p Technician Monday, April 24,1972

8

Transcript of p Technician Monday, April 24,1972

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Volume LII, Number 84

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Technician

Monday, April 24,1972

Hobby addresses marchers

Students protest war

by John WalstonEditor

“I’d rather be right than governor,”Wilbur Hobby, Democratic candidatefor governor, boomed from theCapitol steps to approximately 2,000students from State, Carolina andDuke who gathered on the grounds

“I’d rather be right than governor,"

Friday afternoon to protest theresumed bombing of North Vietnam.

Led by an amputee who had beenwounded in Vietnam, the group hadmarched from the Erdahl-CloydUnion down Hillsborough Street tothe Capitol in a drizzling rain. TheVietnam Veterans for Peace carried abody bag symbolizing a dead soldier.

Democratic candidate forgovernor Wilbur Hobby said to the crowd at the Capitol.

The verterans were followed by a lineof student leaders linked arm-in-armwith Hobby.

The students marched peacefully as100 student marshals from State keptthe march moving and in order.Raleigh Police provided an escort andcleared a lane of traffic to facilitatethe march.

Students met earlier in the Unionas Hobby, Gus Gusler, former studentbody president, Richard Epps, UNC’spresident, and Mark Robertson, headof the Vets for Peace, spoke on therecent bombing. Seven hundredstudents crowded the Union Ballroomas rain forced the group from thenoon-time Brickyard rally.

Terry Sanford appears

tonight on Brickyard

Democratic presidential candidateTerry Sanford will appear on thebrickyard tonight at 7 to cap off a dayof campaigning at area colleges today.

The former North Carolinagovernor and now Duke UniversityPresident will speak at Peace College,appear on Fayetteville Street, St.Mary’s Junior College and MeredithCollege before arriving at State’sbrickyard, a forum this Spring forseveral political office seekers.

The Duke President has beenagainst the war in Vietnam since 1968and advocates complete, immediatewithdrawal of United States troops inSOutheast Asia.A petition drive which began in

January with a handful of studentshas grown to put Sanford in the race

as a serious candidate for theDemocratic presidential nomination.

Sanford faces George Wallace,Shirley Chisholm and Edmund Muskiein the May 6 Democratic primary.

Terry Sanford

After converging on the Capitol,several participants climbed theCapitol walls displaying signs againstthe war and the NixonAdministration. Later members of theVets for Peace mingled through thecrowd collecting draft cards to be sentto President Nixon to express anti-warsentiment.

During speeches, several veteranstold the protesters about theirexperiences in Vietnam anddenounced the war, saying the UnitedStates has no right in Vietnam.

Hobby was then greeted byresounding applause and lived up, tothe crowds’ expectations as he calledthe withdrawal from Vietnam “therightest cause in this nation“. Studentleaders feared the gubernatorialcandidate possibly placed hiselection-bid in jeopardy byparticipating in the march.

Student leaders followed Hobby asthey took the microphone calling forstudents to help continue the protestuntil all troops are out of Vietnam.Epps, the most effective studentspeaker, said that the large turnoutfrom Chapel Hill proved that peoplestill care about the war.

After 45 minutes, the group beganthe march back to the State campusadding songs to their war chants andwhistling songs of peace.

Joesting hits sex biasby Marty PateStaff Writer

in an emotion-charged andcontroversial atmosphere, Dr. JoanJoesting, visiting professor ofPsycholog)’, has charged thePsychology Department with sex

(1“ P.’ “

n. J. .9

discrimination, and is taking theUniversity to court.

Dr. Joesting’s actions result from along-standing feud with thePsychology Department involvingsalary discrepancies, breach ofcontract and what she terms “blatant

(kg

Over a thousand students from area colleges gathered at the steps of the old State Capitol Friday afternoon to protest the escalation ofthe war in Indochina. (photos by Caram)

discrimination.”The legal basis forlDr. Joesting’s

actions stem from her'claim that thePsychology Department pays her onthe rank of a B. A. instead of a Ph. D.She cites that a $4,000 discrepancyexists in the salaries of male andfemale faculty members who havetheir doctorates.

In addition. she claims thePsychology Department is not issuingher a continuing contract solelybecause she is a female and hascreated an uproar in the department

‘ concerning sex discrimination.In an interview with Dr. Howard

Miller, head of the PsychologyDepartment, and Dr. Slater Newman,professor of Psychology, the twoacademicians discussed thecontroversy.

The web of events began inDecember 1970 when the PsychologyDepartment hired Dr. Joesting as apart-time visiting professor for the1971 Spring semester. Instead of acontract. Dr. Joesting and Dr. Miller"reached a personal agreementconcerning . her status in thedepartment.

It was Dr. Joesting‘s intention tosecure another job elsewhere. butclaiming the agreement led her tobelieve she would be retained foranother year, and that her heavyteaching schedule did not allow hertime to find other employment, sherequested a one-year contract.

Dr. Miller consented. with theunderstanding that the contract wouldbe terminated at the end of the fiscalyear, June 1972.

According to departmental policy,all contracts to be terminated must gobefore a personnel committee. Thecommittee is composed of psychologyfaculty, an instructor, a graduatestudent and an undergraduate. Two ofthe members are female.(See ‘JOESTING.'page 8/

li

Friday’s “March to the Capitol” willobviously have no effect on Nixon’sre-escalation of the war in Indochina. Atleast not by itself. Only combined withthe effects from the total number ofdemonstrations across the nation will theadministration begin to feel the pressure.

But Friday’s March proved thatstudents are concerned with the war. The

complete organization of the rally andmarch showed that students can utilizetheir right to dissent and protest in anorderly manner. The rain failed toprevent the students from carrying outtheir mission.

Raleigh Police commended time andtime again the performance of thestudent marshals. The elite group of 40

EDITORIALss

A paper that is entirely the product of the student body. becomes at once the official organ through which thethoughts, the activity, and in fact the very life of the campus, is registered. It is the mauthpiece through which thestudents themselves talk. College life without its iOurnaI is blank. Technician, vol. 1, no. 1, February 1,1920

Another march

From Harvard Yard to the Brickyard,and points in between, they’re stilltruckin for peace.Only, some of thesophomores are now seniOrs and some ofthe seniors are graduate students.

Although bound by certainjournalistic principles to report an eventfrom fear or favor, I could not bringmyself to do this.

After watching the bored face of News. And Observer reporter Jim Linn at themeeting in the Union and later at themarch to the Capitol, some sarcasticthoughts crept into my impressionablesophomoric mind.

I could not sit unemtionally at mytypewriter and bang out, a storydescribing the events which took placelast Friday . How could it go?

Dateline: RALEIGH hundreds ofyoung people from area colleges marcheddown Hillsboro Street from NC. StateUniversity on a Friday afternoon, to thepld State Capitol in protest to the recentescalation in the war in Vietnam.

Like all good journalistically correctarticles. Then I could emphasis the mostimportant events next , like who spoke,what they said, with the correct spellingand so on and so forth.

All nice and neat and concise, soeveryone can read about it Monday.

But somehow , no single event of the

march really seemed more importantthan the rest.

I could have interviewed people in thecrowd, asked them why they weremarchingl could have interviewedonlookers. I could have called facultymembers to get quotes on how they feltabout the march.

I could have done all that and more.But I did not. Shirking myresponsibilities as a reporter you mightsay. Maybe so, maybe not.

As a rationalist I admit that I shouldhave decided where my loyalties lay.

The staff members who did not coverthe march were sitting back in theirchairs arguing over the size of the crowdwhen I returned. They seemed bored bythe whole event. The veterans , who werehere at State two years ago during thepeace retreat. Nevertheless , they wereexcited about the great “ news value” ofthe march down Hillsboro St. Yes, greatcopy, lots of pictures, let’s run a doubletruck.

Do I sound bitter? Perhaps, because. asa student, ayouth , a young person, Ihave been led to believe that I amsupposed to ‘be against the war inVietnam. But aren’t we all. Still, one canremain emotionally charged for onlyso long.

—Cash Roberts

Council presents ‘demands’

Student opinions ofAgromeck vary

Agromeck 1972 is probably indicative of anation-wide trend of changing styles andpreferences in college yearbooks. Instead ofthetraditional upteen numbers of group shots,editor Sid Davis chose to produce a work ofprofessional quality which is far from the usualyearbook stereotype.

The concensus around the publications areaof the King Building is that the design studentslove the yearbook, and the engineers are, to putit mildly, displeased. In fact, a student on theEngineer’s Council appeared before thePublications Authority Wednesday to expresshis displeasure about Agromeck 1972 andpresent a list of “demands” “for next year’sbook.

He wanted group shots of every club andorganization on campus, (which would fill upthe entire book), captions on photographs,more copy and senior honorspamong others.

That’s all well and good, but most studentswho desire this style of yearbook don’t realizewhat it costs in terms of money and man-hours.

First of all, the l92-page Agromeck cost$26,000 to produce. This figure, after takinginto account inflation and rising printing Costs,can’t compare in dollar value to a 400-pageyearbook produced in the 19403. Second,equipment and darkroom space can’t facilitatethe amount of photographs needed to produce a400-page book. And third, lack of studentparticipation in handling all the technical facetsof yearbook production prevents publishing ofsenior honors, photo captions, etc.Page 2 / Technician April 24, 1972

Every fall, the yearbook places a ferventappeal in the Technician to the student bodyfor photographers, c0py editors and layoutassistants to work on next year’s book. Puttingit lightly, response has not been overwhelmingin past years. "

The student body seems to take for grantedthat just like clockwork, a truck pulls up on theBrickyard every April and out come the newyearbooks.

This year’s yearbook staff was composed of ahard-core group of seven dedicated individuals.We at the Technician consider Agromeckphotographers professionals. As professionals,they don’t want their pictures cluttered severalto a page and with captions. The sensitivephotographs in this year’s book tell a story alltheir own.

Editor Davis, a fourth-year design student inArmy ROTC, knew his staff didn’t want towaste its time taking group photos withcaptions beneath their pictures 130, Davis’personal preference is toward an unclutteredyearbook, as the single large picture per pagestyle indicates.

Those who want a larger book have severaloptions open to them. Omit a color section.This would result in a gain of .50 pages, but farshort of a 400-page book. Sell advertising,although the Agromeck would have to competewith Raleigh and area high school yearbookswhich have the advantage.

Sell yearbooks on a subscription basis at $10a c0py instead of the economical $2.80 perbook cost at present. Also take into aCcount

‘ underclassmen probably won’t pay $10 for a

students maintained order throughoutthe long walk to the Capitol and were soefficient that the few Raleigh Policepresent held their duties to leading the-procession down Hillsborough.

The peaceful efforts of the group of2,000 kept State, University of NorthCarolina and Duke students from gettingthe adverse publicity that the Universityof Maryland is getting at this time. It is ashame though, that the people of theUnited States will remember the riotingand looting of Maryland before the

’ peacfulness of Raleigh.The chance that Wilbur Hobby,

Democratic candidate for governor, took,should also be commended. Hisappearance at the March probably costhim numerous votes across the state ofNorth Carolina and the daringness of hisstatement “I’d rather be right than begovemor” may have shaken many of hispolitical friends and enemies. But theslogan goes well with“Give me liberty orgive me death”—one of the backbones ofAmerican heritage.

Students should now forget the

Concentrate energies on campaigning

March, but not the principals. Insteadthey should turn their efforts tosupporting candidates running on truepeace platforms. Candidates w 0supported the end of the Vietnzy/Wtirsince the beginning, not those w 0 havejumped on the bandwagon just to blastNixon and get votes.

Demonstrations andquickly losing their effect andimportance. Students need toconcentrate their energies at the sourceof the problems—the elected officials.Congressional legislation and electedpositions filled with people sympatheticto the average man and his problems arethe only way this country will everchange for the better. Stuffing theenvelopes and campaigning door-to-doorfor such candidates are the ways studentsneed to turn to. Pushing to help thefuture generations of America and theworld.

Students possess more power nowthan any other time in history and it istheir duty to seek and mold the worldinto a better place.

rallies are

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they can gettheir

they feelnothing by flashing

yearbook whensomething forregistration card.

Finally, raise student publications fees. If astudent wants to go through the hassle ofintroducing legislation in the General Assembly,that’s what it would take.

A New York Times News Service story'earlier this year pointed out the fact that somecollege yearbooks are dying off due to a lack ofinterest. This usually happens when theyearbook staff revolts against tradition andproduces an artistic, professional work. Otherschools feel the $20,000 to $100,000 used toproduce a yearbook could be spent on othermore meaningful activities. Schools resorting toselling individual subscriptions are finding it ahard go. UNC—Chapel Hill is a case in point.

A ' 400-page Agromeck, complete withpictures of student groups drinking beer, seniorpictures, captions, high-blown rhetorical copy,senior honors, dedications, etc., would cost$70,000 and an untold number of man-hours toproduce. Also, the growing tradition of studentpublications to produce as close to professionalproducts as possible is something that shouldnot be given up.

This sounds like an us against them attitude,but we figure we placed ‘these standards uponourselves. After all, the only time we hearcomplaints is after the newspaper or yearbook ispublished. It’s too late then. Those studentsdesiring input into the format of the Stateyearbook or neWSpaper have the PublicationsAuthority, a legally ordained body, in which to'

voice their suggestions or complaints.Or better yet, students can join the

yearbook, radio station or newspaper staffs. Itmight be a lot more interesting and rewardingthan sitting in a dormitory room complainingabout the lack of services on campus.

-Cash Roberts

Technician

Editor..... JohnWalstonSenior Editor .................... George PantonAssociate Editor .................... Perry SafranAssociate Editor ....................Willie BolickNews Editor ...................... Cash RobertsConsulting Editor ................. Richard CurtisManag'ng Editor ..................... Paul TanckFeatures Editor .................... Sara SneedenSports Editor ....................... Ken LloydAssistant Sports Editor ............... Jeff WatkinsPhoto Editor ......................... Ed CaramAdvertising Manager .................. Greg HootsCirculation Manager .................... Bill BelkFounded February 1, 1920, with M. F. Trice as thefirst editor, the Technician is published Monday,Wednesday and Friday by the students of NorthCarolina State University except during holidays andexam periods.Represented by National Advertising Service, Inc.,agent for national advertising, with offices located inthe basement of the King Building, Yarborough Drive,campus and mailing address at PO. Box 5698, Raleigh,N.C., 27607, the Technician pays Second Class Postageat Raleigh, North Carolina 27601. Subscriptions are$5.00 per academic semester. Printed at the NorthCarolina State University Print Shop, Raleigh, NorthCarolina.

alt-«rIrma 6-Symbol for U H ICRIER ' I " C“?§§.‘l°“”.§lfim 9:3 32:IEEE will meet.today at 7 pm in laws—discussing prospective refund of deposit. 7:30 in 201 King Religious Center. ”yum _‘?"‘}rlum .LO '1 /~ 1- d I’ Dan 429. Selection of officers for platforms for the 197 Legislature. All persons with ideas urged to 'I‘N'ms PM“P “1' leather L10 3 A ‘l .1. I atnext year. NCSU Union Ballroom, Wed. 7:30 LEOPOLD WILDLIFE Club attend. 8‘¥:‘"°“‘“P, _ “'Metalfil-‘me' v J. on N a, pm by ZPG, ECOS, and Wake Banquet tomorrow at 7 pm in ll'lfirl‘ll? mime "I “find-mm“ 4 <1 3 J. V ‘I ‘d N aWOMENS BASKETBALL Club Environment. Faculty Club. Speaker—Dr. James ENGINEER‘S COUNCIL will meet III-‘- ~‘*“f.. . (“rl'c‘fih N M g . H ameets at 7 today In Harrelson 244. _ Wallace. Awards. Thurs. at 6:30 in 117 Riddick. All il'Km'mfiuun ”glen?“ 3 N 0 d 1 .L u. RUGBY CLUB WIII meet_Wed. at returning members & new members 13-H99II 'MC f-htinster :1 d V 9 1EO SOCIETY WIII meet today at 7 7:30 pm in 230 Union. Bring Dues MEDICAL TECH. Club will meet attend. Brief. 1,"'.‘.'”,-‘” ..l_ 1; f‘efence H I J. 3 0pm In 218 Riddick. Elections. and Banquet fees. Thurs. at 7:30 Tn 3533 Gardner. fin" m. _"r_.‘\.l \" 1, "A "I”, 9 V N n a N 'Elections, refreshments. lufmem'd‘m 5 Tl'lil‘c'd!) O .1. N I .L 3 N V 9 VBORROWERS UNDER the ALL PAMS undergraduate-s, please CANDIDATES’ MEETING Thurs ..,_,‘,;.,,.g,,.,, fi‘i‘lfzhmh a , d a v 1'National Defense Student Loan have facutly course “8108110" form RAP SESSION on the problems of at 7:30 at Vena Wilburn “ ‘ ' 7‘ 1“ eggs.).)_2.. . -_-.. ‘1‘ , __ ‘- 'Program and other long-term to PAMS Council by today. -— I'WUITH’" “99 .51 I assess 33-( run} (Colloq) I3 (‘ompa.s pomtsex roles will be sponsored by Elementary SChOOI on M815}! Crk. "II-Re etition u- »- u.“- thl cc 44-Ht hi on re rtvborrowers who are being graduated _ NCSU chapter of NOW, Wed. at Rd- Public Invited. 25_Hi:;h mountain xiii): t legging” JIS-Se’cret ageni)e 'this semester or Who for Other ROAD AND Trail Mqtorcyde Chm Ltd-Eat — (Snug!) 35-(‘iratllity «IT-Greek letterreasons will not be returning for the Will meet tonlte aft 8 In 252 Union. — ’ _ _ "T-Be in debt as (‘hickg'n g-Elell‘ent jig-fined or tllmefall ' ' Will discuss lans or next ear. 7 _ ' - an-to In s.ln aw’ M seénester should see Bill Giles, p Don t hassle get-(1,79 It home fi-Hasten wimp 3,,_Heaps 51-83,“. on,“rs. udy Prevatte or Miss Judy NNU L INTRAMURAL A ’ d 29-Pale Ill-Soak 40.(‘nhic meter . deity

‘I Register m Room 8’ Holladay Ha“ A A “a: S 30-Printer's 32-I’laything II-Teniporary bed 53-I’reflx: notfor an “Exit Interview." This must Night will be held today at 5 pm in Make some extra bread measure3 done before leaving campus. IObbY OfdGYmr A“ Pafélfipatnttsgt til-Toldoes not include College esp. awar winners “‘88 03 en - . . 33-RiverinltalyFoundation or other loans received Refreshments. {is-Number,mmorhampm \ Sell It In the CLASSS/F/EDS NewCRAFT SHOP closes Thurs. at 10 Student rate ._ 6 cents per word. 37-DefaceS E X , B E A UT Y a n d new pm. Clear lockers by tomorrow for 38-Part of fireplace,_-, JIl-Crafty

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4I-Young horse~lZ-Part of body43-Pigpen4-1-Parcel of landAIS-Spanish article46-Bishoprit47-Conjunction50-Profound52-CeremonyI'M-Before55-Declare56-Verve57-Ethiopian titleDOWN

l-NoveltyZ-Mature3-8 in4- all short

CorrectionThe correct amount for fac-

ulty contributions for the Tech-nician is $2.50. not the $1.50as reported Friday.

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Beautiful women make mediocre filmAfter watching the tele-

vision presentation of theReign of Elizabeth R, andbeing thoroughly involved,Mary Queen of Scotts appearsat the State theater withGlenda Jackson once more asElizabeth and Venessa Red-grave as Mary.

The film didn’t do much totickle my fancy, and at partswas frankly boring, in its

When a chest x-ray shows that ybu have a potentialkiller like TB or cancer, it’s not a pretty picture. But it’s animportant picture because it can help the doctor detect and

attempts to fluff up the his-toric truth I supppose. l wasinformed that Mary and Eliza-beth never met in actuality butin the movie they do so twice,once as Mary enters Englandescaping from Scotland, andagain in a last ditch attempt byElizabeth to prevent the execu-tions of her closest relative

Other than this slight ofhand the film .rett much

covers the true story. 1 wasinterested in the power thatwas held by the two women atsuch a time where strength andmasculinity would have seemedto win the day. Elizabeth wasthe mostly cool headed, logicalruler of an empire while Marywas portrayed as the heart-motivated Catholic whose headfollowed the longings of herheart, and not her country.

The print of the film at theState is not of the best qualityand is often out of focus,which is a bother, and only afew of the camera shots aretruly worth paying attentionto. It seems that overall thefilm was made to cash in onthe revival of interest in Eliza-bethan England and the beautyof Vanessa Redgrave and talentof Glenda Jackson.

The after film discussion Iheld with a friend was moreinteresting than the film itself.It dealt with the use of womenas showpieces in films and howdifficult it is for beautifulwomen, i.e. Vanessa Redgrave,to play really dynamic andforceful women when a dir-ector needs her only for herlooks. On the other handwomen like Glenda Jackson,

If you think Kodak is iust

pretty pictures,you ought to have

yourchest examined.

catch the killer in time.When doctors are out to catch these potential killers,

they want the sharpest, clearest x-ray films they can get. Andthat’s why people at Kodak spend so many hours creatingnew and better x-ray film equipment. Already, the results in-

Page 4 Technician April 24, 1972’

clude convenience for the patient, economy for the hospital,an even more. useful tool for the radiologist—and, most Impor-tant, reduced radiation exposure.

Researching and creating better x-ray films is goodfor our business, which is why we went into them in the firstplace. But it does our society good, too~—which isn’t a badfeeling. After all, our business depends on our society -so wecare what happens to it.

More than a business.

and Lynn Redgrave, who arelucky enough not to be beauti-ful, come across as the strongpersonality, the human beingwith depth of emotions, thereal person.

Then the conversationdeveloped into a discussion ofsexism and other topics rele-vant to today’s society. Sowith this I’ll end the review ofa mediocre film.

—.Ieffrey London

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Approximately one half ofthe pipeline will be aboveground. This will create a wallsix or seven feet high that maymake impossible for caribou tomigrate in their search forfood.

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Eighteen years serving Union

“I can’t begin to tell youhow many student employeesI’ve had working with me overthe years,” states Ms. CorinnePhilbrick, Reservations andInformation Service supervisorat the Erdahl;Cloyd Union.

Further investigation reveal-ed that exactly 247 State stu-dents have worked under Ms.Philbrick’s direction since theinception of the Student Unionwhen she first began workinghere in 1954. Originally theUnion had been known as theNorth Carolina State CollegeUnion but was subsequentlyrededicated in 1962 as theErdahl-Cloyd Union _in honorof Gerald Erdahl, the firstUnion Director, and BL.Cloyd, Dean of StudentsEmeritus.

thing, more. In practicethough, MS. Philbrick’s studentstaff, sometimes referred to as“pages,” are responsible for thepreparation of the Union facili-ties in advance of meetings,lectures, and a diversity of pur-poses.

All students working for theReservations and InformationService are handpicked andhired by Ms. Philbrick. Each

man. he usually stays on untilgraduation.become an increasingly valua-ble asset as they become moreknowledgeable of University

every now and then.”thinking of the

transfer of the ReservationsWhen

Of course, they

Philbrick concluded.tried to be good to the Union."

—R..I. [race

and Information Service to thenew Student University Center.she said, “It’s going to be likeleaving home, but I think themove will be interesting and I

affairs, organizational look forward to the newstructure etc.” continues Ms. facility.”Philbrick. “Student employees “The Union has beencome up with excellent ideas awfully good to me,“

“And we

newly hired “page” is exposedto an orientation period beforehe is actually delegated somespecific responsibilities to per-form without directsupervision.

She utilizes the assistance ofbetween 20 and 25 studentemployees during each of thesemesters and the summerterm, each student works on a

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Page 5/ Technician April 24, 1972

~Netters fail to advance past semis

State’s tennis teamadvanced two singles playersand one doubles team to thesemifinals of the Atlantic CoastConference championshipsheld at Charlottesville, Vir-ginia, but failed to move any-one into the rain delayedfinals, which were heldyesterday.

The Carolina Tar Heels, whoare seeking their third straighttitle and 16th in 19 years, arealmost assured of the cham-pionship. They have advancedfive singles players and threedoubles teams to’ the finals.Clemson was represented in

four of the finals, Virginia inthree, Wake Forest in two, andDuke in one. Only Marylandand State are not represented.

In the first round singlescompetition held Thursday,Herb McKim and DavidJohnson were the lone Statevictors. McKim, playing in thefourth flight, defeated MikeOppenheim of Clemson, 6-3,6-1. Johnson drOpped the firstset to Clemson’s Larry Mag-giore in number six singles, 2-6,but came back to take the nexttwo sets, 64, 6-1.McKim also gained the semi-

finals in number two doubles.POLITICAL ADVERTISING

Bob Wynne’s for studentsHe also opposesadvance tuitiondeposits.

During 1971 legislature heactively worked and spokeagainst tuition hike.

The Wilmington junior and CyKing topped the Maryland duoof Neil Paterson and John Bur-gess, 6-2, 6-2.

State’s other singles playerswere not so fortunate as theyfailed to will a single set againsttheir opponents. In the firstflight, Thorny Strang lost toClemson’s Nunna Bhanu-murtphy, 0-6, 4-6. FreshmanRandy Merritt dropped straightsets to Audley Bell of WakeForest at number two, 4-6, 3-6.Another Deacon, GaryCoopers, bettered ColemanLong in the third flight, 6-3,6-3. At number five, Don Hicksof Maryland defeated Cy King,6-3, 6-3.

In the other two doublesmatches, the State teams tookthe first set both times, only todrop the next two. Strang andMerritt, playing at number one,won the initial set against MarkMeyers and Charles Benedict.

6-3, but the Duke performerscame back to takethe nexttwo, 6-2, 6-3. In the thirdflight, Long and Johnson lostthe last two sets to Cooper andJim Haslam of Wake Forest,2-6, 2-6, after taking the firstset, 7-6.

McKim and Johnson werenot as sharp in the semifinals asthey were in the quarterfinals.McKim dropped straight sets toForrest Simmons of Carolina,who received a bye in the firstround, 6-4, 6-1. Frank Hattenof... Virginia ., defeated Johnson,6-0, 6-3.

McKim and King gave Jim-my Corn and Rich Hardaway,who was the only Tar Heelwho did not gain the finals inthe singles, a hard battle, buttheir effort was in vain. Thefirst set was decided by a tie-breaker, with the Carolina duowinning 7-6. They also won thesecond set 6-4.

wynne

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Page 6 Technician / April 24, 1972

mileage as the little imports.A solidasa-rock lour speed transmission Sports car steering,

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Sports

' Cornerby Ken LloydSports Editor

Take heart, State fans, David Thompson is going to get hischance after all. The freshman basketball whiz will accompanyteammate Tommy Burleson to the Olympic Trials at the AirForce Academy in June.

The Shelby native was passed over when the initial selectionswere made, but this did not stop basketball coach Norman Sloanfrom trying to get Thompson a tryout. He contacted Olympiccoach Henry lba and told him about his prized possession. lbaagreed to give Dazzlin’ Dave a try.*************

Steve Graham has become the latest in the line of basketballplayers to leave State in recent years. He is the sixth to leave mlthe last three years.f Basketball coach Norman Sloan would not comment onGraham’s reasons for leaving, but he was known to haveexperienced academic difficulty. Sloan said the 6-6 sophomorefrom Chevy Chase, Maryland, definitely would not be back next ~year, but he did not know his future plans. It is believed he willtransfer to another school, but this has not been substantiated.

Graham either started or played extensively in several games inthe first half of the season, but was used sparingly during thelatter stages of the campaign. He averaged 3.3 points per gameand 3.3 rebounds. ,

Ed Leftwich and Bill Benson were the most prominent to leavethe State program before their eligibility expired. Both left lastyear before the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. Leftwichleft for “personal reasons,” while Benson, who was one of thebest shooters in the ACC, departed because of “academicproblems.”

Bob Larsen was a promising guard for the State freshmenduring the 1970-71 season, but failed toktgturn to school last fallbecause “he fell in love and decided to quit school,” according toSloan.

Two members of the freshman team that produced Bensoand current team members Rick Holdt and Bob Heuts are itlonger around. Mike Gillepsie, who played high school ball witBenson, and Mark Balbach, who suffered an injury that hinderehis play, did not perform for the Wolfpack after their freshmaryear.

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by Ken LloydEditor

The featured mile run didnot produce a sub-four-minutetime like it was hoped Satur-day night in the Big Threemeet between State, Duke, andCarolina, but it still producedan exciting race between theAtlantic Coast Conference’stwo finest milers on a dark andwet evening.

Duke’s Bob Wheeler, run-ning his first mile this seasonbecause of an injury, used afantastic kick during the finallap to overtake State’s JimWilkins and beat him by 10yards at the finish. Wheeler ran

the distance in 402.1 toWilkins’ 404.].

The team title was won bythe Tar Heels, who amassed 69points to Duke’s 62 and State’s49. But the outcome was notdecided until the final event.

Wilkins started out fast inthe mile and led the race by alarge margin for the first twolaps of the four lap event. Heran the first quarter in 59.3seconds and the second in 62.2to take a commanding leadinto the third quarter.

“1 was on schedule the firsttwo laps,” said the Roxboronative. “But then 1 got coldand tight and lost concentra-

tion. I wasn’t as into it in thethird quarter as l was last week(when he ran a 4:015 mile).”

Wheeler who said it was“time to let people know I’mstill around,” caught Wilkins atthe end of the third quarterand pulled away from himearly in ,the fourth lap. Hesprinted the last lap in about58 seconds as compared to theState performer’s 60.

“Jim has nothing to beashamed of,” said his coach,Jim Wescott. “Wheeler isjust aworld class runner.”

1f the Blue Devils couldhave won the mile relay, theywould have won the meet. Butthey finished far back as therace developed as a battlebetween State and Carolina.

Lennox Stewart overtookState’s Steve Koob during thefinal leg to give the Tar Heelsthe victory in 319.1, 1.7 sec-onds faster than the Wolfpack.

Koob was the evening’s onlydouble winner as he took theintermediate hurdles, hisspecialty, in 55.1 and won the440 in 48.7, his best time ofthe season. Teammate JerrySpivey finished second in thequarter, while another team-mate, Joe Robinson, was thirdin both the intermediates, and120 hurdles.

Field men David Thompsonand Jim Crowell were State’s

only other individual winners.Crowell won the javelin with atoss of 163’ 7”, whileThompson, who was alsofourth in the long ium , tookthe triple jump with aleap of47’ 8”. Carolina’s Darryl Kelly,expected to give the Statefreshman a tough battle in thetriple jump, did not compete.

Freshman David Bracey tiedKoob as State’s top scorer by

taking two second place andthird place finishes. He wasrunner-up in the 120 highhurdles with a time of 14.8,only .2 seconds off the pace,and in the long jump with ajump of 22’ 8”, three andone-half inches behind thewinder. The 100 and 220 pro—duced his third place finishes.

Neil Ackley was State’s

Wheeler tops Wilkins in feature mile

remaining runner to take aplace as he was‘third in thegruelling three mile.

“All three schools havesome quality athletes and allthree are quite competitive,”summed up Wescott. “it wasreally a shame the conditionswere what they were tonightbecause there could have beensome fantastic times.”

David Bracey(center) and Duke’s George Goodrich hooked up in a battle in the 120hurdle in the Big Four track meet Saturday night. Goodrich ran the distance in 14.8seconds, .2 seconds faster than Bracey. (photo by Karangelen)

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The Wolfpack’s Jim Wilkins leads Bob Wheeler of Dukeby a step here at the end of the third lap of the featuredmile run. The Blue Devil passed Wilkins on the next turnenroute to his 4:02.l clocking.(photo by Karangelen)

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Page 7 / Technician / April 24,-]972 ‘

recommendations to the because she felt there were would do any good from the

Joesting finds discrimination

(continuedfrom page 1)ln Dr. Joesting’s case, be-

cause existing funds did notfacilitate the hiring of a full--time professor, the committeeapproved the termination un-animously.

Later, when funds becameavailable, the PsychologyDepartment began searchingfor a full-time professor. Dr.Joesting contends that if shewere male, her contract wouldhave been renewed on a con-um basis. owever, Dr.Joesting has a plied for theposition, but she does not feel-‘she will be awarded the con-tract.

“The rumor is I will not behired because I raise such afuss. They want some nice,passive female. If they denyme the job because I’m out-spoken, they violated my firstamendment rights,” she said.

Dr..Miller disagrees, how-ever. “We are looking for thebest qualified applicant, regard-less of race, sex or color. If Dr.Joesting is the best qualifiedapplicant, we’ll hire her.”

Now, Dr. Joesting has takenthe case before the FacultyGrievance Committee. Dr. Ray-mond White, chairman of thecommittee, declined to com-ment concerning the actions,but he said, “We are con-sidering the case from everyangle, and we will make our

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Chancellor. The Chancellor willdecide if the recommendationsshould be made public.”

But Dr. Joesting does notfeel she will receive anequitable ruling, because thecommittee is composed ofwhite males. “I respect them,but how will they even knowwhat sex discrimination islike,” she said. “I have nohard feelings against anybody,but how can I get a fair rulingfrom white males. I just don’tknow how it could happen.”

In addition to going throughUniversity administrative chan-nels, Dr. Joesting is preparingfor court action. Her argumentis based upon the 14th andfirst amendments. She claimsthat the University has notgiven her equal protectionunder the law by paying her asalary lower than her malecolleagues.

Also, if the Universityrefused to hire her because sheis outspoken, Dr. Joestingalleges that they are violatingher rights to free speech.

Concerning the salary dis-pute, Dr. Miller feels that thePsychology Department hasbeen very liberal concerningher case. “Salary is based uponexperience, number of yearswith the department, and soon. We agreed to give Dr.Joesting an extra year here,

BARKER

DEMOCRAT

N.C. State Senate

certain hints in her argumentthat led her to believe shewould be here next year. Ithink we have been veryequitable, ethical, reasonableand lenient concerning Dr.Joesting’s case.”No decision has been

reached by the committee, butone is expected before the endof school. The board has meteight or nine times concerningthe case, which is unusual.

But before this, in Septem-ber of 1971, Dr. Joesting sent aletter to the Department ofHealth, Education and Welfarestating that sex discriminationexisted here at State.HEW then sent a copy of

the letter to the University andinformed them an investigationwould take place. A copy ofthe letter reached Dr. Miller,prior to which he had receiveda complaint from Dr. Joesting.

Dr. Miller said, “I received acopy of the letter which, inunspecific terms, accused thedepartment of sex discrimina-tion. Dr. Joesting had made noprior effort to make a com-plaint to any faculty member,the Grievance Committee or tome.”When asked why she did not

initially complain to thedepartment, Dr. Joestingresponded, “By law, I’m notsupposed to. I didn’t feel it

blatant discrimination [experi-enced at faculty meetings.”

Dr. Joesting claims thatmany male faculty membershave made snide and insultingremarks directed toWards her,such as, “You’re obnoxious,”“All you write about is hatingmen.”

Dr. Miller, when asked if heknew of any blatant discri-mination at faculty meetingssaid, “I’m not certain if Dr.Joesting is confusing discri-mination as a person with dis-crimination as a female. By mystandards, the charge of blatantdiscrimination couldn’t befarther from the truth. If Dr.Joesting acts in a certain man-ner, she should expect peopleto react in a certain manner.Now I don’t know whathappens when I’m not present,but to my knowledge, Dr.Joesting has been treatednothing but courteously.”

Dr. Joan Joesting, visiting professor of Pscyhologybelieves the department is practicing sex discriminationin its hiring practices. (News and Observer photo)

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