<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039641_0001"/>
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and the truth shall make you free<lb/>
Over 5300 registered<lb/>
Parking problems mount<lb/>
Over 5,300 registered vehicles must<lb/>
vie for the estimated 2,500 campus<lb/>
parking spaces, according to the Traffic-<lb/>
Office.<lb/>
The registration totals include 1.919<lb/>
vehicles listed as "staff<lb/>
Approximately 1,510 day students<lb/>
and 1,306 dorm students are also<lb/>
registered.<lb/>
Chief of Campus Security Joe Calder<lb/>
stated that there were more parking<lb/>
stickers issued than the number of<lb/>
parking spaces available, but that this<lb/>
was done on "all" campuses. According<lb/>
to Calder, "the parking stickers are not a<lb/>
license to park, but a license to hunt (for<lb/>
(in" pnoto Dy Ko?t Mann)<lb/>
parking apace) He '?vtimated that in<lb/>
order to guarantee each student a place<lb/>
to park, the charge would have to be<lb/>
approximately $150-200, as compared<lb/>
to the current $5 charge.<lb/>
Staff parking privileges are free<lb/>
Parking spaces have been made even<lb/>
scarcer by the construction activities for<lb/>
the new Union. Supplies are being stored<lb/>
within a fenced area that was once used<lb/>
for parking. To ease the problem a dirt<lb/>
lot behind the cafeteria has been opened<lb/>
to day students, women's dorm<lb/>
residents, and residents of Slay. Fifty<lb/>
additional spaces will be completed next<lb/>
month beside the Drama building. Also.<lb/>
the ifniversity is purchasing property on<lb/>
the north side of Eighth Street which<lb/>
will be used for parking.<lb/>
Calder rates the presence of<lb/>
unregistered vehicles on campus as one<lb/>
of the major parking problems. He said<lb/>
that if the unregistered vehicles were<lb/>
removed, there would be more room for<lb/>
the registered vehicles to park. Calder<lb/>
noted that fifty percent of the parking<lb/>
areas have been designated "Towing<lb/>
Enforced" sectors, and unregistered<lb/>
vehicles would be towed away on the<lb/>
first offense in these areas.<lb/>
Parking violation fines have been<lb/>
maintained at last year's levels, $2.00 for<lb/>
"wrong zone' parking. $5.00 for<lb/>
unregistered vehicle parking, and $5.00<lb/>
for "no parking" violations.<lb/>
Copies of campus traffic regulations<lb/>
are available in the Traffic Office in<lb/>
Wright building.<lb/>
SLAV DORMITORY STUDENTS find ???d, ai ?M ?,i?ci?? ,? ihrir parkin probl<lb/>
Fahrner rated 'excellent' by students<lb/>
By Pat Crawford<lb/>
Stalf Writer<lb/>
Two outstanding members of the E(T<lb/>
faculty have received awards for teaching<lb/>
excellence as a result of last Spring's<lb/>
student evaluation of instructors.<lb/>
The recipients of the two $500<lb/>
teaching awards are Instructor Louise<lb/>
Aahton Levey of the School of<lb/>
Education's special education faculty<lb/>
and Dr. Alvin A. Fahrner of the<lb/>
Department of History.<lb/>
This is the first year in which the<lb/>
awards, sponsored by the ECU Alumni<lb/>
Association, have been given.<lb/>
Dr. Fahrner holds degrees from<lb/>
Hampden-Syd ney College and<lb/>
UNC Chapel Hill; his field of<lb/>
specialization is Southern U.S. history.<lb/>
Both awards were presented on Sept.<lb/>
5 at the first ECU faculty meeting of the<lb/>
year, held in the Wahl-Coates<lb/>
auditorium.<lb/>
The ECU Alumni .Association had<lb/>
announced that they would give two<lb/>
awards to outstanding teachers, and the<lb/>
Provost appointed an ad hoc committee<lb/>
to determine a system of evaluation. A<lb/>
special committee then drew up<lb/>
questions to be answered by the students<lb/>
to judge instruction.<lb/>
The data on those instructors scoring<lb/>
highest was sent to a sub-committee<lb/>
which selected the two top faculty<lb/>
members Mrs. Levey and Dr. Fahrner.<lb/>
Beaming above his wide green, yellow<lb/>
and red-splotched tie. Dr. Fahrner<lb/>
explained how he found his wayto ECU.<lb/>
"I was born in West Virginia and was<lb/>
reared in Virginia he said. "I spent<lb/>
seven years in the Navy and was at Pearl<lb/>
Harbor on Dec. 7. 1941 World War II<lb/>
caught me unawares in my underwear<lb/>
He had been teaching in South<lb/>
Carolina when he came to East Carolina<lb/>
for an interview.<lb/>
"I liked it he said, i liked the idea<lb/>
that I could emphasize teaching, and I've<lb/>
been emphasizing it ever since<lb/>
This marks Dr. Fahrner's 13th year at<lb/>
ECU. His formula for teaching<lb/>
excellence is a simple one, "History isn't<lb/>
only interesting and exciting, but it's<lb/>
necessary so that a person can be<lb/>
completely educated he said.<lb/>
"A student should be made to feel<lb/>
that he or she is very, very important,<lb/>
and isn't a number, but a person<lb/>
Fahrner believes in the importance of<lb/>
the student, and claims the instructor or<lb/>
university is secondary.<lb/>
"The only reason I'm in the classroom<lb/>
is because there are students in that<lb/>
class he said. "I enjoy seeing a student<lb/>
do well and get no satisfaction when<lb/>
students do poorly<lb/>
Fahrner's enthusiasm and ability to<lb/>
put others at ewt have made him<lb/>
popular and respected among American<lb/>
History students. Students have been<lb/>
known to undergo the rigors of<lb/>
Drop-Add in an effort to squeeze into<lb/>
his classes.<lb/>
The Spring evaluation is testimony<lb/>
enough to Fahrner's appeal and success<lb/>
as a teacher. The comments written by<lb/>
his students are all in praise of some<lb/>
facet of Fahrner's teaching. One student<lb/>
mentions his ability to make history<lb/>
interesting; another says, "He dresses<lb/>
nicely Fahmer, in green jacket, gold<lb/>
pants and brilliant tie, provides perfect<lb/>
evidence for the statement.<lb/>
But one five-word sentence seems to<lb/>
summarize Fahrner's achievement. As a<lb/>
suggestion for improving the university<lb/>
system, one student simply wrote. "Get<lb/>
more instructors like Fahrner<lb/>
It seems that the evaluators knew<lb/>
what they were doing.<lb/>
DR. ALMN FAHRNER in seen here receiving a plaque from Robert L. Jones.<lb/>
Say it ain't so, Joe<lb/>
Are you a bike-rider? If you are, you<lb/>
are now classified as a motor vehicle and<lb/>
must ride your bike on the road, along<lb/>
with the stream of traffic, and obey the<lb/>
same laws that apply to motor vehicles.<lb/>
Yet, for some strange reason, pedestrians<lb/>
and motorists treat cyclists like some<lb/>
sort of foreign invaders that are<lb/>
supposed to vaporize whenever<lb/>
confronted by said pedestrians or<lb/>
motorists.<lb/>
For instance, pedestrians, those<lb/>
mindless wonders who stroll from curb<lb/>
to curb, often waltz right out in front of<lb/>
the cycler, without so much as a stop,<lb/>
look or listen. Cars are even worse. They<lb/>
back into bikes, or force them into the<lb/>
curb, or come up from behind heaving<lb/>
and panting-blasting on the horn, or<lb/>
they pull the neat trick of opening their<lb/>
door into the cycler's path.<lb/>
The offenders have various defenses<lb/>
for these accusations. Among them are<lb/>
that bikes are too small to be seen well.<lb/>
These people just don't look hard<lb/>
enough. Others even bring up the old<lb/>
complaints of cycles being on the<lb/>
sidewalk, or going the wrong way down<lb/>
a one-way street. These complaints are<lb/>
not the issue. If a bike is on the street,<lb/>
going the right way, it should be treated<lb/>
as a motor vehicle.<lb/>
All the offenses against the cycler<lb/>
have caused much frustration to him.<lb/>
One person said that the next time<lb/>
someone opened a car door on him while<lb/>
he was riding his bicycle, he was going to<lb/>
leap off and let the bicycle do whatever<lb/>
damage it could on the erring car andor<lb/>
its operator. In answer to the question of<lb/>
what a cycler should do if a person<lb/>
walked in front of his bike, Mr. Joe<lb/>
Calder, Director of Security, replied, "I<lb/>
guess you'd just have to hit him<lb/>
Cycles should be treated as motor<lb/>
vehicles if they are on the road, going in<lb/>
the right direction. So, watch out for the<lb/>
bicycles, and the 1,000 cyclers in<lb/>
Greenville will appreciate the effort.<lb/>
<lb/>
c<lb/>
?'<lb/>
By GAIL GREGORY<lb/>
Statt Writer<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N CAROLINA<lb/>
VOLUME IV, NUMBER 4<lb/>
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1972<lb/>
Joyner offers computer based<lb/>
information retrieval service<lb/>
Through a new service offered by<lb/>
Joyner Library, all students, faculty, and<lb/>
other interested persons may receive a<lb/>
new type of assistance at a nominal<lb/>
charge. This assistance, called The<lb/>
Computer Searching Service, is a<lb/>
computer bawd information retrieval<lb/>
system, which has been designed to<lb/>
familiarize students and others with<lb/>
information retrieval It is more<lb/>
specialized than the Reader's Guide"<lb/>
and offers many different topics ranging<lb/>
from education to medicine.<lb/>
The searching service has been set up<lb/>
through special arrangement with the<lb/>
North Carolina Science and Technology<lb/>
Research Center. Research Triangle Park.<lb/>
North Carolina. Instead of spending<lb/>
valuable hours searching through<lb/>
different material, a student working on<lb/>
a term paper or master thesis can simply<lb/>
fill out an information sheet in the<lb/>
library and. for a fee of fifteen dollars.<lb/>
will receive all available information on<lb/>
his subject within a week. The fee for<lb/>
faculty members and all others, however,<lb/>
is slightly higher.<lb/>
Only scholarly magazines such as<lb/>
government reports and pollution<lb/>
magazines are available through the<lb/>
service. "Life "Look and other<lb/>
"popular" magazines are not used.<lb/>
Searches of the files of the Educational<lb/>
Resources Information Center (ERIC),<lb/>
The Department of Defense<lb/>
Documentation Center (DDC). the<lb/>
Institute of Textile Technology (ITT),<lb/>
the National Aeronautics and Space<lb/>
Administration (NASA), the National<lb/>
Library of Medicine (NMLi, Chemical<lb/>
Abstracts Service iCACl. among others,<lb/>
are available. Subjects represented in the<lb/>
files include Klementarv and Secondary<lb/>
Education. Physical Therapy,<lb/>
Metallurgy. Chemistry, Health Affairs.<lb/>
Psychology, Medicine, Library Science,<lb/>
Textiles, Aerospaci rechnology,<lb/>
Conservation, Water Resources, and<lb/>
many other topics.<lb/>
According to Ralph I, Si ott of the<lb/>
Joyner Library, the service was originally<lb/>
set up to help such companies as Du<lb/>
Pont and Burlington Mills in research<lb/>
However, the government decided that it<lb/>
would be very helpful to students doing<lb/>
r.?March and would also train North<lb/>
Carolina students in using computer<lb/>
tools, which could be useful m their<lb/>
future work.<lb/>
Actually, students are receiving the<lb/>
computer searching service at a discount.<lb/>
The cost to run the service is really<lb/>
ninety dollars per student. Students pay<lb/>
only fifteen dollars, and it takes the<lb/>
computer around five minutes<lb/>
(sometimes ten minutes) to run a search.<lb/>
The state is subsidizing the other money.<lb/>
Scott, however, feels that the service<lb/>
could be free. He believes that the state<lb/>
could subsidize all of the fees. "We're<lb/>
trying to teach students to use service<lb/>
machines, so the cost should be reduced.<lb/>
I hope that in the future, it can possibly<lb/>
be free Scott stressed the fact that the<lb/>
service's importance is definitely worth<lb/>
fifteen dollars, regardless, and he hopes<lb/>
that all interested persons will come in<lb/>
and take advantage of this opportunity.<lb/>
Union forms new committee to<lb/>
coordinate publicity activities<lb/>
Do you have any type of literary,<lb/>
artistic, or oral ability? Do you have a<lb/>
creative drive to do something? Get<lb/>
involved. The newly formed Student<lb/>
Union Publicity Committee needs you'<lb/>
The Publicity Committee is a new idea<lb/>
this year It is basically a service to the<lb/>
other committees. A member of the<lb/>
Publicity Committee will serve on each<lb/>
of the other committees in an adv isory<lb/>
role.<lb/>
The idea is that members of the<lb/>
Publicity Committee will help the other<lb/>
committees coordinate their advertising<lb/>
and publicity. The committee develops<lb/>
advertising and publicity campaigns to<lb/>
inform the university community about<lb/>
Published, appointed<lb/>
the events sponsored by all committees.<lb/>
The committee met for the first time<lb/>
Monday night to decide on the best<lb/>
approach to inform the university-<lb/>
community of the events sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Union. At this meeting<lb/>
Marilyn Maxwell was decided on at<lb/>
chairman. Thi committee found that<lb/>
they were faced with a lot of work and<lb/>
more members are needed.<lb/>
The Student Union advertising will be<lb/>
developed to its fullest. The committee<lb/>
will also be responsible for a monthly<lb/>
publication of the Entertainer. The<lb/>
committee will utilize all media forms.<lb/>
Any and ail interested persons are<lb/>
asked to contact the Student I'nion<lb/>
office in 214 Wright Annex.<lb/>
Geology profs recognized<lb/>
Dr. B. A. Bishop, Associate Professor<lb/>
of Geology at East Carolina University,<lb/>
authored a recently published paper,<lb/>
entitled "Petrography and Ongin of<lb/>
Cretaceous Limestones. Sierra de<lb/>
Picachos and Vicinity, Nuevo Leon.<lb/>
Mexico The paper, which appears in<lb/>
the Junel issue of the "Journal of<lb/>
Sedimentary Petrology contains a<lb/>
description and classification of the<lb/>
various types of limestones based on thin<lb/>
section petrography. The environment of<lb/>
deposition for the fine-grained<lb/>
Cretaceous limestones is interpreted to<lb/>
have been a basin in which the depth of<lb/>
water was several hundred feet. Much of<lb/>
the carbonate mud is believed tp have<lb/>
come from coccolithophores. extremely<lb/>
small calcareous pelagic microorganisms<lb/>
that have inhabited the surface waters of<lb/>
the oceans from the Jurassic to the<lb/>
present.<lb/>
Scott W Snyder has joined the faculty<lb/>
of the Department of Geology at East<lb/>
Carolina University as an .Assistant<lb/>
Professor. Snyder attended public school<lb/>
in Canton, Ohio and obtained his<lb/>
undergraduate degree from the College<lb/>
of Wooster, Wooster. Ohio. Snyder's<lb/>
graduate work was at Tulane University.<lb/>
New Orleans. Louisiana where he was<lb/>
awarded the Master of Science degree in<lb/>
Geology in 1968. He is presently<lb/>
completing work on his doctoral<lb/>
dissertation on Planktonic Foraminifera<lb/>
in Surface Sediments of the Gulf of<lb/>
Mexico.<lb/>
Snyder is mained to the former Lorna<lb/>
Richmond of Canton, Ohio, and they<lb/>
have one daughter. Kimberly Ann.<lb/>
During his graduate studies, Snyder was<lb/>
a National Defense Educational Act Title<lb/>
IV Fellow. He is a member of Sigma<lb/>
Gamma Epsilon and Sigma XL<lb/>
ctan pnoto Dy Hots Mann)<lb/>
CYCLERS VIOLATING one way street warning run risk of ticket. . .or worse.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039641_0002"/><lb/>
 i a' -<lb/>
Acuff gilds golden memories<lb/>
By BOB MARSKE<lb/>
SI4"<lb/>
vr mi tudenti parent, tecult)<lb/>
and fans thrilled to the lound of Roy<lb/>
A utr and the Smoky Mountain Boyi<lb/>
last Saturday in .1 free concert on the<lb/>
mall, ai Kci began iti miniconcert<lb/>
leaaon Complete with Acuff'i yoyo<lb/>
routine, Iils fiddle balancing act, and<lb/>
such old favorites as The U abash<lb/>
Cannonball" and 'The Great Speckled<lb/>
Bird thii year'i parent' daj rtarted<lb/>
successfully<lb/>
Mr. Acuff has ipent 34 years in<lb/>
Nashville's "Grand old Opry' and nearly<lb/>
10 on the profeaiional stage For most of<lb/>
thoae vears, he has traveled with the<lb/>
same group of men, many of whom were<lb/>
with him in Saturday's concert, This<lb/>
concert was significant for two reasons<lb/>
Not only was it the first of this year's<lb/>
?eaaon, but it marked the 30th<lb/>
anniversary of Acuff'i only other<lb/>
Greenville concert, which was held in<lb/>
1942.<lb/>
NO ELECTRIC INSTRUMENTS<lb/>
The Smoky Mountain Boys use no<lb/>
electric instruments, but only because<lb/>
there are s few country music players<lb/>
skilled in their use The instruments<lb/>
which they do use are the piano, many<lb/>
fiddles, chromatic and straight<lb/>
harmonicas, a five-stringed banjo, a<lb/>
Spanish guitar, nd a dobro, This dobro,<lb/>
often referred to as .1 Hawaiian guitar, is<lb/>
played masterfully by Pete "Oswald"<lb/>
Kirbv. the oldest member of the troupe.<lb/>
ROY ACl FF AM) THE SMOKY MOUNTAIN HOYS charmed many on Parent's Day.<lb/>
on the piano and harmonica; Charlie<lb/>
Collins and Gene Martin on the guitar<lb/>
The other members are Howard<lb/>
Forrester on the fiddle; Jimmy Riddle<lb/>
and vocal; and Onie Wheeler with a<lb/>
harmonica and vocal and songwritmg<lb/>
talents to complete the Smoky Mountain<lb/>
Boys<lb/>
Perhaps id' equal interest was the<lb/>
audience. Individuals from every group<lb/>
were present. There were old country<lb/>
music fans, children of tomorrows<lb/>
generation, blacks, whites, and people<lb/>
from every age and background, all<lb/>
groovin' on Roy Acuff.<lb/>
 .?<lb/>
GOOSE CREEK SYMPHONY has a feeling they want to share Friday at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Goos??raek Symphony<lb/>
They sing of a feeling<lb/>
Photography by Ross Mann<lb/>
u?-<lb/>
M<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?????????????<lb/>
This concert was set up by the<lb/>
miniconcert committee. It is their hope,<lb/>
through concerts such as this, to end<lb/>
East Carolina's reputation as a suitcase<lb/>
college, where many students go home<lb/>
every weekend. The committee's next<lb/>
major attraction will be Oct. 26, when<lb/>
Charlie Byrd will appear in another free<lb/>
concert on the mall.<lb/>
? ?????<lb/>
Not a town, less than a village. Goose<lb/>
Creek is a small, quiet sort of place in<lb/>
southern Kentucky. Clean, sweet air and<lb/>
the smell of new-mown grass, early<lb/>
evenings and the buzz of crickets off in<lb/>
the bushes Goose Creek is the kind of<lb/>
place a lot of people are looking for.<lb/>
"A while back, Ritchie Hart came out<lb/>
of Goose Creek and went to Phoenix.<lb/>
Arizona; he settled down, and he plans<lb/>
to stay there. But Ritchie kept<lb/>
remembering about being young Back in<lb/>
Goose Creek and how good it feels, and<lb/>
he wanted to share the feeling; he<lb/>
wanted to tell somebody about it.<lb/>
So Ritchie Hart found some other<lb/>
people who seemed to know all about<lb/>
the Goose Creek kind of feeling. Five<lb/>
other people who knew just what<lb/>
Ritchie meant; and it was nice liecause<lb/>
they were all living in Phoenix, too.<lb/>
They got together and started talking<lb/>
and writing and singing about Goose<lb/>
Creek.<lb/>
Now Ritchie's friends had come from<lb/>
a number of important places. Fred<lb/>
Weisz started back in Port-of-Spam.<lb/>
Trinidad. Somewhere he learned about<lb/>
Goose Creek, He brought a fiddle and a<lb/>
banjo and a bass and a guitar and a lot of<lb/>
playing time with him. Now he spends<lb/>
his time singing about Goose Creek.<lb/>
Doug Haywood is pretty young,<lb/>
really anyway, it seems you should have<lb/>
lived more than 20 years to know as<lb/>
much as he does about Goose Creek.<lb/>
Doug was looking around for some<lb/>
friends who liked down-home kind of<lb/>
music, and the Goose Creek people were<lb/>
just what he had in mind. When he is not<lb/>
wnting. he's playing the clarinet and the<lb/>
guitar and the mandolin and singing of<lb/>
course.<lb/>
Poor old M.ckey McGee. they did an<lb/>
album and forgot all about putting his<lb/>
name on the cover with the rest They<lb/>
did not forget to include his drums when<lb/>
it got right down to the playing, though<lb/>
and he says he doesn't really mind too<lb/>
much when they all call him the lonely<lb/>
drummer.<lb/>
The Symphony completes the Goose<lb/>
Creek feeling with Paul Howard playing<lb/>
clarinet, guitar and dobro, along with<lb/>
Bob Henke doing his guitar, organ,<lb/>
piano, and jews harp.<lb/>
Oh, yes. There's one more very<lb/>
important member of Goose Creek<lb/>
Symphony Beauty. Beauty is a blue<lb/>
tick hound, really an ugly dog, but she<lb/>
has character, and she obviously likes<lb/>
music, getting nght up on stage and<lb/>
watching the Goose Creek people with<lb/>
moist adoration.<lb/>
Beauty and the Symphony begin<lb/>
showtime at 8 p.m Friday, September<lb/>
22 at Minges Coliseum Student and<lb/>
guest tickets are on sale now at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office for $2 and $3<lb/>
respectively. Public ticket are also on<lb/>
sale at the Record Bar in Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
? ??????<lb/>
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Applications are being accepted<lb/>
for<lb/>
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class officers and SGA Legislatu<lb/>
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re<lb/>
in the SGA office, room 303 Wright Annex. I<lb/>
9:00-4:00<lb/>
Deadline is Thursday, September 21.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039641_0004"/><lb/>
C&amp;ffflSE(8?fl<lb/>
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GREENVILLE<lb/>
1<lb/>
CAMPUS rAIKoL<lb/>
J<lb/>
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PEP RALLY<lb/>
Ttwn will be a pep rally on the Mall<lb/>
Thursday night. Come join us for<lb/>
pre-game excitement, sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Union Spirit Committee.<lb/>
ECU FIGHT SONG<lb/>
Stand up and cheer for East Carolina<lb/>
Fight on to Pirate victory<lb/>
Oh Pirate team there is no finer<lb/>
In all of Pirate history<lb/>
Go out and win for East Carolina<lb/>
For win or lose we're all for you<lb/>
So for the Purple and Gold we will FIGHT!<lb/>
Fight! Fight! HEH! Fight on to victory.<lb/>
" veny imPReSlive 8crr can You Give Ticket ?<lb/>
ORB AT SCOTT, LOOK AT<lb/>
My V5W ROOM<lb/>
Vr<lb/>
Heard a good joke<lb/>
lately?<lb/>
Share them with all the FOUNTA1NHEAD<lb/>
readers. Jokes will be chosen for originality and<lb/>
content. Please, no objectionable words or over-<lb/>
suggestive connotations.<lb/>
All jokes may be submitted to the ENTER<lb/>
TAINMENT PAGE co the Fountainhead.<lb/>
"H"t"f "t<lb/>
NEED<lb/>
A REFRIGATOR?<lb/>
CAN YOU<lb/>
DRAW ME ?<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
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(across from Shoney's)<lb/>
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If you can, you may<lb/>
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Apply in person at the<lb/>
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WOftM'MfXCflOOQflBOfl<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039641_0005"/><lb/>
LLY<lb/>
on the MaJI<lb/>
join us for<lb/>
ored by the<lb/>
ittee.<lb/>
vIG<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
iner<lb/>
olina<lb/>
you<lb/>
ve will FIGHT!<lb/>
n to victory.<lb/>
Bucs unbeaten in two games<lb/>
Fountainhead, TuestUy, September 19, 1972, Page 5<lb/>
MAW WITH A<lb/>
FORM<lb/>
c X<lb/>
u<lb/>
E ?<lb/>
9<lb/>
may<lb/>
as a<lb/>
it the<lb/>
)<lb/>
ou<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
I<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
SpurU I dltOI<lb/>
Defense! Defense!<lb/>
Defense!<lb/>
This relatively new<lb/>
spectator chant became<lb/>
the by-word for ECU in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium Saturday<lb/>
night as the Piratei<lb/>
whitewashed Southern<lb/>
Illinois 16-0.<lb/>
It was the defense<lb/>
which overcame the<lb/>
frustrations of a sputtering<lb/>
offense for ECU's second<lb/>
Benefit students<lb/>
Defensive effort paces 16-0 win<lb/>
straight win in the still<lb/>
young season<lb/>
Item one. Going against<lb/>
a veteran team which<lb/>
averaged 22.6 points per<lb/>
game in 1971, the Pirates<lb/>
handed Sill its first goose<lb/>
egg since Tampa did it in<lb/>
1969 some 27 games ago.<lb/>
It was ECU's first shutout<lb/>
since mid-1970.<lb/>
Item two. By holding<lb/>
Sll' to minus seven yards<lb/>
on the ground, the Pirates<lb/>
have an amazing two-game<lb/>
mark of 14 yards allowed<lb/>
rushing.<lb/>
Also, the S a lukil<lb/>
managed only 44 yards in<lb/>
total offense, 111 fewer<lb/>
than VMI had in ECU's<lb/>
previous win.<lb/>
Furthermore, the ECU<lb/>
goal has not been crossed<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
Item three. Rusty<lb/>
Markland, Mike Myrick<lb/>
and Danny Kepley picked<lb/>
'jff enemy passes and<lb/>
Butch Strawderman nearly<lb/>
did the same in the SIU<lb/>
Check-out rooms opened<lb/>
Students who formerly<lb/>
were unable to participate<lb/>
in leisure time sports<lb/>
activities due to a lack of<lb/>
equipment or facilities are<lb/>
the beneficiaries of a new<lb/>
check-out program<lb/>
instituted recently at<lb/>
Minges and Memorial<lb/>
Gyms.<lb/>
Items from footballs<lb/>
and basketballs to golf<lb/>
clubs are available in the<lb/>
equipment rooms located<lb/>
on the main floor of<lb/>
Minges and downstairs in<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Students may obtain<lb/>
this equipment from 8<lb/>
a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays, 9<lb/>
a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturdays<lb/>
and from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Sundays.<lb/>
Gym and recreation<lb/>
areas are open for student<lb/>
use during these hours<lb/>
unless a class or organized<lb/>
athletic or intramural<lb/>
activity is being conducted<lb/>
there at the time.<lb/>
"We have had an<lb/>
extremely good response<lb/>
to this program and only<lb/>
one item has been lost<lb/>
said Dr. Edgar Hooks,<lb/>
chairman of the health and<lb/>
physical education<lb/>
department. "If the<lb/>
students work with us and<lb/>
show responsibility toward<lb/>
the equipment, we can<lb/>
have a great many items<lb/>
for their advantage<lb/>
Hooks noted that<lb/>
faculty and staff may also<lb/>
use the equipment, but it<lb/>
is primarily for the use of<lb/>
students, upon showing ID<lb/>
and activity cards.<lb/>
No one outside the<lb/>
University community<lb/>
may use the equipment or<lb/>
facilities, even if they are<lb/>
with students, and regular<lb/>
checks are made of people<lb/>
engaged in the activities.<lb/>
Dressing rooms in the<lb/>
gyms are also available for<lb/>
student use.<lb/>
However, Hooks<lb/>
reminds students that they<lb/>
should lock up their<lb/>
personal gear when using<lb/>
the facilities. He also<lb/>
requests that equipment<lb/>
be returned the- same day<lb/>
in which it is acquired.<lb/>
Jack Boone of the<lb/>
physical education<lb/>
department has charge of<lb/>
the equipment rooms, and<lb/>
he urges students with<lb/>
questions or requests to<lb/>
visit the rooms and see<lb/>
what is available.<lb/>
Future plans for the<lb/>
check-out program include<lb/>
the addition of ordinary<lb/>
items such as frisbees and<lb/>
the construction of an<lb/>
archery field.<lb/>
end zone. Fumbles<lb/>
recovered by Mike Shea<lb/>
and Cary Godette also did<lb/>
much tc put pressure on<lb/>
?he Salukis.<lb/>
Item four. Southern<lb/>
Illinois' initial first down<lb/>
came on a penalty with<lb/>
less than five minutes left<lb/>
in the first half. Of six<lb/>
Saluki first downs in the<lb/>
game, three came in SIU's<lb/>
final first half possession.<lb/>
In third down situations,<lb/>
the Salukis failed to<lb/>
convert in 11 attempts.<lb/>
ECU went nine for 22<lb/>
Item five. Southern<lb/>
Illinois moved into Pirate<lb/>
territory only twice all<lb/>
night once on a fumble in<lb/>
the finaJ period and once<lb/>
in the second period on a<lb/>
legitimate drive, when SIU<lb/>
collected those three first<lb/>
downs.<lb/>
On the earlier occasion,<lb/>
the Salukis penetrated to<lb/>
the ECU 22, but an alerted<lb/>
defense stiffened and a<lb/>
field goal attempt failed.<lb/>
So inspired was the play<lb/>
of the defensive unit that<lb/>
it overshadowed a record<lb/>
breaking performance by<lb/>
place kicker Ricky<lb/>
McLester.<lb/>
FIELD GOALS<lb/>
The six-foot Oakboro<lb/>
freshman booted three<lb/>
field goals in the game, all<lb/>
in the first half, and set<lb/>
team and individual<lb/>
records. He is one boot<lb/>
short of the individual<lb/>
career mark after tying<lb/>
team and individual season<lb/>
records.<lb/>
McLester's first field<lb/>
goal came from 37 yards<lb/>
out with 14:09 left in the<lb/>
first half after a Pirate<lb/>
drive was stalled on the<lb/>
SIU 21. He added two<lb/>
25-yard field goals, each<lb/>
after an SIU turnover set<lb/>
the Pirates in good field<lb/>
position, and it was 9-0 at<lb/>
th- half.<lb/>
The game's only<lb/>
touchdown came midw;jy<lb/>
in the third quarter as<lb/>
quarterback Carl<lb/>
Bummerell flew over both<lb/>
lines from one foot out.<lb/>
The play capped a 13-play,<lb/>
60-yard drive, the best of<lb/>
the game, and McLester<lb/>
added his 10th point for<lb/>
the final addition to the<lb/>
scoreboard.<lb/>
Although neither team<lb/>
threatened the rest of the<lb/>
night, the wildly partisan<lb/>
16,509 fans, including one<lb/>
of the most enthusiastic<lb/>
student cheering sections<lb/>
in recent years, reared<lb/>
their approval as the<lb/>
Pirates completed their<lb/>
domination of the Salukis.<lb/>
OFFENSE<lb/>
Offensively for the<lb/>
PiraU-s, the night belonged<lb/>
to Les Strayhorn who<lb/>
carried 33 times for 101<lb/>
yards. In a game in which<lb/>
the Pirates gained 252<lb/>
yards on the ground,<lb/>
Strayhorn took over the<lb/>
team rushing leadership<lb/>
from Carlester Grumpier.<lb/>
Strayhorn's SIU<lb/>
counterpart, George<lb/>
Loukas, was the leading<lb/>
Saluki rusher with 15<lb/>
yards, far below his norm<lb/>
after gaining 1,052 yards<lb/>
on the ground last year.<lb/>
Through the air lanes,<lb/>
Summerell was not quite<lb/>
as impressive as usual,<lb/>
hitting only four of 16<lb/>
tosses despite five more<lb/>
attempts.<lb/>
ECU head coach Sonny<lb/>
Buc hooters blast by Marines 7-1<lb/>
as season opener fast approaches<lb/>
NEW CHECK-OI<lb/>
education depart<lb/>
rooms in Minges<lb/>
athletic equipment<lb/>
takes advantage of<lb/>
(Staff photo by Ross Mann)<lb/>
r ROOMS: The health and physical<lb/>
merit recent!) opened check-out<lb/>
Coliseum and Memorial Gym for<lb/>
for student use. Here, a student<lb/>
the sot-up during a recreation break.<lb/>
New column set<lb/>
Beginning Thursday,<lb/>
this page will have a<lb/>
once-a-week column about<lb/>
activities not directly<lb/>
Baseball<lb/>
practice<lb/>
has begun<lb/>
Varsity baseball tryouts<lb/>
have begun for the 1973<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Freshmen and other<lb/>
eligibles desiring to try for<lb/>
positions should contact<lb/>
head coach Earl Smith at<lb/>
his office in the Scales<lb/>
Field House annex<lb/>
Athletes competing in a<lb/>
fall sport may try out at a<lb/>
later date, when their<lb/>
season is over.<lb/>
related to the ECU athletic-<lb/>
department.<lb/>
There will be features<lb/>
and news articles about<lb/>
hunting, fishing, auto<lb/>
racing, boating, and other<lb/>
areas of general interest to<lb/>
the student body.<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
writing such a column on a<lb/>
weekly or occasional basis<lb/>
should contact sports<lb/>
editor Don Trausneck in<lb/>
the Fountainhead office,<lb/>
second floor Wright.<lb/>
Thursday: a reprint<lb/>
from Wildlife in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
It was a field day for<lb/>
the ECU soccer team<lb/>
Saturday as the Pirates<lb/>
traveled to Jacksonville to<lb/>
play the New River Marine<lb/>
Corps Air Station team.<lb/>
In kicking off their<lb/>
1972 pre-season slate<lb/>
before a partisan crowd,<lb/>
the ECU booters stuck to<lb/>
the kind of ball control<lb/>
game head coach John<lb/>
Lovstedt and assistant Ed<lb/>
Wolcott have stressed since<lb/>
the beginning of practice<lb/>
some three weeks ago.<lb/>
Less than a minute into<lb/>
the game, the Marines<lb/>
drew first blood on a<lb/>
25-yard chip shot which<lb/>
dropped behind goalie<lb/>
Walter McCauley and into<lb/>
the nets for a fluke score.<lb/>
With their spirits not<lb/>
dampened, the Buc<lb/>
booters bounded right<lb/>
back by reeling off seven<lb/>
consecutive crucial goals.<lb/>
Right forward Jeff<lb/>
Kunkler converted for the<lb/>
first Pirate goal on a<lb/>
10-yard shot after a pass<lb/>
from Tom O'Shea. For the<lb/>
go-ahead second goal,<lb/>
O'Shea rippled the net on<lb/>
a fine assist from Kunkler.<lb/>
With the d ef ense<lb/>
playing superbly, the Buc<lb/>
booters were able to keep<lb/>
the ball in the attack half<lb/>
of the field consistently.<lb/>
Before the first 45-minute<lb/>
half was over, the potent<lb/>
Pirate attack had added<lb/>
three more goals.<lb/>
POWER FOOT<lb/>
The third score was<lb/>
again the result of the<lb/>
powerful Kunkler foot on<lb/>
a pass from right wing<lb/>
Dave Myles.<lb/>
Myles came right back<lb/>
with the next score on an<lb/>
unassisted shot from some<lb/>
20 yards out. Then, as if<lb/>
he were not satisfied,<lb/>
Myles added the fifth<lb/>
Pirate goal minutes later<lb/>
on another fine shot.<lb/>
Scoring slowed in the<lb/>
second half, but the<lb/>
booters were able to<lb/>
produce two more goals.<lb/>
Freshman Danny<lb/>
O'Shea drilled in a shot<lb/>
from his right wing<lb/>
position after a<lb/>
tailor-made pass from<lb/>
halfback Bill Valentine.<lb/>
The final goal was<lb/>
contributed once more by<lb/>
last year's leading scorer,<lb/>
Tom O'Shea, who placed a<lb/>
shot perfectly in the left<lb/>
hand comer of the goal<lb/>
after an assisting pass from<lb/>
Jeff Kunkler.<lb/>
ACCURATE PASSING<lb/>
Accurate passing ability<lb/>
made the majority of the<lb/>
Pirate goals possible. The<lb/>
entire team demonstrated<lb/>
passin'g accuracy,<lb/>
particularly left wing Rick<lb/>
Johnson and middle<lb/>
halfback Tom Tozer, two<lb/>
very promising freshmen.<lb/>
The tight Pirate defense,<lb/>
led by outstanding<lb/>
fullback lettermen Bob<lb/>
Poser and Brad Smith,<lb/>
coupled with freshman<lb/>
Bob Gebhardt to<lb/>
effectively restrict the<lb/>
penetration of the Marine<lb/>
attack.<lb/>
With the game a<lb/>
non-league encounter, the<lb/>
Bucs were able to play<lb/>
more than the league<lb/>
maximum 16 players. This<lb/>
gave the coaches a look at<lb/>
the entire squad and they<lb/>
seemed pleased at the<lb/>
depth this year's team<lb/>
contains.<lb/>
SATISFACTION<lb/>
Lovstedt expressed<lb/>
satisfaction at the team's<lb/>
passing and ball control<lb/>
ability. It was evident that<lb/>
the drills installed by<lb/>
coaches John Lovstedt and<lb/>
Ed Wolcott are beginning<lb/>
to take form in game<lb/>
situations.<lb/>
Citing individual stars<lb/>
was difficult as it was<lb/>
definitely a team effort.<lb/>
The booters will host<lb/>
the Marines in another<lb/>
scrimmage Saturday at<lb/>
2:00 p.m. on the Pirates<lb/>
home field before taking<lb/>
on UNC Monday in their<lb/>
first regular season<lb/>
encounter.<lb/>
PRO BASKETBALL<lb/>
Soonsofi'd By The Greenville Jayceet<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
COUGARSiaba)<lb/>
LV A. A A A<lb/>
Vs.<lb/>
KINGS<lb/>
SUPPORT ATHLETICS<lb/>
HIGH SCHOOL<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
or PRO<lb/>
H. L HODGES CO<lb/>
210 E. 5th St.<lb/>
ISP0RTING GOODS<lb/>
HUNTING-FISHING<lb/>
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Telephone 752-4156<lb/>
KANSAS CITY<lb/>
OMAHA KINGS nba yl!y<lb/>
1 WED. NIGHT<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 27th<lb/>
8:00 P.M.<lb/>
MINGES COLISEUM<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
TICKET PRICES<lb/>
ADVANCE GATE<lb/>
Reserve 4.00 500<lb/>
Adult 3.00 4 00<lb/>
Student &amp; 2.00 3 00<lb/>
Child<lb/>
Tickets available at Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
and Athletic Department Ticket Office.<lb/>
Randle, who will send his<lb/>
team against Appalachian<lb/>
State in Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Saturday night, could<lb/>
hardly be heard above tin<lb/>
din in the post game<lb/>
dressing room. But he had<lb/>
much praise once again for<lb/>
his undefeated squad.<lb/>
FOR REAL<lb/>
"We may be few in<lb/>
numbers, but we are for<lb/>
real he said. "This win<lb/>
tonight convinced me. We<lb/>
played a team that was<lb/>
bigger, stronger and more<lb/>
physical, and I think we<lb/>
played them to the hilt It<lb/>
is the greatest effort I have<lb/>
ever seen at East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Randle noted that there<lb/>
will be no letdown for the<lb/>
next game and said that<lb/>
though ECU is a small<lb/>
team, "they arc in good<lb/>
condition. You did not see<lb/>
any drooping heads<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
Saturday's Youth Night<lb/>
battle is scheduled for a<lb/>
7:30kickoff.<lb/>
(Sl? photO By Ross Ujnn<lb/>
BREAKS IT I Pi ECl linebackei Man (Butch)<lb/>
Strawderman reach ei to knock down a pate jut leaving<lb/>
the hand of the Southern Illinois quarterback Saturda)<lb/>
mclit Strawdernuwi v?ac ?ucceeafu and, on another<lb/>
occasion, neailv picked oil a pahs in the Saluki end BOM<lb/>
lor a score.<lb/>
Football club tops Carolina<lb/>
in impressive season opener<lb/>
ECU began defense of<lb/>
its club football<lb/>
championship with a 32-7<lb/>
win over Carolina<lb/>
Saturday on the winners'<lb/>
field.<lb/>
It was the season opener<lb/>
for both clubs.<lb/>
Led by the running of<lb/>
Mike Weirich and the<lb/>
passing of Dennis Lynch,<lb/>
the Pirate club exploded<lb/>
for a 26-0 fourth quarter<lb/>
lead before the Tar Heel<lb/>
Club was able to score.<lb/>
Only a 53 yard scoring<lb/>
bomb prevented an ECU<lb/>
shutout.<lb/>
The Tar Heels actually<lb/>
began the scoring for ECU<lb/>
as a Carolina punter was<lb/>
out of the end zone before<lb/>
getting h m kick off. ECU<lb/>
made it 10-0 with 10<lb/>
minutes left in the first<lb/>
half.<lb/>
Quarterback Lynch<lb/>
passed to his brother,<lb/>
tailback Mike Lynch, for<lb/>
the score on a 41-yard<lb/>
gem. Weirich went over for<lb/>
the conversion.<lb/>
During the half-time<lb/>
break, ECU head coach<lb/>
Tom Michel told his<lb/>
players. "We're going to<lb/>
take a snowball and roll it.<lb/>
and there is no one going<lb/>
to stop us<lb/>
The squad seemed to<lb/>
heed his words, marching<lb/>
63 yards in 13 plays for a<lb/>
score after taking the<lb/>
second half kickoff.<lb/>
It was 16-0 after Lynch,<lb/>
looking like a Roger<lb/>
Staubach and dropping<lb/>
back to his 30 while<lb/>
eluding tackles, flipped an<lb/>
eight yard toss to Lin<lb/>
Spears in Lhe end zone.<lb/>
GJenn "Batman" Batten's<lb/>
conversion made the score<lb/>
18-0.<lb/>
After ECU held on the<lb/>
next series and forced<lb/>
Carolina to punt. John<lb/>
Masotti blocked the kick<lb/>
and ran it 27 yards into<lb/>
the end zone for a score.<lb/>
Lynch passed to Tom<lb/>
Hayes for a 26-0 lead.<lb/>
Moments later Carolina<lb/>
got its only tally on the<lb/>
53-yard pass, but BCD<lb/>
came right back with eight<lb/>
minutes left to close the<lb/>
scoring.<lb/>
Greg Fuderer, taking a<lb/>
tosr. from Chip Isaacs,<lb/>
eluded a few tackles and<lb/>
went into the end zone at<lb/>
the end of a 43-yard play.<lb/>
Quarterback Lynch ran<lb/>
for the extra point but<lb/>
wound up two yards short.<lb/>
Michel was pleased with<lb/>
his team's performance,<lb/>
noting that the players had<lb/>
only been working<lb/>
together about nine days.<lb/>
"Carolina had about a<lb/>
week and a half of practice<lb/>
on us and that reaJiy had<lb/>
me scared he said. "But<lb/>
we played sound,<lb/>
fundamental football,<lb/>
making only normal<lb/>
mistakes. I think we will<lb/>
be real powerful<lb/>
Congratulations<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
with<lb/>
Pioneer<lb/>
wrw<lb/>
2 - $<lb/>
Special Student<lb/>
Prices<lb/>
Cn<lb/>
Systems<lb/>
We Operate Our<lb/>
Own<lb/>
Repair Shop<lb/>
Financing<lb/>
Available<lb/>


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