we slow down long enough to ask why? “And in the naked light | saw ten thousand people maybe more, People talking without speaking, People hearing without listening, People writing songs that voices never share And no one dares disturb the sound of silence.” -Paul Simon Lanny Peters 756590 P.O. Box 3101 Greenville, N.C. Forum policy All Letters to the Editor must have the following information or they will not be printed: the writers name. ID number, and local address. All of this information will then be printed at the end of each letter. Fountainhead will, upon personai request from a letter writer, withhold a name from publication for good reason. But, the name of the letter writer will be on file in the Editors office and will be available upon request to any student. All requests for withholding a name must be made in person to the Editor. Any ietters received without this information will be held until the letter writer complies with the new policy. Fountainhead invites the students, faculty and staff of ECU to present their opinions and beliefs in the Forum. And we have a practicaily no holes barred attitude about what is presented in this section. But, we do ask one thing. Please, if you have something to say in our paper, sign your name and not someone else’s. eaagatrangunausbaha fas taa ea R ATG RENT IAG LEE LL LLNEIS DE LIEN: LENNIE GOOLE LENG OLED NILE ILOILO: 4 FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976 RRR BREN RL LEO LR TRO NIL LIE LOLI OORT DELILE LLL: LANCIA TETRIS tN CLE LOD A TNE Rebelcontest | Chesson blamed for budget Continued from page 1. | thought the response to the contest There were about 15 prose works, and 60 art was extremely good 200 poems works submitted to us We held the contest to magazine to the students, and to artists promote attention developing and writers on this campus” Continued from page 1. the funds released by by Ms. Joyce Owens, bring the of the Student Accounting Office (SFA) were confused and added incorrectly. The SFA, headed Fund does the bookkeeping for the SGA, Student Union, refrigerator rentals, and student The error actually came about when the correct figures released by the Student The error actually came about when loans. The art works submitted to the funds released by the Student Fund ontest were judged by members of the Accounting Office (SFA) were confused ECU art faculty, according to Danny and added incorrectly. The SFA headed O'Shea, art editor by Ms. Joyce Owens, does the The Rebel will probably be distributed according to students in late Feb It will be free faced on This issue going to liff past erent trom any y PIRATES CHEST SSS SS SSS SSS SS S559.) SSSSSSSSss) and will probably be campus Fountainhead stands be vastly ISSUES SSSBSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS HFSS SSSSSSSSSSSSK correct figures released by Office were added incorrectly The report emphasized lack of effort often, and the said SS SS SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSF; PIRATES CHEST Corner of Charles St. & Greeaville Blvd. wane aK eae ak ek SPECIAL— With This Ad Free Bag Of Ice With °*5.00 Purchase! bookkeeping for the SGA, Student Union, refrigerator rentals, and student The error actually carne about when the loans. the SGA Chesson’s to use his advisors more inancial advisors poor ; SPECIALS! Tuesday Wednesday Thursday 4 PM to 6 PM e Beef Stew ® Fried Chicken * Chicken Pastry ® Fresh Fish $ * Other Specials Includes 3 Vegetables and Tea Also Serving Beer, Wine, & Set-ups ~ (With Meals) Banquet and Party Facilities Available RIVERSIDE RESTAURANT 710 N. Greene St. Phone 752-2624 195 RIVERSIDE RESTAURANT showing of responsibility in his duties. Conclusions in the report were that the legislature needs to work more closely with the Executive since the SGA Legislature acted on wrong information for so long, and had such bad results. The present system of accounting is efficient, the report concluded, but, a new method of selecting the SGA Treasurer should be found, it said. Recommendations by the report included the SGA Treasurer should be chosen in a new way, that the Treasurer should work more closely with the Legislature's Appropriations Committee, and that the Treasurer should work more closely with those technical advisors at this disposal A final recommendation states “Larry Chesson, the SGA Treasurer, should officially be censured by the legislature for the major budget error.” Smoke Stack Continued from page 1. Additions to the newer facility, however, will eventually lead to the old plant's termination, said Lowry. As soon as the new plant is in full operation and “some of the kinks gotten out,” engineers will begin working on plans to raze the half century old facility, Lowry said Work has been proceeding for the past year to add two new fuel oil/natural gas boilers to the 14th Street plant. Lowry said installation of these two boilers should be complete by January 26 Ad revenue increases Advertising revenues for Fountainhead through the first four months of the school year have already surpassed the ad revenue for all of last year, according to Fountainhead Editor Mike Taylor. Ad sales through January 8th were listed at $14,112, Taylor noted. Last year, according to Taylor, the paper showed ad revenues collected at just over $13,000. Collections so far this year, as of January 8th, were $4291.95 And, if ad sales continue at the rate they have through the next five months of the school year, Taylor predicts total sales for the September 1975-May 1976 period could easily top $30,000. The $14,000 plus we have sold so far has been in only 25 papers. Our printing schedule for the rest of the school year through May calls for 33 more papers. We could easily go over the $30,000 in advertising sold,” Taylor contended. The Fountainhead editor admitted though that a lot of the ad sales cited above were funds that would not be in hand for at least several months. “Our collections are usually a couple of months behind sales. It usually takes a couple of months to collect most accounts. But, the paper has had a good collection percentage in the past. Sometimes it may be a few months late but the paper does get paid for most ads sold,” Taylor continued. Taylor explained that revenue collect- ed was held by the Student Fund Accounting Office. “The SGA voted this past place our ad revenue back Fall to into the general fund. So, what we collect does not come back to us,” Taylor continued. The advertising period from Septem- ber through Christmas was the best one the student newspaper has ever enjoyed, according to the editor. “Through that time period we actually printed some 600 pages for an average of 24 pages an issue. That is an increase of some 63 per cent over that same time period in 1974,” Taylor explained. The increase in ad sales and the size of paper comes mainly from the increase in advertising inches. “We decided at the first of the school year to expand out advertising format to try and bring in as much business as possible. In the past, the paper had been somewhat restrictive on advertising. The expanded policy serves two purposes in bringing in more ad dollars and also giving us room to expand the paper itself,” Taylor pointed out. But, while ad revenue is up, Taylor admitted costs are up sharply. “We got a larger budget from the SGA this year to cover new positions, salary increases and printing costs.” Taylor pointed out that printing costs, due to higher paper costs, and also due to the enlarged size of the paper, aiong with salary hikes, would eat up a large part of the ad revenue increase. “But, when the final tally is in next summer, | think we can show that we expanded the paper, almost doubled its size as a matter of fact, and cost the SGA little more than previous years. Our ad revenue will cover any expansion we have done,” Taylor predicted. LEO’S PERCO COUPON E.C.U. STUDENTS get 20%, off anything at the station except gas with this coupon PHONE 758-0808 110 WEST 14th ST. GREENVILLE ae | <2 40:
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New Orleans conference Pi
Aronson adresses international gathering E
N e Ar 5 ie ECL Precieuse dans ‘Clelie’,” will < pose ina France he Foreign Language Association at this
lepartment r Foreig anguages anda ublished collection of Says on Dr. Aronson also spoke on views of phi
terat addressex 4 ternationa seventeentt entury French _ literature the U.S. given in the eighteenth-century A feature of the program was an
| t her and ater this year writings of Brissot and Chastellux at the appearance by Francoise Michele Roux of
ea ist weet At the recent 25th annual Mountain N.¢ Foreign Language Conference in Alleins, France, currently a student at F
appeared 1 progran f Interstate Foreign Language Conference Greensboro in November ECU, who was interviewed regarding her phas
add f seventeenth centu enc! at Appalchian State University, Dr The conference was sponsored by impressions of North Carolina Emer
at Ure ; yonsored by the Aror rganized three nference the Foreign Language Association of Dr. Aronson’s address was based on prog!
an Associa f Teachers of ect Ol Women in French N.C. and the N.C. Department of Public research done at the Bibliotheque ll
} terature and charied Section |. The Instruction Nationale in Paris last summer with stude
wa among the sections consisted of presentations by The conference’s French Division was funding from the ECU Research Council asker
f rdinat scholars from various states on role of directed by Professor Marguerite Perry It will be published in a_ special hand
Frent women in French literature since the chairman of the ECU Department. of bicentennial issue of the French Review the t
Ages, as well as critical and Foreign Languages and Literatures, who in May S
i rlotine Ou !a biographical surveys of women writers In was named an honorary life member of vital
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FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976 ;
Pitt County
EMT program begins
By LARRY ZICHERMAN
Staff Writer
Fifty-six persons underwent the first
phase of testing in the North Carolina
Emergency Medical Technician (EMT)
program in Pitt County recently
The Practical Examination, in which
students are given medical problems and
asked to demonstrate how they would
handle it in a real emergency was part of
the test
Students were tested in the areas of
vital signs, primary and secondary survey
of patients, airway management, splint
ing, shock and hemorrhage control,
cardio-pulmonary resuscitation, spinal
injury management, extrication from
vehicles, and patient movement
Supervised by Tom Collie of the
North Carolina Office of Emergency
Medical Services (OEMS) in Raleigh, the
nine examiners each tested the students
in groups of four, having them alternate
between victims and rescuers
The average student finished the
examination in 90 minutes, and the entire
examination had to be satisfactorally
completed before the student was
allowed to take the 200-question written
examination
The EMT course is a minimum of 91
hours long. This course consisted of 85
hours, 73 classroom and 12 clinical
(emergency room). After completing this
course, an@{ EMT graduate is able to
sustain life until arrival at a medical
facility. No drugs can be administered,
defibrilation (conversion of cardiac arrest
using electroshock) cannot be used, or
any other such techniques. This training
comes under the 810-hour Paramedia or
Mobile Intensive Care Unit Operator
course. This also requires licensing by
the State Medical Board
A nationwide Emergency Medical
Services (EMS) program came into being
several years ago, when the U.S
Department of Transportation's National
Highway Traffic Safety Board found that
a large number of persons
highway accidents, many of whom could
have been saved with prompt medical
care, died before reaching a hospital
This program was embodied in the
U.S. Emergency Medical Services System
act of 1973
This act stated that emergency care
must be adequately available to all
persons without inquiry as to ability to
pay, and for each EMS provider to have
adequate personnel with continual
training, adequate vehicles for transport-
ation, and access to an adequate medical
facility for treatment of patients
The act also specifies that the red
cross usually found on ambulances be
reserved for American Red Cross use
only, and designed instead the Star of
Life, the new EMS symbol
The course was coordinated in Pitt
County through Pitt Technical Institute
by John L. Watson, chief of Pitt
Ambulance Service, and taught by
Watson and Sylvia Waters, a nursing
supervisor at Pitt County Memorial
Hospital. Physicians were brought in
injured in
frequently to instruct students in various
areas
THE STAR OF LIFE is the symbol of the
Emergency Medicai Services.
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8 FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976
FEATURES
Pol. Sci coffee room
Come by for coffee, controversy
By RAY TYLER
The college bul! session is alive and
well in the East Carolina (ECU) political
science department. The department has
created a daily talk-athon named it the
coffee room and made some money on
the idea
The coffee room is a gathering place
for students during class breaks. Coffee
costs ten cents a cup but the
onversation is free
The conversations are continuous
affairs which drift along despite the
entrance and exit of many students
The coffee-sipper can hear a wide
range of topics discussed, including
things like, grades, professors, sex,
drinking, and capital punishment.
The coffee room idea grew from a
departmental retreat in November 1974,
at Atlantic Beach. The retreat was
organized by Dr. Hans indorf, a political
science professor, and last years Student
Government Association (SGA) President
Robert Lucas
From the retreat came many ideas
designed to improve the relationship
between students and faculty. Such jGcas
included a_ student representative at
department faculty meeting, student-run
assemblies, ‘contact’ students
responsibie for making announcements
in class, independent study and the
coffee room.
Some of the ideas have not worked.
The issues facing the departmental
faculty meetings are not crucial to the
student's interest. The contact students
were not making announcements and the
independent study program has had a
nominal response
But the coffee room has been a
Success.
The coffee room is run by the student
faculty advisory committee in political
science. The committee found am empty
room on the first floor of C-wing in
Brewster Building and furnished it with
anonymous gift of $100 and furniture
donated by faculty members.
The sale of coffee brought in some
money which was used to finance a
department picnic last spring and a party
this past month.
Connie. Nanney is chairman of the
department's student faculty advisory
committee which includes six students
and two professors. Nanney views the
coffee room as a big plus for the
department.
“The best thing that has happened
around here is the coffee room,” said
Mrs. Nanney. “it has drawn majors closer
together and gotten people interested in
political science.”
Mrs. Nanney is concerned however by
the lack of faculty participation.
“The faculty may feel that it is a
waste of their time to come in and talk,”
she said. “But when they initiated things
in the past, they didn’t go over—such as
the advisory committee they started in
1968 which students did not take an
active interest in until last year.”
Dr. Lawrence Hough has been on the
advisory committee since 1972. He feels
the coffee room has broken down some
barriers between students and faculty.
“If the department can improve its
communications then it can improve its
program,” said Hough. “No two faculty
members feel the same way about their
proper role, but | would like to see more
faculty members participate and develop
a relationship on an informal basis.”
The other advisory committee faculty
member is Dr. Oral Parks. He stated the
case for faculty participation more
strongly.
“1 would not be happy until every
faculty member came in here regularly,”
he said. “But there should be some kind
of role playing because it becomes
increasing!y difficult to draw a line on
who gets an A and who doesn’t when
someone you know is competing with
someone you don’t have a rapport with.”
Parks said he finds it difficult to talk
with students about one subject that is
prevalent in the coffee room chatter—the
competence of professors.
“I don’t want to make value
judgments on colleagues,” he said.
But the common effort of some
students and faculty in the political
science department is leaving few topics
off limits.
By KIM JOHNSON
Staff Writer
recent
Due to the articles on homosexuality that have appeared in the
Fountainhead, “Now Hear This” decided to make an opinion survey featuring a few
members of the Gay community to discover just exactly how they feel the majority of
“straight” ECU students think of them.
This survey will be in two parts: next week we will see how the “straight”
students really do feel about homosexuals and the Gay Liberation Movement.
“! think the majority hate us,” said George Lamb. “A lot of students probably want
to accept homosexuality, but when they get in a crowd, they won't admit that they
accept it. Of course, there are a few “straight” people that really do accept us and the
Gay Liberation Movement. Those that don’t, | feel, think of the Movement as a bunch
of bullshit.”
“They don’t accept us,” said another gay student, Wait. “But ! do think they are
coming to a better understanding of the whole idea, mainly because people are
beginning to be more open about it.
“(Many gay people are finally being honest enough to admit that they are gay. And
if people are honest enough to admit it, others then think they should accept it.”
One student blamed the location for the non-acceptance he felt the majority of
“straight” students at ECU hoid. “Basically the fact that this is eastem North
Carolina, and the South at that, | think has a lot to do with bias against us.
“However,” Henry added, “the Gay Liberation Movement is making peopie aware
that there are persons with different lifestyles from theirs which will in time
contribute greatly to a greater degree of acceptance and understanding, | feel.
“But most people exhibit mixed emotions about homosexuality because, for the
first time, their own value system is being questioned. For years we've been told that
you go with persons of the opposite sex only, especially when it comes to a sexual
relationship. So people say it isn’t “normal.” But what's the definition of “normal?”
Henry spoke of the problem of understanding. “When a person doesn’t understand
something, he tends to ridicule what he doesn’t understand out of fear. | think this is
what the majority of ECU students are doing.
“And | must add that, in my opinion, when a mass of “straight” guys ridicule
Homosexuality and ECU;
the gay viewpoint
someone because they are, as they put it, “queer,” they’re really just questioning their
own masculinity. Maybe perhaps they have those ‘tendencies’ and this ridiculing is a
defense mechanism.”
Another student, Robert, did not hesitate a moment to say, “They think gay
people are sick!” And he added, “Although homosexuality is becoming a more and
more open topic of discussion, still most people are apprehensive to get to know a
gay person because they think they're sick.
“If ‘straight’ peopie would allow themselves to get to know us, they would see that
we're not sick OR perverted.”
M.F. Bumgamer was just as exact about his feelings. When asked how he felt the
majority of ECU students looked upon homosexuals, he answered, “Queers! Faggots!
But it’s really sad that they don’t understand we are no different from them, we just
prefer mates of the same sex.”
For a change of pace, one student, Larry, had quite a different comment to make
from the others. “Most of the ‘straight’ people | know are pretty cool about the whole
situation. It’s no big deal whether you’re straight or gay.
“But | couldn’t say about the real majority. And | don’t care that much about the
Gay Liberation Movement. | can live the kind of life | want, now. | don’t feel it’s
important to have to say ‘I’m gay’.
“Furthermore, it gay peopre want everyone to accept them, then why are they
trying to put themselves into a separate, special classification?”
Be sure to catch “Now Hear This” next week to see what the “other half” really
does think. se
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FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976 e
FEATURES
In English dept.
Women’s study courses offered
Gan you identify the following?
Group A: Margaret Atwood, Charlotte
Perkins Gilman, Isabelle Archer, Tillie
Olsen, Virginia Woolf, May Sarton, Mary
McCarthy, Willa Cather, Mary
Wollstonecraft, Kate Chopin, Sylvia
Plath.
Group B: James Joyce, F. Scott
Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Norman
Mailer, Ken Kesey, Kurt Vonnegut,
Graham Greene, Joseph Conrad
If you're an average person, you knew
almost everybody in Group B and almost
nobody in Group A. Both groups are
comprised of modern America and British
writers, but most college literature
courses stress those writers in Group B.
That emphasis will change at East
Carolina University in Spring Quarter
1976, when the ECU English Department
will offer two courses by women about
women.
English 394, Contemporary Women
Writers, will be a study of novels and two
films by women writers of the 20th
Century on the subject of women’s
experiences.
English 393, Images of Women in
Literature, will examine works by male
and female writers in which a woman is
the dominant figure.
BOTH COURSES WILL BE COUNTED
AS GENERAL COLLEGE LITERATURE
CREDITS.
And both will be offered one night
a week, in an effort “to attract students
and community members who can't
attend daytime classes.”
So women often get the short end of
the literary stick. Is that the only reason
to teach these courses at ECU?
No, say the two professors who'll be
the courses’ instructors, Ms. Marie Farr
and Dr. Sally Brett.
“A course centered upon images of
women in literature,” says Ms. Farr,
“makes students aware of stereotypes.
We use these stereotypes every day, not
just in literature but also in real life, to
make our judgments. The nagging wife,
the shrew, the mother-in-law, the bitter
old maid--these are images of women
that we confront in the pages of a book
and on the television or film .screen as
well as in our real lives.”
“Whether or not these images are fair,
or real, or biased is something | hope the
students will come to decide for
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themselves. Most of all | just want the
students in this course to become aware
of the stereotypes--what they are and
how we use them, consciously or
unconsciously. A stereotype is made
from a generalization and it can be
helpful. The danger lies in operating
solely on the given image and not on the
real person.’
Dr. Brett offers a similar rationale for
her course, Contemporary Women
Writers.
“It is generally assumed,” she noted,
“that the women’s movement has brought
women writers to a new frontier, so to
speak. While it is true that women today
are writing about being a woman more
honestly then ever before, it isnot true
that women writers have never done this.
“We just have not paid very much
attention to women writers, either in
literature study or in popular culture.
Almost everyone knows who Erica Jong
is; equally well Known are Joan Didion,
Judith Rossner, and Jill Robinson-
because all of these women have written
frankly about women and sexuality
“But sex isn't the only topic of
interest to women and it certainly has
not been the only subject of women
writers today or yesterday. Edith
Summers Kelley, for example, wrote in
the 1930’s about women tenant tobacco
farmers. But no one heeded her realism
as they did Upton Sinclairs--although
she is probably the better writer.
“Women write about themselves as
poets, professors, mothers, housewives
etc. AS we become aware that our voices
as playwrights, novelists, and poets are
being heard, we also begin to understand
that our individual situations and feelings
can run counter to what we've been told
we should think and feel. | think modern
woman is becoming aware of more and
more truths about herself and her world
that have long been ignored or denied.
And women’s writings reflect this
awareness. The old images just don’t do
any longer.”
“The list of women who have written
about women is a ist of women who
have been ignored by the bookseller and
the teacher. This course is designed to
rid stuagents of tnat ignorance. We are
going to read modern writers but we are
also going to read writers from earlier
Leora like Charlotte Perkings Gilman,
Kate Chopin, Edith Kelley, Emily Bronte,
Colette, and Edith Wharton.’
If all goes well, the instructors hope
to obtain films for their courses from the
State Library. Tentatively scheduled are
Judy Collin’s “Antonia,” and the film
version of Clare Booth Luce’s play, “The
Women.”
Ms. Farr will use one central text
Images of Women in Literature, as well
as Henry James’ novel Portrait of a Lady.
Also included in the 393 course are short
stories and essays on images of women
and the play by Edward Albee, Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf.
Ms. Farr says at present she expects
to require the usual final examination as
well as a short critical paper, quizzes,
and oral report. Dr. Brett plans midterm
and final examinations, quizzes, and a
report on “books and writers we can't
include in required reading.” Required
readings will include novels by Sylvia
Plath, Virginia Woolf, May Sarton, Grace
Paley, Doris Lessing, Margaret Atwood,
Jean Rhys, Tillie Olsen, Mary McCarthy,
and Muriel Spark. “All the other works |
would have liked to require will be the
reports,” Or. Brett said
Roth women say the reaction from
students has been enthusiastic. They
point out that ECU could do well to
begin emphasizing women’s studies
courses, which are by definition
interdisciplinary. “The subject is certainly
appropriate for sociology, history, fine
arts, foreign literature in translation, as
well as for music and sciences.”
Do Ms. Farr and Dr. Brett see their
courses as ‘‘conscious-raising’? “All
literature,’ they answer, ‘raises
consciousness.’
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] ? FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976
Gould is entertaining in latest movie ‘Whiffs’ fot
WHIFFS
By JIMMY
Val
HANES
2nd at the military
nust for comedy relief
ame Whiffs” follows in
testing base
sed by the army in various
to bring a more humane nature
a little sick. After 15 years of
reactions to experiments
relation to
tne
pase
HHH
So
wh
sees to it that Frapper
of hair and impotence
oxually with his beautiful
it the equipment doesn't
to bring forth sexual
e of the funniest scenes
Jitable jot a problem
Nback reactions by Frapper
By DE!
meets an old triend from the experimental labs,
)) who underwent experiments to hasten his
t robberies
Frapper an ex-con Chops, (Harry
release from prison. The two
» USING Various gases that Frapper
Guard
Neil Youn
pears to |
ims that is
of people
sical capak
basically \
ye Neil Y
rformance
lection very
going to be
jccess of
jalifications
feunion witt
| The first s
it entitled
ng has a
pgressions,
reminisce
bringfield dé
f with antici
ond song :
pil ~=Young’s
oughout t
pviously do
on betweer
cals are mW
bseness_ hi
ademark of
ixing per
hdemark of |
mber, “Par
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ovides sug
‘rics. All <¢
ovided by
ception of |
ummond w
osby, Stills
h exampl
hilosophies
heart if |
ed you mo
hve not shar
me fourth se
le only sele
th a wester
peated Nei
als, and
ool Blues,’
ose “crying
at exemplif
lady whc
yme very gc
yung and
mpo. A fitt!
A song é
e two wit
tire albu!
hilosophic
rm an alliance and launch an episode
from the base
The highlight of the film comes when Frapper and Chops employ Dusty (Godfrey
ambridge) to fly over a town and spray a gas that incapacitates everyone who comes
ontact with it. While everyone is jumping and squirming on the ground, Frapper
rob both banks in the town
The resulting sequence by the
be seen to be believed
All ends on a_ happy
ombination of nerve gas and the antidote
Elliot Gould’s portrayal of a health degenerate
Gould carries the characterization ott with ease. he is
DOrrows
and Chops
chase > army is a hilariously inept bungle that has to
note with Frapper finally getting an erection from a
is one of semi-slap stick comedy
very realistic in the role. Gould
ind Guardino work well together in this script, a la Gould and Sutherland in
M*A*S*H
Godfrey Cambridge has only one drawback in the movie; there isn’t enough of
screen his acting is priceless. His off camera voice kept
austed tne town
him. However, while he is on
rowd acne witn rmymes
Jennifer O'Neill does an job also and without
short of beautiful. She too is very believable in her role
Eddie Albert offers strong support to the film and provides a few lines of
As a whole the movie was very entertaining and very fluid with
anticipation of the next scene. It is definitely worth the price
the « wniie ne
excellent acting saying is nothing
comedy
constant
[This movie is currently playing through today at Plaza Cinema. |
f
Jimmy Buffett here Wednesday |
M
(apr
been written of Jimmy Buffett on his journey to that musical
ib 3ut with everything said, he remains illusive to category. Mobile,
ouldn't hold hirn. Then, Nashville didn’t Know what to do with him. Yet, in
in between he leaves an imprint reminiscent of hurricanes or tradewinds
of being old friends | F
Buffett will appear Wednesday night at Carolina Cowboy Saloon. Don’t miss him. |
Many words have
mecca of
Alabama «
every town
ana he feeling
| inne mere tc ena mane weer nana IRA
eh SIE:
fs’ foung comes back with ‘Zuma’
By DENNIS C. LEONARD
Staff Writer
ps, (Harry
The two
t Free Neil Young's new release, ZUMA
{ a )per
pears to be another one of those
sums that is going to be appealing to a
of people and will further qualify the
isical capabilities of Young. The music
basically very strong, the lyrics are
(GQ dfrey
ho comes
|, Frapper
lat has to je Neil Young profoundities, the
~~ formance excellent, and the song
Yaron a lection very tasteful. This album, | feel,
going to be an indicator for the return
conga jccess of Neil Young’s musical
ZO
‘le. Gould palifications and could possiby provide
pl with Crosby, Stills and Nash.
| The first side of ZUMA begins with a
it entitled “Don't Cry No Tears”. The
ng has a simple rhythm, few chord
ogressions, and standard bass lines. It
reminiscent of earlier Buffalo
ringfield days and starts the first side
with anticipation. “Danger Bird” is the
cond song and the very hard sounds of
x1 Young's guitar is very evident
oughout the tune. The leads are
viously dominant, with good separ-
on between the lead and rhythm. The
cals are mixed very loosely and this
pseness has become as much a
demark of Young's as Stephen Stills’
ixing perfection has become a
demark of his. Cut three is an acoustic
mber, ‘Pardon My Heart,” that places
le listener into a situational setting and
ovides suggestive, but philosophical
‘rics. All of the instrumentation Is
ovided by Neil Young with the
ception of bass which is played by Tim
ummond who incidentally toured with
osby, Stills, Nash and Young in 1974.
n example of Young’s” writing
hilosophies are exemplified by, “pardon
heart if | show that | care/for | have
ed you more than moments we have or
ve not shared.” “Looking for a Love” is
le fourth selection on side one and is
le only selection on the entire album
th a western sound. This song has the
ted Neil Young simplicity, loose
Is, and the good separation. “Bar
oo! Blues,” the next tune, is one of
ose “crying in my drink” type tunes
at exemplifies the fantasy blues about
e lady who got away. This song has
yme very good guitar licks provided by
yung and has a rather fast paced
mpo. A fitting song to end side one!
A song entitled “Stupid Girl” begins
le two with the slopiest cut of the
ttire album. It is another semi-
ilosophic type song with poorly
erland in
10ugh of
Oice kept
, nothing
comedy
constant
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FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976 13
a i
RESEARCH
Thousands of Topics
integrated guitar ana vocais. 1ne second imagery is very rich and the energy of the ;
song is “Drive Back” and it relates well song is very obvious sri te Bak np se ea
to earlier days of “Southern Man” and Through My Sails” is the final song py de oo ;
other Neil Young heavies. The music on the album and is the first song with a Se erg
4
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC
comes Out to be very brash, the lyrics are all of Crosby, Stills, and Nash joining ir
to the point, and the song has a very to provide all vocals and_ full
recognizable tempo. The picking style is 11322 IDAHO AVE., # 206
also very noticeable due to the quick, Continued on page 14. | LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 9002!
| 213) 477-8474
|
ww : | Our research papers are soid f
Mee ee | research purposes only
eae
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deliberate strokes that Young releases on
the quitar. This cut is one of the better
tunes on the entire album. “Cortez the
Killer’ is the following cut with a very
long, melodic intro, plus very tasteful
background guitar leads. The song
progresses to a certain point until the
lyrics cut in. The lyrics are obviously
about Cortez the Conqueror and provides
a musical history of his personal trials
and the loneliness he encountered.
Young incorporates a comparison in the
end between the loneliness of Cortez and
the loneliness ot a present day lover. The
Tne Attic Atmosphere,
the Attic Crew,
the Attic Bands
have all moved to a new location
in the Buccaneer Building.
| | FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976
a cece ining mummamenmeeommat
NEL YOUNG
UO i LL EL “G
CLASSIFIED
EARN EXTRA MONEY doing cross
stitch and thread count. 756-2309
GUITARISTS-Mu-tron Phase Shifter, like
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two pickup - exc. condition $100
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Continued trom page 13.
instrumentation. The vocal harmonies are
excellent, the mixing is very close to
perfect (it is obvious Steve Stilis had a
hand in this song) and the music is
extremely pleasant. The acoustic guitars
add a very refined quality to the song and
Russ Kunkel provides a_ further
dimension on congas. This is probably
the best song on the entire album and
can only prove the effectiveness that
Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young
possess as a musical Coalition.
ZUMA is one of the best albums
released by Neil Young in a long time
and proves to show that he is not
another musician that has fallen into the
hands of mediocrity. The album is
Fri. Tan. 16
Sat. Tan. I
{
THIS WEEK AT THE
ELBO ROOM
._ THEYARE BACK !!
TUES — FRI (AND HAPPY HOUR)
“LEROY BROWN”
EVERY SUNDAY IS LADIES NIGHT
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| > Se Se
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a] FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976 15
Tg wg
RA. | Tt
STEVENS STUDIOS
PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHERS FOR THE YEARBOOK
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STEVENS STUDIOS
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16 FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976
88-71
I ECU Cagers Drop 7th
After losing its top two forwards
earlier in the year, Richmond has had to
revert to a bevy of guards to make their
offense go
Last night the Spiders got the heip
they needed from guards Larry Slappy,
Slappy, a 6’ sophomore transfer, w
the ball hawk on the Spider offense wi
his fancy dribbling and behind-the-ba
passing. Besides that, Slxppy cont!
buted 14 points and three assists to th
Spider rout. n
ECU nips Furman, 72-68
Kevin Eastman and Mike Sanford in Butler finished as high scorer C
: : insisted on waiting for the last shot. shaping an 8871 victory over East Richmond with 20 points and Sullivs
By so gama Miller swished an 18-footer with four Carolina had 14, giving Richmond a balanatl
shi seconds left. In retaliation, the Pirates With Slappy and Eastman hitting from — scoring attack.
The scene was set at the Greenville
hurled a desperation pass the length of
the court to Garner, who hit the layup at
the outside and Sanford controlling the
lane with his passes to Jeff Butler and
After Richmond broke into a quicé
64-48 lead early in the second half, EC* East Ca
S.C.) Memorial Auditorium, January 10 e c . i
The TVS canign a os nee a a. i, __ the buzzer One official deemed the goal Craig Sullivan, the Spiders broke open a ‘Never challenged. The final 15 minut« Ctory over
faba: Ang sill ite warded inrouah good while the other believed and close contest against the unorganized — Proved futile. lave Pattor
and < S roamed throug signaled the contrary. After protests by Pirates Reggie Lee led ECU with 25 points. same for th
the gym like spider webs
East Carolina coach Dave Patton was
wandering over and through these same
Patton and his players, the goal was
allowed. ECU still trailed at the half,
Women cagers drop first
» In comin
seSire after
ire with an_— intens lOOK Of though, by 37-2 Cc Instrume
ee The Bucs shot only 36.4 per cent from Jartiey. But
conc aheibonipssil etched on his: ng He the floor for the first half while Furman Jatton.
knew this was a must game for both managed 44.4 per cent. The main ga
teams. Patton was aware of the fact that difference at the half was the foul Oo es es er, a id Hatin |
he had never won at Furman and that
there could only be one winner in the 3
p.f ontest
That victor proved to the Pirates by a
score of 72-68
The first half of play was indicative of
two teams playing as though it was a
life and death. From the
opening tip-off, both teams played with
the electricity toexcite the crowd from the
very first row to the very last
The initial basket was recorded with
18:14 showing on the scoreboard as
Ronnie Smith connected from 14 feet.
matter of
By JANET HOEPPEL
Assistant Sports Editor
The location was new and so was the
atmosphere. But despite the backing of a
large and boisterous partisan crowd, the
lady Pirates dropped their season opener,
79-74, to West Chester State College in
the team’s first basketball game in
Minges Coliseum.
After starting in a zone defense, the
Pirates held West Chester scoreless for
the opening minutes as they took an
yaladin offer
The West Chester team dominated treree player:
remainder of the game and with
held a 77-74
seconds left
failed
to capitalize on
those
y At this je
lead. E(® the game.
scoritpe bench tc
opportunities. In the final three minut ith more tt
West Chester had outscored the Piratr Hartley f
11-5 and took the 79-74 victory.
Debbie Freeman led the ECU scorik) return in|
and rebounding with 33 points and ,@fformance
rebounds. Ginny Johovich ied a balance And whe
West Chester team with 14 points me aturday's g
coming on outside jumpers.
The Pirates’ next games will be
pid played ¢
reaches wh
Patton gc
Wade Henkel scored East Carolina's first early 5-0 lead. But the taller West Chapel Hill where they will face N, illy Dineen
pair a minute later to knot the score at Chester team came back quickly to close State and UNC-CH on January 18 and 1 dwards, Ht
2-2 the gap with their own tight zone Patton's
A minute and a half later, Ray Miller, : defense. ECU POINTS ymments tt
a native of Raleigh, scored the first two 3 6 With the clock at 14:00, ECU fell Thompson 15 One can’
points of an eventual 25 and the Paladins ; ¢. ¥ behind 10-8 as their opponents Kerbaugh 8 helby nativ
were back on top 4-2 | ’ a consistently moved the ball off the Manning 10 eautifully ir
Furman then bulged to a 10-4 lead as \ defensive boards with quick breaks to the Ross 3 2am.
Steve Whittingham scored on a jumper, M ) basket. Chamblee 2 True, Fu
two free throws and a layup. Only the shooting of Debbie Freeman Dail 1 jayes-Fessc
At this point, Patton called a strategic i and Rosie Thompson, combined with free Freeman 33 e no slouc
t. ECU came off the bench with e throw accuracy kept the Pirates in the Garrison 1 arolina bas
oc . as Louis Crosby and Wade CROSBY...his 11-for-16 field goal shoot- game. An ineffectiveness to move the :
Henkel hit on mid-range jumpers to bring ing paced the Pirates on Saturday. He bail down the court resulted in numerous WEST CHESTER POINTS The EC
ECU to within two with 14:30 remaining finished with 22 points. turnovers which allowed West Chester to Atack 2 ight, but th
The two teams traded baskets for by i iis open up a 40-32 margin with three Cerino 8 If the girl
most of the remainder of the half, with snooting. The Paladins went eight-for-11 minutes left in the haif. Chellio 10 ame of the |
ECU never letting Furman get ahead by at the charity stripe while ECU didn’t The Pirates did not fold, however, and Dunbar 4 2ar
more than four points. During this span, even have the pleasure of one attempt. with a little over one minute remaining, Gichhorn 13 One has |
Reagie Lee and Larry Hunt did the ECU controlled the second-half tip-off the Bucs had outscored West Chester Harden 2 ‘at as Debbi
damage for the Pirates after Strickland touched the ball on its 8-2, closing the deficit to 42-40. Holland 6 reeman sco
upward flight and Crosby quickly hit for a At the half, West Chester held a 46-44 Hullah 6 ourt
Lee scored a layup with 12:24 basket to cut the lead to three at 37-34 ae, This
as * advantage as the Pirates failed to get Johovich 14 iS write
remaining and added a second one a Furman refused to relieve the pressure as i am play th
: hi closer than two points. Tumilty 5 am play t
minute later. Hunt connected on a layup, they retaliated by scoring the next four atch and s
«* then a jumper, which tied the score at if yy 4 The opening minutes of the second Watts 2 peer
’ é 5 points, stretching their lead to seven pais produced an organized ECU team Zwaan 7 ome game v
20-20. With 8:33 left, Furman took a
time-out
After this timeout, Earl Garner scored
two consecutive layups while Miller hit a
20-foot jumper from the left of the circle
and teammate Jim Strickland twisted
inside the 1-2-2 Pirate zone for a crip
shot. The score remained tied at 24-24
ECU and Furman had aspirations of
running, but good defense by both
clubs slowed the pace and kept the score
down. Furman instituted a_ sticky
man-to-man and went to both boards,
well, collecting 19 caroms with Strickland
grabbing seven
Coach Patton's use of the 1-2-2 to
outrebound the Paladins worked even
better as the Pirates came up with 22.
Tyron Edwards grabbed nine of these
first-half rebounds to clearly display his
rebounding ability
With just 27 seconds remaining in the
game, Furman coach Joe Williams
points, which turned out to be the largest
lead of the game.
Reggie Lee went to work, hitting on a
hesitation jumper from the baseline and
drawing a foul on the play. He hit his
bonus shot and ECU had pulled to within
two. An Earl Garner layup tied the score
for the first time in the second half at
43-43
Although Crosby continued the
assault on the Paladin defenders, ECU
could not take the lead until Buzzy
Braman sank a five-foot hook shot with
11:15 remaining. Even that lead was
shortlived as the 6-10 Strickland tapped
in a short miss
Furman went into a full court press
hoping to rattle the Pirates, but the plan
backfired as the Priate guards had no
trouble penetrating and scoring against
it. The Pirates pushed into a five-point
lead with 3:49 remaining.
See Blakely, page 19.
that eventually took a 50-48 lead. And at
several points the Pirates owned seven
and six point leads.
But the turnovers which plagued the
Pirates in the first half occurred
again.West Ghester took advantage and
with less than six and a half minutes
remaining grabbed the lead once more,
65-64.
For the remainder of the game the
crowd watched a see saw battle, both
teams sharing narrow leads, but neither
able to take full control
Things changed with 4:44 on the
clock when the Pirates lost Rosie
Thompson to fouls. With her went much
of the Pirates’ height on the inside and
rebounding.
ECU had several opportunities to put
the game away in the remaining minutes
but simply did not hit the shots and free
throws it needed most.
Members of
University Golf
Team should meet
the East
team are to me
Thursday, January 15 at 7:00 in Rog
142 at Minges Coliseum.
Golf team meetin
Golf team tryouts
Any student interested in qualifyi
for the East Carolina University G@
with Coach M
McLendon on Thursday, January 15
8:00 in Room 142 Minges Coliseum.
Carolit
ime-Out
transfer, w
offense wi
hind-the-
Ixppy cont! By JOHN EVANS
ssists to tl Sports Editor
n
» scorer fv
and Sulliv |
a balanak
into a quic’ a
nd half, EC (Bae oe basketball team really showed some class in Saturday's 72-68
15 minute ma, over Furman. This writer hopes the gutsy performance displayed by coach
slave atton and the Pirate team replaces the performances like the Old Dominion
25 points. same for the remainder of the season.
i In coming from behind like they did the Pirates showed they do have talent and
irst:*:. after all and that they can respond efficiently in adverse situations.
¢ Instrumental in this win was the piay of Louis Crosby, Earl Garner and Dean
Jartley. But perhaps most instrumental of all performances was the coaching of
Jatton.
| | Patton made adjustments in his lineup for the Furman game, starting Ty Edwards
1d Wade Henkel to get height into the lineup and using a zone to defense the
»aladin offense. For awhile it seemed the Pirates may not pull it off and, indeed, with
jominated tree players on the bench with four fouls they could easily have quit.
nd with » At this juncture is where Crosby, Hartley and Garner became determining factors
1 lead. EG) the game. While Crosby and Garner provided the shooting touch, Hartley came off
ose scorittie bench to replace big men Larry Hunt and Ty Edwards, who both had four fouls,
hree minut ith more than ten minutes left in the game.
d the Pirate Hartley failed to score or make many rebounds, but he did not hurt the team either
tory. pid played good defense during his nine minutes of playing time, which allowed Hunt
ECU scori) return in the final five minutes of the game and lend a crucial hand in the winning
ints and jetformance
<4 abalanc And when one considers Hartley had not played a single minute prior to
points mc,aturday’s game, one has to understand a little better the philosophy which Patton
reaches when he speaks of getting help from the Pirate bench
s will be € Patton got all the help he needed from the bench Saturday from Garner, Hartley,
ll face N, illy Dineen, Buzzy Braman and Ai Edwards as he started Crosby, Henkel, Ty
ry 18 and 1 dwards, Hunt and Reggie Lee in an attempt to mix speed and size into the lineup.
Patton’s game play seemed to work and the ECU mentor said in his post-game
YNTS ymments that he plans to use the same lineup from now on.
15 One can’t say enough about Crosby’s play. Considering the pressure put on the
helby native to produce at the beginning of the year, Crosby has come around
eautifully in the last four games and now seems to be the steadiest player on the
2am.
True, Furman is not the same team talent-wise as it was with Clyde
Jayes-Fessor Leonard, but Robbie Smith, Ray Miller and Jim Strickland showed to
e no slouches. From this writers viewpoint at least, the situation with the East
arolina basketball team seems better. Let’s hope things continue to improve
ON THE LADIES’ SIDE OF THE HOOP
The ECU Women's basketball team was not so lucky in its 79-74 loss Friday
ight, but the women did play an exciting brand of basketball to watch.
{f the girls had not made the type of mistakes which usually come during the first
ame of the year they probably woud have won. Surely they will win many games this
2ar
One has to marvel at the way Debbie Freeman plays basketbnali. It was evident
iat as Debbie Freeman goes this year, so will the success of the women’s team. Ms.
reeman scored 33 points on Friday and was far and away the best performer on the
durt
This writer, for one, looks forward to watching Ms. Freeman and the women's
am play this year and hopefully the students of East Carolina will come out to
atch and support ECU's other fine basketball tear - the women’s team. The next
ome game will be January 24 against Madison College.
NOW OPEN!
SPORTS ~.\ WORLD
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FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976 | j
Thinclads shine at meet
By STEVE WHEELER
Staff Writer
The East Carolina indoor track and
field team went to Richmond this past
Saturday to compete in the East Coast
Invitationals. The Pirates left the Virginia
city with the respect and envy of almost
everyone there by virtue of some great,
record-breaking performances
Head Coach Bill Carson came back to
Greenville with nothing but praise for his
team
“We took 22 boys to the meet, with
just two seniors, and we looked as good
or better overall as any team there,” the
proud mentor stated, “and we looked a
far cry better than any other team from
North Carolina.’
Leading the way for the Pirates were
Sam Phillips, Larry Austin, and Carter
Suggs. Phillips ran the most consistent
of his four-year career in the hurdles and
came away with the college and open
division championship in the 60-yard
high hurdles. In doing so, Phillips set a
new meet record for the race. His time of
7.2 in the semi-finals broke the old
record of 7.3
Coach Carson praised Phillips for his
efforts. “Sam has been runnig hard for
four years, but is just now coming into
his own as a hurdler. He was the most
consistent of his career as he ran 7.3 in
the trials, 7.2 in the semis, and 7.3 in the
finals.”
Competing in the college and open
division, his mark of 7.2 was faster than
the winner of the feature (invitational) 60
hurdies. The winner of the invitational
had a best of 7.5 for the meet
One of Phillips’ top competitors in the
event was his teammate Marvin Rankins
Rankins was not quite as strong in this
event as he was earlier in the season. He
had times of 7.3, 7.4, and 7.3 in the East
Coast event. Carson was high on Rankins
for what he did in the finals.
“Marvin was a little overweight
coming back from the holidays and did
not have the speed he had in our first
meet. But in the finals, he was leading
going into the third hurdle, but he hit the
hurdle and lost his balance. When he
regained his balance, he almost caught
up to win.”
finals, but was only a yard behind
Phillips
Austin turned in a great performance
in the college and open division 60-yard
dash. In the trials of the event, Austin
turned in a six flat to break the meet
record of 6.1. This performance also
broke the record of 6.1, a
record that was held by Olympic. sprint
champion Valerie Borzov of USSR
among others
coliseum
Austin won the semi-finals in 6.1 and
in the finals, it looked as if another
runner jumped the gun, and Austin was
unable to run him down, though both
were timed in 6.1. Coach Carson had
some comments on this
“That other runner clearly jumped the
gun. Larry put on a great rally but just
could not catch him. That was my only
complaint about the meet. It was a well
run meet except for that incident
In the invitational 60-yard dash, Carter
Suggs ran 6.1 in the trials, semi-finals
and finals. In the finals, running against
Steve Riddick, third-ranked sprinter in the
world, Suggs had a slight lead through
40 yards of the event. Riddick came back
to nudge Suggs at the tape. Riddick was
one of only two sprinters to beat Suggs
last year and Suggs came back this year
to show Riddick he was still around
In the mile relay, the ECU team of
Ben Duckenfield, Charlie Moss, James
Freeman, and Robert Franklin finished
third in the college and open division
event in 3:25.8. Carson expressed
pleasure in the good time by the relay
team
“We looked great in the relay. | was
surprised we had that good a time this
early in the season with one of our
regulars not running.”
George Jackson was the only other
Pirate to place in the Invitationais as he
placed fifth in both the long jump and
triple jump. In the long jump, Jackson
leaped 23 feet, 1 inch, while he jumped
48 feet, 8 inches in the triple jump
The next meet for the Pirates will be
Saturday, Jan. 24 at the Tin Can in
Chapel Hill. The University of North
Carolina and the South Carolina
Gamecocks will provide the competition
—
CROWS NEST
RESTAURANT
208 East 10th Street
OPEN 24 HOURS
GOOD LUCK PIRATES!
] 8 FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976
a a ee
From the Inside
with
Pat Williams
The holiday season is now over
It is time to turn to the serious business of running the new year.
This writer doesn’t wish to take the new year too seriously, though for a number
of reasons
Keep reading
ECU And The Southern Conference
Question: Who is the Commissioner of the Southern ConferencO
Question: Why is the Southern Conference considered less than equal to any
other NCAA Division | conference?
Answer: You will never get an answer to the second question by asking the object
of the first one
About the only polite thing one can do in reference to the Southern Conference is
to ignore it. The commissioner stated on regional television recently that the
conference future looked very promising, and that the conference had had feelers
from Marshall, Western Carolina and UT-Chatanooga about joining the conference.
Congratulations. This should do a great deal to cut travel costs, as both places are
a long ways away from Greenville. This writer considers the acceptance (real or
otherwise) of any of these schools as just another in a long line of travesties which
have marked the conference’s history
When a conference's chief claim to fame is that it gave birth to two new
onferences, both of which have since surpassed the current conferences in all
aspects, a simple “Why?” must be asked. The natural order of growth and progression
has been upset: usually it is the father that remains more well-known than the son
and daughter
Thank you, Dr. Jenkins, Bill Cain,Board of Trustees, for recognizing the need for
studying the situation. This Writer feels that you will reac® a solution that is both
wise and just. And this writer calls upon the students in the community to support
the committee’s decision, whatever it will be
The Officials
Once again (as if it had ever stopped) the faithful followers of sport have banded
together to express their general disgust at the men who call the games, and not as
announcers, either
The officiating has been bad at times, granted, but in the case of the NFL
playoffs, the playing has been worse. Moving closer to home, in speaking of the
Southern Conference once again, it is agonizing to watch the officials who work the
games
Plagued by general inconsistencies, they never seem to get what they are doing
right. Too, with ECU's contemplation of exiting from the SC, all aspects of the
university relationships with the SC is threatened.
In short, the whole mess about the officiating is a treadmill. The officials from the
professional level all the way down to the Southern Conference will never be able to
please everyone. This writer wishes they would at least try to conform to the rule
books
Bill Cain
Bill Cain has provided a wealth of information concerning the future of athletics at
ECU. He has been spotted on numerous television interviews, been heard on the radio
from Raleigh to Greenville and his name has popped up in countless newspaper
articles in the past weeks
On top of all this, he has taken the time to speak directly to the Student
Government Association, the Women's Residence Council, and will continue to talk to
anyone who is interested in the program, and as he put it, “especially the people
carrying the ID cards, because if it wasn’t for them, we wouldn’t have an athletic
program
This practice of actually letting students know where the money they pay is
headed has practically fallen by the wayside lately. Bravo, BC.
Baseball Is Back
Where has it been?
At least, not yet, has it been snowed under in litigation. However, with the retum
of Bill Veeck, some flavor will be returned to the game.
This summer game fan(atic) will be waitiang the outcome
The Greenville Sports Club
More kudos should be handed out to the persons responsible for tnis venture
General consensus says that the move has been a success and is still growing in
size
Next quarter, with no mid-day class, this writer should be able to attend. Keep it
up in the meantime, fellas
In Closing
ECU is heavily involved in the winter sports program, one that has annually
brought two conference charnpionships home to rest
In future weeks, we will look at these sports and have some interviews with a
number of people in the area who contribute to the sports program at ECU. Also,
there is a very interesting interview planned with a graduate of the ECU program, one
which will be enlightening and informative
ECU beats West Chester
By NEIL SESSOMS
Staff Writer
The ECU wrestlers shamed West
Chester State 41-3 last Wednesday night
in the Pirates’ first home bout this
season.
The Pirates pinned three opponents
while losing only one match the entire
evening. The loss came in the first match
when Wendell Hardy was defeated by
the Ram's Bob Katz 6-1 in the 118 pound
class. Then it was off to the races.
At the 126-pound spot, Paul Ketcham
downed the Ram's Mike Dominguez 13-8.
It was Paul Osman over Dan Bedensen
6-1 at 134 pounds. Tim Gaghan took the
142 pound class from Larry Walthall 12-7.
Tom Marriott upped his record to 11-2 by
downing Jon Barnwell 10-7 in the 150
pound class.
Paul Thorp started off the pins by
flattening the Ram's 158 pounder Don
Myer with a minute and 20 seconds left
in the second period. Phil Mueller
followed suit by nailing John ALemni in
one minute in the 167 pound calss. A
forfeit by West Chester in the 177 pound
class uppped Ron Whitcomb's record to
19-1-0.
At 190 pounds, Mike Radford
demolished Frank Rodgers 23-6. Fresh-
man D.T. Joyner capped off the evening
pinning Tom Stoddard 40 seconds into
the third period in the heavyweight filum.
Justifiably, coach John Welborn
seemed pleased with his team.
“We wrestled well. We've got to get in
better shape. We had some _ people
ie —
coming off of injuries. We have sor {
people that are going to the nationa
this year. With a little hard work, we
be alright this season. East
Welborn spoke respectfully of thneets Ir
West Chester team. winning
“They have a young, good team. Théhursda)
had some people sick including the teadndefeat
captain. They're going to be a gooaturday
team.” ame in
Welborn commented on the remaindéé-31 me
of the season. The F
“We have a lot of competitioright sv
William and Mary has a much better teastrong a
than last year. Carolina and State aput big «
always tough. We have quite a challenguspenc
ahead.” ‘ollowinc
Sohpomore Phil Mueller, a transfoy the |
student from the University of Wisconsdlayers s
and N.C. Invitational Tournamerhe reasc
champion at 167 pounds, commented c_ In th
his performance. aight of
“| had a good night. I'm not at mecord tc
peak. | sprained my ankle befopnly indi
Christmas. | had to tape it up but it’s ye won t
good shape now.” he 200 t
Mueller commented on the school ar Other
the team. “We've got a real good teafomas
and good people to work with in ttthorne,
wrestling room. | can’t say enough abo«jrkman
coach Welborn. He's always concernéwas also
and he’s just a great coach. This is eters
great school. The people are friendly. io 26.28
got it ten times better here than | did Green bj
Wisconsin.”
The attendance refiected the schooi
support of the nationally ranked Pirate
Mike Radford observed, “It’s great to | =”
at home. It was a good crowd and
really helped the moral.”
Buddies top ranked
East Carolina Intramural Basketbail
league is winding into its fourth week
this week with 28 teams still sporting
unbeaten records. Two teams, the
Swappy Gators and the Lambda Chi
Alpha Raiders, hold 4-0 records and most
of the remainder of the unbeatens have a
3-0 record.
In the Men's Intramural Scoring Race,
Terry Nobles of the Hatchets is the
leader with 26.6 average through three
games. Nobles is followed by former
junior varsity play Erwin Durden and Pi
Kappa Phi’s Len Blackley. Durden has a
22.0 average and Blackley is averaging
20.3 points per game. One other player,
Al McCrimmons, is averaging over 20
points a game, but has not played the
minimum of three games required for
ranking.
In games over the last two weeks, Pi
Kappa Phi routed the Lambda Chi Aipha
“A” team, 89-16, to record the largest
point total and biggest spread so far this
season. Roland Rivera, with 36 points,
holds the top individual scoring record.
Rivera plays for the Scott Brewers.
In the top ten, the Nutties Buddies
are the top ranked team in both ine
Intramural Update and Fountainhead
polls. Other top ten tems in both
rankings are the Average White Team,
Bittweweed Gang, and P.E. Majors.
The biggest win of the year, however,
came when the Delta Zeta team defeaiad
the Chi Omega Two team by a 75-2 score
in women's play. The win was. th
opening game for the defending women
Intramural champions. In the win, th ”
Delta Zeta’s got 30 points from Kath
Myslinski and 18 by Paula Culbreth. Th
Owls’ basket was scored by Teres
Akers.
The Chi Omega One team made u
partly for their sisters’ embarrassmen
with a 25-17 win over Gamma Sigr
Sigma. Kaye Norris had 11 and Jea
Trevathan had 10 for the Owls’ numb
one team. | DAVID K
In other women’s action: Baptijiast wee
Student Union-42 White -24, Alpha
Delta-9 Alpha Delta Pi-6, Alpha Phi-1
Sigma Sigma Sigma |-7, Alpha Omicro
Pi-12 Sigma Sigma Sigmall-3, Fletch
Dorm-28 Greene |-17, Cotten Bunnies-
Greene II-9.
Since the women have played on
one week, no rankings have been
yet.
FOUNTAINHEAD RANKINGS
Nutties Buddies
Purple Steam
Pi Kappa Phi
Average White Team
Bitterweed Gang
P.E. Majors
Walkers
Hatchets
Swappy Gators
Lambda Chi Raiders
SESE SL
_
FOUNTAINHEAD/VOL. 7, NO. 26/13 JANUARY 1976 ] :
a]
ster
/ By STEVE WHEELER
le have sor § Staff Writer
the nationa
rd work, we ak :
East Carolina's swim team swam two
trully of tHmeets in Minges Natatorium last week,
winning one and tosing one. On
xd team. Thehursday, the tankers beat the previously
ding the teadndefeated University of Maine, 64-49
be a gocbaturday, the Tar Heels of North Carolina
tame in and trounced the Pirates by a
the remaindéé-31 Margin.
The Pirates, hampered by the loss of
competitionight swimmers and one diver, swam
sh better teastrong and hard in both meets and put
ind State aput big efforts. The team members were
e achallenguspended by the coaching _ staff
‘ollowing a ten-day trip to Florida taken
4, a transfoy the team during the holidays. The
of Wisconsdlayers suspended were not named, but
Tournamerhe reason was disciplinary.
ommented c In the Maine meet, the Bucs won
sight of the 13 events in running their
m not at mecord to 3-0. Steve Ruedlinger was the
inkle befopnly individual double winner for ECU, as
up but it’s ne won the 50-yard freestyle in 22.77 and
he 200 butterfly in 2:01.03.
ye school ar Other winners for the Pirates were
al good teafomas Palmaren, Keith Wade, Billy
with in ttfhorne, Tom McKenna, and David
enough abo«irkman. The 400 freestyle relay team
yS CONCEMEWas also victorious
th. This is i
‘ : freestyle in
, friendly. 1" Palmgren won the 1,000 freesty
| Green by .01 of a second.Wade won the
the schooi
nked Pirate
5 great tot =
crowd and
in was tt
ing women
he win, th
from Kath be
yulbreth. Thi
by Teres
m made u om
Darrassmen
mma Sigmr
1 and Jea
wis’ numb
10:26.28, nudging out teammate Larry -
200 individual medley in 2:03.41, while
Kirkman placed second with a time of
2:05.70. Thorne won the 50 freestyle in
49.46 while Kirkman won the 200
breaststroke in 2:19.64.
McKenna won the 500 freestyle in
5:01.25, while Barry McCarthy placed
second in 5:03.44. In the 400 freestyle
relay, the team of Alan Clancy, Doug
Brindley, Thorne, and Wade put together
a time of 3:17.24 to win the event.
Assistant Coach Don House summed
up the effort as being “real good.” He
added, “This was our first major test of
the season and we came through it well,
even though we were swimming
shorthanded.”
Carolina completely dominated the
meet on Saturday from the start. The Tar
Heels won the first three events in
running up a 23-2 lead quickly. Billy
Thorne came along in the 50 freestyle
and gave the Bucs their first win in the
meet with a time of 21.81. Alan Clancy
finished third in the event with a time of
22.70
The Pirates finished with two more
victories. Ruedlinger won the 200
butterfly with a time of 2:00.55. And in
the final event the 400-yard freestyle
ielay, the ECU team of Alan Clancy,
Keith Wade, John Tudor, and Billy
Thorne won with a time of 3:16.27 as the
Carolina team was disqualified.
Oe
DAVID KIRKMAN took a first and second place finish in the 200 breaststroke in meets
, Alpha
pha Phi-1
on: ne week. He placed first against Maine and second against Carolina.
ha Omicro
-3, Fletch
Bunnies-
played on
been
MUFFLERS
BATTERIES
BALANCING
INGS
otieed
t
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WHEN YOUR CAR WEEDS
TIRES
REMEMBER US FIRST
(masran crams )(“aarnamomcane ) =!
Phone 786-5244
320 W. HWY. 264 BY-PASS
ALIGNMENT
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GENERAL REPAIR
GREENVILLE
The only second-place finishers for
the Bucs were David Kirkman in the 200
breaststroke with a time of 2:18.26 and
Lund Sox placed second in the one-meter
diving event with 196.15 point.
Coach Ray Scharf singled out five
people for their efforts in the UNC meet
“Steve Ruedlinger had his best time of
the year in winning the 200 butterfly. He
looked real good today.”
Coach Scharf said that Thorne and
Kirkman had “showed a lot of guts and
swam real hard.’
Barry McCarthy finished third in the
1000 freestyle. it was his best time in the
layer suspensions hurt swim team’s performance
event by almost ten seconds.
Freshman diver Lund Sox turned in
his best performances of his career in the
one-and three-meter diving events. In the
one-meter diving, his 196.15 bettered his
previous best by 45 points. His 171.95 in
the three-meter was some 21 points
better than his best previously of 151.05
points. Assistant Coach Don House was
high on Sox. “Lund really gained some
valuable confidence against UNC on
Saturday. He is coming off an injury and
these were his first two collegiate meets
His fine performance had to help him
BLACKLEY
Continued from page 16
Again the lead proved to be a short
one, as the Paladins managed to
recapture a tie at 6666 with 1:49
remaining. A final ECU time out was
called at 1:09 after the Pirates had taken
a 69-68 lead on a free throw by Garner
Shortly later, Garner found himself at
the lane again with a chance to build
ECU's lead to three points. He made the
first shot, but missed the second, as
Strickland rebounded the shot
Moving down the court, the Paladins
desperately tried to penetrate the Buc
zone for the shot that would send the
game into overtime. John Cottingham
eventually missed a contested ten-foot
trv and Larry Hunt rebounded. With two
seconds left, Lee was fouled and hit both
ends of a one-and-one to ice the win for
Patton’s troops. It was a thrilling come
from.behind victory
The Pirates used their entire bench
against the Paladins, while posting a
42.1 field goal average and an 80 per cent
free throw average
In his post-game comments, coach
Patton had lost that intense look that had
been on his face prior to the game. It had
been replaced by an extreme look of
pride and contentment
“Both teams had chances to quit,’
said Patton, “But neither team did. We
made fewer miste