East Carolina University - Buccaneer Tecoan Yearbook (Greenville, NC)

 - Class of 1979

Page 1 of 362

 

East Carolina University - Buccaneer Tecoan Yearbook (Greenville, NC) online collection, 1979 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 362 of the 1979 volume:

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The BUCCANEER T H I S T I M Volume 55 East Carolina University E Greenville NC 27834 The Buc Reappears It is no secret that this is the first volume of the Buccaneer to be published in three years That is not the only thmg that makes this volume of the Buc special and unique This volume contains more color pages and more special effects than any yearbook ever published at East Carolina It covers the year in a way new to this university a magazine style format By covering the events of the 1978 79 year chronologically this volume presents a clearer perspectnve of the times But first there is a need to discuss the events that caused the cancellation of the book for two consecutive years Each year needs to be examined separately as the factors involved in each case were not related to each other There will be no whitewash here The reasons he with such things as personal ity conflicts power struggles incompetence and politics things that should not get in the way of publishing a yearbook lt is not a story that anyone should be proud of The 1977 edition fell victim to controversy between the editor and the Student Government Association which at that time controlled the fundmg of the yearbook Upon the SGA s rejectlon of an unnecessarily large budget which had been submitted by the editor she and her staff resigned For rea sons only known to the legislators and staff members involved no compromise was reached Late in the year a second editor was named who agreed to a smaller budget and a smaller staff But the late start and the theft of equipment from the Photo Lab resulted in the cancellation of the book for the first time in over 70 years. The next year saw the same second editor attempting to pick up the pieces and get a yearbook out The facts behind this second failure are much harder to understand and accept than those of the first No one realized a problem existed until the beginning of Fall Semester 1978 Suddenly a Fountain head story claimed that the yearbook was in serious trouble for the second year m a row The story claimed that nothing had been done for a year no plans were made no pxctures were taken and the staff was never told what to do Amidst promises by the editor that the book would be finished the student body waited November 1978 came and with no progress made the Media Board cancelled the publication of the book No Judgments will be made here But there is one comment that must be stated it could have been avoided if more people had taken the time to care Apathy has plagued this campus for several years It is sad that no one was willing to put forth enough effort to insure a yearbook The 1979 Buc staff was hindered by all of thls Those who did not understand the situation were quick to place the blame for what had happened on the 79 staff Co operation was a thing that nobody was willing to give and the staff consisting mostly of freshmen and sophomores was put on the defensive This was to be the make or break year The future of the Buccaneer was at stake 4 Index Cover ECU s new Chancellor Thomas Brewer and newly expanded Ficklen Stadium Catholic Church suffers traumatic loss of two Popes as Paul VI and John Paul l die within 2 months 78 Pirates fall to Notre Dame 89 72 in last regular season game played at South Bend Indiana Cover Dr Thomas B Brewer mstalled as 7th Chancellor of East Carolina Um ceeds Dr Leo Jen kms who served as Chancellor for 18 years Long awaited Media Board begrns its year by cancelling 1978 Buc and caus mg controversy over its unspent funds Buccaneer staff suc ceeds in publishing yearbook for the first txme in three years Cover Ficklen Sta drum is expanded to seat 35 000 Pirates defeat Western dedication game Ficklen is now the 3rd largest stadium 1n NC .-,gg-wwf ECU 5 long fight winds down as Med School begxns opera tion New classroom first graduating class will be in 1980 Homecoming cele brated with parade dances and region ally televised 203 victory over William and Mary 90 Men s basketball team finishes season with an exhibrtlon game against Soviet National team Tragedy in Jones town sparks re newed controversy over relrg1ous cults as 900 die in bizarre murder suicide pact After two stormy years as head bas ketball coach Larry Gillman resigns much to the relief of his adversaries ECU makes its lst bowl appearance in 15 years and de feats Louisiana Tech 35 13 in 3rd lnde pendence Bowl SGA suffers another year of controversy with apathy fman cial problems and unfair election bring ing grief 2 Features Radio station WECU 104 D0fm Life tries for second year 132 The 50V2f1t12S to go FM FCC foot 152 SHOW dragging impedes 184 Great Escape success 198 Downtown 220 Apathy , ,,, 48 7 3 - 16 , A -A ,X 5 7 l n' - . -li ' - , .li f versity- BYQWGI' SUC- Carolina 14-6 in S X 5 ik W facility is planned, as 1 as , - . 1 . sarr r zo 64 72 so ' 86 . 17 1 180 1 196 08 I l THI TIME Edltor Craig Sahli Business Manager Terry Brown Copy Editor Martha Oakley Academics Editor Janet Wiener Actlvltles Editor Robin Stone Athletics Editor Barrie Byland Classes Edltor Theresa Sheats Organizations Edltor Ronnie Gill Assistant Athletlcs Bob Debnam Assistant Organizations Ramona Mills Louise Massey Layout Artist Ellen Fishburne Writers Richy Smith Anne Tharrington Luke Whisnant Artists Andy Anderson Tim Brown Donna Crouse Photographers John Grogan Chap Gurley Doug Melton Pete Podeszwa Steve Romero Classes Portraits By Stevens Studios Bangor Maine Printed By Josten sfAmerican Yearbook Co Clarksville Tennessee Published By Media Board of East Caro lina University TIME s title and format by permission of the publisher TIME Inc Media Board of East Carolina University Typlsts: Adrienne Cloer Copyright 1979 by Craig E. Sahll and the Continued from previous page The staff has proved itself with the publication of this edi- tion - we are not to be ridiculed any longer. The 18-member Buccaneer staff and the 4-man staff of the Photo Lab have produced this book alone. We give thanks to the few who went out of their way to make our coverage of them easier - Preston Sisk of the Drama Department, Laurie Arrants of the Women's Athletics Department, members of the Student Union Major Attractions and Program Committees, Walt At- kins of Sports Information. We owe our greatest thanks to the Media Board for having the confidence in us to give the Buc a third chance. This book belongs to the Student Body. To those of you who understood, and were willing to give us a chance - we hope you get as much enjoyment out of it as we put into it. To those of you who bitched, and screamed, and complained - we will be available to assist in removing innumberable, inex- tractable feet from condemning mouths. Yearbooks are becoming out-of-date. It is our hope, howev- er, that this edition of the Buc will help reverse the trend and re-establish the tradition of a yearbook at this university - a tradition never to be broken again. Campus Comes To Life Ks Students move in In IIQKI 1P?l Rooms vacated for summer break were slowly re- opened as students returned to campus. Parking spaces filled up as students and parents unpacked their cars and trudged up to the dorms to unload. As the last day to move in came, the final strings were broken and old ones were untied. Old friends were reacquainted, new friends were made, and some tear- ful goodbyes were said to relatives. Moving in was a big step for freshmen, but a familiar one to upper- classmen. Picture A: A service provided by the SGA, rental refrigerators were a valuable addition to many dorm rooms. B: Carrying assort- ed parcels, two students struggle to climb the stairs. C: A smiling co-ed comes prepared for the chilly winter mornings to come. Moving Inf 5 LONG LINES FCDRA4 AS DROP-NDD BEGINS V Q ,,: W Y Drop-add morning shook the sleepiness from students' heads as they arose early to avoid the long lines. Upon arriving at Wright Auditorium it looked like lines for tickets to a Carolina game or a concert. Many students spent all day running back and forth across campus trying to find stray cardsg however, other students were in and out in less than an hour. Their secret . . . who knows? Picture A: Waiting in line for drop cards can be tiresome on your feet, or so these students seem to be showing. B: At last l'm at the front of the line, but now I've scheduled six classes during one hour! C: Checking schedules is important both to students and teachers. D: Deciding times to take classes proves hard for this co-ed, so she takes a seat and a newspaper to help her out. ITVSQ N tu, W A .K ' - 1 fl! J! xr G I V x ' A 'lk h .-Lg. W :..-, ni V Qi fr f f Drop-add f 7 ..w'Jr, 5 ez JJ , iffy, Hcklen Expands To Meet ECU as Needs , 1 - 1' V-. . ' P, ... 1 751 U rl i f 111 ' ,xv 1 W5 ,. 3, :TJ 1.4 '-I ,I LT ,Ugs1:.:l r .- fins ,L igfiyi - 'ffv Q' ' X , , .- . lf , f, jug, ff IA! f H X, ' v i if ' l . ?,1? 4-W in ECU's three-and-a-half million dollar enlarge- ment of Ficklen Stadium was formally dedi- cated during a special halftime ceremony at the ECU-Western Carolina game on Sept. 2, 1978. Prior to the expansion, Ficklen held 20,000 Pirate fansg with the addition of 15,000 seats, the new stadium promises to be an important addition to the ECU athletic program. Along with the increase in bleacher space, the improved facility now boasts a modern three-level press box and an 18-foot computer- ized scoreboard. The scoreboard cost over S170,000 including the installation fee and was donated to the ECU athletic department by several local businesses. During the halftime dedication ceremony, Dr. Thomas Brewer commended Leo Jenkins, Dr. Ray Minges, private Greenville contribu- tors, and the ECU student body for their plan- ning and financial support of the stadium fund. The student body alone contributed over one and one half million dollars to the fund. The Pirates christened their new stadium with a lackluster win over WCU, 14 to 6. A lack of offensive concentration and a total of seven turnovers in the second half led Head Coach Pat Dye to characterize the Buc's performance as a comedy of errors. Picture A: The new press box is a welcome sight to Ficklen. B: The first game in the enlarged stadium was played against Western Carolina University. C: The chang- ing of scoreboards finalized Ficklen's expansion. ,ff ,I d U -f' .f ,-.: I f 14 'I A 'A' ii, ,,. A ffl' Aff? kssknn A, -'.'Ficklen Stadiu .M Ad, w N 1 w N I I 1 N 1 w w N 15 ., A, Q ' ' ' ,-A 1' LV, ' , Sf. I.-Iii! 'DIS N .gg ,.. ' ffl . ,TW ., x th f., i F- i .' ' :vii GFX F R' .391 'In X E.. ' - '4?rf - was F s Q ., Z '1- 5 Z 1.. 1.2 f, Auf I it ,az -. ey :cf H 5 . f Q Y . A , ,L-X .2-, K K VU ,V , , W V, W 'N , j11,1,Vs+Vrf uv mn -14 JL ',W.l5jg5...':, lk ,,1 1. w , ,',Qz!..iw3 N WJ! , , V, W W , Q! H .' ,fwmz V 'mpg L ulnxy-,HL n,,,,y5,Av.. ' ,gnu A '-gn. Nm 1 m fx 1 4 1 'Q ' , . Q :A :.':, . -4' 1 - ' , w 1 P ' I' 1 r I1 v UA a mu I X1 1 X w ' N 5 I f Y m v OXPLC. Srcgic N If Q., J ff' 12 f Volleyball Lady Spikers Enjoy lflhnning Season ECU's volleyball team ended the 1978 season with a 29-13 record. Second-year coach Alita Dillon de- scribed the season as a successful one. With an 8-4 record in Division I play, ECU posted decisive victories over Wake Forest, Duke, North Carolina and UNC-Greensboro. Led by Most Valuable Player LaVonda Duncan, the women had a multitude of offenses from which to draw. Also recognized for outstanding play were Ro- sie Thompson, Ginnie Rogers, Joy Forbes, Linda Mc- Clellan and Phyllis Burroughs. This year's young team did well and gained much experience, which will provide a strong base from which to build for next year. Picture A: Ginny Rogers goes up for a block. B: I.aVonda Duncan and Joy Forbes prepare for a serve. C: Becky Beauchamp and Rosie Thompson get up to block a State spike. 1... , , --syy. T...-5 -'B 1 -. 'v ff'- . . . . .s 1., E.: ,. . ',., 1.4 K 4 ,. .--P' -- . , V. .., .Q fu u ' A Hr: - .2 1.J1-PP-'M P - .r---P ' ' ' ' g24g-,+,.- 1' ly 'L A ' ' J v .A .4f..1 7' 4.-,--,T ,, .-V .rf .-- 4-.'-.-Arwizfn -Nfl . ' ' N ...Q-wh , ' , g .4 .,1w,12,!fi5'-1 ,. .- F- - ,..,,,, x .-.V 4. ' ' , .,., Y '-:'.:. Q f -A ly. 1 x .bw , . l .N I awq., - 44 : ,f , ,x ' ' ' :fa - Qxffw ,.-' ' ' --. U ' . Volleyball f 13 Picture A: Heels blockade a strategic run made by a Pirate offensive player. B: Piles of purple and gold sink a stubborn UNC player. C: Two spirited Pirates put a stunned Heel in his place. D: An alert Tarheel offensive man slides by the Pirate defense. ,v-,.-- 141 North Carolina Even though the Pirates dominated the en- tire second half both offensively and defensive- ly, the North Carolina Tarheels took a slight edge, leaving the Pirates with a loss of 14-10. No one will admit which team was better on the field for they were both so evenly matched. There was just a suprise ending to the game. The Pirates had the football on the Carolina 16- yard line, trailing 14-10 with only 55 seconds to go in the game. Marching all the way from their own 31-yard line, the Pirates were sure the final touchdown was inevitable. lt was a third-and-five situation. The ball was snapped. Quarterback Leander Green looked away and was hit. He was hit hard again and fumbled the ball. UNC's David Simmons recovered the ball and ECU's dream ended in a loss. Even though they lost, the Pirates showed for the first time what kind of offense they are capable of having. The six turnovers to their opponents dam- pened the Pirates' game, but not their spirits, as the team returned home to get ready for South- western Louisiana. .s 'E In the mid 1960's several universities were trying to acquire authorization for a School of Medicine. In 1965, the General Assembly authorized planning funds for this school at East Carolina College. In 1967, East Carolina University received continued authorization and additional funds to plan the medical program. Dur- ing 1972-1975, ECU was awarded a one year medical school. This program closed during 1975-1977, while gearing up for its four year program. In the spring of 1977 ECU's School of Medicine received accreditation from the Liason Committee on Medical Education. Four months later, 28 medical students were admitted. In 1978, they were joined by 36 more, and this fast growing grad- uate school plans to accept 40 more students in the fall of 1979. The medical school's offices and the basic science departments - Pathology, Physiology, Pharmacology, Anatomy, Biochemistry, and Microbiology - are located on the main university campus. The clinical sciences, including Surgery, Pediatrics, Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Medicine, are housed at Pitt County Me- morial Hospital, as is ECU's new Eastern Carolina Family Practice Center. This fa- cility is one of the largest in the United States used exclusively for family prac- ' .il ,I xi lp pl :Mix ' 16 f Med School Idea Becomes Realit tice. Other Medical School facilities at Pitt Hospital include the regional Neona- tal Intensive Care Unit which offers care for critically ill newborns and a high risk obstetrical referral service which pro- vides special care for women with compli- cated pregnancies in 29 counties in East- ern North Carolina. The Eastern North Carolina Helicopter Program was also initiated this year, and provides a link between fourteen hospi- tals and seven clinics. This effort to im- prove the quality of emergency health care was developed by the School of Medicine in cooperation with Dare Coun- ty and the Department of Human Re- sources office of Emergency Medical Ser- vices. The School of Medicine and Pitt Hospi- tal experienced another first in ,July when 24 residents joined the hospital's house staff to receive additional training in their clinical specialities. Physicians participating in the medical school's post- graduate training program now total 31. Seven residents trained at the Family Practice Center last year. The ECU medical school also concen- trates its efforts in research. At the Continued on page 18 fi In if I if Q. ' I nl Wlvlmile 5-nu f I alll 'gl' I -4? , 3- ... , Q 'Yknl :y',r ' -A 3' --fr, ' M l-.5-51. . f-f B V 4 E, ., ,,.I Z 1 l l l NRA... .... - A fill . i P Q? . .avi talk x Picture A: Lab work is vital to the diagnosis of many diseases. B: ECU's new Family Practice Cen- ter, C: The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit operated by the ECU Department of Pediatrics is a regional referral center for infants requiring special care. D: Dr. John B. Tingelstad, pediatrics chairman, dis- cusses a patient's chart with the department's resia dents. E: After receiving their first black bags, sec- ond-year medical students headed for class at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. F: Medical School stu- dents at work diligently in the classroom. Med School X17 X Program Starts From cratch Continued from page 16 present time they are focusing on magne- sium's role as protection against heart disease, childhood earaches, the effect of alcohol of fetal development, and region- al family disease patterns. At the present time, the medical school is in the process of receiving Ph.D. au- thorization in the fields of anatomy, bio- chemistry, microbiology, physiology and pharmacology. The development process for new Ph.D. programs was instituted in 1975 and will reach fruition with its first candidates for degrees in August of 1979. These programs will be the first such studies to be initiated in the state of North Carolina since 1971 and the first Ph.D. program for ECU. By the summer of 1981, the East Caro- lina University School of Medicine will occupy a nine story Medical Science Building, adjacent to Pitt County Memori- al Hospital, which will house all of the Medical School's departments, clinics, labs and classrooms. At that time, the enrollment in the school's medical educa- tion program will have risen to 200 future physicians. 18 f Med School AA if A ,,....f -,why ' ,L lu 1' fr' .x- .-.eiif iidfigdhi sw, ,Lil Picture A: Construction has begun on the Medical Science Building, the S26 million educational facility for the School of Medicine. B: Ultrasonography is one of many tests used to diagnose complicated pregnancies referred to the high-risk obstetrical clin- ic operated by the School of Medicine. C: The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. D: Dr. William Lau- pus, Dean of the School of Medicine. E: A Medical School resident counsels a patient. If g . M ' I i ,A A r 1 'fel :,, 3: 1 liff 4,115-1-5:z5. izvnhwff , 'zig '31-I:'11:f1f:f,: - winau:nvfg1 Q33 'zjlgi 35,1 :zip-If ,555 .. . . 313151: -A -'T'-1 W2--' ..1.': N9 X 5' ' Tzfif - Wifi? . .1 , -' f.-2' . i lf? 'f flilif , 'lv::sQ.' -: : 1 f. -1,i,i in -,... .. :,.IQ'i.: -EJ : -1' , -gg:-r.,-:-'ig'-,551-Q, , .-- - , Tr in 'lfi-5-1453: N3 Z3 X . -- .-.' 1 f J' X - '- i.- . ' I XL... f ,L aupllu ' -.liz . pn' I- . ',7 :f . , ik . '4 it T 'e :L+ VI. 35131 ' 'el xx ill fl i T .313 Med Schoolf 19 20fNewsline The year 1978 was a traumatic and historic time for the Catholic Church. The church suffered the loss of two Popes, and broke a 450-year-old tradition by electing a non-Italian to succeed them. The aged Pope Paul VI died August 6 after a 15- year reign that saw the most profound changes that the church had experienced in centuries. Paul al- lowed many changes that enabled the church to sur- vive the tumultuous moral and social upheaval taking place in the world, and embarked on a reapproach- ment with other faiths. The church was international- ized as many non-Italian cardinals were appointed. In later years, his hope and courage dwindled away, but his compassion never died. His death, at age 80, was mourned by millions of people throughout the world. The conclave that met to choose Pau1's successor was the largest and most diverse in history. Yet it took only one day to choose the Archbishop of Ven- ice, Cardinal Albino Luciani, as Paul's successor. Lu- ciani honored his two immediate predecessors by taking the name John Paul I. John Paul brought a fresh, new feeling to the church, and a smile that made everyone feel that his would be a revitalizing reign over a faith that was suffering a worldwide decline. But before he had a chance to prove himself, this smiling man who had captured the world suffered a massive stroke which took his life. His brief, 33-day pontificate had suffused the church with warmth and hope. Once again, the shocked and saddened College of Cardinals met to choose a successor. The conclave lasted longer than the previous one and its result surprised the world even more than the election of Luciani, who was not even mentioned as a successor to Paul. The two-day conclave chose the youngest Pope in 132 years, and the first non-Italian in 456 years, Polish Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, who took the name John Paul II. It is clear that the college wanted a younger man whose health would enable him to tolerate the demands of the papacy. ln John Paul II, the college got this, plus the extraordinary qualities of leadership and experience. The Cardinals reasoned that, coming from a Communist state, John Paul may well be the best qualified man to lead the church out of the worldwide crises that have threatened its very existence. John Paul ll has proved to be as popular as his predecessor, and during a visit to Latin America in January, he was greated with tremendous ovation by millions of people who love and respect this pastoral, fatherly man. 'tg X p,-.' 1 v 1.54 'ii .N .. ' -. ks ,X fi . .AC .lug .' fx ga' ,gtk- ldv ,-.-1. 0K -- .. 1 'ix h sf, rg W xr , 'i A Picture A: Pope Paul VI upon his visit to the International Francis- can College where he celebrated the 800th anniversary of the death of St. Bonaventure. B: Pope John Paul l leaves the Sistene Chapel where a conclave had elected him successor to the late Pope Paul. C: Pope John Paul ll, the first non-Italian in 450 years to be named Pope, gestures after leaving the Sistene Chapel where he was elected to succeed Pope John Paul l. Z Kggi. q - ,Mari W' ..-L .u -. I1-sz urs..-Ii H - '-,af r - ...xt 4 .- '1' i- -v i gn, I' as .r' ,I '-4 Shock ed Hhurch ibn es Cufo Pope f 1 X, A .5-.1 F 'fi . x. ' -n.- n X -1, -st fr tix, 5' ML '. - ,G ,Y X ft u . ' i . 'Y' -., -V. ll ili lN h Intramurals are a way of life for many East Carolina University students. In recent years, there has been a tremendous increase in the overall participation in the intramural program. The activities range from Almost Anything Goes, for the fun-loving E.C.U. stu- dent, to tennis, for the most serious minded athlete. The intramurals allow students to include vigorous physical activity in their dai- ly lives. A wide variety of sports activities make the intramurals accessable to a broad range of students. Separate categories have been designated for men's and women's competition in such areas as softball, bowl- ing, and golf. The special events selected for the co-recreational intramurals provide great opportunities for athletic battles be- tween the sexes. According to Dr. Thomas Brewer, East Carolina University is proud of its outstand- ing intramural program. It is our belief that each student should be afforded the oppor- tunity to participate in competitive and non- competitive activities. Our intramural pro- gram is among the finest in the nation and fully meets the University's commitment to encourage team games, individual and dual sports, and co-recreational activities. The East Carolina Physical Education De- partment strives to get students to under- stand the importance of physical activity as a way of life. The outstanding increase in participation in these intramural activities proves that the students are listening. Picture A: Hey buddy, watch where you're going with this contraption. l'm precious cargo, ya know! Perhaps Almost Anything Goes isn't for you, but surely there are numerous other sports offered in the intramu- ral program that you're interested in. These sports not only offer physical fitness, they give students the chance to meet new people So, if you're tired of jogging your legs off to keep trim or just plain bored with your present leisure activities, why don't you take a look into East Carolina's intramural program Who knows, you may find just what you have been searching for! 'sei' 'xiii ' 'xl hifi! t 4.5 w . 4 V-w 1, at - I r-,L g- .-ff'- s. ' t I S. H . 1- 'V' .PT'..k I B an r o 1' 5 - .s 1' Ku M: 1 .Mu 1.52. .l r 'L'.' Y ,W . 1 T Q Q-M' -.Q 54-T we -1.-lik., 4 - . A. ' . ' ff 1' F ' ff-it ' i -.2795 -ts n ' a w ' , . 1 . fan . .s , . T .1-, fy 1' ' 1-. s . - ,fs . 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The first seven minutes of the game claimed the only touchdowns made during the four quarters. These, along with the outstanding eleven points scored by kicker Bill Lamm, totaled the Pirates' score. But, as head coach Pat Dye said after the game, field goals of Lamm gave the Pirates enough second half points to secure a final victory margin. -..-'f if --V W . .. I i. 1' you've got to win some games like this every year. If you're going to be a good football team and have a good record, winning comes in a lot of different ways, Dye said. But I was proud of our team, and I'm happy we won. The Pirate offense weakened in the second half when quarter- back Leander Green was injured. Only the Pirate defense and the il- L' 'ni f s'lz .-rw Alf y . I . l ' Ig ,, , j X , A K., 5 ci 'I . , , , 1 he -H , 'g , 1 is-2--a?z i A ,s--s, Texas-Arlington 27 Picture A Pirate Steve Greer struggles to gain yardage as a determined Maverick tries to choke his progression B Football is definitely a contact sport as shown during thas particular play C Leander Green who was injured during the second quarter of the game tries to dodge an aggressive opponent N Q :- U! FA ea I 1 I 1 ea b e H The East Carolina Women's Tennis Team started the fall season with a new coach and a bright outlook. Barbara Olschner is a new face on the E.C.U. sport scene. At the beginning of the season, she was assured that her team's strength laid in their youth, consistency, and concentration. ' Two of the players, Debbie Spinozzola and Pat Stew- art hold particularly high esteem in their coaches eyes. Pat, a transfer from Hofstra, is sighted as the top player on this year's team. Although Olschner's confidence is just, she was ex- tremely concerned with the experience held by the sea- son's opposition. The strongest asset of the team was their-constant dedication and their intense desire to win. Picture A: Pat Stewart of New York demonstrates a facet of the style that makes her number one on the court. B: Intense concentration and a serious dedication to the sport of tennis are just two assests all winners possess. C: Debbie Spinozzola is the holder of the second place title on the Pirate team. 30fNewsline Deaths, Disasters Debacles and Daredevil San Diego Plane Crash Worst In US Histor The hellish orange flames and black smoke that rose quickly into San Diego's morning skies on September 26, 1978 signalled the worst air tragedy in U.S. aviation history, as more than 150 people lost their lives. The deaths included all 135 people aboard Pacific Southwest Air- lines' Boeing 727, the two occupants of a tiny Cessna 172 that collided with it, and at least 13 people on the ground who were struck with flaming debris. The collision dramatized the haphazard nature of mid-air collisions. The evidence collected by the more than 100 Federal Avaition Administration investigators in- dicated that both the veteran pilots were following proper safety procedures, and that air traffic controllers had alerted both pilots of their dangerous proximity - and yet they still collided. , The airliner, descending for a landing, overtook the small, ascending Cessna and flipped it against the airliner's lowered right wing. Both planes burst into flames and plunged to the ground. On the ground, chaos spread through the quiet residential areas in which the planes plunged to earth. The bulk of the airliner smashed into houses, causing blazes that burned for two hours. The devastation on the ground sparked renewed controversy in San Diego over such a busy airport's being situated in a heavily populated area, and over the FAA's delaying of use of an electronic system to warn pilots of im- pending collisions. The disaster showed that the element of mere chance in course, speed, and timing can still doom even the most ex- perienced pilots and their passengers to innocent deaths, like the victims who died over San Diego. Picture A: A flaming Pacific Southwest Airlines Boeing 727 plunges toward the ground, moments before crashing into a residential area of San Diego, Cal. B: The Lone Eagle II reflects the sun as it crosses the French Coast near Le Havre in the first successful trans-Atlantic balloon crossing. ' ' 'TTT' T 'f7 T ' , -. . .we -. -. - V Kucinich Survives, City's Fate Unknown Cleveland's mayor Dennis Kucinich barely survived a recall vote in August, but the city itself still faced a tough fight for survival. The recall was organized by Kucinich's enemies who challenged his firing of a popular police chief. He was also under fire for two brief police strikes, a walkout by city mechanics, 23 vetoes of city legis- lation and continued struggles by the city to meet its financial obligations. Kucinich won by a slim 236-vote mar- gin given him by his only supporters, the white working-class ethnics. He may have survived himself, but his city still faced enormous problems, including raising enough money to pay off long term notes due in December, shoring-up city services, and a controversy over sale of the municipal power compan which Kucinich refused to allow. His victory did not end his politic problems, either, as he made enemies both Republican leaders and heads of h own Democratic Party, members of black community, the majority of the council, and leaders of the Te Union and local AFL-CIO. The made changes in his staff and pledged forget the past and try to work with city leaders to restore public in the city's government and to default later in the year. S l Americans Set Aviation History An enormous silvery balloon appeared over the skies of France during August, as three Americans from New Mexico made history by being the first to cross the Atlantic in a balloon. The helium-filled balloon finally landed in a wheat field in the village of Miserey, 50 miles west of Paris. By then, hundreds ople had arrived to welcome the to France. Upon arriving, the popped the cork from a bottle of and began toasting their and each other. Their -of pe 3,100-mile-historic trip from Presque Isle, Maine to Miserey lasted over 5M days. The Albuquerque Three had openly modeled their trip after Charles Lind- bergh's famous airplane flight of May 1927. They named their craft the Lone Eagle II in his honor, and had wanted to land at Le Bourget, where Lindy himself touched down. Though they fell 60 miles short of their goal, they got a welcome reminiscent of the tumultuous greeting that Lindbergh received. Obituaries Morris fthe Catj - July 7, 1978 - Fin- icky star of over 40 television commercials, of cardiac problems associated with old age. Fields, Totie - Aug. 2, 1978 - Talk show comedian who staged a comeback to night-club circuit following amputation of her left leg in 1976, of a heart attack, in Las Vegas. Paul VI - Aug. 6, 1978 - Supreme Pon- tiff of the Roman Catholic Church, of a heart attack in Rome, after a 15-year reign. fSee page 20.l Fontaine, Frank - Aug. 8, 1978 - Comedian known as Crazy Guggenhamf' who was a zany second banana to Jackie Gleason in the 1960's, of a heart attack. Prima, Louis - Aug. 8, 1978 - Jazz trumpeter and gravel-voiced singer and bandleader, after lingering in a coma for 3 years, in New Orleans. Kenyatta, Jomo - Aug. 22, 1978 - President of the Republic of Kenya, who led his country to independence and a moder- ately prosperous African Socialism, in his sleep at a beach resthouse in Mombasa, Ke- nya. Shaw, Robert - Aug. 28, 1978 - Actor and author of five novels who had numerous television appearances, in Tourmakeady, Ireland. Warner, Jack - Sept. 9, 1978 - Motion picture producer and the last of the four Warner Brothers who pioneered in produc- tion, distribution, and exhibition of films. Messerschmitt, Willy - Sept. 15, 1978 - German aircraft pioneer who developed German fighting planes of World War II, in West Germany, after major surgery. Bostock, Lyman - Sept. 23, 1978 - Star California Angel outfielder, of a gun- shot wound, in Gary, IN. When he died, he was hitting .296, ninth among American League batters. John Paul I - Sept. 28, 1978 - 263rd Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church whose reign lasted only 33 days, of a heart attack, in Vatican City. fSee page 20.1 Bergen, Edgar - Sept. 30, 1978 - America's top ventriloquist and creator of Charlie McCarthy, Mortimer Snerd and oth- ers, in his sleep, in Las Vegas. Newsline f 3 1 ' 'Q' 29.1 N--atv 49 :Inf I am joy, I am sorrow, I am fear, pity, loveg echanical man. l am dream, I am nightmareg a andle burst into flame, a candle burnt out. I am orilla, caged behind bars, straining to meet ou - to eat you. I am mime: impossible doer f things, a weaver of spells, a magician you an't look away from. I make you believe. nd believe you do. When Keith Berger enters stage the room is filled with silent anticipa- ion. tines which included Mechanical Birth, The Flame, The Bizarre Circus, and The Head Piece. The crowd might have kept Berger on stage for the rest of the evening had the mime not had other engagements to attend. Picture A: Smiling at the audience response, Berger re- laxes from his routine. B: Berger gets laid back in the afternoon as students watch in amazement. C: Taking a stroll with his girl, the mime entertains students on the mall. On October 4, 1978, at Mendenhall's Hen- Theater the same silence filled the air as was carried on the stage by two men. young mime went through a series of rou- leaf D: In the finale of his act, Berger's excellent talent definite- ly shines through. E: Facial expressions play an important role in Berger's work. Keith Berger f 33 the players on the two sid try to score points by drivi the ball into the opponents' gc The East Carolina Women's Field Hockey team had an aggra- vating 1978 season. The Lady Pirates ended the regular season with just a single victory. The team made an outstanding recovery in time for the AIAW State Tournament in which they won two of their four play-off games. Their winning streak continued through the Deep South Tournament as they slid by Furman 2-1. Coach Laurie Arrants felt that the slow season was due to the extremely tough schedule the ladies had to endure. Despite all the disappointments the team had to encounter, the year did shine for four players. Leigh Sumner, Sue Jones, Kathy Zwigard, and Sally Birch were named to the All-Star Team at the Deep field hockey: a field game in whic South Tournament. Coach Arrants was proud of the team's end-of-the-season co- meback. Picture A: Damn, we lost again! B: Donna Nichols makes an action-packed pas C: Co-Captain Sally Birch watches her team from the sidelines at the state tourn ment held at Boone. D: Ruth Grossman makes an impressive defensive steal. Sideline strategy is a vital part of any sport. F: A well-played defensive rush by Ea Carolina on a penalty corner stroke. G: Sue Jones makes a pass to Kathy Zwigar during the UNC game. 34fWomens' Field Hockey I S, c. .- .,.k4. X A . . 1 4 I5 rs-q, , , . F I m 'LZ YT N Kr , N245-if v 0 -...- Womcns' Field Hockey KRESKINI ND NIYSTERY Preferring the apellation, mentalist Kreskin claims there is no mystery to him at all. As a mentalist, he invests more vigor in participation by audiences than any other entertain- er. During his show the audience plays a vital role as Kreskin uses his power of suggestion to astound and amaze onlookers. Performing to a standing-room-only crowd, he left them looking forward to more. Picture A: Roaming through the audience, Kreskin selects helpers for his illusions. B: Now, try to shut your mouth! C: The power of suggestion can be very great as Kreskin seems to come out of himself. sefxfeskm C Kreskin f 37 FINN. SEQNDS CRITICZIL 0 PlB4TES FIF'IH XIICTCRY The Plrates met Rrchmond ln the annual Oyster Bowl Classlc hosted by the Vlrglma Shrmers m Nor folk, and walked away wxth a 21 14 vlctory The Pxrate offenslve lme was too much for the Spiders as Leander Green engmeered all three Plrate scormg drnves and scored the wmmng touchdown hxmself on a fxve yard run wlth just 1 02 left on the clock I just trned to make thmgs happen today sald Green I just worked on the bas1c thmgs lxke makmg the good prtch and readmg the defense better Thls certamly was the best performance by the offense m a couple of weeks Best offense was the name of the game as the Pirates left Vlfglftla wlth a 5 3 record 38jOyster Bowl K f 'I s ll' ff M 1 is 1' f r Emxffpeg Min.. fig, A 5. N 999.0 we Q -1.1-Qi.. 5, .9 , K a5352w4fi,?4?Qiyg' 54' W YW' A F 825' Myyzfyg - .N gf.. ,fa- NWQQQSM 2 N W' Alf? 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I .Haag Q' , I, :U ' f,. . ' ffm'-g-.. A-'45 - -. 4 sf.. P ,-ng.. F f l 4 S S- Kg - . T Mya .- .aw 'Ql:'Q-'9 Hg' . 9 ' ' .L la nd Iw- f Q I Y '43 9'-L I 1-2fNancy Hauser Dance Company ni' .V p yilfey 0 Dancer s Success Performing in a matinee on October 24 and an evening show on the 25th, the Nancy Hauser Dance Company showed students and faculty that there is more to dance than meets the eye. Hauser's philosophy, and the thor- oughness of the training of the dancers, is the key to the success of the company. Besides excellent dancing and exceptional choreogra- phy, The Nancy Huaser Dance Comapny is known for its fine workshops. The performance was equally appreciated by all age groups. Picture A: Bev Sonen leaps with agility in a scene from Recherche 1976. B: Dance members Gary Lund and Mari- lyn Scher's dramatic technique is magnified by their danc- ing ability. C: Group shot from Recherche 1976 shows the company in a striking pose. 5: I . QQ ffl . Nancy Hauser Dance Companyf43 gm Es CGS. in QCD F-'E CD G23 E-ii 44-f Marching Pirates l C c The Marching Pirates performed under the guidance of new band director Dennis Reaser, who came here from Salem, Virginia, where he was director of an award-winning band. Reaser is a trumpet player and a composer! arranger who performed in the Navy Band and with such celebri- ties as Red Skelton, Bob Hope, Sammy Kaye, and Nipsey Russell. Reaser constructed a new band hierarchy sys- tem which consisted of a drum major and two assistant drum majors, and three captains equal in power, each of whom have four squad leaders. The squad leaders serve as teachers to the rest of the band members. The 215-member band performed at all home football games and at NC State and North Caroli- na games. Band Day was held during the Appala- chian State game on November 4. High school bands from North Carolina and surrounding states participated in the competition, in which the Clin- ton High School Band and the Rocky Mount Sen- ior High Band tied for first place. v I x ' 'f r A, L, 3? th 31 Q-1. , la: il A '27 3,1 I fx fa. r ' ir 1 wir. , ,,,.-J? ' . Q- fr 1 av , 'YQ-'-if .-'fp - -54 .' -Y, . 'ff' ' ' f ' V , . Q l ., ,. L, 43 1 '.-F-531 2 all Q31 'P I Ns V , x ' . A.-1 . in '4 nf. X I sr 'x ' i' 'E . ' ri . 'sr' ' H . . xv . 11 I 'E ' l 1 I' J' hs.: A -.., ,K -, ., fy M' X QR ns, Q4 'en W 1- 46f Marching Pi t our Nw 5 6x Picture A: The woodwind and brass sections brighten every show. B: Pom-Pom and flag girls give encouragement off as well as on the field. C: The color guard serves as a backdrop for a trumpet solo. D: A sharp salute adds to the band's performance. ' rewer 'nstalled ll euenth hancellor The installation ceremony for Dr. Thomas Bowman Brewer was held on the north lawn of East Carolina University campus on a drizzling October 28 morn- ing. Brewer became the seventh chief ex- ecutive officer of ECU and came to Greenville with twenty-two years of teaching experience in classrooms of higher educational institutions. He also had ten years of administrative experience as a department chairman, dean and vice chancellor. l-Iis academic credentials in scholarship, research, and writing are equally distinguished. A processional consisting of student leaders, delegates from colleges and uni- versities, delegates from learned soci- eties, faculty, administration, faculty sen- ate, and trustees of ECU formed the long line that began the installation ceremo- nies. Greetings were extended from the hon- orable James I.. Hunt, Governor of the state of North Carolina and other distin- guished heads of organizations from ECU. President William C. Friday, from the University of North Carolina, presided on the platform of dignitaries. The speaker for the occasion was President Jack W. Peltason from the American Council on Education. Chief Justice Susie Sharp, Supreme Court of North Carolina, formally in- stalled the new chancellor. After Dr. Brewer's response, Rabbi Levi A. Olan, Rabbi Emeritus of Temple Emanu-El, Dallas, Texas, gave the bene- diction. Music was provided by the Concert Choir and the Symphony Orchestra of ECU under the direction of Professor Robert I-lause. The event was video-taped by NBC network. After the installation ceremony, those who attended were invited guests for a luncheon with the chancellor at Menden- hall Student Center. Dr. Brewer and his family then hosted an open house at their home for the pub- lic 3 TW'-i K 1 V 48 f Newsline '93 'iv' 'l'9'I 4 9 4, ? 4' Q Season Qpenef Delight Audience The Drama Department opener, Pippi- proved a delightful success as the first prod tion of the 1978 season. The play, adapt from Roger O. Hirson's book, deals with qu tions concerning the search for individuality Choreography and performance carried show through as each was done to its 5 talent. Ken Miller and his assistant, Pat lion, staged an excellent production of Picture A: Explaining what Pippin is about is the cast the show. B: Beautiful choreography is shown during performance of the drama. C: This scene from the shows just a few of the magnificent costumes used to bri out the characters' personalities. D: Characters of Pip strike a dramatic pose for the camera. 50 fPippin . x 1 'rv , 'xi 'a ,Q S. W r' H44 ' . Q1 if Nj? qi 'L fc . V I ' x , J r' 1 ' H- 5 X4 ns' ,-. I ml' a ,1 A h if f 1 , L vw' Y -k-s 3' ff 6. .Qfy , ' , N L liidflg F 'Z' iid' -1 ZfHalloween I-4 O Y -s-Q C9 vi-l zo, 6Q'DC o Cn O .5 gli 5 QQQ gti-sd , .5 Q O Q hs' . -..,,15 ., ,. N '4 5.-A 5 4 ' A 'f7,Yf',,,,1I.,f. '23 - 0 l..Qs Oc 'f as s s 0 A ' 'Q its , , 1,00 0 ls:..., o.0'.VQ 9,00 ' .xg Jo 90... Ol g..' 50 .5 5. . s os' s-5, 5,5 Q....x. , ,ss.0,w- 0' l ss. .l',5- Q Q xSlg: 5 Q. 'C Ssg' W 5 Q0 'o -H' Q. . N . Breaking a semi-traditional habit, ECU students decided to party instead of riot on Halloween night, 1978. Fraternities made their own show of sports- manship by giving their own little bashes and, not to be outdone, art majors held their annual Beaux Art Ball. Dress at these parties consisted of everything from regular street clothes to Wonder Woman out- fits. Many and varied costumes decorated the dorms, streets, and lawns of ECU, as students really out-did themselves. Much running around and borrowing of clothing and make-up was seen on the evening of October 31, as some items were not easily found. To many students, the closing of downtown was a disappointment, but spirits were lifted when other outlets were opened to them. Music, fun, and laugh- ter filled the air as friends joined together for a ghouly time. Picture A: A face as sad as this can only be because this clown has run out of beer. B: Renewing the spirit of the Bicentennial, this young Uncle Sam enjoys the Halloween celebration. C: This Pirate scowls while his crew members are gone to get more brew. D: These buzzed students wait for the elevator to lift their bodies up as high as their minds are. .- .. V ,f . ' fr'-'Nw 4. ' , , Q 4 i ff, fb - Atv - , 3'-Q.. ,-F V - . -J ,if Q ' - 1 ' I 'I P 47 1 f, in ,-. . A. ,1 'xl V 'xl ' ' ' A ' 5, '- . -X i A 1.-. .A 1 rgx C! 'H ' '. ' 1 1.43. . - A ns, 1 y f --'J I I ', , 5, , F,H,'514f'.',.i - ' wc? . . '27 ' . , , -. I, U H, ' . At. N A 'Q i x .. .H - ' - .if Ns. i- .ynh sw l R C Sf' Hallnulovn f52 E E 0-l an Gam QE WE an 54fCh1 Omega Parent's Day On Saturday, November 4, 1978, Chi Omega held its annual Parent's Day, in or- der to give parents a chance to see the house. At 12:00 noon, the parents arrived, toured the house and were served a lun- cheon catered by Parker's Barbeque. Some of the girls sang for their parents and at 3:00 p.m., the parents left in time to see the Appalachian-ECU football game. ,-, , - K - e e T s , if 1- 1- ilk? 1 , fr I 5.3 H ' ' , . . ,Q . ff.,-jg., 1 gif., gli! f' -A . l . DS T 99 'i ' ,A f' i i .ra if more -- f ,I 1. ' iii,---wmufzfffa 'f 71' 'A ' Aa ' ' fS- fa:12--1ffw-wx,--bfi-Ffffif' a....'-05. Q: t 1 V -- - - - - -. -. .. ...- . -. - - ,. ,, .A , -, ,- Y N' ' , . ' l - N ,, , - 1341- W-in-TV -H g Y-F M lg 'H ' be aa a il ni - in 2 ,,,,. Ili: in 'I li - in ll ,., 5 57 Il 1 9 II - -+1 I 'pf ' -sr N 1 5 'Q 'I if 'W I' A LJ M -Q . 1.-1. i 'YQ' . if l 1 c J .7 af ',. ,113 PI! 'f 52 53 EL L. - x nw ,gu'T'. ,C 9 E91 . . x Q Tl . i if -., : IBA ff' ,I fi-5 .! ,. ,df Picture A: Even brothers got into the swing of Parent's Day. B: Parents eager- ly await lunch. C: Chi Omega's introduce parents to their living quarters. D: Do you pledge . . .? Chi Omega Parent's Dayf 55 Hicks Triple Touch do wns To Guarantee Pirate Victor While Mountaineer quarterback Steve Brown sat on the side- Coach Dye was proud of the performance by halfback Eddie lines with a badly bruised knee, the Pirates acquired an easy 33-8 Hicks who rushed 16 times for 114 yards. Including the 25 yard victory over Applachian State. The win was the second straight run that scored the first six points for our team, Hicks completed for the Pirate team. It improved their overall record to 6-3 for the the game with three touchdowns to his name. season. 56 f Appalachian fr A-, Q A P 19 no. M .5-! Thx ceive K East from Appalachian X 57 I ,Ll-nv-vi.. On Sunday, October 29, 1978, all Greek organizations gathered at the bottom of the hill to participate in fun and games. Lambda Chi Alpha has sponsored this field day annually for the last 20 years. Activities included Inner-tube Relays, Slow Bicycle Race, Tricycle Race, and Softball Throw. The fraternity winner was Beta Theta Pi and the sorority winner was Sigma Sigma Sigma. The winners received a trophy. The Tri-Sigs have won for the past 3 years, and as a result had to retire their trophy. The group then went to the LCA house where a Banana Eating Contest and a Beer Chugging Contest were held to conclude the day's activi- ties. -timing.-. gZ.i lcture A: Phi Kappa Tau's prove that four legs are better than eight. : Inner-tube Relays provide entertainment for many who attend field ay. C: Alpha Delta Pi sister strives to achieve victory in the Sack ace. D: Alpha Xi Delta sisters enthusiastically participate in the Inner- be Race. -I. l I i 1.1 1 g-I.-1 .1 -f T -v I i ' A uv -1 ' 5 i I H4 L - -f Lambda Chi Field Dayj59 60 f Newsline U2 CD mu? Mil CDl55l E05 CD-+3 bm om ZE-I Competency Tests This year, for the first time ever, students in North Carolina high schools were required to take a compe- tency test before being allowed to graduate. The tests caused a storm of controversy statewide, as some private schools went to court to fight the required tests. The schools eventually administered the tests to their students, who scored higher on them than students in public schools. The test, which involved a simple measure of basic computational and reading skills. resulted in a 14 Mixed Drinks Legalized In NC Localitie Early September of 1978 marked an important victory for the proponents of liquor-by-the-drink in North Carolina, as Mecklenburg County voters gave their endorsement to mixed drinks. However, the last signs of prohibition did not begin to disappear from North Carolina until November 21, 1978. That morn- ing brought the sale of North Carolina's first mixed drink in 74 years. The drink, a Bloody Mary, was sold Create Controversy percent failure rate in reading, and a 19 pe failure rate in math for the North Carolina l school system. ln private schools, 99 percent of students passed the reading test, and 98 pc passed the math skills test. The Pitt County School system scored just sl below the state average with a 14 percent failure on the reading test, and a 20 percent rate of failure math. in Charlotte. Other areas of the state which later took af tive action on the local-option law were: O County, Chapel Hill, Southern Pines, Sanford, burg, New Hanover County, Asheville, and S port, while Black Mountain and Dare County down the issue. elms Scores xpected Victory Republican Senator Jesse Helms easily defeated Democratic opponent John Ingram in his bid for lection, pulling 54 percent of the vote. Helms' liberal campaign spending contrasted with arch-conservative, anti-big government ideology. set a record for the most expensive senatorial paign in US history, which earned him the nick- e, The Six Million Dollar Man. ngram suffered from a lack of support by mem- s of his own party after upsetting the favored ther Hodges in the Democratic Primary. His cam- gn was the exact opposite of Helms' - loosely anized and poorly financed. elms' strength came from the populous Pied- nt, where he carried virtually all the major cities the smaller textile counties. Ingram won 38 coun- to Helms' 62, and Ingram's were mainly small, al areas with a heavy black vote. He solidly took northeastern part of the state, much of the Sand- , and scattered counties in the far west. He car- Orange County, always Democratic, but lost usu- - Democratic Durham. elms made no statement after his victory was ounced, while Ingram conceded defeat and said lanned to return to work as state insurance com- sioner. ture A: Campaign foes Jesse Helms and John Ingram greet other at the inauguration of Chancellor Thomas Brewer. Obituaries Dailey, Dan - Oct. 16, 1978 f- Affable actor and song-and-dance man who had many television and movie rolls, of anemia. Turney, Gene - Nov. 7, 1978 - Undefeated World Champion boxer, in Greenwich, Conn. Rockwell, Norman - Nov. 8, 1978 - One of the most popular artists of the twentieth century. Creator of 317 covers for the Saturday Evening Post from 1916-1963, at his home, in Stockbridge, MA. Mead, Margaret - Nov. 15, 1978 - One of the world's foremost anthropologists who pioneered in research methods that helped turn anthropology into a major science, of cancer, in New York City. Jones, Jim - Nov. 18, 1978 - Leader of the People's Temple, by his own hand, in Jonestown, Guyana. lSee page 80l. Ryan, Leo - Nov. 18, 1978 - US Representative from California who went to Guyana to investigate alleged mistreatment of US citizens at the People's Temple, of gunshot wounds sustained there. lSee page 801. Johnson, Sam Houston - Dec. 11, 1978 - Younger brother of the late President Lyndon John- son, who advised him during his many years in office, of cancer. Buzhardt, Fred - Dec. 16, 1978 - Defense law- yer for President Richard Nixon during the Watergate investigations, of a heart attack at Hilton Head Island, SC Boumedlenne, Houarl - Dec. 27, 1978 - Presi- dent of Algeria, who led his country to independence, and was a leading spokesman for underdeveloped Third World countries and for militant Arab nations aligned against Israel, of a rare blood disease, in Algiers. Newsline f 61 'T 4. ' Jn 1 J'-1 a.n I 00 00191 Ei 33 H0001 O Q fs was-Q faxes-sas asc '-13,3-...U wo-QQ Qc-l Q gr NOON F Q f ....m3'-l 1m...,m 'UB---lxl CQ mgQ,'J-'CETgw3g '-tgggavmg-gooEa'o wr: 5l 'Qn'+ 49.-t. jgxc NB nigga '2gmgoerg.32,gg'6S,EgL Q92 E-3s?3I5'aff5 a 53s25'4EE 553' m .-. an aw .U nv an 0 Om D mrv..3oo :r ff-if-Q sfssgssaa-:wffs we 2,5245 :ag-HQ-m:23'd9.. 222: Qs' NTSC 502' 0 ':'Fl.:-D' WW :QU wg:-tv gQ,9.gE: gg.gogAgwn. ggi?- '-'wgvs Sasmsgssaisfgg 5:2 ME C 0- ' ' n NE. 5.6 was gsggsawgswiae S25 mmcnn vsgm Q..0-1-WD. Qhnmn- ,hm 0,050 crm -+ H03 cr 0-so --1 U, ua . ' O 0 1 N0 , :rm 'EEN ES'uff+bsSwfi3g-QESQ 53g Q-Do mgmi' Q.-- '0 SP,a.mo wro- ama- aogsg-5-ggzfea 'gs ,gg 2.23 02'-+..:: ..aBa2'S-S' ear 'Og '-85 -sm 3-QOmNg':5 w 'mm 30 'U 'f3'3S NDS - SS. 255 -im 5'--'U-Q, mm-gig. 0 -1 55,-S 3522, sfgglaaggi SEQ' h-1 Q .1 Ewa ease? 2 N2-we f. 32- -3-om ,,,Em5 JmfQ.. Un-g S g gm.-,cl-T :1-E75-...9'3o0 91 0' 5 m:,D'UD:- on-4o...,:r:E Og! . o. -1.w::-m -cz:-mo-:s.,.-ua. ,QQ Picture A: Guitarist, David Jenkins, fades out to gain musical freedom. B: Jenkins and Day of Pablo Cruise, accompanied by erotic lighting play to packed house. C: Cory Lerios plays his piano with an artistry found unbelievable to students who screamed for more. D: With mouth open wide, Livingston Taylor plays to audi- ence with great style and fervor. E: Surrounded by his instruments, Steve Price awaits the start of a new song. Pablo Cruise f 63 Board Respond To Media s Need A Media Board consisting of student leaders and administration representatives was created in Janu- ary, 1978, by the Board of Trustees. Its creation relieved the SGA of control of the Buccaneer, Foun- tainhead, Rebel, and Ebony Herald. One of the first things the new board did was to cancel the ill-fated 1978 Buccaneer, and keep that publication's unused funds for capital improvements in the various media offices. But because the SGA did not have enough money to meet the requests of some campus organizations, Chancellor Thomas Brewer stepped in and took half of that money away from the Media Board and gave it to several organizations were in need. The board then voted to spend remainder of the money to make at least some of necessary improvements. After trying unsuccessfully for several years obtain an FM license, WECU finally began to see efforts realized with the active help of the I Board. The Media Board better served the needs of campus media, and at the same time removed responsibility for the media from a politically-ori governmental organization. Ji., , V- A' Tsiiii. xi-QrZQ?3'T' n-43:1 ,igeifiji fj 4. . ,,.-,,..Q ' KTTH -l.,',,,?1-,Q -Q:5p- - '. , , 'A' A Y f ' -fs-..,..'.4. ' gig ,flip ' -! :' f-i b' '-'fy 'z.9,,L,-55, -.aw . s!7Z?fgf'm'.g . 1 5 we ,gg V, ,,,, .,.,,. -V , ' ' ' iriihfkwai 0 , ' 2 ' -11 1-,3g..fj:uf -5+ jr 1' 45: 1.11 'KLQQ 12il'zP,jn,' ' 5,-0.52:-1 K. i V r :Q . N 1,'s.f.w - -L V . -et ,, . . , , .-,-, , ' ' ' ' ' L: -- V . -- if -4- 1: Y b ., ,-f ' - 2 ,. .sf -...,.:,-i .i T'1 -' ..,'f'fe'i f - - -..es . t. .,-fi A ,.. 4.. . ' i-V,-, --. ,,.-. I J- -ry -Dfw' .nina . - Av .. .X V . ,z 3 i M ,L 4' ' -if' - ' 'J i -1 fliw gslliiarf- '4t...14 ,I 115 ' Nik .maensfzx -. , j ' 'j ,Uh , .g,, ik 'ig I, 1. .r., , ,, - l',,.r,, ,.,v u . H , I 4 V, --'1--P -a93.fB.L4 . .. ' '- ' ' 351158 'iw-Q frfffflwlm , r . islirziiefi lllrw - Lf .' 'J ' -,. ev- rn. 1 ' W - ,. T' ' 'glues if '52 hggg.-wi ,fug1FT's',:7?! t f ' , ' 'F-, 7 Iigpu-1-at-f Q-gum 1 , ro. fr I - . , , . - ' , ,Q ,,.,,..- . l , r---f.-5-fi?-X Hsfg- 1' 1 we , .f-M1-rffgvgam .-igwf','4.r , .. Q, 5 , 1.5-14's 'sv-'sv' A. 1 -' -- . . . . . J' ..'fi..... -L'k 1., .1 '- . i E 1iL...4.:,'.P is X3'3.Xxxf ,f ,J i I ' I i ' W5 E5 3,5 I 64-f Media Board A? -qc: 1,-,. X.--axe, -S-in K' H i A .. . i,si,, 4. F. -,. ,Gu -'1l5!fbd.ff I l.. 4A C Zi, 'l J ..i, qv- 15 ' Picture A: Board member Rudolph Alexander enjoys a summer feast. B: 1978-79 board members are Tom- my Joe Payne, Dr. Thomas Eamon, Marsha Sullvan, Hal Sharpe, Ann Thompson, Rudolph Alexander, Ger- ry Wallace, and Mike Morse. C: Board members meet with Chancellor Thomas Brewer to discuss the progress of WECU's FM application. Media Board 65 66 f Globetrotters 1 191, '91, 4. . rf V I I 'dp P. x N' . U. if ' I arlem Style The exciting and talented Harlem Globetrotters returned once again to Minges Coliseum on No- vember 21, 1978, to play basketball before a full house. Geese Ausbie led the team to an expected victory. Magic unfolds and history is made every time the Globetrotters step on a court. Their expertise is reflected in the audience's thrilling response. Picture A: A Trotter thrills the crowd with a slam dunk. B: Forever the clown, Geese Ausbie entertains the crowd. C: Fan participation has long been an integral part of the Globetrot- ter's performance. D: A trip to the line is a sure two points for the Globetrotters. Globetrotters 67 K , i 1 Y i A i i i , ii H i i i i xv I i i I , .. i ix , N i if X , i ' ' , i Ai i i i 'W f i i i i i i i i A,J A f ., , A,, . N . F . !' i Y ' 1 ' i i ii i A l2or:f::Qif is I5'.5l42GifDi,iQ the z'ia'Cioi'i. This Elurapaazi spciiffc pi:j,:1.1.1az iiiy has firea'i'ie111:im1algi iiicrefwseci in time last decade aQiQ1'2.1ing ii: ro ciiaigjc into first place in populaxiiy and gain wczflci-vlidc eiqrfflaiazz. Thciiigii the som-91' ezaded the season with El ciiixfip- pDi1'itl,iQ recofral, fblfiy jiiifigmd one ci' the toiighsxl schediziss 111 iiie fgoiiiih. Wluiifa g::ii's,g3 vp agaiinsi 5 of 'EIQQ tciqji e'n'i,i,ii'iez,'n :313-ponerits, the young ikeam, cciizsistiug of sis: fE'f3.1'i'fiT'iQ-2 'iT'v. 2ShXTL62i1, 1zi5ie'ieq.gi2d, Lo break ten school zvecords in the uourze ilieiz' 1978 scafswii. Cozzcii Bind Q3:r:i't?'i felt iha odds were iiie 'ierim rI3'3CEiil.S'2 they f,2.fr31'e so ymmg. :i'TfOWQVQ1', lm felt 'QJ1'iii'i 1wiiE'i yflili-75 ezizxyeriemze 1.ii'icic:'r iihrziii belis, the 'beaii wmilizi and S19 sQEa:31:3L'i wiiii 0, imnczh iilblfil im131 25sive ffecord. fP'3':.5fL:Q JZ: 11:1 opponeni faces U12 cc-risizquwicizs of missing he ball. fl: F'fJOiV,'O!'ii in the mosi imporianr affpeci of s:Jcci:i'. TI: The oppcsing goalie slides ro prevent Emi Cm-olina from gaining another poini. 63f3occer i I I r V , i -: ry Q KP., .J Q-:,' 'E -g X ii Pig Dui: if -S R-4 f ' . WN- i A , ,. il 535.7591 Kal E .. !i Bgssqf iii K' K. -,',.i 'A i i fii-imfifilfi ' A d- ig.. JK. i: ,ff- W. K, -Q ' , 1 1 I ' 'J:'h ' . - . -' gig ! JA ' 'ga E x -i' fi' fa -. V gk I '- -. , ii ,f Q ,.,i i ., i jf ' A' . 7 ,lu 5 A i ' ' I , - i' Q .fs 43 . , -. R Y' 4 3. 1 .U , - . .L . . 1 ,Q I -.. I W f i gi. ig .t W WS- W ' ' X- .A1h.:, -s he ,V ,Q :M 'i'F'j,J ' ' J 4-'mf I . , . . . ,-. ' I WU -Qu, 4 ' ui i - 1,351 W9-FIA' N4 --, -1.,- ig.-V.,i. ' .J . J' Blix . - , 1-1 70fMRC Pig pickin' , v 1 1 I J' xx I Q , I 71512. 7 'ia lx , Qi' - ' C ' Q . ll ' ,lj I sr- Mwx ' - '-N N 'A vu , , C a nn ' ,. ,F is -Rs. ' . I 1 , 1 . .,. . .mf g . '4 UAV fr: ' X 4 , .Yi .- f .,f .' l .N ix x . X l X. Q 1 lx, .1.11 4' . X , On Wednesday, November 8th MRC held , a pig pickin' to celebrate the Homecoming week. Because of rainy weather, the dinner was d move to the basement of Aycock Dorm. A bluegrass band provided music, and members f WR 3 C helped out with the food preparations. MRC President Gerry Wallaceg Charlie West, :ice presidentg Tripp Murray, treasurerg and David Murray, secretary, all worked hard to 'nake the meal a success. . - 4, e, 5 .-.ww 4'-iyg, '. l. A ' .. .iv a ',.Ax-' ' in . , H ., ' f W E uf-m4 -. 7- . 'L,- 'a 'A :.' . . ff - .' 1 i, .,-fs -. . s C- - ,w 3' - . -3- -I Q h v ' 7, 3 4. A4 .q , 4 -A J . ,j 1 '-I' . ....- 'u-. 7 - fp 1 ,req 1 I K vl,xl.i' 'I 1 'L Q' ' Q' I , -7 7 f. :iff , :' ,'. J ix? 'J' 1 fa , N X 0' M- 5' 'Y 1- .s - Afgfifgav' . -r . - '5i1'vi'. 1- if 5-' Nl. 3 ' . ,,',-5-as-I 1iN.i.,j! '- fl l . .11,.' - ,111 g vg-fsql - 1 5121, 4 , - ,S I. ! B Picture A: The bluegrass band added a countr t y a mo- sphere to the Homecoming Pig Pickin. B: A long wait in line and help yourself style paid off for these hungry MRC'ers. C: MRC members and their dates await their turns to dig in. . -' 3' -J' '? if 'J , , . . - MRC Pig Pickin' V71 Ae' f if ,fr ig,'. ' iff 4, IU ' ti- F '.f '-7 ' , f , Y-EY. ' va -. 72 !Homecoming Homecoming! 73 I J' ...4 MQ-5, v. .5 ,E Mx Q X, xg 1. L . , ' 2 gxx I I x' 5 - -. - ' W . 1 'Xin X .NJ-X , . QQ V -NA' I .,f-X ...lj . , , ' fi, X.,-1 H-A .A . Y i rg. .. ,.. f. F., '- -'11 is ' , fx w .g,,,'W-, M... us., If Lu- 4 fn, i.- .gltg -' 1, ., LJ rg, -pq- -,a..,, 'N...,: KF' ' ,,..in- J, - . I . ev. A -. tfw f Mud' H.,-.w 'ef ,vm ,uf 3' ' - -.-,V f nie' ,ua-' av . 'af .Ls-r - -f 1-LK . ...,.,, 4,- i gh,f , ...nv-..-P' -i ,sf rv-11' U,--'L . ig - W.-- -..v-- 1,9 ,fre--33, My wrgn. ',, 4.41, 'xi' f . A Jai' f:'.:-sq V, ffl ,iiP ' X. : M ...... ff -J.,,3.:,Q,,,2 gf.,-. ' : -,rg 11-t -r:fJ,fJ-ef .K J -J .f ' ' : ' I ., -- ,. , ly.,-J.. ,J i J '..-f .r Q.. ff Y x idwffw-o ,mf , 4, ' W va? :r', 1-+',..+ - W 4 ' ' A ,V- 1 N- K 'xy 1 X N ' 'sq M. 'x 3191 ' , . XM W n 'S ai ' '23 . 1 I 4 2 ...ff -4 3-2' Homecoming '78, New Horizons, cele- brated the incoming leadership of Chan- cellor Thomas Brewer. Events began early in the week with a concert featuring Pablo Cruise. The is- land-flavored band was more enthusiasti- cally welcomed than any in several years. Excitement was again running high Sat- urday morning when the annual home- coming p . struct by the Industrial and Technological Edu- arade began A Pirate ship con- from wood and automotive parts competition. Second prize went to Alpha Phi Lambda and Lambda Chi Alpha. Regionally televised by ABC, the ECU- William and Mary game kicked off at 4 p.m. The Pirate pass defense, which was ranked second nationally as it entered the game, never looked better than it did that Saturday night. After having been beaten the previous year by William and Mary's Indians, 21-17, the Pirates had revenge on their minds, and scalped the Indians 20-3' Continued on page 77 partment won first prize in float fy. C.QD.i1pIL. straw- A .L i I: NN, -.4' .f'.f 7:15 -' .1 I .-f- 1 3- . i Y, 'S K 1 y .1 2 ET U 0 Hof CDO Eff Ur: CDCW 55? 3'ra CL JJ, ,mg Qui og MDN IJ OZ QU D5 .UP IIIQUGI Picture A: Suzanne Lamb is crowned homecoming queen by SGA President Tommy Joe Payne during halftime cere- monies. B: The new queen poses with her escort, Chris' Judy. C: Chancellor Thomas Brewer is honored by Kappa Alpha's float in the homecoming parade. D: MRC's float illustrates the theme of this year's festivities, New Horizons. x 2 Homecoming! 75 D1fatos6calplnd1ans 0 3 Picture A Leander Green executes one of his many rushing plays against Wnlllam and Mary that earned him the Offensive Player of the Game award B Sheila Mendoza 15 escorted off the field by Gerald Barnes after belng named first runner up ln the contest for Homecoming Queen C ABC shows that it and ECU are still the one by regionally televlsing the homecom ing game D The Pirate defense crushes an other lll fated William and Mary play 701 Homecoming OC an-f Continued from page 75 Halftime activities were high- lighted with the crowning of 1978 Homecoming Queen Su- zanne Lamb who represented the Intra Fraternity Council. First runner up was Sheila Men- doza representing SOULS Alli- son Fuentes second runner-up represented Clement Continued on page 79 Homecoming f 77 1 J, 1.4-,. ' - - -.-af , .. 4 la 11 llll11 1 ll1111 11l1 ' 1111l111l1.111111 l11111111.. 11111 111X 1 Xl1 'V . W l L 1 111X1 l111l11l11111XX1..1111.l111 111l11 vm' ,X 5 X X A X , M 4- lX1111111l11 ll 1111111131 111111 1 1 1 X Q 3, -A ,.-,..,J1L 'X 1 llll1'1 ll11 'l1l1l 111l11 1 . . d. - 1 1 XX Y X.-ma cg: A XT X'L X .. lv XX lll111111 1111 11111X1XX111111111111 11.1 'X1-----1-1g1,.a:XX,,X.1Xi--5.L -Qj'w-H fs -f ,o X , VX 1,10 51 he-'-epdggff Q 1 f . - cf , 1ll '111 1 1lll1 l1l11 111l1 1 - -1. T ...U .. fi ' uv V Y ' V 1 l lll11111 11l1l1l 11111l1l11 1 1 '1l11ll111111 lllll 11 1111111 11 l11l11'1 ll 11l1l 11 I11l11 1 1lll1X1 11 1F11 1 11111 1 1 1 . llll'll1 ' llllll' 11 1 l1111 Plcture1A: Willie provided entertainment tor cheering fans before the game and during halftime. B: Left tackle X1111ll11j11 ,,' 11 11, 111111111 . 11l'1 1111 Vance Tingler puts the breaks on this pass attempt by Indian quarterback Tom Rozantz. C: Allison Fuentes, 11 XX1111 11 11111 ll ,1.. escorted by Bob Splllman, was named second runner- up in the Homecoming Queen competition. D: Anthony 111 1111 11 11, 1111. XCollins .runs around the end in a crucial 3rd down l situation. E: The float sponsored by the Industrial Tech XX 1X1111XXX XX111X X XX X Departrnent won first prize in the float competition. F: l Chancellor Thomas Brewer and Athletic Director Bill XXX XX XX XXXX XXX X XX XXX Cain pose with the four new inductees to the ECU Hall l 'l l ' of Fame. Pictured arelflim Johnson, a multi-sport star X X and former head football coach, James Mallory, coach ml' 11 llllll 1 l of the 1961 baseball team that won the NAIA National Championship, Chancellor Brewer, Richard Narron, an 1 11lll ' 1l11 ll 'lll11 l11 AlllAmerlca catclrerg Tom 1Michel,1 a standout fullback, and Bill Cain. 1111111111 ..1.- 111111. .. 1.1.11 1.11 -., 111111l' 1111 111111 11 1111 1'11 ll ll 111111 111111 1 1 1111111111111 111111111 . 1 111111 11111111 11111 1 1 ll 111 11111 XX 11111111 1111X111 111.11 111 X111111X1 1 1l1l111l1111' 'XX1111l11l11 1 11 11 1111111111111 ll 111l11111 11 11111 X 111 11111l'1l3111111111 1l11l11X 12 111111 X111 '11 l11l1X1 Xll 1l11l11111111 11.1111 111 1X11l11l1111X 111111 1111111 11111111 ll 1111111X11 111.1 1 X11 11111111111 XX 11111 11 1111 11111111 111111X11X11 11111X11X11 11111 11 ll 1111'1111111 ll l1111111' 1 111111 11 11 f11l111 1l111 11 1111 X 11111'11X ll 1l111 1111 111111 1111 1 lllllxll 11111l11 l1 11 78fHomecoming rl- TMI? v C 4 if ,Fo P Continued from page 77 Winners in the competition for dorm decora- tions were also announced at halftime. Fletcher Dorm won first place, and Clement was runner-up. House decoration awards were presented to Al- pha Delta Pi for first place and Delta Zeta for second place. The ECU Hall of Fame inducted four new mem- bers who represented outstanding achievement in athletics while at ECU. They were Jim Johnson, Richard Narron, Jim Mallory, and Tom Michel. , - , -e A ., . , .e , as 1 .., Q gig, fr, ,..,p-1 g me- --.1 S-eff-rI---fi 3 . ?a.'iE1. Ez- Q' 5-f Effie ea - 'gg - r .h - A 4 Xu - X ' , ii . Z J - - x . xp Fl if ,r r- 'av ' -1-f . ' Y Q Vxsnqt K -J Tpig-I .- I Fas- A 1 ' - J - 4. vw ' ' . I 1 ' s - .. ' awe, WA ' -'A .O ,.,, - i ' Homecoming f 79 ,U ........-,-.1 .- -lv. -.... ,...,. . .q..-..1-11- . ,V wxrfjf' 'elf-Ltiv. .,,..i,,-Q wi, 4. 19 '- A - ' - , - N- 4 ,. 1 fp - s 1 . :Ly f- f . : Y. 1 fa ' ,. .- ' f-,..-ft-,jf-g. , 3 - - lx ' V ' '. V. 4' 'IJ . ' .L if 'JP 'C ,.,g,l K, . gif' ' f'v -o.'75'1 U, - 4 P 1'3'1P.1 lf' , -?., ff- f v h J A 7 .-,v ' ' , Q31 J.. ' fx' , f 1 . Q 8Of Newsline ,I pl ' A i. -Y ' i 15.41 A x X x rv' , ...Q I '::T7:i:i so T' 25 - '- s ' '- L ,Q .n t -ll L- vi 4- I .J 'Q . N40 V 7 -' .Y , rw 'f .. -if 32 gf .9 3 J - r.- I- Nine Hundred Die In Jonestown Tragedy On November 17, 1978, California Representative Leo Ryan entered Jonestown, Guyana, an agricultur- al commune of about 1,000 members of a San Fran- cisco-based religious cult called the Peoples' Temple. Ryan flew to the South American settlement to inves- tigate rumors of mistreatment of U.S. citizens living there. Jonestown, named after its leader, the Rev. Jim Jones, seemed ominously defensive to Ryan. Jim Jones voiced his suspicions that the Representative had come to rescue defectors. Ryan and his party spent an uneasy night in the concentration-camp atmosphere. On November 18, as Ryan and his party were leaving, the Representative was attacked by a assail- ant in an attempt to prevent a cult member's defec- tion. Ryan, uninjured, but covered with his attacker's blood, gathered his party around him, climbed into a jeep, and left Jonestown for the airstrip four miles away. Jim Jones, suffering from the delusion that he was Christ and Lenin in a single embodiment, and believ- ing that Ryan would make an unfavorable report to the U.S. Congress, gave orders that Ryan must not leave Guyana alive. As members of Ryan's party were boarding their plane, a tractor appeared at the edge of the airfield. Behind the tractor was a flatbed wagon carrying sev- eral men from Jonestown armed with shotguns and automatic weapons. Within several seconds, between 50 and 75 shots rang out. When the killing was over, Ryan, three newsmen, and an escaping Jonestown resident were dead. The nightmare continued back at the settlement. Jim Jones gathered his followers around him, saying The time has come for us to meet in another place. The camp doctor added a jar of potassium cyanide to a vat of grape Flavor-Aid. The people lined up. Mothers and fathers squirted the deadly liquid into their children's mouths. Couples drank Dixie cups of poison and embraced, then lay down in the dirt to- gether. The few who tried to run were shot down by Jones' camp guards. Jones supervized the whole hor- ror, then shot himself. It came to be called The Suicide Cult. The daily body count grew higher and higher and finally stopped at 913. Nearly a thousand people - Ameri- cans, black and white, poor and affluent - died there in the Guyana jungle. It was a grisly Thanksgiving. Picture A: The vat of death sits on a plank walkway at the People's Temple in Jonestown, Guyana, with the bodies of some of the more than 900 victims of the murder-suicide plot on the ground. The vat contained an ade drink laced with cyanide. Newsline f 81 PIFIATES SLAIVI HEFIII 45-D IN FINAL GAIVIE The Pirates destroyed Marshall's Herd 45-O in the last game of the season. But, with a 1-9 record and a coaching staff facing unemployment, Marshall had very little at stake. Entering the game with the nation's second best passing defense, the Pirates limited Marshall to just 119 total yards, with just 37 yards passing at the finish of the game. Our defensive backs have set the tempo throughout the entire season, Dye said. They came back this fall in great shape and they have been an inspiration to the whole team. Picture A: Pirates await kickoff. B: East Carolina scores another six points against Marshall's Herd. C: The Pirates ended the season with a 9-3 record, which was the fifth consecutive winning season for the Pirates under the leadership of head coach Pat Dye. 4 Ali' 4- U:- Effss . .ialefui 4-'rf' sffffl T -551-N . X .A E 5-7. a V... 5 i-11 1 1 ,gl 1 -:vw KM. '-'Qfsf 74 1, 4' -if 'P ' 1' --4 f B Q, . at -if .Q , t,- te ',i5 gf if lt, - ' ji RL.: : U -sf, J. I ,I ,, .x 'NP szjzbiia, . V, 1,- W.. . 1 VH A 5 V ' X x, up . V IW- V. -I . 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W WM S K, A lf F , K if .'w 'A i,.f f7,f'f'l J 1 gf' ,f j I 5 A-,Q I 0 Let Me Tell You One Thing, We Weren 't The Most Polished Unit Out There Today, But We Got After Their Asses 7 77 And Thats The Way You Play The Game. The Pirates celebrated their first bowl appearance in 13 long years by capturing the Independence Bowl title in Shreve- port, Louisiana. The 35-13 victory over the Bulldogs of Louisiana Tech was the perfect ending of a sometimes-frustrating season. g The Pirates outmanned the Bulldogs at every turn, as they converted four tur- novers into as many touchdowns as Tech would allow. Pirate fullback Theodore Sutton, the game's most valuable player, proved to be an important asset to the team as he rambled 45 yards down the left side of the field for a touchdown. We had to get the momentum back and we needed something big offensively to happen, Sutton said. Sutton set an Independence Bowl re- cord with 17 carries for 143 yards. Quarterback Leander Green executed the offensive line as well as it could be done in any game. I-le finished the game with 41 yards rushing and completed four passes for another 54 yards. The team played before an enthusiastic crowd of 18,200 fans in the State Fair Stadium in Louisiana. The Pirates had much to celebrate and, yes folks, celebrate they did. Picture A: The team brought this magnificent tro- phy back to Greenville as the prize for their victory over Louisiana Tech. B: John Morris, Rocky Butler, and Mindell Tyson don the special Independence Bowl jerseys. C: The turnout of only 18,200 fans was a disappointment to the Bowl sponsors. 86 Independence Bowl Lgm. X FM lf 3 vw 4' Q .- 1 Q -' 'lv' Q, f - ' , '.-A- HQ-.1,, ,,. , - lg , . ' . V -j 4 QQ Q QQ ,Q ', , Q , Q, Q1 Q x . . . Q Q ,Q 1 ' 's 3334 ' W 114 5 rl - ,Q-,lx . 4 -' 'IQ ' - , A, - 'P L -5 Q, 1 Q. 3 x 3 ',4' if ,ig HQ: ,, 23 '.- ' ,Q Z- K LE' W Q '34 Q , ,. , A. Q I , QQ? qw? QQ . Q, Qqfic. 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E: lt's a good thing Eddie Hicks was available for Leander Green's last-minute pass-off, for the way things look, the play would have ended at the hands of number seventy-five. Independence Bowl 1 89 Picture A: Louisiana Tech coach Maxie Lambright con- gratulates Pat Dye on the Bowl victory. B: Chancellor Thomas Brewer and Athletic Director Bill Cain admire the Independence Bowl trophy. C: John Wayne poses with three Independence Bowl beauties. D: Willie Holley shows his excitement after the Pirates' victory. E: Matt Mulhol- land and Leander Green congratulate one another on a fine game. :QU 'F' V .:',',,4'.W t Indqsaendence Bowl f 91 , xi B F .Y, 5?8w.5,,W .. HW. . R, ,Z W fy . W ,wwf ,YW Qiv -,......., gm, use Q fm 4 UZLX W. -1452 R. ' ww Lx z 1 if fwue M Z H ss , V , , 'vw f fatal' .,M nf P5 is 'iw xg wx n 1 wi as ,M sa KN uf. :Af . wx ,, fm, I Z i X . L, ,f ' .SA Q Q 1 ggi H. mf xx N , w X-4 4 su . 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Sail, If ,, , ww' ,MU B MZ, ,. k WSZQ , gb K ,, - Q ,Q 323 XXL mm 1: NV. Y Mm. :JiX,1, ..1Q3ffs. ,faafgzm if M I: 5 Q 33 .. ,mmm ffm . f 1 wg 4 :fu ga ,N ,Isl V 3111, -M: AQ LQ ab In s.. GJ .Q CD CD Z cn +-1 U 3 'U E P- 4-1 .92 U rSo HO eEc Ho O I ECU's chapter of Phi Upsilon Omi- cron, a national home economics honor society, received accredidation from the Association of College Honor Societies. Membership in the society requires aca- demic excellence, leadership, and profes- sionalism. Following the year's theme of maxi- mizing human potential , the honor soci- ety held a leadership workshop in More- head City March 23-25. It was attended by officers of all the home economics organizations on campus. In a fund raising project, the group sold T-shirts which sported the slogan, Home Economists Live It Up . Phi Upsilon Omi- cron's second project for the year in- volved providing the community with fly- ers informing them of the proper proce- dures to follow in reporting child abuse. The annual Ruth Lambie Scholarship was received by Carla Manning for use in graduate school. 94fPhi Upsilon Omicron We W f-.,,,- r Picture A: Phi Upsilon Omicron members serve the new initiates. B: President Libby Jernigan presents initiate, Cheryl Upham, a membership certificate. C: The Phi Upsilon Omicron officers, Carla Manning, Lois Mochrie, Diane Parker, Carole Mayo, Libby Jernigan, Margaret Daniel, Sue Crisp, and Becky Bittner, lead the initiation ceremony. D: Carla Manning initiates Dr. Jan Zolko, honorary initiate and advisor. E: Libby Jernigan stands with Barbara Fuller, District ll Counselor and master of Phi Upsilon's Charge Service. F: The new initiates of Phi Upsilon Omicron include: Qfront rowl: Suzanne Moody, Janet Burke, Sally Gasperson, Lisa Caveness, Cathy Bullock, Susie Beaman, Allison Peaden, Betty Dail, Dr. Jan Zolko. imlddle rowls Michelle Eri, Connie Jones, Jimmie Sue Spain, Donna Morris, Nell Joyner, Anita Henderson, Cheryl Upham, Mary Morris, Jackie Davis, Julie Sazama, Cathy Crawley. lback rowl: Joann Tucker, Lee Jones, Cathy Spruill, Jane Dixon, Judy Shell, Robin Maxwell, Phyllis Morris. i ?g F it R 'C-X :E --ni . fu : F iq -1' ' L ' 1 . ' , 1 uf' ' O . .it . 'W fx on V I , f,-: Q 1 -I 4' ...U xm . 1.-v ' 1.- v 1 N 1 +, 11 :ef L D L?-t:'57g ,5' .' 7' will ' QR' ' fi X' gif, A ' 'E dl. '-'af' 5' .'i k'a 7. fry ' tl . 1 ' '3v25f:'1.s. ' . 7' . . , ' 'ig A puff , . . .i 15' . .V ' , '. . 4 4 .l' ' - '- ' fu - l-i -, f Q-'S' .A 54 6' 5 - , N . , ,X Y, , . 4 L Jyflif - ' , -, ., a , V. ,. , Q-. miie, . 4 I , ,V 1. A .- YQ N LJ:-q xy! 5 1. Af. ' - --Q. xv - I . f .WRU H3 . - . - .- . 4' FW: P41 - ' x 1' 41 .' 7 .I 4 if fu fpiil ,A A, qfy ..l Q V, . ,-7, -J K, H V h HF , ' - .n 1, - Q , 5.3. ,l,-. '-Y -1 A Y Qfiflnffamufals P 4 iwiun., .. - 4 --z,..'g. J - - 1' rf: , ..j . ,e l x f 'Ivo ' r . A , ui?-LV , . Vw . .FP 'L.K L .I F 'J - V 4 ' 2, o . hut A .1 5, ar D. wiv ,, . 0 iw? ' -uv ,1 ..- M . ,-. 1 ' O. 1 A its-.-.... The Games A People Play 4 -ri' . The East Carolina University intramural program pro- vides a wide variety of sport to choose from. Any stu- dent interested in the program should contact the Intra- mural Sports Office located in room 204 of Memorial Gymnasium. The co-recreational calendar offers soft- ball, Almost Anything Goes, tennis mixed doubles, vol- leyball, two-on-two basketball, bowling, iceball, inner- tube waterbasketball, badminton mixed doubles, frisbee, putt-putt, archery, baseball trivia, skateboard, and horseshoes singles f doubles, The list of men's and wom- en's sports include flag football, golf, team tennis, one- on-one basketball, track and field, soccer, team hand- ball, free throw shooting, basketball, swimming, slam dunk, wrestling fmenl, badminton, softball, volleyball, and marathon. So add physical activity, fun, and fitness to your way of life and get involved in the games of ECU intramural sports. Picture A: It's the Human Innertube , just one hilarious aspect of Almost anything Goes. B: Lacrosse is slowly gaining popular- ity in Eastern North Carolina and is one of the newest additions to the program. C. Flag football - roughing it! 42 I Wm 45 A Intramurals 97 98fPhi Sigma lota .l, Society Recognizes Academic Excellence Phi Sigma Iota is the foreign language honor soci ety of ECU. Membership is based on merit, excep tional grades and general all-around standing. Its purpose is to recognize exceptional ability ani attainment in the study and teaching of foreign lar guage, the stimulation of advanced research in thi discipline, and the promotion of cultural enrichmen and the sentiment of international amity gained fror the knowledge and utilization of foreign language. During the academic year five meetings are hel with a guest speaker from the foreign language de partment. Graduating seniors read a paper written i their major language. Picture A: Members and guests gather at the home of Sponsi Mrs. Helga Hill for a monthly meeting. Phi Sigma Iotaf99 4 N 100 f Newsline U2 obs 83 0: f-is 56 -s WE 2?-.20 -r-lr-'I sas: '5'-fi? mm Carter Dumps Taiwan, The United States and China formally established diplomatic relations January 1. At the same time, the government severed its relations with the Nationalist Chinese government on Taiwan. The resumption of formal diplomatic relations was celebrated with simultaneous receptions at the US and Chinese liason offices in Peking and Washington. Under the terms of the agreement the United States agreed not to sell any more arms to Taiwan and to abrogate the mutual defense treaty with Taiwan effective January 1, 1980. The US also agreed to maintain unofficial trade and cultural rela- tions with Taiwan. Administration officials assured US businessmen that relations with China would not prevent expan- Pol BY The insurgent Kampuchean United Front for Na- tional Salvation announced on January 8, 1979, the overthrow of the government of Premier Pol Pot, and its replacement by a People's Revolutionary Council of Cambodia formed in Phnom Penh to govern the country. The combined force of Cambodian rebels and Viet- namese soldiers launched its offensive on December 28, 1978, and captured Phnom Penh on January 7, 1979. While the United Front announced that Phnom Penh and all the provinces of Cambodia were totally liberated, strong Cambodian government resistance was reported continuing in territory captured by the Vietnamese, particularly east of the Mekong River near the Vietnamese border. By January 12, Viet- namese troops had advanced to Battambang, in the western part of the country near the Thai border. Deputy Premier Ieng Sary was rescued by a Thai helicopter on January 1 1, and was flown to Bangkok. Recognizes Chin sion of trade with Taiwan. Chinese vice-premier Teng Hsaio-ping arrived i the US on January 28 to solidify the relations th had begun on January 1. Teng held a series of talk with President Carter at the White House, and the signed agreements on cultural and scientific e changes. Other issues to be settled were claims for asse that were frozen in each country upon the victory the Chinese Communists in 1949. Teng praised the establishment of diplomatic rel tions and the signing of the agreements by sayin this is not the end, but just a beginning, and th there are many more areas of bilateral co-operatic and more channels waiting for us to develop. Pot Regime Ouste Rebels, Vietnames He was denied asylum in Thailand, and flew to Ho Kong and crossed into China from there. Premier Pol Pot, the leader of the most dictator and repressive regime in world history, was believ to have remained in Cambodia, along with so members of the Chinese Embassy. The four-year regime of Pol Pot undertook t most revolutionary social changes in history, forci people out of the cities to work in rice fields, elimin ing currency and reinstating the barter system, a reportedly killing hundreds of thousands of Cam dians who resisted the changes. More than 700 foreign officials and advisers Cambodia crossed into Thailand January 8 to esca the Vietnamese drive. Among them was the Chin Ambassador to Cambodia. About 650 of the arriv in the Thai border town of Aranyprathet were C nese, whose country was the only one in the wo maintaining supporting relations with the Pot regi teelers Claim 3rd NFL Title The Pittsburgh Steelers won the championship of the ational Football League January 21, with a 35-31 ictory over the Dallas Cowboys. Pittsburgh, which had on NFL titles in 1975 and 1976, became the first team ver to win three Super Bowls. Super Bowl XIII was played in the Orange Bowl in iami before a sellout crowd of 78,656 and a national elevision audience estimated at 95 million viewers. The contest was regarded as the best played and most xciting of all Super Bowls, as several records were roken, including most points scored, 66, and most ouchdowns, nine. A labama, USC hosen Number One The University of Southern California and the Univer- ity of Alabama were named the national champions of ollege football in separate wire-service polls. United ress International picked USC January 2 in a survey of 5 college coaches. The Associated Press chose Ala- ama number 1 on January 3 in a poll of sportswriters nd broadcasters. Southern California finished the season with a 12-1 ecord, including a victory over Michigan in the Rose owl. Alabama was 11-1 for the season, including a win ver previously-undefeated Penn State in the Sugar owl. The differing polls caused tremendous controversy d renewed calls for a playoff system to determine the ational champion. Supporters of Southern Cal argued that the Trojans eserved to be number 1 on the strength of their 24-14 efeat of Alabama earlier in the season. Alabama's back- rs pointed our that USC's only loss came at the hands f unranked Arizona State, and that they should be I ampions. The UPI poll listed Alabama in second place, while e AP poll listed USC as runner-up. Both polls listed klahoma, Penn State, and Michigan as the third, urth, and fifth place teams, respectively. UPI rounded out its top ten teams with Clemson, otre Dame, Nebraska, Texas and Arkansas. The AP icked Clemson, Notre Dame, Texas and Houston. Down 35-17 with less than four minutes to play, the Cowboys moved the ball 89 yards in eight plays. The drive ended with a seven-yard touchdown pass, and an extra point which made the score 35-24. The Cowboys recovered an onside kick on the next play and moved down the field again. Wide receiver Butch Johnson snagged a four-yard touchdown pass with 22 seconds left in the game. The contest ended 35- 31, with the extra point. Qbituaries Mingus, Charles - Jan. 5, 1979 - Jazz musician, composer, bandleader, and virtuoso of the bass, whose emotional, free-floating music helped shape modern jazz. Lawrence, Marjorie - Jan. 13, 1979 - Austra- lian - born soprano who resumed her career in a wheelchair after being stricken with polio in 1941, of a heart attack, in Little Rock, Ark. Mowrer, Elizabeth Hadley - Jan. 22, 1979 - The first of Ernest I-Iemmingway's four wives. Hem- mingway dedicated The Sun Also Rises and A Mo- veable Feast to her and assigned her the royalties, in Lakeland, Fla. Stakman, Elvin - Jan. 22, 1979 - Pre-eminent plant pathologist who led the war against wheat dis- eases, and increased the world's wheat yields by breeding new, hardier strains, of a stroke, in St. Paul, Minn. Rockefeller, Nelson - Jan. 26, 1979 - Former vice-president of the United States, and governor of New York from 1958-1973. Rockefeller's career in public service spanned 40 years and included ap- pointments under six presidents. I-Ie died of cardiac arrest, in New York City. Dubs, Adolph - Feb. 14, 1979 - US Ambassador to Afghanistan, after being kidnapped and shot by Afghan Moslem extremists, in Kabul, Afghanistan. Newsline f 101 Brewer Hddresse Ponhellenic Banque L..4L Q-if' 'Y 6 f The Panhellenic Scholarship Banquet was held at the Moose Lodge on Thursday night, February 15, with Chan- cellor Thomas Brewer as guest speaker. After Brewer's address, awards were presented. The Panhellenic Scholarship trophy was presented to Kappa Delta for upholding the highest grade point average. Kappa Delta also received the most improved sorority scholarship. Following the presentation of awards, the installation of officers closed the banquet. Picture A: The Philanthropic Award was presented to Kappa Delta for excellence in their field of philanthropic work during the year. B: Panhel- lenic officers presented awards during the Scholarship Banquet. C: Outgo- ing Panhellenic President Ann Thompson presents Hera Award to Gay Blocker, outstanding Alpha Phi Alumni. Panhellenic Banquet f 103 . , ,fwfv-- 104 f Dorm Life N y-F R H NsANiT E, .Elf-f--' 'g ' I' gg - '-fE.v U ' --- . . , , f- 1 - 'f'11fWf.4 'YEQP 4 .. ' Q- J' 'WW- 1 '-1 ' f r- .4:,a1!L. V ' g:, :L..w+A 5- , Y, A - ' , ,Q ,. gf'-nf-an-. .my '-, AJ , .1 X 1- 5 '. 35,1-W 39.-,TL 1 , v 1 Q. , YN .. T--A If-X-.1,y4-.HF::.:3qM.qv f -4 ,E- ,,A' Q . ., , H -, ' . , ' w - .fix . . . I: I P P v- XVI T1 P . -. I 'mu ., 11 ' DID , - :R IW' , ' zzmf ff,-3.9 f -1 x v w 'I .' V U iq - -m pp. 'J V , , x 1 ri W w-xv ,QQ m-+V 1 I + ,,L .-,W-, Q-, ,., --f- . - A ' . L.. - V- ,,- ,.pg 7- -- 4,111 ,V . ' ' MM- 5 V' jffl..- ', -1 ' Y 11-'42-uwiff Zz.-,f -.,.. X i di. :tag ....:i.:,y:,iNX xi' -Tri'--N f fnuh, ag-QJEVULQ-H lg, A, . .f,,ih,, . I .1 1. 4 Q N HM , K .1 XJ , kg, 106 f Dorm Life Continued from previous page Every light in my room was ong the stereo was going full blast, and my roommate was in the hall yelling, Waste power! Let's go home. Anytime I think of the dorms now, I thank God I'm out. I spent my required two years there, and I enjoyed a lot of it, but now you couldn't get me back in with a shotgun. Ask anybody - even the people who live there - dorm life is 24-hour insan- ity. The dorms: where you can stand in the hall and drink beer from a glass with no hassle, but if it's in a can, the hall advisor will confiscate it. Where your next-door-neighbor plays his stereo at volume 9 but you're not allowed to play your acoustic guitar. Where they fine you S5 for taking the screen off your window. The dorms: where I ate out every night because I couldn't cope with cooking on my tiny hotplate, which kept short-circuting anyway. Where I learned in the shower to duck whenever someone flushed the toilet. Where I discovered the true value of sleep. Two years in a row I was the only person on our hall who got along with his roommate. That meant everyone else, who hated their roommates, hung out in our room. Lots of times I locked the door and pretended to be out - lack of solitude is definitely a problem when you live in the party room. I never got anything done in the dorms. The pace was just too hard to live with. Everything was so laid-back, and at the same time, so frantic, that it was a real problem deciding what to do when you weren't in class. IUsually your hallmates decided for you.l And if you ever settled down to an evening of serious study, someone was sure to start a panty raid. You could always find a party in the dorms. I remember standing in the shower on my first morn- ing at ECU, talking with the guy beside me about the semi-annual perpetual hangover of registration week. We were both impressed with the quantity of partying the average dorm student could tolerate, but I told him I was sure things would be much quieter during exam week. Hell, he said, these Efi irely A lTERNATivE ifesryle people don't stop for nothing. You wait and see. He was right. No one in the dorms is immune to party fever, and exam week just provided more free time for getting wrecked. The hyper people O.D.ed on No-Doze, crammed during the day and partied all night. The laid-back people set up lawn chairs in the shower, sat there and drank beer under the cool water all afternoon, and later slept or crashed through their exams. So many people on our hall dropped out after exams that LeRoy, our janitor, commented, Livin' in these dorms will drive you crazy. I know I couldn't stand it. The dorms: where there is always something to tear up if you get bored. In Aycock they put M8O's in the commodes and literally demolished the bath- room fixtures. ln Jones they leaned 39-gallon gar- bage cans full of water against a door and waited for the occupant to come out. Every night there were shaving cream fights and trash can burnings. People threw furniture out the windows, kicked holes in glass panels. One night I watched a guy take an axe to his chair - he smashed it to kindling, too, with- out batting an eye. My roommate that year was a pyromanic: he lit long trails of lighter fluid in the halls and burned announcements off the bulletin board. Then he learned to blow 12-foot fireballs from his mouth and every night during Homecom- ing week he walked around College Hill treating the dorms to a fireshow. The dorms: where there was a power failure anytime you were desperately trying to finish an English paper on an electric typewriter. Where you could always hear five stereos at once, whether you wanted to or not. Where campus police roamed the halls and told residents they'd be detained for questioning if they yelled out the window again. Where my next-door neighbor collapsed in the corner and vomited in the trash can at the end of last year, and a confirmed day student who was sitting on my bed turned to me and said, This place is sheer insanity. How can you live here? I thought for a minute. I couldn't remember the answer, and that's when I decided to move out. 1 , I -.vh,,,... ....... -f' f 951.gif-2 Picture A: Cold showers at 3:00 a.m. are a necessity for some dorm students. B: A moment of solitude is a rare occurance in a dorm. C: Could this really be The Gates of Hell? Dorm Lifef107 qilljy' ' I, v. .1.4,1z.ys,:,-,r:Ar'f, f x x. gp f :G-. .-,J-f 1 ' f wg, 'Sin vga. wif. Y ' ' ' iw Q v Iif,49: , 3.-,Ll .1-gm. ,jfff az, 'E f Y 5 7 . .1 fra ,I ,, Q, '..XPf'av 1 f . F ,iz .f 1 , 4 ' , ,- I vs 4 -.. !-.v .-:f t e 1- J.,-H 34455. fd A- 15 . ,rx 7 4 ! , ,:, fwfzh 1 ' r I N 1 , Qi 5 Z. -1 if fn 1 I -:QE P. .4 rf-3 41.21 'PA 2. 25215 4.1111 .gflig-,Q f i. 5 EL-' , ,W ' I 41,2 FF- X. 1 7 I js, 7' , .a J , Y i . . l- ik' KX Q. MM ibm.- ghrdq . , P 'W .0 y ' g., 14 .,, J .. . 1' 'IL W if 2.5 1 is T H AQ! ls. ,. ' VO.. as 4f3Q'5l2i'- fl. 5vV,au-,. W A. K 1 :TQ - 4h f ' 'ar . ff' ' . gr 'N if . A sew - -wp mga. ' 4 : 4 5 '. '?1'2f',' 7 T, 41 I , 7, Q., qK'k.,, 4.35: N-sw 4' 9 lwi WH T. 2 tion had 6 the for wo Bhd the Bud and conhnued Classic in e mp shot Maynor makes an impressive layup v 1X-.,i-I 'N 4 Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals I rals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals l .... t urals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals r t ur l tr als Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals intram ls r rals traIf amurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals Intramurals 'wi' .t I' I S' ' s ?1Q2t'n,.'f',.' 5,1 .' P, . 5,-sattff Hi . ,1'?v, ' ' .L 'r?f-:fr + ' ivghd- ' Have you ever had the desire to become involved in a sport, but never got up enough nerve to do so because you lelt you weren't good enough? Well, the E.C.U. intramural program is for you because perfection isn't sought, participa- :ion is. Your interest is your ability to excell in intramurals. You gain twice as much as you put in. The social, as well as 'he physical, rewards are unsurpassed. Dr. Wayne Edwards, 'he Intramural Sports Director, urges all students to look into he program. ln intramural sports, it's the participant, not he spectator, who really counts! Intramurals are a vital part of university existence. The . D '. K- . ' a w . V . 1 v A 'I '. AS -N .Q 5. -t opportunity is here and it's up to you to take the first step. Your participation is the success of the East Carolina Univer- sity's Intramural Program. Picture A: These E.C.U. students take the opportunity to become involved in the great American game of football. B: The intramurals are exciting, entertaining. and just plain fun! lntramuralsf 1 ll Mendenhall Presents Albee, Fodo ,wife 'Q' The Student Union Artists and Theatre Arts Committees each sponsored an event at Men- denhall's Hendrix Theater in January. Famed playwright Edward Albee directed of his plays on January 24, 1979. The two The American Dream and The Zoo Sto- were a part of a project called Albee Dir- Albee, in which the playwright took per- charge of the performances so that they be enacted the way he intended them to The idea for the project was Albee's. His behind it was that many people had his plays directed by others, but that these never spoke clearly of his own in- Albee proved to be as good a director as he s a playwright. His direction evoked an under- tandi among the actors and the audience alike that they never expected to achieve. The players and the spectators became aware of the story itself, not just the production. Six days later, on January 30, violinist Eu- gene Fodor starred in a one man show. Fodor, called the Mick Jagger of classical music, gave a superb performance to the en- thusiastic crowd at Mendenhall. At 27, Fodor has accomplished things that most people can never hope for. His credits include one of the top three violin prizes at Moscow's Tchaikovsky International Competi- tion in 1975. He has performed at the White House and as a soloist with several symphony orchestras. His performance exposed the audience to a rare dose of classical music, and he left the crowd wanting more. Picture A: Edward Albee offers advice to a member of the cast of The American Dream. B: At age 27, Eugene Fodor is an extrovert, a ladies' man, and one of the best violinists in the world. Special Attractionsf113 Picture A: An Industrial Technology student melts metal in a furnace. B: A student works at the printing press. C: A Technology student displays his welding ability. D: Students concentrate on completing their metal projects. E: To complete a project for lndustrial Technology, two students make metal boxes. 114fSchool Of Technology Teaching, Industry And Business The School of Technology offers six pro- grams leading to a Bachelor's Degree, These include Industrial and Technical Education, Industrial Technology, Technical-Teacher Education, Business Education, Distributive Educatioh and Office Administration. Master's Degrees are offered in the areas of Industrial and Technical Education, and Business Education. East Carolina's School of Technology of- fers Certification Programs where students are able to take courses leading to teaching certification in the fields of trade and indus- trial education, business education, and dis- tributive education. The School, located in Flanagan Building, contains many laboratories and facilities. These include labs for Electronics, Wood Technology, Metals Technology, Drafting and Design, Graphic Arts Technology, Pow- er Technology, Industrial Production, Intro- ductory Data Processing, Curriculum Devel- opment, Office Practice, Secretarial Skills, and Merchandising Technology. School Of Technologyf115 L X he We ken Sex IsN'T .V Al M .1 . rs- - K - ww Se'- Q 434' l A 1... x X I r ff ' Q35-. f1' .2533 -K -. -1 4 f' O i A A. - 5 . V is . . ,J 'T In 'il FH ? FH A new era of women's basketball began at East Carolina this year. Under the supervi- sion of first-year coach Cathy Andruzzi, the team overcame its height disadvantage and exerted a greater team effort to surpass its handicap and reach newer and higher athle- tic goals. The team's strength was in the speed, quickness, and endurance of the players. However, much depended on the exper- ience of its six returning letter winners of last season. Rosie Thompson, the All-American candidate who led the scoring, was the team's top performer. With over 1,000 points accredited to her name, Thompson added a twist to the games as the audience witnessed the breakage of several long- standing records. The season's schedule included such powerhouses as NC State, Ohio State, Old Dominion, Montclair State, and North Caro- lina. The Lady Pirates played one of the roughest schedules in the state. The first game of the season resulted in a loss for the Pirates. Though Thompson scored 27 points, Campbell pulled through with a 70-69 victory. The losses did not end there, for the second-ranked NC State over- whelmed the ladies and ended the game with the scoreboard reading 106-74. The loss against the Wolfpack was attributed to a weakness in the defense. Things began to pick up for the team as Duke and Wake Forest suffered losses at the hands of the Pirates. The overpowering strength of the team enabled all five starters to score in the double figures. This surge of physical talents allowed the Lady Pirates to dominate Wake Forest throughout the entire game. Picture A: April Ross searches for an open teammate during the Pirates' loss to State. B: Rosie Thompson battles two Carolina players for a rebound. Women's BasketbalIf117 eff? - 1 ,Q X Tr' i an. 4 , U f' ,, 1 .. -Q..- 5' 4 , QQ ' Ei Q ,yy D 1 8fGr6gg Smith Singers 1., -. 1 45, .. lhvg. ll A ' 'VG MJ 3 I ' 4124 7,4 ii,-ri i , ' xl Vi Picture A: Awaiting a cue for their next song, members watch director. B: Formal attire adds to the music as well as the prestige of the singers. C: Waiting to go on stage can be nerve wracking. Gregg Smith Singers f 1 19 . 6 u u Q n 1 0 ' ' ' ' ' .W - . . an oo ' ' , , . , . . . -nm ,5 whnrc lv? , , , ,N 13 ,,,,ooxM . ' ,.H ,-G-,,-NH . 11 f ' 1' ' . , ' ' . . . . Play F-ao+ban'N E - I ' X X . X , ,M,,M.. 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YS Ns- a--Q., 'L ff' Iv: ,I ,www .. ,' f . ,. W , ff- IH... fl ' 4'A X5 I N -. f , , '-, l ': , f - A. v I f - V . 4 iq 1 F163 55 ., , I ' A . , -2 -' I 'Q -7,214 -V ,vQf 4 7955! 1 H1 123 The Wind Ensemble is the top performing group in the School Picture A: Mr. Hubert Carter diligently directs the Wind Ensemble during of Music, The 54-member group can be ioined by audition only' fall concert. B: Brass and Woodwinds add an attractive note to the perforr The Ensemble, directed by Mr. Hubert Carter, performed three concerts, one each in the fall, winter, and spring. 124 f Wind Ensemble A f' ga f .-5 na.. 'Q'xXx ..--'., X F Q I PU!M wasug 9ICl U 'L LQ 5' nl- ID ualpnv 69 W dE bl f125 SGA OFFICERS IN CDIVIIVIAND Members of the Student Government Associ- ation Executive Committee put a lot of time, energy and effort into their positions. Their moti- vation stemmed from their concern for the wel- fare of the student body. Tommy Joe Payne worked in the SGA for two years before becoming president. After obtaining the presidency, he found that most students do not know much about the inner workings of the SGA. They don't realize that transit and refrig- erators and many other things are operated through the SGA, Payne said. It is often a thankless job from the students. Vice-President David Cartwright found his ma- jor in Political Science directly related to his of- fice. He worked with the legislature, helped to prepare bills, worked to improve the student tele- phone book, and set up the absentee ballot which was used by 175 students in the November gener- al election. Cartwright was concerned that the students were not more familiar with the SGA, but said he enjoyed his job very much. I would run again if I could, he said. Zack Smith learned that a business background was not really necessary for his job of treasurer, but that the ability to deal with a lot of people was. Smith realized something during his term of office that he wanted to pass on to all SGA officers. It's true that everyone makes mistakes, ck Smith - Treasurer , itll, 4' fzl - 4 i n Bell - SeEEtary but never make a mistake that can't be correct- ed, he said. In her two years of work with the SGA, Libby Lefler, Speaker of the Legislature, saw a lot of controversy which hurt the effectiveness of the legislature. SGA is taking positive steps now, and I am happy with my job, Lefler said. I arn trying to work for the students' interests. Secretary Lynn Bell worked with the legisla- ture for two years doing clerical work. She want- :5'I , 1 -.i4,A:.f if V' X I iQ'k. sr' - A' ' fs , ' ' I , - li it i 5 2 J. 'IAN 5 4 I, 4- g 1 t A .X A Libby I-eflel' - Speaker 6 the llilgslature :Is - 'X 3 ed the job of secretary to see how the Executive Committee operated. I have learned more on the second floor of Mendenhall than I have in all my classes, Bell said. Overall, the SGA Executive Committee had a successful year which enabled them to serve the students well. sGAf127 After winning two more games at home, the team beat Western Carolina 84-73 on their court. The win proved that the Lady Pirates could win on the road as well as at home. Rosie Thomp- son and Marsha Girven proved the hot shooting force in the action-packed second half. The Pirates then returned home to play North Carolina. Early foul trouble and a poor defense plagued the Pi- rates, allowing Carolina to go home with a 78-73 victory. The disturbing game became the Pirate's sixth loss of the season. The overwhelming defeat of Appa- lachian State, 87-57, was a perfect co- meback for the Lady Pirates. They led by only four at the half, but their sec- ond-half blitz, led by Thompson, pushed the team to a victory margin of 30 points. Foul trouble again plagued the team as they traveled to Johnson City, Ten- nessee, to play East Tennessee State. The game resulted in a double over- time that left the ladies with a 92-90 defeat. The team seemed to bounce back and forth between wins and losses as they returned home to defeat Long- wood College 82-42. The game ex- posed 61 rebounds for the Pirates. The team then played host to NC State and suffered a disappointing loss of 94-58. Rosie Thompson scored her 1500th career point with 11:08 left in the game. State combined a tight zone defense and superb outside shooting to insure their victory. Picture A: Marsha Girven goes up for two durin the Pirate's victory over UNC-G. B: Lil- lion Barnes threads her way through a tight defense. C: Rosie Thompson takes a jumper during the team's heartbreaking loss to Caroli- na. C3 Us 'Isa -Q S O . , - .t 2,1 Ex ww' A I ,us lf ' F -mvilik b., l -.J -i ,- ...Lime 1 -ex in , - . , 6 T ' D .. 128fWomen's Basketball --0 61 ' . 1 'f A w 'Q -l- Q 1 fi' Q in 1 ll- 4' f' ,1 ' -1, I Y. NN a p t ,'rg.,5- Q x t 3' '--6 I L , 17 4 Despite Disappointments, M I 4 1 1 Pirates Complete K1 g Improved Season 'Q 4 a t I fix to .Q- Q t we to 'ff , .. t J 1. b Ai I , ' v 5' gigs. j ' . I V I H 31. -' 1' -,- -XX'Mfg2'.A M I . eff e -as K- .X ' ' ' as K ' 1 ,J ' A r t' x ft 1 . Us fe u I I KKK' . , I I fffb -. Jigrfglilxgl! A ' . I ,t x , We x it 2-e ' x x 5 s of z. if e , ,, I A QW 1 ,V M 'X' s fffcq, f - ' WIHBURG tk 31 .est. - e- Mfr' .J 1 4' 'H Men's Bask tb inf Nith five returning starters for the 1978-79 basketball season, Pirates began their schedule with confidence as they won er UNC-Asheville at Asheville and St. Leo's at Minges Colise- . The Pirates, coached by Larry Gillman, faced one of the ghest schedules ever. But they still won twelve of their twenty- en games, which marked the most victories a Pirate team has n since 1975 when the Bucs finished with a 19-9 record. The ates played against three Atlantic Coast Conference schools Maryland, NC State, and Georgia Tech. They also met Indiana te, Notre Dame, Iona, Detroit, Tennessee and South Carolina, ing victories from South Carolina, Iona, and Georgia Tech. 'he team drew heavily this year from the strengths of All- .erican guard Oliver Mack. He was the number two returning rer in the NCAA with a scoring average of 28 points per ie. Mack was clearly considered the finest player ever to wear irate uniform. i dominating theme throughout the season was improvement he areas of rebounding and defense. The team's basic weak- :es seemed to stem from the need to establish continuity early mg a large group of veterans and rookies, and a very rigid 'ing schedule. roblems also arose from the anti-Gillman factions. Personnel mlems among the coaching staff and the players plagued nan consistently. Two assistant coaches, Billy Lee and Herb rn, both resigned, while seven players quit or transferred to -r schools. ' .. -Q 4.9 Y W Y I '-.gr 1' After the season's outstanding opening, the course changed for the Pirates as William and Mary's Indians out played, out hustled and out scored them. That loss started a chain reaction as the team also fell to the Tennessee Volunteers 89-71. Guard George Maynor led all the scoring with 24 points and his teammate Greg Cornelius, center, added 14 points. The score was tied at the half, but the aggressive Tennessee guard, Gary Carter, returned to the floor and initiated an outstanding scoring blitz . Losses traveled with the Pirates as they took on Indiana State in the first round in the Hatter Classic and faced Stetson in the consolation game on the following night. The Classic, played in Deland, Florida, was hampered with problems for the Pirates. Both opponents aggressively took the floor and the Pirates just could not get themselves together. Oliver Mack was saddled with foul trouble most of the night but managed to score 15 points in the first half and 18 in the second. Mack was named to the All- Tournament team while Larry Bird of Indiana State was named the tourney's Most Valuable Player. Wins and losses followed the Pirates in the next five games with a wide-marginal loss to Maryland and a narrow victory at Iona. The Pirates made a shocking victory by defeating the South Carolina Gamecocks 56-55. That victory marked the school's biggest basketball win in recent history. The Pirates never led in the first half but their five-man press in the second half paid off. oi o if 5,3 I X ffrifff 1 A XIA,-1-. Wifi i. g fti E , ' I5 ll I - 1 ' l l .I - A 'l w --. -..L V E W 1' l -1'-,,. ' I . .fl .hx X V . - ll Yi I I zi , W, . 'L N . - Q ,161 . - HD: TSQIQI - l xqignig I -1 1 :l,v'V:,, . ' X ' ui L fi, 'P' V I f tl l r f' I T I , ,E .arf- 'afd j . IR ' 1? I f if , ' 5: QC 3 if N, .1 . .M ,Ill ' A x 1 ' . ' ' I Q.-. f - , rr.. - . .GE I I .J .I jk, if Qt 6 All S i' X X ,M ' . A 1 s. U .r Fa. I Iv' E . ' 2 132 f The Seventies It is impossible to think about the mood of the seventies without recalling the mood of the sixties. Contrasting them both, and trying to get a feel for the past ten years, one can't help but remember writer Tom Wolfe's 1975 evaluation: the seventies were The 'Me' Decade. Compared to the dramatic social changes we wit- nessed in the sixties, the prevailing themes of the seventies were blase, ennui, and apathy. People just wanted to be left alone. At best we were into self-improvement: jogging, E.S.T. yoga, health food. At worst, we closed our eyes, tried to catch'a buzz, and coasted. Not that there weren't good reasons for cruising - we needed a break. The first years of the decade were haunted by the prolonging of a nightmare from the sixties: the Vietnam War. That horror had been with us as long as many of us could remember. The early seventies brought increased bombing of North Vietnam, U.S. invasions of Cambodia and Laos, and the murder of four protesting students at Ohio's Kent State University. The 1973 cease-fire and subsequent troop withdrawal came as a bitter anti-climax. The war had dragged on too long for us to feel anything but relief, cynicism, and a heavy callousness. The end of Vietnam brought us the beginning of Watergate - a fiasco built on betrayal and political conspiracy. The credibility gap widened into a chasm as we watched Nixon's corrupt White House rotting- es Decade In etwspec from the inside out. The rancid fruits of Wat yielded two American history firsts: Nixon was first president to resign, and Ford was the first dent never elected by popular vote. We had a big two-hundredth birthday party. By time July 4 rolled around we'd had about 18 n of Bicentennial publicity and not many people - like Christmas, the Bicentennial was over-co cialized. The special all-day minute-to-minute coverage of the big day made the whole thing more dull. Y u 1 f u Q 1 Women s Liberation was the big social mov Peace rallies gave way to rock concerts, van c tions, and Human Rights demonstrations. We a real, honest-to-God energy crisis in which many us got of bed at 5:30 a.m. to wait all morning in for gas. We had a whole year of crazy weather droughts, stifling summer heat, snow in Florida one of the coldest winters on record. We o relations with Red China and discarded Taiwan the Panama Canal. We lost a lot of famous p Jimi Hendrix, Pablo Picasso, Lyndon Johnson, tha Mitchell, Jack Benny, Bing Crosby, I Rockefeller, Mao Tse-Tung, Elvis, and two popes two months. We lost Patty Hearst for a while then the FBI found her for us. Continued on page 135 Us l 'W 54 'W- ai' .flfifs , Picture A: South Vietnamese troops fill every inch of space on a ship evacuating them from Hue to DaNang in March, 1975. B: President Richard Nix- on bids farewell to his few remaining supporters after announcing his resignation on August 8, 1974. C: Nixon's successor, Gerald Ford, was the first appointed president in U.S. history. Ford was ap- pointed vice.president after the resignation of Spiro Agnew and was thrust into the presidency when Nixon resigned. 134-fThe Seventies I . s 1 x . I , , 1 1 - 4 ' -mhz 130, N .,,, ' E-f gf ' - 'L zxlrg gx N'--M., 1-fi4i.'L,4XQ 1 -X, - 1 1 w -..ms-K-U S 1, 1 Lt! Z Picture A: A portrait of Patty Hearst during her stay as a SLA guerrilla. B: The recession of 1974 brought overflow crowds to employment offices throughout the nation. C: The '70's saw the initiation of anti-pollution drives throughout the nation as people finally pushed to clean up a dirty America. 136 f N ewsline Irar1,Vietnam, Indiana State Suffer March Onslaughts China Attacks Vietnam I Early March saw the beginning of a war between two angry Communist neighbors who have been cul- turally and politically at odds for 2000 years. Three divisions of invading Chinese troops descended on the Vietnamese town of Dong Dang and were met by the fierce resistance of Vietnamese regular army troops. The assault on Vietnam was expected and well- advertised. Tensions had been building ever since Vietnam expelled 200,000 ethnic Chinese from the country last spring. The Vietnamese rout of Cambo- dia's China-backed regime in February brought the confrontation to a head. Despite Chinese claims that the offensive was only a punitive lesson, world leaders shuddered at the Spartans The Michigan State Spartans claimed the 1979 National Collegiate Basketball Championship in March by defeating the previously-unbeaten and number one ranked Indiana State Sycamores. In their unbeaten, storybook surge to the cham- pionship, the Sycamores had trailed by as many as 11 points in previous games and had rallied to win. But they had never been down by 16, and they had never faced Michigan State's Magic Johnson and Spe- cial K Kelser. As hard as they tried to write a happy ending for what had been a fairytale season for them and their rookie head coach, the closest they ever got was six points. Punitive Action' global implications that would be brought on if th Soviets chose to intervene on Vietnam's behalf. By invading Vietnam, China intended to rega' some lost prestige and prove it is no paper tiger. also had a tactical goal: to draw Vietnamese troo away from Cambodia and thus ease the pressure the surviving forces of the Pol Pot regime. The US position was that the Chinese intrusion w a result of the Soviet-encouraged Vietnamese inv sion of Cambodia, which, in turn, was seen as M cow's response to the normalization of Chines American relations. State Department officials r sponded to the confrontation by urging Vietnam withdraw all its forces from Cambodia and China do the same from Vietnam. Claim National Championshi With Johnson's 12 points and Kelser's nine, Mic gan State carved a 37-28 halftime lead, and th went on to score the first seven points after interm sion and gain a commanding 44-29 lead. With 10: remaining in the game, Indiana State's Larry Bi lead a Sycamore rally that narrowed the Spartan le to six, but a free-throw and a bucket by Johns returned the momentum to Michigan State, who n er let go of it. The final score was 75-64, which wa double victory for the Spartans - a national ch pionship and the first and only defeat of the year Indiana State. hah usted, slamic Republic ormed Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi left Iran perma- ently on January 16, 1979, after a year of political urmoil and economic frustrations. The Shah, who ad ruled for 37 years, left the country in the hands f a 9-member regency council that he appointed to arry out his duties. Exiled Moslem leader Ayatollah uholla Khomeini then returned to Iran to set up an slamic Republic under his domination. Khomeini set p a Council of the Islamic Revolution, which was to ventually displace the regency council and Premier hahpur Bakhtiar. Bakhtiar's government was overthrown on Febru- ry 11, after bloody fighting in Teheran. Khomeini ppointed civil rights activist Medhi Bazargan to head government which would transform Iran into an lamic Republic. Bakhtiar and other members of his overnment went into hiding after the coup. Voters on March 30 approved Khomeini's Islamic public with a margin of 9706. Kurdish rebels were ranted limited autonomy by Khomeini several days efore the election in an effort to get their support of e plan. Shortly after the approval of the Republic, execu- ons of prominent people who had served under the hah were began. The closed trials and summary ecutions of 119 former officials drew outrage from ithin the country as well as from outside, as opposi- n to the Khomeini regime began to grow. Thou- nds of people demonstrated in the streets of Tehe- n April 15-17 in opposition to Khomeini's policies. homeini blamed the unrest on the US and its ents who were creating disunity in Iran. Obituaries Ritchie, John Simon - Feb. 2, 1979 - English punkrock musician better known as Sid Vicious of the notorious Sex Pistols group, of a heroin overdose, one day after being released on bail from prison, where he was awaiting trial for the October, 1978 murder of his girlfriend, in Manhattan. Beltran, Pedro - Feb. 16, 1979 - -Former Peru- vian Prime Minister and longtime publisher, of a heart attack, in Lima. Bartlett, Dewey - March 1, 1979 - Former Republican Senator from Oklahoma who was a cham- pion of conservative causes, of lung cancer, in Tulsa. Villot, Jean Cardinal - March 9, 1979 - French theologian who was appointed Vatican Secretary of State under 3 Popes, and who served as head of the church twice during 1978, after the deaths of Popes Paul VI and John Paul l, of pneumonia, in Vatican City. Monnet, Jean - March 16, 1979 - Frenchman who was regarded as one of his country's principal statesmen, who conceived the Lend-Lease program during World War ll and played a major role in the formation of the European Common Market, at his home west of Paris. Haywood, Max - March 18, 1979 - English scholar who translated Boris Pasternak's Doctor Zhi- vago and works by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and other Russian authors banned or banished in their own country, of cancer, in Oxford, England. Newsline f 137 Cheerleaders Promoti The 1978-79 Pirate Cheerleaders cheered at all home football and basketball games and at every away football game except Southern Mississippi. The squad, made up of six girls: Alice Goins ico- headl, Edna Privette, Cathy Gray, Patsy Roop, Petra McBride, and Karen Jones: and six guys: Ronnie Eason ico-headl, Mike Aman, Hardee Cox, Craig Sholar, Dave Tetrilyak, and Kenny Privette lmascotl was funded by the SGA and the Athletic Department. As part of their activities for the year, the cheer- leaders helped to raise money for the Heart Fund and performed at the Phi Kappa Tau Carolina Keg Rally. They also held pep rallies at the Elbo Room in order to raise money for their trip to the Inde- pendence Bowl game in Shreveport, Louisiana. The Pirate Cheerleaders entered the National Cheerleading Contest, but did not place high enough to receive honors. Picture A: The squad celebrates after a Pirate football victo- ry. B: The practice pays off as the Pirate cheerleaders execute this mount to perfection. C: The team and fans are encouraged by those everpresent smiles. D: The cheerleaders support the team by participating in the Homecoming parade. 138 f Cheerleaders School Spiri g .1'f1'W:. wp - ' I-,FI 2 . rr Q . : -I . 1 . T -giszrg . arg:-.qxgirkj ii we-f--T - X ff?- 1 . 'ull 5 .'- Lf' I X 4, v 'K -Q 1 . ff' .4,-- xx ' ll. .. , 1 .3. F. -jg. 1 . ' 11 if I 1 ,io MV 2. -, ' . v ' my - ff . X f I I N-f nl 5 Lv, 1 A- , ,-jf, J - .4 'A' 1.. Q-, W .. , Y ' A , M. 1.-Q . L s ,fu .7- , 1 - , W ,. -vs. 9 -f , y- aalg , :L- -l Hining.-.Z A .:-...... D The Right Direc tio ECU Intramurals An Aim A 1401 Intramurals Intramural-recreational sports at ECU include a variety of programs. In addition to the extensive offering of intramural sports, programs are offered in the areas of sports clubs, informal recreation and recreational equipment utilization. Sports clubs during 1978-1979 included rugby, karate, lacrosse, racquetball, team handball and ski- ing. This program provides competitive, recreational and instructional experiences for the interested East Carolina student throughout the year. The informal recreation program provided count- less recreational opportunities for thousands of East Carolina students. Gymnasiums, weight rooms, tennis courts, racquetball courts and playing fields are avail- 1W- C: Co-ed Basketbal T e offers a wide variety of sports Throwing, Flag Foo Women s 1 able for free-play use, while over 40 hour recreational swimming are available weekly. E4 ment for practically every sport imaginable is a able to the ECU student at no cost. Sports clubs, informal recreation and the ec ment check-out service, provided ample oppor ties for constructive use of students' leisure i Many students do take advantage of the prog offered by the intramural department. Estimates f that over 6006 of the men and over 4096 o women on campus participated in some kind of sponsored by the intramural office this year, proves that there is, indeed, something for e' body. G V l .bfi Ro J li LGU Intramuralsf 141 Swim Teqm Sends Five Io NQIIX Chompionships Swimming is one of the most successful pro- grams in East Carolina's athletic department. Ray Scharf, upon entering the 1978-79 season, had compiled an overall record of 73-43 in his eleven years of coaching at ECU. This year proved to be another victorious one for Scharf's teams. The men's team, finishing 5-3 for the season, qualified five swimmers for the NCAA Championships. The women's team, though completing the year with a 2-5 record, greatly improved their previous aver- ages. All in all, the 1978-79 season was one of the best ever for the East Carolina swim team. Ac- cording to Scharf, the team managed to rewrite most of the record book. The men's team opened the season with a loss to Alabama. After placing sixth in the Penn State Relays, they went up against UNC-Chapel Hill. The Pirates, though losing to the Tarheels by one point, swam one of their most impressive meets. Coach Scharf was extremely proud of the team because he realized how hard the men worked to overcome such strengths as Carolina. Old Dominion was the first to suffer a loss to the Pirates. This win of 75-57 was followed by wins over Maine, Richmond, and UNC-Wilmington. State placed its foot in the way of progress when it defeated ECU 66-47. The team's bad luck continued with Duke taking the next meet 68-45. The men wrapped up the season by winning the Wilmington Invitational. This successful endeavor was followed by a third place ranking in the East- ern Intercollegiate Championship. Picture A, B, C, D, E, F: The Pirate swim team practically rewrote the record book this year. Members of the men's and women's teams are shown during their defeat of the University of Maine. 142 f Swimming K, .1 Q 5 6 1 5 - 'Q ii, u , ' ' '-- Q10 ' U1 ' 14, j,Z?z.f r . N V ' ' --is -1. .. N Q db .P I -V P ., .li 4 y 'Q Vg' .1 ,C . '5' -L -.. - f'.-4. 54,1-,gf5a,,5,,-,, 3- .- 6 JC' '35, i-'Q . 1 t. . -, n. -I -, ,J- ,u 1. :15 5f-E+.- -, n '-. f '!' f. . tl.. . ,N .jig . 1,1 . ,J F f 5, -. -A, .5-1 v 'J,.: ,..- N - '-ec 'V-fi-' ' 'J -- - - ..... . H71 -- , V, , . . e-4 - 1 - 4- ,f 1- ' 5 -. . 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W3-'N , 4 L w-4 .- Je,-fPfL',k.4 .f.fwm.4' 1 N...-as. 1 ' '- ML- xwim.-L, fm ' - ..4.+f- 'Jf-if ,..-. J: 511116144 1' -Pg!-an Hula . gpm,,,,m Forty-Eight Teams Particnpat In First-Annual The first-annual Stroh's Case Stacking Contest was held during basketball season. The competition, joint- ly sponsored by Strohs and Hallow Distributing Com- pany, drew a field of 48 teams. The object of the contest was to stack as many cases as possible in a 3-minute time period. The trick was to stack from the bottom, with 2 members of the 4-person team balancing the ever-growing stack. After the time period is over the cases must stand for ' Y Y FF? V i i 1 STROH .aathl STPOH 74 Ulu 'mm - v J'11L'll1, , . f ilu lurug F I STROH STROH STRQH 'xfy-1. . Sllprl ,, M, ' 'QISV Picture A: The competition drew over 40 4-member teams. B: The object of the competition was to stack as many cases as possible during a 3-minute time period. When the cases fell, the team had to start over again, and stack as many as they could before time ran out. C: This team almost tied the world's record of 18 cases, but some of them fell during the 10-second period in which they must freely stand after the 3-minute stacking time is over. D: The winners of the competition were Bob's Ruggers in the mens' division and P,A.S.T. in the wom- ens' division. Case Stacking Contest! 145 Inconsistent Pio Brings Wins Losse After an overtime loss to Virginia Commonwealth and a blow-out at the hands of Tennessee-Chattan- ooga, the Pirates continued to play inconsistently. They suffered losses to the Detroit Titans and the Wolfpack of North Carolina State. Hawkeye Whitney of State lived up to his fine reputation by piercing the Pirate defense for 28 points, 5 rebounds, and 6 assists. His enthusiasm obviously spread to his teammates as the Pirates fell I C i 3 .1 r 'G 1 IQRI ul :z m. l -v1t 1' 1 A igl 'P--IL-'W N m ,Q y 35 .WIN I ,iffy 3 1 3' Qgeyg ax, 4 Q tall gk .3 X 1 ,M - I xl . if r- 3 - JW 2, -gif.. f?'9. f :Q- 8 '- . 5' QXQXQ - A fri hir L 7 V , 410 I C- 595:42 I f , 'L 148 f Newsline 1 V A an, 5 E1 H VD H The Coastal Chemical Company, the largest company of its kind in North Carolina, caught fire February 19th at about 4 a.m. The fire caused approximately 2 million dollars in damages to the company. A large number of Pitt County residents were evacuated from their homes because of the danger that was presented by the toxic chemicals in the air. Residents of the Greenville and Winterville subdivisions were moved to shelters in Greenville which were organized by citizens who volun- teered to help make the refuge as comfortable as possi- ble. Firemen from 15 departments in the county were called to assist in the extinguishing of the blaze. The toxic cloud of black smoke reigned over Greenville for several days but residents were returned to their homes within two days of the fire The environmental impact of the fire was undeter mined The EPA monitored the air and many officials had open well water supplies inspected Chemical runoff from the melting show was the big problem considered after the flames were extinguished and residents were safely in thelr homes Contributing to the chemical runoff was the great amount of chemicals absorbed into nearby streams and water supplies Local farmers were warned to keep their livestock from drinking the contaminated water Picture A Coastal Chemical Corporation was the scene of this pre dawn fire on February 19 1979 causing S2 million in damages B Units from Greenville Fire Department respond to the blaze C The billowing smoke and fumes caused the evacuation of hundreds of area residents C Newslinef 149 f. ,X A r M-E f , iff Q Q .il .gn , Ni, .f Aan f. N NN -.b an 9 ' 'I I Q--' , I 'Q ' 1,- 1 ti it 3'-JIU' r'. 1 A' ,A ' 3 Q15-55 25-M- ,J V x - rf'-- Q 4 Picture A, B, C, D: ECU's matmen suffered a disappointing loss to North Carolina The wrestling team, after surviving all the scrapes and scratches of the year, suffered one last jolt. Bill Hill's resignation ocurred at the end of his second season as wrestling coach. With D.T. Joyner, one of the nation's top heavyweight wrestlers, out for the season, Hill found himself in dire need of another heavyweight to fill the position. As in the past, Hill found the answer to his problems on the football field. Min- dell Tyson, the 280-pound defensive tackle, proved to be an outstanding choice for this one-on. one sport. Hill commented that Tyson is an ex- tremely talented wrestler who moved well on the mat. He also added that Tyson knew when to use his weight against his opponent. This freshman, who had previous experience while in high school, is expected to make his mark in the heavyweight division before leaving ECU. Though the overall season was a disappointing one, the team did manage to gain some valuable experience. Wrestling X151 Record snowfall covered North Carolina in Febru- ary causing classes at ECU and on campuses across the state to be cancelled. Greenville had approxi- mately six inches of snow while the western part of the state had as much as 15-20 inches. As the cold winds blew, the great wizard of the weather waved his magic wand and students took over College Hill for an afternoon of fun. Monday, February 19, was a day for sliding down the hill, snowball fights, broken car windows, sore arms, and snowmen of all shapes and sizes. Fortunately, no one was hurt as many students took their sleds, headed for the streets, and met a few cars in the process. Picture A: This girl expresses her dismay after being hit over the head with a large snowball. B: A resident of College Hill proves that you're never too old to have fun in the snow. C: This unfortu- nate victim tries in vain to shield herself from her attackers. D: The 6-inch snowfall was a delight for many ECU students who had never seen that much snow, and many of them wasted no time in getting out and enjoying it. Recor. ., , ,,- l s I '?f if 152 f Newsline M' ll Blankets State un- ' av .,v, 6' .qi ..-4' , 'V 4 l ' ' n B Uqxgg- A-::. 251, .WA mms. 'fwf' 'A m 1?F? . C Newsline I 153 Classes Cancelled By Well-Organized Snow job -1 42 ' -' 'V-of -. -Q- ' ' ull!!! , Q .' Q. 4 P' Q!! ! nn,-1 Q .U I . 'T' : 5'f'7m'g'553f.5..:.11. wwf -'v Q, - uf wp ' ' 4' 4' fl. 1 .4 ,ffn .04 I ,-P. .Q .1 A, ' - . ,, n 1 ', 'I Wil M.',' if 4 .U - ,fi , J- 4 ' -'4 L ww A, 1 -LA 4 . Y .M . A 'fi , 1 x , ' ' fs fx I- .r '-Ora - I t I A ' . ' 1 ',,f L Ikvlj.-1 . 1 x P 5 1 4 , V 4 A , , A 84, , 7ll , 3, ' , 7 iv' X v ' - - ' J. , A 0 154f Newsline .444 5 l Picture A: A student follows the trodden path in order to nake her way past the Gazebo easler. B: This is one of the nany and different snowmen that appeared on campus as students publicly displayed their creatlvity. C: Although morn- ng classes were cancelled on Monday the 19th, students were :tlll required to beat their way through the snow for afternoon zlasses. D: This student uses a makeshift sled to enhance his enjoyment of the unexpected snowfall. E: Snowball fights arupted all over campus and many people had their cars rcraped off for them. Fortunately, no one was injured during hese campus-wide skirmishes. 1 crunnl Ml -4.-s.,-.l.g1i:iml1Av l 3. 1ff'lLiHF?' I gp: REDUCE . SPEED . Ama D N ewsline f 155 Chambef Qfchestfa Spafkles In Deffofmance The Piedmont Chamber Orchestra, though small, provided full, superb concert sound. Under the energetic direction of Nicholas Harsanyi, the orchestra played a well-mixed pro- gram. Using varied styles and periods, the group disproved the idea that an orchestra has to be large to have a full sound. Picture A: Conductor Nicholas Harsanyi leads the orchestra through difficult passages in the song. B: Intense concentration is needed to conduct an ensemble, as shown by Harsanyi. C: Frederick Bergstone, a French Horn soloist, shows incredible finesse and style during his performance. Piedmont Chamber Orchestraf157 5 v-1-- , Q2 V 73' 4 ' ' Q w---Q Q.. : i.,r f an, f 21 'T '. i. . .x, ,, 1 , 'ki - . -'Rr ' Q T . r. :Z . N M, ' Q' S Q am F15 i Wfkyf 3 ' f -9 53? L 5 4. ALS . if ga 4 Q W K jg A 5- 2 'Q I . !: -rl L. 1 , Q2 X Q-5 . ,Mqf . Q9 QQ Hal 159 Promotes Kcademlc Excellenc Phi Eta Sigma is a national scholastic honor society for college freshmen. The society is a member of the Association of College Honor Societies. Its purpose is to encourage and acknowledge high scholastic achievement. There are 200,000 members in the 180 chapters throughout the United States. Every two years stu- dent delegates from each chapter attend the national convention. All freshmen men and women who attain 3.5 grade point average or higher during their first grading i l If 1 I X . ' A 1 I Q : I n f 'Z . l 9, 1 l i l fr 1: ll' ll l , .1 : 15 Q i Us 2' ' iw ll' 3 :lil 3, 2 1 si Picture A: On February 28, 1979, an informal mixer was held for all prospective members of Phi Eta Sigma. B: Present Phi Eta Sigma members Deb- bie Geere, Brenda Killingsworth, Jeff Rickman, and Gary Shavers talk with faculty advisor, Dr. Ebbs. C: Refreshments were served as a part of the mixer. Phi Eta Sigmaf 161 A 66-64 victory over ACC's Georgia Tech marked the Pirates' first win over an ACC school in 26 at- tempts. George Maynor canned a 16-footer at the sound of the buzzer in overtime to provide the eighth victory of the season for the Pirates. Oliver Mack was the leading scorer with 24 points. Herb Krusen had 14, and Al Tyson followed with 11 points. The Pirates then went on to subdue a determined William and Mary team 61-59. During the next seven games, VCU, Tennessee-Chattanooga, and Georgia Tech all defeated the Pirates. Old Dominion also lost to the Pirates as Oliver Mack scored 25 pointsl The final game of the year was played against third-ranked Notre Dame. The Fighting Irish met the Pirates for the first time and concluded their season with a 89-72 win. In a strong effort, Oliver Mack scored 20 points and became ECU's number four all- time leading scorer. The season ended as the Pirates travelled to Greensboro to face the Soviet National team. o Picture A: Greg Cornelius clears the boards as Oliver Mack and :he rest of the ECU squad look on. B: Clarence Mlles moves to gain position on an Old Dominion opponent. C: ECU's Frank Hobson :nuts In a basket against Virginia Commonwealth. D: Oliver Mack akes a jumper from downtown Greenville. 01 A , L. Vf. J' 'H 51:4 Am in Q 'gs 'Q- if 6 r l 'S kvy 'D if H :lp r c!!- '3 4, X .3 The School of Music, located in A.J. Fletcher Mu- sic Center, works toward the development of musi- cianship and the fostering of self-realization consistent with the nature of the art and the abilities, talents, interests, and professional aspirations of the students it serves. It strives to thoroughly prepare each stu- dent for a specialized field, to develop an understand- ing of the relationship between this specialty and areas of music, and to stress the importance of a committment to the professions. The following degrees are offered in the School of Music: the Bachelor of Music, the Bachelor of Arts, and the Master of Music. Undergraduate level majors include Music Education, Performance lpiano, organ, voice, winds, percussion, stringsl, Theory-Composi- tion, Church Music, Music Therapy, Piano Pedagony, and Voice Pedagony. At the graduate level, majors are offered in Performance, Church Music, Music Education, and Composition. The School of Music is accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music, National Council for Association of Colleges and Schools, National Associ- ation of Music Therapists, and Council of Graduate Schools in the United States. Within the School, a forty-five member faculty offers specialized instruc- tion to over four hundred music majors. Music School Preparea dtuden For Specialized Career ,,. - . A . .,. 1 .- r .-,a. I ilfmlil I I HHH S l 1 .-I . -9 . . t ' V ,lI','2'f41 ,li1llQ!'i 1-. 1. - , A ' ju, , 'Qin'-ir 'ru ,ff- w z ' '33-fgar 164fSchool of Music 'i l !K1.,!.x I . a Q -I . 9 Q. 1 kv IA V A l H I 5 - , -5, , , 1 ' 1 ,if 1' r f X WI-Y? ' it ll' ' lvl Via .c,.,5 ff- , i s lL'IH - 'rll : 5.1311-sv 95? i Q t ,lx-'x Q qi-.J I , 1 ' 2 l t ' 2 6 l ' - j . .Q A L.A ml X .-L .Alb wr' ks-J-W I .FJ -Q,-' ,ig pl ,f -vt' Picture A: A music major plays her violin in one of the Center's practice studios. B: Students converse in the lobby of the Music Center. C: The A.J. Fletcher Music Center is one of the university's more attractive structures. D: Mike Regan rehearses on the recital organ. E: Janet Reeve, ECU's shortest Bass player, stands with her instrument. School of Muslcf 165 -1 - The Winthrop Invitational in Rock Hill, South Carolina boosted the spirits of the Lady Pirates, who returned to Green- ville with first place honors. ECU opened the tournament by conquering the College of Charleston, the defending champi- ons, 74-67. Francis Marion then fell to the Pirates with a 99-97 loss. The latter saw four top ECU players foul out of the game. The team then returned to Minges to host the number one ranked Old Dominion, which lived up to its reputation by crushing the Pirates 95-70. The victors never trailed and the win boosted their impressive seasonal record to 24-0 causing the Pirates to drop to 15-9. High Point the defending AIAW Division II national champi- ons defeated the Pirates 77-67. The game added Gail Ker- baugh ECU senior guard to the thousand point roster. The Pirates closed their season with a third place title in the State AIAW Tournament. Rosie Thompson finished the sea- son as the state s leading scorer and rebounder. She ranked sixth in scoring nationally and was ninth in the nation for rebounding. Although the team seemed to see-saw between wins and losses the season proved to be an impressive one. The suc- cess of the team was probably the one thing that was not new to them this year. against Carolina. B: Sideline coaching is vital to the performance of any basketball team. C: Gale Kerbaugh one of the top dribblers on the team moves quickly to avoid any sticky situations. -I 2 us 1 Y v 1 il l fr' Ti ia 9 'I 9 7 7 7 Picture A: Rosie Thompson displays her winning form as she shoots for two QA X . , I V I .. af 1 'sl ,B 332' fa... 1 gg my rr sr: -'wc 'sr at-as : 'f Nassau- asa W -- ami .--ff A 11?-im N ww fix. as L L W fl C H X, Y 1 .aw if-'RL I.. X 'IH I I W as an Hwy 3?-x ' H Eggs ,sv gin: Egg:- 3 glib, ,ASQ - QLLAL.-1 v- -Lg: 'E Lf f,4 ,Q , - gm lg.: 1 1 - vs., -- -an ,.- , A -Y wfQf,..-.,.L , H ,Y -,,. in 17 V44- l !l'J:. Mi.: , 4,44-.'.4, ' raw: ' .- fxiifgf F. I- 'ZA X Q- Q1-fef-' -3:1 1 ' Af- V - , ,gen V. . A :Ig--??g:e.f:. ,, .U A 'Qffliajfi ' .- ,, , , -we ,wr rw . '- w- , ,. .... ,. is fi-5231? eq?'i1 -r -. 3., -M, .'.L'.-' - . - F , Iv kj : V , ,, 'Lv . I '-- , f-:-- -... .1-' ' . f' ij '. A , - 'Jin . , 4 . 4g :Lg',y. .Wm -41. xi., Af.-J - -- - A 1 su XL . 5-5 gc pi- V f Xt.: X- , Q x aww -wf--'-- ,A A vt 5- h ' . 'V 1 Y P' ,, hu ..1u::::.m::gg - 7' -V h -I.,-.pfz i., - . ' ' - uv.: ,,. . -- ' , ,,'.,. , t 5 - ...fm f. . .K . W t .e ' - H . C . .- . Q' f ., .- x ffl: ' 1 .-a'1. '.- '-L-nigga' .- With style and grace, The North Carolina Dance Company demonstrated their unique and classical form of dance. Accompa- nied by a musical background of strings and Woodwinds, the dancers flowed with the music. An appreciative audience saw a ruly great performance. lcture A: Svea Eklof and Michel Rahn, pose in perfect symmetry in a scene rom their performance. B: Various members of the Theater strike romantic tances during their show. C: Choreography plays an important role in the eemingly effortless performance. N.C, Dance Companyf169 d Book I I Swim T eam Re-Writes The Recor ECU's Women's Swim Team taced diiiiculties when its 15 statistics. Julie Malsolm broke all records in the Breaststroke, and members iizzled into iust a six-woman team. Even so, the team Karen Davidson was the record breaker tor the 400 yard lndivid- tinished with an impressive record oi 2-5, placed second in the ual Medley. Lucy Weckerling broke the standing record for the N.C. AlAW Relaysf and won the Wilmington lnvitational. backstroke. Coach Ray Schari was proud oi his small, but talented team. . Both the meds and womerfs teams broke all the previous 'Tm pleased with their pt0Q'teS5,', he Said. 'L'l'he girls attitudes records for the team Relays, Wefe WW Q00d-N The 1978-79 ECU Swim Team had an outstanding season. The The men's team had an outstanding season as the record books season is said to be one of the best as tar as the record books are prove. John Tudor re-wrote the past records in the 100-200 yard concerned. lt is through tough coaching, hard training, and tyle, 100-200 yard Backstroke, and the 400 yard lndividual boundless determination that ECU had produced a team that was ' ' d tor the 200 yard Freestyle tor the able to match, and sometimes overpower, the larger university 'n the 500 and teams. during several oi their meets Schari Frees Medley, John also qualitie Championship. Ted Neiman broke records i ar beat the standing times in the ' ' Medley. NCAA 1 F150 vard Freestyle. .lack Clow A '-fl and the 200 yard lndrvidual 'i 'lm record breaking A B C, D: The swim team is shown Duke and Old Dominion. E: Coach Ray Pictures D , , against such teams as Carolina, . 'Ls 'wnuress ot his talented team. 1 lmfswimming Q -if -A .f,,gff, ...A f, . A g1,?o,w t'Z4. 'Tn ' ' . ' 1-fm-I . '5. iii' , 4. y umm. 4. , Zlylryfawv -A ' Azfgfw: -1. .-an - ,'-'I C' ' mir A , , V 1- . -.. ',-' 1 ,ff K' O Tau Kappa Epsilon Sponso .f The fourth annual TKE Boxing Tournament was held on February 23, 24, and 25. The tournament, held in Wright Auditorium, drew a large crowd of interested fans. The winners in the eight divisions were awarded trophies. The event proved to be suc- cessful and plans are to repeat it again next year. D ourth Annual Boxing Tournament Picture A: This boxer receives refreshment and encouragement from his trainer during the break between rounds. B: These two combantants struggle near the end of their match. C: The eight winners of the competition were awarded trophies as prizes for their victories. D: Two fighters engage in head-to-head confronta- tion at the beginning of the second round of their bout. E: This match proved victorious for the fighter on the left, as he eventually won his division. F: The event was well attended by the public. 1 174fsGA SGA Struggles Through Year Of Controversy Picture A: Libby Lefler was declared the winner of the controver- sial presidential election by the Review Board. She served this year as Speaker of the Legislature, and is shown receiving her gavel from SGA vice-president David Cartwright. B: Members of the legislature confer with each other during a busy legislative session. The Student Government Association was busy during both fall and spring semesters dr with controversy. Among the more important ai taken by the SGA was the appropriation of funds various campus organizations. Controversy was created between the SGA the Media Board over the fate of the remaining of the 1978 Buccaneer. The money for the book originally appropriated by the SGA with the st tion that all unspent funds would revert to its ge fund. When the Media Board was created, hovi control of the unspent funds came under its jui tion. The problem arose when the SGA, realizing did not have enough money to fund every org tion that sought funding, requested that the I Board return the 'money to it. Chancellor Thomas Brewer ended the contro by intervening in the dispute and personally allot a portion of the money to several academic da ments - Art, Music, and Drama. The SGA worked towards funding as many organizations as could with the money it had. In other actions, the legislature approved a r tion calling for a fall break which would last mately 4 days. It also elected a woman as Speaker the first time in its history. Junior Class Libby Lefler was chosen Speaker by a simple ug T Ez-. '? vote. The SGA also approved resolutions for a Review Board and for the option to pass the of individual organizations one at a time, than passing all of them in one vote. Spring elections for Executive Council positions marked by charges of unfair publicity shown to candidates by the Fountainhead. The close race was won by Brett Melvin, while Sherrod was the unopposed victor in the vice- race. The race for treasurer was won by Lowe, and the secretary's position was won by Calder. The voter turnout was slightly higher usual, due to the public controversy. Melvin and Lowe were later disqualified by the Review Board, due to campaign and election violations. Libby Lefler and Steve O'Geary, run- ers-up for both offices, were sworn in as president d treasurer respectively after the Review Board peared on campus during the election week. The publication was unsigned and condemned three can- didates running for SGA offices who had been fea- tured in stories run by the Fountainhead. ln both cases it was stated that neither Melvin nor Lowe listed The Alternative Press as a campaign expenditure, and that Melvin only turned in a partial list of campaign workers. The charges against Lowe were the same, with the addition of an alleged unlist- ed expense ad printed by the Fountainhead. After a forty minute deliberation on the cases, the Review Board ruled in favor of Charles Sufie, who brought the charges against Melvin, and in favor of O'Geary, who brought the charges against Lowe. Chancellor Brewer, however, later overruled the decision of the Board concerning Ricky Lowe. Ruling in favor of Lowe, the Chancellor said that the charges against him were not substantial, nor were they prov- The Board's decision ended almost two weeks of about the outcome of the Spring elec- Both Melvin and Lowe appealed the decision to Brewer, who subsequently notified Lefler O Geary that the matter had not been resolved. The charges brought against Melvin and Lowe con- for the main part, the publication of The Press, a political newsletter which ap- Q , 4 ll K f, Q, ' ' - 'Sis-li 7 ' ' ' T 'A if en. He did uphold the disqualification of Melvin. Melvin appealed the decision to the Board of Trustees, who met to discuss the matter on May 2. They announced that a decision would not be made until June, so the year ended with the election results still in dispute. Hopes that the controversy would not spill over into next year with an adverse effect dimin- ished as the appeal process dragged on. F' 1 1 SGAf175 vff I 'JL RYA 4-1 r I lv' , 'V A 7' if Q i... , - -vb 1X 4 wa Em 4 'f:m1f::1, .of oft, 176 f School of Art rt School Offers aried Curriculum The East Carolina Art Department is one the strongest in the southeast. Within the ate of North Carolina, it has the largest mber of degree offerings. These include ur undergraduate degrees including a BA art, a BS in art education, a BA in art tory and a BFA in art. Masters degrees lude MA in art, MA in art education and FA in art. ECU also has the largest studio art pro- am in the state. There is a tremendous riety of studio offerings, including print- king, sculpture, ceramics, design, paint- , communication arts, interior archetec- e and design, and drawing. By having a ad range, the art department can provide -y options to creative individuals. ECU also has a large major gallery. There are 9,000 square feet of floorspace with a 250-seat auditorium adjacent to it. This is a prime place for meetings, symposiums, and conventions. In the past few years, the Visual Arts Forum has brought many good speakers to ECU. This is possible through a grant and funds from the Student Government Associ- ation. Picture A: An art student works diligently to finish a project in the textile studio. B: Students bring a partial- ly-finished ceramics piece back from the kiln. C: An art student struggles to finish a project on time. D: This art class discusses decorating Easter eggs while meeting outside. E: This student is constructing a threesdimen- sional environmental piece. F: School of Art t-shirts, designed by art students, provide a practical application for their creativity. 'il I MQW 14 ' lrw School of Artf177 ,UD Ill Sr- 94 I NF! -I -I 3 4-J After playing six games in nine days, the Pirates had a long layoff before meeting the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame for the first time ever. But the rest and relaxation did not seem to help them much. Notre Dame, ranked third in the Associated Press poll with a 19-3 overall record, concluded its regular season with an 89-72 victory over the Pirates. The Irish got off to a quick start, and in compari- son, the Pirates played sloppily, and were out- matched by the Irish in every aspect of the game. Even so, by halftime the Pirates had cut the Notre Dame lead to nine. Oliver Mack led the ,fi i-I H 4,4 ' -'.- ,I XJ 1 4 771: I ' - - A r' Ni Q .,g:w..,,4 I I If rr-:ici A I '--'--- ,N !I:T.:Hli,Ih: X, -il A . in f 1 .- i. I ,Lg ' I I - ,L - ,. j , 'x 1 - I Rt Q F, ,, fi, ' . . , I l ' ' I I 2 l l rx... l ', E ! Ti . I 1 -o ,GN Plcture A: Clarence Miles drives past an Irish opponent. B: David Underwood fights for a loose ball. C: Oliver Mack hits two of his 20 points against the Irish, which made him the fourth leading scorer in ECU history. IS '52 ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU 1978- 89 91 54 71 79 82 75 71 74 68 76 56 83 67 69 88 92 66 61 85 84 103 78 77 68 99 72 79 Season Record UNC-Asheville St. Leo's William and Mary Tennessee Indiana State Stetson Lynchburg Maryland Manhattan Connecticut Iona South Carolina Virginia Commonwealth Tenn-Chattanooga Detroit NC State UNC-Wilmington Georgia Tech William and Mary Old Dominion Virginia Commonwealth USC-Aiken UNC-Wilmington Tenn-Chattanooga Georgia Tech Old Dominion Notre Dame .X- Notre Dame f 1 79 9 1801 Buccaneer iii far :11E Buc Staff Publishes First Volume In Three Years After two long years of inadequate staffing and leadership, budget disagreements, and political and personal conflicts, the Buccaneer earned a somewhat scandalous reputation. It was not a favorable founda- tion to work from. Yet with the help of the Photo Lab, the small 1978-79 staff got organized and began working. Suffering from a lack of support from the Student Body, the staff became all the more determined to prove its detractors wrong. Long hours, little outside co-operation, poor facilities and a shortage of man- power did not make the job any easier, but the capable staff would not quit. Throughout the year, the Media Board was the staff's single source of confidence. The Board ex- pressed that confidence by making improvements in office facilities which brought the working area up to a basic level of functional efficiency. The staff was concerned with doing more than just publishing a book. It was aware that the more recent editions of the Buc were not enthusiastically received, and directed itself toward producing an innovative and distinctive volume. The change to a magazine style format and the increased use of color and spe- cial effects was a significant factor in the production of a quality book. With this publication, the animosity and disrespect previously aimed at the Buccaneer should have no grounds to continue. Picture A: Martha Oakley, Copy Editor. B: Terry Brown, Busi- ness Manager. C: Craig Sahli, Editor. D: Janet Wiener, Academics Editor. E: Ramona Mills, Assistant Organizations Editor, F: Ronnie Gill, Organizations Editor, i 1 Staff Ends Tvvo-Year Break In ECU's Yearbook Tradition 1 'N . 4452? L , 'BW Ola elim, L Picture A: Staff members gather to discuss plans during a working Stiff Membef8 Not PlCflll'e session, B: Barrie Byland, Athletics Editor. C: Bob Debnam, Assis- tant Athletics Editor. D: Ellen Fishburne, Layout Artist. E: Donna Theresa Sheats Classes Editor C , T ' . , ' , muse ypm Richy Smith, Wnter Anne Tharrington, Writer Luke Whisnant, Writer Adrienne Cloer, Typist Andy Anderson, Artist 184-fThe Great Escape Th Great E cap f x Y 1 I 1 -.-4,..,........., v A li , ' , -' ' . ' W , H. y .--X . . , . . , X 1 X Xw W, .XX . ' ' - R , i . -- N ' i -- -J .v,.,. . --. 4,?,, Q X X 'Lain --I . ,, ,. -, .-,. , ,, Y' . XX X Y. X MX, Lf' W A 5 ' 'N ' 5 f !YLf' - 'Q W J N 'L .FT V ,,X -: ' 4 H fX -MN uf' ,J , , 1,- ,uf . W7 ' 3 ' , U ' r'-A - ,f VT A J L ' .X I. w . -v X ff: J' ' ,,J,, W A J- 1-1-2? 1,2 f -' X X 1:XXEsqf1.r ,sf X. V '-.-' . I qt f 'ffl' gf W ' M -+-Ag.:fJ-1-gpg-1, fi22fs+21fQsf .- - N A '- . '-- - ,-' . '1 1 1 I Nw' V '- ,Jul 'ww' M If' -,V 'wuli I .+UHN 4 '1 ' 9, ll ' -T g RH :,:iQ'jXli, lf' ' ,Jef Mm, X . f, ,N V ,1fp'....X . M J- ' , -'ggi-.TPC1 'Ali nlamv . 23, d .ij ..f X ,. g i. ff T ' f -1' ,4 r 1 ' l ' XX X :X ,1 w -X 1 ' v X 1 N X 1 1 X X X X .IQ I , X X .X X XX Nw Xw X - V ,., ' QM L A A -.. , - .f H.,-.um 1 , .1 if-1. M' Nl ' Q Af . M' r . C n 1. w w 4 Mmvmwn 4 'E . F Anywhere Cr Bust Picture A: For those impulsive or compulsive few who must leave in the middle of the week, the Pamlico River provides nearby recreation. B: Some leave in search of solitude not available on campus. C: Marshallburg Harbor attracts weekend fishermen and sailors. D: Prox- imity to the ocean is a drawing-card for ECU's regular escapees. ' --.41V,,r-xv - -- - '-' W :f. nr ' ii ,xi 1- :MJ ' ws.. ix .1 :I ii ' . ' mi. 1.1 41- 5 2' -1-:Ti-vi . . -'1- ui ' J 1 i . ,JL V, F ' 4 ig I . W., ' 4' ' ie , , . in . i N lp 1 u-gn 186 f The Great Escape ntinued from previous page Where else can you find a town with eight hell-raising ht clubs within three' blocks of each other, and within distance from campus? unlikely that on any given weekend there will be more ECU students at Carolina or State than there are in Greenville. for many students, downtown is wither a deca- example of college student mentality that they'd wash their hands of, or a curiosity - an interest- to visit on those off-weekends when you're in town. Downtown is not a good enough reason to in Greenville. Greenville, the cultured Mecca of Eastern North has almost nothing else to offer. You can go to free flick, or hit a couple of night clubs, find a party if lucky, or lock yourself in your room with a few and stay wasted all weekend. at other colleges can be a godsend. It is not Who wouldn't want to head for the beach? Or the mountains? Or Florida or the Keys or Pinetops or Fu- quay-Varina? Whatever factors contribute to the hatred of Green- ville, there is little doubt that the Great Escape leaves its mark on ECU weekends. More nightclub owners agree that Thursday night is usually better business-wise than Friday - everybody is trying to get their partying done before they leave town. And in the Friday afternoon traffic, with cars backed up on 264 heading west, more than one bumper sticker reads, Anywhere But Green- ville. ', -' 4 TilFF -1 'T7. :T1 'i ' 7 -'N-' WF' ' jd' i ew, The Great Escape! 187 GJ S-1 5 4-3 CYS s-4 CU -s-v 'I'-I v-I 4-T s-4 C r-4 L20 F 1- u '- 1 Kd W YT i - .,.fa. ,, ill ,Q wi ' ', ' s - fe I Y L ,N ff, K , t Egfr -,.-M5 -- I -fig' 1-' ,V fri 1 gf, . 4 ' H K2 h.. . 1 4 ,. W .. 21- 'fl' . 1 fit 4' . .. ,VV .2 lg, , 5. 'WV--1 Q. U, Y . . L' E .-f-0, A' F v an 1' Q' 1 Q 1 4 . i ,- ' 'V 'I 1' Q P' lf 1. ' l'-g . 4 Q 'Q y 5 H x , 2 i X P1 'Q .1 ,- Z X xjx .. 1 X. fr 'H A E 1 lm . E I I 1 : X1 Hx : is 1 :. Z . ,2 LB X2 ..: as Q ,gf ,X . 5 If gg W Q 1 :Vg B - 2 E if - 55 E :.- A 55 ss R B V ii 1 K J W 2.2 H H 21: gg 1'y 145 160' et Y ' -rw 1, ' 'a W, 'lf fm 'sf-5 IQQ 'Viff vi s .H Z .lf-4 I S- Y 2 ,S . .. 4. V in f xx .Q I -:wir 'ff' , '. is .4 H g ' l ,Q 1 Q M' my in 'A : ,ls-4 . 4 5 3 A. Je. -f -I df' K I' 4 A f ' A Jax, ' X inf: q , ' ' V .. A - 4 . A'w1- H , . -3 2 U ' fx, 1 'W ,- .J Ng: -R . Q I 1 ,,f Jimi R f A M 3. l at N Nviilb After publishing an edition of the Rebel in 1978 that was awarded a second place national prize by the Society of Collegiate Journalists, the Rebel staff set out to do the same again for 1979. The staff decided to stay with the same basic for- mat that proved successful last year. This format was simple, clear, and established an identifiable image for the Rebel. Throughout the year, the staff sponsored readings of prose and poetry, so that students would have a chance to present their work to the public. The staff felt this was an important part of their effort to promote interest in art and literature. Apart from publishing quality literature, the Rebel is one of the few collegiate literary magazines that publishes full color art. The staff has worked to maintain the high stan- dards in the 1979 Rebel that everyone has come to expect. Picture A: Luke Whisnant, Editor. B: Karen Brock, Associate Editor. C: Renee'Dixon, Associate Editor. D: Robert Jones, Asso- ciate Editor. Rebelf189 Only one day after their loss to Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, the Pirates met the Soviet National Team in an exhibition match, Playing before a small crowd in the Greensboro Coliseum, the Pirates lost to the Russians 95-76. The Pirates had trouble from the beginning with Soviet players who were over 6'1O tall. In the first ten minutes of the game the Soviets gained a 19-16 lead. The Pirates fought hard, but at halftime the score was 47-42. In the second half the Soviets, in an eight-minute period, outs- cored the Pirates 23-8. Afterwards, the Pirates could only work at trying to narrow the lead. Anatoli Mishkin led the Soviets with 19 points and 7 rebounds. Pirate guard George Maynor was the high scorer for ECU with 18 points. Forward David Underwood followed with 16 points of his own. Soviet coach Alekzander Gomelski cited Pirate guards George Maynor and Oliver Mack for their good technique, good dribbling, and good shooting. In speaking about the Pirate team as a whole, Gomelski said, When time passes they could be very good and interesting team. But must have big player to be be good team. No big player, no good team. Coach Larry Gillman was impressed by the Soviets. They're a great basketball team, he said. This was surely a good experience for our kids. I think we learned a lot. if Q-1-eg., Soviet counterpart. B .L a it Picture A: ECU's David Underwood powers up for a basket against the Soviets. B: George Maynor moves up to the basket. C: Maynor watches the action under the basket. D: 6'9 Greg Cornelius is dwarfed by his Picture A: Assistant Sports Medicine Director Liz White administers ultrasound treatment to a rehabilitating athlete. B: Sports Medicine Director Rod Compton instructs an athlete in proper ankle rehabilitation. C: Athletic trainers help an injured football player to the sidelines to give him further immediate care. D: Liz White gives on-the-court attention to an injured basketball player. PORTS IVIEDICINE PECIALIZES IN REVENTIDN, TREATIVIENT letic trainers are available through the Physical Edu- cation Department to serve as sports medicine coor- dinators for intramural activities. In addition to the certified personnel, student trainers are required to be in attendance at all intercollegiate and intramural events. The purpose of the division is to provide preven- tion, immediate care, treatment and rehabilitation of athletic injuries. Its goal is to reduce the incidence of sports-related injuries and minimize any long-term effects when injuries do occur. This is being accom- plished through the use and integration of current information and techniques in the growing field of athletic medicine. u .L 194f Emily Emily: a warm and compelling drama of the life of Emily Dickinson. Thomas Patterson wove a moving story of a love that grew between the poet and her older brother, Austin. The innocence associated with their childhood closeness dissolves as the two mature. Austin, unable to bear his guilt, leaves his sister to enter into a proper lifes- tyle. Emily, torn by the loss of her love, finds her only release in the written poetry she is famous for. The anguish she felt haunts every word. The Drama Department's production of Emily was mov- ing. Remarkably fine performances were given by Paige Weaver, who played the poet as a youth, and Frank Alts- chuler, the young Austin. The two presented the characters with ease and sincerity. Ann Franklin truly mastered the difficulty of her role as she consistently recited the pain- filled words of the elder Dickinson. One cannot praise the performance without making ref- erence to the scenery. The setting, which created a false depth by the use of transparencies, both separated and blended the actions and eras of the drama. Emily was a credit to Producer Edgar Loesin, Edward Haynes and the set designers, and, most of all, the cast. Picture A: Frank Altschuler, as the young Austin, is scorned by his parents, played by Del Lewis and Hazel Stapleton, and his younger sister Lavinia, played by Laura Royster. B: Paige Weaver, as the young Emily, dreams of Austin's return. Ann Franklin, portraying the poet, watches the touching scene of her childhood. C: Emily Dickinson recites the window- side verse that reveals her inner-most feelings. D: Austin and Emily, as youths, share one of the many intimate moments of the play. , . . ..,-52' '---f. L..- 1 ,. Z, . 9' A 1 ' J ' 1 5 Q ,f- If , , I-. .1 -,f,L,w5-45-:A 1. 1- ' -v.w-:gr '51 ,L .:QIL,jfM.-, V. -1-fsfwz.-1 5 N-.1 'iii' ' Jeff - . I ',, I,,1. 11? ' - I-QU:-gif .U ...1 . - 'SQ-3. , A f-ycfwff e . M, ,,,11'f' ' 'N 9 , , '- ,,aQgFffg.'-42 N. J. . 1. - ' H J ' f A . ' .- , F'-if my sf ,Q-If , !! A ,,,- H413 ,fr ,, 1 kt. - fn' f L. - , ' 1. J, f' ' I 'f ,, ' - ,h f?- I-J X J - , .. '. I - fig f' --. ' 4 L I - ' . , X .R , L V- , I Q- ' ff .fl - , f' , ' - A 5. ,g ary , ,Q -A X A 1 L, V 4 vm , if A Wh- I h A ' ,wa,.a+'T f .f g V. :-' 3 - Y' ' 444 f A If s , J, f, ' X A -ifaf ! r ' ,W I n ark ., ,,, Q. 'S I ' D -1- --.nn-an -..gs-Sk. A ,- The Photo Lab is an independent medium under the jurisdic- tion of the Media Board. Its purpose is to provide pictures for all other campus media, mainly the Buccaneer and Fountainhead. The Lab operated this year under several adverse conditions. For half the year, it operated with one short of its usual four photographers. It also had extremely poor facilities in which to work. The lab, located in the basement of Fleming Dorm, was not large enough for two people to work in at the same time. Plans were made at the beginning of the year to relocate the lab in the Publications Center, but these fell through because of a lack of co-operation on the part of the administration. The only solution left to the problem of inadequate facilities was rennovation of the present work area. This was done during the Summer of 1979 by the members of the lab. The rennovations almost doubled the effective working area, which will greatly add to the efficiency of the lab. The idea of having only one photo lab for all campus publica- tions is not new to East Carolina. The present system has operat- ed for several years, and has, for the most part, worked farily well. The advantage of having only one lab to serve all media is that there is no unnecessary duplication of work. One photogra- pher can easily cover an event for more than one publication. In spite of its problems, the Photo Lab worked well this year, and with a more efficient facility in which to work next year, the photographers will have a much easier time serving the other campus media. Picture A: Pete Podeszwa, Head Photographer. B: John Grogan. C: Chap Gurley. D: The staff of the Photo Lab worked hard all year to provide pictures for the Buccaneer and Fountainhead. 196 f Photo Lab i K ,,--1-i i1 .ilinin 'YJ .Al v1't li' ,,., L ik. H , . 4, ,W .1 424 U f J:-I-'ff If K -if -. . .,, .n :Mi-3, - Q13 , ..3 Pay ' Y:- 'il if Jill 3 2421 ' Mig 1 . F 4 V 1 '1,v-41 '?f4'ff'.-7' f. , .,, 9.1, W H +-ff, .5 f- - .W F-.. . 1'-' . q ,xi J Q. L1 ' a' .9 :Alu . --an 1,4 -, 7 ,Fl .V . , 7 N Q. 5- .' A -'-ww . nwka . ' . f xv!! V, r i lsffiiy' ' J of , '- 0 Q. X . , hx, gQ 'Q f .xl X Lily .Lu 1.-'M --.-ph . A ,ll if J I F -A Q lv. J - r L- W, - , A' I . ',Jff ' . '- Q V . .. A 1: Q w' 1 ' :Fc fr?-,r , 5' -'b 'Q ' vf 1 f ' , , ' V L P. h 9357 mn ,. 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Q -W 1 la 'F vi-I 1 w, N l, 0 E East Carolina Gay Commumt The pllght of gay people has long been a concern whlch was restrlcted only to them and formal gay orgamzatmons have only become known ln the last few years The sltuatnon was thus at East Carohna untnl the mrddle of the year when the East Carolma Gay Com munlty was formally organlzed There had been a need for such an orgamzatlon here for a long tlme and the orgamzatlon was prompted by several letters whlch appeared 1n the Fountamheaa' that were wrntten by anonymous gay students Wnth the asslstance of the campus mmlstry the ldea of forming a gay orgamzatlon was made mto a reahty The Snsters of the Immaculate Heart offered the use of thelr house as a meetmg place and they have served as advlsors and helpers smce then The fxrst meetmg of the orgamzatlon held tn De cember was attended by 12 people but smce that trme the group has grown nn srze to 45 members The purpose of the group IS two fold to develop a sense of self awareness and promote a posntrve self 1mage among gay people and to promote understandmg among all people of dxfferent sexual orlentatlons The orgamzatnon was beset wlth several problems from the start One of the major ones was acqumng formal recogmtlon by the SGA The group s constltu tlon was submmtted to the SGA for approval nn Janu ary and although lt was one of the best wrltten docu 200fEast Carol a Gay Commun ty ments ever submltted for SGA s approval there w heated debate over whether the group should even recogmzed The blll passed favorably and the EC then began to functlon as an off1c1al orgamzatxon Another early problem was that of flndmg a sp sor Several group members went to faculty memb of the Psychology and Soclology Departments to f1 a sponsor because they felt that mstructors rn th departments would be more mterested an workmg w the group No one they talked to would consent sponsor the group because of fears for themr Job a fears of what others would thmk of thelr bemg ass ated wlth the group Fmally Mrs Edlth Webber of the Enghsh Dep ment was suggested to the group by another facu member The group went to her to ask her to be th advlsor and she subsequently met the members of group and agreed to advmse them It as mterestlng note that Mrs Webber IS not gay but that she generally concerned over the problems assocla wnth bemg gay sponsormg worthy pro1ects One of the flrst proje was to develop a peer counselmg servlce The gr had nmmednate support from the Counselmg Cen but was less well recelved by the SGA when It requ ed partxal fundmg to pay professxonal trammg fees I I . . 7 . 7 , . ' 1 . , . - , , . , . . . , . , i . , i 9 3 ' , I , i . i . . . . : . ' , - - ' I I ' . . u - Once the organization got on its feet, it set itself . . 7 I - , , , in i i! 'bf 9.0 Sign Language Clubf203 DRAMA DEPIARTIYIENTS BES HIGHLIGHTED DURING NN EVENING GF DANCE l l On Feburary 22-24, East Carolina's Studio Theater came alive with An Evening Of Dance: The program featured highlighted samples of works choreographed by ECU faculty members. Throughout the evening over forty student dancers captivated the audience with their graceful styles and amazing talents. The production began with Celebration Of Life, choreo- graphed by SaraJo Berman. To Vernon, a collaboration between singer-songwriter Judith Lander and choreographer David An- derson followed. The third and final piece of the first act, Duncan Suite, was choreographed by Patricia Pertalion. It contained an array of solo dances originally composed by Isadora Duncan. Act two opened with Los Mendigos, a piece choreographed by Judy Pascale which depicts the helplessness one feels when approached by beggers. Kaleidoscope, by David Anderson, Dwth Apologies To Wvaldi, by Patricia Pertalion, and Natural Attrac- tions, by SaraJo Berman followed. All That Jazz, choreographed 2041 An Evening Of Dance by Frank Wagner, ended the show with a variety of jazz ments. The nine dances traced a few of the many faces of that have made this style an American phenomenon. The East Carolina Dance Program has grown by leaps bounds since majors were offered in the field of dance in 1 The cold February nights of the 22nd through the 24th all: the faculty and students a chance to display their abilities stage. An Evening Of Dance portrayed just a touch of the t. of the Drama Department. Picture A: Kim Beason, Stacy Wilkes, Jennifer Hammond, and Allison F are shown dancing to Primitive, a prologue to the dance sequence All That B: SaraJo Berman dances with Steve Williford to a selection called l Attractions. C: Opening, another select piece from All That Jazz, is dramatized Lynn Williford, Holly Jereme, Debbie Phipps, Pat Register, and Maureen S1 D: Rene Delaney, Rachel Woodruff, Sharon Foley, Frank Holmes, Steve year, and Mickey Ussery displayed Furies, a portion of the work Duncan .w -4. L ' fi '1 1 ' V sh ' ,f- dj L .Ila- I.-. . N , el JH. , ' gm , f mf, K J, 9' I ' 6,14A . ilk 25 39 r fl .4., 'a 5 1 N Mx.,-,Xx,T.f V hz , E. , ,,,., N l I 5 if A 4 ' A X 5 x I . ,Q Uutlaws And Molbf Hatchet Provide Rowdy E venlhg For Hkst Concert ln Four Months Picture A: The lead singer for The Outlaws shows his crowd- pleasing talents on the guitar. B: The capacity crowd displayed its enthusiasm for the first concert held in four months. C: Molly Hatchet warmed up the audience with its own brand of country rock. D: The performance given by The Outlaws was well-received by the student body. E: The Outlaw-'s drummer set the tempo for the rock and roll evening. The Outlaws! 207 l9lIllllfZxnlXN I lUIlS IU After two years of speculative rumor concerning his situation and perfor- mance, Larry Gillman finally resigned his duties as head basketball coach at East Carolina on February 28. Gillman cited the university's failure to issue him a long-term contract to continue the development of the basketball pro- gram as the reason for his resignation. I was very eager to get a head coach- ing job, but I didn't analyze the situation here at East Carolina very closely, Gill- man said. I was only 28 years old when I took the job and it was certainly a great coaching opportunity for me. But the program here needs alonger committ- ment from the university along with more money and better facilities, he contin- ued. l'm not happy with the way things have turned out, but l'm relieved right now. Gillman came to East Carolina in 1977 after serving as an assistant coach at San Francisco. He promised that the Pirates would win 18 games during his first year, but the team finished with a 9-17 record. After that season, The Athletic Council voted unanimously to dismiss Gillman, but then-Chancellor Leo Jenkins over- ruled the decision and allowed Gillman I was very eager to get a head coaching job . . . the pro- gram here needs a longer committment from the uni- versity along with more mon- ey and better facilities . . . one more year on his contract. In Gill- man's second season the Pirates finished with a 12-15 record. Dissension among the players added to Gillman's problems during the 1978-79 season. Forward Herb Gray left the team at mid-semester and guard Walter Mosley withdrew from school during the last week of March. Al Tyson quit the team a week before the Notre Dame game. A total of nine players either quit or trans- ferred during Gillman's term as head coach, and two assistant coaches re- signed. Gillman left with plans for a possible career in sales. 208 f Newsline One month after Gillman's resignation, East Carolina announced Dave Odom as its choice for new head coach. Odom served as an assistant coach at Wake For- est University for three consecutive sea- sons before coming to ECU. Concerning his contract, Odom said he had received a multi-year agreement program. The program here has somewhat dormant over the last years, but the administration wants a class program and that's what we're ing for. Odom graudated from Guilford lege, where he played football and ketball and was named the Best ll and was satisfied with the financial ar- rangements. He further commented that he felt positive about ECU's basketball xi' LJ graduate Athlete in 1965. He ri his master's in Physical Education East Carolina in 1969. ,ra-uqif .- qi -uni' X ST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY l in J 'WKMKI swab! S' .X rv- -Q ' ,Lf lee.-N.- .,.. . . --mi lk. gf --,5g,, :,- mi? Ji? -'lm ,312 . '.,'ji5..2- EFF! 'tb l' -T ie. -3' .fi- 'i'i1. w: Picture A: Dave Odom, a former assistant coach at Wake Forest, was named new head basketball coach. B: Larry Gillman resigned as head coach on February 28, after serving in that capacity for two seasons. During Gillman's tenure, nine players and two assistant coaches quit the team, and an NCAA investigation was launched concerning the recruit- ment of freshman center Al Tyson. The allegations were raised by the University of Mississippi, which claimed that Tyson had agreed to play his college ball there. Newsline 209 210fNewsline As an exultant President Carter stood by to wit- ness, Egypt's Anwar Sadat and Israel's Menachem Begin ended 30 years of painful animosity and war- fare by signing the first peace treaty between an Arab nation and the Jewish state. All three versions of the treaty - Arabic, Hebrew, and English - were signed on the front lawn of the White House. Approximately 1,200 guests attended the occasion, and were seated on bleachers erected especially for their presence. The treaty stipulated that Israel pull its occupation forces out of the Sinai Desert within three years, and that Egypt end its economic embargo against lsrael. Both parties agreed to move quickly toward full di- plomatic relations and to open negotiations on Pales- tinian autonomy within one month. Sadat called the treaty a new dawn emerging out of the darkness of the past. The first step towards peace between the Arabs and the Israelis came in December of 1977 when Sadat made his historic visit to Jerusalem to confer with Begin on ways in which they might achieve a peace settlement. The peace treaty was outlined during a 13-day summit at Camp David, Maryland, in September of 1978. Negociations then continued for the next six months, and at times the situation looked very bleak. But President Carter insisted that the attempt could not be given up. In early March of 1979, he made a trip to the Middle East to help iron out difficulties which had developed. Last minute details were con- sidered right up to the night before the treaty was signed. President Carter stated that in 50 or 100 years the event would be remembered as his greatest diplomat- ic triumph. Picture A: Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin embrace as President Jimmy Carter applauds during a White House announcement that the two Middle East nations had agreed on the Camp David agreement. Histori It - 'L ii, 7 tm, C llldeast Pea. Signed H-5 'S l V V'-1 effz. inf' A' Z 4 faq , ' ' ci viii 4-t 2 1 2 f Alpha Omicron Pi Picture A: Eyes were astare and cameras were ready for the entrance of the spring pledges. B: Many island treats were avail- able for the sisters and their guests to taste. C: Leis, moo-moos, and Hawaiian Punch added to the excitement of the Luau. D: This couple slipped away from the action to enjoy a moment of private conversation. '59 Q L t., . G.: L: iftflf' 1 'tl if Q 154 , 5 4.1 A fri-- 9 i ' i 1 x - i ,I 'x 5 A YW 1237, x 1 l' Y fi 1 l 1 I 9 I .1 ':. L ii ,TM 3- The Alpha Omicron Pi house was the scene of a Hawaiian Luau as spring pledges were inducted on March 23, 1979. As part of their activities for the year, the sisters held a Swim-a-thon in February to raise money for the Arthritis Foundation. They also helped to raise mon- ey for the Heart Fund and held a Christmas party for underprivileged children. Sue Lutz, an Alpha Omicron Pi sister, was named the Outstanding Greek Woman of ECU for 1978-79. ..- . I I . YM, 5 f 'ref' ' 5 ,Au- 9 x Z Y, E YUQDDQDDULL nesents Uanious 9:25 onalities February and March brought visits from two prominent jour: and two very gifted actresses. Ed Bradley, special reports l spondent and Sunday evening news anchorman for CBS l spoke to a large crowd in Mendenhall Student Center on Feh 13. He spoke about the role of the press in American society t Bradley referred to responsibility as the Siamese twin of fre of the press. The American press cannot have responsibility lated upon it, he said. lf that happened, the government have to say what a free press is. There is a profound connection between freedom and res bility, Bradley added. The First Amendment is the linchpin of viable society. ln speaking about objective reporting, Bradley related some of experiences in Southeast Asia. As a reporter, he had to tell the honestly without letting his personal feelings interfere. As a h being I was against the warf, he commented. In offering advice to would-be journalists, Bradley said, need a lot of hard work and a lot of luck. Usually, when you hard, you make your own luck. You need experience. It is a easier to get a job in a smaller city. About one month later, Shana Alexander, one of America's most women journalists, spoke in Hendrix Theater. Author of several books, Alexander focused her lecture on most recent work, Anyone's Daughter, a book about Patty P and American society. Her opening remarks were directed toward her PointfC point partner, James Kilpatrick. Many people always ask me if really hate Jack, she said. No, I don't really hate the poor fool In reference to her research for a segment of CBS's 60 Alexander said, It usually takes about two days to finish start. Jack doesn't do any research because he made up his thirty years ago. 2 14 f Special Attractions 5- Alexander was charming and entertaining as she left the audience laughing about her male counterpart and began dis- cussing her lengthy research on Patty Hearst. A writer needs to look at something as closely as anthro- pologists, closely and through a microscope, she said. ln the fragmented life a writer leads, we feel the need to concentrate on one central subject and study it at our pace. Alexander did exactly that in her research of Patty Hearst. She is the scapegoat of our time, Alexander said about Hearst. She viewed the Hearst story as a great tragedy and said that no one really won in that case. On March 19, Esther Rolle appeared in Hendrix Theater in a one-woman show, Ain 't l A Woman. Ain 't l A Woman, a story of Sojouner Truth and Susan B. Anthony brought to life in their own words, was a passionate and humorous drama. Ms. Rolle portrayed two women of contrasting natures: one white, one blackg one educated, one illiterateg one middle class, one a freed slave - but both with the strength and courage of their convictions. She offered a commanding performance and one of the most memorable evenings ever held in Hendrix. Trained in New York for the stage, Ms. Rolle was one of the original members of the famed Negro Ensemble Company. Appearing both on Broadway and Off Broadway, her credits include: Amen Comer, Blues for Mr. Charlie, Don 't Play Us Cheap, The Blacks, and Black Girl. Ms. Rolle's character of Florida on Maude proved so popular that a spin-off series was planned for her. Good 'limes went into production and be- came one of television's most popular programs. Michael Learned, Olivia Walton of the television show The Waltons, appeared with Anthony Zerbe in a show entitled Dear Liar on March 26. The performance was given in Wright Auditorium. Ms. Learned was a part of The Waltons cast for six years, and won three Emmy awards. Dear Liar was adapted from the correspondence of George Bernard Shaw and Mrs. Patrick Campbell, who appeared in so many of his plays. The love-hate relationship of the brilliant iconoclast and the beautiful Victorian actress is one of the most fascinating literary love stories in history. The two great wits exercised charm and sarcasm to their fullest. Ms. Learned's performance as Mrs. Patrick Campbell re- ceived excellent critical reviews throughout the country, and was well-received at ECU. Picture A: Esther Rolle starred in Ain 't I A Woman in Hendrix Theater on March 19, 1979. B: Ed Bradley spoke to a full house in Mendenhall on February 13. C: Shana Alexander cast new light on her Sixty Minutes counter- part James Kilpatrick and on Patty Hearst during her appearance on March 20. D: Michael Learned starred in Dear Liar with Anthony Zerbe on March 26. Special Attractions f 215 may ' 'a, if 1 7 , 1 1 Q I L ua, QF ,, 1 4 . ov' r P 0 W 7 4 I . I 9 un. i ' A .M A! ' 1 gh? .4 S it 1. mx 11 ll-ft W N QVN' 4 .ag :L N , iiM l- 1 '19 IA ' 2, .J P .. ,. ,Sli P. Er Q ,yy - J'-i:g..:: ' 'l f 1- 2155 ' 1 ff :A W Q si Ii-Sig elebmtes Qtlw irtlwclil In its nineteenth year on campus, Sigma Sigma Sigma as the champion in Intramural bowling, tennis, and the orority divisions of swimming and soccer. The sorority lso won the Lambda Chi Alpha Field Day for the fourth onsecutive year. ln other activities, Tri-Sig held parties for underprivi- edged children and helped Mrs. Brewer with her work In he Heart Fund. Two members, Sue Barnes and Eva Pittman, were . .W tea. gc- My.. inducted in Rho Lambda. Three members, Debbie Rix, Sara Casey, arid Julia. Roland, were inductedjintogther Greek Hall of Fame. ' ' W t f Sigma, Sigma Sigma also, spons'ored,Sara Eloydgas af -, I-lomecorning attendant. Q C it Y- it 'W ' Picture A: Tri-Sig members and their guests enjoy the meal and after dinner drinks. B: Attentive guestsenjoy the speaker andftheir cock- tails. C: Socializing was an attractive laddltiontowthe' Sigma Sigma Sigma pledge formal. - A . M .. , ,?, T1 - ' as . ' 2 X . . st, s I r? r. Y . Wgm 7 ' . -, . rr. S' , . Kg. - 1 4 -1. 1 5:-.A 3 fi 4 E C Sigma sigm3,sigmay217 2 1 8 f Mike Cross 279' K CROSS 'Che Usiccil Gmigrna with a touch of humor and seriousness. At the end of the concert a surprised and pleased audience left the theatre to spread the word of interest to those who had missed the experience of Mike Cross. Picture A: Fitted with a hat and shades, Mike Cross strums a story of love and laughter. B: Picking and grinning is an easy way for Cross to express his feelings. C: Showing versatality, Mike Cross plays the fiddle in true country fashion. -..Q- 5 1 L 75. 4 11 r' JF' . vias Ja 17' ,,,.v--0-vcr .l .ffffs-A 2' Q5 ..f' S.. NSE, n -. .ZX '-x, .: Vi' - . I. 'F' 1 , ' u If fi it I' 1' 4. K . 1 , 'Y' 111 fi ,, V1 .J -' , I K 1 i x 1 , f I The student leans back on his dorm bed, yawns, and takes a lungful of water-cooled smoke from his bong. There is a knock at the door. He exhales, slides the bong under the bed, and calls, Come on in! A young woman enters, carrying an armful of brown fliers. She hands one to the student and goes into a prepared speech. Hi, my name is Cindi and l'm with the Campus Crusade Against Apathy. We :feel that the majority of ECU students just don 't care bout anything. Our crusade is an attempt to get eople involved in campus life - Hold on, baby, you're talking to the wrong man, the student says. You mean, you're already involved in campus ite? A- . V that stuff. Fraternities? Can't stand Greeks. The girl raises her eyebrows. I see. When was the last time you wrote a letter to Fountainhead? I don't even read that rag - why should I write a letter? When was the last time you signed a petition? The student doesn't answer. Well, when was the last time you took a stand on a public issue? Hmmm . . , The student smiles. Last Friday I stood up during the Free Flick when the film broke and called the projectionist a four-eyed, incompetent son of a bitch. ..4+1rrr., f -Ffim , Tv I 1 'Qu . 'I s 1, l I Sure. Great! What do you do? Are you in the SGA? Naw. I hate politics. You work for publications? Nope Maybe a Student Union committee? Never heard of 'em. The girl looks puzzled. So what campus organiza- ns do you belong to? None. None? You're not into any organizations? What out clubs? What about Karate? or Forever Genera- n? or Interact? or the French Club? Well, I went to one meeting of the Comic Book ub but they wanted me to be on their financial mmittee, so I never went back. I'm too busy for You're not involved in campus life at all, are you? the girl asks disdainfully. Sure I am. Like how? Well I haven't missed a football game all year. Yeah? What's our record? I dunno. I just go 'cause it's a big party. I don't watch the games - nobody does. But I did sit in line all night to get tickets for the State game. Man, that was wild. Had a great time. The girl snorts. Qcontlnued on next pagel Student Apathy f 22 1 And what about concerts? I go to every concert - I mean, every decentconcert. And I go downtown almost every other night. Hell, I'm not apathetic. But you don't even care about some of the most important things in student life. Sure I do. I have priorities. Like what? Grass Miller Lite. Jack Daniels. Parties. Sex. Not necessarily in that order. The girl hands him a flier. You need to read this, she says, and then she slams the door behind her. Nice ass, the student thinks. Too bad she's not very laid back. He picks up the flier. The headline is APATHY IS A PROBLEMg under that he reads the following: 'The past three years, less than 15? of the student body has vot- ed in SGA elections. 'The editors of this year's publica- tions were selected for their jobs illi lblllllyy Ill SS? unopposed, because nobody it ZA, ,Q cared enough to run against lf-1 -V ' 'Nt them. 'The turnout at Student Union Special Events has been disgrace- fully low due to . . . The student picks up his bong, fires it up, and takes another hit. He reaches over and flips his radio on - Deep Purple into Smoke on the Water. The student turns the flier over and begins doodling on the back. After a minute he writes, Apathy is a problem. He thinks about the girl again, smiles and adds, but who gives a damn? Picture A: lt seems that the one thing that students cared about was getting tickets to the Carolina and State games. These stu- dents stayed up all night waiting in line, and brought along enough paraphernalia to make their wait enjoyable. B: Some students are able to force themselves to study, but many still take advantage of a warm, sunny day. 222 f Student Apathy I .1 ,'Q . AI'-f. X I I R ' -x . A l' ,,--ix . , . Ewrwe-xlib ' 'v'f 'i. ' ' x tvs. f Q . 1 . -H 'N . 1- j.,Q,,k... gms. , ,, , ff. P' tx. Ls.: 1 - fikhslk j f nl 1 K '1-L.,- 39. - '. . sim-gf' 1 13 1- W . ,' I ,writ-g-ff.. ,gp . .r 5 ' 4 'D - ri. 0 I'-fl' 'ff z W Q0-fi, ZITTICI '-I ...rj-wi I X. . .,' Q W: bi. Q? .., . -NY'!'Cf'.', ,V-i an tw 'I .f Q . Y 5 1 gxvg. g ,Q- ry ,Q 5 1 ' . X , ,. gfx'4 ',.4 5 334 .fl , T 'n .,..Bui I 4 , K 1 1 S' y. Q! , ri. t 1 H - 5 I , 5 W f ,rx ' 'V 'N -1-,Af f . 11 5 A,X r i . ., 'K .g .5 ' ,K lax ' X. :ru A f, w A KL 'Q' if in in . .1 ,!cQs 1 - s t . i -. -Q Aa V -fn u 1 , ,I L' S -,. 1 ni' Aj-. -51' ' X F? ' ' , - . Q MMF MV M -A -'.1- ,Q . ,U Q4 . .A , E 'M V V AN 'Mt '- I - . ' f . gint .. Q A555 nr, f Q.-ww L . .af . 37' vu F111 fix.. 13:60 X 4 A 'us-N 4 ly: Wy: 9- U' 'ufv ' t- nc 5-'f -1 F - NM 1.5! '- , ,.l Q if 1' . 'Q9Y'f'AS' All'ty.'5 ,fsda7' .f 'Nl Jw . 'M' , 'N'-1 iq I' ?': l .QL ' P QV X Q v. VAT-'II' 'A X , . , wg lx. I Al - 1, ' -' -,lT'! 1- 'mf - I, :rf-, 1 ,? 'iq ki HH- . Miiiwf +R , wif' 0' ' . . ...f s 1'x, QQ.f.y3 QQ. Y jjj- 2 .. ' ff' 9' QQ Wfvig. f', 4- - Gi 'H .,.' ' ? 'X N 'V -' 'Qi ' 5' fx'i..'N-frxf' 1' Ti ' 5 'YH iw! - 5 .qi 'L 1 3S'Vi 'l' Sn'K:s'iWf'e'w sn Q . k - n.,.wm?M .-6 Q1-.xv ue.. ...rug ! A .Av ,K .nw V. Ir . .. H. .ws . ve ' 1 'x'f'.'1. . , N' 1 in fha? a '4Q'x: V5-43 'EU 'if mhfgf' 'K' 23- 6 .,1f56 ' , ' ' Vi- '57 fungi 'mi - L . - .g. + x -mn wc Y-158. ,c..1..x!i'sQ '-.--1r'5 -A-w mf ,1 an 1.-A Har, EJ, By ., in-. I .I W! T up .f , gxm Lista gy A , . '.wI,, -h -Q49 5 V5 F. 4,Qq.Q.,-,-R1 -.wsu A4 yn! .K ALA H - WL' iw.: i ,ug-1: ,- H- .fu-N LII ,Stu 1' xvcipk .- V X , -- -:Rh 4. vilfk .1'1,'k45!5ir l-. ty. .P - fxg., . -Q.,-'W ,qfyff 1i.4 '-4uw.Y' '-.-' Tr. qgjdf 'V' qw., ' mi ' ,iv f'3 g5.' s H VVMm 'fwwgwwwqmwmvwwmqwfi rf ww Q ww',-wwwfffwpwwwfw QhfQ enrwww -. f- :nr ' if-ww Tiff-R -x. +1 xJHs?f9:f. .JQN 2 f'sTT.A '5?fi.si'.Q?'x 13-as -A , .t ,..fwm .bimljaiix Student Apathy f 223 224 f Radio Station The idea of turning WECU into an FM station was initiat- ed in the Fall of 1977, but without the support of the SGA, the idea was not able to get past the planning stages. In April of 1978 John Jeter became the general manager of the station and presented the idea of going FM to the Media Board. The Board was receptive to the plans and approved a budget which allowed the positions of general manager and business manager to receive salaries. A fre- quency search was completed in May, and on May 31, 1978, an application was sent to the Federal Communica- tions Commission. The application was received on June 6, but the very next day the National Public Radio petitioned the FCC to abolish all 10 watt stations. The FCC then ruled that by January of 1980 all 10 watt stations must go to 100 watts or go off the air. That ruling required an amendment to WECU's application, which had been for a 10 watt station. Action was further delayed when an incorrect tower site was indicated on the application. Ed Perry, of Educational Associates in Boston, used maps dated 1904 to locate the site for the tower on top of Tyler Dorm. Because of the use of dated maps, the site was missed by 780 feet, and had to be corrected on the application. A new engineering study was then required because of the change to 100 watts, and even more delay followed. The university Physical Plant also failed to co-operate con- cerning the location of the transmitting tower on the roof of Tyler Dorm. It was the Plant's opinion that consultation with the original architects of the building would be neces- sary before the tower could be located there. In April of 1978 the station went off the air as a result of the expense involved in operation on carrier current. The station was using the electrical wiring in individual buildings as antennas, and was gaining very poor reception. It was considered a waste of money to continue to operate under such conditions since the station was planning to go FM. More problems then arose for the station, this time cre- ated by the administration. Chancellor Thomas Brewer expressed concern over the competency of student manag- ers and suggested that a professional general manager be hired to oversee station operations, removing all but techni- cal jurisdiction from the Media Board. The Chancellor also expressed a fear that the station might do something to embarass the university, and declared that there would be no broadcasting beyond the Pitt County line without con- trol of the station being placed in the hands of the Board of Trustees. Brewer also refused to allow the station to be called WECU saying that it would then be the voice of the university, which he did not want unless it was controlled by the university. As of April 1979, required studies of the population were being made in order to determine the commu problems and needs, and to select programming wh would reflect those needs. The proposed would incl album-oriented rock and jazz 24 hours a day, broadcast in dolby in order to eliminate distortion and increase lo ness. Special radio theatres, comedy hours, student t shows, classical programming, and public service progr ming would also be included. 1 Footdragging by the university and the FCC was primary cause for delay of the FM station going on the The projected date for the opening of the station September, 1979. , ,, 'rr A A I ,fx-f ' , , Y N .ii - 1 - we ' 1 -, Ns-AQN X ' ' Yr: l .a-, ..i icture A: John Jeter, the station's general manager, worked hrough a disappointing year of delays towards getting the FM tation on the air. B: The skeleton staff of the station: Jeff Wil- iams, Program Directorg Glenda Killingsworth, Business Managerg nd John Jeter, General Manager. Radio Station f 225 , Mis Picture A: Winclsprints are an integral part of conditioning. B: An ECU football player bridges to strengthen his neck. C: The clinic concluded with a speech by Bear Bryant. D: Dummy tackling drills provide the opportuni- ty to develop technique. 226fFootball Clinic 9.46 .4 'ff ' whale .fans . Q Q2 in ' ' fa- . af'- ' pdf., Bryant Highlights Spring Football Clinic University of Alabama head football coach Bear Bryant was the featured speaker at ECU's first annual spring football clinic, held March 16-18, 1979. Bryant, who has led the Crimson Tide to five na- tional championships and 20 bowl games, addressed the clinic on March 18. Members of the East Carolina staff and outstanding high school coaches sessions during the first two days. The clinic, which coincided with the opening of 'gf' W, .J spring practice for the Pirate football team, offered on-the-field instruction as well as lectures. Pirate head coach Pat Dye, who served as an assistant under Bryant at Alabama said of him, We have the most successful college coach at this clinic which will enable high school coaches to learn from him and other coaches as well. The clinic ended with a speech by Bryant at Men- denhall, and was overall a successful event, -SX l l 1 J l .ff -gx 70 x vgf- -- 'r E, if ff' 1 Football Clinicf227 Pi Kappa Ph: Open Greek Weel ' a With Fzeld D P085 wma if a Phi Greek Week, the highlight of the year for fraternities and sororities, began on Saturday, March 31, with Pi Kappa Phi field day. The event was open to all Greeks. Stimulating competition and refreshments proved to be enjoyable to all who participated. Picture A: Music added to the overall atmosphere of the day. B: Refresh- ments were enjoyed by those who attended field day, C: Pi Kappa Phi field day included an evening of many competitive events. 5-39- I--1r ' Pi Kappa Phlf 229 J,-.if-, r.-LI.--:Q -TM ,1 1-. '-'f2.5bz'.a51'-'ff' 'S' School Bus1ness I ECU' Largest The School of Business is the largest program at East Carolina. Its three departments - Economics, Business Administration, and Accounting 8: Finance - offer a varied curriculum for students interested in a career in business. The ECU School of Business is one of only 118 in the nation which has accredited undergraduate and graduate programs. The school is accredited by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Busi- ness, It is one of only two in North Carolina to have such accreditation. Because of the increasing popularity of the pro- grams offered by the School of Business, admission standards have been raised in order to keep the ,A A -..mx 3, .94-an -.awl'.y,,- , x W X 4 fv , x, x .fp be Q mm. - .gh J, . + ,,f,,f f' ,-f. '. -.-? QR 25,5 f 1.9 1152! 1-f 1 .'1 7 ,J 4 . -Mx X Student Apathy Nlismonogement Plague Fountciinheod Students returning to campus for Fall Semester were wel- comed by the newly-expanded format of Fountainhead. The August 28 issue represented the change from a tabloid to a broadsheet. Even with the new expansion, Fountainhead still suffered from a lack of student interest and had trouble recruiting staff report- ers. As a result of the enlarged size of the paper, the printing budget which was intended to suffice for the entire year was exhausted by February. An additional appropriation was made by the Media Board from the remaining funds of the 1978 Bucca- neer to cover the deficit. Fountainhead's situation continually worsened, when in the 232 f Fountalnhead .111 SGA election surfaced. Stories featuring particular cand who were never officially endorsed appeared in the paper the election, and were followed by allegations of mismana- directed toward Editor Doug White. An investigation by the Media Board led to a two-week st sion of White. News editor Marc Barnes was appointed l editor. The Media Board officially extended the suspension April 10. Ten days later it was reported that White had coni the North Carolina Civil Liberties Union with regard to filing lawsuit against the Media Board and the University. On the day, Chancellor Thomas Brewer reinstated White as editor the one remaining week of the year. Spring, accusations of questionable coverage of the upci . . t C fi n h 0 o 1 5 A n I 0 O n i 1 Q n 0 A D I O 1 o s s I 1 I Q O I I 0 0 1 a u 0 Q n 1 Q 0 I 7,1 I D I I O I I I I 1 O I l l U I O O 0 I 'Ill illll 1 uuulslolbl E L I O I O I I 5 I O lusoiitilll Q 1 1 0 0 1 o 0 0 0 0 U Q I O 0 u D 0 O 0 l l I L 0 0 Q Q 0 I 0 0 Q i I . 1 Q U U l . 0 C U 5 O O Q l Q O O Q ' U O U U Q 5 9 I . I I Q O U 5 C . Lessons 501009 L Q 1 I 0 -, , ,-,jg OO I D g'7L Y5,,J n -. ff. v 4 h n :rf , X. '. '25 4 A iwsxlvax 4 'L H., A Iliff' 'AQ :L .- 1 if ?WL'f5l'Pf1s-LP! X' W2 ' ' 5 , A 'dr 1' . ff-- .- , ,Q , . A ,I V. I A f ' ., ' '., . V 'Y . Q 1,0 .M 1 , . ' ,,-K S ' 5 ga- + .Y W.. Mxfs MAJ, 1,51-' ,H ,Aff A. y 2, QW- fig, --3 , . 4 'ini A ,i - ' , . Vg? . . L , ' 1 a ,- V 1 L is A .J 5 1 N I, gigs f IQ A -pg ' fm A -'-'P -45 'E Q Q fi , 1-' L X ' -his sq C .-fr-A ,, t. ,- 'L T 5:-'gf I I 2-1...4.-... ..- A- ' Q5 ,gf 4.3 N-. V ,,',. ge min ,1 -.,- ' Picture A: Sue Johnson, Proofreader. B: Barry Clayton, Cartoonist and Assistant Trends Editor. C: Deidre Delahunty, Proofreader. D: Ricki Gliarmis, News Editor. 234 f Foun tainhead '7 . 'wvnnunzrnul' I:7'Jr,?l Q' ,f 4547. I I . w.'iAE':' 413' Fountainheadf 235 The School of Nursing offers three different courses of study. A program which leads to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Nursing pre- pares students for basic professional nursing practice. The Master of Science in Nursing con- centrates in a clinical specialization with an em- phasis in teaching or patient care management. Nurse practicioners can be prepared in the areas of family, pediatric, adult and obstetrical- gynecological care through the Nurse Practi- cioner Program. The Nursing Program, accredited by the Na- tional League for Nursing and approved by the North Carolina Board of Nursing, is designed to prepare students for Nursing careers in hospi- tals, health departments, mental health centers, and other community agencies. The first class of Nursing students was ad- mitted to the School of Nursing in the fall of 1960. Seventeen nursing majors graduated four years later. Since that time, the number of student and faculty members has continued to increase, and the building has changed from a house on Eighth Street that had five offices and one classroom, to the present attractive struc- ture which contains five classrooms and forty faculty offices. 2 3 O U55 'SO mu J 23 6 U -5 2 2.-.Q bio Of Nursing 'ANTEQJ ' - W Picture A: A Nursing student checks over patient charts. B: Keeping up with paperwork is a large responsibility of a Nurse. C: Nursing students discuss premature infants. D: Students converse outside of class. E: A Nursing student assists the doctor in patient care. School Of Nursmgf237 Still In The Swing Df Things 'li 5 K 1 On March 3, 1979, the East Carolina baseball team charged to a 45-game season. The year proved difficult ancl demanding, at the Pirates defeated the majority of their opponents. Head coach Monte Little watched as the year whittled away his apes for a third consecutive NCAA bid. He commented that the ajor reason behind the team's frustrations was the highly com- atitive schedule. The year was one of one-run losses, as the am fell to 11 opponents by that slim margin. Coach Little tributed many of these losses to a lack of consistency of the am's hitting, pitching, and defense. Still, a 25-18 record cannot be labelled unsuccessful. Coach ttle felt that the record was excellent, considering our sched- a. With a much tougher schedule now that East Carolina is an zlependent, the team was not expected to perform as well -as at year. Little felt that the baseball program was continually improving. He was especially proud of his four-man pitching powerhouse, which was ranked among the top ten in the nation. Little was optomistic about next year. He plans to put forth an extensive recruiting effort in order to attract more top-notch athletes so the team will be able to live up to the demands of an ever-toughening schedule. He will be hindered in his effort by a recruiting budget that is not adequate.Little claims that the uni- versity will have to put forth more money and manpower for recruiting in order for the team to remain competitive in the future. Little is optomistic that the team will be even more successful in 1980. Most of the players will be returning and with emphasis placed on the team's weaknesses, there is every reason to believe that the team will improve on its favorable record of this year. Picture A: Rick Derechailo, a Junior from Cliffwood, N.J., slams the ball into the outfield. f if -gr Kappa Sig Celebrat Greek eel ith Funky Nassa Vybi. ' 1? lv.. in JM .,. xi i ,, , 5 W 2,-l srfiffo as f ,. i, , 3 V 1, 'aff . V - x QV 4 s, - -.Q-X Q .e 5' - - A ,, f ' if I WA-'+a-F? ' i'a-'fi' f fee W.s.e:ri'P-'Ut' N cw f N, ff-is if IQ 'P ' - T Y. 5 I N -A U .4 ,4 N MI' 240 f Kappa Sigma Kappa Sigma fraternity sponsored Funky Nassau, a beer chugging contest, on April 5. The event was the fraternity's part of the Greek Week celebration. The contest was open to all fraternities and sororities and was won by Kappa Alpha. The event provided a festive atmosphere for all Greeks to get together for a day of fun and a chance to socialize. Picture A: Kappa Sigma's yard was filled with beer-thirsty awaiting their chance to compete. B: The Pi Kappa Phi's fierce competitors but they were out-chugged by the Kappa phas, C: The sorority division of Funky Nassau had eyes focused on the stage. I . n . Xa, - K 5 FP' X 'ax s 5 r -J! V , A XL v .vw -.,,d ' 4 1 S h3.'1 ' 1:4 ' I L 1 . -f . ily. 1 a 1, 1 r' , B , -r ,bu l I K ! 'L 74 4-1 Q5 ' L eJ ,., . p N ,.. ' , AI -I, -J,-,Q 1 , C Kappa Sigmaf 241 vs wrap ffrfwweg ' if-' , 'r' - ii Five- The event Y Goods and the Coastal participants. Hundreds of spectators April war: . annual af? . Track OVQY up for the 3.00 p.m. r A start of the race. Rick 'A finish line 31 was flied. P woman finisher, with of Cherry Point crossed they seconds after the starting gun 'FECU student, was the stop? ,- of 41.54. a hindrance for I tempegaturesiorced ji gi? Ei 3 612 mile course. l ,Q i L and successful, wiflit , Easter Seal Society. , Wd, Rick Clear heads for the finish line. B: 6.2 I an afternoon's work. C: Some of the more F 11 ply straxniln the last 50 yards of the race. l1ff7711::'vff 13, s4uif'B9S-4...i, 5 f , 5' . Q-. F 1 -3 5. if 1 e if 6 301. 41 1' H, Q-M '-v--1 -TE .s. QA 'U iii, Us rf 'L ,P-',ii'.' 'T' 952 Q ll' li Q W . - ' .J , ' lit' ' I V . 'L ji . - L n m , Q- N .I A ii, , ' : ' 'uf 1 'b .4 .- i. T-':H?'- ' 'Y ' A ,, 515 wk . '15, Y, .L If H , Y, : . :J 1, . 1.1:-.' ,,,-V r i -. Q - a 1ft1., ., fu lf' - - - ' ,Q ' 3y.i'i'r T ' V. . 1, ' 7 . . -. 'ii F 4, s . i i if i, K- ' A i F fi' f 4 I . ' V. 95 V fi 5 3 - ., Q ,, :iv rf 1 ff.. ' ' ,A M ' 5 J ' . ' ' -.' , Y ? i -' ?' C S . 'iQ' - I1 N ' A .+. -F V - - ,. f 1- , ,Q .. '1-9' f l-. ii., ,... i . 5 rg: ' Y ' wi' I ' r w ., f 6 'K I 1 5. ' I 4 x,,' A . 242forge ,E i 'L,-.ff ' Q?57':f'.rx? ' .,- .,.-v 'lf as I I 44 , . 5' r.. , 1,-r:,.5 L--A n -.. ,9- Lim. 3-4- ind 'af 4.-fa . 3' AML , f F,-1 4 . .4 X 5.1. 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X. 1 Youth, Ihexperiehoe Iague Men Netters The ECU Mens' Tennis team finished the 1979 pring season with a dismal 2-10 record. Coached by andy Randolph, a former ECU tennis player, this ear's team suffered from youth and inexperience. he team consisted of eight freshmen, one sopho- ore, two juniors, and one senior. This season's schedule included some tough oppo- ents such as North Carolina, Atlantic Christian, and Despite this year's disappointing record, ECU eleven out of twelve players returning next year, should provide an opportunity for improved in all facets of the game. A: Curt Tedesco tosses the ball for service against an B: Kenny Love practices prior to a match. C: Tedesco with a powerful forehand. D: Alex Cunningham volleys a match. ps- 'E'! ' g .....,.-pst L ' , .a l ' lf ti... n Q-4. A K ..,.vvn A as-Ln s ff lad .-,. ffr lf- A - . , 3- -- JAP Ml, 246fSchool Of Drama QP' 1 fx --,- And Cain Strom M .f,f' The Drama Department produced several very success- ful plays this year. The productions were of high caliber and were enjoyed by all, but the amount of preparation and planning required for each one was usually overlooked by their audiences. The Drama Department spent long hours in preparation for each of its productions. There were several lengthy steps involved in the planning of each play. These included determining the method of interpretation of the screenplay, casting, the designing of costumes and sets, and the publi- cizing of the show. Auditions were held to choose the cast of each show, and then lengthy rehearsals were held in order to perfect the actors' interpretations of their characters. While this went on, set and costume designers were busy ascertaining their needs and selecting those materials and fabrics that they needed to perfect their creations. Public relations people were also busy generating press releases and printing tick- ets and posters. These preparations had a specific timetable, as the shows had to be ready by the date advertised. After weeks of individual preparations, the scenery, costumes, lighting and acting were integrated into a unified whole which culmi- nated in opening night. There was quite a lot left to be done after the closing of the show as well. Scenery had to be disassembled and stored, and costumes had to be cleaned and stored. The last thing done was counting and auditing ticket receipts and cleaning up the theater. The entire process took from four to six weeks, depend- ing on the length and complexity of the individual produc- tion. The process of preparation and concluding a play required as much effort and direction as the production itself, and it was through the lengthy efforts of the students and faculty in the Drama Department that audiences were treated to the high quality productions they witnessed this year. - Picture A: The Director of a production must spend long hours in preparation in order to insure a high quality show. B: This rehearsal for A Cry of Players was one of many which was held so that the actors would be thoroughly familiar with their roles. C: This drama student is busy cutting wood for one of the many props used in A Cry of Players. School Of Drama f 247 248fRugby Give Blood - Play Rugby The East Carolina Rugby Club was founded in the of 1976, and after 3 years it is one of the sports clubs on campus. Membership in the has grown from 20 members to 50 members, the East Carolina Rugby Club one of the sports clubs in the state university system. The 1978-79 seasons were very successful for the It was during the Fall season that East Carolina the first annual ECU Octoberfest Invita- Rugby Tournament, in which 8 teams partici- Fort Brgg won the tournament with an 18-10 over Cape Fear. East Carolina finished third dropping its first match to Ft. Bragg 4-O. ECU its Fall season with a 6-4 record. n the Spring the ECU club had one of its best seasons ever, with a total of 14 new players out. The team played its first two matches in over Spring break. The Spring season saw the team lose some well matches in the final minutes. The final match- es of the season saw ECU reverse this trend, pulling off impressive wins over Appalachian State and Dan River in the Wake Forest Tournament. In the Wake Tournament ECU was also awarded the Sportsman- ship Trophy for its play. The ECU Rugby Club is a member of the ECU Intramural Sports Club Council. The Rugby team received a great amount of assistance from the ECU Intramural Department. Without this assistance the team would have a much harder time sustaining its existance. The club also had several fund raising ac- tivities to help support itself. The club is open to all fulltime students, faculty and staff at ECU. Picture A: Farmer and Tanahey look on as possession of the ball is fought for during a line-out, B: A scrum-down marks the start of a new play. C: ECU makes an open field tackle against NC State. D: A NC State opponent is hit after passing the ball. Rugbyf249 zsofsonbau S lx 'N ly The ECU Womens, Softball Team entered its second seasor with great enthusiasm. With strengths returning in pitching and ir the infield and outfield, Coach Alita Dillon was positive about winning season. The team opened the 1978-79 season with a doubleheade against Pembroke State, which ended with the Pirate's first wi and loss of the season. Ups and downs followed as the team fell t Appalachian State and defeated North Carolina. A three-game losing streak followed, with losses to UN Greensboro, and two crushing losses to NC State. More problem followed for the team, as they lost to North Carolina A 81 T an again to NC State. Wins then followed over Western Carolina an Elon. The team entered the NC State Tournament with a season record of 8-7. The tournament provided one victory again North Carolina A 8: T and losses to North Carolina and NC State The next six games boosted the Pirate's winning record by fou games. Three doubleheaders gave the team wins over Campbel NC State and UNC-Wilmington. T The team then proved their ability to win by capturing the titl in the Appalachian State Tournament. The ladies won two three games against Western Carolina and also defeated UN Greensboro. The final doubleheader of the season against Met odist provided the final win and loss of the season, driving th record to 18-12 for the year. The team did not meet their goal of a 20-win season, but the did achieve their second winning season in their brief two-ye history, which is quite a credit for the young team and the coach. Picture A: Kim Holmes strains to pack as much power as she can into her swin B: Bryan Carlyle, a native of Kinston, carried the bulk of the pitching duties f the 1978-79 season. r-v- 1 .. . , ' .- . W Ui.. - -td...-. , 'Wg- n If 1 4 I J I Spii Ii 252 f Phi Kappa T Sucls An Sun lwamce 2' In or JW! dl 13 , as X.. f,.:- FT ,- Y F33 eq ' V' A NU- Af. -. P' - ' ' ' A .H 4 I X, ' ,,,.1wv'f vw . .. ' .ff ,Jn ' - p l? l V! f' 'V . ,L -,rv .. .-,13,g,f -- A- ' I Hx' fb., .3e- f. - ' L T ff. , 1' .:::-f p.., x',..- x ie' Ei . ifii Y QE if B, On Friday, April 6, the Phi Kappa Taus sponsored their annual Spring Fling. The event, which began mid-afternoon, was open to all ECU students. Warm weather, sunny skies, and 25 kegs of beer made everyone who attended mellow and content. Attendance was so great roadblocks were required to help control traffic. Picture A: Sunny skies added to the enjoyment of Phi Kappa Tau's Spring Fling. B: Several kegs provided plenty of beer for the afternoon. C: The large crowd was evidence of the fact that students are not apathetic when it comes to partying. Phi Kappa Tauf253 254 f Newsline HEW Threatens Cutoff Of Funds Officials of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and the University of North Carolina system were engaged in a continuing battle over de- segregation throughout early 1979. At stake was S89 million in federal aid which HEW officials threatened to cut off if the University did not implement an approved desegregation plan by mid-March. At the last minute a plan was drawn up by Gover- nor James Hunt to spend S40 million for new aca- demic programs and building rennovation at the state's predominantly black campuses, where 70070 of the state's black university students are enrolled. Officials of the university termed HEW's demands rigid and filed suit in late April to block the depart- ment from cutting off at least S20 million in federal aid. Negotiations with HEW foundered on the question Spa Wns A series of breakdowns in the cooling system of the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant's No. 2 reactor led to a major accident in the early morning hours of March 28, 1979. The Three Mile Island facility is located 10 miles south of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, in the Susquehanna River Valley. On March 30 the Nuclear Regulatory Commission warned of a possible core meltdown, a catastrophic event that could involve a major loss of life, and also raised the threat of an explosion of a hydrogen gas bubble that had formed in the overheated reactor vessel of the crippled plant. Pennsylvania Governor Richard Thornburgh ad- vised pregnant women and preschool children within a five mile radius of the plant to leave the area. Nuclear experts worked to cool the overheated uranium fuel and to reduce the size of the dangerous of what to do with duplicate programs at local blac and white campuses. HEW Secretary Joseph Cali fano demanded that the university reduce duplicatio and that the school not initiate any new, potentiall popular programs at its white campuses. UNC syste president William Friday responded that Our basi interest is to give more opportunity to go to college You don't do that by closing programs. Albert N Whiting, Chancellor of predominantly-black Nort Carolina Central University added, My answer t HEW is that we should place the emphasis on enhan ing our curriculum. UNC's suit is a basic challenge to all HEW desegr gation efforts in Southern universities. If upheld, th suit will undermine desegregation agreemen reached by HEW with Arkansas, Florida, Georgi Oklahoma, and Virginia. Nuclear Misha Renewed Con fro Vers hydrogen bubble. Evacuation plans for citizens with 10 to 20 miles downwind of the plant were prepar for use when or if technicians decided to force t hydrogen gas bubble from the reactor vessel. President Carter visited the site on the fifth d after the incident and announced that the reactor w stable. He also announced that radiation levels in t area were safe. Seven days after the accident, the announceme was made that the hydrogen gas bubble had be eliminated. Experts continued in their efforts to bri the reactor to a cold shutdown state. 'The accident threatened the future use of nucle power in the United States and raised questions the safety systems regulated by the NRC and used the nuclear power industry. hatcher Wins ritish Vote Conservative Party leader Margaret Thatcher and r party won a decisive victory in Britain's general ction on May 3, 1979. She thus became the first man Prime Minister in British history. Mrs. Thatcher, an Oxford-educated chemist and yer, won a substantial majority and a clear man- te to reverse the country's march toward Social- For Prime Minister James Callaghan, the campaign ding up to the election was a difficult one. He had ided in October, 1978, against an election at a e when he had a good chance of winning, and was ced into this one when he lost a vote of confidence Parliament. rs. Thatcher had her problems as well. Her voice manner reminded many of unfondly-remembered oolmarms. Her party was ill-prepared when the our Party demanded to know how the Conserva- s would pay for their proposed cuts in income es. t was Britain's 11th postwar general election. La- r won six of the preceding ten, and held power for of the last 15 years. alentine Drafted y Steelers ack Valentine, defensive end for ECU, was draft- y the world champion Pittsburgh Steelers on May 979. He is presently the highest NFL draftee in history of ECU. alentine, a second round draft pick, was twice ed to the all-Southern Independent first team and named outstanding defensive player in ECU's 35- Independence Bowl victory. Good News, Bad News Obituaries Hodge, Al - March 19, 1979 - Actor best known as Captain Video, television's first kiddie hero, of lung disease in Manhattan. He began his career as a popular radio performer. Lyon, Ben - March 22, 1979 - Actor who ap- peared in 72 silent and talking pictures, and who, along with his wife Bebe Daniels, broadcast a popular radio program in the 194O,s, of a heart attack aboard the Queen Elizabeth IL in the Pacific. Stafford, Jean - March 26, 1979 - Caustic lady of letters who tautly structured short stories won a 1970 Pulitzer Prize, of a heart attack, in White Plains, NY. Kelly, Emmett - March 28, 1979 - Creator of the sad-eyed hobo clown Weary Willie, whose mourn- ful pantomime made him Ringling Brothers' biggest attraction for 14 years, of a heart attack, in Sarasota, FL. Bhutto, Zulfikar Ali - April 4, 1979 - Former Prime Minister of Pakistan, who was executed for conspiring to murder a political opponent in 1974, at a jail in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Bayh, Marvella - April 24, 1979 - Wife of Indi- ana Senator Birch Bayh, whose battle against cancer became a national example of common sense, hope and courage for millions, of cancer, in Bethesda, MD. Newslinef255 15 9 9 , . .f 1 Q-iw ,Q f ' :fe':Wyf- Z 4 -fl X '.m'v5,z- W . r 3 All 14 x ,f .5 1. , '-1 YJ 7'f l Q ,,o ,o r KN me YW, N . P J A ,2- g,L..f 'Qi' 'I-C .. 'fl ' ww 1 A ' - . 5, N- .1 ' E I gl M KAJ1' - 1. -- M 'lf .-.- fn , egg IPS -, ,.. Yr H1 5 Q1 'U '-Q fs Q s,.' 1'4 w N 'xiii 5:5 gif: gr.: if 49-'gl 'Y ' ff iff, J -.4 E: .A ,mgiiial S X , ,: XJ N . . x: XI -- Q '- M turn: N , ff. A , .. al: 43' 256 f Barefoot On The Mall Q7 I . p px '1 'Y 42-'Er' 5 , . -XA Flfternoon Hffoir You've heard of barefoot in the park? Well, the ECU Stu- dent Union presented Barefoot on the Mall on April 17. The day was jammed with all types of events and carnival-type booths. The gala playfair began at noon and was followed by fencing demonstrations and Karate experts. The ECU Jazz Ensemble kept the mall rocking as Toad the Mime entertained the entire audience. Toad was one of many professional entertainers featured at Barefoot on the Mall. In her roles, Toad was neither male nor female as she observed and used the scenery around her to complete her act. By making her performances a part of the environment, she delighted her audience by reading part of her improvisions. After her command perfor- mance, the sounds of the mall became clogging medleys as the Green Grass Cloggers delighted everyone around. Lines were long on the mall as people waited to have their palms read and to taste the delicious cotton candy and candied apples on sale. For. those who were interested in a t-shirt to mark the occasion, the only cost was a long wait in line. The wind was chilly, the grass was green, the crowd was thick and laughter filled the air, as students, young and old, experienced Barefoot on the Mall. Picture A: The audience remained alert, as anybody could have been the next one selected to perform for Toad. B: Several students displayed their many talents and became afternoon entrepreneurs. C: A young girl became a clown for a day, thanks to Toad the Mime. D: Toad the Mime highlighted the day with her silent stage antics. E: The artist came out in a lot of students when they were given a chance to create this masterpiece. Barefoot On The Mallf257 Free N Eos 258fBarefoot On The Mall 9 I I i L . 1 ,zrlff -if' .0- ,pf v. , , , .131 te... 4 . .xo v 'an'-L . i f .i .. g , Q .4 5 r 1 N 1 '. J N. E 4 6' 2 1 1 E 'i ' 1 .A 1 I V- .Y I , Q - ' -,' N71 .. I ,A Q, YY L - Xi 4 . fi - gl' . Qi' 4 , Tlx ,' f',. 4.,' ,'- I if 1- 'mr Q' ' 'af' ' 'uf N. ,Q , H , '-g, - ' - 1 - ..r3,g., .JF 31 11 ,ET f .'3' ' - r 'A - -, -. Y -I V- , - .V U , I ,gb A. , 1 1, . . - , f t R Y ,,rn,gQa,w h. ., H I J-if . ffls ,I w.v,,n.if'3 47. fl -L ,,,, ,. , ,..' .- -fl 3 lqjs. A. lf V Jig,-.dl M ' ', ,4fH .:t,'. I Q05 vrzf .5 A -A K ,g- -. 4. .A Wu. . 'ff ni bk -itil, pw ,,,d' LSI' JJ., '4...4. 1' - ,mg -Y r . -J 1 Q2 ' l ' I 'mm if ' Af fi' W '1E i .f I uve? -' ll. I Q,-vb 1 I Picture A: The ECU Jazz Ensemble set the afternoon to music. B: Toad the Mime used several members of the audience in her acts. C: Pete Podeszwa screens Barefoot on the Mall t-shirts, which were free to all who had the patience to stand in the long line. D: Playfair gave students the chance to enjoy group games. E: There was no age limit for the afternoon of fun. Barefoot On The Mallf259 'fx' . 1'-4 I T - -I-1:i - V A e, f fffg-fmm g g 1 i -.f--Qui wffv ,-,-.m.:...-1. 14 . ,' J, . YQ -.lvjalll 'Ag' ' J fr'-.--ga.. J. ,,:4 ' X YES? ' .-gr' . 811.15 ?'v7!:f-1 X In W u o o 5-o o ff -.6124-a-gr .4212-:J r . Fifi, ul i 260fStudent Union ll Am Y -i IUNIIDN IDIIQ UWIIIDIEY WAIIQIIIEID I NIIIEIIQIMXIINMI Nl The Student Union had an active year bringing var- ious forms of entertainment to campus. The various committees of the Student Union sponsored everything from films and concerts to trips abroad. The Major Attractions Committee presented Pablo Cruise, the Brothers Johnson and The Outlaws in con- cert. Free flicks on Friday and Saturday nights were arranged by the Films Committee, while the Lecture Series Committee presented such noted personalities as Ed Bradley and Shana Alexander. The Coffeehouse Committee presented talented ECU students and other local celebrities. The Artists and Theater Arts Commit- tees featured performances such as Dear Liar, starring Michael Learned, and Aint I A Woman, starring Esther Rolle. Topping off the list were trips to New York City, Hawaii, and the Bahamas sponsored by the Travel Com- mittee. By presenting such a wide variety of entertainment, the Student Union tried to have something for every- body. Students and other members of the university community truly had many popular things to choose from that highlighted and enriched their year at ECU. Picture A: Charles Suie was installed as President of the Student Union for 1979-80 during the banquet. B: Certificates were presented to each member of the Student Union at the annual banquet held in appreciation for their year-long service to the Union. C: The Student Union topped off its year with a banquet for all its members who had served during the year. D: The celebrated Rudy Awards were presented by outgoing President Michael Morse to those who had shown outstanding or unusual service during the year. Student Union f 261 Much More Than Betty Crocker's Baking School The School of Home Economics offers degrees in Clothing and Textiles, Housing and Management, Child Development and Family Relations, Food, Nutrition and Institution Management, and Home Economics Education. The Department of Clothing and Tex- tiles prepares students for positions relat- ing to marketing and management or the design and education phase of the cloth- ing and textile industry. Housing and Management students are trained to work with home builders, archi- tects, city planners, sociologists, and oth- er professionals to provide a better envi- ronment in the home and community. Students in the department of Child Development and Family Relations are prepared for such jobs as preschool teaching or supervisiong social agency counselingg or working with exceptional children and their families. The School of Home Economics offers the only coordinated undergraduate pro- gram in Clinical Dietetics in the state. After successfully completing the pro- gram, the student will receive a BS de- gree in Home Economics, be eligible to take the registration exam and will also be eligible for membership in the Ameri- can Dietetic Association. Students in the undergraduate pro- gram in home economics education are prepared to teach young adults in the areas of consumerism and homemaking, agricultural extension services, business and industry, and social agencies. Facilities in the School of Home Eco- nomics include well-equipped laborato- ries, classrooms, a home management house, a playground area for the pres- chool program, offices, a student lounge, a reading room, and a social room. Picture A: Home Economics Education stresses the preparation of good food for one's family. B: This Institutional Management major learns how to prepare nutritious meals for large numbers of peo- ple. C: The curriculum in the School of Home Eco- nomics involves classroom lectures as well as lab practice. 262fSchool Of Home Economics in-. L! HY' R. 7-3i ' f an 1 I Q- .. J f 1 nf: ff M- G! - ' ', ,rm 1, KN Q. A 'xii Y, .5JYi'vf' L1 B ni .f. S qggunn-ll? School Of Home Economicsf263 264fBaseball l D FTF' f. 3 -mare-fv-ff' iw - fi? ,- -' BM . 1 - , f . - .yi -r A ' ,w--'s-f r --wr M n V Q t n . -' , .gt l . , , in . . .rl lv. El' A A .Y ! ' , , A, -5 .V-5, H- AM' -L .. 1. -we . rf- as-me -4-f -,J A Ji? ' nr I. 4 1 . 'I . -ff., .1 , ,yr . -A ' ,ur A . 5 uf- . -zur ff . y- f .. A. ..4.,g 1': 1, ,f'-gf,-' j X -' ,X Q, A - , ,3' 57 ,. ' .4 .f '..: ' 1' ' ' ' 1' f' I ' gi 5?i?'f 1?Il'Z'T5 A f 'Y' if ., Q . -1 ..' 1.1. 5+ .ff 1 Iv s u' ':T I- 1-L 4: 4 . Q: - ir QW v 'ffetff Q T! W 1? - . ga A 4.2, wr.. ,J a 1-f-'.1 '.-4? 58.1, . A 'ifiify' 3'5 'gl-Kiel!-ek .1 ' - ' ' ' . 'fi .i,1f.,,f-' ', ' 3.3, 'n i b '- ,iffy M51 1' ,-:- . gl-. . - - . 1 4- - . ,, .. .' Jg ,Qj:h',,.S:,.,v.,u -wi-sf. .iggafmjggpygir O.,-,, ,T fgwfi 1,. '. Q, . f' 'V .5 , I in fr'-F 'r' 9 .. r. 4 H Ir 'L-4-or ni- 1 4 4 5 vr. if if 'uf 'i I, nv.: A-v . . . 1 . V4 Ay Y I M Sh at - ' , , J Q ,L A 4 Va .. . - ' -..- . -' -- R- ,J '-+V - h!l,.q..'f'! - 1.-... , U ,9.h , K Picture A: First baseman Mike Sage stretches for the throw. B: Macon Moye, ECU's leading hitter, puts one away for the Pirates. C: Parker Davis delivers a powerful fastball enroute to a 5-4 record. D: ECU's Diamond Darlings provided support for the Pirate sluggers throughout the season. , Q- I I I .4 L. . . I on , . '- '. f g,',' of s . - - . ap 1 '. , ., , - '. 1 . A' ' I. . lv I 1 n ' -' x 1 4 xg U-. ' P.. mf vu . 4 ,J ,u I fr , . -E.Q'.' .-Q U.,-.52 rw r- fr. n .v ' ' X, v .z 4 eem Completes Success ful, et Disappointing Season f S - . ', ' .I ' 4' 1 - .,,, -1--A-2-55 ' F , 'Hat 'Fi ' 1 -aut-- -4-Sh B .1 H b. ..,A . - - -.. I .1 My - . ki , li ' . Y. '. . xii! -,.s , I . 'qv'- ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU ECU 1979 Season Record South Carolina South Carolina Clemson Clemson Connecticut Connecticut Connecticut Connecticut Elon North Carolina State North Carolina State Eastern Connecticut State Eastern Connecticut State UNC-Charlotte UNC-Charlotte Virginia Tech Virginia Tech UNC-Wilmington Virginia Maryland North Carolina Campbell William and Mary Davis and Elkins North Carolina UNC-Wilmington Pembroke State Pembroke State Pembroke State North Carolina State North Carolina State Virginia Commonwealth Liberty Baptist Liberty Baptist Virginia Wesleyan Campbell Methodist Methodist Atlantic Christian Atlantic Christian North Carolina Wesleyan North Carolina Wesleyan South Carolina South Carolina Baseballf265 266fSeniors Class Cf 1979 Abbit, Frances V77 Alcock, Phyllis Allen, Vicky Alligood, Ashley xiii 5 ,-. Ais 11: Q3 'Qi fix 79 l Y Adcock, Ray , .ig Anderson, Cynthia Albertson, Tammie Avereffe, Cindy Baker, Ann Baker, Phyllis l ! .el vi Batten, Candy Beasley, Robert Beckwith, Nancy rdf '40 if -if Tim Robert Kathy Jeffrey .1 J' Beesley, Pamela Belangia, Elizabeth Belcher, Kay G. an 4-2' Seniors f 267 268 f Seniors Betts, Wiley sly-f A Sl sf 45' 1 ,-, A V, , f, , 'f' . ' ..-r-I,-- ,. 16, 'Ur V I N Beverage, Thomas Biggs, Debra Birch, Sally IU' SEV 1: 'fl71vN,,ll V96 I Booth, Chuck Bowman, Anita Bramble, Cindie W? l X , 'Tr Brann, Laura Braswell, Ronald Brett, Deborah Briley, David Q 415 65 , 1 ' ' , , . 1 ,. IU' fi! ,g-s fm 11'-.L 'N w M' 1 A QW- ' . , ' WX, , K- I1-pm M B f 123' Y n, Alida ome, Cindy wn, Cathy an, Jimmy Bryant, Debra Bryant, Teresa Buff, Sara 7,,, N 41 Vs ,- A ' F -D Jw Q 4 l j ' i 5 -m J lk I B m Nff A Buffaloe, Kim Bullock, Louise Bumgarner, J. Michael Bunch, Barbara Seniors f 269 270fSeniors xi 1--ff An.-.-, nf' I if iv P 'mms Burroughs, Barbara Burton, Ben Byrd, Katie Cain, Edith Capettini, Julie Bunn, Deborah Carfora, Patricia Burgess, Linda Burkhart, Cheryl Burns, Susan Carr, Mary all Carraway, Sandra 'ui . .twig Picture A: Mlnges Coliseum was the site of controversy concerning the Boston concert. .f , ,!, flx 'N E l. V ,Q It ff J N' 1- fl EL: ' : i C as i ,T ' . V 4 N , 'ii : , C 1 l 4 l I J ,Q U-x e i 1 A -, 5-I ' gi' ff ' i ,I - ? A' '96 1 ff l ee ff' 'l lr M l A rv -A . 1: X X , .ivrvi i ,,,, mm Ceruzzi, Brenda Chandler, Claude Chappell, Terry Carrere, Timothy Caton, Deborah Caudle, Eddie Chase, Carol Clark, Janet Clark, Marcia Click, Bobbi Seniorsf271 272 f Seniors Colclasure, Steve f H J 1 .f' -0 X 'Y,, K e 'eg- N Xiu 'MJ A ' Q-VE XX Copeland, Ervina Cothran, Cindy Crawford, Lois 137 ..--f -f'-ff? for AF: Colenda, Mary 15, ' J ., ' -lg F-xl Crisp, Susan Cook, Debbie f Crowe, John Cumbo, Lisa Currie, Joan 152 fa. 'IEP' Dill, Marianne Dixon, Renee Dixon, Thomas -lf. . ,Q R ,fvign 32 nfu .u.n, fJf:'Zfsi'i ' CI? i , ,ix e-'J ,na- Margaret G. Parker Vicky Donohoe, Rosanne Dunlap, Edd Etheridge, Patricia an ,fix i af, Seniors f 273 274f5eniors Evans, Joyce ,wr -4 .L GW CS ml- -ft f ,fi 4-' , Farlow, Carmen Fassnacht, Linda Fehlner, Linda If ilis Fisher, Dawn Fleming, Caroline Foushee, Karen 4153 M France, Paulette Franke, George Freund, Mark Fussell, Michael till 'QKVT7' 3, fu-L 4 ,573 1 . 4.. .ous '-. ...Y ,I wx V ., X I 1 .1 Geely, Beth ' Goldstein, Mariana Goodman, Barbara Graham, Terrie Gray, Charlie pony Green, Rebecca Teresa Burlon noerman, Jeffrey 'm 1 'll A .1 ' , ' Il' ,n-lfrvw-fpvn ' . 1., - ' V ' 'l' Greene, Emily Seniors f 275 X l f l . mf ,- - . ! , ,. ..,. ll l va. lu... . . i Greer, Steve Grill, Pat Grogan, John Gurganus, Charles 2 76 f Seniors I ff gil ,f TJ' Q 7 ': 23 Hall, Mary Hardee, Beverly l-Iarling, Jayne Harrell, Eva Harrell, Patty Harriett, Ramona Harrison, Jenni I T, 8 4 e 1 if . 'wif Picture A: Evidence of the campua parking problem. ' -. r, . N, Q A 1 Wax .1 u ,v 3. . 'SEI' . ix 35,1 if X Qimj, 1.11 R Hawner, Karen Hawkins, Lorena Hayes, Deborah f ---F? l g' in nv l .Q 278 f Seniors Horvath, Elisabeth A, as T f'..-- A- 1 'Wynn . ex , ,. -. - ,,f-f-f--f'- - 4 Fw 'Q gnnx. ,N ff- -- ---F-- mg--sQ - H iff li ,vi X iw. ,nu vs : '- .gf l Howard, Susan Howell, Darlene Howell, Vickey l : .aux fbi. lr I , Hownshell, Elizabeth Howard, Sharon ' '.,' 'rf ,M A X-I l X . ' . x' l , x , fx ll l l' ll' '- K , ,Z xg. -1 ,1 i -c:':.ZV ,HB ll , -A . W W .' ,j,,. l N R V J Huffman, Gary l-lungate, Ann Hutchinson, Fay Jackson, Vida ' iw l 17.57 Jones, John Jones, Remona Jones, Robert .SW . 0' 'B . 49225 , Libby on, Hursel on, Vickie , Connie 5 f 5 l J IXN Kimball, Beth 1? Kelsey, Lawrence Kiger, Will Seniors f 279 280 f Seniors King, Jennifer -y 'T sf .,g sg' fer f N 1' Fx L.. Xa.-fr Tj if' it -we if . 'Aj ,fx ' , .ff .X King, Mark Kingrey, Terry Kubitz, Brenda Lail, Carolyn Lambe, Bernard Lamm, Carol 1151- is 4 1 N Lammert, James Langston, Ronnie Laughter, Robert Leary, Lucy l e dl' Y? .ign- I I Arn 'iujf ,0- Diane Mark Wanda K 1 wi, ,ku A Li' A if iw , ,av gc- nn., Lewellyn, Bennett Lucas, Guy Madaria Pamela Manning, Carla Marguglio, Karen Markort, Susan '-.N-if 0154. Zigi 2 ' .fi . , -L. 'V -V . 1 4 ,il L, it X in' N 5' gh A , TT'L: 4,4 3 ' 'z U Q. X l:5.1ET2'fh f- it 5,54 xaagy i 'Q F , ' if Z' . , T3- .,-, H -r fi. H 1. f , We- 1 B' Qiamg Martin, Leslie Seniors f 281 frft eff' -:er-If 'f 'mingl- - Dx . ,. Q F I wi A -is I r 4 up Q5 ,Az x 'I 4 ,ax 282 f Seniors McCullough, Kent McDade, Charles McDaniel, Tomiann McDonald, Gwendolyn McDuffie, Mary Matthews, Janet McKee, MBC Matthews, Robert Mayo, Joan McCanless, Robert 5 ,,- -. v, -' H . 'a' 'Y - ' , '1 A , fl v ,V J' 1 A- K .. 1 -1' 1 - '- X 'K f .vw ' M 'M 2 M tn 'Fill' 'll QM ' F flf 4' 'X of I, . . r X I ,X 1 aE.f-f'3i2lff-swf A 1 fl M ' l f lie 2 af M M M' X ,Ll 1Q.,'1j X ,, A i. Y n . ' A McPherson, Barbara 'S Uh 'tx x 4 5 'i Medlln, Steve l ' U' il N Picture A: The service provided by the E.C.U. transit system, though sometimes unpredictable, is a welcome alternative to driving. F11 .V Y iii i Ai .. i fs is-7 , 'x 64 ,u -,yrfff 3- - V . 'V ' K , A If 4 'kW V ' Tw! if -Q., , if . se . - 'A . 5 -... 1 it , E. .. - 5 xr iz Y S ifiefih. , ,tl Moody, Cindy Moore, Debra Moore, Nancy ..- ,.. . N . i 1 ir . . Q 'x . Y ' ,us Lg' ' ts' ' P V j X4 X 1 Miller, Anne Miller, Randy Mochrie, Lois I- N' sd. 4. w. r . J M Moore, Troy Morgan, Lorenza Murray, Gina Murray, Karen Seniors j 283 2841 Seniors Murray, Teresa -q-uf 7 0 ,Fx ri Q Myers, Anna Nelms, M. Diane Nelson, Vicki Nentsy, Debby Nicholson, Laurie I . 'gl , , C-T7 It lk Xx ww- -WSIB' Yi I ,H - .. 'ab ,, ll dlstff' wif? '44 . .mst .-1 -633 ik -My ,an - Q1-: - 4. I ' J-' -, 54 -x N, Norris, Patricia Oakley, Terrie O'Donnell, Joan Orosz, Susan 4 1... .J '23 nl , Leonor ey, Gena , Wallace r, Diane Parker, Jeffrey Parker, Robin Parker, Theresa Sava Phillips, Bertha jg 1 E . L - P 7 .f ay, l- 'NL will ,llll r he .nnfl Parrott, Lisa Peterson, Brenda Seniors f 285 286fSeniors fi an JN f N'T, , . ,f ,D-C531 h7,j!,N fd. . ,Egg gg ,f ni l E . 2 bid' R 'V 7'--1! 71 'lf ' l 'Q Q7 C! ' l Powell, Teresa Pryor, William 4 Z Ray, Candace Plott, Jonathan Poole, Dawn Poole, William Reagan, Thomas Renfrew, Martha Reynolds, Gina Rivenbark, Judy f., ffm .LLB Sz ,..,.. :N', 'A' R R R C 'Ram borough, Rebecca Nancy J. Louise r-sk w :. , 21 17: . L,V'5. ,. ' ,V . wf T' uddle, Ann ufty, Betty umley, Harry Q--nf A-gnu. f,3,,-5?c v if 7 R 3 il 1 Q ,, V :aa ,5 Q Q .M R , ' o Q4 All 1. 1 A1 Runnion, Jill Safrit, Gina Schadt, Karen Scoggin, Steven Seniors f 287 .4 X .1 Y. ,J:,.v ml.. '- W, , Awi ' ,.. t K' I.-l 'Alg 7 I V' I 'YIU at if A 1' ol 5 27 U Y' Q 5,1 V 'jf .' 'fb A? , ,Q - ii, sg. -..-di f nf. H1177 pri Jil: I hp.-... 'ai- Q, ,x 151 . i . ,1 K ,n o- Q-A- -E-A fl. anti if nl. in '. f ar-HQ: 288 f Seniors , Y l f Q Scott, Eugene Scurry, Linda Shanahan, Kieran Shell, Judy .fx 2'-'Ut Soloman, Cindy Simmons, Charlotte Sipe, Scottie Smith, Bernard Smith, Deborah Smith, Jane Smith, Richy -,-, . X Spear, Pana ' vii 1 ff! C 'W f ,, Spruill, Cathy Stankus, Carol Stearn, Suzanne .gvfglftm -Z' v' 1 1 l ai' ' KIT? 49 -i. ?x, fl 'W I IL F-rv-,if - lf ,sf I Stevenson, Emily Stott, Kathy Suggs, Angelo -v Suggs, Jacqueline Suggs, Kathy Suggs, Linda Sullivan, Dottie Seniorsf289 290 f Seniors PGN Y 5 x N 1 -- ei-in 4 QIJHAH k,K,M,,,9v ':', 1 ' XZ Z- f '12 Svoboda, Jonathan 'f-:z::aH : ff 5 1 . :li 1 I .ish I . J'.r',,!N,::,, gl! gv M P 'Hu' l '11 tl' 9 Swain, Montine Sypes, Julia Tamashiro, Naomi 1, ff' fl -f -v X X 1 ,3 , Taylor, Emily Taylor, Jet Temple, Bonnie gin. 1 Cl YJ? , A. i x . 1 4, if AS.. ICN' -fi? Yi.,,,Z7' L , Tice, Carol Tindal, Melanie Todd, Jeff Tyler, Jeanie 156 if ff, 1 .xwms ,ff -af 'HW -.., V ., ,, ' ' '-51,4 :':1',21.::'1:--'. - ,ni Weatherman, Bonnie ' I: ?.! ..ls uf '1M.,,N. S-, Weeks, Donna Emma Orey Steve Whited, Phillip Whitfield, Jannett Nettie Williams, Jeoff 11-pi' 'gf W X ei Williams, Kay f'I'.I.'.3 Seniors f 291 292 f Seniors 'rf' rL.n-fa, Williams Willie 'Lrg , Windley, Stuart Wood, Amy Wooten Mary Wrenn Deborah l 1 1: 'Y Yancey, Dennis Yancey, Mable Zajac, Gary Zaremski, Gail Patricia n, Barbara Deborah ,Wm fl vw. CLASS DF 'ISBD Baker, Bland A ' ' llixdhv ,x ll li .lfxx , x . , .lf , 1v.':Q l n!'l' ..- :ll-l- lui a' ' 74' V :plan 2-526 I Aupo, Raymond 1 rf Barnes, Gerald Barnes, Latefa 3' ' z , Barber, David Barber, Linda 1,4 Banks, Douglas Banks, James Q . M 1 X l 5 W? Nr :fl ul ,i-4 arm.. 'fin' D 4' ll el. srff' ll 'lla ' ., V b' A I Bailey, Kitsy Barefoot, Teresa Bailey, Sheila x J uniors f 293 294 f J uniors Blake, Jamie so , ,' w 1. -lr, I f Y l I g V I7' x X x ,f X Uk ,gf n , Iv, he '-Vffrww Bounds, Craig Branch, Janice 5 NX mx l. Britt, Amanda Brooks, Collen l -- Ml, I i . lg Qu rv: . , ' 2557455 1 l xi? J l l l , 8 W ,J I 1 A i 2' N J'J :Il l 'C ' 2, f 'lr lin' ,mx 'yr' 5,4 N A 1 1 1, A U 1 l 1, ,vm gfhl Q3 ,jp-iifg , ' 'E ,,,. ff1r..'J'lP A 11 + ve: fu I ,-I ,, 2 .f, ,1 No 1 , ew Brock, Glenn Brock, Karen A x , l 2, X , fi -- . 9 'H-ies... 1 Bass, Judy Bell, Lynn Brandt, Jenny .14 , , ' l Brown, Janet JXLIJIY' Brown, Patty Brown, Terry Browne, Donna N wr? I , T7 ,eip lard, Lynn lick, Cathy chette, Edward J 1 Bush, Carol Cameron, Deborah l ff: r fri- w 'I 0 lfl l ff' V , .J r jil l - ' X fl ' 1 5' f , .,, , ' 'pf 'dw 1' ' If l 'nfl .. l AIS Cannon, Ricky Carpenter, Margaret Carroll, Sheryl rl' -'Eh ff , -e. Cash, Shannan Cataldo, Linda ati Cameron, Kent 'Ltr' ,1 X. ,' U '4'-4 , . W 1 0 Carroll, Doug . fl A f ,l rf' r.- f Caton, Carol Chambers, Susanne J uniors f 295 296 f Juniors Chappell, Michael Cloer, Adrienne 4 JA, -A i, fwvi , gf, lixgilf UN ' Cloukey, Margaret Costner, Robert ,H Cutler, Sandy Daniels, Sandra Davis, Jackie Davis, Sheila Collins, Helen :.: .. :.,,:,4 .Phil In u.. v, !s. f1. '.. Crawley, Cathy Cross, Bettylynn CII QT? lik C IY i Colwell, Dawn Wmlw ffmuoom Damron, Cindy Daniel, Frances L ' 1 ',f 1 'LC -,l' , :T 'i 1 De Jaager, Tammy Dement, Kim Denson, Pat l W lx I Dickerson, Grady Dilday, Kyle Durham, Peggy Edwards, Judy Ellis, Marion Emerson, Melanie AU' Eri, Michelle Etheridge, Penelope Evans, Mildred Everette, Martha Fasshacht, Robin J l L J uniors f 297 298 f J uniors Y' - wi: - I ' ' '15 f, , ,. '::. 7: n w rf' , , xv gs l qf. k X lit 1 ' . , If f' .ff .-R g f xg .gs f rn'gmvfb'wL11sA,g,,q,mg,w,a,, li Fishburne, Ellen Geere, Deborah Gillis, Heather 5-K' w T 1. 1 'nu' P X I I .I ss 1 ' 1 Q '- l U L , 1, . 1 2' X ' l 5- 1 ,, v. L al r I ' J l . J Graham, Ann Grant, Rhonda Tir Floyd, Terry Fountain, Susan :rs 'Q Frizzelle, Charles Gardner, Kathy Gasperson, Sally If 4 Y. ,, ,' ,A s H' . 6 Q. 'L u 'S 1' 'n u l- Godfrey, Dawn Goforth, Ann ii' 'e 6 1 '19 Gray, Cathy Hall, Cynthia Enky, Elizabeth per, Kendra 'UL M? n NJ ,Q 5 rf Herring, Michael Highsmith, Mike fi.-S I -it 1 A Holley, Margaret Holt, Dan Huggins, Lee . 1 , cf derson, Anita don, Terry Hinton, Lisa Hodges, Betsy M ! X . m y ,riff , d,f 'J' t k 57 TTD Hunt, Judy Hutchens, Susan iv 'if' ' 3 . Hutchins, Hugh xg J uniors f 299 M ' M Va X H gtk- H , X E212 fi' V I L ,S fs H, it .A -1 D, , , 1. I . R 'X-Lg'-,',,. Rr. James, Richard Jarrett, Susan G? e, P29951 fler, Libby lard, Susan Lindell, JoAnn Lingenfelser, Claire vim Gi Little, Jill fi ' x N Lt l Little, Stanley Lloyd, Teresa Long, Jo Wi 4Dh L.....a Lupton, Bea MacLeod, Kathy 57 N . Long, Janie Madden, Annie Malone, Stanley Juniorsf301 302fJuniors Merritt, Cynthia Molnar, Edward Montgomery, Kim Vij- ff-awrf' ' r . f, ' A l7l,fT l Y , Massey, Louise if an f, ill lhihx Massey, Tammy ' 2 ' Matthews, Connie CA I , SX ' R . , 7 1 fs , - J' X - , K Q Q A C C A W1 w -v 42+ - .1 K ik Moon, Bobby Moore, Tamala W Manning, Chris Manning, Shelton McCoffrey, Terry McDonald, J. Michael McNair, Teresa Moore, Wanda Norris, Mary Oakley, Harry Oakley, Martha LPM' ' ,,. l ,i I Pace, Kathy Parrish, Linda Perry, Jan X. x fl , ,ll i , , ' . fX ...I .-- -,lf 4 i Q' l u-..a Jean Douglas Joey ' ,X x P l - ..'. 4' ' if fm l OHVGY, Woody . if Pesce, Leonetta gl:n,lLZT' ' V A S Phillips, Cheryl i J uniors f 303 304 f J unlors Poole, Valerie Portela, Margie Prevett, Pamela Rivers, Frank Roberts, Cindy Rodgers, Perry .iv i ,ifiv lg i X 'ni' X 7, mums Q - - . 5, i ,-,, x.. - . I is R. xl Pittman, Janet Pollock, Tammy Privott, Willis Proctor, Mary Richardson, Debra lug. Roop, Patsy Rucker, Calvin Russ, Debi Sanders, Laura l Sh d,E-1 i shgllll, cirlgiky gjpf, li ' Short, Pamela QXYQXW MA' -' ' i ,R N lihTi'.1, 1.31-Qing JL L ulP54 'I qv n As. fl Gwen Sears, Kathy Slay, Debra Theresa il Stephenson, Stormy Stratton, Robin ,-.-,,-f A '-f'w.- -, ll- 0 4 7 r X , ,.- rf f If 1 1 1 r .43 i X, - -'ffl 71. Q ,VH H f W i lil tt i ll all Simmons, Alvin Simmons, Jerry Small, Becky Smith, Irving , 1- c' r , gi i . .V .1 A 7 A 'r if J airs? f?'2i' -' ll!! I l il 09 Strickland, Cynthia Strickland, Teresa J uniors I 305 306 f Juniors Swain, Sandra pn. fi ,-rf' QQ? 'G an.: 5 if Turner, Kathy Tyson, Al 2 ft 1 K Y gf: Stroud, Henrietta Stuart, Andrea Thigpen, John Thompson, Robert 7.'X. L 4 ,1 Trenda, Toni Triplett, Jeff Tritt, Debbie -FDC! Vanhoy, Jennie A ,Hwy -Q I -Y I XXX 4 1-XY-Q ,,-,,.' X if I 3 T r VanWagoner, Vinson, Brend Waller, Emmett -w'---v X 1 Wells, Susan West, Mary Wetter, Adele X r, 1 ,1 11' f i' ID Wiggs, Angie Wilder, Lori Williams, Denise IB 'PFA 514: Y Ang -as .lady :ily unfej . K1- L w .lf 3 A 1 v w. JL, 49 V I ,I If f.,,:,:Yg w, l7,g,L,., 1136,-W,-ll 15, l s 1 , ll, U N i, El 1 Q ii-31525, x W L. TQ 1 1:-0 4 H ! Vx ffl C V t.'7' Sandra Sandy All: , , au V Terri il Irs yi lar' Williams, Eric White, Mary Whitehead, Dorothy Williams, Lauren Whitford, Julia J uniors f 307 308 f Juniors , ,f . ,' 'Q ,.--Us IM X . n Wogsland, Nancy Wood, Patricia Wood, Robin , it .Au f T w- all A ' al ,if :AX W i VN X A ., ' nl N fu , l , l ,rv f if . Williams, Patricia Williams, Polly Winslow, Catherine ,a-1 fl' .fi B Y? P ,li Woodruff, Teresa Wuntke, Mark Zack, Lisa Arim, Nancy Bailey, Janet Baker, Katherine CLASS DF 1981 . . 'R '. 1 X Y'.lI.1 f aj V717 Barefoot, Terry Barham, Nicky Barnes, Mary R Y' 'TF Albert Sharon L-V .lx Aman, Michael Michelle C'7r Baker, Thomas Ballance, Lisa Ballard, Dympna 'ff' B xc lf s- Q 1 ' X fl n l Batten, Lisa Baugham, S. McCoy Sophomores f 309 Bernstein, Samuel fzllgvffrrx Brantley, Sherrl Bratton, Johnnie f 4 . w 310fSophomores Beaman, Carol Bembridge, Susan llll 1l.l,f. Blce, Stephanxe Boney, Elton CTP e, I Ella! Bowser, Renee Boyd, Samuel vit. yi..- Zs xx x lg, -. sq , WN, ual. 3 l. Kvumfu - l Branham, Esther Brewer, Cynthia 'O 1. ' -r Briley, Pamela Brinson, Michelle Britton, Charles , .L-f Carmac, Patty Carroll, Kathy 5 Q. Cloud, Velma Q! 1 al Browning, Cindy Bullard, Frank Caddell, Karen I ll X. Casper, Betty Chase, Jerry A . Conner, Susan Conrad, Jack Carter, Glen 35 fi! Chasteen, Bonnie -nh' ,P-'V lr. W' W 'rr ,Q N ill' B -fall'-fa isp ' , I qt ., get-J. I 3 Conyers, Frederick Couch, Norman Sophomoresf311 Cowan, Donna Crocker, Bill CZ? 's i x Ugg, 1 A 1.' 'Rig , '3 'r :P ffrf l ? . ,-I HLJLA I, iff? . . -.,- , 'S-.xgf X - ll' llfzjgal 11, i X 3 12 f Sophomores -:-.sg ,A of 'fl l ' 1 Deaton, Debbie DeBord, Deborah Dees, Wilbur fi'-4 4 '7' A Y ' X Yi!! I 44,1 fi li Davenport, Nancy Dawson, Eric Dawson, Pam , gl Dixon, Mary Dixon, Vanessa Dodd, Cathy 'Cn- li him . '-vv ' f- .QQ Del..oatch, Kenneth DeLoach, Stanley Dixon, Dawn , l A -. , vi 4f ' ff- 'rv I. 1,4 6 1' t ix K Dreyer, Cathy Duckworth, Mark Emery, Elridge it? i Faggart, Robin ,lk Qi l I ha, K Fennell, Tum 'C' -,4 Ferebee, Rosalyn Floyd, Amy IQ-0 f-4 fi fvzzv Fowlkes, Margaret Frazier, Terry -BS:-g.,e.,,,,-A .QI . Farlow, James Farrar, Ellory Fuentes, Alison Garner, E. Collette Gattis, Katherine gs- ' fha f' f Al ' f n , v4 kl K l w l J r l ' -14:5-', .aff Y. 5 1 ix G 4 , ... P Sophomores f 313 3 14fSophomores Gatton, John Gibbs, Janet i '-Q 5. ,T Gill, Thomas Gilman, Claire rs Si-- ,- .. 4. ,Q-'X' fl ,fx qi, '-ji- X.-4 J --' 'l 4.. L.1f'5 Glosson, Donna .JV A 1 1 Gooch, Eric Gray, Ann Gray, Frances Y 4- In nr I. N YI, , . !J l , Gray, Thomas Effwfw Y' f Griffin, Phyllis Guion, Teresa Gupton, Charles .-I' C? 1 1' ,,L Yu., if '-s Griffin, Cathy Griffin, Mary rf'- , ' ' 'Jr Herdon, Barry Hill, Debbie Hoke, Susan 4 ,f -,, f. 3 16 f Sophomores Horvath, Julie C? X KX 1 x x r ' x I . ' in Houston, Mark Howle, Anna Jacobs, Gail ' Johnson, Andrea Hughes, Mary Hunter, Teresa 'v -c':.'?' 1 uf M I 1'f-vw xg 0 , N 'Sit f ' V , .9 ou- -. ,., Hudson, Donna Hughes, Ann Hughes, Lynn lex 'Si 45 -, if Hurder, Amy Ikner, Karen Johnson, Vivian Johnson, Yvonne Jones, Jinger Jones, Karen 5731 1 1? Kenion, Della Keyzer, Debbie Killingsworth, Brenda Killingsworth, Glenda ll, Lillard, Allyson tl 1' lf Wlllll llll if 7 Lassiter, Terry Lennon, Rosalind Ladd, Robert F , 1 Lambe, Christopher Nl f Langley, Cynthia f Kilpatrick, Cathy Kincaid, Michael Sophomoresf317 318 f Sophomores Maletzkey, Lynn Marley, Lynda Maye, Angela V4 Cb McIntosh, Drew www McKnight, Cynthia McNeill, Kathy :mx 01-1 Lomax, Diane Lowry, Fran ALA!-'fx'U.,t L ,brian we Y, Y-E? 1 J McCall, Debra McCullen, Renee McGovern, Joseph N X43-f' f ' AD' Cl l I Meeder, Pa Mewborn, Milliken, Mills. Q-ha Murdoch, Charlotte Neathery, Page Neblett, Brenda ,, X' 'fzzv' Parker, J effry Payne, Anna YF? Mobley, Earle Charles Mosely, Linda Motola, Susan ,Q-qw . Noell, Fran O'Briant, Carolyn Pailin, Felecia Parker, Catherine 1' P Penerton, Charolett Perry, Carroll Sophomores f 319 W 'PFA , nba- ' 1 v 4 1 I 'D 4 , xl . '- 4 h--' l '1l1l 'qP J P .Vp Plummer, Sharon Potts, Nancy Powell, Debra -qs' N EX , fl 1. ,Zen I! Purdue, Mary Rabon, Richard Rankin, Gwen QP . i. , l a K ll' If 5 '2 dbh! J' - . V . x l V r I 1 'RQXJ - P A Ll, H ,- Phillips, Benjamin Pierce, Wanda 320 f Sophomores F i w Powell, Ronald Powell, Vickie Puett, Melinda I 613 Ray, Joy Respass, Kim Rickman, Jeffrey Roach, Timothy Roberts, Jimmy Frances Rogister, Frieda f.: '1 ' '- ' Rose, Gina - .A Sahli, Craig Rouse, Cindy 1 foil jg ll 1 av if VH v l . r sf ml . ' u 11 lvl . ' 1 Rouse, Gina FEP Ruffin, Bennita wg?-W P5122 Sage, Michael .-.F g g sf' glial., J v :I 12773: : .- '.-tlzzg'-7,.....-his ef'-,, 1- ez. .-Q:::.g:,::: If 'Sf-2:-1 --. ,541-5 A-.v,1...1v,' M xg.,-cg-1 Q a --.'Q.-.g-1-.w,.M-- -f,2z2e13a1e,' -I-241-1': b'1'- , '.,w Smggd-15,g.2N QQ, R... ,c 1 1 'Q.....4.v- 1 zqfixzuwa '-.....-1-11-11 GS:- . -.g.,.,- J. 's ,, :?1'.:-.11-is-1-1 ,,N..... 4.1.1 ,sk ,. ,J Stix. Salmon, Melody Sasser, Carol 'ZIP rj' T gnu 4:57 la' . 'N J' 79x 1 s Sawyer, Hope Scarlett, Teresa Sophomoresf321 322 f Sophomores C7 fav 1' . r ,Iv ,. l 5, ,fnliifif f , Lf...4i i s 9' ' T231 , 632 xv I , Schall, Cynthia Seagraves, Valerie Seijo, Karen u 's' 'Kaac X Sherk, Tammie Sherman, Deborah inf fl'- Ji I. ix ,fr ,Nr Shokoufan, Roya Simmons, Charlene IDX Smith, Elizabeth Snipes, Karen qv:- f -Q jllz r :Elf FM ' Mu All ' Y 1 I' 4 XM I Ali I J.. an Snyder, Adele Spain, Lisa Springle, Eileen Snodgrass, Diana l Skinner, Julie N. a:Z'f Stone, Mary Stuart, Stacey Sutker, Michele 'sw-. 1 . .-5 ,.f. V., I cs, ,-. ' , I W - T' ,-f! Zig M , f J. 'Ui y,,,,.,mnm-r- V unix.. fw1,m.,,,..-mmg. ., 'alum-ml EJ rl! 4 ' ' 59,2 ' 5 'lvl f, Tedder, Charla Thorsen, Robin Tilley, Susan 'If ..4 .Z 3 '-s Sprouse, Michael Starkey, Boyd Stiller, Timothy T'9' 'g 1- 1 , IPQQHQ r di ' M RB w 'Y 531ZL-H gl M l 1 F . , ,, ,. 11. :fp 1 if fl? T fl. 1 ' Swearingen, Cheryl ,ar '65 :px ,eb Qea-MT Tingle, William Tart, Norman Taylor, Nancy Trainor, Tina Sophomoresf323 Watson, Jennie Weaver, Paula Wells, Gracie fb CTI? Valalik, Edward Van Baars, F. Eric Vann, Helen fl! 15 ,Z rf LL fu me 'v I' r,'w -.411 Wessells, Ellyn Whitaker, Whitehurst, Kelli . - ,-1-.,,, ' '- ,121 324fSophomores Tsung, Anne Tucker, Judy F..-f YTT? i :'.2f-f L i Y . ,, 4 Wagoner, Pam Ward, Dede Waters, Vicki 'lo A-Us x 1' N, X N'lx Wiggins, Cecelia Williams, Angela Williams, Daneille 5 1, 1: i X ' fo' f 4 Whitley, Jae Whitney, Mary Widener, Chris J v fx W it lil T . Williamson, Jeff Wilson, Carole Winslow, Lisa C-159 -1-3, 4- , ,z l Yarborough, Sylvia Zaky, Anita Sophomoresf325 Barrow, Kim Bartel, Jane Basden, Dawn Baxley, Tammy Beard, Linda CLASS DF 1982 Banks, Jim 326 j Freshmen '- ,i ri ' FT- Allen, Robert Alston, Gaye Anderson, Dorinda I Agrew, Robin Aguinaga, Dianna cgi? I Bailey, Pamela Baines, Leonard Ballance, Sharon Barefoot, Tommy Barnes, Renee Jjf t Barrett, Angela .-. if Sr, .f Benis, Lynn Bennett, Linda Benson, Donald Benson, Paul Benton, Dave Unix' y' lit ' ,V fl n W N X 1 Bishop, Monique Bizzell, Andrea Bland, Judy Bobbit, Wray .V I P- . l l l. L! V - ' H ,Q Qs r v R C 1 ,I 1 ll ' 1 lu ' , X -r Q, 3 Brett, Wanda 13 , 5 Briley, Stuart ' 26 ' Brittain, Keith - 7 .'?z f . T,-vt. .1 4515 - -,V ,--. A 4 1 FL x IL. 1 5 I-I p' .rift-'alll - I-bi! I ll ' ,- 'IMD' I l ai I ':'! A-mf 1.2.- C . 45' . t . it , 9: X . .4A'1.' Bostian, Connie Bowden, Tawanda Boyd, Sam A .W Brown, Daniel Bryant, Shelton Freshmen f 32 7 328 f Freshmen - 1 Bulluck, Debbie Bunch, Kimberly Bunn, Sharon dffpg Cale, J. Lynn Canady, Sherry p x -. IL V l 9213-:-A--'---- '. 5 Butler, Linda Byland, Barrie dr 'vars' 'I-ev x wma 'Q . X, ,,,1 -N M, . , A- f 5, .A it-,A 4 l jam Q-Ji.: 1- - leg' z Buck, Cathy Buck, Tony fag? -nal -' , xx l W Ji ' .. L! Q ji, .K : if if . . . lil V ' if I-ffl I ,N -V 3. I , I h ff!-,I E V la I il i 2 3 ' W s -- C V' n, 9-' :CL Bunn, Terry Bunn, Vicky Burgess, Pegy Burrus, William ,,ah,fM:?lm5u- W 5 4f'11 Byrun, Ida Cacldell, Cindy r. Cannon, Michael Caveness, Cindy Cayton, Dawn Clayton, Robin -v I . n , 4' f...,.T Cleve, William Conyers, Greg Cooper, Steve Cope Connie 1 J I g. C 1 Xa Dean, Laura Debnam, Bob Dement, Pam I Xl? N C XZ . Copeland, Jill Couch, Daniel ' -J' Craddock, Linda Cross, John l Crouse, Donna ff'-f 'is'-3,',f': Daniel, Deborah C7 Dillehay, Missy Dillinger, Cheryl Freshmen f 329 3301 Freshmen Dougher, Ann Dougherty, Carol Downs, Lawrence Di Nardo, Lisa Dixon, James Doub, Mitchell Q1 Edwards, Lisa 20 Eure, Teresa Feamster, Clint ,psig !.Q i v ,dx Ernest, David Estep, Rebecca 40 an ,I M lv . l I 1 H fm ' n s I Edwards, David Q X .,' .K Eg Finch, Fink Fink, v iii? .1 -A an Evans, Melissa Evans, Robert -ln ' r 4 Q I l g, we X ,Pm 3 ' f Forbes, Tracey Franklin, Betsy Freelander, Mike fi fi- Geer, Lois George, Kathy Gibbs, Nancy Gillingham, Gail Fisher, Joey Fisher, Pam Deborah VX ,f f w 1 ,f i F gi Jl F ffl I r ' ,x 1,1 F F l . . 1 . Fleetwood, Linda Fletcher, Tammy Futrell, Stanley Garner, Peggie Flyihe, Reginald Gathers, Crystal Gay, Marlena y-gx il 1 l i - -0 fa F f - or -if-1 :::: '-x....X--E.is1f-H T ,Ze N l F V f f l .g FE- , ' ff' ,iff i ,T I' ,ff ww Q l i, Q 'F Ni 1 X 1 L X u' -ixi ,, 5' ix aww- l l N ill X Freshmen f 33 1 332 X Freshmen Glover, Kim Goss, Karen Gravitte, Kim Grimes, Albert ,-. 'hs via ia 'ine-'iw va' lriwif - 'V 'A -n 9 x 1 Hackman, Debbie Haddock, Jennie Hales, Jimmy Ham, Deborah Hanger, Sheryl Harlan, Tracey Harrell, Tammy E A 9- t-N ,Q -HL Xa R -E 'N Harris, Connie Harrison, Benita I-Iaughton, Ted Henderson, Angela Hewett, David Hicks, Julia Hill, Tina Hilliard, Melody F '? u 31' Holliday, Anne Hinton, Janet Hite, David Hohnskehn, Arthur Holzschuh, Kimberly Hood, Margo Hood, Shields Horne, Pam Hoskins, Misty 2' L ' Hunt, Phillip if Hurdle, Lynn fill ,' i'l efiw-5. '1 -yl lf 1 951' lan lgfi Q3 Q .ig M- I H 11,D 'd i l, ovguey, ,A i g num ILM. il -.f -. 4:-'2' Hund, Sarah Huters, Cyndy Freshmen f 333 3341 Freshmen Jones, Donna 'SI'-Q7 Jackson, Jim fn 'rn N., T' Kirkman, Leela Knapp, Rosemary fe -..P ,.f. -L. J X Q , nf, w QUX fl! Kincaid Deborah Kmlaw Terri Y--n-wr 7, NH -F Johnson, Barbara Johnson, Clyde Jones, Jackie Kearney, Lynne Kinane, Mary xv Kirby, Rebecca Laney Lassiter Lester, T Lancaster, Loreese Lindsey, Tonya 'PP Y , I A Luther, Jeanne Mack, Roger YET' 1-.iv 4 X, N A i . I. l l Link, Linda Little, D. Kirk Long, Stuart 3' l El cas' j, .ll , MX, v I ,Rf Manning, Marsha Marsh, Anita Luther, Billy Maiorano, Frank 4'1 If ,, r CTT? Marshall, Suzanne Martin, Vivian -Lx! -2 Mason, Jennifer Mason, Pamela Massengill, Kim 4+ Q Matthews, Anna 'is-'27 Matthews, Rhonda Matthews, Teresa Freshmen f 335 1 I 336 f Freshmen HY. Matusek, Joseph McConnell, Rhonda McKee, Danny McKee, Frances McKinney, Aubrey vlhdhm -J McKoin, Emily l ' uf' 'V' , x . Mills, Marsha Mitchell, Mary McLamb, Lena Montford, Danny McLaughlin, Penny MOSS, Krista Mears, Jo Mehler, Lynn Y.. Murray, Myrtle Naeser, Joanne Nail, Lester Nicholson Pass, Gina Pearson, John YT 1-UN :LY Pell, Deborah Pelone, Frances A 'mf If i Poindexter, Cindy Poole, Bobby Powell, Joanne ,511 Pjfiflh F 0 Q :ts 'H 1 Af- ,,,,.., , Qxfb I i Katherine 1 P J if' Pa Libby age, Cindy rrish, Greg Perry, Donna Phipps, Marshal Phthisic, Denise Pike, John Price, Noah Proctor, Thomas Quinerly, Kathy Freshmen f 337 338 f Freshmen Respess, Patsie Rogerson, C. Lisa Rich, Jamie Rogerson, Kristi Richardson, Allison Ross, Donna Richardson, Sandra Ross, Renee 1 'fa 'xi' - Aa- Q-,,.,3 ,- f r J 1+ .. - . 1 :Cx ' J 1 f ff-' 1' .' 1 Zh I Rambo, Jo Ransom, Geanice Redmond, Brenda il-lb 'i is J . '.f 4 I , , 4, 1, NL 4 C7 Riddick, Eva Rivers, E. Donise Robinson, Sherri Ai' IM.. . Hi A ,la , ,Mi QQ 2, 1, ., . 'Ji .ww fifv N-. ,.,- i.-,-.L.j..L' fX34T-'-.2-Qi:-g.,.x 52- if 1- M' X Rouse, Teresa Sahhar, Fadia Sanders, Susie Saunders, CI' lg- Sessoms, Sim i Setliff, Paul C9 'I , X iiiffi ,Q Sargent, Judith Schaub, Stephanie Schmidt, Cynthia Scott, Bonnie Shearin, J .W. Sheppard, Virginia Shores, Pat Short, Debbie Simmons, Jeanne Smith, Charles 11417 Smiley, Tisha Smith, Andrew :ev 'I xr-,. 'Ju is.. 'ITV f ,I , f - x 735 2 , if I i?P '.,.,.,. I, f' i, s f JB' Tlx . L Smith, Claire Smith, Rhonda Freshmen f 339 340 f Freshmen 4 l 14125, 'VE'- 5?' I Snow, Carla Stone, Robin Suitt, Carla Symons, Barbara ii l l Taylor, Diane Taylor, Paula if '.--1 Teachey, Doris Teel, Judy Thornton, Karen Thornton, Steve Tice, Alice Traylor, Rebecca Q rv 'cg-r Tyler, Angela Ulmer, William Viglione, John Tripp, Bunny Vrengdenhil, Wade, Ginger Wainscott, David Wallace, George Ward, Julie Warren, Abby Watson, Barbara Wemyss, Jill Westbrook, Ginger Wetherington, Michael Wiener, Janet Willis, Patsy Wilson, Kathy Wood, Turner ' ,' .. . . I I 'R X ' 'SI . 4 gf. -- - -- 41' f .W .n 'YP'-. ' . . ' M J: A-19, , 4 -ff .A ,kiln i v ill ' - K., ' 1 V . . X vw ' . . ' 1.',e3T2 A - .4, Q J Yr QL- 1 : ,A fi. , ' - . - ,'2if2 'T.'T ' ll' Y .Ai , W X... ' LM :L i y-' 1-,gi.i, A., .f 1 7. .., ' li '.,wfff5'of M- .J a t ,, ga. 7' fit' Q4 'Kit , A1-yQ3T':'? .N ,N m .hL 't5,.x'4 V Mi, 1. N 4 A Liv 5 , ,W .Y rv.: -'T A TTY ' .l L f', ir , .- . fi .41 .w su. X , . . - I ,ek v . . fn- , - i H5 5 4 N 1. ,Q 'A vw.-.. .- QQ 'g -4-' f 'P' 1 W1 we ,.,, 1 . I , . . , N N, if ,A-, I -f 51 I l 1 k fs. v, nv it i ,- . ., -v' 1..,,. . , W. l , y L- J r 1-af-wal K, fb.-f l .... . ,ji 'P -.Wu-. X -if 115.2 , J X Weyler, John White, Cheryl Whitehurst, William ' Whitesides, Tom Wood, Valerie Wooten, Dail Zengel, Keith Freshmen f 341 342forads GRADUATE STUDENTS X ' x .nr ' f , , 5 V' Q. we Armstrong, Michael Benfield, Joy Coggins, Carlton Dolacky, Diana Fitzgerald, Evelyn 1 1-'VN fv--4 131 T fY in-:sf .av-H THQ. 111 Hanson, Marlene Koontz, Don Moose, Lynne Petterson, Lynne I. Robertson, Patricia Sanders, Emily Scercy, Ronnie ,,-fr X . J rj' '2f 'f' 7'-T it Yzgzr' Stukes, Josie Westbrook, Martha Connie Richard Grads f 343 Peter Podeszwa 1 Hop, 144 A, 4 A 145 A 5 C 146 B 6 A 147 C 7 B, C, D 150 A, 10 A 151 C, 11 D 158 A 14 A, B, C 172 A, 15 D 173 B, 25 A, B, C, D 176 A, 33 C, D 177 C, 36 A 178 A 38 A 179 B, 39 B, C 181 F 41 A, C 190 A 44 A 191 C, 45 B, D 194 A, 47 B, D 195 D 50 A, C 196 B, 51 B, D 197 D 62 A, C, D 204 A 63 B, E 205 B, 70 A, C 206 A, 71 B 207 B, 72 208 A 73 220 A 75 C 222 A 76 A, C 232 B 77 D 234 B 78 A, B, E 235 C 79 F 243 B, C 84 A, C, D 246 A, B 85 B, E 247 C 86 A 260 A, 87 B, C 261 D 90 A, B, C, D 91 E 114 A, C, D 115 B, E 116 A 117 B 130 C 131 D, E 1-38 B 139 A, D 142 A, D, E 143 B, C, F 344 f Photo Credits Photo Credits Iohn Grogan 1 lbottoml 2 A, B, C 8 A, C 9 D 16 A 17 F 19 E 33 A, B, E 36 B 41 B 44 B 46 A, C 48 A, C, D 49 B, E, F 64 B 65 A, C 66 A, B 67 C, D 69 B, C 74 A, B 77 B 79 C, D 88 C 89 A, B, D, E 99 A 102 B 103 A, C 105 A 126 A, C 127 B, D, E 128 B 130 B 139 C 146 A 149 A, B, C 152 A 153 C 154 A, C 155 B, E 159 B 161 B Doug Melton 162 A, 163 C 164 A 165 B, 166 A 170 A 171 C, 180 A, 181 C 183 B, 184 A, 185 C 186 B 187 D 188 A 189 B, 191 B 196 A 209 B 212 B 213 C 214 B 216 A 217 B 218 A' 224 A 225 B 231 A 242 A 244 A, 245 C 250 A' 251 B 265 D 348 A 153 B, D 264 A, C 155 D 265 B Chap Gurley 11 C 223 B 13 C 226 A, 17 B 227 C 23 A 228 B 27 B, C 229 A 52 B 231 B 66 A, B 232 A 67 C, D 233 C 69 B, C 234 A 83 C 235 D 92 B 240 A 93 A, C 241 B, 96 A 252 A 97 B, C 253 B 110 A 256 A, 122 A, B, C 257 B, 123 D 258 A 124 A 259 C, 125 B 262 A 128 A 263 B, 160 A 161 B, C 162 A, B 163D 166 B 167 C 180 E 182 A 183 C 203 A 212 A 213 D Steve Romero 8 B 58 A, C 12 A, B 59 B, D 26 A 75 D 35 B 82 A 52 A 83 B 53 C, D 111 B 54 A, C 119 A, C 55 B, D 174 A 56 A 175 B 57 B, C Wide World Photos 1 20 A 132 B 21 B, C 133 A, C 30 A 134 A, B 31 B 211 A Laurie Arrants 34C,D,E 35A,E,F Frank Barrow 35 C Ellen Fishburne 107 C Georgette Hedrick 16C,D 18A,C 173,15 19B Richard Lymburner 94 A, D, E 95 B, C, Catherine Mercer 186 A, C Joseph Millard 108 A 109 B Carroll Punte 19 D Kip Sloan 68 A 107 A Printing Specifications Buccaneer, the student yearbook of East Carolina University, is published by the East Carolina Universi- ty Media Board, Mendenhall Student Center, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, 27834. Press run for the 1979 Buccaneerwas 7000 copies with 348 pages. The book was printed by Josten'sf American Yearbook Company, Clarksville, TN, on 80 pound glossy enamel paper. Body copy is 10 point Souvenir with bold and italic emphasis faces. Captions are set in 8 point Souvenir. Headlines vary in style and size, using paste-up type for some pages. Black and white photographs are printed as halftones and were taken by the ECU Photo Lab staff, with some contributed by others. Color reproductions are from prints taken by the Photo Lab staff. Classes photographs were taken by Stevens Studios, Bangor, ME. The cover is Maroon Craftline embossed in Cor- dova grain, hot-stamped in silver foil, and was de- signed and executed by Ellen N. Fishburne of the Buccaneer staff. Printing Specsf345 346flndex Albee Edward 112 Alexander Shana 4 Alpha Omlcron Pl 1 Art School of 176 Barefoot on the Mall 256 Baseball 238 264 Basketball Mens 108 130 146 162 178 190 Basketball Womens 116 128 158 166 Berger Kexth Bradley Ed Brothers Johnson Bryant Bear Buccaneer 180 Cheerleaders Chl Omega Conclusxon 348 Cross Mlke 2 1 8 Dorm Lxfe 104 Drama School of Drop Add 6 East Carohna Gay Commumty Emily 194 An Evening of Dance Fxcklen Stadlum 8 Fneld Hockey Football Appalachlan State 56 Marshall North Carolma A ' , --21 - '-22 B -32 , -214 -24 , -226 C Campus Map - 120 -138 ' 1 :54 D ,H - -246 E I - - -zoo -' -204 F l I . . - ' -34 482 - - -14 North Carolina State 10 Rnchmond 38 Texas Arllngton Wlllram and Mary Fountamhead Freshmen 326 341 xllman Larry 208 lobetrotters raduate Students 342 Great Escape regg Smxth Smgers 118 reenvnlle Road Race alloween 52 atter Classxc omecommg 72 ome Economncs School of dependence Bowl 86 ternatlonal Language Organization tramurals 22 96 110 140 248 umors 293 308 appa Sigma 240 res ln ambda Chl Alpha 58 earned Mrchael 2 4 Marathon 33 84 Marchmg Pirates 44 Medxa Board Medxcme School of Mens Resldence Councll Mother s Fmest Movrng In 4 Musrc School of Nancy Hauser Dance Co Newsline Balloon Fllght 39 Brewer Thomas Brltlsh Electrons 254 Cambodxa 100 Chlna 100 136 Cleveland 30 Coastal Carolina Chemlcal Frre Colleglate Basketball Champnonshrp Colleglate Football Champxonshlp Competency Tests Guyana 80 HEW vs UNC 254 Iran 6 Liquor by the drxnk 60 Mud East Peace Treaty 210 NFL Draft Obxtuarles 30 60 100 136 254 Popes San Dxego Plane Crash Senate Electron Super Bowl 100 Three Mlle Island 4 Vnetnam 100 136 North Carolma Dance Theater Notre Dame 178 Nursnng School of 236 Odom Dave 208 Outlaws 206 Oyster Bowl 38 Pablo Crulse 62 Panhellenlc Council Phx Eta Sxgma 160 Ph: Kappa Tau 252 Phr Slgma Iota Ph1 Upsllon Omxcron Photo Credlts 344 Photo Lab Piedmont Chamber Orchestra P1 Kappa Phl 228 Plppm Rebel 1 8 Rolle Esther 4 Rugby Semors 266 292 Seventnes Sxgma Sxgma Slgrna Sxgn Language Club Soccer Softball 250 Sophomores 309 325 Sports Medncme 192 Strohs Case Stackmg Contest Student Apathy 220 Student Government Assocnatron 126 174 Student Umon 260 Sw1mm1ng 142 170 Table of Contents 2 Tau Kappa Epsllon Taylor Lnvmgston 62 Technology School of 114 Tenms Mens 44 Tenms Womens 2 Txtle page 1 Volleyball 12 WECU Wmd Ensemble Wf2Sfl1HQ 122 150 Indexf347 I - . . - . . . - 94 . 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Suggestions in the East Carolina University - Buccaneer Tecoan Yearbook (Greenville, NC) collection:

East Carolina University - Buccaneer Tecoan Yearbook (Greenville, NC) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

East Carolina University - Buccaneer Tecoan Yearbook (Greenville, NC) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

East Carolina University - Buccaneer Tecoan Yearbook (Greenville, NC) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

East Carolina University - Buccaneer Tecoan Yearbook (Greenville, NC) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

East Carolina University - Buccaneer Tecoan Yearbook (Greenville, NC) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975

East Carolina University - Buccaneer Tecoan Yearbook (Greenville, NC) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

1976


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