<?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="00039686_0001"/>
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ECU med school'less than adequate'<lb/>
According to an accreditation ing the curriculum, although ap- Pltt ComtY physicians, the outstanding scholars in most de- <lb/>
According to an accreditation<lb/>
report on ECU's one-year Nedical<lb/>
School, the ECU program "is pre-<lb/>
sently less than adequate to meet<lb/>
the needs of present-day medical<lb/>
education<lb/>
The accreditation report was<lb/>
released by a conmittee represent-<lb/>
inq the Association of ctedical<lb/>
Colleaes and the Council of Nfed-<lb/>
ical Education of the American<lb/>
Medical Association.<lb/>
The report criticized the<lb/>
lack, of communication between<lb/>
ECU and the UNC-Chapel Hill med-<lb/>
ical school, with which it shares<lb/>
a cooperative arrangement.<lb/>
"It was clear said the<lb/>
committe, "that there has been<lb/>
very little interchange between<lb/>
the faculty at ECU and UNC regard-<lb/>
ing the curriculum, although ap<lb/>
parently very recently there has<lb/>
been some augmented exchanqe.<lb/>
"However, a true collegial rela<lb/>
tionship with discussion of the<lb/>
pros and cons of the various ap<lb/>
proaches appears as somethina to<lb/>
be avoided<lb/>
The report described the of-<lb/>
fice, laboratory and teaching<lb/>
area at ECU as "adequate" for the<lb/>
small medical program, but rated<lb/>
library facilities inadequate,<lb/>
and too distant from the school.<lb/>
These facilities are situated in<lb/>
the Allied Health building two<lb/>
miles avay.<lb/>
In general, space allotment<lb/>
was rated adequate, though more<lb/>
would be needed for further<lb/>
growth, or research activity.<lb/>
Honorary journalism fraternity<lb/>
inducts Hester and students<lb/>
Dr. Erwin W. Hester, chairman of the<lb/>
English Department, and 16 students<lb/>
active in student publications will be<lb/>
inducted into Alpha Phi Gamma,<lb/>
national honorary journalism fraternity,<lb/>
next Sunday, May 6, at 4 p.m. in Room<lb/>
201, Student Union.<lb/>
An honorary award will go to Dr.<lb/>
Hester for his cooperation with the<lb/>
journalism program and his interest in<lb/>
student publications, according to Ike<lb/>
Epps. president.<lb/>
Included among the 16 students who<lb/>
will become active members are three<lb/>
present or future publications editors.<lb/>
They are Bo Perkins and Pat Crawford,<lb/>
editor and editor-elect respectively of<lb/>
Fountainhead. and Sandy Penfield,<lb/>
editor-elect of the Rebel.<lb/>
Other students include Phyllis<lb/>
Daughtery, Edward Herring, Jr Judy<lb/>
Langley, Glenn Lewis, Janet Loelkes,<lb/>
Christine Mills, Vicki Morgan, Bruce<lb/>
Parrish, Gerald Roberson, Kirk Y. (Skip)<lb/>
Saunders, David Swink, Ronald<lb/>
Wertheim and Darrell Williams.<lb/>
Dr. Hester will give the address<lb/>
following the induction ritual, to be<lb/>
presided over by the following officers:<lb/>
Ike Epps, president; Gary Carter,<lb/>
vice-president; Mary Lenta, secretary;<lb/>
Horace Whitfield, treasurer; Frank Tursi,<lb/>
bailiff; and Ira L. Baker, adviser.<lb/>
Dr. Hester became chairman of the<lb/>
English Department in 1968. Earlier he<lb/>
had served on the faculty at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Author and editor of several articles and<lb/>
a book entitled 4 Rhetoric Reader, Dr.<lb/>
Hester is an authority on 19th Century<lb/>
English literature.<lb/>
Following the meeting, a social hour<lb/>
will follow with APG members Linda<lb/>
Gardner and Brenda Sanders serving as<lb/>
hostesses.<lb/>
Whitfield said the meeting is open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma was organized in<lb/>
1919 at Ohio Northern University to<lb/>
honor students with outstanding records<lb/>
in journalism and campus publications.<lb/>
The ECU chapter was organized in 1968<lb/>
when Prof. Baker was national<lb/>
president of APG. The charter group was<lb/>
the largest group ever inducted into the<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
Students cited<lb/>
for honors<lb/>
Eleven students have been invited to<lb/>
join the Political Science Honors<lb/>
Program in September 1973.<lb/>
Each year approximately 9 of the<lb/>
majors in Political Science qualify for<lb/>
participation in the program;<lb/>
qualifications include a 3.0 by the junior<lb/>
or senior year and invitation by the<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Participants for 1973-74 are: Patricia<lb/>
A. Crawford, Ernest C. Dunn, Grier<lb/>
Ferguson, Mark Griffiths, Scott Keeter,<lb/>
Bob Lucas, Bob Prince, Becky Robinson,<lb/>
Bert Sessoms, Jim Westmoreland and<lb/>
Juanelle Wehmer.<lb/>
In six years, only 40 students have<lb/>
been invited to enter the program. Of<lb/>
those students who have taken part, 23<lb/>
have completed the program successfully<lb/>
and three are currently enrolled. Upon<lb/>
successful completion, the Registrar<lb/>
notes "Honors in Political Science" on<lb/>
the records of a participant.<lb/>
Those invited to enter in Fall 1973<lb/>
will constitute one of the largest groups<lb/>
ever to qualify.<lb/>
UNC faculty senate<lb/>
faces tenure problems<lb/>
By DAVID HAINS<lb/>
St?'f Writer<lb/>
When the consolidated University of<lb/>
North Carolina was created last spring, a<lb/>
Faculty Assembly was also initiated to<lb/>
act as an advisory body to the president.<lb/>
Recently, one of ECU's members. Dr.<lb/>
Henry' Ferrell of the History<lb/>
Department, spoke out on what the<lb/>
assembly has done and what it might do<lb/>
in the future.<lb/>
HAMPERS ACTION<lb/>
According to Ferrell, the actions of<lb/>
the assembly are presently hampered by<lb/>
one of the member schools. To cite an<lb/>
example, he stated that "recently a full<lb/>
and uniform ordering of tenure was<lb/>
sought by the assembly, but UNC-CH<lb/>
was not interested and a more vague<lb/>
resolution was passed The reason the<lb/>
professors from Chapel Hill wanted a<lb/>
soft resolution was because "at UNC-CH<lb/>
the senior professors determine the<lb/>
ten ire for the junior professors; if<lb/>
del nite procedures were set up then<lb/>
they would lose power Ferrell also said<lb/>
that "women teachers there have not<lb/>
been granted tenure as easily as men<lb/>
Another example of this power became<lb/>
apparent when the assembly was unable<lb/>
to pass a uniform pay scale resolution.<lb/>
HOLDS BALANCE<lb/>
Voting in the assembly is apportioned<lb/>
according to the number of teachers at<lb/>
the individual institutions. UNC-CH and<lb/>
NCSU both have five votes, ECU has<lb/>
four and all other schools have either<lb/>
three or two. The reason that UNC-CH<lb/>
has as much power as has been<lb/>
demonstrated is because the Board of<lb/>
Governors who ultimately decide on a<lb/>
resolution has a balance of Chapel Hill<lb/>
membership. A resolution would be<lb/>
meaningless without the support of the<lb/>
UNC membership.<lb/>
ECU's trying to obtain a sorely needed<lb/>
medical school to what Ferrell termed as<lb/>
an "anti-establishment" point of view of<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins that is BOt appreciated. He<lb/>
went on to say that "there are few<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
According to the distinguished history<lb/>
professor, "ECU is the gadfly of the<lb/>
assembly, and there is good evidence<lb/>
that a bias exists against East Carolina<lb/>
The cause for these feelings range from<lb/>
people in North Carolina that are<lb/>
working for the common man, even<lb/>
though many of them say they are<lb/>
REMAINS ADVISORY BOARD<lb/>
As far as the future of the assembly is<lb/>
concerned, he feels that it will remain an<lb/>
advisory body. "Unless it can pass<lb/>
resolutions and a uniform pay scale, it<lb/>
will not have as much effect on the<lb/>
individual universities as the local faculty<lb/>
senates do. The less the assembly does<lb/>
the better they (UNC-CH) like it<lb/>
And so, the Faculty Assembly will be<lb/>
functional in name only and the ongoing<lb/>
battle between state schools will<lb/>
continue until "the pigs at the public<lb/>
trough" are willing to make room for<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Library fence<lb/>
stops parking<lb/>
Due to the construction of a fence<lb/>
around the area in which the new library<lb/>
extension is to be built, parking will not<lb/>
be permitted behind the cafeteria or in<lb/>
the Eighth Street sand lot.<lb/>
The fence is expected to be up within<lb/>
two weeks, according to Dr. Clifton<lb/>
Moore, Vice-Chancellor for Business<lb/>
Affairs. The area enclosed by the fence<lb/>
willincludeplaces formerly used for both<lb/>
faculty and student parking.<lb/>
"Lota on Ninth Street have been<lb/>
cleared and are open for student<lb/>
parking said Moore.<lb/>
"These lots have been cleared for<lb/>
some time he added, "but students<lb/>
have failed to take advantage of the<lb/>
additional parking space.<lb/>
Pitt County physicians, the<lb/>
report stated, were regarded as<lb/>
too pressured by hospital work<lb/>
to teach medical students. No<lb/>
plans have been made for teach-<lb/>
ing space in the new Pitt County<lb/>
Hospital; therefore, the report<lb/>
continued, any expansion of the<lb/>
program would require drastic<lb/>
building revisions.<lb/>
In the area of faculty, the<lb/>
accreditation committee described<lb/>
ECU Medical School personnel as<lb/>
"of only modest accomplishment<lb/>
"There is no reason to believe<lb/>
they are not competent the re-<lb/>
port continued, "but they are not<lb/>
recognized as outstandina<lb/>
Particularly cited were the<lb/>
faculty's lack of med school<lb/>
teaching experience and a lack of<lb/>
outstanding scholars in most de-<lb/>
partments. "Low morale" as a re-<lb/>
sult of uncertainty of future med<lb/>
school plans was also mentioned.<lb/>
Salaries, it was stated,<lb/>
should provide more incentive for<lb/>
coming to the Greenville area, an<lb/>
area in which "the recreational<lb/>
aspects are attractive and the in-<lb/>
tellectual climate is growma as<lb/>
the University develops The<lb/>
failure to exploit ECU's affili-<lb/>
ation with Chapel Hill was men-<lb/>
tioned as a lost opDortunity for<lb/>
providing incentive to faculty<lb/>
and students.<lb/>
In acuity appointments,<lb/>
"the role of UNC-Chapel Hill is<lb/>
relatively minor with no<lb/>
real effort at recruitment or in-<lb/>
sistence on comparable qualifi-<lb/>
The accreditors ound the ECU<lb/>
school less than adequate for<lb/>
present-day medical education,<lb/>
lackina strong and experienced<lb/>
leadership, possessina low morals<lb/>
and havma a acuity some of<lb/>
whom intend to leave unless the<lb/>
med school's future plans are<lb/>
clarified.<lb/>
In conclusion, the accreditors<lb/>
stated that ECU's one-year Droaram<lb/>
could not gain apDroval on its own<lb/>
merit, but required the strength<lb/>
and control of UNC-Chaoel Hill.<lb/>
rations,<lb/>
Last night our IBM Composer broKe<lb/>
down. Therefore the type size is varied.<lb/>
Hopefully, this malfunction will be<lb/>
corrected by next issue.<lb/>
ountamhead<lb/>
Costumes and exhibits<lb/>
VOLUME IV, NUMBER 49GREENVILLE, NC TUESDAY, MAY 1. 1973<lb/>
Afro-Asian seminar begins<lb/>
Colorful costumes and exhibits<lb/>
saluting ECU's foreign students and their<lb/>
native lands and a talk by a Hindu<lb/>
Swami will highlight the Afro-Asian<lb/>
World Today Symposium next week<lb/>
(May 2 - May 3) on the ECU campus.<lb/>
The symposium is the third in a series<lb/>
of spring symposia on international<lb/>
studies held at ECU and will feature<lb/>
visits and addresses by African and Asian<lb/>
diplomats and representatives of a<lb/>
number of foreign embassies and other<lb/>
overseas interests.<lb/>
All the activities are open to the<lb/>
public and free of charge.<lb/>
Dr. Kermit King, director of the ECU<lb/>
Office of International Education said<lb/>
that the local community is cooperating<lb/>
with the University and the students in<lb/>
arranging an international festival<lb/>
planned for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday night<lb/>
at the Jarvis Methodist Church in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
"Between 40 and 50 foreign students<lb/>
will be dressed in their native costumes<lb/>
for this part of the two day symposium<lb/>
and there will be folk dances, food,<lb/>
songs and music he said<lb/>
Swami Bhashyananda of India will<lb/>
discuss religion and world peace<lb/>
Thursday night at the local church<lb/>
beginning at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
The daytime portion of the<lb/>
symposium will be conducted<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday in room 102B<lb/>
Social Studies Building on the ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The Wednesday moming session<lb/>
begins at 10 a.m. with a welcoming<lb/>
address by ECU Chancellor, Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins. The international guests that<lb/>
moming include: Hon. G B.<lb/>
Ramakrishna. Economic Minister of the<lb/>
Embassy of India, and Simon Gichuru,<lb/>
First Secretary for Commercial Matters<lb/>
of the Embassy of Kenya. The two<lb/>
diplomats will discuss social, political<lb/>
and economic progress in their countries.<lb/>
Highlighting the afternoon session<lb/>
which begins at 2 p.m. will be a sitar<lb/>
recital and discussion of India's classical<lb/>
music. Several business and education<lb/>
professionals will participate in the<lb/>
afternoon program by discussing the<lb/>
Role of International Co-operation in<lb/>
Community Life<lb/>
Thursday's morning and afternoon<lb/>
sessions begin at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. with<lb/>
reports on the Economic Development<lb/>
of the Afro-Asian Region. Trade and<lb/>
Commercial Conditions in the African<lb/>
Region, and Japanese Industrial and<lb/>
Economic Development.<lb/>
Dr. King described the Afro-Asian<lb/>
Symposium as an educational venture to<lb/>
promote international cooperation<lb/>
"It is free and we urge the public to<lb/>
attend he said<lb/>
Campus press experience freedom<lb/>
By MELVINMENCHER<lb/>
(CPS)?An old idea in a new garb is<lb/>
moving through the halls of academe. It<lb/>
is "independence independence for the<lb/>
campus newspaper.<lb/>
But there's more than meets the eye<lb/>
to this new-found freedom. Some<lb/>
student newpaper staff members who<lb/>
have had a chance to experience<lb/>
independence are now having second<lb/>
thoughts. That feeling of independence<lb/>
which in the process of transformation<lb/>
appeared to be a good and healthy<lb/>
occurence has taken on an altogether<lb/>
different connotation -<lb/>
independence-by-pressure. Going off<lb/>
campus to attain a free and unfettered<lb/>
press in reality has become a restriction<lb/>
to serve its readers, and the actual<lb/>
beneficiaries are those college<lb/>
administrators who had always wished<lb/>
that initiative student journalists would<lb/>
go away.<lb/>
The college press has been widening<lb/>
its interest over the years as it examines<lb/>
social realities in a society supposedly<lb/>
committed to equality. The college press<lb/>
has moved from concern over equality<lb/>
for the races to equality for the sexes. Its<lb/>
next stop could well be an examination<lb/>
of the inequalities that wealth, and its<lb/>
lack, foster.<lb/>
IndtDendent college newspapers have<lb/>
been around a long time, particularly in<lb/>
the Ivy League. But the idea had never<lb/>
caught on.<lb/>
The financially independent<lb/>
newspaper relies almost completely on<lb/>
advertising, and most college towns<lb/>
could not support a daily or weekly<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
Editor Mike Wines of the University<lb/>
of Kentucky Kernel-which has been<lb/>
financially independent since January<lb/>
19 7 2 - -advises college newspapers<lb/>
thinking of going it alone to hire a<lb/>
full-time advertising manager, a<lb/>
professional adviser and a bookkeeper<lb/>
And to make sure the advertising base is<lb/>
solid.<lb/>
"The economics of campus<lb/>
newspapers makes independency a<lb/>
chancy proposition for anyone he says.<lb/>
The Kernel, which Wines describes as<lb/>
the "nation's only completely<lb/>
independent paper at a state university,<lb/>
excluding off-campus newspaper has<lb/>
an advisor who serves as general manager<lb/>
and handles budgetary matters. The<lb/>
advisor is also available for consultation<lb/>
on editorial matters, but only at the<lb/>
request of the staff.<lb/>
Since losing the university's $40,000 a<lb/>
year subsidy the Kernel has been doing<lb/>
well on advertising income A factor,<lb/>
according to Kernel staffers, is the<lb/>
ineptitude of the local newspapers which<lb/>
are owned by a trust and administered<lb/>
by a bank. The local newspapers have a<lb/>
13 percent campus readership. The<lb/>
Louisville CourrierJournal reaches 45<lb/>
percent of the students. The Kernel<lb/>
claims to have a 94.5 percent campus<lb/>
readership.<lb/>
The college newspaper that publishes<lb/>
off campus, is distributed only to paid<lb/>
subscribers, and receives no direct or<lb/>
indirect financial assistance from the<lb/>
university is a rarity. Most newspapers<lb/>
that assert they are independent usually<lb/>
refer to editorial freedom rather than<lb/>
their financial status.<lb/>
Most so-called independent<lb/>
newspapers remain on the campus. At<lb/>
the University of Colorado, the Colorado<lb/>
Daily's letterhead describes the<lb/>
newspaper as "an independent student<lb/>
newspaper referring to the fact that in<lb/>
1968 it surrendered the compulsory-<lb/>
student activity fee. which supports<lb/>
most student newspapers. The Daily is<lb/>
now completely supported by<lb/>
advertising. But it is given space on the<lb/>
campus rent-free be ause it is a student<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Most college newspapers that have<lb/>
become financially independent plan to<lb/>
continue to distribute their newspapers<lb/>
to all students, even though students will<lb/>
no longer be paying for them through<lb/>
the student activity fee.<lb/>
College adminstrators anxious to<lb/>
make their campus newspapers<lb/>
independent may find trouble from an<lb/>
unexpected quarter-local commercial<lb/>
newspapers.<lb/>
College newspapers before<lb/>
independence received a third to half of<lb/>
their income from the student activity<lb/>
fee. Now 95 percent of their income will<lb/>
have to come from advertising. The<lb/>
Stanford Daily, for example, now sells<lb/>
about $100,000 in advertising Under its<lb/>
projections, it will have to sell about<lb/>
$180,000 in advertising in 1978.<lb/>
The effect on the new staff is more<lb/>
subtle. At the Colorado Daily, when<lb/>
the newspaper became independent and<lb/>
had to go into the marketplace to sell<lb/>
advertising, it found resistance among<lb/>
merchants who were upset by the Daily's<lb/>
radical politics and its use of so called<lb/>
obscenities.<lb/>
The idea of independence was<lb/>
resurrected a few years ago at the<lb/>
University of California. The student<lb/>
press on the campuses of the University<lb/>
of California system had long been<lb/>
liberal in its politics, frank in its use of<lb/>
language, and unstinting in its criticism<lb/>
of Governor Ronald Reagan and his<lb/>
University Board of Regents One regent.<lb/>
John Canaday. was particularly<lb/>
?hement about these newspapers. He<lb/>
insisted that President Charles J. Hitch<lb/>
do something about them. In 1969 Hitch<lb/>
responded by appointing a Special<lb/>
Commission on the Campus Press, asking<lb/>
it to explore "the possibility or need for<lb/>
a written code of performance<lb/>
In the South, massive social and<lb/>
political changes were set in motion by<lb/>
the decision of the United States<lb/>
Supreme Court that ordered the<lb/>
desegregation of public schools. The<lb/>
campus press not only reported the<lb/>
changes, it urged them on recalcitrant<lb/>
communities and states At the<lb/>
University of Florida, the Alligator<lb/>
looked into politics and condemned the<lb/>
activities of the pork-chopper, the<lb/>
politician from northern Florida who<lb/>
hewed to the old ways. In the<lb/>
mid-1960's, the Alligator's zeal caused<lb/>
the president of the university to fire the<lb/>
editor.<lb/>
New members<lb/>
join Beta Eta<lb/>
Beta Eta chapter of Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Omicron, honorary fraternity in Home<lb/>
Ecnomics, initiated 43 new members in a<lb/>
candlelight ceremony April 17 at the<lb/>
Home Ecnomics Building, ECU.<lb/>
Each new member was chosen on the<lb/>
basis of scholastic ability and leadership<lb/>
qualities. Following the ceremony Mrs.<lb/>
Rachel Wei borne gave a charge service to<lb/>
the new members explaining the<lb/>
purposed of the organization and the<lb/>
responsibilities of membership.<lb/>
The new members are: Cynthia W.<lb/>
Wood, Terri L. Hope, Hettie L Wallace,<lb/>
Carolyn A Mayo, Deborah M. Midgett,<lb/>
Joann M. Upchurch, Lillian C. Cumn,<lb/>
Alice K. Buff aloe, Alice L. Lancaster,<lb/>
Susan E Harris, Wanda D Dickerson,<lb/>
Mary K Beaman, Belinda Y Mar'indale,<lb/>
Linda S. Robbins, Linda G. Nielson,<lb/>
Susan J. Wood, Rose W. Massey, Donna<lb/>
S. Davidson, Judith M Hart well,<lb/>
Elizabeth Ann Parsley. Elizabeth J<lb/>
Taylor, Carolyn F. Williams, Ebbie J.<lb/>
Rogeraon, Janice L. Burroughs, Katie B.<lb/>
Moore, Sally Carol Lennon, Pamela S.<lb/>
Eakms, Julia B. Oliver, Mary E. Carawtm,<lb/>
Helen J McMillan, Diana L Adams,<lb/>
Ijllie Angela Rich, Wanda B. Jackson,<lb/>
Joselyn J. White, Karen L. Wilson, Susan<lb/>
B. Rouse, Constance Laskowski, Joan R<lb/>
Pitcher, Lesley J Muaselman, Mrs.<lb/>
Sandra D Garrett, Linda Gail Outlier,<lb/>
Janet A. Edrington, Kathy L. Bryan.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039686_0002"/><lb/>
(VNQUET-The<lb/>
innual banquet<lb/>
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iquet will be<lb/>
I 7 p.m. ? 9<lb/>
obby of the<lb/>
I of the banquet<lb/>
.TA-The<lb/>
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e year will be<lb/>
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rous of the<lb/>
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RETREAT-A<lb/>
i May 11, 12,<lb/>
b and friends.<lb/>
, group games,<lb/>
Contact John<lb/>
ncy Test will<lb/>
; dates during<lb/>
lges Coliseum<lb/>
4-5 p.m.<lb/>
2-4 p.m.<lb/>
2-4 p.m.<lb/>
C H I<lb/>
ions are now<lb/>
cholarships to<lb/>
the national<lb/>
hology. This<lb/>
' graduate or<lb/>
major who<lb/>
ation in the<lb/>
r at ECU or<lb/>
(Warships will<lb/>
of academic<lb/>
Application<lb/>
I Psychology<lb/>
, and the Psi<lb/>
line date for<lb/>
urned in is<lb/>
plications to<lb/>
? Psychology<lb/>
ange<lb/>
(imen<lb/>
s<lb/>
spend a<lb/>
I summer<lb/>
?sailing<lb/>
'Ou'll want<lb/>
Tampax<lb/>
uently<lb/>
swimming<lb/>
:ult days<lb/>
pkins<lb/>
I internal<lb/>
Die<lb/>
i your<lb/>
id might<lb/>
ampons<lb/>
vater-<lb/>
hke<lb/>
I month<lb/>
Fountainhead, Tuesday, May 1, 197.i. Page S<lb/>
ECU'S RICHARD McDUFFlE tails over<lb/>
the bar in his victorious pole vault in the<lb/>
Southern Conference Championship<lb/>
(Photo by Roaa <lb/>
track meet. McDuffie's vault<lb/>
calibrated at 15 feet.<lb/>
inn)<lb/>
was<lb/>
Stickmen wallop HI. C. State<lb/>
8-4,then annihilate V.M.I.<lb/>
Jeff Hansen leads the East Carolina<lb/>
lacrosse team in everything except selling<lb/>
peanuts at the concession stand, mainly<lb/>
because of the fact that we do not have a<lb/>
concession stand for lacrosse games<lb/>
Anyway.<lb/>
In play last Wednesday and Saturday,<lb/>
Hansen scored an unbelievable total of<lb/>
13 goals and accounted for four big<lb/>
assists in leading the Pirates to victories<lb/>
over NX. State and Virginia Military<lb/>
Academy.<lb/>
Against the Wolfpack on Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon in addition to Hansen's five<lb/>
goals and two assists, BUI Harrington<lb/>
scored twice and Danny Mannix<lb/>
accounted for one goal and one assist in<lb/>
the 8-4 triumph.<lb/>
Coach John Lovstedt praised the play<lb/>
of Ray Cobel who recorded his first<lb/>
assist of the season and Mark Wilson who<lb/>
added his third assist. Dave Schaler<lb/>
played one of his finest games at<lb/>
mid-field.<lb/>
Lovstedt also noted the fine<lb/>
(performances of defensemen Clark<lb/>
Franke, Chip Hopmann and Frank<lb/>
Sutton.<lb/>
In East Carolina's 24-7 shellacking of<lb/>
Club gridders win<lb/>
The East Carolina Club football team<lb/>
played their spring game during the<lb/>
Easter vacation and the Pirates<lb/>
demolished the Tar Heels of UNC-CH,<lb/>
34-0. ECU came back from the game<lb/>
with a victory and some good sun tans as<lb/>
the game was played at South Carolina's<lb/>
Myrtle Beach on Saturday, April 21.<lb/>
The offensive attack was led by<lb/>
quarterback Dennis Lynch as he burned<lb/>
the UNC secondary for five touchdown<lb/>
passes. Three of these t.d. bombs were<lb/>
hauled in by his brother, Mike.<lb/>
Jim Kyle and Jim Sermons were on<lb/>
the receiving ends of the remaining two<lb/>
scoring tosses.<lb/>
Kent Ridenhour converted fouroutof<lb/>
the five extra points to complete the<lb/>
Pirate scoring.<lb/>
A devastating defense held UNC to a<lb/>
mere three f irst downs and the Tar Heels<lb/>
crossed the 50-yard line only once all<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
The football club would like to thank<lb/>
all of the students who contributed to<lb/>
make the game and the victory possible.<lb/>
Sportmedicine<lb/>
conference set<lb/>
A sports medicine conference for area<lb/>
coaches and student trainers will be held<lb/>
at ECU, May 4-5, dealing with necessary<lb/>
skills and techniques for the treatment<lb/>
and rehabilitation of athletic injuries.<lb/>
The program is jointly sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Sports Medicine Division, Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education, School of<lb/>
Allied Health Professions and School of<lb/>
Medicine.<lb/>
Rod Compton, head trainer at East<lb/>
Carolina, will direct the conference.<lb/>
Compton is a member of the National<lb/>
Association of Athletic Trainers (NATA)<lb/>
and is editor-in-chief of the NATA<lb/>
Journal.<lb/>
The staff for the conference will<lb/>
include members of the ECU faculty and<lb/>
local physicians, in addition to the staff<lb/>
of the ECU Sports Medicine Division.<lb/>
Tuition for the conference has been<lb/>
?et at $25, on campus, $15 for<lb/>
commuters. The on-campus fee includes<lb/>
lodging Friday night, all meals,<lb/>
conference materials, and a ticket to<lb/>
Saturday's ECU-Pembroke State baseball<lb/>
game. The commuter fee included<lb/>
conference materials and a ticket to the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Deadline for registration is April 2'i.<lb/>
Applications can be obtained by writing<lb/>
to: Sports Medicine Conference, Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education, East Carolina<lb/>
University, P. O Box 2727, Greenville,<lb/>
N. C. 27834.<lb/>
V.M.I Hansen (heard of him?) pumped<lb/>
in eight goals and picked up two more<lb/>
assists to lead the Pirate's efforts. The<lb/>
eight goals tied a school record, while<lb/>
the 10 point total set a new school mark.<lb/>
The 24 goals scored and the 13 assists<lb/>
credited broke the old school mark of 17<lb/>
and 11, respectively.<lb/>
East Carolina took the lead in the<lb/>
opening period, outscoring the Keydets,<lb/>
6-2. They beat them 4-3 in the second<lb/>
and led, 10-5 at the half. After a 5-2<lb/>
advantage in the third period, the Bucs<lb/>
finished up by scoring nine times in the<lb/>
final period, while shutting out hapless<lb/>
V.M.I.<lb/>
Harrington had quite a picnic as he<lb/>
pumped in five goals and Mannix had<lb/>
four and three assists. Larry Hayes<lb/>
scored three times and picked up two<lb/>
assists, while David Clinard scored his<lb/>
first goal of the season and also added<lb/>
three assists. Wilson added a goal and<lb/>
two assists, while Schaler and Cobel each<lb/>
had one goal, and Franke added a single<lb/>
assist.<lb/>
The Pirates ran their season record to<lb/>
4-5 before the game on Sunday against<lb/>
the Virginia Tech Gobblers.<lb/>
Quinn inks<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
cage star<lb/>
Buzzy Braman, an outstanding<lb/>
basketball player from Springbrook,<lb/>
Md has been awarded a grant-in-aid to<lb/>
play at ECU. It was announced recently<lb/>
by Tom Quinn, head basketball coach.<lb/>
Braman, a two year starter at guard<lb/>
for Springbrook High School, averaged<lb/>
21.6 points per game and six assists<lb/>
during the 1973 season in leading<lb/>
Springbrook to a 20-2 season finish.<lb/>
Braman ? s named first team<lb/>
A 11-Metropolitan, first team<lb/>
All-Maryland State, and the Best Player<lb/>
in Montgomery County, Md.<lb/>
"Braman is the best player I have ever<lb/>
coached sad John Barrett, coach at<lb/>
Springbrook High School. "He is an<lb/>
excellent jump shooter, an excellent<lb/>
passer and a good floor leader. He is just<lb/>
an outstanding basketball player<lb/>
As a junior Braman was second team<lb/>
All-Met and second team All-State as he<lb/>
led Springbrook to the State<lb/>
Championship. In the State Tournament,<lb/>
Braman was named the Most Valuable<lb/>
Player.<lb/>
"Braman possesses an uncanny<lb/>
knack for scoring in all types of<lb/>
situations said Quinn in making the<lb/>
announcement. "He always seems to be<lb/>
able to hit the open man when he is<lb/>
double-teamed. He had the ability to<lb/>
play the wing or the point in our offense<lb/>
and is mature enough to see action on<lb/>
the varsity as a freshman<lb/>
aaaaa<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
ivunwuc CAN M PtOVlM<lb/>
KM TOM CAM. COMMIT AM<lb/>
COMVEMIINCi IT PNONf IT<lb/>
10IS. TIMI IS IMHMTANT -<lb/>
CAU TOU FRfl TODAY<lb/>
A.I.C. Services 800 523K?:n<lb/>
?I<lb/>
r<lb/>
Old bankers never die,<lb/>
they just lose interest.<lb/>
ENTERTAINER<lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
Piano or Guitar<lb/>
June 7 to Sept 1<lb/>
WRITE:<lb/>
HOLIDAY INN<lb/>
BOX 308<lb/>
KILL DEVIL HILLS, N.C.<lb/>
27848<lb/>
Buc Trackmen finish second<lb/>
Bv STEPHEN G. THOMPKINS<lb/>
Spactai to ountainnaad<lb/>
William and Mary for the third<lb/>
consecutive year beat out ECU for the<lb/>
Southern Conference Outdoor Track and<lb/>
Field Championships, due to their<lb/>
tremendous strength in the distance<lb/>
events and an untimely injury to an ECU<lb/>
sprinter.<lb/>
William and Mary won the meet with<lb/>
118 56 points, East Carolina a strong<lb/>
second with 97 13 points, followed by<lb/>
Richmond's 18'4, Appalachian's 16,<lb/>
VMI's 6, Davidson's 5 13 and The<lb/>
Citadel's 5 points.<lb/>
In the five distance events, the 880,<lb/>
mile, three mile, six mile and the 3000<lb/>
meter steeplechase, William and Mary<lb/>
won eighteen out of a possible<lb/>
twenty-five places. The Indians swept all<lb/>
five places in the three mile, and took at<lb/>
least three places in all the others.<lb/>
With the score tied sixty-four- all,<lb/>
Maurice Huntley was winning the 100<lb/>
yd. dash but pulled up with a hamstring<lb/>
pull forty yards from the finish line.<lb/>
Huntley was favored to place high in the<lb/>
220 yd. dash also.<lb/>
Barry Johnson, captain of the Pirate<lb/>
track team, said, "We put out all we<lb/>
could. But when Maurice pulled that<lb/>
muscle it got some of the guys down.<lb/>
That and their distance runners hurt us<lb/>
There were plenty of bright spots for<lb/>
the Pirates though. The meet's first event<lb/>
on Friday saw Ed Rigsby finishing third<lb/>
in the six mile in a fine time of 30:39.4.<lb/>
In the weight events both Ivey<lb/>
Goffers place third<lb/>
in conference play<lb/>
The East Carolina golf team,<lb/>
defending Southern Conference<lb/>
champion, finished a very disappointing<lb/>
third in this year's 54-hole conference<lb/>
tournament held at the Country Club of<lb/>
South Carolina in Florence, S.C.<lb/>
This poor finish was not as surprising<lb/>
as would seem. Despite the fact that the<lb/>
Pirates had a perfect 8-0 dual meet<lb/>
record, their play at the Camp Lejeune<lb/>
Collegiate Toumey and the Furman<lb/>
Intercollegiate Tourney just was not up<lb/>
to par.<lb/>
Furman University now wears the<lb/>
conference crown, finishing first with a<lb/>
team score of 1,144. Second place<lb/>
belongs to Davidson at 1,152. ECU was<lb/>
third at 1,157, followed by Appalachian<lb/>
State at 1.175. Richmond at 1.200, The<lb/>
Citadel at 1,202, William and Mary<lb/>
1,233 and VMI as 1,275.<lb/>
The inconsistency of the defending<lb/>
individual champion Eddie Pinnix had to<lb/>
be particularly distressing to Dirate coach<lb/>
John Welborn. Pinnix sai iwiched an<lb/>
excellent 72 between rounds of 82 and<lb/>
83.<lb/>
A bright spot for ECU was a four<lb/>
under par closing round of 68 by Jim<lb/>
Brown. Brown, a senior from Stoneville,<lb/>
N.C, recorded the tournament's best<lb/>
round with this effort.<lb/>
Other Pirate scores were: Harry<lb/>
Helmer, 79, 79, 75; Jim Ward, 83, 76,<lb/>
72; Bebo Batts, 75, 77, 78; Carl Bell, 85,<lb/>
77, 75; and Ray Wall, 87, 83, 77.<lb/>
The Pirates wind up the season with a<lb/>
home match today against Campbell<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Davidson wins net<lb/>
crown ; Bucs sixth<lb/>
The 1973 Southern Conference<lb/>
Tennis Championship now belongs to<lb/>
the regular season champion Davidson<lb/>
Wildcats. The 'Cats captured four finals<lb/>
matches on Saturday afternoon to defeat<lb/>
runners-up Applachian State and<lb/>
Furman, who tied for second in the<lb/>
Greenville, S.C. toumey.<lb/>
The four wins gave the Davidson<lb/>
netters 19 points for the tournament to<lb/>
15 each for Furman and Appalachian<lb/>
State.<lb/>
William and Mary finished fourth with<lb/>
nine points and The Citadel was fifth<lb/>
with five. East Carolina, Richmond and<lb/>
V.M.I, failed to score.<lb/>
Top-seeded Keith Richardson of<lb/>
Appalachian State defeated Ford<lb/>
Robinette of William and Mary, 6-4, 7-6,<lb/>
6-2, for the singles title.<lb/>
Furman's Dudley Reynolds was a<lb/>
surprise winner in the number tvo<lb/>
singles, easily defeating division top-seed<lb/>
Kevin Menton of Davidson, 6-2, 6-0.<lb/>
Doubles play sparked the Wildcats to<lb/>
the Championship as they took two of<lb/>
the three finals matches.<lb/>
r<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
!<lb/>
J<lb/>
FREE Iced Tea With<lb/>
Any FoodOrder on<lb/>
Mondays<lb/>
FREE Salao With each<lb/>
Lasagna Dinner<lb/>
SUBMARINES<lb/>
DELIVERY SERVICE<lb/>
from 5-11 p.m.<lb/>
7 Days a Week<lb/>
752-7483<lb/>
Peacock and LaBaron Caruthers turned<lb/>
in exceptional performances. Peacock<lb/>
won the inaugural hammer throw with a<lb/>
throw of 152-2, and finished second in<lb/>
both the shotput 48-6 34 and disc.is<lb/>
148-2. Caruthers finished tecond in the<lb/>
hammer throw 143-9, fourth in the<lb/>
shotput 49-4' and third in the discus at<lb/>
141-9 feet.<lb/>
John Hoffman finished second in the<lb/>
javelin with a throw of 190-0 feet.<lb/>
In the high jump ECU took the silver<lb/>
and bronze medals, Roy Quick finishing<lb/>
second at 6-6 and John Pitts third at 6-4.<lb/>
Walter Davenport put on his usual<lb/>
brilliant exhibition in the long jump and<lb/>
triple jump. Davenport won the long<lb/>
jump on Friday with a jump of 23-6<lb/>
feet. On Saturday he set a new Southern<lb/>
Conference record in winning the triple<lb/>
jump at 50-51 feet.<lb/>
Larry Malone and Lawrence Wilkerson<lb/>
backed up Davenport well. Malone<lb/>
finished third in the long jump at 22-10<lb/>
34 feet, and took another bronze medal<lb/>
in the triple jump with a leap of 47-6V4.<lb/>
Wilkerson finished fourth in the triple<lb/>
jump with a jump of 47i feet.<lb/>
In the sprints Gary Tiffany ran a 10.3<lb/>
in the 100 yd. dash for fifth place.<lb/>
The most exciting race of the two day<lb/>
meet was the 440 yd. relay. The ECU<lb/>
relay team of Larry Malone, Carlester<lb/>
Crumpler, Maurice Huntley and Charles<lb/>
Lovelace finished first winning the gold<lb/>
medal with a time of 41.8 seconds, aided<lb/>
greatly by a superb anchor leg by<lb/>
Lovelace.<lb/>
In the hurdles Ron Smith finished<lb/>
fourth in the 140 yd. intermediates Hi<lb/>
55.2, and ECU finished third, fourth and<lb/>
fifth in the high hurdles. Sam Philips<lb/>
took the bronze at 14.5 seconds. Ron<lb/>
Smith fourth at 14.6 and Crumpler fifth<lb/>
at 14.9.<lb/>
In the 110 yd. dash ECU took first,<lb/>
second and fifth. Charles Lovelace was<lb/>
the gold medal winner at 49.2 seconds.<lb/>
Barry Johnson took the silver at 49.5<lb/>
and Palmer Lisane finished fifth at 51.0.<lb/>
The pole vault was won by ECl 'i<lb/>
Richard McDuffie with a jump of 15-0.<lb/>
Also placing for the Pirates was Art<lb/>
Miller at 13-6 which was good enough<lb/>
for the bronze medal, and Bill Bailey<lb/>
tied with two other vaulters for fifth at<lb/>
13-0.<lb/>
In the mile run Gerald Klas finished<lb/>
fourth at 4:16.6, giving the Pirates only<lb/>
two places in the five distance events.<lb/>
In the final event, the mile relay, the<lb/>
Pirates took the bronze medal, due<lb/>
mainly to a fantastic anchor leg by Barry<lb/>
Johnson. The relay team of Charles<lb/>
Lovelace, Palmer Lisane. Walter<lb/>
Davenport and Johnson was in fifth<lb/>
place joing into the final leg. but<lb/>
Johnson put jn a thrilling finish to<lb/>
enable the Pirates to finish third.<lb/>
In all the Pirates won six events to<lb/>
William and Mary's ten. The Outstanding<lb/>
Athlete Award was a a'aw between<lb/>
Furman's Bill Dimitrouleas vho won the<lb/>
discus and shotput, and William and<lb/>
Mary's Bill Louv who won the three mile<lb/>
and finished second and third in the<lb/>
steeplechase and mile respectively.<lb/>
Pirate nine falters with tough<lb/>
loss to Citadel; Larussa hurt<lb/>
The Citadel scored two unearned runs<lb/>
in the fifth inning and held on to<lb/>
surprise ECU 2-1 in Southern<lb/>
Conference baseball action Saturday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
The loss dropped the Pirates to 6-2 in<lb/>
the conference and they now trail first<lb/>
place Appalachian State by one game.<lb/>
With the schedule shaping up as it is, the<lb/>
prospects appear dim that a pennant will<lb/>
be flying over Harrington Field this year.<lb/>
Perhaps more serious than the loss of<lb/>
the game itself was the loss of pitcher<lb/>
Dave Larussa for the remainder of the<lb/>
season. A line drive was hit back to<lb/>
Larussa m the second. The ball struck<lb/>
him on his pitching hand and broke his<lb/>
thumb. Without Larussa the Pirates are<lb/>
teetering on the edge of the plank as<lb/>
they sail into six games in six days<lb/>
beginning Monday.<lb/>
Bill Godwin came on to relieve<lb/>
Larussa and had no trouble until the<lb/>
fifth when he unloaded a wild pitch with<lb/>
Bulldog runners on first and third.<lb/>
Catcher Rick McMahon pounced on the<lb/>
ball and fired in time to Godwin<lb/>
covering the plate. But unfortunately<lb/>
Joke of day: Did you hear about the<lb/>
who requested that he be buried at<lb/>
sea? Nine of his friends drowned<lb/>
while digging his grave.<lb/>
Godwin got caught up in the excitement<lb/>
of the moment and dropped the ball. He<lb/>
walked the next batter and then gave up<lb/>
a single which scored the second Citadel<lb/>
run.<lb/>
Godwin was hardly the culprit, as the<lb/>
Buc batters managed just four hits all<lb/>
day, three of which were singles. The<lb/>
Citadel pitcher Rusty Booth sneaked<lb/>
three strikes past ten Pirates in the eight<lb/>
innings he worked.<lb/>
ECU got their lone run in the eighth<lb/>
inning when Mike Hogan lofted a high<lb/>
fly ball just over the right field fence.<lb/>
This made the score 2-1. In the ninth the<lb/>
Pirates goi a man on first, but a poor<lb/>
attempt at a sacrifice bunt killed that<lb/>
last hope for a rally.<lb/>
So now the Pirates have their work<lb/>
cut out for them. Yesterday they were<lb/>
due to face the Spiders of Richmond at<lb/>
Richmond. Tommorow they have a<lb/>
home doubleheader scheduled with<lb/>
VMI. On Thursday they travel to<lb/>
Williamsburg to face William and Mary.<lb/>
and then wind up the season Saturday as<lb/>
they travel to Boone for a doubeheader<lb/>
with Appalacian State.<lb/>
Thought for the day. If an orange is<lb/>
called an orange, why isn't a oanana<lb/>
called a yellow or a grape called a<lb/>
purple?<lb/>
Whenever a Navy plane is under electronic<lb/>
Control, that plane is in the hands ot a Naval<lb/>
light Officer Naturally as a candidate tor<lb/>
Naval Flight Officer traininu you'll need some<lb/>
very special qualifications First, you must<lb/>
really want to fly. even if you've never flown<lb/>
before You'll also need a college degree ?nd<lb/>
the kind of mind that works well with math<lb/>
and physics<lb/>
Waiting at the end of your trainmq<lb/>
rogram is a Navy Commission and the Golden<lb/>
Wings of a Nival Flight Officer By then you'll<lb/>
be an expert m areas like Jet Navigation and<lb/>
Airborne Control equipped to do your Ob<lb/>
wherever you go<lb/>
But whatever your specialty, travel will<lb/>
be part of your life And so will challenge,<lb/>
responsibility, achievement and reward<lb/>
The benefits aren't average either A Naval<lb/>
Flight Officer can earn up to $10,000 upon<lb/>
ompletion of flight school The pay after three<lb/>
years is up to $14,500 There is also a program<lb/>
for obtaining a masters degree at no cost The<lb/>
Navy gives its Naval Flight Offio-<lb/>
If that's the kind of careei you're loo u<lb/>
for, and if you think you've got what it i<lb/>
be a Naval Flight Officer, send in the tour<lb/>
Gentleman<lb/>
. I like il Pimm sena mora information on what it<lb/>
I lakaa to ba a Naval Flight Officer<lb/>
 Nama<lb/>
I<lb/>
 Adoraaa<lb/>
I<lb/>
 City . siaia<lb/>
I<lb/>
 Currant Collaga yaar<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Age<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
See LT VUailaca Mengum, on campui. Student Union, 14 16 May or aand coupon to Navy Hacrutting<lb/>
PO Box 7606. Raleigh. N C 2760?. OH CALL (9191 83?-6629<lb/>
OaaaaaaaV<lb/>
<pb facs="00039686_0003"/><lb/>
rountainhead. Tuesday, May 1 . 197 Page 3<lb/>
ANQUET-The<lb/>
annual banquet<lb/>
dlewick Inn.<lb/>
nquet will be<lb/>
d 7 p.m. 9<lb/>
lobby of the<lb/>
e of the banquet<lb/>
LTA-The last<lb/>
norary English<lb/>
le year will be<lb/>
Ird at 7:00 in<lb/>
trous of the<lb/>
it will speak on<lb/>
lembers should<lb/>
RETREAT-A<lb/>
Id May 11, 12,<lb/>
Lib and friends,<lb/>
s, group games,<lb/>
. Contact John<lb/>
ency Test will<lb/>
g dates during<lb/>
inges Coliseum<lb/>
? 4-5 p.m.<lb/>
-2-4 p.m.<lb/>
- 2-4 p.m.<lb/>
C H I<lb/>
it ions are now<lb/>
scholarships to<lb/>
the national<lb/>
chology. This<lb/>
y graduate or<lb/>
y major who<lb/>
cation in the<lb/>
er at ECU or<lb/>
holarships will<lb/>
1 of academic<lb/>
Application<lb/>
le Psychology<lb/>
9, and the Psi<lb/>
iline date for<lb/>
turned in is<lb/>
pplications to<lb/>
ie Psychology<lb/>
langel<lb/>
Timer<lb/>
is<lb/>
0 spend a<lb/>
g summer<lb/>
r?sailing<lb/>
?you'll want<lb/>
f Tampax<lb/>
quently<lb/>
swimming<lb/>
icult days<lb/>
apkms<lb/>
e internal<lb/>
lible<lb/>
iOd might<lb/>
tampons<lb/>
water-<lb/>
;t like<lb/>
ie month<lb/>
wom?n truti<lb/>
?fl at a o<lb/>
. "ia r m .<lb/>
ECU'S RICHARD McOUFFIE sails over<lb/>
the bar in his victorious pole vault in the<lb/>
Southern Conference Championship<lb/>
(Photo by Row Mann)<lb/>
track meet. McDuffie's vault was<lb/>
calibrated at 15 feet.<lb/>
Stickmen wallop N. C. State<lb/>
8-4,then annihilate V.M.I.<lb/>
Jeff Hansen leads the East Carolina<lb/>
lacrosse team in everything except selling<lb/>
peanuts at the concession stand, mainly<lb/>
because of the fact that we do not have a<lb/>
concession stand for lacrosse games.<lb/>
Anyway<lb/>
In play last Wednesday and Saturday,<lb/>
Hansen scored an unbelievable total of<lb/>
13 goals and accounted for four big<lb/>
assists in leading the Pirates to victories<lb/>
over N.C. State and Virginia Military<lb/>
Academy.<lb/>
Against the Wolfpack on Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon in addition to Hansen's five<lb/>
goals and two assists, BUI Harrington<lb/>
scored twice and Danny Mannix<lb/>
accounted for one goal and one assist m<lb/>
the 8-4 triumph.<lb/>
Coach John Lovstedt praised the play<lb/>
of Ray Cobel who recorded his first<lb/>
assist of the season and Mark Wilson who<lb/>
added his third assist. Dave Schaler<lb/>
played one of his finest games at<lb/>
mid-field.<lb/>
Lovstedt also noted the fine<lb/>
erformances of defensemen Clark<lb/>
Franke, Chip Hopmann and Frank<lb/>
Sutton.<lb/>
In East Carolina's 24-7 shellacking of<lb/>
Club gridders win<lb/>
The East Carolina Club football team<lb/>
played their spring game during the<lb/>
Easter vacation and the Pirates<lb/>
demolished the Tar Heels of UNC-CH,<lb/>
34-0. ECU came back from the game<lb/>
with a victory and some good sun tans as<lb/>
the game was played at South Carolina's<lb/>
Myrtle Beach on Saturday, April 21.<lb/>
The offensive attack was led by<lb/>
quarterback Dennis Lynch as he burned<lb/>
the UNC secondary for five touchdown<lb/>
passes. Three of these t.d. bombs were<lb/>
hauled in by his brother, Mike.<lb/>
Jim Kyle and Jim Sermons were on<lb/>
the receiving ends of the remaining two<lb/>
scoring tosses.<lb/>
Kent Ridenhour converted four outof<lb/>
the five extra points to complete the<lb/>
Pirate scoring.<lb/>
A devastating defense held UNC to a<lb/>
mere three first downs and the Tar Heels<lb/>
crossed the 50-yard line only once all<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
The football club would like to thank<lb/>
all of the students who contributed to<lb/>
make the game and the victory possible.<lb/>
Sportmedicine<lb/>
conference set<lb/>
A sports medicine conference for area<lb/>
coaches and student trainers will be held<lb/>
at ECU, May 4-5, dealing with necessary<lb/>
skills and techniques for the treatment<lb/>
and rehabilitation of athletic injuries.<lb/>
The program is jointly sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Sports Medicine Division, Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education, School of<lb/>
Allied Health Professions and School of<lb/>
Medicine.<lb/>
Rod Compton, head trainer at East<lb/>
Carolina, will direct the conference.<lb/>
Compton is a member of the National<lb/>
Association of Athletic Trainers (NATA)<lb/>
and is editor-in-chief of the NATA<lb/>
Journal.<lb/>
The staff for the conference will<lb/>
include members of the ECU faculty and<lb/>
local physicians, in addition to the staff<lb/>
of the ECU Sports Medicine Division.<lb/>
Tuition for the conference has been<lb/>
et at $25, on campus, $15 for<lb/>
commuters. The on-campus fee includes<lb/>
lodging Friday night, all meals,<lb/>
conference materials, and a ticket to<lb/>
Saturday's ECU-Pembroke State baseball<lb/>
game. The commuter fee included<lb/>
conference materials and a ticket to the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Deadline for registration is April 27.<lb/>
Applications can be obtained by writing<lb/>
to: Sports Medicine Conference, Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education, East Carolina<lb/>
University, P. O. Box 2727, Greenville,<lb/>
N. C.27834.<lb/>
V.M.I Hansen (heard of him?) pumped<lb/>
in eight goals and picked up two more<lb/>
assists to lead the Pirate's efforts. The<lb/>
eight goals tied a school record, while<lb/>
the 10 point total set a new school mark.<lb/>
The 24 goals scored and the 13 assists<lb/>
credited broke the old school mark of 17<lb/>
and 11, respectively.<lb/>
East Carolina took the lead in the<lb/>
opening period, outscoring the Keydets,<lb/>
6-2. They beat them 4-3 in the second<lb/>
and led, 10-5 at the half. After a 5-2<lb/>
advantage in the third period, the Bucs<lb/>
finished up by scoring nine times in the<lb/>
final period, while shutting out hapless<lb/>
V.M.I.<lb/>
Harrington had quite a picnic as he<lb/>
pumped in five goals and Mannix had<lb/>
four and three assists. Larry Hayes<lb/>
scored three times and picked up two<lb/>
assists, while David Clinard scored his<lb/>
first goal of the season and also added<lb/>
three assists. Wilson added a goal and<lb/>
two assists, while Schaler and Cobel each<lb/>
had one goal, and Franke added a single<lb/>
assist.<lb/>
The Pirates ran their season record to<lb/>
4-5 before the game on Sunday against<lb/>
the Virginia Tech Gobblers.<lb/>
Quinn inks<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
cage star<lb/>
Buzzy Hraman, an outstanding<lb/>
basketball player from Springbrook,<lb/>
Md has been awarded a grant-in-aid to<lb/>
play at ECU. It was announced recently<lb/>
by Tom Quinn, head basketball coach.<lb/>
Braman, a two year starter at guard<lb/>
for Springbrook High School, averaged<lb/>
27.6 points per game and six assists<lb/>
during the 1973 season in leading<lb/>
Springbrook to a 20-2 season finish.<lb/>
Braman was named first team<lb/>
All-Metropolitan, first team<lb/>
All-Maryland State, and the Best Player<lb/>
in Montgomery County, Md.<lb/>
"Braman is the best player I have ever<lb/>
coached said John Barrett, coach at<lb/>
Springbrook High School. "He is an<lb/>
excellent jump shooter, an excellent<lb/>
passer and a good floor leader. He is just<lb/>
an outstanding basketball player<lb/>
As a junior Braman was second team<lb/>
All-Met and second team All-State as he<lb/>
led Springbrook to the State<lb/>
Championship. In the State Tournament,<lb/>
Braman was named the Most Valuable<lb/>
Player.<lb/>
"Braman possesses an uncanny<lb/>
knack for scoring in all types of<lb/>
situations said Quinn in making the<lb/>
announcement. "He always seems to be<lb/>
able to hit the open man when he is<lb/>
double-teamed. He had the ability to<lb/>
play the wing or the point in our offense<lb/>
and is mature enough to see action on<lb/>
the varsity as a freshman<lb/>
TNniNfSTMDKAlCAM<lb/>
AT IHILOWW rttCIS<lb/>
fOt A SAH UGAt ONI OAT<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
EVarTMNC CAN M PMVNB<lb/>
K TOM CAM, COMFOtT AND<lb/>
CONVINIINCI IT MKMH IV<lb/>
OOt MaWtSTANMNC CMMSI-<lb/>
10IJ. TIMI IS IMPMTANT<lb/>
CAUTOUWIITOOAY<lb/>
Buc Trackmen finish second<lb/>
A I.C. Services BOM23B308<lb/>
-?<lb/>
Old bankers never die,<lb/>
they just lose interest<lb/>
???<lb/>
ENTERTAINER<lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
Piano or Guitar<lb/>
1 June 1 to Sept 1<lb/>
WRITE:<lb/>
HOLIDAY INN<lb/>
BOX 308<lb/>
KILL DEVIL HILLS, N.C.<lb/>
27948<lb/>
By STEPHEN G. THOMPKINS<lb/>
Special to Fountainhaad<lb/>
William and Mary for the third<lb/>
consecutive year beat out ECU for the<lb/>
Southern Conference Outdoor Track and<lb/>
Field Championships, due to their<lb/>
tremendous strength in the distance<lb/>
events and an untimely injury to an ECU<lb/>
sprinter.<lb/>
William and Mary won the meet with<lb/>
118 56 points. East Carolina a strong<lb/>
second with 97 13 points, followed by<lb/>
Richmond's 18'?, Appalachian's 16,<lb/>
VMI's 6, Davidson's 5 13 and The<lb/>
Citadel's 5 points.<lb/>
In the five distance events, the 880,<lb/>
mile, three mile, six mile and the 3000<lb/>
meter steeplechase, William and Mary<lb/>
won eighteen out of a possible<lb/>
twenty-five places. The Indians swept all<lb/>
five places in the three mile, and took at<lb/>
least three places in all the others.<lb/>
With the score tied sixty-four all,<lb/>
Maurice Huntley was winning the 100<lb/>
yd. dash but pulled up with a hamstring<lb/>
pull forty yards from the finish line.<lb/>
Huntley was favored to place high in the<lb/>
220 yd. dash also.<lb/>
Barry Johnson, captain of the Pirate<lb/>
track team, said, "We put out all we<lb/>
could. But when Maurice pulled that<lb/>
muscle it got some of the guys down.<lb/>
That and their distance runners hurt us<lb/>
There were plenty of bright spots for<lb/>
the Pirates though. The meet's first event<lb/>
on Friday saw Ed RigsLy finishing third<lb/>
in the six mile in a fine time of 30:39.4.<lb/>
In the weight events both Ivey<lb/>
Goffers place third<lb/>
in conference play<lb/>
The East Carolina golf team,<lb/>
defending Southern Conference<lb/>
champion, finished a very disappointing<lb/>
third in this year's 54-hole conference<lb/>
tournament held at the Country Club of<lb/>
South Carolina in Florence, S.C.<lb/>
This poor finish was not as surprising<lb/>
as would seem. Despite the fact that the<lb/>
Pirates had a perfect 8-0 dual meet<lb/>
record, their play at the Camp Lejeune<lb/>
Collegiate Toumey and the Furman<lb/>
Intercollegiate Tourney just was not up<lb/>
to par.<lb/>
Furman University now wears the<lb/>
conference crown, finishing first with a<lb/>
team score of 1,144. Second place<lb/>
belongs to Davidson at 1,152. ECU was<lb/>
third at 1,157, followed by Appalachian<lb/>
State at 1.175. Richmond at 1.200, The<lb/>
Citadel at 1,202, William and Mary<lb/>
1,233 and VMI as 1,275.<lb/>
The inconsistency of the defending<lb/>
individual champion Eddie Pinnix had to<lb/>
be particularly distressing to Pirate coach<lb/>
John Welborn. Pinnix sandwiched an<lb/>
excellent 72 between rounds of 82 and<lb/>
83.<lb/>
A bright spot for ECU was a four<lb/>
under par closing round of 68 by Jim<lb/>
Brown. Brown, a senior from Stoneville,<lb/>
N.C, recorded the tournament's best<lb/>
round with this effort.<lb/>
Other Pirate scores were: Harry<lb/>
Helmer, 79, 79, 75; Jim Ward, 83, 76,<lb/>
72; Bebo Batts, 75, 77, 78; Carl Bell, 85,<lb/>
77, 75; and Ray Wall, 87, 83, 77.<lb/>
The Pirates wind up the season with a<lb/>
home match today against Campbell<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Davidson wins net<lb/>
crown ; Bucs sixth<lb/>
The 1973 Southern Conference<lb/>
Tennis Championship now belongs to<lb/>
the regular season champion Davidson<lb/>
Wildcats. The 'Cats captured four finals<lb/>
matches on Saturday afternoon to defeat<lb/>
runners-up Applachian State and<lb/>
Furman, who tied for second in the<lb/>
Greenville, S.C. tourney.<lb/>
The four wins gave the Davidson<lb/>
netters 19 points for the tournament to<lb/>
15 each for Furman and Appalachian<lb/>
State.<lb/>
William and Mary finished fourth with<lb/>
nine points and The Citadel was fifth<lb/>
with five. East Carolina, Richmond and<lb/>
V.M.I, failed to score.<lb/>
Top-seeded Keith Richardson of<lb/>
Appalachian State defeated Ford<lb/>
Robinette of William and Mary, 6-4, 7-6,<lb/>
6-2, for the singles title<lb/>
Furman's Dudley Reynolds was a<lb/>
surprise winner in the number ttvo<lb/>
singles, easily defeating division top-seed<lb/>
Kevin Menton of Davidson, 6-2, 6-0.<lb/>
Doubles play sparked the Wildcats to<lb/>
the Championship as they took two of<lb/>
the three finals matches.<lb/>
f<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
FREE Iced Tea With<lb/>
Any FoodOrder on<lb/>
Mondays<lb/>
FREE Salad With each<lb/>
Lasagna Dinner<lb/>
SUBMARINES<lb/>
DELIVERY SERVICE<lb/>
from 5-11 p.m.<lb/>
7 Days a Week<lb/>
752-7483<lb/>
Peacock and LaBaron Caruthers turned<lb/>
in exceptional performances. Peacock<lb/>
won the inaugura1 hammer throw with a<lb/>
throw of 152-2, and finished second in<lb/>
both the shotput 48-6 34 and discus<lb/>
148-2. Caruthers finished second in the<lb/>
hammer throw 143-9. fourth in the<lb/>
shotput 49-4 Vi and third in the discus at<lb/>
141-9 feet.<lb/>
John Hoffman finished second in the<lb/>
javelin with a throw of 190-0 feet.<lb/>
In the high jump ECU took the silver<lb/>
and bronze medals, Roy Quick finishing<lb/>
second at 6-6 and John Pitts third at 6-4.<lb/>
Walter Davenport put on his usual<lb/>
brilliant exhibition in the long jump and<lb/>
triple jump. Davenport won the long<lb/>
jump on Friday with a jump of 23-6<lb/>
feet. On Saturday he set a new Southern<lb/>
Conference record in winning the triple<lb/>
jump at 50-51 feet.<lb/>
Larry Malone and Lawrence Wilkerson<lb/>
backed up Davenport well. Malone<lb/>
finished third in the long jump at 22-10<lb/>
34 feet, and took another bronze medal<lb/>
in the triple jump with a leap of 47-5Mj.<lb/>
Wilkerson finished fourth in the triple<lb/>
iump with a jump of 47-V4 feet.<lb/>
In the sprints Gary Tiffany ran a 10.3<lb/>
in the 100 yd. dash for fifth place.<lb/>
The most exciting race of the two day<lb/>
meet was the 440 yd. relay. The ECU<lb/>
relay team of Larry Malone. Carlester<lb/>
Grumpier, Maurice Huntley and Charles<lb/>
Lovelace finished first winning the gold<lb/>
medal with a time of 41.8 seconds, aided<lb/>
greatly by a superb anchor leg by<lb/>
Lovelace.<lb/>
In the hurdles Ron Smith finished<lb/>
fourth in the 440 yd Intermediates at<lb/>
55.2, and ECI finished third, fourth and<lb/>
fifth in the high h 'dies Sam Philips<lb/>
took the bronze at 14.5 seconds. Ron<lb/>
Smith fourth at 14.6 and Crumpler fifth<lb/>
at 14.9.<lb/>
In the 440 yd. dash ECU took first.<lb/>
second and fifth. Charles Lovelace was<lb/>
the gold medal winner at -lit 2 seconds,<lb/>
Barry Johnson took the silver at 49.5<lb/>
and Palmer Lisane finished fifth at 51.0<lb/>
The pole vault was won by ECU'S<lb/>
Richard McDuffie with a jump of 15-0<lb/>
Also placing for the Pirates was Art<lb/>
Miller at 13-6 which was good enough<lb/>
for the bronze medal, and Bill Bailey<lb/>
tied with two other vaulters for fifth at<lb/>
13-0.<lb/>
In the mile run Gerald Klas finished<lb/>
fourth at 4:16.6, giving the Pirates only-<lb/>
two places in the five distance events<lb/>
In the final event, the mile relay, the<lb/>
Pirates took the bronze medal, due<lb/>
mainly to a fantastic anchor leg by Barry<lb/>
Johnson. The relay team of Charles<lb/>
Lovelace, Palmer Lisane. Walter<lb/>
Davenport and Johnson was in fifth<lb/>
place going into the final leg. hut<lb/>
Johnson put on a thrilling finish to<lb/>
enable the Pirate?, to finish third.<lb/>
In all the Pirates won si. event! to<lb/>
William and Mary's ten The Outstanding<lb/>
Athlete Award was a draw between<lb/>
Furman's Bill Dimitrouleas who won the<lb/>
discus and shotput, and William and<lb/>
Mary's Bill Louv who won the three mile<lb/>
and finished second and third in the<lb/>
steeplechase and mile respectively<lb/>
Pirate nine falters with tough<lb/>
loss to Citadel; Larussa hurt<lb/>
The Citadel scored two unearned runs<lb/>
in the fifth inning and held on to<lb/>
surprise ECU 2-1 in Southern<lb/>
Conference baseball action Saturday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
The loss dropped the Pirates to 6-2 in<lb/>
the conference and they now trail first<lb/>
place Appalachian State by one game.<lb/>
With the schedule shaping up as it is. the<lb/>
prospects appear dim that a pennant will<lb/>
be flying over Harrington Field this year.<lb/>
Perhaps more serious than the loss of<lb/>
the game itself was the loss of pitcher<lb/>
Dave Larussa for the remainder of the<lb/>
season. A line drive was hit back to<lb/>
Larussa in the second. The ball struck<lb/>
him on his pitching hand and broke his<lb/>
thumb. Without Larussa the Pirates are<lb/>
teetering on the edge of the plank as<lb/>
they sail into six games in six days<lb/>
beginning Monday.<lb/>
Bill Godwin came on to relieve<lb/>
Larussa and had no trouble until the<lb/>
fifth when he unloaded a wild pitch with<lb/>
Bulldog runners on first and third.<lb/>
Catcher Rick McMahon pounced on the<lb/>
ball and fired in time to Godwin<lb/>
covering the plate. But unfortunately<lb/>
Joke of day: Did you hear about the<lb/>
who requested that he be buried at<lb/>
sea? Nine of his friends drowned<lb/>
while digging his grave.<lb/>
Godwin got caught-up in the excitement<lb/>
of the moment and dropped the ball. He<lb/>
walked the next batter and then gave up<lb/>
a single which scored the second Citadel<lb/>
run.<lb/>
Godwin was hardly the culprit, as the<lb/>
Buc batters managed just four hits all<lb/>
day, three of which were singles. The<lb/>
Citadel pitcher Rusty Booth sneaked<lb/>
three strikes past ten Pirates in the eight<lb/>
innings he worked.<lb/>
ECU got their lone run in the eighth<lb/>
inning when Mike Hogan lofted a high<lb/>
fly ball just over the right field feme<lb/>
This made the score 2-1. In the ninth the<lb/>
Pirates got a man on first, but a poor<lb/>
attempt at a sacrifice bunt killed that<lb/>
last hope for a rally.<lb/>
So now the Pirates have their work<lb/>
cut out for them. Yesterday they were<lb/>
due to face the Spiders of Richmond at<lb/>
Richmond. Tommorow they have a<lb/>
home doubleheader scheduled with<lb/>
VMI On Thursday they travel to<lb/>
Wiliiamsburg to face William and Mary.<lb/>
and then wind up the season Saturday as<lb/>
they travel to Boone for a doubleheader<lb/>
with Appalacian State<lb/>
Thought for the day: If an orange is<lb/>
called an orange, why isn't a banana<lb/>
called a yellow or a grape called a<lb/>
purple?<lb/>
ie a special kind of Navy Flyer.<lb/>
Be a Naval Flight Officer.<lb/>
Whenevei a avy plane is undei electronic<lb/>
kontrol, that plane is in the hands ot a Naval<lb/>
Flight Office r, Naturally, as s candidate for<lb/>
Naval Flight Officer training you'll need some<lb/>
ry special qualifications Fust, you must<lb/>
ally want to fly, even if you've never flown<lb/>
U'tore You'll also need a college degree ?nd<lb/>
he kind of mind that works well with math<lb/>
and physics<lb/>
Waiting at the end of your training<lb/>
I'rogram is a Navy Commission and the Golden<lb/>
Wings of a Naval Flight Officer By then you'll<lb/>
be an expert in areas like Jet Navigation and<lb/>
Airborne Control equipped to do your ob<lb/>
wherever you go<lb/>
But whatever your specialty travel will<lb/>
be part of your life And so will challenge,<lb/>
responsibility, achievement and reward<lb/>
The benefits aren't average either A Naval<lb/>
Flight Officer can earn up to $10,000 upon<lb/>
completion of flight school The pay after three<lb/>
years is up to $14,500 There is also a program<lb/>
tor obtaining a masters degree at no ci Tht<lb/>
Navy gives its Naval Flight Officers ths bl<lb/>
If that's the kind of careei you're ! i ?<lb/>
for, and if you think you've got "hat it takes m<lb/>
be a Naval Flight Officer, send in the coupon<lb/>
Gentlemen<lb/>
I like it Piaata send more mlormalion on what it<lb/>
lakes to be a Naval Flight Orticar<lb/>
 Name Age<lb/>
I<lb/>
 Adorns<lb/>
I<lb/>
 City . State Zip<lb/>
I<lb/>
 Currant Collage Year<lb/>
Saa LT Wallace Mangum.on campus. Studant Union, 14 16 May or sand coupon to Navy Racruiting,<lb/>
P O Bo? 2506. Ralaigh. N C 77602. OR CALL (9191 832?629<lb/>
<pb facs="00039686_0004"/><lb/>
Stud?nt N?w?p?P??<lb/>
PuMiwmo ? t ??' Carolina Unlvarslty<lb/>
P. O. Bo? 75l? ECU Station<lb/>
Qraanvliw. Nortn Carolina 27SS4<lb/>
TMcpnon 7i?-?t? or 7SI-SM7<lb/>
Courrumhead<lb/>
Editorial Commentary<lb/>
Political spying just part<lb/>
of the 'American way'<lb/>
Last night the President of th I'mted<lb/>
States came on national television trying,<lb/>
a.s he stated, to maintain the "saered<lb/>
image" of the White House That image<lb/>
as most of us know, has been smeared by<lb/>
iIk breakin of the Democratic National<lb/>
Headquarters at the Watergate Hotel in<lb/>
Miami in June of l?72, and by the re<lb/>
sulting political spying by the Re-ele't<lb/>
the President higherups<lb/>
As much as we may try. we cannot<lb/>
believe that the President actually thinks<lb/>
the American people are seriously dis-<lb/>
turbed by this "political spying After<lb/>
all, spying has been pretty much "the<lb/>
American way" to find out about any<lb/>
thing thai our opposition has been doing.<lb/>
Spying, in one form or the other has<lb/>
iccompanied every major war in which<lb/>
America has particiapted It is evidenced<lb/>
in most all sports (Olympics included),<lb/>
'ii industry, in our academic institutions,<lb/>
i t ically all of our lav enforcement<lb/>
agencies (both federal and state), and<lb/>
yes, even in politics.<lb/>
We all rememeer the infamous Gary<lb/>
Powers. Our nation was shocked at that<lb/>
time that we were spying on the Russians<lb/>
during peace time. However, a multitude<lb/>
of spy films and spy TV senes were soon<lb/>
to follow, glamorizing the role of the un-<lb/>
dercover spy.<lb/>
Industrial spying fails to raise the inter-<lb/>
est of Americans, and as John Mitchell<lb/>
said just a week ago, "You have to run a<lb/>
campaign like a business Why should<lb/>
the Watergate incident bother Americans<lb/>
now<lb/>
The Watergate breakin is more of an<lb/>
indictment against the American people<lb/>
than any particular administration, dust<lb/>
as we fail to condemn the unmarried<lb/>
girl "playing around" until she gets<lb/>
pregnant, we fail to recognize political<lb/>
corruption until after the damage is al-<lb/>
ready done. The damage was done<lb/>
November 7.<lb/>
Washington Mfrr-go-Round<lb/>
Was Whitten setup by FBI?<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
A federal grand jury, as you may<lb/>
know, refused to indict my associate Les<lb/>
Whitten after FBI agents arrested him on<lb/>
the streets We now have evidence that<lb/>
the FBI deliberately tried to set up<lb/>
Whitten and withheld the facts from the<lb/>
Justice Department. The grand jury<lb/>
really should have indicted the<lb/>
responsible FBI officials.<lb/>
Whitten embarrassed the FBI by<lb/>
ting stolen Indian documents that<lb/>
the FBI had been searching all over the<lb/>
country to find Whitten also wrote the<lb/>
story of the documents, which was<lb/>
highly embarrassing to ,u government.<lb/>
The word came down tn m the White<lb/>
House to retaliate.<lb/>
Whitten was arrested, therefore, as he<lb/>
was covering the return of the<lb/>
documents to the government. Indian<lb/>
leader Hank Adams had been negotiating<lb/>
to get the documents back from the<lb/>
Indians who who stole them and return<lb/>
them to the government files. The FBI<lb/>
knew about Adams intentions but<lb/>
didn't mention this to the<lb/>
eDepartment.<lb/>
The prosecutors, therefore, began<lb/>
incking up the facts in the cast not from<lb/>
the FBI. but from the newspapers. The<lb/>
FBI, for example neglected to tell key<lb/>
Justice Department officials that their<lb/>
undercover man had en present when<lb/>
Adams told the press of his intention to<lb/>
return the documents Even more<lb/>
embarrassing, the FBI's undercover man<lb/>
was shown on an ABC-TV film sitting<lb/>
only four feet from Adams while Adams<lb/>
was talking about returning the papers.<lb/>
Neither Whitten nor Adams, of course,<lb/>
had anything to do with stealing the<lb/>
documents. And it is not a crime to<lb/>
assist the government in recovering<lb/>
stolen documents. In other words, the<lb/>
FBI knew Whitten and Adams were not<lb/>
committing a crime when they were<lb/>
arrested.<lb/>
The prosecutors, nevertheless, allowed<lb/>
the FBI to present its case to the grand<lb/>
jury It's rare that a grand jury wont<lb/>
indict people that the FBI wants to bring<lb/>
to trial But the FBI's case was so bad<lb/>
that the grand jury refused to indict<lb/>
Whitten and Adams.<lb/>
Meanwhile. Whitten's constitutional<lb/>
rights were knowingly violated by the<lb/>
FBI. Maybe the grand jury ought to bt<lb/>
called back into session to indict the<lb/>
responsible FBI officials.<lb/>
PUBLIC AWARENESS<lb/>
The latest polls show that more<lb/>
Americans know what Watergate means<lb/>
than know who Henry Kissinger is.<lb/>
Public awareness of the Watergate<lb/>
scandal is so high that millions of<lb/>
Americans are asking questions that<lb/>
Republicans had hoped never would be<lb/>
raised:<lb/>
Was President Nixon personally<lb/>
implicated in the Watergate crimes?<lb/>
Could the President himself be involved<lb/>
in so sordid an episode?<lb/>
We have sought the answer from the<lb/>
best available sources. They swear that<lb/>
the President was misled by two of his<lb/>
most trusted advisers, John Mitchell and<lb/>
John Dean. Both swore to his face that<lb/>
they had no advance knowledge of the<lb/>
Watergate bugging operation.<lb/>
There were other aides who cautioned<lb/>
the President that Mitchell and Dean<lb/>
must have been aware of the break-in<lb/>
and bugging. But Nixon would just shrug<lb/>
helplessly and ask for proof. Then he<lb/>
would emphasize that he didn't want to<lb/>
behead innocent people.<lb/>
DEMOCRATIC CASUALTY<lb/>
Meanwhile, at least one Democrat has<lb/>
also been hurt by the Watergate affair.<lb/>
He is Spencer Oliver, who for several<lb/>
years has serves as the Washington liaison<lb/>
for the Democratic State Chairman<lb/>
Association. It was Oliver whose phone<lb/>
was tapped by the Watergate bugging<lb/>
crew last May.<lb/>
Now, a year later, Oliver finds himself<lb/>
caught in a political cross-fire between<lb/>
Republicans and Democrats. Democrat<lb/>
national chairman Bob Strauss, for<lb/>
example, is furious with Oliver for not<lb/>
playing along with his efforts to settle<lb/>
the Democrats' multimillion-dollar<lb/>
lawsuit against the President's campaign<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
Oliver has told my office he was<lb/>
offered as much as $50,000 to be paid<lb/>
over two years, if he would agree to let<lb/>
Strauss settle the suit out of court.<lb/>
Oliver's cooperation was crucial ? since<lb/>
it was his phone that was bugged.<lb/>
Oliver's lawyers advised him to settle,<lb/>
but he stubbornly refused. Instead, he<lb/>
announced he would file his own lawsuit<lb/>
if Strauss went ahead with a settlement.<lb/>
Bo Perkins<lb/>
Editor in Chief<lb/>
Bruce Parrish, Managing Editor<lb/>
Charles Griffin, Business Manager<lb/>
Perri Morgan, Advertising Manager<lb/>
Pal Crawford, News Editor<lb/>
Skip Saunders, Assl. News Editor<lb/>
Ross Mann, Chief Photographer<lb/>
Jack Morrow, Sports Editor<lb/>
l)av e EngJert, Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Phyllis Dougherty, Features Editor<lb/>
Mike Rd wards, Circulation Manager<lb/>
v<lb/>
Ira I Baker, Adv isor<lb/>
wm.<lb/>
Mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
Wonder where<lb/>
judge got his info?<lb/>
To Fountain head:<lb/>
I am writing in reference to the<lb/>
editorial in the April 26 issue of the<lb/>
Fountainhead. I was glad to hear that<lb/>
someone else had heard a certain district<lb/>
court judge actually say, the Mafia has a<lb/>
"strong-arm control" over Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, and they are "hooking" people<lb/>
on marijuana; then they will take the<lb/>
marijuana away and substitute heroin. To<lb/>
top it off, the judge stopped proceedings<lb/>
to tell this to a sixth grade class, that was<lb/>
visiting the courtroom.<lb/>
To say the least, I was appalled. Even<lb/>
Tricky's Council on Drug Abuse says<lb/>
that it is bad to lie to kids about drugs.<lb/>
These scare tactics rarely work. I wonder<lb/>
where the judge got his information<lb/>
concerning drugs?<lb/>
Butted<lb/>
Theft initiates<lb/>
move off campus<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
During Easter vacation, our room<lb/>
(212 D Scott), was violently broken into<lb/>
and approximately $250 worth of<lb/>
merchandise was stolen consisting of a<lb/>
new 19 inch $155 black and white<lb/>
television ($122 still owed in monthly<lb/>
installments), a $40 cassette tape<lb/>
recorder and records worth about $75.<lb/>
We think it is an outrage that students<lb/>
"mature" enough to be at East Carolina<lb/>
University would stoop to such thievery.<lb/>
They even stole the records off the<lb/>
phonograph and "politely" closed it.<lb/>
Why didnt they steal the phonograph<lb/>
will always be a mystery. These robbers<lb/>
entered our room by breaking the lock<lb/>
on the transom and pushing the lock<lb/>
down on the door. They ransacked the<lb/>
room, looking in the closets and drawers.<lb/>
If these thieves have any conscience,<lb/>
we would like these articles<lb/>
returned?no questions asked. One of<lb/>
the records had a sentimental value,<lb/>
being an All-State Band Album. The<lb/>
return of this record would be greatly<lb/>
appreciated.<lb/>
There is a $50 reward for the<lb/>
television (serial no. 57X5133). There is<lb/>
a $25 reward for the Admiral Cassette<lb/>
Tape recorder (serial no. 2348299) and<lb/>
20 record albums. Please call 752-0892<lb/>
for information on the items.<lb/>
You can now see one reason why so<lb/>
many students are leaving the dorms and<lb/>
moving off-campus. After this incident<lb/>
my roommate and I plan to move off<lb/>
campus also.<lb/>
Disgustingly youn.<lb/>
Bill Murphy<lb/>
Marshall Gay<lb/>
Policeman replies<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I realize that this letter<lb/>
will be disposed of promptlv,<lb/>
but nevertheless I need some<lb/>
practice at the typewriter and<lb/>
feel compelled to express my<lb/>
opinion to such an unbiased and<lb/>
impartial newspaper?.<lb/>
In the April 26th edition,<lb/>
the editorial consisted of a<lb/>
letter to the Fountainhead.<lb/>
This fine, lawa iding, citizen<lb/>
was arrested for a drug<lb/>
violation. She did not<lb/>
mention that she was charged<lb/>
with felony possession, hut<lb/>
this did become evident from the<lb/>
words (preliminary hearing).<lb/>
Furthermore, she did not<lb/>
sign a name, leaving in one's<lb/>
mind the question as there<lb/>
r<lb/>
THE FORUM<lb/>
:??S?:Si?:<lb/>
a letter at all?"<lb/>
You realize, of course, that<lb/>
I was not present on the night<lb/>
in question; nor was I present<lb/>
in the courtroom on the dav in<lb/>
question; so I cannot sav that<lb/>
these things did not occur. All<lb/>
that I can sav is that the<lb/>
person in charge of the jail can<lb/>
never recall a miscarriage in<lb/>
the cells. All persons who are<lb/>
sick or even claim to be sick<lb/>
are taken to the hospital. I<lb/>
have been in the jail and while<lb/>
it isn't the llolidav Tnn, it is<lb/>
kept clean, or as clean as can<lb/>
be expected for a detention<lb/>
center that is of that age,<lb/>
considering the type of<lb/>
clientele that sleep there.<lb/>
They do feed you and coffee is<lb/>
served at breakfast.<lb/>
The author of "the<lb/>
editorial" did not name that<lb/>
slanderous judge. I have spent<lb/>
manv hours in the courtroom<lb/>
but I cannot remenber a judge<lb/>
ever saying anything about the<lb/>
Mafia, the Costra Nostra, or any<lb/>
other such absurd criminal<lb/>
element. I bet that the judge<lb/>
she was speaking of was Mr.<lb/>
Valachi in person.<lb/>
Our mommies and daddies used<lb/>
to say that one is judged bv the<lb/>
company he keeps and I am sure<lb/>
this fine girl was not aware<lb/>
that there were anv drugs in<lb/>
that home. I bet she was there<lb/>
to have prayer with her family<lb/>
minister. I bet them dirty ole<lb/>
policemen brought that stuff<lb/>
over there to have a party and<lb/>
she didn't want to be associated<lb/>
with them ole nasty drugs.<lb/>
If the truth were known,<lb/>
this fine girl was probablv<lb/>
allowed a phone call. Or Perhaps<lb/>
she was allowed two or three<lb/>
phone calls. Her bond was<lb/>
probably so high that no one<lb/>
would bail her out of jail for<lb/>
lack of funds because of the<lb/>
seriousness of the charges<lb/>
brought against her.<lb/>
We all must remember that<lb/>
policemen do write our laws<lb/>
nor do they amend the laws.<lb/>
They must enforce them as<lb/>
they interpret them. Law<lb/>
enforcement officers do not<lb/>
attend law school for the most<lb/>
part but rather they gain<lb/>
their knowledge of the laws<lb/>
from experience and some<lb/>
schooling. Hverv person<lb/>
accused of a crime has the<lb/>
right to face their accuser<lb/>
and they have the right to<lb/>
a fair and impartial trial.<lb/>
We as individuals must work<lb/>
for more educated police<lb/>
officers, officers who can<lb/>
contribute to a better<lb/>
environment because of their<lb/>
education and experience.<lb/>
They must be paid a salary<lb/>
which will justify their<lb/>
having to work all hours of the<lb/>
day and even on weekends and<lb/>
holidays. They must be paid<lb/>
for their education and<lb/>
experience. Ask any officer<lb/>
how many j obs he must hold<lb/>
down to earn a respectable<lb/>
salary.<lb/>
We must also work to<lb/>
improve our court system if<lb/>
we are not happy with it aa<lb/>
it presently stands. T?kj a<lb/>
glimpse of the court calendar<lb/>
the next time you happen to<lb/>
be in court. Mow well do vou<lb/>
work when you have more than<lb/>
you can do.<lb/>
it<lb/>
ft<lb/>
in<lb/>
es<lb/>
sy<lb/>
in<lb/>
Ai<lb/>
srr<lb/>
th.<lb/>
frc<lb/>
ch<lb/>
k?i<lb/>
mil<lb/>
fj<lb/>
T<lb/>
it<lb/>
a<lb/>
9<lb/>
ni<lb/>
rt<lb/>
ur<lb/>
si(<lb/>
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HI<lb/>
n<lb/>
Mow, I realize that this<lb/>
fine lady probably did nothing<lb/>
wrong, it was just that those<lb/>
car kevs wore of a very grassy<lb/>
content. And that sassy ole<lb/>
judge let her go, and that<lb/>
hateful ole jailor didn't<lb/>
assault her but rather let her<lb/>
make 15 phone calls and let her<lb/>
out of jail. And since he<lb/>
wanted to protect her lie while<lb/>
she was in Jail he didn't let<lb/>
her have that long ole needle<lb/>
to hurt herself with. He was<lb/>
responsible for her and he did<lb/>
his job well. Some people do<lb/>
become depressed in Jails and<lb/>
hurt themselves an even take<lb/>
thMr own life vou know.<lb/>
I bet that fine young ladv<lb/>
lias risen above that terrible<lb/>
three days in jail and is now<lb/>
working to help improve<lb/>
detention centers, or in some<lb/>
crisis intervention center, or<lb/>
lobbying for improvements in<lb/>
law enforcement legislation. I<lb/>
bet she is even in Raleigh or<lb/>
Washington now working for<lb/>
reform in the drug laws. Whv, T<lb/>
bet she'll probablv even be one<lb/>
of them there legislators one<lb/>
day or even a governor or a<lb/>
president. I can't hardlv wait.<lb/>
I can just see her now. Ulw<lb/>
maybe they are already building<lb/>
a nev; jail where that ground Is<lb/>
torn apart behind the ole Jail,<lb/>
all because of what she suffered<lb/>
during those terrible three rlaya<lb/>
in the Pitt Countv Tail.<lb/>
But its probablv lust a<lb/>
parking lot thev're building<lb/>
there, and she probablv isn't<lb/>
in Washington or Raleigh or at a<lb/>
Crisis Intervention center or<lb/>
working to see changes in our<lb/>
courts or for better lav<lb/>
enforcement. She's probablv<lb/>
still a student filled with<lb/>
arlmositv concerning the<lb/>
Greenville Police, the 'itt<lb/>
County Sheriff's department<lb/>
and the S.B.I. But then mavbe<lb/>
she's on the Fountainhead staff<lb/>
and working to improve the<lb/>
Police-Student communitv. I ?f<lb/>
bet she'll even sav "HI' to t<lb/>
the next policeman she meeti. o<lb/>
Who knows, she might even sav I.<lb/>
"MI" to me. After all, t an ?<lb/>
a policeman, and I trv to be a g<lb/>
student, and soon I might even 5u<lb/>
finish college if I can find a ?<lb/>
little spare time, dub ah tine eri<lb/>
til<lb/>
8TBVEH LEF. b<lb/>
itl<lb/>
io<lb/>
SI<lb/>
lr<lb/>
ii<lb/>
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Forum Policy<lb/>
All students, faculty members, and<lb/>
adminstrators are urged to express their<lb/>
opinions in writing to the Forum<lb/>
The editorial page is an open forum<lb/>
where such opinions may be published<lb/>
Unsigned editorials reflect the opinions<lb/>
of the editor-in-chief, and not necessarily<lb/>
those of the entire staff or even a<lb/>
majority.<lb/>
When writing to the Forum, the<lb/>
following procedure should be used<lb/>
-Letters must be typed<lb/>
double-spaced, and should not exceed<lb/>
300 words.<lb/>
betters hould be signed with the r?mp<lb/>
of the author and other endorser! U<lb/>
the request of the signees, their JZ<lb/>
may be withheld. <lb/>
Signed articles on this page reflect th<lb/>
opinions of the authors and<lb/>
necessarily those of the FounUinh"01<lb/>
East Carolina University. d or<lb/>
?tta<lb/>
tt<lb/>
y<lb/>
ii<lb/>
d<lb/>
ele<lb/>
,?r<lb/>
nto<lb/>
en<lb/>
stol<lb/>
n H<lb/>
r<lb/>

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