i point Coach claims discrimination By FRANN1E BURNS" In the final segment of a three-part series on Title IX and its effect on UNC athletics, the Summer Tar-Heel interviewed the Carolina women's field hockey coach about UNC' enactment of the federal policy Discrimination in certain athletic programs exists within the women's sports departments at UNC, Carolina women's field hockey coach Dolly Hunter believes. Hunter said hockey does not get the same respect the other sports get. Tve been intimidated by my budget: I've shared uniforms and coolers in the long run the girls have been hurt." Hunter said. '' Hunter said inequality exists within each department. One example she cited was the traveling routine of the men's lacrosse team, which allows them to travel to a game the night before while the women's field hockey team has to travel to a game on the day of the game. The facilities for the women's field hockey team are pitiful. Hunter said. She said the varsity field hockey team's field this past season was in bad shape while the team had problems getting help from maintenance men. Hunter voiced her opinions about the inequality her team received to UNC Athletic Director Bill Cobey and he told her the situation would improve, she said. Hunter believes the women's athletic program has improved tremendously during the past seven years, partially because of Title IX and women's increased awareness of Coach Dolly Hunter what their sports programs were not giving them. The first step was in 1973. when eight women's sports programs were incorporated into the men's athletic department. Hunter said. "At that time women's sports were social and it was considered to be in bad taste for women to be competitive," Hunter said. Carolina now fields 13 women's sports programs which are "equally as good as the men's," she noted. "We have the most (women's programs) in the state and we're one of the top schools in the nation in the number of women's sports,'' she said. . 'r Hunter believes the growth of women's sports will continue to improve in the future. "Legally, the University will be forced to comply," Hunter said. The ' threat : of withdrawal of federal funds is not the problem she explained, since the University doesn't receive any federal money for the athletic program. c C- - -' t .'": ; c c c c c e c o o - o c . c o o o 'J ,r 1 'i a t w ,fi m W i i( Tr " - r Jf r f " t t. I . vj v,J t J - t - 4 ! " 4J i-Ui.W i .U4J;;W syfaM;..r tut A rm ffm: ":;;'it-' Yes, we're now serving a delicious home cooked breakfast every morning Tues. - Sun. from 6:00 am - 10:00 am Don't Miss It! '"Vrr . . 118 E. Franklin C42-G750 - y'T' - C . next to Cnrclina Th-: ooooou()ooooouo a ooooo oooqoqoqoooooooqoo tit t 5 I I v J ! o o o m Red hot Heels travel to Alaska By SAMMY BATTEN When fans in Boshamer Stadium stand for the seventh-inning stretch and Sarge sings his rendition of "Take Me Out to the Ballgame." people have a chance to get up and move around in anticipation of the game's finale. , The Tar Heel baseballers flexed a few muscles of their own this past week following Sarge's harmony when they scored 13 runs in the eighth inning of two games, propelling them into first place in the North Carolina Summer League. Defending champion Louisburg College was the victim Wednesday night, beginning in the bottom of the eighth. First-baseman Lloyd Brewer's routine fly ball was misplayed by Hurricane left -fielder Mark Velasquez and started a four-run Tar Heel rally, leading to an 8-6 win. Mike Baucom's li ne shot was bobbled by the first baseman and Brewer advanced to third. P.J. Gay unloaded an RBI single to right and Ed Waynick walked, loading the bases. Jim Rouse then hit a sinking liner that escaped the Louisburg right fielder and rolled to the fenceV clearing the bases. Bull Musser (2-0). picked up the win, pitching five innings in relief of starter Franklin Roberts. Musser hurled scoreless balls until the final inning, allowing two runs on three walks, a hit and one Carolina miscue. John Cleetwood ( 1-0) and Ron Huffman (1-1), gained their first summer victories Friday night as the Heels swept a double header from Atlantic Christian College, 1 0 and 11-2. Returning home Saturday, the team avenged their only defeat this summer, scoring nine runs in the eighth inning to trounce UNC-W 11-6. i. Two hits, sandwiched around six walks and an error, provided the margin of victory. Jim Rouse's three-run double to right field did the most damage. David Kirk, despite shaky seventh and eighth innings, received the win. Sunday, the Tar Heels left for a two week trip to Alaska. They will play 13 games in 14 days against the best summer league competition in the nation. UNC catcher Dwight Lowery and recruit Ottis Nixon are playing in Alaska this summer.' This year's standouts Scott Bradley and Bill Gallagher will participate in the Alaskan league next summer. Several members of the team won't be making the trip. Jim Rouse and reserve catcher Tom Daily will remain at home because of work and school obligations. Pitcher Mike Brewer was suspended from the team for disciplinary reasons until after the trip. The Heels return home June 24. They will resume summer league play on J une 28 against Louisburg in Boshamer Stadium. Recruit's future questionable CHAPEL HILL(AP) Standing 6 feet 5 inches tall, weighing 275 pounds and blessed with extraordinary quickness. Craig Sharpless was a young man with a seemingly unlimited future as a football player. Then somebody slipped him a mickey, literally. Today the 19-year-old Sharpless. the lineman OQU Puzzle Solved: 1 n j e I g I e i b ri t 1 a I tTcT 1 a l c I tTh" SH.LJ. Hl D0R.SH.00 VITALS T ATI S TICS A L S L 0 A C THANKS t R,0i l o j JL JL JL gr 0 U N D IT B E 0. U t S tTs JL JL .k ttrfo 1. J. Ji .GjlJ Hi API TTTc R.A T E 'lc H X i.iA-LO.Ai.riZilo.o.D.JL eJn s c o .n jl. E I K j0 JL m eJj 10 rs h2 c o nIt TlZ, B E A J I N G 0 U T ABUNJ 1 T I E I E 1 D L... 1 S I A I L t T L. J A T S j E A j "UUHY DO THE : MEATMEN RAGE? Poolmo 2:1 Grid Acta 41B WW Epheslans 28r9, tays: Tor by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should boast" Time and again have heard great men, and good men, quote this passage and follow it up by saying: There is nothing you can do, ab solutely nothing to get saved, it is the gift of God." Such ad vice usually brings to mind the passage where a man asked Christ if there were few that be saved, and His answer "Strive to enter in at the straight gate: for many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall not be able." Luke 13:24. The writer is not concerned about upsetting another's doctrine, unless It is a doctrine that uses one Scripture to cancel another Scripture. In the "temptation scene" when the devil quoted a Scripture to offset the Scripture Christ acted upon, Christ toid him he was "tempting God" We should all be greatly concerned lest any be found tares and offensive and "food for the furnace fire" in that day, when they are sup posed to be, and think they are, good wheat for the Master's garner. The Bible does not contradict Itself. Apparent con tradictions are the result of our blindness, stlff-neckedness, and unclrcumclsion of the heart! "And, oh, what a weeping and waning, when the lost were told of their fate. They cried for the rocks and the mountains to fail on them and hide them from the face of Him that sitteth upon the throne, and from the wrath of the Lamb.They cried, but their cry was too late." Rev. 6:14-17. "Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter Fear God and keep His commandment for this Is the whole duty of man. For God shall bring every work into Judgment, with every secret thing, whether It be good, or whether It be eviL" Eccles. 1213, 14. REPENT, TURN FROM EVIL, AND MAKE YOURSELF A CANDIDATE FOR "THE GRACE OF GOD THAT BRINGETH SALVATION!" Once heard of a Negro woman who got up in a Church Testimony meeting and spoke about as follows: "God put the Rainbow in the sky to tell ustHe was not going to drown the world again with water. B ut lust about ever since H e has been advertising that He Is going to "BURN HER UP WITH THE WICKED' WHO DONT REPENT AND QUIT THEIR EVIL AND DEVILMENT! How Is it that we keep loving and serving the devil and this evil world?" In the Sermon on The Mount, Matthew 5:43, Christ said: "BE YE THEREFORE PERFECT, EVEN AS YOUR FATHER WHICH IS IN HEAVEN 13 PERFECT!" The writer wishes to mske a t?tdxl end urgsnt request of any who may cjree with him 1CC, and th$! la that dally you . TAKE TO THE LORD IN PRAYER THE MATTER OF OUR W03L05 i:GnALITY.VILCHSC3, LACK OF CHASTITY," remembering The Scriptures reveal such faint provoke the visttxSon of THE WHATH OF GOD BY F1HIU RemetrAer the NegroWomarfsTesUmonyfltlsFcKhfultoGotfaTestLTieny! tlmony! . coveted by nearly every major college recruiter in the East before deciding to attend the University of North Carolina, is a mere shell of his former self. Hospitalized for the last two months. Sharpless has lost 55 pounds. A doctor says the former Jacksonville High School star is suffering from pneumonia and an overdose of phencyclidine. more commonly known as PCP or angel dust, a powerful drug used to tranquilie animals. Those who know him well insist he would not knowingly take the drug, which induces violence and hallucinations. . His mother. Ernestine Sharpless. said her son told her someone must have put the drug in a drink he was having at a party on March 17 in Jacksonville. "1 know my boy. and he's not on drugs." said Mrs. Sharpless. He's not that way." Three days later he was admitted to Onslow General Hospital under the care of Dr. Cary Myers of Jacksonville. Later he was transferred to North Carolina Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill. "When 1 first saw him. it was obvious he was in a drug-induced state." Myers said. "We determined he was suffering from an overdose of PCP. and I brought in a psychiatrist. Craig was quite unstable." Sharpless told Eddie Southards, sports editor of the Jacksonville Daily News, that his mind "started coming and going at the party." P. O. BOX 4C3 DECATUR, GEORGIA SC031 Rugby Shorts LLC' ; " if r . ; " These 100 cotton twill sport shorts are made for the active life. Designed for comfort with an elastic waist . . . . plus two convenient side pockets. Made exclusively in New Zealand. OlILYU20 m rf 103 L FRANKLIN ST.. CHAPEL HILL SHOP MON.-SAT. 10 TIL 6 18 The Summer Tar Heel Thursday. June 14. 1979