<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057179_0001"/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
North<lb/>
1(3<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. 98<lb/>
ruary 1979<lb/>
Bradley speaks in Hendrix<lb/>
CBS newsman<lb/>
advocates freedom<lb/>
of the press<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
"News Editor<lb/>
Ed Bradley, special reports correspondent and<lb/>
Sunday evening news anchorman for CBS News,<lb/>
spoke before a capacity crowd Tuesday night in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center-<lb/>
Bradley spoke on the role of the press<lb/>
in American society.<lb/>
Bradley's beats have covered a wide area,<lb/>
including the war in Vietnam, the earl) da- of the<lb/>
Jimmy Carter White House, and more recent I) . the<lb/>
evacuation from Southeast Asia of thousands of<lb/>
refugees.<lb/>
Bradlej commented that the Siamese twin of<lb/>
freedom of the press is responsibility. "The<lb/>
Amcncan press cannot have responsibility legislated<lb/>
upon it Bradley said. He added, "If that<lb/>
happened, the government would have to sav what<lb/>
a free press is<lb/>
There is a profound connection between<lb/>
freedom and responsibility Bradley said. He<lb/>
added. "The First Amendment is the linchpin of a<lb/>
viable society<lb/>
Bradle) also said that a reporter must be<lb/>
objective in his reporting. He spoke of his<lb/>
experiences in Southeast Asia, saying that as a<lb/>
reporter, he had to tell the story honestly, while<lb/>
separating his personal feelings from his job. "As a<lb/>
human being, I was against the war Bradley<lb/>
commented.<lb/>
that journalists were human, and<lb/>
must open our<lb/>
that<lb/>
sometime made mistakes. "Me<lb/>
mind- to criticism he remarked,<lb/>
the press will not go away, and<lb/>
commented. "I do wish il<lb/>
higher plane<lb/>
He turned again to the problem of Vietnam,<lb/>
saying that. "Vietnam is an experience from which<lb/>
we have yet to recover He added, "To many of<lb/>
us want to forge! it<lb/>
Bradle) was one of the last journalists to leave<lb/>
Saigon when all American forces were evacuated.<lb/>
"This criticism of<lb/>
it shouldn't he<lb/>
ould be on a<lb/>
He said that the American Embassy told the<lb/>
newsmen to keep their radios turned to the Armed<lb/>
Forces radio network, because the evacuation would<lb/>
take place during the next few days. "When it was<lb/>
time for evaluation Bradley said, "the radio<lb/>
announcer would sa it was 100 degrees in<lb/>
downtown Saigon, and then Bing Crosby's 'White<lb/>
Christmas' would play<lb/>
Bradley said that he first became aware of the<lb/>
evacuation when he saw westerners running through<lb/>
the streets with suitcases in their hands. The given<lb/>
signal over the radio network was never played, and<lb/>
he found himself waiting for a bus headed for Ton<lb/>
Son Nhut air base.<lb/>
When the bus got there, Bradley said that the<lb/>
driver had never driven a bus before, and that the<lb/>
keys to the bus were not to be found. "Everytime<lb/>
that bus stalled out, we had to cross the wires to<lb/>
get it started again Bradley commented.<lb/>
The entire capital was in a state of seige,<lb/>
Bradley said. Vietnamese blocked the way into the<lb/>
airbase, so the bus went to a port facility.<lb/>
"Thousands of Vietnamese were running towards<lb/>
helicopter Bradley said. "There was no security<lb/>
to allow Americans to board the helicopter<lb/>
Bradle then got back on the bus, and fought<lb/>
his way back to the American embassy, where he<lb/>
found embassy personnel burning money. Bradley-<lb/>
stated that the American defense community had<lb/>
often spoken of a "light at the end of a tunnel" in<lb/>
reference to the end of the Vietnam war. He<lb/>
commented that the only time he had seen that<lb/>
light was at the end of a long corridor, in a<lb/>
conference room at the American Embassy in<lb/>
Saigon, on that last day, just before he escaped to<lb/>
safety.<lb/>
Bradley also said that censorship was a threat to<lb/>
a free society. He added that if censorship existed,<lb/>
the Bert Lance affair and the secret bombing of<lb/>
Cambodia stories would never have been told to th<lb/>
public.<lb/>
"This country does not need censorship, this<lb/>
country needs a strong press, a responsible press<lb/>
Bradley said. "But, the press must be responsible<lb/>
to the people, not to the government<lb/>
"With a strong, free press, our freedom will be<lb/>
insured Bradley said finally.<lb/>
Bradley then asked for questions from the crowd.<lb/>
When asked the difference between covering the<lb/>
Vietnam war, and covering the White House,<lb/>
Bradley quipped, "In Vietnam, you had to duck<lb/>
Bradley was then asked of his impressions of the<lb/>
presidency of Jimmy Carter. "He had a different<lb/>
idea at the right time Bradley remarked. "He was<lb/>
unknown, an outsider. He had a thorough, indicative<lb/>
plan to solve problemsafter all, the man is an<lb/>
engineer<lb/>
He continued, saying he felt Jimmy Carter was a<lb/>
decent human being. "I think, however, that he and<lb/>
some of his associates are politically niave Bradley<lb/>
said, "It's taken him a long time to catch on in<lb/>
Washington. He raised the hopes and he made a<lb/>
lot of promises Bradley commented. He added, "I<lb/>
don't think he has kept his promises, but in<lb/>
fairness, I don't think anyone could keep those<lb/>
promises<lb/>
Bradley then had some advice for would-be<lb/>
journalists. "You need a lot of hard work and a lot<lb/>
ol luck Bradley said. "Usually, when you work<lb/>
hard, you make your own luck. You need<lb/>
experience. It is a lot easier to get a job in a<lb/>
smaller city Bradley commented.<lb/>
He llienlielded the inevitable questions on some<lb/>
of his collegues at CBS. "Walter Cronkite will never<lb/>
retire, knowing Walter, you'll have to drag him<lb/>
out he declared. When asked about Daniel<lb/>
Schoor and his agreement to leave CBS, he said<lb/>
that, "It was by mutual agreement that he leave<lb/>
the network, but throughout the trial (about the leak<lb/>
of the Pentagon Papers), CBS backed him to the<lb/>
hilt<lb/>
On the subject ot human rights, Bradley<lb/>
commented that some countries in the world back<lb/>
the U.S and some countries disagree. He cited the<lb/>
Wilmington 10 case, in a later question, saying that<lb/>
he thought the government should have intervened.<lb/>
On the subject of the recent turmoil in Iran, he<lb/>
commented that he thought the revolution had been<lb/>
caused in part by the actions of Iranian college<lb/>
students in America.<lb/>
Finally, Bradley said that college administrations<lb/>
have the obligation to insure freedom of the press,<lb/>
on their campuses. "Freedom of the press is for<lb/>
everybody he remarked.<lb/>
After a short break, in which he filmed a local<lb/>
television interview, Bradley returned to the stage,<lb/>
where he signed autographs and answered still more<lb/>
questions. Bradley appeared in connection with the<lb/>
Student Union sponsored Black Arts Festival. The<lb/>
campus festival was held in conjunction with a<lb/>
nationwide Black Awareness Week.<lb/>
ED BRADLEY. SPECIAL assignments correspondent<lb/>
and Sunday evening anchorman for CBS N�'vs.<lb/>
speak to a capacity crowd at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center on the roll of the press in American societv.<lb/>
Bradley covered many subjects in his speech.<lb/>
mong them were the Vietnam war, the problem<lb/>
in Iran and elsewhere, and how collegiate journalist<lb/>
ran get started in their craft.<lb/>
Photo bv John H. Crogan<lb/>
Overcrowding main concern<lb/>
Bv TERJn GBATi<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Croatan snack<lb/>
bar was built in 1970 at<lb/>
a cost of over $23,000.<lb/>
According to Cliff<lb/>
Moore, ECU vice-chan-<lb/>
cellor for Business<lb/>
Affairs, the entire sum<lb/>
was provided from<lb/>
combined profits of the<lb/>
Student Book Store.<lb/>
Although the snack bar<lb/>
i- essentially -tudent-<lb/>
financed, approximately<lb/>
one-third of the total<lb/>
seating capacity is<lb/>
allocated to the Faculty<lb/>
Dining Area.<lb/>
After being presen-<lb/>
ted these facts, students<lb/>
and members of the<lb/>
faculty who were in the<lb/>
Croatan were asked<lb/>
whether or not they<lb/>
thought this arrange-<lb/>
ment was fair.<lb/>
This is a cross-sec-<lb/>
tion of responses from a<lb/>
total of 20 students who<lb/>
were questioned:<lb/>
John Olsen, Junior <lb/>
It doesn't bother me<lb/>
that the faculty has its<lb/>
own place, but I think<lb/>
there should be more<lb/>
student seating area.<lb/>
Luann Bunch, Soph-<lb/>
omore  Why have it<lb/>
divided up into student<lb/>
and faculty areas? Why<lb/>
not have it on a<lb/>
first-come, first-serve<lb/>
basis?<lb/>
Lester Fisher, Soph-<lb/>
omore  I think that<lb/>
it's unjust.<lb/>
Dennis Hearne, Fre-<lb/>
shman  I'm not too<lb/>
concerned about it. My<lb/>
central concern is that<lb/>
the place is too small.<lb/>
Don Ingold, Senior <lb/>
It kind of upset me<lb/>
when I found out that a<lb/>
friend of mine was told<lb/>
to leave the faculty area<lb/>
last week, especially<lb/>
since it wasn't that<lb/>
crowded.<lb/>
Linda Peale, Soph-<lb/>
omore  If the students<lb/>
paid for the whole<lb/>
thing, they should get<lb/>
the whole thing.<lb/>
Tom Keene, Junior<lb/>
- If I want to sit down,<lb/>
and there's a place<lb/>
available in the faculty<lb/>
:tion, I just go sit in<lb/>
MIKE CROSS, WHOSE unique blend of mountain<lb/>
music and off the wall humor have made him a<lb/>
favorite performer in Raleigh and Chapel Hill<lb/>
nightclubs will appear in Hendrix Theater in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center on Feb. 25 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Cross, who started playing the guitar as a<lb/>
University of North Carolina student was raised<lb/>
in Lenoir. In 1973, he took up the fiddle, which has<lb/>
since become his first love. Cross has released three<lb/>
albums, "Child Prodigy "Born in The Country<lb/>
and the just recently released "Bounty Hunter<lb/>
This concert, which represents the first time<lb/>
Cross has ever played in Greenville, is sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Union Special Attractions Committee.<lb/>
Admission is free.<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Ed Goodwin, Soph-<lb/>
omore - The only time<lb/>
you see the faculty in<lb/>
here is during the noon<lb/>
rush when the seats are<lb/>
needed most.<lb/>
Members of the<lb/>
faculty<lb/>
gave<lb/>
the following responses.<lb/>
Faculty reaction<lb/>
Phyllis Makuck, En-<lb/>
glish  I think it is a<lb/>
problem of inadequate<lb/>
facilities for both stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty.<lb/>
Dr. Ryan, Biology <lb/>
It is not unusual for<lb/>
permanent employees to<lb/>
have a place to eat.<lb/>
The students come and<lb/>
go, but faculty members<lb/>
are going to be here<lb/>
year after vear.<lb/>
John Pauly, English<lb/>
 If I can't find a place<lb/>
in here, I just go back<lb/>
to ray office.<lb/>
Henry Doskey, Music<lb/>
 Why couldn't this<lb/>
wall be knocked out<lb/>
completely and the fac-<lb/>
ulty dining sign taken<lb/>
out?<lb/>
Although there were<lb/>
complaints, the majority<lb/>
of students and faculty<lb/>
members held no ex-<lb/>
treme feelings about the<lb/>
matter. General over-<lb/>
crowding was by far the<lb/>
major concern. Since<lb/>
none of the students<lb/>
had any qualms about<lb/>
sitting in the faculty<lb/>
section if they had to,<lb/>
the question seemed to<lb/>
be not one of privilege<lb/>
of a few, but ot the<lb/>
inconvenience of all.<lb/>
What's inside .<lb/>
Emily is "warm" . . .<lb/>
see p. 5<lb/>
Blue Collar is screened<lb/>
. . . see p. 5<lb/>
Pirates down LNC-W<lb/>
78-70 . . . see p. 7<lb/>
ECU faces Tennessee-<lb/>
-Chattanoga tonight at<lb/>
7:30 in Minges . . . see<lb/>
P- <lb/>
RICHARD PRU)R<lb/>
In Pitt County<lb/>
Liquor in 'limbo'<lb/>
By MARC BARNES<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
A rumored-and long<lb/>
awaited-referendum for<lb/>
liquor by the drink in<lb/>
Pitt County will wait, at<lb/>
least for the time being,<lb/>
according to a spokes-<lb/>
man for the local Board<lb/>
of Elections.<lb/>
According to the<lb/>
spokesman, the Co unty<lb/>
Commissioners would<lb/>
have to call for the<lb/>
referendum, if it is to<lb/>
be held.<lb/>
So far, the commis-<lb/>
sioners have not yet<lb/>
made the decision to<lb/>
hold the referendum.<lb/>
According to County<lb/>
Manager Reginald Gray,<lb/>
the idea of mixed<lb/>
drinks in Pitt County is<lb/>
"sort of in limbo<lb/>
"There hasn't been<lb/>
any ground swell either<lb/>
way Gray said. He<lb/>
added, "The tioard of<lb/>
Commissioners are wait-<lb/>
ing to see if the people<lb/>
want the referendum<lb/>
"There just hasn't been<lb/>
that much interest he<lb/>
noted.<lb/>
Gray stated that the<lb/>
Greenville Area Cham-<lb/>
ber of Commerce was<lb/>
trying to see if the<lb/>
people in the county<lb/>
would suppoit having a<lb/>
referendum on the<lb/>
question. "There has to<lb/>
be some interest for us<lb/>
to hold a referendum<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
According to a<lb/>
spokesman for the<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce,<lb/>
a task force did a studv<lb/>
of the effects of the<lb/>
sale of liquor by the<lb/>
drink by studying the<lb/>
effects in those areas of<lb/>
the state in which the<lb/>
measure had passed.<lb/>
This study is slated<lb/>
to go before the Board<lb/>
of Directors of The<lb/>
Chamber today, and the<lb/>
directors will then de�<lb/>
cide whether or not to<lb/>
ask the county commis-<lb/>
sioner for an election,<lb/>
according to Chamber<lb/>
president Ed vlalker.<lb/>
 alker, whose group<lb/>
represent over 700<lb/>
businesses and profes-<lb/>
sional groups in the Pitt<lb/>
Count) area. said that a<lb/>
survey conducted late<lb/>
last summer indicated<lb/>
thai 68 percent of those<lb/>
surveyed were in fat or<lb/>
ot liquor b) the drink,<lb/>
while 32 percent were<lb/>
oppoed.<lb/>
"People's emotions<lb/>
get into this, their<lb/>
morals Walker said.<lb/>
He added, "Thi� is not<lb/>
a cut and dried issue<lb/>
"The Chamber has<lb/>
not been supportive, or<lb/>
negative on this Wal-<lb/>
ker remarked.<lb/>
One of the owners<lb/>
of the Villa Roma, a<lb/>
local restaurant, said he<lb/>
thought the wet forces<lb/>
were looking at the<lb/>
question from an eco-<lb/>
nomic standpoint, while<lb/>
the dr force were<lb/>
looking at ii from a<lb/>
See WETS, p. S<lb/>
T<lb/>
m m v r r m m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057179_0002"/><lb/>
Designers Quakers<lb/>
The oung Home<lb/>
signers League will<lb/>
� rues . Feb. 20 al<lb/>
in. in the V anland-<lb/>
ham Room in the<lb/>
I- L'onomics Build-<lb/>
Mark ripton w ill<lb/>
the speaker. His<lb/>
the evening<lb/>
designer job<lb/>
ripton will<lb/>
b require-<lb/>
designer in<lb/>
 well as<lb/>
w hen<lb/>
designer.<lb/>
business will<lb/>
ssed al the<lb/>
majors and<lb/>
- in the field are<lb/>
nd.<lb/>
The Society of<lb/>
Friends (Quakers) Meet-<lb/>
ing tor Worship is held<lb/>
every first and third<lb/>
Sunday of the month at<lb/>
the First Federal Sav-<lb/>
ings Building on the<lb/>
264 By-Pass.<lb/>
For further informa-<lb/>
tion please eontact Oris<lb/>
and Eleanor Blackwell<lb/>
at 758-4247, or Lon<lb/>
Felker at 752-0787.<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Circle-K<lb/>
k will be<lb/>
chick-<lb/>
- . Feb. 17<lb/>
to 6 p.m.<lb/>
Included<lb/>
. ill be cole<lb/>
and carrot<lb/>
dessert. The<lb/>
n eal is<lb/>
Bake sale<lb/>
Council<lb/>
Idren<lb/>
t kt -ah'<lb/>
in 9 to<lb/>
"Rent-a-lane" is now<lb/>
available every Saturday<lb/>
from 12 to 6 p.m. at<lb/>
the Mendenhall Bowling<lb/>
Center located in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Lanes will be<lb/>
rented by the hour for<lb/>
the cost of S3.<lb/>
Accounting<lb/>
The ECU Accounting<lb/>
Society will meet Mon<lb/>
Feb. 19 at 5:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Western Sizzlin Steak<lb/>
House.<lb/>
The speaker will be<lb/>
Mr. H. Glen Williams<lb/>
of Arthur Andersen &amp;<lb/>
Co. from Greensboro,<lb/>
N.C. All interested peo-<lb/>
ple are invited to at-<lb/>
tend. Topic to be dis-<lb/>
cussed is the training<lb/>
and development pro-<lb/>
gram tittered by the Big<lb/>
"8" to their new staff.<lb/>
Tau Kappa<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
fraternity will be hold-<lb/>
ing their 4th Annual<lb/>
Boxing Tournament Feb-<lb/>
ruary 20, 21, and 22 in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium at 7<lb/>
p.m. A pre-boxing tour-<lb/>
nament party will be<lb/>
held at the Elbo Room<lb/>
Tuesday night Feb. 13,<lb/>
featuring Goldfish Eat-<lb/>
ting Contest. A post-<lb/>
tournament party will<lb/>
be held at Blimpies<lb/>
F r i Feb. 23 from 3<lb/>
until 7 p.m.<lb/>
Free beverages for<lb/>
those wearing Boxing<lb/>
Tournament T-shirts.<lb/>
Tournament information<lb/>
and T-shirts are avail-<lb/>
able at the TKE House<lb/>
or by calling 752-1451.<lb/>
Ping pong<lb/>
The Table Tennis<lb/>
Club will hold its week-<lb/>
ly meeting this Tuesday<lb/>
night at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Table Tennis Rooms at<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Players of all levels<lb/>
of ability will be partici-<lb/>
pating.<lb/>
Various activities<lb/>
such as ladder tourna-<lb/>
ments are often sche-<lb/>
duled.<lb/>
All ECU students,<lb/>
faculty and staff are<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Careers<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
science and a possible<lb/>
job in the field is urged<lb/>
to attend "Careers in<lb/>
the Medical Labora-<lb/>
tory Wed Feb. 21 at<lb/>
7 p.m. in Biol. N 102.<lb/>
The Med Tech<lb/>
Society is sponsoring<lb/>
this program which will<lb/>
feature speakers discus-<lb/>
sing career opportunities<lb/>
in hospital and clinical<lb/>
laboratories, sales and<lb/>
technical service and<lb/>
teaching.<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
A newly formed<lb/>
Backgammon Club will<lb/>
meet this Monday night<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in the table<lb/>
games area of the<lb/>
ground floor at Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
All those attending<lb/>
are urged to bring their<lb/>
own sets.<lb/>
Crafts<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
The Chess Club will<lb/>
hold its weekly meeting<lb/>
this Monday night at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the Coffeehouse<lb/>
at the Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center.<lb/>
Competition is at all<lb/>
levels and everyone is<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
The Crafts Center at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center is now offering<lb/>
introductory level work-<lb/>
shops in a variety of<lb/>
crafts. Pottery, Floor<lb/>
Loom Weaving, Wood-<lb/>
working, Leather Craft,<lb/>
Enameled Mirrors,<lb/>
Printmaking, Kite Mak-<lb/>
ing, and Contemporary<lb/>
Basketry will be offered.<lb/>
All full-time stu-<lb/>
dents, student spouses,<lb/>
and staff and faculty<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center members are<lb/>
eligible to join the<lb/>
Crafts Center. A semes-<lb/>
ter membership costs<lb/>
$10 and includes work-<lb/>
shops, tool check-out,<lb/>
use of library materials,<lb/>
and aid of experienced<lb/>
supervisors. Personal<lb/>
supplies and supplies<lb/>
furnished by the Crafts<lb/>
Center must be purcha-<lb/>
sed by the participant.<lb/>
Crafts Center mem-<lb/>
berships are available<lb/>
during regular operating<lb/>
hours, 3 p.m. until 10<lb/>
p m Monday through<lb/>
Friday, and 10 a.m.<lb/>
until 3 p.m<lb/>
The last day<lb/>
for Spring<lb/>
workshops<lb/>
Saturday,<lb/>
to register<lb/>
Semester<lb/>
is Sat<lb/>
March 3. Persons must<lb/>
register at the Craft<lb/>
Center and class spaa<lb/>
is limited. No refunds<lb/>
will be made after the<lb/>
workshop registration<lb/>
deadline.<lb/>
3&amp;K(SCg<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
Careers<lb/>
The Agency for<lb/>
International Develop-<lb/>
ment, Department of<lb/>
State, is now accepting<lb/>
applications for 1980<lb/>
internships. The dead-<lb/>
line for applications is<lb/>
March 16, 1979. A<lb/>
degree in public health,<lb/>
nutrition, population,<lb/>
education administration,<lb/>
economics, finance,<lb/>
business administration,<lb/>
accounting, sociology, or<lb/>
urban development<lb/>
regional planning is<lb/>
required. More informa-<lb/>
tion is available in the<lb/>
Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Office.<lb/>
Superman Career<lb/>
Rugby<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
home Rugby match<lb/>
against Camp Lejuene<lb/>
this Saturday at 2 p.m.<lb/>
behind the Allied<lb/>
Health Building. All in-<lb/>
terested persons are<lb/>
invited to come out and<lb/>
watch.<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
playing rugby can at-<lb/>
tend practices on Tues-<lb/>
day, Wednesday, and<lb/>
Thursday each week<lb/>
behind the Allied<lb/>
Health Building.<lb/>
A Beer Blast will<lb/>
follow the match on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
The Broadway musi-<lb/>
cal, It's a Bird, It's a<lb/>
Plane, It's Superman!<lb/>
will be presented in the<lb/>
Wahl-Coates Elementary<lb/>
School Auditorium on<lb/>
February 15, 16 and 17<lb/>
at 8 p.m. The show is<lb/>
directed by Fred Mclean<lb/>
and features sets<lb/>
designed b Emmy<lb/>
Whilehead and choreo-<lb/>
graphy by Sherry! Mer-<lb/>
cer.<lb/>
The Boy Scouts of<lb/>
America are sponsoring<lb/>
this production which<lb/>
feature young people<lb/>
from the Greenville<lb/>
area. The plot of the<lb/>
musical centers around<lb/>
an evil scientist who is<lb/>
trying to get revenge on<lb/>
the world by destroying<lb/>
Superman.<lb/>
The music is written<lb/>
by Charles Strouse, who<lb/>
also wrote the scores<lb/>
for Bye Bye Birdie and<lb/>
Annie. It is performed<lb/>
by an orchestra consis-<lb/>
ting of ECU faculty and<lb/>
student musicians.<lb/>
Tickets are on sale<lb/>
now at a cost of $2 for<lb/>
adults and $1 for stu-<lb/>
dents under 18. Tickets<lb/>
or information can be<lb/>
obtained bv calling 758-<lb/>
1843 or 752-3993.<lb/>
IHE DYNAMIC 1 I M 1111 <lb/>
Scott Dorm will be<lb/>
having a Career Plan-<lb/>
ning discussion with<lb/>
Farnev Jarnes, director<lb/>
of ECU Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement Office,<lb/>
Feb. 20 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
the basement of Scott.<lb/>
Topics for discussion<lb/>
include "interviewing<lb/>
"job outlook<lb/>
"resumes and "place-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
su<lb/>
Applications are now<lb/>
being accepted for<lb/>
membership to each<lb/>
Student Union Commit-<lb/>
tee for the 1979-80<lb/>
school year. If you want<lb/>
to become involved with<lb/>
East Carolina entertain<lb/>
ment next year fill ou'<lb/>
an application.<lb/>
Applications art<lb/>
available at the Infor-<lb/>
mation Desk, Menden-<lb/>
hall Student Center.<lb/>
The last day for appli-<lb/>
cations is Mon Feb.<lb/>
26 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
Gamma<lb/>
Beta<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will<lb/>
meet on Thurs Feb<lb/>
15 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center in room 244. All<lb/>
members are urged to<lb/>
attend. Semester due-<lb/>
are payable at this<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
00<lb/>
BYOB<lb/>
$2.50 in advance<lb/>
.00<lb/>
Tickets may be purchased at the Clothes Horse<lb/>
or from any member of Phi Kappa Tau or call 752-4379<lb/>
Set-ups Available<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
torrent Q)<lb/>
ROOMMATE needed to<lb/>
-hare apt. $92.50 mo.<lb/>
1 tilities incl. Please<lb/>
leave message, 752<lb/>
1715.<lb/>
FEMALE needs room-<lb/>
mate to share nice 2<lb/>
B.R. apt. Share 12<lb/>
expenses. Call Marsha<lb/>
at 758-2081.<lb/>
NEED responsible,<lb/>
settled female to share<lb/>
2 B.B. apt. at River<lb/>
Bluff Apts. Call Jan -<lb/>
Dav, 752-2531, Nights,<lb/>
752-4167.<lb/>
NEEDED: Responsible<lb/>
female roommate to<lb/>
share 2 B.R. apt. at<lb/>
Eastbrook. Call<lb/>
immediately 758-5794.<lb/>
J<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT in<lb/>
big house, few blocks<lb/>
from campus, $37.50<lb/>
per mo. plus utilities.<lb/>
Phone 752-9325.<lb/>
BOY'S red 23" frame<lb/>
Murray 10 speed bike<lb/>
featuring dia-compe<lb/>
center pull brakes,<lb/>
safety brake levers,<lb/>
Shimano deuraillers, and<lb/>
chrome front forks $55.<lb/>
Call 758-8756.<lb/>
CONSOLE STEREO for<lb/>
sale $125, excellent<lb/>
cond. FM Stereo-8 track<lb/>
recorder &amp; turntable,<lb/>
call 758-1457.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1976<lb/>
Mustang II, 4 cyl, 4<lb/>
speed, AM-FM Digital<lb/>
clock, silver with blue<lb/>
interior. $2600. Phone<lb/>
752-4995.<lb/>
STERLING SILVER<lb/>
monogram filigree<lb/>
jewelry-rings, pins,<lb/>
pendants, earrings &amp; tie<lb/>
tacks; for him or her; 1<lb/>
or 3 interlocking initials.<lb/>
$10-70. Fast Service!<lb/>
Call Pam 756-5190 after<lb/>
9 p.m. weekdays, all<lb/>
day Sundays.<lb/>
GIANT YARD SALE<lb/>
Sat. Feb. 17th. 8 a.m.<lb/>
on. Clothes, sofa,<lb/>
household items, odds<lb/>
and ends. Hwy. 33 (Old<lb/>
Washington Hwy) just<lb/>
past PuttPutt. Follow<lb/>
the<lb/>
signs!<lb/>
LOST: A 1979 NCS<lb/>
class ring with the<lb/>
engraved name Donald<lb/>
Nelson Reeves. BS<lb/>
Degree in Engineering.<lb/>
If found, please call<lb/>
Susan Oglesby, 756<lb/>
9843.<lb/>
fretsona�<lb/>
Hammock weavers<lb/>
wanted - no experience<lb/>
necessary, will train.<lb/>
Apply in person.<lb/>
Hatteras Hammocks,<lb/>
11th &amp; Clark Sts.<lb/>
758-0641.<lb/>
SALESPERSON with<lb/>
expertise in ski, golf,<lb/>
and tennis. Part-time<lb/>
position available<lb/>
immediately. References<lb/>
required. Call 752-1525<lb/>
for interview appoint-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
BELLY DANCE classes<lb/>
with Sunshine beginning<lb/>
soon. Call 758-0736.<lb/>
(Phone recently out of<lb/>
order, call again).<lb/>
ANOTHER DISCO<lb/>
CLASS - due to demand<lb/>
will begin this Friday.<lb/>
Call 758-0736 mornings<lb/>
&amp; evenings.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHER<lb/>
needed to make band<lb/>
promotion pictures -<lb/>
portfolio needed. Call<lb/>
Dan Nartanvan,<lb/>
752-1715.<lb/>
STUDENT helpers with<lb/>
an interest in electronics<lb/>
and computers to assist<lb/>
in development of an<lb/>
instrument-computer<lb/>
system for blind science<lb/>
students, $3 per hr.<lb/>
Contact David Lunney,<lb/>
Dept. of Chemistry,<lb/>
757-6713 or 757-6711.<lb/>
MBA students looking<lb/>
for real business ex-<lb/>
perience while getting<lb/>
your Masters. Flexible<lb/>
hours and good income.<lb/>
Call Northwestern Mu-<lb/>
tual Life 752-4080 for<lb/>
an appointment.<lb/>
YOGA classes be-<lb/>
ginning Feb. 27. 7:30<lb/>
pm. All interested<lb/>
persons are invited to<lb/>
attend. Call Sunshine<lb/>
758-0736 mornings &amp;<lb/>
evenings.<lb/>
SENIORS' resume<lb/>
preparation is the key<lb/>
factor in job placement.<lb/>
National Printing Co. is<lb/>
offering resume prep-<lb/>
aration to seniors. You<lb/>
merely submit the in-<lb/>
formation and we<lb/>
provide the resume.<lb/>
Photographs can be<lb/>
included. Low prices.<lb/>
For more information,<lb/>
contact Richard Cole at<lb/>
Office 758-2486 Tues. &amp;<lb/>
Thurs. from 2-5 p.m. or<lb/>
Home 752-1662.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057179_0003"/><lb/>
MSC Crafts Center offers instruction<lb/>
15 February 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Vw Editor<lb/>
vte�Tdh:�hcar;f�5 -<lb/>
Center s n<lb/>
trr"ig two<lb/>
rkshops this<lb/>
H Work.<lb/>
nt�led "Kite<lb/>
"J Enam-<lb/>
! to a news<lb/>
" Provided hv tu.<lb/>
lm'r- sampiw 0<lb/>
senting ,<lb/>
�<lb/>
workshop in<lb/>
�5 in Iron.<lb/>
 lent Hank a.<lb/>
M' all.<lb/>
AH full time stu-<lb/>
dents, student spouses,<lb/>
1,1,1 faculty and staff<lb/>
Mendenhail Student<lb/>
Center members are<lb/>
eligible to participate as<lb/>
well as dependents of<lb/>
facult) ami staff who<lb/>
are eighteen or over.<lb/>
1 pon payment of a<lb/>
-1 semester fee,<lb/>
an individual ma<lb/>
register for an) of the<lb/>
available workshops<lb/>
without additional<lb/>
1 barge, excluding costs<lb/>
personal supplies<lb/>
and a small lab fee<lb/>
should the Crafts Center<lb/>
Wet<lb/>
furnish supplies.<lb/>
Everyone who is<lb/>
interested in learning a<lb/>
craft should register<lb/>
from 3 to 10 prn<lb/>
daily during the week,<lb/>
and from 10 t, 3<lb/>
p.m. on Saturdays. The<lb/>
lasl day to register is<lb/>
Mar. 3. Also, no fee<lb/>
refunds will be made<lb/>
alter the works registra-<lb/>
tion deadline.<lb/>
The following work-<lb/>
shops are now available:<lb/>
-Moor loom weaving. In<lb/>
this workshop, you v ill<lb/>
learn how to use a<lb/>
four-harness floor loom.<lb/>
 say liquor is needed<lb/>
"Mitntue.i from p. 1<lb/>
One re.1-0<lb/>
n then<lb/>
Efforts to gel in<lb/>
are  �.uat restau- touch with leader- ol<lb/>
On in<lb/>
� � -<lb/>
' I s<lb/>
as big<lb/>
-<lb/>
 en<lb/>
I. aild<lb/>
� l<lb/>
be<lb/>
� a en<lb/>
a<lb/>
more<lb/>
ink it<lb/>
a<lb/>
ants in North Carolina<lb/>
 because ol the<lb/>
absence ol liquor by the<lb/>
drink he said.<lb/>
- tor the rest of<lb/>
the restaurants in the<lb/>
area, Quintard believes<lb/>
thai the) are not push<lb/>
mg too stronglv toge<lb/>
'her. "As a whole,<lb/>
) re nol doing that<lb/>
much he said Quin-<lb/>
tard adv in ates the for-<lb/>
mation of a restaurant<lb/>
alii ion to discuss pro-<lb/>
blems thai will arise it<lb/>
Mixed b� v. sales<lb/>
v should<lb/>
� � registering to<lb/>
Quintard noted.<lb/>
uid put ihe<lb/>
pusl y'll have<lb/>
restaurants, and<lb/>
will in-<lb/>
the dr forces<lb/>
Killed<lb/>
Rev. william Wallace,<lb/>
president of the Chris-<lb/>
tian ction League, was<lb/>
unavailable lor com-<lb/>
ment. The League has<lb/>
been traditionally<lb/>
opposed to the sale of<lb/>
mixed beverages.<lb/>
RIGC VS<lb/>
SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
AND<lb/>
LEATHER SHOP<lb/>
New leather pocketbooks,<lb/>
holts, and belt buckles.<lb/>
Shoes repaired to look<lb/>
like new .<lb/>
Ill W. ith St.<lb/>
: 4fiNlKB 5<lb/>
Had a piece Lately?<lb/>
CHANELO'S PIZZA<lb/>
sandwiches spaghetti<lb/>
pizza lasagna<lb/>
BREAD AND PIZZA DOUGH<lb/>
MADE FRESH DAILY<lb/>
FAST FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
758-7400<lb/>
O<lb/>
FESTIVAL<lb/>
CO<lb/>
EVERY<lb/>
Flounder Dinner<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
Includes French Fries, Salad Bar,<lb/>
Tartar Sauces &amp; Hush Puppies.<lb/>
FRIDAY'S SPECIAL!<lb/>
MONEYS<lb/>
Located beside<lb/>
the Ramada Inn,<lb/>
264 By-pass.<lb/>
 ariel ol lei hniquey<lb/>
will be demonstrated.<lb/>
-Basic pottery. In this<lb/>
class, basic instruction<lb/>
i" wheel throwing and<lb/>
hand-building techniques<lb/>
will be taught, as will<lb/>
the glazing and tiring f<lb/>
i lu.<lb/>
Basic woodworking. In<lb/>
tin- workshop, vou will<lb/>
learn techniques with<lb/>
handtools. Instruction<lb/>
will include various con-<lb/>
struction proi esses, and<lb/>
the finishing and stain-<lb/>
ing ol wood.<lb/>
Kite making. This<lb/>
workshop will enable<lb/>
you to go flv a kite. <lb/>
genei al introdm 1 ion to<lb/>
the historv and types of<lb/>
kite- will be followed h<lb/>
methods ol kite- in-<lb/>
struction. ll in will<lb/>
iom Inde thi workshop.<lb/>
-Contemporar) basket<lb/>
ry. In this course, you<lb/>
will learn flow to make<lb/>
contemporar) baskets,<lb/>
bv usin a varietv of<lb/>
techiniques and mater-<lb/>
ials.<lb/>
Leather craft. Learn<lb/>
the method- of creating<lb/>
your own leather arti-<lb/>
cles, like belts, wallets<lb/>
and handbags.<lb/>
Interested persons<lb/>
should contai t Tana<lb/>
Noble- at the Crafts<lb/>
Center in Mendenhail<lb/>
lor more information.<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S Evans<lb/>
8-15, bomber, field,<lb/>
deck, flight, snorkel jackets<lb/>
Back Packs<lb/>
mirror-<lb/>
-Enameled<lb/>
Learn basic enameling<lb/>
method- to create mir-<lb/>
ror- with a varietv of<lb/>
designs.<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE REPAIR<lb/>
113 GRANDE AVE.<lb/>
at<lb/>
COLLEGE VIEW<lb/>
CLEANERS<lb/>
40th &amp; Evan Streets<lb/>
m0 1tOi Cm<lb/>
Schiifc Miller Stroh s $7.88<lb/>
II ler � � s .<lb/>
50 Lbs ice $2 75<lb/>
CW�fc�4HS<lb/>
IV,<lb/>
h<lb/>
TERRIES<lb/>
HAIR FACTORY<lb/>
Beauty Salon<lb/>
Pactolus Highway<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
758-7815<lb/>
OWNED AND OPERATED BY<lb/>
TERRY MOZINGO<lb/>
FORMERLY with La Kosmetlque<lb/>
SPECIAL ON PERMS $20.00 thru Feb. 15.<lb/>
Op�n Mon. thru Frl. 8:00 to 6:00pm.<lb/>
SKI SALE<lb/>
All ski glove poles, hoot carriers, ski toti<lb/>
thermal socks, goggles, &amp; liners 25 percent OFF<lb/>
Large Assortment Ski Jackets, bibs, sweaters,<lb/>
jumpsuits, turtlenecks &amp; tobaggons NOW �� OFF<lb/>
2U percent to 50 pen enl on all skis<lb/>
W percent OFF on boots bought separatel)<lb/>
or 50 percent OFF it bought in a i<lb/>
Car Racks i 1 OFF<lb/>
NVI ILLATION CHARGE FOR MOI TI<lb/>
ORTHOPEDIC TECHNICIAN WAILABLE<lb/>
IOCI STOM HI BOOTS<lb/>
Ml men slacks, lini d &amp;<lb/>
double cushion s I - �. ins .0K<lb/>
50 percent OFF on I- nnis<lb/>
Mi n - � omen's Etonit<lb/>
-hoe- wen S � u -<lb/>
812   ilsi n Dunloi !<lb/>
ritleisl goli balls.<lb/>
(witrtUm ft. I ulf,<lb/>
2 OFh<lb/>
V<lb/>
m.<lb/>
Rico Valentino<lb/>
"The Campus Locomotive"<lb/>
Major Romantic Languages. Always has a<lb/>
date wears iridescent slacks .from the<lb/>
wrong side ol the tracks, .been on "American<lb/>
Bandstand" still cruises local high school<lb/>
lor chicks.<lb/>
Robv Famsworlh Harrington III<lb/>
"Moneybags"<lb/>
Major: MicroMacro Economics. "Lack o<lb/>
mone is the root of all evil" . .chauffered to<lb/>
classes wears penm, loafers with dimes in<lb/>
em Math Cross luggage. . plans to start at<lb/>
the hp (of his lather s corporation).<lb/>
Class of 1962<lb/>
Xelda Woofenbite<lb/>
"Gums"<lb/>
Major: Libran Science. Watches "Queen For<lb/>
A Day" and cries, studies a lot alwas in<lb/>
curlers dependable. . . makes popcorn even<lb/>
Fridav and Saturda night . . uses nasal spra<lb/>
probabl will be "left on the shelf<lb/>
B.M.O.C.<lb/>
'He only had one thing on his mind"<lb/>
Bettina Putschnik<lb/>
"Pinky"<lb/>
Major: Art. Ban the Bomb. dresses in black<lb/>
recites blank verse poetr in coffee houses<lb/>
met one of the Limeltghters .can slip into<lb/>
a trance. . proud ol her Holden Caulfield type<lb/>
brother, wants a pad in the Village. . . bongo<lb/>
Idrums. . really hep<lb/>
g 1979 PABST BREWING COMPANY. Milwaukee. W.s andotherdt.es<lb/>
Tilton Sidewheys<lb/>
"Tilt"<lb/>
Major: Motel Management. Sings along with<lb/>
Mitchthe original clone wears white<lb/>
socks and ripple-soled shoes that squeak<lb/>
frequently "ditched even by parents . can<lb/>
burp the "Gettysburg Address" perma-<lb/>
nently out to lunch<lb/>
�SKfcz�, -<lb/>
Peaches N. Kreme<lb/>
"Hot Stuff<lb/>
Mann Elementary I .<lb/>
dnen snow . . pert st 1c <lb/>
knockout, especially in swt<lb/>
"�mature" men voted eai<lb/>
Princess<lb/>
Freud Ian Slipp<lb/>
bggy<lb/>
Major: Nuclear Physics ctuall I<lb/>
"I lysses wears coke bottle classes<lb/>
populat around exam time knows jht<lb/>
ence between "inductive" and<lb/>
reasoning turned Harvarddown<lb/>
V<lb/>
Jim Shoe<lb/>
Iwinky<lb/>
Major: PH .Interior Decorating A compiei<lb/>
person plays varsity everything an opera<lb/>
butt sometimes misunderstood "onci<lb/>
more, and I'll grind your face into the con-<lb/>
crete" sensitive. . favorite color: chartreuse<lb/>
 a neo-Renaissance Man<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057179_0004"/><lb/>
A free student press<lb/>
Freedom of the press is for<lb/>
everybody, and college administrations<lb/>
should do all they can to insure that<lb/>
student journalists are guaranteed<lb/>
their rights under the constitution.<lb/>
Unfortunately, these rights are not<lb/>
always guarded, either by the<lb/>
administration or the students.<lb/>
Too many college administrations<lb/>
fegard their student press as a branch<lb/>
of the univesity just like any other,<lb/>
and attempt, with frightening success,<lb/>
to tell the college editors what they<lb/>
rnay print or even force them to print<lb/>
stories about certain events or groups<lb/>
on campus. If direct coercion doesn't<lb/>
work, they threaten the paper with<lb/>
withdrawing financial support or the<lb/>
editor with expulsion or removal.<lb/>
No administration has any right,<lb/>
either legal or moral, to dictate<lb/>
editorial policy, news coverage, or the<lb/>
amount of space which must be<lb/>
devoted to a particular segment of<lb/>
campus. Those decisions are rightly<lb/>
placed in the hands of the newspaper<lb/>
staff. Sadly, recent court decisions<lb/>
have threatened these freedoms, but<lb/>
there is still a large body of<lb/>
supportive cases.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD experienced at-<lb/>
tempts at censopship during the early<lb/>
'70's, one of which resulted in the<lb/>
expulsion of editor Bob Thonen and a<lb/>
landmark court decision reinstating<lb/>
him. Many of the individuals<lb/>
involved in that affair are still around,<lb/>
and their attitudes about a free press<lb/>
have not changed. Their minds are<lb/>
rooted in antiquated authoritarian<lb/>
ideas. Those who do not learn from<lb/>
the past are destined to repeat it.<lb/>
Viewpoint<lb/>
ERA foes are misguided<lb/>
By DEIDRE DELAHLNTY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In the Tuesday News and Observer there was a<lb/>
cartoon of the sort that is insulting to women and<lb/>
infuriates them, be they feminists or not. The<lb/>
cartoon depicted dizzy empty-headed women as the<lb/>
ones who are blocking the ratification of the ERA.<lb/>
1 his is an erroneous assumption and a biased<lb/>
putdown from a supposedly enlightened source.<lb/>
Stupid women are not the ones who are so<lb/>
effectively blocking the passage of the ERA in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The opposition is composed of women who, after<lb/>
having thought about the issue, assume wrongly<lb/>
that the few rights they have now will be taken<lb/>
away from them. The other members of the<lb/>
oppostion are those North Carolinian legislators who<lb/>
believe they must protect "their" women.<lb/>
Women who oppose the ERA base their<lb/>
opposition on the idea that they will be forced to<lb/>
leave their roles as homemakers and find other<lb/>
jobs. They fear that they will lose their husband's<lb/>
financial support, as will their children. This is<lb/>
false.<lb/>
The ERA is a simply written amendment which<lb/>
states that "Equality of rights under the law shall<lb/>
not be denied or abridged by the United States or<lb/>
b) any state on account of sex The ERA applies<lb/>
to state and federally funded institutions, not to<lb/>
social personal relationships like families and<lb/>
marriage.<lb/>
The ERA will require that laws be written in<lb/>
sex-neutral language. Therefore support and alimony<lb/>
law- will be extended to men, not denied to<lb/>
women. Custody of children will not<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina community for over 50 years<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
DOUG WHITE<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGER<lb/>
ROBERT M. SWAIM<lb/>
NEWS EDITORSAssistant Advertising<lb/>
RICK 1 GLIARM IS MARC BARNESManager Terry Herndon<lb/>
Assistant News EditorsAdvertising Salesman<lb/>
Richy Smith Mike RogersPaul Lineke Chief Ad Artist<lb/>
TRENDS EDITORJane W ells<lb/>
JEFF ROLLINSProofreaders<lb/>
Assistant Trends EditorsOeidre Oelahunty<lb/>
Barry Clayton Bill JonesSue Johnson David Miller Typesetters<lb/>
SPORTS EDITORJeanett Coats-<lb/>
SAM ROGERS Assistant Sports Editor Charles ChandlerOebbie Hotaiing Cartoonists Sue Lamm Barry Clayton<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD Is the student<lb/>
newspaper ol East Carolina University<lb/>
sponsored by the Media Board ot<lb/>
ECU and is distributed each Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year (weekly during the summer).<lb/>
Editorial opinions are those of the<lb/>
Editorial Board and do not necessari-<lb/>
ly reflect the opinions of the<lb/>
university or the Media Board.<lb/>
Offices are located on the second<lb/>
door of the Publications Center (Old<lb/>
South Building). Our mailing<lb/>
address is: Old South Building,<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
The phone numbers are:<lb/>
757-6366 6367, 6309 Subscriptions<lb/>
are $10 annually, alumni $6 annually.<lb/>
automatically be given the mother, rather under the<lb/>
ERA, fathers will be given equal consideration when<lb/>
child custody is decided by the courts. The ERA<lb/>
will not force any woman to change her personal<lb/>
relationships, lose her husbands support, and in the<lb/>
case of divorce, men and women will be treated<lb/>
equally.<lb/>
In reality, the ERA will help to strengthen the<lb/>
family unit, especially those families who are<lb/>
suffering from economic strife. Almost 50 percent of<lb/>
the women in North Carolina work and many do<lb/>
so out of economic necessity. Over half of all the<lb/>
poor people in North Carolina are women.<lb/>
Those working and poor women should not be<lb/>
barred from higher paying, more technically skilled<lb/>
jobs simply on the basis of sex. The family unit is<lb/>
in all probability suffering now because the working<lb/>
women can not make enough money to effectively<lb/>
contribute to its support.<lb/>
Another facet of the opposition's argument is<lb/>
that women will no longer be protected by rape<lb/>
laws, and that they will have to share bathrooms<lb/>
and living quarters with men. This, too, is false.<lb/>
Rape laws will not be eliminated. They will,<lb/>
though, be rewritten so as to protect both genders<lb/>
from sexual assaults. This means more protection<lb/>
for men, not less for women.<lb/>
As for the toilet issue, the right to privacy has<lb/>
been covered by the Supreme Court. This right<lb/>
includes separate bathrooms and sleeping facilities<lb/>
where they are needed. Consequently, all dormitor-<lb/>
ies and bathrooms will not go co-ed with the<lb/>
ratification of the ERA.<lb/>
When it comes to the notion that women need<lb/>
to be "protected well, feminists find the idea<lb/>
repulsive. The concept of "protection" implies that<lb/>
women are not intelligent enough to protect<lb/>
themselves. So far, chivalrous minded men have<lb/>
"protected" women from equal educations, better<lb/>
jobs and their own property, to name just a few.<lb/>
This protection is misguided and unwanted.<lb/>
The ERA will go to the North Carolina Senate<lb/>
this week. At last report both sides had counted<lb/>
votes in their favor, and it appears that the vote<lb/>
will be a draw. If this is the case, Lt. Gov. Jimmy<lb/>
Green will be called on to cast the tie-breaking<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
Green does not support the ERA. He told<lb/>
reporters in Raleigh Tuesday that they did not have<lb/>
enough tape in their cassette players or enough<lb/>
time for him to list all the reasons for his<lb/>
opposition to ratification. That was not an<lb/>
illuminating answer to so important a question.<lb/>
Perhaps he, too, feels that the women of North<lb/>
Carolina need protection?<lb/>
Unfortunately, the North Carolina Legislature has<lb/>
continually made a poor show of support for women<lb/>
and their quest for equal rights. This lack of<lb/>
support may have a serious effect on the entire<lb/>
state. The National Organization for Women (NOW)<lb/>
has organized a boycott against those states that<lb/>
have refused to ratify the ERA. Organizations that<lb/>
support the ERA have rallied with NOW and refuse<lb/>
to hold their conventions in anti-ratification states.<lb/>
This boycott is so effective that Nevada and<lb/>
Missouri, anti-ratification states, have lost millions<lb/>
of dollars in convention revenues and are suing<lb/>
NOW under the Sherman Antitrust Act. Fortunat-<lb/>
ely, it is unlikely that these states will win their<lb/>
suit.<lb/>
Women of North Carolina need permanent and<lb/>
guaranteed equal rights under the law. They have<lb/>
been discriminated against under the guise of<lb/>
protection far too long. The North Carolina<lb/>
Legislature must ratify the ERA. Only then can<lb/>
North Carolina be considered a truly progressive<lb/>
state.<lb/>
yoo'fts? q ftee roAwtOo FM'tv Ties.<lb/>
ST�U- Yoo Go tf"�T flFT�t wo<lb/>
AMD THC TS�CS A� wrtSHCb, Tt�<lb/>
fuxHtS A SCftomSC � - - (StCM I) (fio&amp;T<lb/>
-gc Nice<lb/>
Loj-c BeVft.Iic<lb/>
LAeo�ssxce Ufcd<lb/>
 RecoJTLY, i feet asthou&amp;h<lb/>
TVr Going- Ho�t� Tb TMfi"<lb/>
HOOSe of FRANK�NST6lh.<lb/>
WVMMV<lb/>
o4 Just A<lb/>
pfttsrsja- TrfoMcmT<lb/>
Quft<lb/>
A referendum is needed<lb/>
The Greenville Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce must decide today whether<lb/>
or not to ask the County Commission-<lb/>
ers for a liquor by the drink<lb/>
referendum for Pitt County.<lb/>
We have expressed our support of<lb/>
the issue in several previous editori-<lb/>
als, and do not feel justified in<lb/>
repeating the same arguments.<lb/>
Suffice it to say that we hope the<lb/>
commissioners decide to hold a<lb/>
referendum, and that it will be held<lb/>
at a time when most students,<lb/>
faculty, and staff of ECU will be in<lb/>
the area. It would be wrong to<lb/>
schedule it when school is not in<lb/>
session, since that would be unfairly<lb/>
stacking the deck in the dry's favor.<lb/>
Uppity Women<lb/>
Medieval women were oppressed<lb/>
By CHARLENE CARTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Some historians divide early medieval society<lb/>
into three groups�those who fought, those who<lb/>
prayed, and those who worked. Women were<lb/>
regarded as unable to fight, they could not be<lb/>
priests, and only a very few were permitted to<lb/>
become nuns; the only occupation left for them was<lb/>
to work.<lb/>
A religious vocation for women was a<lb/>
troublesome consideration in the male-oriented early-<lb/>
Middle Ages. Many early female ascetics were<lb/>
forced to disguise themselves as men in order to<lb/>
pursue holy vocation.<lb/>
This changed as convents were founded, but few<lb/>
women ever had the opportunity to choose the<lb/>
religious way. Girls were expected to marry early<lb/>
(at age 13 or 14) and widows were expected to take<lb/>
new husbands. Convents were mainly a retreat for<lb/>
well-to-do women, the widows and daughters of<lb/>
great men. English subjects were warned that the<lb/>
spiriting away of a nun for marital purposes carred<lb/>
the death penalty.<lb/>
Toward the end of the 12th century, a religious<lb/>
group called the Premonstratensians refused to<lb/>
admit any more women to its holy order, the<lb/>
explanation being that recognizing that the<lb/>
wickedness of women is greater than all the other<lb/>
wickedness 0f the worldand that the poison of<lb/>
asps and dragons is more curable and less<lb/>
dangerous for men than the familiarity of women,<lb/>
(we) have unanimously decreed that for the safetv<lb/>
of our soulswe will on no account receive an<lb/>
more sistersbut will avoid them like poisonous<lb/>
animal<lb/>
One attack on the status quo which had survived<lb/>
the centuries was written by a woman named<lb/>
Christine de Pesan in the 15th century. She accused<lb/>
those, who attacked women, as being guilty of<lb/>
ingratitude. She asserted that while some women<lb/>
were bad, just as some men were bad, that it was<lb/>
poor logic to lump them all together into one group.<lb/>
She cited many virtuous women, and argued for the<lb/>
education of women.<lb/>
Childbirth was a women's function which was<lb/>
seen as having a dual purpose - that of glorifving<lb/>
womenkind while at the same time punishing ' her<lb/>
for original sin. The once-reputable occupation of<lb/>
midwife came under suspicion of the Church<lb/>
Suffering was not supposed to be relieved in a<lb/>
laboring woman, since it was the will of God.<lb/>
Midwives who administered herbs or otherwise<lb/>
attempted to ease labor often found themselves<lb/>
suspect of witchcraft. Women were urged to despise<lb/>
the midwms and to seek help onlv from<lb/>
Church-authorized male physicians and priest.<lb/>
exi1 WiU L�e the ,8St brief ht�rv.<lb/>
examining women in the Ancient World.<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Miller's Bee Gees review 'slanderous'<lb/>
To FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
I find it disturbing<lb/>
that your "Trends" re-<lb/>
viewers are so impu-<lb/>
dently negative on<lb/>
everything, even things<lb/>
that deserve such a<lb/>
cruel fate as being<lb/>
reviewed by FOUN-<lb/>
TAINHEAD. I have po-<lb/>
litely tolerated the<lb/>
pseudo-journalism ap-<lb/>
pearing in "Trends<lb/>
but now it's time to see<lb/>
justice done. The gro-<lb/>
tesque epitome of pess-<lb/>
imism and negativity<lb/>
came recently with a<lb/>
slander entitled: "Bee<lb/>
Gees release 'Maalox-<lb/>
flavored candy bar<lb/>
Spirits Having Flown<lb/>
is an exceptional album.<lb/>
It seems to me that a<lb/>
group that is able to<lb/>
push a recording to the<lb/>
number one position in<lb/>
ten days, surely can't<lb/>
be as unappealing as<lb/>
was insinuated. The Bee<lb/>
Gees are able to<lb/>
capture on record that<lb/>
little bit of magic that<lb/>
transcends the music<lb/>
itself. Their style is not<lb/>
dead.<lb/>
On the contrary, the<lb/>
style is truly unique<lb/>
and somewhat revolu-<lb/>
tionary. It creates a<lb/>
euphoria that does more<lb/>
for the listener than all<lb/>
the devices employed by<lb/>
the conventional rock<lb/>
group.<lb/>
It seems to be this<lb/>
very unique style that<lb/>
has misled the public in<lb/>
general. Even the<lb/>
"Trends" reviewer has<lb/>
fallen victim to this<lb/>
unfortunate propaganda<lb/>
syndrome. The Bee<lb/>
Gees might at first<lb/>
seem to be a "Teeny-<lb/>
bopper group but<lb/>
that's absolutely false.<lb/>
The musical enter-<lb/>
tainment they provide is<lb/>
for everyone, not just<lb/>
developing twelve year<lb/>
old girls who derive<lb/>
orgasmic pleasure from<lb/>
looking at photographs<lb/>
of the newest fawn idol.<lb/>
Be reminded that in<lb/>
1964, a group emerged<lb/>
that was labeled strictlv<lb/>
for the younger children<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Today, the Beatles are<lb/>
respected by all tvpes<lb/>
of music listeners.<lb/>
One final comment:<lb/>
whoever bought the<lb/>
record album for $8.98<lb/>
must have been on<lb/>
cocaine at the time. Mv i<lb/>
C�P only cost $5.99 at<lb/>
Record Bar.<lb/>
S. Maurice Jones<lb/>
V<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057179_0005"/><lb/>
15 February 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Christopher Parkening<lb/>
5<lb/>
(<lb/>
Guitarist appears<lb/>
T Parkeninu  k c- . . . . <lb/>
L I 1 k.<lb/>
as<lb/>
ar<lb/>
dor<lb/>
'hr darkening, who first<lb/>
attention when still m his<lb/>
America's leading virtuoso oi<lb/>
vndres Segovia, the<lb/>
ha- declared:<lb/>
ftisfone of the<lb/>
commanded<lb/>
teens, now<lb/>
the classical<lb/>
master guitarist of the<lb/>
'Christopher Parkening is a<lb/>
most brilliant guitarists in<lb/>
I ne reasons tor Segovia's enthusiastic<lb/>
emen� ill be very much<lb/>
mar 20th. Parke<lb/>
He<lb/>
�mug i<lb/>
in<lb/>
cheduled<lb/>
' Hendrix Theatre under the aegis of the Studen<lb/>
��on Artists Series. The artist's tour this seaso.<lb/>
under<lb/>
nent.<lb/>
season<lb/>
the direction<lb/>
Park<lb/>
of<lb/>
evidence on<lb/>
to appear at<lb/>
t<lb/>
season<lb/>
Columbia Artists<lb/>
He is<lb/>
many<lb/>
outstanding<lb/>
enmg is playing on the<lb/>
"i many universities and colleges.<lb/>
� with students that he has had<lb/>
ments with most of tht<lb/>
- ol higher learning.<lb/>
first European tour he made debuts in<lb/>
Oxford, Cambridge, Paris, Amsterdam and<lb/>
na. Twice he has toured Japan and visited<lb/>
 aka and othe<lb/>
1 a 11 k <lb/>
H<lb/>
mu<lb/>
Un In-<lb/>
n,<lb/>
Japan<lb/>
�r cities.<lb/>
Iond, young artist is California-born.<lb/>
k up the guitar at age eleven, motivated by<lb/>
the playing of his cousin, American<lb/>
first<lb/>
guitarists,<lb/>
i leledonii<lb/>
I'Ulpn<lb/>
w ere<lb/>
and<lb/>
�er<lb/>
Jack Marsh:<lb/>
lack Marshall. Parkening'<lb/>
he Spanish concert<lb/>
i.<lb/>
his<lb/>
atta<lb/>
i<lb/>
� n-<lb/>
Judges inc<lb/>
Mar, Cast<lb/>
guitari<lb/>
Pepe Romero. From the beginning<lb/>
manifested the phenomenal affinity for his<lb/>
instrument that characterize- the virtuoso-to-be,<lb/>
working voluntarily with his guitar and with<lb/>
untiring enthusiasm fur many hours each dav.<lb/>
Vfter the first year of ?tud, Parkening gave his<lb/>
tirst recital. His program ot Bach, Scarlatti and<lb/>
Ubeniz prompted a critic to exclaim, "Although<lb/>
twelve, he ha- a musical feeling, a command<lb/>
instrument, and a self-assurance seldom<lb/>
by most adult musicians<lb/>
?urteen he entered the annual state-wide<lb/>
ol the Young Musicians Foundation.<lb/>
'uded Jascha Heifetz, Gregor Piatigorsky,<lb/>
'Inuovo-Tedesco and others. The Founda-<lb/>
t hat time ottered no category in which<lb/>
t- could compete; but so impressed were the<lb/>
 - with Parkening's virtuosity that he was<lb/>
duled as a special "out-of-competition" perlor-<lb/>
His excellence in the Bach Chaconne was the<lb/>
si nsation ol the auditions. It won for him the<lb/>
interest and respect of many celebrated, older<lb/>
musicians present.<lb/>
In particular the auditions were the beginning ot<lb/>
a warm friendship vviTh" Mario �astehnrrovoTetrero<lb/>
It was this composer's Concerto in D with which<lb/>
Parkening made his formal concert debut under<lb/>
auspices ol the Young Musicians Foundation of Los<lb/>
ngeles. This acclaimed appearance led at once to<lb/>
engagements with the Los Angeles Philharmonic<lb/>
Orchestra, the Pasadena Symphony Orchestra and<lb/>
numerous other orchestras in Southern California.<lb/>
W ith Utter- from Castelnuovo-Tedesco and cellist<lb/>
ph Schuster, and a tape of his performance of<lb/>
the Concerto in D as his credentials, Parkening was<lb/>
accepted as a scholarship student by Andres Segovia<lb/>
in a Master Class at the University of California at<lb/>
Berkeley. Segovia chose him from three hundred<lb/>
students present to perform daily before the class,<lb/>
and later selected him as soloist when the Master<lb/>
Class was televised nationally.<lb/>
In January 1966 the artist gave the world<lb/>
premiere of the Second Concerto in C for Guitar<lb/>
and Orchestra by Castelnuovo-Tedesco. Walter Arlen<lb/>
of the Los Angeles Times wrote: "It is music by a<lb/>
irtuoso for a virtuoso suggesting that other<lb/>
virtuoso, Segovia It was in this period that<lb/>
Parkening took up academic and musical studies at<lb/>
the University of Southern California; and he again<lb/>
attended on full scholarship a Segovia Master<lb/>
Classthis time at the Winston Salem, North<lb/>
Carolina School of the Arts.<lb/>
In July 1968 Parkening was named one of the<lb/>
outstanding young artists of the year by High<lb/>
Fidelity Magazine. The following September he<lb/>
signed with Columbia Artists Management for his<lb/>
first concert tour of the United States and Canada.<lb/>
The artist's international celebrity has been<lb/>
greatlv increased by five stunning recordings for<lb/>
Angel Records. "In the Classic Style" and "In the<lb/>
Spanish Style" were released in November 1968.<lb/>
There followed "Romanza" and "Parkening Plays<lb/>
Bach For the latter the artist did his own<lb/>
transcriptions. This recording joined the list of<lb/>
best-selling classical recordings throughout the<lb/>
United States and maintained its high position for<lb/>
many weeks. In the fall of 1974, saluting the artist<lb/>
a- a best seller, Angel issued another disc, "The<lb/>
Christopher Parkening Album" which features<lb/>
the most outstanding selections from earlier albums.<lb/>
Angel's newest recording is an album of Baroque<lb/>
and French Impressionist music by Handel,<lb/>
Couperin, Scarlatti, Weiss, Visee, Ravel, Debussy,<lb/>
Satie and Poulenc. The disc, titled "Parkening and<lb/>
the Guitar" was distributed in November 1976.<lb/>
In the autumn of 1968 Parkening was invited by<lb/>
Segovia to serve with him on the judges' panel at<lb/>
the International Guitar Competition in Santiago de<lb/>
Compostela, Spain. At Segovia's request he gave<lb/>
two concerts and at each the great maestro<lb/>
personally presented him to the Spanish audiences.<lb/>
The-e performances won Parkening an ovation from<lb/>
both audience and press, and the competition<lb/>
concluded with an extraordinary turn of events: the<lb/>
young American judge was awarded a silver plaque<lb/>
-kml�oTrTeT�trrjnors- the Spaniards' ' vvuuld -hare-1<lb/>
conferred only upon their first-prize winning<lb/>
contestants!<lb/>
Recent concert seasons have found Christopher<lb/>
Parkening on lengthy tours: in addition to the<lb/>
nation's concert halls, his engagements include<lb/>
re-engagements on college and university recital<lb/>
series where he has an especially warm rapport<lb/>
with audiences. In recent seasons he has been<lb/>
-oloist with the New York Philharmonic, Mnnesota<lb/>
Christopher Parkening<lb/>
Orchestra, Milwaukee Symphony, and was featured<lb/>
on television with the Boston Pops Orchestra,<lb/>
Arthur Fiedler conducting. He made his New York<lb/>
recital debut in the handsome Alice Tully Hall at<lb/>
Lincoln Center on November 2, 1972 and returned<lb/>
to the same hall on February 23, 1974. Both events<lb/>
were -old out occasions for enthusiastic audiences<lb/>
and major critics.<lb/>
In August and September 1972 Parkening<lb/>
completed his first tour of principal cities of Japan<lb/>
where his recordings are extremely popular; he has<lb/>
been principal soloist at that country's first Rodrigo<lb/>
Festival which honors the composer who has done<lb/>
so much for the guitar.<lb/>
Christopher Parkening is the author of "The<lb/>
Christopher Parkening Guitar Method, Volume I"<lb/>
which was published by Sherrv-Brener Ltd. of<lb/>
"Chicago. Devoted to basic techniques of guitar<lb/>
playing, the book presents the artist's perrial<lb/>
approach after his years of study, playing, and<lb/>
teaching. The initial printing was 30,000 copies.<lb/>
"The Parkening Method wa- written so that it can<lb/>
be used either in a classroom or -tudent-teacher<lb/>
situation, or bv an individual student attempting to<lb/>
studv alone. It has already been adopted by<lb/>
conservatories and schools of music across the<lb/>
countrv as official text for their guitar departments.<lb/>
The Method B,�,k i- i '� its second printing.<lb/>
Lik. Segovia .niic  .ire tht preponderance of<lb/>
great musicians the world over-Parkening recognizes<lb/>
the obligation of the accomplished instrumentalist U<lb/>
pass along the heritage of knowledge to younge<lb/>
musicians. For several years he occupied the thai<lb/>
of Head of the Guitar Department and was full-time<lb/>
instructor in guitar for the University oi Southern<lb/>
California School ol Music,He now makes his home<lb/>
in Montana where he plan- to continue hi<lb/>
teaching. During the summers ol 175 and 176 he<lb/>
taught two series of Master Clae- at Montana<lb/>
State University in Bozeman. He is now the head ot<lb/>
their Guitar Department.<lb/>
During the last two years Christopher Parkening<lb/>
has limited hi- touring each concert season so that<lb/>
he can fulfill hi- expanding recording and teaching<lb/>
t ommitments.<lb/>
Critical acclaim for Parkening artistry has<lb/>
appeared in newspapers aero America, including<lb/>
such major publications a- The New lork Times.<lb/>
the Boston Globe and the San Francisco Chronicle.<lb/>
Parkening frequently visits his parents who live<lb/>
in the beautitul wilderness area ol Idaho. He is an<lb/>
accomplished fly-fisherman and horseman. He also<lb/>
enjoys Scuba diving and skiing.<lb/>
Richard Pryor's comedie style shines in Blue Collar<lb/>
FROM LEFT TO right. Yaphet Kotto, Richard Pryor<lb/>
and Harvev keitel. who protray auto workers in<lb/>
I niversals Blue Collar hold the evidence of<lb/>
corruption they intend to use to blackmail their<lb/>
union.<lb/>
Blue Collar 1<lb/>
is a contemporary drama, laced with moments ot<lb/>
hilarity, about three ordinary men-two blacks and<lb/>
one white-whose impulsive decision to rob their<lb/>
own union results in tragic consequences for each of<lb/>
them.<lb/>
It is also someting of an anomaly among<lb/>
American movies todaya personal film that was<lb/>
hand-tailored rather than "packaged" for major<lb/>
studio, distribution.<lb/>
The latter is far more customary. At its simplest<lb/>
it involves obtaining a "property" (play, story,<lb/>
screenplay), getting a star or two and a director (or<lb/>
sometimes, a super-tar director and then the actors)<lb/>
to agree to make it, developing a budget, then<lb/>
presenting the project to a studio for financing, with<lb/>
the packager serving as producer.<lb/>
When Paul Schrader started fashioning, the script<lb/>
for Blue Collar from source material suggested<lb/>
by writer and former auto assembly-line worker<lb/>
Svdnev A. Glass, he knew that he would have some<lb/>
difficulty in selling it to a major -tudio.<lb/>
lthough his s recounting credits included Taxi<lb/>
Driver Theiakuzu . Obsession Roiling<lb/>
Ihundcr and olhei -old but not yet filmed, the<lb/>
.�v�-ial! tone of Blue Collar would be darkand<lb/>
�' t ' e riskv at a time when upbeat films like<lb/>
Rocky were commanding the industry's attention.<lb/>
VI-o, he wanted to use the story to make his<lb/>
directorial debuta second handicap. It would be<lb/>
nece-ary to make the project more attractive.<lb/>
Even as he and his elder brother, Leonard-with<lb/>
whom he had collaborated on The lakuza as well<lb/>
as on a new work, Old Boyfriends began to<lb/>
co-write the screenplay, he touched bases simultan-<lb/>
eously with Richard Pryor and Harvey Keitel; at<lb/>
least one of his major characters had to be<lb/>
blackbecause American cars he noted, "are<lb/>
made primarily by black people On the other<lb/>
hand, he wanted to make a "worker film where the<lb/>
economic issue was more significant than the racial<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Pryor had increasingly begun to include some<lb/>
dramatic elements in hi- film work, having jut<lb/>
completed Which Way is I p' free adaptation<lb/>
of Lina W ertn.ueUer's The Seduction of Mimi . in<lb/>
which h portrayed a beleagie d ii.it picker, and<lb/>
Greased Lightning the story ��! tamed black stock<lb/>
car racer W endell Nt�<lb/>
Blue Collar negan filming May l�. I77 at<lb/>
the Checker plant in kuiaiiiuoo. Mn � r n. with<lb/>
Bobby Byrne as director of photography. Byrne, a<lb/>
protege and operator at various time- tor tioth<lb/>
William Fraker ami Las.lo Kovacs, has been a great<lb/>
aid to two othei 'iret.ir- m.lkill. '� �.(<lb/>
Him- Hal Need! ,m I "Mnokcy and the Bandit , al�j<lb/>
Joan  frit; Hrt Love lie ai-o photograf-h�tl<lb/>
The laid for Bun Kevnoid<lb/>
Patterson's Emily is 4a warm and moving story'<lb/>
Bv SUE ELLEN<lb/>
McLEOD<lb/>
Staff W riter<lb/>
Thnma- Patterson's<lb/>
play. Kmilv which deals<lb/>
with tnc 'life of Emily<lb/>
Dickinson, presents a<lb/>
warm and moving story<lb/>
of the love which grows<lb/>
between a brother and<lb/>
sister. Patterson weaves<lb/>
the playful happiness<lb/>
and closeness of chil-<lb/>
dren into a love that<lb/>
grows with maturity.<lb/>
The incestuous at-<lb/>
tachment which devel-<lb/>
ops is believable be-<lb/>
cause it blossoms nat-<lb/>
urally. The sorrow crea-<lb/>
ted for Emily and her<lb/>
brother is touching and<lb/>
real. Patterson's script<lb/>
involves a running reci-<lb/>
tation of Emily's poetry<lb/>
in juxtaposition with<lb/>
specific events which<lb/>
happened in her youth,<lb/>
events which center<lb/>
around her relationship<lb/>
with her brother,<lb/>
Austin.<lb/>
Whether or not Pat-<lb/>
terson's interpretation is<lb/>
factual is the concern of<lb/>
scholars of Emily<lb/>
Dickinson. The play it-<lb/>
self, however, unfolds<lb/>
like a flower, blooming<lb/>
and fading. It is moving<lb/>
and well written.<lb/>
Remarkably fine per-<lb/>
formances are delivered<lb/>
by Paige Weaver as<lb/>
Emily Dickinson, the<lb/>
youth, and Frank<lb/>
Altschuler as Austin<lb/>
Dickinson, the youth.<lb/>
The ease and sincerity<lb/>
their combined effort<lb/>
achieves firmly estab-<lb/>
lished the growing force<lb/>
between the two char-<lb/>
fully to<lb/>
poignant<lb/>
character<lb/>
acters.<lb/>
Paige Weaver is<lb/>
delightful as a young<lb/>
girl and manages art-<lb/>
retain the<lb/>
and vibrant<lb/>
of Emily as<lb/>
she matures. Frank<lb/>
Altschuler renders a<lb/>
sincere portrayal of<lb/>
Austin Dickinson. He is<lb/>
alive and caring yet still<lb/>
principled and, there-<lb/>
fore, troubled.<lb/>
Franklin<lb/>
Ann Franklin as<lb/>
Emily, the poet, has a<lb/>
difficult role as she is<lb/>
constantly reciting the<lb/>
poetry which reveals<lb/>
what she inwardly con-<lb/>
ceals. She manages to<lb/>
sustain momentum thr-<lb/>
oughout, but at times<lb/>
has trouble maintaining<lb/>
spontaneity.<lb/>
Edward Haynes' set<lb/>
is a fluid movement of<lb/>
versatility and depth.<lb/>
Sheer transparencies<lb/>
both separate and blend<lb/>
the past and the<lb/>
present, aiding the<lb/>
shifts in time which<lb/>
occur throughout the<lb/>
play. The lighting, de-<lb/>
signed by David F.<lb/>
Downing, is excellently<lb/>
subtle and stark. The<lb/>
subtle shades of dusk<lb/>
and dawn create shifts<lb/>
in time and the stark<lb/>
blazing white intensifies<lb/>
emotion. A particularly<lb/>
dramatic scene finds<lb/>
Emily, the poet encir-<lb/>
cled by a brilliant shaft<lb/>
of light which beams<lb/>
brighter as she watches<lb/>
her younger self mount<lb/>
the stairs to her<lb/>
brother, Austin.<lb/>
Directed by Edgar<lb/>
R. Loessin, Emily is<lb/>
captivating and intrigu-<lb/>
ing. Loessin presents<lb/>
scenes from the past<lb/>
under Emily's watchful,<lb/>
remembering eyes, cre-<lb/>
ating a past that lives<lb/>
both for Emily, the<lb/>
poet, and the audience.<lb/>
His use of nudity<lb/>
when the ghost of<lb/>
Emily's brother as a<lb/>
youth appears to her<lb/>
works well, but one<lb/>
wonders if the reason is<lb/>
the nudity or the mom-<lb/>
ent created by compe-<lb/>
tent actors.<lb/>
The Drama Depart-<lb/>
ment's production of<lb/>
Emily is inspired and<lb/>
moving. The play runs<lb/>
through Saturday night<lb/>
in Studio Theatre and is<lb/>
a production well worth<lb/>
seeing.<lb/>
Edgar Loessin<lb/>
"� -m ?<lb/>
� -<lb/>
-����n mi nm imi,niiii,wii,M�mam<lb/>
<pb facs="00057179_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 February 1979<lb/>
Buckminster Fuller answers questions<lb/>
By BARRY CLAYTON<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
This is the second installment in a two-part<lb/>
interview with Buckminster Fuller.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"1 don't mean to infer that being an optimist<lb/>
precludes being a realist<lb/>
Fuller:<lb/>
"I'm not an optimist. I'm a hard realist, and I<lb/>
gave you some factual information about an opt<lb/>
you didn't know you had. I can show you that<lb/>
evolution is trying to make us a success<lb/>
Ft) I NTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"I guess I'm going for a particular idea. Do you<lb/>
believe that Man has the capacity to solve<lb/>
Ku lu-<lb/>
ll Ull.<lb/>
"Do you think that the human race will be able<lb/>
to solve any technical problem that it encounters?"<lb/>
Fuller:<lb/>
"I've got it all spelled out. It can be done in<lb/>
engineering; it's clear. It's highly feasible. I know<lb/>
just what I'm talking about. And all you have to do<lb/>
Synergetics<lb/>
i- look at any of the 200,000 buldings built from my<lb/>
d ' I've got many other things including a map<lb/>
laid i! so that you can see Earth like that totally<lb/>
visible and not kill yourself with all that nonsense.<lb/>
Go back to Synergetics. That's 780 pages. I've got<lb/>
Volume Two just being finished now. That's another<lb/>
800. All on Aegis' coordinate system. All<lb/>
conceptual. It can be understood by any child. Any<lb/>
child can do nuclear physics<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"Not this child. I can't even handle<lb/>
calculus<lb/>
nature's not using, that they teach you but which<lb/>
doesn't work. They teach you in geometry that<lb/>
many lines go through the same point at the same<lb/>
time. Physics finds that they can't, and trying is an<lb/>
event. You have an interference and you have a<lb/>
refraction, smash-up, deflection. All the things of<lb/>
reality come out of the fact that lines can't go<lb/>
through the same point at the same time. So they<lb/>
teach you straight-line physics where there aren't<lb/>
any ways. They teach you solids, and no solids. Our<lb/>
whole education system is completely misinforming.<lb/>
1 admit it's a shocking thing but it's true, when<lb/>
� "U really go out and get your own factual<lb/>
information.You don't have to call it mathematics if<lb/>
you enjoy the way a butterfly flies. That's the<lb/>
mathematics, really. Realize that that's exactly the<lb/>
point and try to find out more about it<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"You've received a fantastic number of honorary<lb/>
degrees over the years. In the information I've<lb/>
seen, it is fully twenty-nine honorary degrees<lb/>
"That's fantastic.<lb/>
Fuller<lb/>
'Human' instead of 'Man No woman,<lb/>
no<lb/>
FOl MAIN HEAD:<lb/>
Fuller:<lb/>
FullerIt's forty-one<lb/>
You vebeengiventhismathematicsthatFOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
They're in science, art, everything.<lb/>
Poetry<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"Didn't I see something about a degree in<lb/>
poetry as well?"<lb/>
J have the Harvard Chair in Poetry. The Carles<lb/>
Lind Chair in Poetry. It's only given for one year.<lb/>
That's the greatest honor Harvard gives.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD:<lb/>
"Do you write as well? Poetry?"<lb/>
Fuller:<lb/>
"I have eighteen books. A lot of people call<lb/>
them poetry<lb/>
With this we concluded the interview, and Mr.<lb/>
Bream returned to escort Dr. Fuller to his motel<lb/>
where (doubtlessly)he could rest in more comfort.<lb/>
Carolyn Wyeth steps into public view<lb/>
U CHRIS ROBERTS<lb/>
Vssociated Press Writer<lb/>
CHADDS FORD. Pa.<lb/>
P Carolyn Wyeth, the<lb/>
use n! America's<lb/>
famous clan of<lb/>
artist is stepping from<lb/>
the liadows.<lb/>
-If I didn't have a<lb/>
I heart I'd go out<lb/>
and gel drunk as hell<lb/>
sty 69-year-old<lb/>
the exhibit of<lb/>
work that opens<lb/>
lay a stone's<lb/>
�m the weather-<lb/>
use that has<lb/>
her lifelong home.<lb/>
house was built<lb/>
Hobbit<lb/>
appears at<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
Thi- weekend, the<lb/>
ent Union Coffee-<lb/>
Committee will<lb/>
open its -Ting semester<lb/>
 rogramming with the<lb/>
Mountain String<lb/>
: and Hobbit.<lb/>
Both attraction- will<lb/>
perform on Fri. and<lb/>
Sat. Fob. 16 and 17, in<lb/>
15. Mendenhall.<lb/>
Admission is 50 cents.<lb/>
! hne -how will begin at<lb/>
(' p.m and will be<lb/>
followed b a 10 p.m.<lb/>
performance bv the<lb/>
other act.<lb/>
Coffeehouse auditions<lb/>
have also been sched-<lb/>
ule.i for Fri. and Sat<lb/>
Feb. 23 and 24, at 9<lb/>
p.m. in the Coffee-<lb/>
house. dmission is<lb/>
free.<lb/>
Both the Bassett<lb/>
Mountain String Band<lb/>
and Hobbit feature ECU<lb/>
students. The String<lb/>
Band feature- Chris<lb/>
Tacher and Nelson<lb/>
Jarvis, while Hobbit is<lb/>
better known as Karen<lb/>
W einberg, an ECU<lb/>
voice major.<lb/>
Both acts performed<lb/>
in the Coffeehouse last<lb/>
semester to an enthusi-<lb/>
astic audience.<lb/>
Hobbil ings acoustic<lb/>
blues and folk songs<lb/>
with a beautiful, wide-<lb/>
ranging voice and<lb/>
sensitive guitar playing.<lb/>
Her style is -imilar to<lb/>
early Join Mitchell or<lb/>
Joan Armatrading.<lb/>
The String Band is a<lb/>
no-nonsense bluegrass<lb/>
outfit that never fails to<lb/>
bring the audience to<lb/>
it- feet. One of the<lb/>
highlights of last<lb/>
semester's show was an<lb/>
audience participation<lb/>
-quare dance.<lb/>
As always, free<lb/>
refreshments will be<lb/>
served to complement<lb/>
the evening's program.<lb/>
for her father, the late<lb/>
illustrator N.C. Wyeth,<lb/>
and was the birthplace<lb/>
of her brother, Andrew,<lb/>
one of the nation's most<lb/>
celebrated artists. Her<lb/>
nephew, Jamie, a noted<lb/>
portraitist, lives nearby.<lb/>
"It isn't a myth I'm<lb/>
a recluse. It the<lb/>
truth she said in a<lb/>
rare interview thi-<lb/>
week. The exhibit, the<lb/>
largest ever of her<lb/>
paintings, will feature<lb/>
53 of her about 100<lb/>
work Her paintings<lb/>
she average- two or<lb/>
three a year�are brood-<lb/>
ing, often -tark. captur-<lb/>
ing the browns and<lb/>
green- of the earth she<lb/>
explores with her ani-<lb/>
mals.<lb/>
"The lame of the<lb/>
others? It hasn't made<lb/>
me jealous Miss<lb/>
Wyeth -aid, sitting in a<lb/>
laded burgundy and<lb/>
gold wing chair, smok-<lb/>
ing constantly. "I don't<lb/>
like i! myself. I hate<lb/>
tame A- -he -poke,<lb/>
sunlight -plashed<lb/>
through the deep-silled<lb/>
window- of the red<lb/>
brick and white clap-<lb/>
hoard house perched<lb/>
high on a hill. N.C.<lb/>
Wveth built the house<lb/>
with money<lb/>
illustrating<lb/>
in 1911<lb/>
earned<lb/>
"Treasure Island<lb/>
The room, the one<lb/>
in which Andrew Wyeth<lb/>
was born, is filled with<lb/>
books�among them<lb/>
"Kidnapped" by Robert<lb/>
Louis Stevenson and<lb/>
"The Mysterious Island"<lb/>
b Jules Verne, both<lb/>
illustrated by N.C. A<lb/>
portrait of the family<lb/>
patriarch, who died in a<lb/>
ear-train accident in<lb/>
1945, i- on the mantel.<lb/>
"He was a wonder-<lb/>
ful teacher Miss<lb/>
 yeth said of her<lb/>
lather. "I had 19 years<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
'JANICE'<lb/>
Mon. Feb. 19,1979<lb/>
Showtime 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Advance tickets $4<lb/>
At the door (if available$6<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
CHAPTER X at 752 9745<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
CoSfehouse<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
presents<lb/>
The Bassett Mt.<lb/>
String Band<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Hobbit<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat Feb. 16 &amp; 17, at<lb/>
9 &amp;IO p.m.<lb/>
Room is, Mendenhall<lb/>
ADMISSION SO cents<lb/>
As usual,<lb/>
plenty of FREE refreshments<lb/>
the wonderful, sweet-<lb/>
living, Santa Claus-<lb/>
loving family everyone<lb/>
believes. Now, I'm giv-<lb/>
ing the other side,the<lb/>
real thing<lb/>
Exhibit<lb/>
The exhibit, entitled<lb/>
"Carolyn Wyeth, Ar-<lb/>
tist will be at the<lb/>
Brandvwine River<lb/>
Museum in Chadds<lb/>
Ford until May 20.<lb/>
with him starting when<lb/>
I was 11, hut we didn't<lb/>
get along, and it's a<lb/>
shame because we loved<lb/>
the same things, the<lb/>
trees, the vegetable gar-<lb/>
den. We could have<lb/>
had such a good time<lb/>
together<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
SPECIALS<lb/>
b Howdy ECU Students "<lb/>
Clip this coupon for<lb/>
good Western Eatin<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
R BAR BURGER<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
MEDIUM DRINK<lb/>
$1.60<lb/>
offer good 'til 3-10-79<lb/>
B��nBPooaoaaBPBBoaeaoBBOOOBB � o co '<lb/>
���iT���, ,�n i.i<lb/>
20 of your Favorite Steaks<lb/>
Choice Tender, USDA<lb/>
Meat-Cat Fresh Daily<lb/>
BIG, BIG POTATOES<lb/>
33 ITEM SALAD BAR<lb/>
SECOND TO 0.E<lb/>
MOM DIGH<lb/>
We brought<lb/>
Mom to ECU<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY ANNOUNCES<lb/>
POSITION OPENING FOR<lb/>
VICE CHANCELLOR FOR ACADEMIC AFFAIRS<lb/>
East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, invites annlir<lb/>
tions or nominations for the position of Academic Vice Chancellor The<lb/>
beginning date is open for filling this position. "ceiior. The<lb/>
East Carolina is a comprehensive institution, of ferine undergraduate<lb/>
and graduate programs in eleven schools, including the MedicS School<lb/>
Over 12,000 students attend the main campus, apoximtely 22 000 nei'o c<lb/>
are enrolled in continuing education, and about 1 SfgraLate sLdensr<lb/>
enrolled Doctoral programs are offered in specialized disciDlinef L<lb/>
graduate degrees are offered in 105 areas, and graduate degrees in 7lL.<lb/>
The main campus consists of 84 major buildings located on K! a-�<lb/>
Schools or departments operate through their code? w the olJFL-<lb/>
the chief executive officer of the University. Chancellor being<lb/>
The Academic Vice Chancellor is the chief academic officer � �<lb/>
directly to the Chancellor, and is responsible for the aSS' I"8<lb/>
the academic programs of the institution. nisiration of<lb/>
It is expected that the successful applicant will nn�P� <lb/>
doctorate (Ph.D. preferred), be capable ofVing tenured a f�l n�f<lb/>
in an appropriate discipline in terms of demonstrated teaSin Passer<lb/>
skills, have prior administrative experience in m Academic sneM<lb/>
to exercise creative leadership, have ability to give leadership'able<lb/>
to meet the challenges of the future, appreciate ti�diverstv If Pj"�Wg<lb/>
and professional disciplines, be restive to faculty�ro?e K<lb/>
University have ability to articulate the academic program! to th , <lb/>
constituencies of the University, and possess ability Smage budgets!0US<lb/>
subnu�ed1foe2,P?179i0arldSmusef gfita E �t be '<lb/>
vitae, and other sch material's S �<lb/>
and (X&amp;tKMdc Sfaarh8' �"�<lb/>
Carolina University, Greenville, N. C. 27834 Coimuttee, East<lb/>
� j,Carolina University is a constituent<lb/>
if � S �f the "��' of North Carolina<lb/>
An Equal OpportunityAffirmative Action<lb/>
Employ<lb/>
er.<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057179_0007"/><lb/>
 �r 0<lb/>
?" r r r � f r r r<lb/>
�v<lb/>
15 February 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
Ereertirows u-4 78- 70 win<lb/>
Pirates down inspired UNC-W<lb/>
B AM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
WILMINGTON .<lb/>
mticipated this one<lb/>
ighi in Trask Cotis<lb/>
1 Wilmington had long<lb/>
It was homecoming Tuesday<lb/>
seum and the raucous Seahawk<lb/>
nad some tend<lb/>
� 90-85 loss here<lb/>
Vnd until just less<lb/>
appeared UNC-U<lb/>
memories of last season'<lb/>
th<lb/>
"Tin<lb/>
bul the<lb/>
at the<lb/>
Gillman<lb/>
the first<lb/>
step<lb/>
lot<lb/>
to<lb/>
zone's shone<lb/>
-witch to the<lb/>
end when we<lb/>
year,<lb/>
there<lb/>
us a lot of good this<lb/>
man-to-man helped us<lb/>
were holding the ball<lb/>
said. "I thought we did a fairly good job in<lb/>
halt defensively. We just seemed to be a<lb/>
behind them. But in the second half we put a<lb/>
which reallv seemed<lb/>
an<lb/>
six minutes remaining,<lb/>
ilmington might just pull this<lb/>
of pressure on their guards<lb/>
ic a big difference for us.<lb/>
exchanged hands<lb/>
wever, an effective<lb/>
lutch free throw<lb/>
�s lifted ECU<lb/>
delay game by the Pirates<lb/>
shooting in the last five<lb/>
past the inspired Seahawks<lb/>
seven times in the<lb/>
Hobson canned a 15 footer<lb/>
i) give the Bucs a 63-62<lb/>
! his has got ti<lb/>
I'm undefeated<lb/>
after the<lb/>
?ise thert<lb/>
lol more ;<lb/>
fortunate to win<lb/>
gh place to play, in<lb/>
be one of the few gyms around<lb/>
in Pirate coach Larry Gillman<lb/>
"We handled ourselves with a<lb/>
in the last five minutes and<lb/>
iggressive in the second half. We<lb/>
tonight. This is certainly<lb/>
The lea<lb/>
second hall until Frank<lb/>
with 5:50 remaining I<lb/>
advantage. The Pirates never trailed after that<lb/>
Alter a nifty three point day by Oliver<lb/>
long juniper by George Maynor with<lb/>
went into their delay game.<lb/>
David Underwood,<lb/>
a<lb/>
Mark<lb/>
4:36,<lb/>
trailing by live points, 36-31, at the half.<lb/>
s abandoned their 1-2-2 zone defense and<lb/>
nctlv man-to-man the rest of the way. Th<lb/>
kept UNC- ilmington off th<lb/>
second half and also hurt<lb/>
e<lb/>
e backboards in<lb/>
its outside shooting.<lb/>
and<lb/>
the Pirate- then<lb/>
Ma nor. Mack and forward<lb/>
who gunned in a career high 22 points, all canned<lb/>
a pair ol three throws during the last two minutes<lb/>
to put the game out of reach.<lb/>
'We've been in a lot of tight games this year<lb/>
and I think our experience against so many tought<lb/>
team- has reall helped us at times Gillman<lb/>
explained. "David Underwood certainly had his<lb/>
finest game of the season and Frank Hobson got a<lb/>
couple ol ke baskets for us in the second half. I'm<lb/>
jusl pleased to win on the road. This is only our<lb/>
tourth road win ail year<lb/>
Underwood, the 6-6 transfer from South Carolina,<lb/>
scored field goals and canned free throws for his 22<lb/>
points. Maynor had 17 while Mack chipped in with<lb/>
15 and Herb Krusen added 12.<lb/>
Dave Wolff led UNC-Wilmington with 15 points<lb/>
while John Haskins had 14, and Danny Davis scored<lb/>
13. Gary Cooper who returned to the Seahawks<lb/>
lineup after a six-game absence, had 11 points and<lb/>
nine rebounds.<lb/>
Despite UNC-Wilmington's poor 43.5 shooting<lb/>
percentage for the game, the Seahawks outre-<lb/>
bounded ECU 40-29 and were in control throughout<lb/>
the entire first half.<lb/>
Cooper and Wolff hurt the Bucs early with their<lb/>
inside play and propelled the Seahawks to as much<lb/>
as a nine point lead late in the first half at 36-27,<lb/>
before a bucket by Maynor and two free throws bv<lb/>
Underwood cut the margin to five at intermission.<lb/>
ECU improved its overall record to 11-12 while<lb/>
the Seahawks dropped to 15-8. The Pirates face<lb/>
Tennessee-Chattanooga Thursday night at home and<lb/>
entertain Georgia Tech Saturday.<lb/>
"With the way Tennessee-Chattanooga took us<lb/>
apart up there, I don't think we'll have any<lb/>
problems getting ready for them Gillman added.<lb/>
"And Georgia Tech's going to be a tough one, too.<lb/>
We've just got to take them one game at a time<lb/>
Revenge for, against Pirates?<lb/>
ECU looking to<lb/>
make amends<lb/>
B CHARLES (HANDLER<lb/>
ssistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Tonight encounter with Tennessee-Chattanooga<lb/>
back memories to the ECU Pirate<lb/>
i m.<lb/>
night wa- January 15, strangely enough<lb/>
month ago to the day. The game came<lb/>
fa disappointing double overtime loss<lb/>
f! rded irginia Commonwealth.<lb/>
t.l game had followed shocking upsets bv<lb/>
� lona and South Carolina. A third such<lb/>
VCU, would have been a tremendous<lb/>
r both the Pirates and the entire ECU<lb/>
-�<lb/>
P<lb/>
re the lo- was nearly tragic. The game<lb/>
proved this. The Pirates lost that contest<lb/>
The M � asins did everything but jerk the tie<lb/>
irate<lb/>
head coach Larrv Gillman's shirt. The<lb/>
is just that frustrating for the Pirates.<lb/>
The Moccasins even snakebit ECU All-American<lb/>
Oliver Mack, holding the Queens, N.V. native to a<lb/>
mere 13 points. Adding to the problem, no other<lb/>
- able to top Mack's output on that dreary<lb/>
ev enii<lb/>
rhe Pirates come into tonight's game with a<lb/>
rent outlook. Larry Gillman's club has not<lb/>
reallv poorl) since the game with<lb/>
� -Chattanooga.<lb/>
e moccasins ECU has given<lb/>
State and Detroit fits before<lb/>
- the loss to the Mi<lb/>
- as VC.<lb/>
umbing late in the game. Also since that time<lb/>
has come a big upset of ACC member Georgia<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
"We've gained a lot of experience this season<lb/>
Gillman. "We have shown a lot of development<lb/>
ir poise<lb/>
Gillman says he feels this has been a relatively<lb/>
satisfving season thus far for him and the Pirates.<lb/>
"We've had some big wins he said. "We'd love<lb/>
to have more victories, but overall I feel we have<lb/>
come along well.<lb/>
The second-year ECU mentor spent much time in<lb/>
preparing his Pirates for tonight's rematch with teh<lb/>
"1 jut hope<lb/>
George Maynor fires<lb/>
 LAST SECOND jump shot by the 63' star guard<lb/>
propelled ECl to a 66-64 overtime victory over<lb/>
Georgia Tech earlier this year. Maynor will be<lb/>
rousted upon to lead the Pirate attack against those<lb/>
same Yellow Jackets this Saturday night.<lb/>
Photo bv John H. Grogan<lb/>
M' M<lb/>
Gillman.<lb/>
we'll be readv said<lb/>
Heading the Pirate attack entering tonight's<lb/>
game is Oliver Mack. The 6'3" senior guard leads<lb/>
the team in scoring with a 17.8 average. He is also<lb/>
the team- second leading rebounder, averaging 4.2<lb/>
grab- per contest.<lb/>
George Maynor follows Mack in the scoring<lb/>
column with a 12.9 average. Maynor, a true<lb/>
all around performer, also averages four rebounds a<lb/>
game and leads the team with 93 assists.<lb/>
Greg Corelius leads the team in rebounding with<lb/>
an average of eight per game.<lb/>
The Moccasins are led by Keith Parker, a 6'7"<lb/>
sophomore forward. Parker is scoring at a 17.5 clip.<lb/>
Sophomore center Norm Anchrum leads the team<lb/>
with 8.2 rebounds per game. He is also the<lb/>
Moccasins' second leading scorer with a 12.3<lb/>
average.<lb/>
A point of interest for Pirate fans concerning the<lb/>
Moccasins is that while the Moccasins were in the<lb/>
middle of a hot streak when they defeated the<lb/>
Pirates last month, going 7-1 in the month of<lb/>
January, they are only 6-8 since that time.<lb/>
The Moccasins are a very young team, with only<lb/>
one senior listed among their top seven players.<lb/>
Five of those players are sophomores.<lb/>
Frank Hobson<lb/>
THE BURLY PIRATE forward pulls down a rebound<lb/>
in a game against Virginia Commonwealth earlier<lb/>
this year. Hobson will be expected to hit the<lb/>
boards hard when the Pirates face Tennessee-Chatt-<lb/>
anooga tonight in Minges Coliseum. The Moccasins<lb/>
defeated the Pirates 91-67 one month ago today.<lb/>
Photo by John H. Grogan<lb/>
Will Ga. Tech<lb/>
remember loss?<lb/>
By CHARLES CHANDLER<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU Pirate basketball team ends its home<lb/>
season this Saturday night against Georgia Tech, a<lb/>
team the Pirates upset 66-64 in an overtime game<lb/>
earlier in the year on a last second shot by George<lb/>
Maynor.<lb/>
Naturallv one would come to the conclusion that<lb/>
the Yellow Jackets will have revenge on their minds<lb/>
a- they prepare for Saturday's 7:30 p.m. tipoff.<lb/>
Not so says Tech assistant coach Jay Niddiffer.<lb/>
"II you play for revenge said Niddiffer, "you<lb/>
don't accomplish anything<lb/>
"Basketball is a game of competition he<lb/>
continued. "To us there is no such word as<lb/>
revenge. That just gets in the way. We take each<lb/>
game one at a time and try to play our best in<lb/>
each outing<lb/>
"There are two days that do not exist as far as<lb/>
we are concerned. They are yesterday and<lb/>
tomorrow. Worrying too much about either one can<lb/>
harm you<lb/>
Due to these factors Tech will approach<lb/>
Saturday's rematch with the Pirates as if the earlier<lb/>
game never took place.<lb/>
"We just accept the fact that we lost the<lb/>
game -aid Niddiffer. "East Carolina must have<lb/>
played better than us. They won, anyway<lb/>
Though they may not be thinking about it when<lb/>
Saturday rolls around, the Yellow Jackets certainly<lb/>
learned something from the first encounter with the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"They have a lot of talent said Niddiffer.<lb/>
"That's for sure. Oliver Mack is a great player. He<lb/>
would be a real asset to any team<lb/>
The Yellow Jackets have a player of their own<lb/>
who deserves recognition. Sammy Drummer, a 6'5"<lb/>
senior forward, leads the team in scoring with a<lb/>
23.3 average. He also ranks second on the team in<lb/>
rebounding with 6.5 pulls a game to his credit.<lb/>
"Sammy is having a good year said Niddiffer.<lb/>
"He is one of the most improved players on the<lb/>
team<lb/>
Supporting Drummer in the Yellow Jacket attack<lb/>
is Tico Brown, who averages 15.3 points per<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
Though Drummer and Brown have performed<lb/>
well as expected, the Yellow Jackets are a<lb/>
disappointment to many. Picked by several national<lb/>
publications as a preseason Top 20 team, Tech has<lb/>
never entered the national rankings and now stands<lb/>
13-9.<lb/>
Injuries have slowed the Jackets all year. The<lb/>
most crucial injury came just before Tech's first<lb/>
encounter with the Pirates. Rob Noyes, a 6'8"<lb/>
senior and the Yellow Jackets' starting center, was<lb/>
finished for the season with a wrist injury.<lb/>
Tech is now forced to operate with a 6'4"<lb/>
pivotman, John Mann. Though Niddiffer noted that<lb/>
Mann has played well, a center of Mann's<lb/>
dimensions is at a distinct advantage in major<lb/>
college competition, maybe even in high school<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Incidents such as Noyes' injury and last second<lb/>
losses typify the Georgia Tech season. "Things just<lb/>
haven't bounced right for us at times this year<lb/>
said Niddiffer.<lb/>
Things may just begin "bouncing" better for the<lb/>
Yellow Jackets next season when they become a<lb/>
member of the prestigious Atlantic Coast Confer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
"We're looking forward to playing in the ACC<lb/>
next year said Niddiffer.<lb/>
Though Tech enters the ACC next season,<lb/>
Niddiffer feels there will be a period of adjustment<lb/>
before the Jackets feel at ease within the<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
"There will probably be at least a four to five<lb/>
year period of adjustment he said. "But<lb/>
eventually we'll be right at home<lb/>
Dunk city<lb/>
PIRVTE FRESHMAN CENTER l Tyson slams one<lb/>
through to the delight of all ECl fans, lyson's<lb/>
6 11 frame has come in handy on numerous<lb/>
oceasions this season for Coaeh Larrv Gillman's<lb/>
lub- Photo b John H. Grogan<lb/>
Underwood<lb/>
gets playing<lb/>
time, points<lb/>
Bv SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
WILMINGTON - Although David Underwood had<lb/>
drawn a lew starting assignments this season and<lb/>
played brilliantly in a couple of game lately the<lb/>
big forward ha- been -pending more and more time<lb/>
on the bench.<lb/>
In fact, before Tue-dav night contest against<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington Underwood even begged Pirate<lb/>
coach Larry Gillman for more playing time.<lb/>
"I told him it he would post up strong inside, I<lb/>
would give him all the time he wanted Gillman<lb/>
explained after the Pirates' 78-70 victory over<lb/>
I NC-W ilmington. "And tonight he certainly had his<lb/>
finest game of the year<lb/>
L nderwood, the big 6-6 transfer from South<lb/>
Carolina, got all the time he wanted against the<lb/>
Seahawks, and responded with a career high 22<lb/>
point performance. He kept the Bucs in the game<lb/>
during the first hall with 10 point- and canned<lb/>
-everal clutch free throw- down the stretch in the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
"They gave me a lot of opportunities to drive<lb/>
inside and took them Underwood -aid. "But I -till<lb/>
missed a lot of shots I probably -hould have made.<lb/>
I was still glad we won, though, that the .most<lb/>
important thing. We've got some important game-<lb/>
coming up and winning this one will get us going<lb/>
Although Underwood connected on onlv -i ol In<lb/>
field goals, he made all ten of his free throw<lb/>
attempts, snatched five rebound- and dished out<lb/>
three assists.<lb/>
He also spent most of the evening battling the<lb/>
Seahawks sharpshooting forward Dave Woltf under<lb/>
the backboards.<lb/>
"He's a tough competitor and he reallv put me<lb/>
through a war out there Underwood said. "There<lb/>
was a lot of banging around in there Hut once<lb/>
again, the win was a total team effort Everybody<lb/>
contributed and I wa glad we could pull another<lb/>
close one out<lb/>
The Bucs 1-2-2 zone had given I V.W ilmington<lb/>
plenty of problems in the team's tirst meeting<lb/>
earlier this season, but the Seahawks had virtually<lb/>
no problems with it in the first half, rolling to a<lb/>
36-31 lead. The Pirates then switched to a<lb/>
man-to-man in the second half which proved to be<lb/>
the key factor in the final outcome, according to<lb/>
George Maynor.<lb/>
"We were just confused with the matchup- in<lb/>
our zone tonight in the first half Maynor<lb/>
explained. "After we switched to the man-to-man in<lb/>
the second half, we seemed to play a lot more<lb/>
aggressively<lb/>
The Pirates gradually overcame the Seahawks<lb/>
five point lead and went ahead to stay at the 5:50<lb/>
mark on Frank Hobson's basket. Maynor finished<lb/>
the game with 17 points and was also the Pirates'<lb/>
top rebounder with seven.<lb/>
"They reallv hurt us on the boards in the first<lb/>
half Maynor said. "But we just wanted to go out<lb/>
in the second half and play more aggressively. It<lb/>
seems like all year that if we play one half well,<lb/>
we just seem to have problems maintaining our<lb/>
aggressiveness in the other half<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
- .<lb/>
�MiH<lb/>
<pb facs="00057179_0008"/><lb/>
�� 1 <lb/>
llMrl�-<lb/>
 y<lb/>
8 FOUNTAINHEAD 15 February 1979<lb/>
Grapplers end season<lb/>
Saturday against UNC<lb/>
ECU wrestling action<lb/>
Photo by Pete Podeszwa<lb/>
Down ECU 95-70, Thompson gets 28<lb/>
By SAM ROGERS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU wrestling team concludes its regular<lb/>
season Saturday when the Pirates travel to Chapel<lb/>
Hill for a dual match against Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference foe North Carolina.<lb/>
A win over the Tar Heels would certainly<lb/>
provide the Bucs a big lift before next week's<lb/>
Eastern Begionals, but even Pirate coach Bill Hill<lb/>
admits an ECU victory is unlikely at this stage of<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
"They whipped up pretty good in the first<lb/>
meeting and they're always a tough team for us<lb/>
Hill said. "Bill Lam has a well balanced team and<lb/>
they've got some potential national champions on<lb/>
their squad<lb/>
"North Carolina captured its first regular season<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference championship last week<lb/>
with a victory over arch rival North Carolina State.<lb/>
The Tarheels have an impressive 13-1 dual record<lb/>
Top-ranked Lady Monarchs win<lb/>
B JIMMY DuPREE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECl women's athle-<lb/>
tics reached another<lb/>
milestone Monday even-<lb/>
ing; a team currently<lb/>
ranked number one in<lb/>
the national standings<lb/>
visited Minges Coliseum<lb/>
to face the Lady Pirate<lb/>
basketball squad.<lb/>
Old Dominion I'ni-<lb/>
versit) conquered the<lb/>
Lady Bucs 95-70. but<lb/>
ODl coach Marianne<lb/>
Stanlej said afterwards,<lb/>
"For a team so young,<lb/>
they were very good.<lb/>
'They weren't as<lb/>
awe-struck as a lot of<lb/>
teams have been. Thev<lb/>
just came out<lb/>
plaved their game<lb/>
Lanky 6'5"<lb/>
Nissen led the<lb/>
Monarch scorers<lb/>
24. The Denmark<lb/>
also grabbed<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
"We wanted to get<lb/>
the ball inside to Inge<lb/>
commented Stanley.<lb/>
"Once they went man-<lb/>
to-man, it started open-<lb/>
and<lb/>
Inge<lb/>
Lady<lb/>
with<lb/>
native<lb/>
nine<lb/>
ing up and Nancy<lb/>
(Lieberman) started get-<lb/>
ting her points<lb/>
Lieberman, every-<lb/>
one's All-American, had<lb/>
only 16 points on the<lb/>
game, eight below her<lb/>
average, her leadership<lb/>
on the floor, however,<lb/>
cannot be measured in<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Angela Cotman,<lb/>
another All- American,<lb/>
and freshman Rhonda<lb/>
Rompola each contri-<lb/>
buted 15 to the ODU<lb/>
total.<lb/>
For the Ladv Bucs,<lb/>
regional scoring leader<lb/>
Rosie Thompson pro-<lb/>
vided 28 points and 15<lb/>
rebounds, reinforcing<lb/>
coach Cathy Andruzzi's<lb/>
contention that "she is<lb/>
a legitimate All- Ameri-<lb/>
can.<lb/>
Point guard Lydia<lb/>
Rountree poured in 12<lb/>
and center Marcia<lb/>
Girven added 11.<lb/>
"Inge Nissen's such<lb/>
a dominating center<lb/>
commented Andruzzi,<lb/>
"Marcia did a good job<lb/>
not fouling against<lb/>
her<lb/>
All-American Alston sights<lb/>
Nationals, improvement as goals<lb/>
DAVID MAREAD1<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
According to Pirate<lb/>
Track Coach, Bill<lb/>
Carson, Calvin Alston is<lb/>
one of the best athletes<lb/>
from anv sport ever to<lb/>
don a Pirate uniform.<lb/>
The 5"8" senior<lb/>
track -tar from Hender-<lb/>
�i ha many<lb/>
impressive credits on<lb/>
ni record during his<lb/>
four seasons with the<lb/>
Pirate track team. In-<lb/>
cluded are two All-<lb/>
America honors awarded<lb/>
to him during his<lb/>
- phomore and junior<lb/>
seasons and recognition<lb/>
i the Greensboro Daily<lb/>
News as their athlete of<lb/>
the week.<lb/>
As a sophomore<lb/>
track sensation, Alston<lb/>
was named the Sou-<lb/>
thern Conference Track<lb/>
Athlete of the Year bv<lb/>
vote o! the league of<lb/>
coaches.<lb/>
He is the only two<lb/>
time Ail-American in<lb/>
ECl Track history.<lb/>
J<lb/>
"Calvin is a real<lb/>
pleasure to work with<lb/>
commented Carson, "He<lb/>
seems to be stronger<lb/>
this year and is running<lb/>
League battles<lb/>
iegin in earnest<lb/>
better overall. Calvin is<lb/>
a very coachable athlete<lb/>
and team leader. He<lb/>
comes to practice, asks<lb/>
what we're oing to do<lb/>
today and then goes out<lb/>
and does it<lb/>
During his sopho-<lb/>
more year on the<lb/>
-quad, Alston qualified<lb/>
for the Nationals in the<lb/>
200 meter dash. He<lb/>
finished fifth edging out<lb/>
Olympians Harvey Gla-<lb/>
nce and Johnny Jones<lb/>
among others.<lb/>
In addition, Alston<lb/>
holds several Pirate<lb/>
track records including<lb/>
marks in the 200 meter,<lb/>
400 meter, 220 yard<lb/>
and 440 yard dashes.<lb/>
He is also a member of<lb/>
the school record hold-<lb/>
ing one mile relay<lb/>
team.<lb/>
For the immediate<lb/>
future, Alston has high<lb/>
aspirations.<lb/>
"My goal at this<lb/>
point of the season<lb/>
commented Alston, "is<lb/>
to qualify for the Pan-<lb/>
American games. I<lb/>
would really like to<lb/>
finish higher in them<lb/>
than I did last year<lb/>
qualified for the Nation-<lb/>
als this year in the 440<lb/>
yard dash with a<lb/>
of 47.7 seconds.<lb/>
"Many of the<lb/>
who beat me last<lb/>
in the Nationals<lb/>
either graduated<lb/>
school or dropped<lb/>
so I believe I have a<lb/>
good chance of finishing<lb/>
in the top five<lb/>
When asked about<lb/>
the potential of this<lb/>
time<lb/>
guys<lb/>
year<lb/>
have<lb/>
from<lb/>
out,<lb/>
year's track team, Al-<lb/>
ston replied, "I think<lb/>
we've got an experi-<lb/>
enced team this year<lb/>
with some good fresh-<lb/>
men who should help<lb/>
the team out a lot<lb/>
The Pirates are<lb/>
currently running in the<lb/>
indoor competition track<lb/>
meets with the outdoor<lb/>
season scheduled to<lb/>
begin on March 24th.<lb/>
Senior guard Gale<lb/>
Kerbaugh managed only<lb/>
seven points in the<lb/>
contest, thus falling just<lb/>
two short of the 1000<lb/>
point plateau.<lb/>
"We stopped their<lb/>
fast break and we broke<lb/>
their zone pressthat's<lb/>
quite an accomplish-<lb/>
ment praised Andru-<lb/>
zzi. "They tried to get<lb/>
fancy and we just<lb/>
played solid defense.<lb/>
"In the second half<lb/>
we just kept hustling<lb/>
and made them work<lb/>
the ball for their<lb/>
shots she added.<lb/>
"This is one game<lb/>
we have nothing to be<lb/>
ashamed of. We were<lb/>
very happy to have Old<lb/>
Dominion at Minges to<lb/>
show people what Divi-<lb/>
sion I basketball is all<lb/>
about<lb/>
ODU (95)<lb/>
Leiberman 7 2-2 16,<lb/>
Trombly 5 3-4 13<lb/>
Nisson 10 4-4 24,<lb/>
Cotman 7 1-1 15, Rom-<lb/>
pola 6 3-3 15, Richard-<lb/>
son 1 0-0 2, Richard 2<lb/>
0-0 4, Davy 2 0-0 4,<lb/>
Brown 1 0-0 2, Jerome<lb/>
0 0-0 0. Totals 41 13-14<lb/>
95.<lb/>
ECU (70)<lb/>
Thompson 9 10-14<lb/>
28, Emerson 0 0-0 0,<lb/>
Girven 4 3-6 11, Roun-<lb/>
tree 4 4-4 12, Kerbaugh<lb/>
3 1-2 7, Barnes 0 2-2 2,<lb/>
Howell 1 0-0 2, Ross 3<lb/>
2-2 8, Versprille 0 0-0<lb/>
0. Totals 24 22-30 70.<lb/>
Halftime - ODU 49,<lb/>
ECU 31. Fouled out -<lb/>
Rompola. Total fouls -<lb/>
ODU 26, ECU 16.<lb/>
Technical  Rompola.<lb/>
A-700.<lb/>
SHERLOCK'S<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
on 5th St. Across from<lb/>
the Book Barn<lb/>
Good Food&amp;Good People<lb/>
Vegetarian diets<lb/>
respected<lb/>
MonSat. llam�9pm<lb/>
Alston has<lb/>
ilready<lb/>
4th Annual TKE Boxing Tournament<lb/>
Tues Feb. 20th thru Thurs Feb. 22nd<lb/>
Come to H.L. Hodges for your equipment needs<lb/>
Speed bags boxmg <lb/>
bag gloves 40 and 70 lb. training bags<lb/>
We also have a large selection of boxing gloves from 8 to 16 oz.<lb/>
L. H0DGES COMl<lb/>
S<lb/>
VPAJ&amp;<lb/>
THE SPORTS STORE<lb/>
752-4156<lb/>
B CANDY WEDEMEYER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Intramural<lb/>
Basketball season is<lb/>
almost half over and 21<lb/>
teams are still undefea-<lb/>
ted.<lb/>
In the dorm division<lb/>
the Jones Jaguars, Scott<lb/>
Stooges, Belk Stylons,<lb/>
Slaystead Villians, Belk<lb/>
Players Association, and<lb/>
Belk Pleasers are all<lb/>
undefeated and lead<lb/>
their respective divi-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
In the Ford divisions<lb/>
of dorm play the Scott<lb/>
Anythings and the Belk<lb/>
Stud Farm are both 4-0<lb/>
and are tied for the<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
Teams with only one<lb/>
loss in these leagues<lb/>
include such teams as<lb/>
Belk Buckles, Aycock<lb/>
Embodiers, Belk Slow<lb/>
Motion, Belk Slimey<lb/>
Dogs, Scott Guards,<lb/>
Jones Busters, Scott<lb/>
Boulders, Jones Jailers,<lb/>
Belk White Hope, and<lb/>
the Aycock Express.<lb/>
In the ClubIndepen-<lb/>
dent division the Tas-<lb/>
mainian Devils, and the<lb/>
Bouncers retain their<lb/>
undefeated record to<lb/>
lead their divisions,<lb/>
with the Ozone Airmen<lb/>
and the Kinks right<lb/>
behind them with one<lb/>
loss apiece.<lb/>
The Sadaharu Oh's<lb/>
and the Giants are<lb/>
undefeated and tied for<lb/>
the lead in the Apple<lb/>
league, as are the Nads<lb/>
and Eight is Enough in<lb/>
the Egg League. The<lb/>
Jerks are undefeated<lb/>
(2-0) in their league<lb/>
The Carrot league is<lb/>
extremely close. There<lb/>
are no undefeated<lb/>
teams left in this divi-<lb/>
sion but the Heartbreak<lb/>
Kids, Langston D.Js<lb/>
and Pac are all tied for<lb/>
the lead with one loss<lb/>
apiece.<lb/>
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this season with their only loss, a one point<lb/>
decision against eastern wrestling power Navy.<lb/>
The Heels won four of the five lower weight<lb/>
classes against the Pirates in the teams first<lb/>
meeting to take an, easy 39-8 victory.<lb/>
The Pirates have won only one dual match all<lb/>
year and are now 1-7 overall. Old Dominion handed<lb/>
the Bucs their most recent loss, a 20-19 setback last<lb/>
Saturday in Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
"We ran into a couple of surprises against Old<lb/>
Dominion in the lower weights and they just<lb/>
managed to pull it out Hill explained. "V�<lb/>
Northrup is wrestling better and we'll hay most ol<lb/>
our lineup healthy against North Carolina<lb/>
CD. Mock, the Heels star performer at .<lb/>
continues to lead the team. Mock is undefeated m<lb/>
a 13-0 record and is currently ranked sixth in<lb/>
nation by Amateur Wrestling News. Mock vmII .<lb/>
help in the lower weights from 1 18-pounder B;<lb/>
Monaghan who has a 7-2 record and Dave Juergi<lb/>
who is 9-3-1 overall.<lb/>
One of the evenings top matchups will be in the<lb/>
158 pound weight elas where North Carolina-<lb/>
Carter Mario will face ECU's Steve Coode.<lb/>
Mario and Goode battled to a 7-7 draw in their<lb/>
first meeting. Mario boasts a 12-0-1 record thi-<lb/>
season while Goode has wrestled hi way to a<lb/>
10-5-1 slate.<lb/>
Another interesting matchup will be in the 177<lb/>
pound weight class where ECU's Butch Bevils will<lb/>
face North Carolina's Dean Brior. Revils. 12-3 this<lb/>
season, toppped Brior, 5-2 with a late third period<lb/>
takedown. Brior has an 11-2 record.<lb/>
Following the North Carolina match, ECU begins<lb/>
preparation for the Eastern Regionals Feb. 23 and<lb/>
24. The regionals are the qualifying event for the<lb/>
NCAA Championships which will be held March<lb/>
8-10 in Aimes, Iowa.<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>