<?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="00057198_0001"/>
Circulation 4,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
North<lb/>
Vol<lb/>
55 No. X&amp; 31 May 1979<lb/>
Faculty appointments include<lb/>
Morgan to Dean, new<lb/>
prof<lb/>
B) Lynn Beyar<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Several new faculty<lb/>
appointments have been<lb/>
made recently in the<lb/>
various departments and<lb/>
administration of ECU.<lb/>
mong those appointed<lb/>
to positions are: Walter<lb/>
l. Bortz, Donald L.<lb/>
Lemish, Dr. Alice B.<lb/>
Cranoff, and Dr. Edwin<lb/>
W. Monroe.<lb/>
IK. EDWIN MONROE<lb/>
Dr. Edwin W.<lb/>
Monroe, presentlj pro-<lb/>
lessor ol medicine and<lb/>
 ice Chancellor tor<lb/>
Health Affairs, has been<lb/>
named associate dean<lb/>
l.r external affairs at<lb/>
the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine. This position<lb/>
involves coordination ot<lb/>
medical education pro-<lb/>
grams at Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina Hospitals and<lb/>
health centers.<lb/>
Monroe, appointed<lb/>
the first dean on the<lb/>
School for Allied Health<lb/>
and Social Professions<lb/>
in 1968, played a major<lb/>
role in the development<lb/>
of the School of Medi-<lb/>
cine and in development<lb/>
ol new programs such<lb/>
a the Family Nurse<lb/>
Practitioner and Master<lb/>
ol Science in Nursing,<lb/>
mi nine undergraduate<lb/>
and three graduate<lb/>
programs in the School<lb/>
of Allied Health and<lb/>
Social Professions.<lb/>
Dr. Monroe is a<lb/>
graduate of Davidson<lb/>
College. University ol<lb/>
Penn. School ot Medi-<lb/>
cine, and maintained a<lb/>
private practice in<lb/>
Greenville for twelve<lb/>
year- prior to joining<lb/>
thi' university.<lb/>
He is a fellow of the<lb/>
American College of<lb/>
Physicians and a mem-<lb/>
ber ol the editorial<lb/>
board of the North<lb/>
Carolina Medical Jour-<lb/>
nal.<lb/>
DR. ALICE B. GRANOFF<lb/>
Dr. Alice B. Granoff,<lb/>
has been appointed<lb/>
associate professor of<lb/>
pediatrics and Director<lb/>
ol Pediatric endocrinol-<lb/>
ogy in the ECU School<lb/>
ol Medicine. Dr.<lb/>
Granoff, a specialist in<lb/>
diabetes and abnormal<lb/>
growth problems of<lb/>
children com - to ECU<lb/>
from Fres. b"nia,<lb/>
where she siivi , as<lb/>
assistant chief of medi-<lb/>
cine and pediatrics at<lb/>
Valley Medical Center.<lb/>
Dr. Granoff received<lb/>
her training at the<lb/>
University of Texas-<lb/>
Austin, University of<lb/>
Texas Southwestern<lb/>
Medical School, St.<lb/>
Louis Children's Hospi-<lb/>
tal, St. Louis, Mo. and<lb/>
John Hopkins Hospital,<lb/>
Baltimore, Md.<lb/>
She has also held<lb/>
faculty and staff posi-<lb/>
tions at Temple Univer-<lb/>
sity, St. Christopher's<lb/>
Hospital for Children,<lb/>
Case Western Reserve<lb/>
University, and Cleve-<lb/>
land Metropolitan Gen-<lb/>
eral Hospital, Ohio.<lb/>
Presently, Dr. Granoff<lb/>
also serves as reviewer<lb/>
for the Journal of Pedi-<lb/>
atrics.<lb/>
 LTER M. BORTS III<lb/>
Walter M. Bortz HI<lb/>
will become the new<lb/>
Director of Admissions<lb/>
lor East Carolina<lb/>
University as of June<lb/>
15. The 34-year-old<lb/>
candidate has been<lb/>
Dean of Admissions at<lb/>
Texas Christian Univer-<lb/>
sity, Fort Worth, for<lb/>
three years, and served<lb/>
lor seven years prior to<lb/>
that as Dean of Admis-<lb/>
sions at Bethany Col-<lb/>
lege, West Virginia.<lb/>
Bortz, who will succede<lb/>
Dr. John H. Home, is<lb/>
Lecture series will feature Osborne<lb/>
Dr. Oliver Osborne, authority on mental health and<lb/>
cultural change, will be a guest lecturer in the ECU<lb/>
S hool ol Nursing Distinguished Lecturer Series.<lb/>
Jim Barnes<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The ECU School of<lb/>
Nursing graduate pro-<lb/>
gram recently an-<lb/>
nounced that Dr. Oliver<lb/>
Osborn, RN will be the<lb/>
guest lecturer for the<lb/>
1979 Distinguished<lb/>
Lecturer Series. Dr.<lb/>
Osborn, professor of<lb/>
nursing and adjunct<lb/>
professor ol anthropol-<lb/>
ogy at the University ol<lb/>
Washington (Seattle)<lb/>
will lecture on June 14<lb/>
and 15 at ECU.<lb/>
Osborn, a recognized<lb/>
authority in the fields of<lb/>
mental health, cultural<lb/>
diversity and change,<lb/>
will lecture on "Symp-<lb/>
tom Patterns and Social<lb/>
Process Change" from<lb/>
1:30-3:30 p.m. on June<lb/>
14 in Room 101 of the<lb/>
School of Nursing. The<lb/>
lecture will involve a<lb/>
report ol research on<lb/>
changes in patients'<lb/>
presenting complaints in<lb/>
psychiatric-mental<lb/>
health, and changes in<lb/>
institutions.<lb/>
From 10:00-12 noon<lb/>
on June 15 in the Belk<lb/>
Building auditorium,<lb/>
Osborn will lecture on<lb/>
"Alternative Health<lb/>
Care Deliverv Systems -<lb/>
The Botswana Model<lb/>
A frequent guest<lb/>
lecturer for a learned<lb/>
societies, Dr. Osborn<lb/>
has done extended re-<lb/>
search in the U.S. and<lb/>
Africa on alternative<lb/>
patterns of health care,<lb/>
changing patterns of<lb/>
symptomatology in<lb/>
mental illness and<lb/>
changes in the care<lb/>
provider institutions,<lb/>
topics for his lectures at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Massey to discuss behavioral<lb/>
influences in London conference<lb/>
t<lb/>
4<lb/>
r<lb/>
By Francine Perry<lb/>
ECL News Bureau<lb/>
A complex study of<lb/>
the possible relationship<lb/>
of age, sex and right-<lb/>
or left-handedness to<lb/>
learning behavior will<lb/>
be discussed at a Lon-<lb/>
don conference this<lb/>
summer by ECU grad-<lb/>
uate student Cara Mas-<lb/>
sey.<lb/>
The research, involv-<lb/>
ing an intensive survey<lb/>
of 184 ECU seniors,<lb/>
was undertaken by Ms.<lb/>
Massey as part of her<lb/>
master's thesis work<lb/>
and will be reported at<lb/>
the Fifth International<lb/>
Conference for Impro-<lb/>
ving University Teaching<lb/>
at the University of<lb/>
London July 4.<lb/>
The Massey project<lb/>
is the second phase of<lb/>
a two-part investigation.<lb/>
The first, conducted<lb/>
by Dr. Hal Daniel of<lb/>
the ECU Department of<lb/>
Speech, Language and<lb/>
Auditory Pathology and<lb/>
His research associate<lb/>
Patti Loesche, synthe-<lb/>
sized current findings<lb/>
regarding human learn-<lb/>
ing strategies as they<lb/>
relate to brain struc-<lb/>
ture and function.<lb/>
Daniel and Loesche,<lb/>
who presented their<lb/>
findings at the same<lb/>
conference in Aachen,<lb/>
Germany last summer,<lb/>
indicated that behavioral<lb/>
differences observed in<lb/>
groups characterized by<lb/>
sex, age and manual<lb/>
preference, might have<lb/>
implications for educa-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
Since certain human<lb/>
functions are known to<lb/>
be regulated by specific<lb/>
parts of the brain, they<lb/>
concluded, differences in<lb/>
brain structure and or-<lb/>
ientation linked to indi-<lb/>
vidual's age, sex and<lb/>
use of the right or left<lb/>
hand might account for<lb/>
some students' achieve-<lb/>
ments within the pre-<lb/>
sent educational system<lb/>
and others' inability to<lb/>
cope with it.<lb/>
The left hemisphere<lb/>
of the brain, for ex-<lb/>
ample, frequently linked<lb/>
to right-handedness<lb/>
when it dominates, is<lb/>
where language use,<lb/>
logical thinking and<lb/>
manual dexterity origin-<lb/>
ate.<lb/>
HYPOTHESIS<lb/>
TESTED<lb/>
Ms. Massey tested<lb/>
the Daniel-Loesche hy-<lb/>
pothesis � that brain<lb/>
structure and operation<lb/>
associated with certain<lb/>
groups might signi-<lb/>
ficantly affect learning<lb/>
and achievement � in<lb/>
her study of the 184<lb/>
subjects.<lb/>
Factors considered in<lb/>
her computerized study<lb/>
were choice of major<lb/>
field and career plans,<lb/>
academic and other in-<lb/>
terests, preferred modes<lb/>
of testing and classroom<lb/>
instruction, personal<lb/>
study habits and, when<lb/>
permission was given,<lb/>
SAT scores and aca-<lb/>
demic grade point<lb/>
averages.<lb/>
The test group was<lb/>
studied in regard to<lb/>
sex, age (over or under<lb/>
25 years) and use of the<lb/>
right or left hand by<lb/>
the respondents and<lb/>
members of their fam-<lb/>
ilies.<lb/>
"LACK OF<lb/>
significant<lb/>
differences-<lb/>
Ms. Massey reported<lb/>
a "lack of significant<lb/>
differences" associated<lb/>
with right- or left-hand-<lb/>
edness and no new<lb/>
findings on sex differ-<lb/>
ences regarding learn-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"Absolute classifica-<lb/>
tion by handedness ap-<lb/>
pears inappropriate<lb/>
she concluded. "How-<lb/>
ever, behavioral differ-<lb/>
ences as a function of<lb/>
age, sex and handed-<lb/>
ness may eventually be<lb/>
identified in university<lb/>
populations<lb/>
SAMPLE<lb/>
SIZE<lb/>
NOTED<lb/>
Ms. Massey was<lb/>
able to examine the re-<lb/>
sponses of a relatively<lb/>
small number of left-<lb/>
handed individuals (17<lb/>
out of 184). "A consid-<lb/>
erably larger sample<lb/>
size perhaps would have<lb/>
led to a discovery of<lb/>
significant thrends a-<lb/>
mong variables investi-<lb/>
gated she said.<lb/>
But one interesting<lb/>
fact was noticed: eight<lb/>
of the 17 left-handed<lb/>
students refused to al-<lb/>
low their confidential<lb/>
test scores to be ex-<lb/>
amined, as compared to<lb/>
only 12 of the 167<lb/>
right-handed respon-<lb/>
dents who denied per-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
"Although the low<lb/>
number of left-handed<lb/>
subjects prevents exten-<lb/>
sive speculation, this<lb/>
behavior may be con-<lb/>
sidered in light of<lb/>
reported higher anxiety<lb/>
levels among left-hand-<lb/>
also one of six region-<lb/>
ally appointed members<lb/>
of the 19-member Col-<lb/>
lege Entrance Examina-<lb/>
tion Board Council on<lb/>
Entrance Services, and<lb/>
a member of the Col-<lb/>
lege Scholarship Service,<lb/>
Natl. and Regional<lb/>
Assns. of College Ad-<lb/>
missions Counselors. He<lb/>
has also published<lb/>
works on transfer stu-<lb/>
dents, and on the field<lb/>
ol word processings in<lb/>
the college admissions<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
DONALD L. LEMISH<lb/>
Donald L. Lemish<lb/>
has been appointed Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Institu-<lb/>
tional Advancement and<lb/>
Planning at East Caro-<lb/>
lina University. He will<lb/>
be leaving his position<lb/>
as Assistant Vice Pres-<lb/>
ident and Director of<lb/>
Development at the<lb/>
University of Alabama<lb/>
at Birmingham, a posi-<lb/>
tion he has held since<lb/>
Deeember of 1977.<lb/>
Dr. Edwin W. Monroe, former Dean<lb/>
of School of Allied Health and Serial<lb/>
Professions. Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Health Affairs, newly appointed<lb/>
Vssociale Dean for External ffairs.<lb/>
Davis manuscripts acquired<lb/>
By Dennis R. Lawson<lb/>
ECl Manuscript Curator<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
Manuscript Collection<lb/>
has acquired the per-<lb/>
sonal paper of Captain<lb/>
Loui Poisson Davis,<lb/>
USN (1883-1978). Cap-<lb/>
tain Davis, a native of<lb/>
W ilmington, N.C was<lb/>
the son of attomev<lb/>
Junius Davis and<lb/>
grandson ol eminent<lb/>
Confederate statesman<lb/>
George Davis.<lb/>
 1905 graduate of<lb/>
the U.S. Naval Acad-<lb/>
emy, Davis served on<lb/>
or commanded the<lb/>
U.S.S. Kearsarge, Gal-<lb/>
wstor, Delaware, Pan-<lb/>
ther. Minnesota . Jarvis,<lb/>
Texas, Alabama, Mary-<lb/>
land, Ringold, Wood-<lb/>
What's Inside<lb/>
Vietnam, Vietnamp.3<lb/>
Woody Allen's Manhattanp.5<lb/>
Gay Organization describedp.5<lb/>
McPhatter, Melvin in Nationalsp.7<lb/>
WoocK Allen<lb/>
Sullivan to edit folklore<lb/>
ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
"The Children's<lb/>
Folklore Newsletter a<lb/>
new quarterly publica-<lb/>
tion sponsored by the<lb/>
Children's Folklore Sec-<lb/>
tion of the American<lb/>
Folklore Society, is be-<lb/>
ing edited by Dr.<lb/>
Charles Sullivan III of<lb/>
the East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
veristy Department of<lb/>
English.<lb/>
Purpose of the<lb/>
newsletter is to keep<lb/>
AFS members informed<lb/>
of current research in<lb/>
the field of children's<lb/>
lolklore.<lb/>
is<lb/>
"Children's lolklore<lb/>
a young, vigorous<lb/>
and rapidly growing<lb/>
Held Sullivan<lb/>
commented.<lb/>
"Those of us who<lb/>
work in it wish to<lb/>
record and study the<lb/>
sayings and customs of<lb/>
children, much the<lb/>
same way traditional<lb/>
lolklore has been stu-<lb/>
died and preserved<lb/>
Folklorists believe<lb/>
that a great deal can be<lb/>
learned about the values<lb/>
and impulses ol a<lb/>
national group bv<lb/>
examining its folkways<lb/>
and tale<lb/>
Each issue of the<lb/>
newsletter will feature a<lb/>
glossary ol terminology<lb/>
used by children identi-<lb/>
fied by age and geo-<lb/>
graphical location.<lb/>
The current issue<lb/>
includes "The Language<lb/>
ol Little League a<lb/>
collection of baseball<lb/>
words used by urban,<lb/>
upper middle-class boys<lb/>
See FOLkLORE, p.l<lb/>
bury, ami Colorado dur-<lb/>
ing 30 year- of active<lb/>
duly. He participated in<lb/>
the "Great White<lb/>
Fleet a flotilla of 16<lb/>
new battleships dispatch<lb/>
ed by Theodore Roose-<lb/>
velt to circumnavigate<lb/>
the globe in a demon-<lb/>
stration of U.S. na.<lb/>
might.<lb/>
During W orld W ar I<lb/>
he commanded the de-<lb/>
stroyer J a r v i - and<lb/>
earned the Nav Cros-<lb/>
tor in- troop and supply<lb/>
convoy services. As Or-<lb/>
dinance Inspector of the<lb/>
Navy Bureau ol Ord-<lb/>
inance during W orld<lb/>
W ar II. Dav is dev ised a<lb/>
system of palletized<lb/>
ammunition shipment,<lb/>
an immense logistical<lb/>
advantage to the Amer-<lb/>
ican war effort.<lb/>
I he taper w hich<lb/>
consist ol personal and<lb/>
military correspondence,<lb/>
financial papers, orders,<lb/>
pamphlets, personal<lb/>
military records, diaries,<lb/>
and photograph were<lb/>
donated by Davis' vi-<lb/>
dow, Edna S. Dav is if<lb/>
Washington. D.C and<lb/>
his -on- Louis P Jr<lb/>
George J Shether. and<lb/>
fhomas W alkcr. II.<lb/>
Prior to Dav is"<lb/>
death, the East Carolina<lb/>
Manuscript Collection<lb/>
completed oral history<lb/>
interviews in which he<lb/>
discusses hi- career and<lb/>
topics ot naval interest.<lb/>
The forthcoming Guide<lb/>
to Miltarv Holdings in<lb/>
the East Carolina Man-<lb/>
uscript Collection will<lb/>
include a description ol<lb/>
the papers.<lb/>
Researcher- interest-<lb/>
ed in the Dav i- Papers<lb/>
may vi-it the Collect ion,<lb/>
located in ECl Joyner<lb/>
Library, between the<lb/>
hours of 8 am and 5<lb/>
pin, Monday through<lb/>
Fridav.<lb/>
era<lb/>
.ne explained, 1979 is The International Year of the Child<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
 � . .  m<lb/>
� MMNiiViJJJiJi 4J1 UJ1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057198_0002"/><lb/>
. � �.<lb/>
VOICES &amp; OPINIONS<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 May 1979<lb/>
Still waiting for Godot<lb/>
By this time next week, the<lb/>
students of ECU and interested<lb/>
onlookers should know, finally and for<lb/>
good, who the Student Government<lb/>
Association President for next year<lb/>
will be: Libby Lefler or Brett Melvin.<lb/>
The decision by the ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees should put an end to over<lb/>
two months of uncertainty, bickering<lb/>
and bitterness that have tainted the<lb/>
ECU political system.<lb/>
Although thousands of students<lb/>
literally couldn't care less about SGA<lb/>
power plays ("They ought to decide<lb/>
who's president by putting all the<lb/>
candidates in a steel cage with axes,<lb/>
buzzswas, and brass knuckles and<lb/>
whoever's still around after an hour<lb/>
gets the job"), the upcoming Trustee's<lb/>
decision is, if nothing else, a topic of<lb/>
conversation for some of us on this<lb/>
lazy summertime campus, and, to at<lb/>
least two people, the matter is<lb/>
nothing to sneeze about: the job<lb/>
pays $150 a month.<lb/>
It is not this writer's intention to<lb/>
imply that Lefler and Melvin are<lb/>
battling it out for the presidency<lb/>
simply for the money � far from it.<lb/>
Nor is it totally inconceivable that<lb/>
someone who has served for years in<lb/>
the SGA would enjoy the work, or<lb/>
honestly feel that shehe were the<lb/>
most qualified person for the job, and<lb/>
decide to run for president. There is<lb/>
nothing suspect in these motives.<lb/>
But it is interesting to consider<lb/>
Melvin's motivations. One would<lb/>
really have to love the job to continue<lb/>
fighting for it, as he has, in the face<lb/>
of two separate appeal decisions<lb/>
against him. To drag this matter out<lb/>
so long has cost both candidates<lb/>
considerable time, worry, probably<lb/>
alot of sleep, a a great deal of<lb/>
creadibility with their public. Not to<lb/>
mention money: Brett Melvin's costs<lb/>
now include an attorney's fee for<lb/>
drawing up his Trustees appeal.<lb/>
Well, the lucky winner of next<lb/>
week's battle will receive not only<lb/>
$150 per month, but a private office,<lb/>
access to a full-time secretary, seats<lb/>
on the Greenville City Council,<lb/>
the ECU Board of Trustees,<lb/>
the Media Board, God knows what<lb/>
other honorary positions and privileges,<lb/>
veto powers, and a good bit of control<lb/>
over next year's sizable SGA budget.<lb/>
Poor old Acting President Charlie<lb/>
Sherrod. He's been the chief exec for<lb/>
the past two months, and he didn't<lb/>
even want the job in the first place.<lb/>
He's done well with it, though, and if<lb/>
Melvin loses and appeals to a state<lb/>
court (always a possibility � you<lb/>
never know about these guys), Charlie<lb/>
Sherrod may get a chance to do even<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Tough luck, Charlie. �L.W.<lb/>
Crosswinds<lb/>
Jim Barnes<lb/>
Uppity Women<lb/>
6. C. Carter<lb/>
Did uu ever look in<lb/>
clothes closet, and<lb/>
he feeling that vou<lb/>
nothing to vear?<lb/>
I vou have, vou're not<lb/>
nt� - -11 seems most<lb/>
Vmcrican women have<lb/>
similar feelings<lb/>
il their own clothes<lb/>
-�I- That the closets<lb/>
lie filled with<lb/>
fecll) wearable,<lb/>
tie-worn-out clothes is<lb/>
beside the point en-<lb/>
tirel). The point is,<lb/>
usually, that the clothes<lb/>
not the very latest<lb/>
� C .<lb/>
Admittedly, in these<lb/>
mllationarv times, lots<lb/>
us women have had<lb/>
to learn to make do<lb/>
with lot of things,<lb/>
including last year's<lb/>
clothes. Of course,<lb/>
making do never has<lb/>
meant that you had to<lb/>
feel real good about it.<lb/>
Bui 'hen again, the<lb/>
fashion industry spends<lb/>
exorbitantly for adver-<lb/>
ti-ing, to make sure<lb/>
that uc women feel that<lb/>
we have "nothing to<lb/>
wear And tor us to<lb/>
"keep up it costs us<lb/>
even more than it costs<lb/>
them, because if there<lb/>
was no profit involved,<lb/>
vou can be sure that<lb/>
there would be no hugh<lb/>
fashion industry.<lb/>
A "good appear-<lb/>
ance" is, without ques-<lb/>
tion, important in a lot<lb/>
ol ways, particularly to<lb/>
prolessional persons, as<lb/>
most of us plan to be<lb/>
in the coming years.<lb/>
However, it seems that,<lb/>
for women, there is an<lb/>
additional requirement.<lb/>
It's been a part of the<lb/>
culture we've grown up<lb/>
in, and is so taken for<lb/>
granted that it's hardly<lb/>
questioned�that is, that<lb/>
women are expected to<lb/>
appear "sexy<lb/>
Of course, some will<lb/>
deny (vehemently) that<lb/>
it's so. But I don't<lb/>
think they're really be-<lb/>
ing honest, either with<lb/>
who they are talking to,<lb/>
or with themselves.<lb/>
I must confess that I<lb/>
have always had the<lb/>
terrible habit of eaves-<lb/>
dropping on other peo-<lb/>
seen all these<lb/>
several times,<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Lake Whisnant<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
AD MANAGER<lb/>
Robert swaim<lb/>
Jim Barnes<lb/>
Lynn Beyar<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Jeff Rollins<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is Hw Mudant iwmpapw el<lb/>
East Carolina University aponaorad by Mm Madia<lb/>
Board of ECU and la diatributad eacn Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic year (weekly during<lb/>
)�<lb/>
of tfw Editorial Board<lb/>
tfi opvfifOfie of tfi<lb/>
Editorial opinions are<lb/>
and do not necessarily n<lb/>
university or the Media<lb/>
Our oftiCM ore<lb/>
Mm (OM<lb/>
is OM South<lb/>
N.C. 27834<lb/>
Our phono numbers are: 757 im, SM7<lb/>
Subscriptions are 110 annually<lb/>
annually. tubacfipHoB requests<lb/>
M<lb/>
flOOf Of NlO<lb/>
0jf iWaoWno<lb/>
ECU, Greenville.<lb/>
tie's eonversations. But<lb/>
I sure have learned a<lb/>
lot of things that way. 1<lb/>
have also been fortunate<lb/>
enough to have had a<lb/>
few good male friends<lb/>
in mv life who have<lb/>
been willing to let me<lb/>
in on some of the<lb/>
things that go on, on<lb/>
the "other side<lb/>
But maybe the real<lb/>
awareness only comes<lb/>
with experience. Have<lb/>
vou ever heard a man<lb/>
tell another man that he<lb/>
"hired the one with (1)<lb/>
the legs (2) the long<lb/>
hair (3) the tits?" Have<lb/>
vou ever worked on a<lb/>
job with a woman who<lb/>
got away with doing<lb/>
less work and lots of<lb/>
e clash-fluttering? Have<lb/>
vou ever seen a very<lb/>
capable professional<lb/>
woman replaced with a<lb/>
less capable (less<lb/>
threatening), more<lb/>
"sexy-looking" woman?<lb/>
I have<lb/>
things,<lb/>
and I know lots of other<lb/>
women who have too,<lb/>
in case you think I'm<lb/>
exaggerating.<lb/>
It's enough to make<lb/>
you wonder if that isn't<lb/>
what's really expected<lb/>
of women on the jobto<lb/>
be a little less ambi-<lb/>
tious, to provide a little<lb/>
more scintillating<lb/>
atmosphere, complete<lb/>
with alluring costumes,<lb/>
ego-massage, and just a<lb/>
hint of geisha? Maybe<lb/>
it helps make life in the<lb/>
jungle more exotic for<lb/>
the big-game hunters.<lb/>
I checked into some<lb/>
"fashion-and-beauty"<lb/>
books, and closed them<lb/>
with a vague feeling<lb/>
that they would have<lb/>
been better titled "I<lb/>
Dreamed I Was mis-<lb/>
taken for a Call-Girl in<lb/>
my Maidenform Bra,<lb/>
and Cot an Offer to be<lb/>
the King's Mistress<lb/>
There was presented<lb/>
this image of a woman<lb/>
(an image, mind you,<lb/>
not a real person) that<lb/>
we are all supposed to<lb/>
strive for, and various<lb/>
formulas were given, so<lb/>
that you can mold<lb/>
yourself in this image.<lb/>
The only emphasis on<lb/>
personality that I could<lb/>
find was a warning to<lb/>
be "unobtrusive Body<lb/>
movements for the cul-<lb/>
tivation of "delicate<lb/>
motions, round gestures,<lb/>
and slow movements<lb/>
with the hands (which)<lb/>
all suggest femininity"<lb/>
an- shown in detail to<lb/>
be practiced in front of<lb/>
a mirror.<lb/>
Woman are en-<lb/>
couraged in these books<lb/>
to dress to please their<lb/>
men. "If you haven't<lb/>
got a man around,<lb/>
vou're only a half-<lb/>
woman. These are flat<lb/>
facts with which no girl<lb/>
can quarrel, if she's<lb/>
honest with herself . . .<lb/>
There is every chance<lb/>
that Charley knows bel-<lb/>
ter than you do what<lb/>
looks good on you (I<lb/>
was only able to find<lb/>
one book on fashion<lb/>
and appearance for<lb/>
men, and the only<lb/>
reference to women that<lb/>
I could find in it was a<lb/>
chapter called, "Don't<lb/>
Let Women Dress You<lb/>
for Failure What can<lb/>
I say?)<lb/>
The fashion writers<lb/>
inform women that if<lb/>
there is a general rule<lb/>
of thumb about dressing<lb/>
for one's man, it's to<lb/>
be inconspicuous. (She<lb/>
won't feel that his<lb/>
property might be<lb/>
threatened?)<lb/>
As a rationalization<lb/>
for their composite of<lb/>
subtle put-downs, the<lb/>
beauty-book authors<lb/>
contend that it is com-<lb/>
monplace for even the<lb/>
most attractive women<lb/>
lt constantly fret and<lb/>
fuss about their looks<lb/>
and desparalely want to<lb/>
change their appearance<lb/>
and personality. If this<lb/>
is true, where does<lb/>
such an unhealthy atti-<lb/>
tude come from? Are<lb/>
women born that way?<lb/>
Some people think so.<lb/>
In fact, some people<lb/>
absolutely gloat over the<lb/>
"fact" that it's so.<lb/>
(Guess which people?)<lb/>
I disagree. My<lb/>
contention is that such<lb/>
a degrading self-concept<lb/>
is a learned attitude,<lb/>
and the behaviour man-<lb/>
ifestations are learned<lb/>
behavior. A long time<lb/>
ago, I guess it must<lb/>
have been necessary to<lb/>
appease the ruling class<lb/>
by the subjugation of<lb/>
self, in order to just o<lb/>
survive. Have we not<lb/>
made any more social<lb/>
progress than that?<lb/>
It is perhaps a good<lb/>
thing that Memorial<lb/>
Dav and commencement<lb/>
exercises are so close<lb/>
on the calender, for<lb/>
each in its own way<lb/>
spawns a re-dedication<lb/>
to traditional American<lb/>
virtues such as pride of<lb/>
achievement, ambition<lb/>
and respect for those<lb/>
who died in the military<lb/>
protecting those virtues.<lb/>
Speakers extol the<lb/>
various graduates for<lb/>
their vision, and implore<lb/>
them to jump right into<lb/>
the system, seeking<lb/>
solutions for the<lb/>
problems that plague<lb/>
Us.<lb/>
Two bittersweet<lb/>
reminders in the recent<lb/>
press would mar the<lb/>
idealism of even the<lb/>
most resolute college<lb/>
gradule. Mary McGrory,<lb/>
in her column in the<lb/>
Mondav News and Ob-<lb/>
server, quotes statistics<lb/>
on the deplorable state<lb/>
of many Vietnam<lb/>
veterans, economically,<lb/>
physically, psychologi-<lb/>
cal).<lb/>
Last Sunday's New<lb/>
York Times carried on<lb/>
page 26 of the first<lb/>
section a story with the<lb/>
headline "Sale of Nix-<lb/>
on's Estate Aided by<lb/>
Millions in U.S.<lb/>
Funds The story goes<lb/>
on to tell how Nixon<lb/>
stands to make a con-<lb/>
siderable profit on the<lb/>
sale of La Casa Pacif-<lb/>
ica, basically because of<lb/>
some 2.4 million dollars<lb/>
of taxpayers' money<lb/>
being spent for capital<lb/>
improvements on the<lb/>
estate.<lb/>
These two stories<lb/>
bring painful reminders<lb/>
of two incidents when<lb/>
America was not at her<lb/>
virtuous best-Vietnam<lb/>
and the Watergate<lb/>
presidency of Richard<lb/>
Nixon. A look at each<lb/>
shows how America has<lb/>
handled the veterans of<lb/>
Vietnam and a president<lb/>
who sent them<lb/>
therethe Amefican<lb/>
people do not profit<lb/>
well by the comparison.<lb/>
McGrory quotes<lb/>
statistics from a<lb/>
Cleveland survey which<lb/>
shows Viet Vets have<lb/>
not all had acceptance<lb/>
on their re-entrance into<lb/>
civilian society, nor<lb/>
have all adjusted<lb/>
emotionally or psychol-<lb/>
ogically to their return<lb/>
from Vietnam. It is<lb/>
instructive that during<lb/>
Vietnam Veterans' Week<lb/>
we can see how we<lb/>
have treated some of<lb/>
the men we sent over<lb/>
to fight that morally<lb/>
divisive and attrited<lb/>
war.<lb/>
Of the veterans<lb/>
surveyed in the<lb/>
Cleveland study, 41<lb/>
percent of them have<lb/>
an alcohol problem.<lb/>
Drugs are a problem for<lb/>
59 percent of the blacks<lb/>
and 67 percent of the<lb/>
whites;<lb/>
the suicide rate of<lb/>
these Vietnamese<lb/>
Veterans is 234 percent<lb/>
higher than the rate for<lb/>
non-veterans of the<lb/>
same group;<lb/>
-The black Viet vet<lb/>
is twice as likely to be<lb/>
unemployed as the<lb/>
non-veteran who is<lb/>
black;<lb/>
of those married<lb/>
before going to<lb/>
Vietnam, 38 percent<lb/>
were divorced within six<lb/>
months after their<lb/>
return.<lb/>
These facts make, it<lb/>
painfully clear that<lb/>
America is not doing<lb/>
what it can to provide<lb/>
for these men. The<lb/>
government is slow to<lb/>
loath as far as ad-<lb/>
mitting that Vietnam<lb/>
was not an ordinary<lb/>
war, and its veterans a<lb/>
group with special<lb/>
problems. Unlike World<lb/>
 ars, or even the<lb/>
"conflict" of the<lb/>
Korean variety, Vietnam<lb/>
never once had the total<lb/>
support of the people of<lb/>
America. Rather than a<lb/>
comfortable feeling of<lb/>
performing militarily for<lb/>
a nation united in<lb/>
causc, theVhmain<lb/>
veil�ran wascaught m<lb/>
thecrolirrolpublic<lb/>
del� ate, which<lb/>
(JUl-Honed tbe�er)<lb/>
inoralil) olthe I -<lb/>
preSCIICC inSiuiIh a-<lb/>
Asia.<lb/>
Regardlesstil �ur<lb/>
Iceing- aboutletiiam,<lb/>
See VETS, p. 3<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Summer bus woes<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The ECU transit<lb/>
system under the man-<lb/>
agement of Joe Bullard<lb/>
is operating during both<lb/>
summer sessions. How<lb/>
it is running concerns<lb/>
man) day students. The<lb/>
scheduled runs seem<lb/>
flexible and at the<lb/>
"whim of the boss<lb/>
The first run is<lb/>
supposed to get people<lb/>
at various spots on<lb/>
campus by 8:00kind of<lb/>
impossible if the bus<lb/>
picks you up at ten til<lb/>
8:00 with three stops<lb/>
left before arriving on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Frequently slops are<lb/>
passed bv if the driver<lb/>
is late.<lb/>
During the first<lb/>
week ol classes, the<lb/>
buses ran until 3:00.<lb/>
This week it is 2:30.<lb/>
Next week?<lb/>
The "gas situation"<lb/>
was one explanation for<lb/>
deleting the three<lb/>
o'clock route. This is<lb/>
fine, but what can be<lb/>
said for the purple bus<lb/>
left running-radio blar-<lb/>
ingin front of Speight<lb/>
from 9:55 to at least<lb/>
10:30<lb/>
There<lb/>
Th<lb/>
I a -1 i n u r s u a )<lb/>
wa- iif driver,<lb/>
just people left waiting<lb/>
ami complaining.<lb/>
Nobody i. haiv<lb/>
about the present bus<lb/>
situation. Neither the<lb/>
drivers under Joe Bul-<lb/>
lard nor the students<lb/>
lor which this svstcm is<lb/>
prov itlttl.<lb/>
Il is kind ol bad<lb/>
when ou wonder it vou<lb/>
art riding an ECl bu-<lb/>
(il vou tan fin i one) or<lb/>
a gas uzliny dump<lb/>
truck. Milk cartons .<lb/>
paper cups. Hostess pie<lb/>
wrappers, old Fountain-<lb/>
heads are piled e en -<lb/>
where. The seats are<lb/>
dul), and the windows<lb/>
makf the bus look like<lb/>
it has been under the<lb/>
lar River lor a month.<lb/>
Care ami concern<lb/>
needs to be eercis�ed<lb/>
bv students, driver<lb/>
and all concerned.<lb/>
Hojitlullv before we<lb/>
gel too lar into thi-<lb/>
M�k�u, ur will be able<lb/>
to count on the hiw-<lb/>
wilh as much certaiulv<lb/>
as lately, our chances ol<lb/>
ram in Greenville.<lb/>
 Colleen Flvnn<lb/>
Mear Brilliance<lb/>
W U'WWL<lb/>
Tcc-w�ei�ja- T�t� poseur <lb/>
sFo6t SrtoTAae ajo yo�t.<lb/>
 PLEA FoA- ArtiC4tC�WS TO �C<lb/>
atVfS�ve &amp;A5, Hovo bo VoO<lb/>
j R�Tieurtuxe" uSia youA.<lb/>
 Fixer o HeucoPrefcs '<lb/>
? E FlSHoJC- TKo?S 9 � <lb/>
by Barry Clayton<lb/>
16th Street<lb/>
rnisTeii ptsiD6-�n<lb/>
Irl THINKING<lb/>
, I'm THtrtKINGJ<lb/>
&amp;�&amp;<lb/>
by Sheldon Bryant<lb/>
watch Closely, kidan you<lb/>
JUST MKHT LifiRN SfMPTWf<lb/>
JUST LET SWEET SMHD SNOW W<lb/>
HOW T HANDLE THE WfM�V<lb/>
HUlO.Qm! I'MSWfET<lb/>
- �-��  " ' �  �-<lb/>
M �<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057198_0003"/><lb/>
Vietnam, Vietnam, Vietnam, we've all been there'<lb/>
VA<lb/>
31 May 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 3<lb/>
On<lb/>
 exec says vets<lb/>
'need recogintion9<lb/>
�Dservation of<lb/>
vhere Max Cleland<lb/>
aid<lb/>
lue<lb/>
servicemen<lb/>
wreath on<lb/>
who died<lb/>
a plaque<lb/>
during the<lb/>
v ar w a<lb/>
gnored,<lb/>
Memorial Day, Americans began official<lb/>
Vietnam Veterans Week. The week's<lb/>
b;gun at Arlington National Cemetarv,<lb/>
Veterans Affairs Administrator.<lb/>
red, white and bli<lb/>
ledicated to tht<lb/>
�letnam War.<lb/>
u,1'lnantatv,e,nam veu'ran wh� os� th iegs<lb/>
I  dur,ng -ar, stated that America<lb/>
m ,� f1 m�re rec�8�i�n to the manv<lb/>
��s who served in Vietnam. The fact that the<lb/>
unpopular has caused the veteran to be<lb/>
according to Cleland.<lb/>
Freedom is not free - c,eand gai(J �Jhe<lb/>
'�lwn "�� "per forget that price, no matter what<lb/>
send our troops to fight he added.<lb/>
maintained that Vietnam veterans were<lb/>
i-ver recognized a heroes and never given respect<lb/>
e�r Near. ,� Vietnam, Such treatment of the<lb/>
erans, he noted, can be more<lb/>
?hysical wounds received in combat<lb/>
painful than<lb/>
ECU veterans<lb/>
decline in number<lb/>
 ietnam<lb/>
lumber ha<lb/>
iccording to Ms<lb/>
ration Certification<lb/>
Veterans attend ECU, but the exact<lb/>
been statistical!) broken down,<lb/>
Slay Jackson, Veterans Adminis-<lb/>
officer for ECU. There are<lb/>
ipproximately 400-500 students at ECU who receive<lb/>
V - educational benefits. In addition to Vietnam<lb/>
� eterans, dependents of veterans and disabled<lb/>
veterans are included in the ECU totals.<lb/>
The Viet vets were active on the ECU campus in<lb/>
he early 70's, according to Ms Jackson. A fraternal<lb/>
rganization was formed with 100 or so active<lb/>
members, but the society is no longer politically<lb/>
ictive, Jackson said. The number of veterans<lb/>
.eeking a higher education at ECU has declined<lb/>
ver the years, with some of the decline attributed<lb/>
to increased veteran enrollment at technical schools<lb/>
rather than lour year institutions.<lb/>
According to the VA educational benefits, a<lb/>
veteran has up to ten years from the date of his<lb/>
lischarge to take advantage of VA educational<lb/>
is-sistance. The benefit is paid in a monthly lump<lb/>
-um, out of which the student must pay tuition.<lb/>
I hi plan could affect the move towards the<lb/>
technical institutions, Jackson pointed out, because<lb/>
the veteran paying less tuition will have, more<lb/>
benefit money to apply to the day-to-day living<lb/>
vpenses ol a student.<lb/>
Virginia vet dies in shootout<lb/>
HAMPTON Va.<lb/>
(AP) '<lb/>
The wife of a Viet-<lb/>
nam veteran who shot<lb/>
himself to death after<lb/>
taking hostages and<lb/>
battling police in a<lb/>
restaurant, said Monday<lb/>
her husband couldn't<lb/>
cope after-jhe war.<lb/>
No one knew exactly<lb/>
what happened to Tech.<lb/>
Sgt. Orenen Tucker, 42,<lb/>
during his year in<lb/>
Vietnam. But he came<lb/>
out a different man, his<lb/>
vile said.<lb/>
He got out on a<lb/>
discharge and<lb/>
get himself to-<lb/>
said his wife,<lb/>
a da) after the<lb/>
Air Force vet-<lb/>
lh! himself.<lb/>
he was sick<lb/>
medical<lb/>
couldn't<lb/>
gelher<lb/>
Arlene,<lb/>
20-year<lb/>
eran lui<lb/>
Because<lb/>
with<lb/>
extreme anxiety,<lb/>
she said, her husband<lb/>
retired and they settled<lb/>
in the Gloucester Coun-<lb/>
ts town of Haves,<lb/>
where her parents live.<lb/>
He tried working at<lb/>
a chemical plant near<lb/>
Williamsburg, she said,<lb/>
"but he couldn't main-<lb/>
tain the schedule she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
After that, Tucker<lb/>
tried going back to<lb/>
school at Rappahannock<lb/>
Community College. That<lb/>
didn't work out either.<lb/>
"Something hap-<lb/>
pened said Mrs.Tuc-<lb/>
ker. "He just couldn't<lb/>
cope with things<lb/>
It all ended for the<lb/>
veteran Sunday morn-<lb/>
ingat the start of<lb/>
Vietnam Veterans'<lb/>
week�at Clyde's Res-<lb/>
taurnat.<lb/>
There, said Hampton<lb/>
Detective Charles Firth,<lb/>
Tucker apparently seized<lb/>
a gun behind a counter,<lb/>
look, hostages and more<lb/>
than an hour later shot<lb/>
himself once in the<lb/>
chest.<lb/>
"He told police he<lb/>
wasn't coming out<lb/>
Firth said. "He said,<lb/>
'You'll have to kill<lb/>
in<lb/>
me.<lb/>
Gun I ire was<lb/>
exchanged between<lb/>
Tucker and police, and<lb/>
one of the hostages was<lb/>
hurl.<lb/>
Tucker was a 6-foot-<lb/>
4, athletic-looking man<lb/>
who knew how to use a<lb/>
gun lor hunting.<lb/>
In Vietnam, during<lb/>
the Tel offensive of the<lb/>
late 10's, Tucker was<lb/>
assigned to supply pro-<lb/>
curement.<lb/>
"He was under a lot<lb/>
ol pressure his wife<lb/>
ol 18 years said.<lb/>
But he felt it was<lb/>
his duty to be there. A<lb/>
lot ol guvs around him<lb/>
didn't feel that way,<lb/>
but he was very patri-<lb/>
otic<lb/>
For Tucker, a Pine<lb/>
Valley, 0 k 1 a native<lb/>
who grew up in Ore-<lb/>
gon, "the military was<lb/>
his whole life his wife<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Whether it was co-<lb/>
incidence that he died<lb/>
during a holiday week-<lb/>
end dedicated to vet-<lb/>
erans isn't certain.<lb/>
"I wondered that<lb/>
in v self said Mrs.<lb/>
� I ucker.<lb/>
The war was this year's media event<lb/>
By Robert L. Jones<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Michael Herr's best-<lb/>
selling Vietnam chonical<lb/>
Dispatches ends with<lb/>
the words "Vietnam<lb/>
Vietnam Vietnam, we've<lb/>
all been there And<lb/>
lor those of us who<lb/>
weren't actually there,<lb/>
the past year has made<lb/>
up lor that absence.<lb/>
This has been the<lb/>
year of Vietnam. For<lb/>
the media it has been<lb/>
4-4-����m4-4-�<lb/>
THE NATIONAL SALUTE<lb/>
TO VIETNAM ERA<lb/>
VETERANS<lb/>
nam Veterans Week<lb/>
May SB- June 3, 1979<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
����������������?����������������.<lb/>
VETS from p. 2<lb/>
that tht<lb/>
�<lb/>
are<lb/>
u-<lb/>
once more<lb/>
as fellow<lb/>
anl the least<lb/>
a moral<lb/>
can<lb/>
now realize<lb/>
veterans<lb/>
among<lb/>
izens.<lb/>
national<lb/>
to assure<lb/>
these veterans re-<lb/>
adjustment services ol<lb/>
whatever t v pe are<lb/>
required.<lb/>
11 ! lie ietnam<lb/>
veteran- are not taring<lb/>
as v � II as deserved, the<lb/>
-aim cannot be said of<lb/>
the president who pre-<lb/>
sided over their with-<lb/>
drawal from ietnam<lb/>
alter launching a private<lb/>
war on Cambodia,<lb/>
Richard M. Nixon.<lb/>
Sunday - New i- ork<lb/>
Times story about the<lb/>
-ale of Nixon's place<lb/>
(our place?) at San<lb/>
Clemente leaves me<lb/>
with a rancid taste in<lb/>
inv mouth. It seems<lb/>
that in I969, the Nixons<lb/>
paii SI.5 million for La<lb/>
Ga-a Pacifica. Old-time<lb/>
Nixon buddy Robert<lb/>
bplanalp helped Nixon<lb/>
with the finances for<lb/>
I he deal. As (resident,<lb/>
Nixon justifiably had<lb/>
some improvements<lb/>
made tn the house and<lb/>
grounds, lor services<lb/>
and security befitting a<lb/>
president.<lb/>
c some of those<lb/>
improvements, such as<lb/>
I he purchase of<lb/>
neighboring houses and<lb/>
the construction ol new<lb/>
building were made at<lb/>
�in expense of the<lb/>
taxpayers of $2,444,000<lb/>
by August of 1973,<lb/>
according to the General<lb/>
Services Administration.<lb/>
(C.S.A.).<lb/>
Supposedly, someone<lb/>
connected with Nixon<lb/>
stated that the<lb/>
Government, which<lb/>
stands to inherit the<lb/>
complex, denied interest<lb/>
in taking over the<lb/>
properly. This would<lb/>
seemingly clear the way<lb/>
for Nixon to realize a<lb/>
handsome profit on the<lb/>
sale of the property.<lb/>
The trouble with this is<lb/>
that the Nixon people<lb/>
did not identify the<lb/>
government source who<lb/>
supposedly denied<lb/>
interest in the property.<lb/>
Does any of this<lb/>
sound familiar? It<lb/>
seems, as sure as the<lb/>
wind doth blow from<lb/>
Harrisburg, that Nixon<lb/>
is getting ready to do it<lb/>
to the American people<lb/>
again. Here is the first<lb/>
president to resign n<lb/>
in disgrace, collecting<lb/>
lees of S600.000 for his<lb/>
fictionalized accounts ol<lb/>
W atergate given to<lb/>
David Frost, and<lb/>
reaping yet more money<lb/>
for his big blue book.<lb/>
I he thought of Nixon<lb/>
realizing perhaps SI<lb/>
million or more profit<lb/>
mi the sale of property<lb/>
which we, the tax-<lb/>
pavers. improved is<lb/>
galling.<lb/>
To compare how the<lb/>
rank and file Vietnam<lb/>
Veteran has fared after<lb/>
his service to America<lb/>
how Richard Nixon<lb/>
fared after his<lb/>
service to America is to<lb/>
brush with<lb/>
a dark sort.<lb/>
with<lb/>
ha;<lb/>
cynicism of<lb/>
Here then a Vietnam<lb/>
Veterans Week chall-<lb/>
enge to the graduates<lb/>
ol the class of "79 :<lb/>
What is it in the<lb/>
national character which<lb/>
allows veterans of an<lb/>
unpopular war little real<lb/>
support and at the<lb/>
same time rewards with<lb/>
riches those political<lb/>
criminals who tested the<lb/>
Constitution almost to<lb/>
the bursting point? This<lb/>
is the proper time to<lb/>
welcome all graduates<lb/>
into the world. We<lb/>
need your ideas<lb/>
mistakes have, as vou<lb/>
can see, been made.<lb/>
something like an ex-<lb/>
plosion, or a fever.<lb/>
Major media events<lb/>
have included:<lb/>
National Book Award<lb/>
Vt mners Dog Soldiers<lb/>
by Robert Stone and<lb/>
Going After Caccito bv<lb/>
Tim O'Brien; Herr's<lb/>
Dispatches; and thelilm-<lb/>
The Deerhunter. Who'll<lb/>
Stop The Rain. Coming<lb/>
Home. Heroes, and the<lb/>
still-unfinished Apo-<lb/>
calypse Now.<lb/>
Here is a brief list<lb/>
ol books available in<lb/>
Joyner Library on the<lb/>
Vietnam Veteran. Check<lb/>
out:<lb/>
I he Discarded Army bv<lb/>
Paul Starr, (1973).<lb/>
The e Soldier by<lb/>
John Kerry, (I97l).<lb/>
Home fter The War<lb/>
hy Robert Jav Liflon,<lb/>
(1973).<lb/>
Bringing Home the X ar<lb/>
by John Heltner.<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN<lb/>
EAT<lb/>
Perch<lb/>
or<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
$2.29<lb/>
Dinner meal includes<lb/>
Golden Crisp<lb/>
French Fries,<lb/>
Cole Slaw, Tartar Sauce<lb/>
and the World,�<lb/>
Best Hushpupples.<lb/>
FRIED CHICKEN<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAll<lb/>
$2.75<lb/>
miranrs<lb/>
1890<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Sun. thru Thar. 400-100<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 430-10:00<lb/>
Friday's Seafood<lb/>
23X18. Evans St.<lb/>
Baa inn.<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
Mon. -Fri. 11:30 2:00<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Tnes. 6:00 8:00<lb/>
758 6266 Hwy 2B4 bypass Greenville , N. C.<lb/>
r<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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! CUSTOMER APPRECIATION<lb/>
I WED THUR.4-6<lb/>
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2713 E. 10th Greenville<lb/>
Open 4:00 p.m. dally<lb/>
.4<lb/>
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T<lb/>
THE UNIVERSITY BOOK EXCHANGE<lb/>
is having a SUMMER SPORTSWEAR<lb/>
SALE .Great savings<lb/>
on plain and<lb/>
printed<lb/>
sportswear.<lb/>
S<lb/>
U<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057198_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 May 1979<lb/>
Students receive fellowships and awards<lb/>
I In rain<lb/>
hut i'<lb/>
h gone for good.<lb/>
!tir a place to<lb/>
(ool oil whrn the sun finall) appears.<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
ECU's Tau Chapter<lb/>
of Phi Sigma Pi national<lb/>
honor fraternity has<lb/>
announced the selection<lb/>
ol Susan Cheston of<lb/>
Annapolis, Md and<lb/>
Bernard Lam be of<lb/>
Coldshoro as out-<lb/>
standing seniors at ECU<lb/>
for 1979.<lb/>
Selected by a cam-<lb/>
pus-wide group of<lb/>
faculty representatives,<lb/>
Miss Chestion and<lb/>
Lambe exemplify Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi requirements<lb/>
lor the awards - out-<lb/>
standing scholarship,<lb/>
outstanding leadership,<lb/>
and service to the uni-<lb/>
versit.<lb/>
Miss Cheston<lb/>
achieved a 3.947<lb/>
average in music edu-<lb/>
cation and music<lb/>
therapj while serving as<lb/>
an officer of several<lb/>
campus organizations,<lb/>
stall member of campus<lb/>
publications, and re-<lb/>
cipient of manv campus<lb/>
honors and anarchs.<lb/>
Lambe achieved a<lb/>
5 13 average in poli-<lb/>
tical science while<lb/>
serving as the Group<lb/>
Commander of the ECU<lb/>
Air Force ROTC unit.<lb/>
Lam he lias received<lb/>
other honors and<lb/>
award- both for his<lb/>
academic achievements<lb/>
and lor his service to<lb/>
the campus.<lb/>
WILLIAM GAJUNER<lb/>
W illiain Garner of<lb/>
Greemillc, senior<lb/>
student in the School of<lb/>
Business, i the 197(;<lb/>
vvinnei of an annual<lb/>
1 esting center to administer<lb/>
NTE, GMAT, LSAT in summer<lb/>
Vdi<lb/>
lor<lb/>
the site<lb/>
k I fall,<lb/>
11 i o n<lb/>
()n<lb/>
7. the<lb/>
�lii lagement<lb/>
I I 1<lb/>
 ('inter<lb/>
in-<lb/>
Jlllv<lb/>
� gin<lb/>
le Ed-<lb/>
Sen ice<lb/>
'  '  � ti s also<lb/>
ed that ECU<lb/>
the site ol the<lb/>
School Admission<lb/>
(LSAT) for five<lb/>
dates lor the ll7-<lb/>
tdemic year.<lb/>
DEADLINES<lb/>
Deadline for accept-<lb/>
application for the<lb/>
i. raduate Management<lb/>
Vdmission Test is June<lb/>
15. Application blanks<lb/>
should be completed<lb/>
and mailed to the<lb/>
I d ucational Testing<lb/>
�lee. Box 966-R,<lb/>
Princeton, .J. 08540.<lb/>
rurther information and<lb/>
application materials<lb/>
FOLKLORE<lb/>
continued from p.l<lb/>
,<lb/>
,i I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Man<lb/>
I tiiversit)<lb/>
id a list<lb/>
 terms<lb/>
: up ol<lb/>
 ork pre-<lb/>
h n plaj ing<lb/>
- 'i ted b)<lb/>
f the<lb/>
ol New<lb/>
isell<lb/>
ker<lb/>
sons m various parts of<lb/>
the nation and carries<lb/>
announcements of forth-<lb/>
ming conferences on<lb/>
asp� cts of folklore.<lb/>
n alumnus ol the<lb/>
Stat I niversit) of New<lb/>
A "rk at Albany<lb/>
(BS,MA), Sullivan has<lb/>
1) and PhD degrees in<lb/>
lolklorc and mythology<lb/>
Irom the University of<lb/>
t Oregon.<lb/>
may he obtained from<lb/>
the KGl Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice. 105 Speight Build-<lb/>
ing, ECl .<lb/>
INTE registrants<lb/>
should have their com-<lb/>
pleted applications<lb/>
mailed to reach the ETS<lb/>
no later than June 28,<lb/>
the deadline lor regular<lb/>
registration. For reg-<lb/>
istration alter June 28<lb/>
but hv Julv 5, a penaltv<lb/>
lee ol S5 is charged.<lb/>
On-the-spot registration<lb/>
will not be allowed.<lb/>
Forms and instructions<lb/>
are available directly<lb/>
Irom National Teacher<lb/>
Examinations, ETS, Ko<lb/>
911, Princeton, N.J<lb/>
Sullivan is an assis-<lb/>
tant professor at ECU,<lb/>
where he teaches<lb/>
courses in .Northern<lb/>
European mythology and<lb/>
American folklore.<lb/>
vmong his research<lb/>
interests have been lit-<lb/>
erarv fantas) and sci-<lb/>
ence fiction as well as<lb/>
traditional and modern<lb/>
folk legends.<lb/>
085 fl or Irom the<lb/>
Testing Center.<lb/>
ECL<lb/>
The LSAT. a halfdaj<lb/>
test is designed to<lb/>
measure certain mental<lb/>
abilities important in<lb/>
the stud) of law, will<lb/>
be given at ECU on<lb/>
October 13 and Decem-<lb/>
ber 1. 1979 and on<lb/>
Fehruarv 2, April 19<lb/>
and June 28. 1980.<lb/>
Sample test questions<lb/>
ami registration material<lb/>
are available direct!)<lb/>
Irom Law School Admi-<lb/>
ssion Services, Box<lb/>
2000, New town, Pa<lb/>
18910, or from the ECl<lb/>
Testing Center.<lb/>
ol a<lb/>
political jingle about<lb/>
Preside irter now<lb/>
imong Green-<lb/>
ville school children.<lb/>
The newsletter reg-<lb/>
ularly featun 'Notes<lb/>
and Queries column in<lb/>
which folklore scholars<lb/>
mav -hare research<lb/>
interests and solicit<lb/>
similar findings hv per-<lb/>
Aimc<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
WAREHOUSE<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
EZARIAH<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
EZARIAH<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
DADDY'S<lb/>
MONEY<lb/>
� ����<lb/>
Wed. June 6th<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
112 E Fifth Street <lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC<lb/>
758-7099<lb/>
featuring:<lb/>
�tOUrquoise &amp; Indian<lb/>
jewelry<lb/>
�metal and solid brass<lb/>
belt buckles<lb/>
�do-it yourself<lb/>
leather kits<lb/>
I" u discount on<lb/>
jc v ii � u1( yOU<lb/>
i�x'iii ihis ad<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$150.22<lb/>
pregnancy test, birth control and<lb/>
problem pregnancy counseling For<lb/>
further information call 832-0535 (toll-<lb/>
free number 800-221-2568) between<lb/>
9AM-5PM weekdays<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, NC. 27603<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Mon. - Thurs. 11:30-9pm<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11:30-10pm<lb/>
Greenville Blvd-264 ByPass<lb/>
756-6737<lb/>
Enjoy Our Dining Room OR Take-Out<lb/>
honor sponsored hy<lb/>
Beta Gamma Sigma<lb/>
honor society in busi-<lb/>
ness. The ECU chapter<lb/>
named Garner the<lb/>
year's most Outstanding<lb/>
Senior. Garner, a busi-<lb/>
ness administration<lb/>
major at ECU, has<lb/>
maintained a perfect 4.0<lb/>
academic grade point<lb/>
average during his<lb/>
studies here. He is the<lb/>
son ol Leslie Garner ol<lb/>
I Toil Knoll wood Drive,<lb/>
Greenv ille.<lb/>
Ann M. Arnold of<lb/>
Choeowinily, NC, a<lb/>
recent graduate with a<lb/>
perfect 4.0 grade point<lb/>
�verage at ECU, is the<lb/>
winner of the 1979<lb/>
Fiehlerest Management<lb/>
Award in the ECU<lb/>
School ol Business.<lb/>
Mrs. Arnold, vile ol<lb/>
Billy Arnold, completed<lb/>
tier ECU work last<lb/>
December and is now a<lb/>
teacher ol economics at<lb/>
Beaufort County Tech.<lb/>
GRADS RECEIVE<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Debra IVrry Hill of<lb/>
Kinslon and Ruth<lb/>
Evelyn Porter ol ra-<lb/>
etteville, graduate<lb/>
students in psychology<lb/>
at ECU, have been<lb/>
awarded SI,500<lb/>
Fellowships b) biue<lb/>
Bell Inc. to conduct<lb/>
research projects in<lb/>
industrial, organizational<lb/>
ps etiology.<lb/>
The Blue B<lb/>
fellowship awards are<lb/>
made through the ECL<lb/>
Department ol l's<lb/>
cholog) i' outstanding<lb/>
graduate students in th<lb/>
field. Hn is the fourth<lb/>
year ol the Blue B<lb/>
fellowship program<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Ihr two students<lb/>
will be prov iijrd a<lb/>
11 search site and vill<lb/>
 � r k on projects in<lb/>
r.<lb/>
t � <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i ii -u 11 al ion v n h I)<lb/>
 illiam F. Grossniekh<lb/>
theii graduate ad v i-or.<lb/>
IS THIS<lb/>
WHAT YOUR<lb/>
KISSES<lb/>
TASTE LIKE?<lb/>
If you smoke cigarettes,<lb/>
you taste like one.<lb/>
Your clothes and hair<lb/>
can smell stale and<lb/>
unpleasant, too.<lb/>
You don't notice it. but<lb/>
people close to you do.<lb/>
Especially if they don't<lb/>
smoke.<lb/>
And non-smokers<lb/>
are the best people to<lb/>
love. They live<lb/>
longer.<lb/>
CANCER SOCIETY<lb/>
This space contributed bv the<lb/>
publisher as a public service<lb/>
it!<lb/>
��!t��!���!�!t!t!t!t<lb/>
Sherlock's<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
On 5th St. across from<lb/>
the Book Barn<lb/>
Good Food<lb/>
&amp; Good People<lb/>
Vegetarian diets<lb/>
respected.<lb/>
MonSat. 11a.m9p.m.<lb/>
STUFFY'S<lb/>
GOOD STUFF<lb/>
Now serving ice cream cones,<lb/>
sodas, sundaes and<lb/>
banana splits.<lb/>
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL<lb/>
Buy any size ice cream cone<lb/>
and get ONE FREE<lb/>
George to wne<lb/>
Shoppes<lb/>
752 6130<lb/>
KORE-O-MAT<lb/>
"The fall service<lb/>
laundramat"<lb/>
WELCOMES ECU<lb/>
SUMMER SCHOOL<lb/>
44 Wash your clothes in<lb/>
AIR-CONDITIONED<lb/>
COMFORT44<lb/>
E. 14th St. 7f 2-9636<lb/>
coupon<lb/>
GOOD FOR ONE<lb/>
 FREE WASH<lb/>
limit l per customer<lb/>
offer expires June 13' 1979<lb/>
Specializing in<lb/>
Nike Footwear<lb/>
and Accessories<lb/>
NOW IN STOCK the NEW NIKE Tailwinds<lb/>
ATHLETES'FOOT-WEAR&amp; ACCESSORIES<lb/>
RUNNING - TENNIS - BASKETBALL - RACQUETBALL - SOCCER<lb/>
Over 100 different<lb/>
styles of footwear<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
756-0309<lb/>
THE BEST MEXICAN FOOD<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
PURE BEEF OR BEAN TACO<lb/>
each<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Special Good Only With Coupon<lb/>
May 31- June 6 , 1979<lb/>
Limit-4<lb/>
TheTastiest Taco In Town<lb/>
TIPPY'S TACO HOUSE<lb/>
T<lb/>
SunThurs.<lb/>
ll:00a.m10:p.m.<lb/>
Fri. and Sat.<lb/>
11:00a.m. lhOOp.r<lb/>
no. 14 Steerbnrger<lb/>
and Fries or Baked Potato, Served on a<lb/>
Flying Saneer, Yon Can Keep!<lb/>
Take ont till QQ<lb/>
Orders NJF-l.�Crcr Banquet Facilities<lb/>
available 758-8550 33 Item Salad Bar<lb/>
COME DRESSED TO IMPRESS<lb/>
AT THE ALL NEW<lb/>
THE SUMMER PLACE TO RP<lb/>
SPECIALS C<lb/>
Thurs. .10 Draft from 9:00 til 10:00<lb/>
Sun. FREE KEG For girls starting"at 900<lb/>
.10 DrsftRestof Night<lb/>
T<lb/>
  ' V "<lb/>
- - -  -s- �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057198_0005"/><lb/>
TRENDS<lb/>
31 May 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
l-iLl<lb/>
Allen and Keaton<lb/>
star in Manhattan<lb/>
Bv Barry Clayton<lb/>
Assistant Trends Editor<lb/>
Uter writing and starring in his zany madcap<lb/>
(lake the Mone and Run, Kvervthing You<lb/>
Vhas Wanted lo know About Sex. Bananas, and<lb/>
in more ol the same genre). Woody Allen filmed<lb/>
Vnnit- Hall which was a little less slapstick and a<lb/>
� more Oscar material than his other works.<lb/>
rhis was followed by Interiors, a film that<lb/>
i so tar from the Allen formula as to<lb/>
�gnized a hi own work.<lb/>
Vow Mien has released another film of the<lb/>
Vnnic Hall variety, it is called Manhattan, and, as<lb/>
Vnnk- Hall, it . tilizes a serious theme which<lb/>
embellishes with his own sparkling insane<lb/>
fhe central idea of Manhattan is Isaac<lb/>
search tor stabilit) in the worlds of art,<lb/>
-siunalism, and love, played against the<lb/>
ol Manhattan, the cit) that he loves and<lb/>
I leave.<lb/>
 the stor) opens Isaac (Woody Allen), age 42,<lb/>
i- himsell caught up in an affair with a<lb/>
id u;irl played b) Mariel Hemmingway. His<lb/>
riend introduces Isaac to his mistress (Diane<lb/>
iton).<lb/>
 one might expect, Allen and Keaton fall in<lb/>
: decide to share an apartment. Even though<lb/>
surface the appear to have nothing<lb/>
�r in common. The complication comes<lb/>
Murph) refuses to -top out of the picture.<lb/>
is much to recommend Manhattan to the<lb/>
movie audience and, most especially, to<lb/>
Vllen Ian However, some points about the<lb/>
film transmit themselves less readily than others.<lb/>
For instance, the film is in black and white.<lb/>
Even in this day and age that is not unique to<lb/>
Manhattan But why is the film in black and white?<lb/>
Mel Brooks comedy masterpiece Young Frankenstein<lb/>
used a black and white format. But then, Brooks<lb/>
also chose to use the original Frankenstein set. The<lb/>
purpose was clear: authenticity. Brooks decided<lb/>
that lor his parody of the early horror classic to be<lb/>
most effective, it had to resemble the original as<lb/>
nearly as possible.<lb/>
But what about Manhattan ?<lb/>
There is a sense of despondancy, of the<lb/>
uncontrollableness of circumstance, the runs through<lb/>
the film the way a vein runs through a man's arm.<lb/>
Black and white footage tends to accentuate this.<lb/>
For this verv reason many directors opted away from<lb/>
color even though color printing was available at the<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Maybe.<lb/>
Or maybe it is just the fact that Allen is an<lb/>
earlv film hull.<lb/>
Another point i the George Gershwin score that<lb/>
is everywhere in the film. Being a Gershwin ian, I<lb/>
natural!) can find no objection to the score. In<lb/>
several plate- the choice ol music is played for<lb/>
laugh that much is certain. But many movie-goers<lb/>
are going to wonder what condition Manhattan's<lb/>
budget was in when the time to choose music rolled<lb/>
around.<lb/>
The cat is a line one, and the acting is<lb/>
unilormlv excellent.<lb/>
Mariel Hemingway who plays the role of Allen's<lb/>
teenage lover is the third grandaughter of the<lb/>
legendar) Ernest Hemingway, and, like her<lb/>
Allen and Keaton<lb/>
grandfather and sisters (celebrated novelist Joan and<lb/>
model actress Margaux with whom Mariel starred in<lb/>
the controversial Lipstick), Mariel is obviously an<lb/>
achiever.<lb/>
Michael Murphy starred (along with Allen) in<lb/>
Martin Ritt's The Front. In addition to being a<lb/>
member of Robert Altman's stock company, Murphy<lb/>
Marred opposit Jill Claybugh in An Unmarried<lb/>
W oman.<lb/>
Anne Byrne (Murphy's wife in Manhattan) began<lb/>
her acting career with a bit part in Papillon in<lb/>
which she played the spouse of (not ironically) her<lb/>
real-life husband Dustin Hoffman. Italian filmmaker<lb/>
Lina Wertmuller found it worthwhile to give Bvrne<lb/>
a feature role opposite Candice Bergen in The End<lb/>
of the World in Our I sual Bed in a Night Full of<lb/>
Kaiu.<lb/>
Meryl Slreep who plays the part of Allen's<lb/>
lesbian ex-wife ma) be a newcomer to feature films,<lb/>
hut -he i- certainl) in no way inexperienced. In<lb/>
addition to her Emm) Award winning performance<lb/>
in the television mini-series Holocaust, Streep has<lb/>
-tarred in the Oscar winning Deer Hunter and in<lb/>
Julia. She also stars opposite Alan Alda in The<lb/>
Senator, and opposite Dustin Hoffman in Kramer<lb/>
vs. Kramer, both films slated for release later this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Murphy and Byrne<lb/>
Allen dictates troubles<lb/>
Chris Costner, Eve, gives lecture at ECU<lb/>
By Laura West<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On Tuesday evening, May 22, 1979, in the<lb/>
Allied Health auditorium, a lecture was given by<lb/>
Chris Costner Sizemore on the subject of "multiple<lb/>
personalities Her life was portrayed in the<lb/>
bestseller The Three Faces of Eve written by her<lb/>
psychologist Corbett H. Thigpen, in 1952.<lb/>
The tir-t -he can remember about her life was<lb/>
at the ag( "j 2, which was probably the starting<lb/>
iier "illness Mrs. Sizemore seems to<lb/>
remember 3 hurtful events when she was around<lb/>
2, such a: 1) a drowned man being taken<lb/>
from the ditch, 2) another man being cut in half at<lb/>
a lumber mill with his belt still intact with his<lb/>
pants, and 3) her mother cutting her arm and<lb/>
yelling to Chris to get help from her father. This<lb/>
was when her first transition occured. She was so<lb/>
afraid that she ran and hid, and another little girl<lb/>
went to get help.<lb/>
As a teenager, Chris did not perform well in<lb/>
school so she dropped out in the tenth grade,<lb/>
because of the pressure being so great.<lb/>
Chris underwent long periods of amnesia and<lb/>
frequesnt headaches. These were the starting signals<lb/>
of her different personalities.<lb/>
Mrs. Sizemore did not start going to Dr.<lb/>
Thigpen, until she tried to choke her daughter. That<lb/>
was when her family knew something was<lb/>
desperately wrong and she needed help. Dr.<lb/>
Thigpen told Chris that her many personalities were<lb/>
defensive mechanisms she underwent to get away<lb/>
from the stressful events in reality.<lb/>
Chris' family was very supportive and helpful<lb/>
towards her. Her father paid Dr Thigpen to give<lb/>
Chris private sessions rather thatn put her in a<lb/>
mental institution.<lb/>
Chris' first husband left her when he knew Chris<lb/>
was so ill. But later on she marned a gentle and<lb/>
understanding man who tried to help her. As her<lb/>
daughter got older she went to the sessions with<lb/>
her mother to see how she could help her.<lb/>
In 44 years Chris Sizemore experienced 22<lb/>
different personalities: ten wrote poetrv. six were<lb/>
artists, one a tailor, and one was left-handed<lb/>
even though she is originally right-handed. The<lb/>
longest personality lasted 12 years and the shortest<lb/>
personality lasted 6 weeks.<lb/>
Her last 3 personalities were 1) the strawberry<lb/>
lady � who dressed up ;n cir.k and red, was loud<lb/>
and aggressive, and thought she was a young, thin<lb/>
woman, though in reality she was in her forties and<lb/>
heavy set; 2) the purple laJy � who dres.� d ir<lb/>
purple, liked evervthinp mirnle and she a f�<lb/>
Music faculty win recognition<lb/>
nicest of all the personalities; 3) the<lb/>
lady � Wi nt out 0j ner<lb/>
down the same place sne iad been before<lb/>
retrace<lb/>
wav to go<lb/>
of<lb/>
of<lb/>
! hree members<lb/>
ECl School<lb/>
Musi facult) have re-<lb/>
cent lv been awarded<lb/>
national recognition.<lb/>
Robert Hause, con-<lb/>
du tor of the ECU<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra,<lb/>
appointed to a<lb/>
second triennial term as<lb/>
governor of Phi Mu Al-<lb/>
pha Sinfonia fraternity's<lb/>
Province 20.<lb/>
He will be one of 38<lb/>
provincial governors who<lb/>
a- liasons between<lb/>
a in pus chapters and<lb/>
regional and national<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha directors.<lb/>
Dr. Rodney Schmidt,<lb/>
a violinist, has been<lb/>
chosen to perform in<lb/>
Zurich, Switzerland from<lb/>
June 25 to July 7 in a<lb/>
select master class dir-<lb/>
ected by famed violinist<lb/>
Nathan Milstein.<lb/>
The class will be<lb/>
held at the Muraltengut<lb/>
in Zurich, meeting daily<lb/>
for a four-hour session<lb/>
in which each par-<lb/>
ticipant will perform<lb/>
concertos and sonatas<lb/>
for Milstein's criticism<lb/>
and comments.<lb/>
Herbert Carter,<lb/>
chairman of the School's<lb/>
instrumental depart-<lb/>
ment, was awarded a<lb/>
citation of excellence<lb/>
from the National Band<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
The honor is given<lb/>
to persons who have<lb/>
"set an example of ex-<lb/>
cellence in musicianship,<lb/>
leadership, and dedi-<lb/>
cation to bands and<lb/>
band music<lb/>
Ray Haney, NC<lb/>
state chairman of the<lb/>
National Band Associ-<lb/>
ation, presented the<lb/>
award on behalf of the<lb/>
NBA.<lb/>
ECU's annual Sum-<lb/>
mer Day Camp has<lb/>
been set for June 11 -<lb/>
July 7. The camp is<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
Department of Health,<lb/>
Physical Education, Re-<lb/>
creation and Safety.<lb/>
According to camp<lb/>
directors Gay Blocker<lb/>
and Josephine Saunders,<lb/>
children may be en-<lb/>
rolled in the camp for<lb/>
one ore more weeks, on<lb/>
a half-day or all-day<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
Instruction and acti-<lb/>
vities will be available<lb/>
in many areas, with a<lb/>
special emphasis upon<lb/>
development of swim-<lb/>
ming skills.<lb/>
Play opportunities<lb/>
will' be offered in ar-<lb/>
chery, badminton, bask-<lb/>
etball, soccer, recrea-<lb/>
tional games, rhythms,<lb/>
table tennis, tumbling,<lb/>
gymnastics, and other<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
The ECU Day Camp<lb/>
is open to children<lb/>
ranging from kindergar-<lb/>
ten through 12 years of<lb/>
age. Its purpose is to<lb/>
promote physical, men-<lb/>
tal and social well-being<lb/>
through enjoyment der-<lb/>
ived from both mild and<lb/>
vigorous activities.<lb/>
Further details about<lb/>
the camp and appli-<lb/>
cation materials are<lb/>
available from "Summer<lb/>
Day Camp Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, ECU, Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C.<lb/>
Since enrollment will<lb/>
be limited to assure a<lb/>
good staff-camper ratio,<lb/>
early application is ad-<lb/>
vised.<lb/>
In the novel, The Three Faces of Eve, Dr.<lb/>
Thigpen and Hervey M. Checkley wrote about<lb/>
Chris, alias Eve, and three of her personalities: 1)<lb/>
Eve White, 2) Eve Black, and 3) Jane.<lb/>
The three personalities followed a definite<lb/>
pattern: the first personality was the dominant who<lb/>
always had amnesia; the second personality knew<lb/>
what she was doing; and the third personality knew<lb/>
what all 3 personalities were doing.<lb/>
After many years, Mrs. Sizemore went to<lb/>
another psychiatrist who said to stop hiding and get<lb/>
out into the world. He felt that people would<lb/>
understand what she was going through. And thev<lb/>
did.<lb/>
Chris' treatment consisted of hypnosis, not<lb/>
chemicals or shock treatment.<lb/>
Her resolution started 5 years ago, when she<lb/>
was sitting inon one of her sessions and her mind<lb/>
went completely blank. All of her "ill" personalities<lb/>
left her mind. Her doctor gave her a sedative and<lb/>
told her to go home and not rely on anymore of<lb/>
those personalities again. And she didn't.<lb/>
Chairperson of gay organization describes aims<lb/>
By Jeff Rollins<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
Michael Lee is currently acting Chairperson of<lb/>
the East Carolina Gay Community, a non-profit<lb/>
service organization for gays at ECU. Yesterday,<lb/>
thi- reporter spoke with Lee about some of the aims<lb/>
of the organization.<lb/>
FH: First of all, what does the East Carolina Gay<lb/>
Community do? Essentially, what is it?<lb/>
ML: Our first purpose is as a service<lb/>
organization. Providing special services for the<lb/>
special needs of gay people within the university<lb/>
community. For example, we have our peer<lb/>
counseling office, in the university counseling<lb/>
center.<lb/>
FH: How would one apply for your counseling?<lb/>
ML: Referrals are made through the counseling<lb/>
center staff. You would go up to the Center and<lb/>
request to see one of the staff counselors. After<lb/>
thev review your situaion and both of you agree<lb/>
that it would be profitable to see a gay peer<lb/>
counselor then a referral would be made by the<lb/>
staff member to us.<lb/>
FH: What kind of training do the gay peer<lb/>
counselors go through?<lb/>
ML- First, each counselor attends a week-end<lb/>
seminar conducted by the Reverend Claud Andrews<lb/>
and his wife, Carol. Mr. Andrews is a psychologist,<lb/>
and Mrs. Andrews is a psychiatric social worker.<lb/>
The seminar is conducted over a period of two<lb/>
days. First there is a great deal of emphasis on<lb/>
communication, counseling ethics psychology and<lb/>
special problems of gay people.<lb/>
And then we finish up with some intensive<lb/>
role-play training. The seminar is followed by two<lb/>
or three follow-up workshops. At the completion of<lb/>
these workshops, participants are screened by Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Andrews and then again by the<lb/>
counseling center staff.<lb/>
Those who are selected are allowed to begin<lb/>
work staffing the counseling center office.<lb/>
FH: You mentioned some of the special<lb/>
problems that gay people have. Could you elucidate<lb/>
on that? What are some of the special problems<lb/>
gay people have?<lb/>
ML: I think in Eastern North Carolina one of<lb/>
the biggest problems gay people have to deal with<lb/>
is the lack of acceptance of their alternate lifestyle<lb/>
by society in general.<lb/>
They're tremendous adjustment problems that are<lb/>
encounici when a person comes to grips with his<lb/>
own sexuality. Many times gay people go through<lb/>
periods of extreme lonliness and depression at the<lb/>
beginning of this coming-out process. We hope we<lb/>
provide support for people in this situation.<lb/>
FH: How is the ECGC funded?<lb/>
ML: First of all, we have received some private<lb/>
contributions. The bulk of our money comes from<lb/>
fund-raising activities. Recently we were very<lb/>
successful with our "fun-raiser" which was held at<lb/>
the Paddock Club Sunday afternoon, April 29th.<lb/>
We also won $250 in the Burger King "Best<lb/>
Darn Organization on Campus" Contest. Our total<lb/>
vote was nearly double that of the second place<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
FH: Is the ECGC an organization recognized by<lb/>
the SGA?<lb/>
ML: Yes, our constitution was approved in<lb/>
January of this year. And according to the chairman<lb/>
of the committee who reviewed the constitution, it<lb/>
was one of the best that was submitted this year.<lb/>
FH: Do you have a headquarters?<lb/>
ML: No, we don't have any offices at this<lb/>
point. We do meet regularly, however, at 609 E.<lb/>
9th St. Meetings are Tuesday afternoons at 5<lb/>
o'clock.<lb/>
FH: What are some of the plans you have for<lb/>
the ECGC this summer and next year?<lb/>
ML: On June 7th the Human Sexuality Council,<lb/>
which is operated under the auspices of the Student<lb/>
Government Association at Chapel Hill, will be<lb/>
presenting an Outreach Program here at East<lb/>
Carolina. There will be an open discussion of<lb/>
alternate lifestyles. Interested persons are invited.<lb/>
We don't have a room yet, but we'll let you know<lb/>
as soon as we get one.<lb/>
Also we plan to open a Crisis Line in<lb/>
conjunction with our peer counseling service.<lb/>
FH: Michael, how has reaction been to the<lb/>
ECGC at East Carolina? I guess I'm asking about<lb/>
both straight and gay reaction.<lb/>
ML: First of all, there has been very little bad<lb/>
reaction from most of the straight people on<lb/>
campus. The worst thing that has happened was the<lb/>
way were treated in the SGA. The first time we<lb/>
introduced the bill . . .<lb/>
FH: Let me interrupt you there to ask what<lb/>
specifically was your bill?<lb/>
ML: We requested money to cover part of the<lb/>
costs of training our peer counselors. The diMurbing<lb/>
thing about the wav the SGA handled the bill was<lb/>
that verv little lime was devoted to discussing the<lb/>
bill; thev spent most of their time arguing who was<lb/>
sponsoring the bill. The second time we went in<lb/>
trout of the SGA, thev refused to even allow us to<lb/>
go on the floor. No other bill presented during that<lb/>
session was given that kind of treatment.<lb/>
Now a to the second part ol your question,<lb/>
about gays, a far as reaction by the gay<lb/>
communit) we've received a great deal of support<lb/>
from a lot of people, both gav and straight. Our<lb/>
average attendance at meetings is larger than the<lb/>
average attendance at the Carolina Gay Union,<lb/>
which is an organization which is almost ten vears<lb/>
old.<lb/>
However, the vast majority of gays on campus<lb/>
still hesitate to attend meetings or support the<lb/>
group lor fear of discovery or for fear of exposure.<lb/>
However, confidentiality is maintained at all<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
FH: What do vou hope to accomplish with the<lb/>
ECGC?<lb/>
ML: Well, as I mentioned before, support and<lb/>
development of a positive self-image among gay<lb/>
people is our primary purpose. But also one of the<lb/>
very important purposes of our organization is to<lb/>
promote understanding among people of all sexual<lb/>
orientations. I firmly believe that through education<lb/>
and communication, understanding and tolerance of<lb/>
alternate life-styles can be achieved.<lb/>
�<lb/>
v<lb/>
a i JWi n-i m 04490M'M X 5? t<lb/>
�M Ft :�<lb/>
<lb/>
�Mm<lb/>
 �. m m m - - �� -m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057198_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 May 1979<lb/>
School of Music has an active summer<lb/>
Metropolitan opera<lb/>
star Jerome Hines has<lb/>
been inducted into the<lb/>
ECU chapter of Pi<lb/>
Kappa Lambda honor<lb/>
society along with 17<lb/>
students and a faculty<lb/>
member of the ECU<lb/>
School ot Music.<lb/>
At a recent initiation<lb/>
banquet, Hines was<lb/>
made a special honorary<lb/>
member of the honor<lb/>
society, the most pre-<lb/>
stigious of all national<lb/>
honor societies in<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Also inducted were<lb/>
-i juniors, six seniors,<lb/>
five graduate students<lb/>
and faculty member<lb/>
David Hawkins, a<lb/>
double reed specialist.<lb/>
Freshman and soph-<lb/>
omore certificates of<lb/>
honor were given to<lb/>
Stephanie Hubbard, a<lb/>
freshman music therapy<lb/>
major from Dillon, S.C<lb/>
and Bruce Smith of<lb/>
Wilmington, a sopho-<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Presiding at the<lb/>
ceremony was Dr. Ros-<lb/>
alie Haritun, president<lb/>
of ECU's Beta Zeta<lb/>
chapter of Pi Kappa<lb/>
Lambda.<lb/>
Musical entertain-<lb/>
ment was provided by<lb/>
the Bath Family En-<lb/>
semble, which includes<lb/>
Dr. Charles Bath, pi-<lb/>
anist and chairman of<lb/>
the ECU School of<lb/>
Music keyboard depart-<lb/>
ment; his violinist wife<lb/>
Joanne; and their child-<lb/>
ren, Patricia, Stephen<lb/>
and Andrea, all violin-<lb/>
ists.<lb/>
Jerome Hines is the<lb/>
second musician of na-<lb/>
tional eminence to be<lb/>
honored by the chapter.<lb/>
Last year's honorary<lb/>
member was Norman<lb/>
Luboff, director of the<lb/>
Norman Luboff Choir.<lb/>
Honorary membership<lb/>
recognizes outstanding<lb/>
service and contributions<lb/>
to the field of music.<lb/>
Hines has appeared<lb/>
in numerous operatic<lb/>
roles including Don Gi-<lb/>
ovanni, Don Carlos, Vo-<lb/>
tun and Mephistipholes,<lb/>
both in the U.S. and at<lb/>
major opera houses in<lb/>
Europe.<lb/>
He is currently in<lb/>
his 33rd season at the<lb/>
Metropolitan Opera<lb/>
House in New York,<lb/>
where he is to sing a<lb/>
record 49 performances<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Previously Hines has<lb/>
visited ECU to perform<lb/>
on the campus Artist<lb/>
Series and for informal<lb/>
sessions with members<lb/>
of the ECU mathematics<lb/>
department.<lb/>
The late Dr. Willian<lb/>
Whyburn of the ECU<lb/>
mathematics faculty was<lb/>
Hines' professor when<lb/>
the noted basso studied<lb/>
at UCLA. �<lb/>
Two faculty members<lb/>
of the ECU School of<lb/>
Music received doctorial<lb/>
degrees during the<lb/>
1978-79 academic year.<lb/>
Daniel Mellado, a<lb/>
violoncellist and a<lb/>
member of the instru-<lb/>
mental faculty, was aw-<lb/>
arded a PhD degree<lb/>
from Michigan State<lb/>
University.<lb/>
He holds a the<lb/>
Bachelor of Music de-<lb/>
gree from the University<lb/>
of Texas at El Paso and<lb/>
the Master of Music<lb/>
from the Unviersity of<lb/>
Colorado.<lb/>
Brett Watson, con-<lb/>
ductor of ECU's Concert<lb/>
Choir and a member of<lb/>
the theory-composition<lb/>
and choral departments,<lb/>
received the Doctor of<lb/>
Musical Arts degree in<lb/>
choral music from the<lb/>
University of Southern<lb/>
California.<lb/>
Dr. Watson is an<lb/>
ECU alumnus and re-<lb/>
ceived the Master of<lb/>
Music degree from the<lb/>
Eastman School of<lb/>
Music, Rochester, N.Y.<lb/>
Paula Scarangella, a<lb/>
rising senior in the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
School of Music, is the<lb/>
winner of this year's<lb/>
Presser Scholarship at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The scholarship,<lb/>
which carried a stipend<lb/>
of more than $1,000, is<lb/>
given each year to an<lb/>
outstanding junior muMi<lb/>
student at ECU.<lb/>
A candidate fur the<lb/>
Bachelor oJ Musk Ed<lb/>
UCattOO degree and a<lb/>
harp student at EG<lb/>
M Scarangella ha- ap<lb/>
peared in several<lb/>
semble performai<lb/>
during her studies U<lb/>
Sfi- i- the daugl<lb/>
o! Mr. and Mr-<lb/>
thon J. Scarangella<lb/>
2505 Dora inion <lb/>
Norfolk, A an :<lb/>
graduate- ol Lake I ,<lb/>
High S hool.<lb/>
StlldentS present Program iesesgsessagsgsesedsdgagassesgs<lb/>
h(,l News Bureau<lb/>
F"ur students from<lb/>
� ECl School of<lb/>
Music recently pre-<lb/>
sented a program of<lb/>
i lassical and popular<lb/>
music tor the Sir Walter<lb/>
Cabinet at North Ridge<lb/>
Countr) Club in Ral-<lb/>
:h.<lb/>
I he program of<lb/>
vocal olo and duets,<lb/>
ranging from songs by<lb/>
Mendelssohn and<lb/>
Brahms to musical<lb/>
corned) selections b)<lb/>
Cole Porter, was<lb/>
presented by vocalists<lb/>
Ann Gunn of Durham,<lb/>
Sheila Brooks of Wil-<lb/>
mington, and Doug<lb/>
Newell of Roxboro, all<lb/>
students of Gladys<lb/>
W lute, and piano<lb/>
accompanist Carol Wolfe<lb/>
of Winter Park, Fla<lb/>
student of Henrv<lb/>
Doske).<lb/>
1 he students were<lb/>
introduced l Dr.<lb/>
Charles Stevens, A-<lb/>
sistanl dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Music.<lb/>
Other- in attendance<lb/>
Irom Greenville were<lb/>
Belt) Brewer, wife of<lb/>
ECl - Chancellor, who<lb/>
was the guest of Rep.<lb/>
and Mr Horton<lb/>
Rountree, and Gladys<lb/>
Howell, immediate past<lb/>
president of the Pitt<lb/>
Count Democratic<lb/>
Women, guest of Mrs.<lb/>
John Ingram.<lb/>
Mr Howell is also<lb/>
-i member of ECU's<lb/>
sociology faculty.<lb/>
The Sir Walter Cab-<lb/>
inet is composed of<lb/>
spouses of state legisla-<lb/>
tors, judges and gov-<lb/>
ernment officials.<lb/>
Williams wins scholarship<lb/>
Stephen Mae<lb/>
Williams of Kin-ton, a<lb/>
graduate student in the<lb/>
East Carolina Univeristy<lb/>
artmenl of English,<lb/>
the recipient of a<lb/>
S  scholarship<lb/>
2 from the Green-<lb/>
ville Branch ot the<lb/>
English-Speaking Union.<lb/>
1 he award nil!<lb/>
'ble him to tud<lb/>
v i� lorian poetr) at the<lb/>
Universitv of London<lb/>
during Juh and August.<lb/>
1'Cw<lb/>
Williams, an alum-<lb/>
nus of ECL, eurrenth<lb/>
holds a teaching assis-<lb/>
tanlship in the- ECU<lb/>
English department. His<lb/>
special interest i the<lb/>
work of major 19th<lb/>
centur) Britih poets-<lb/>
lennyson, the Brown-<lb/>
ings. Matthew Arnold,<lb/>
Thomas Hardy and<lb/>
Gerard Manlev Hopkins.<lb/>
He is the son of<lb/>
Frank and Shirlev<lb/>
Williams of 606 Darby<lb/>
Ave Kinston and a<lb/>
in-<lb/>
1(73 graduate of<lb/>
ston High School.<lb/>
The award is the<lb/>
first in a scries of<lb/>
annual awards to be<lb/>
gien by the Greenville<lb/>
K-Sl to superior East<lb/>
Carolina students in the<lb/>
liberal arts t(, support<lb/>
terms of study at a<lb/>
British university.<lb/>
W illiams was selec-<lb/>
ted b) a committee<lb/>
headed ,y John Hull<lb/>
McLean of Kinston.<lb/>
Also serving on the<lb/>
committee were E-SU<lb/>
members Elizabeth<lb/>
W ebb and Dr. Keats<lb/>
S<lb/>
of the<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Glenda's<lb/>
Beauty Salon<lb/>
&amp; Boutique<lb/>
Your Full Service Salon<lb/>
Both Men &amp; Women<lb/>
WELCOMES BACK ECU<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Announces the most<lb/>
completely staffed, full service<lb/>
salon in the Greenville area.<lb/>
-Electrolysis-<lb/>
ART &amp; (CAMERA<lb/>
526 S. Contanche St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
parrow, both members<lb/>
English faculty at<lb/>
The English-Speaking<lb/>
L nion is an interna-<lb/>
tional association which<lb/>
promotes friendship and<lb/>
understanding among<lb/>
people of the World's<lb/>
man) English-speaking<lb/>
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SP-<lb/>
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MOVIE OR SLIDE<lb/>
Ektacnrofno or Kodachrome Processing<lb/>
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110,<lb/>
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PLAZA CAMERA<lb/>
j What organization is solely 1<lb/>
j responsible for providing j<lb/>
campus entertainment?<lb/>
SGA?<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
No!<lb/>
S&amp;n otyaiuyaJum; not a hrihlvut<lb/>
Students providing<lb/>
entertainment for students.<lb/>
o<lb/>
 " " :�   � �<lb/>
�j � -<lb/>
�SJM S' W<lb/>
<pb facs="00057198_0007"/><lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
31 May 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
MePhatter, Melvin compete in Nationals<lb/>
Otis Melvin in NCAA<lb/>
ftOO meters<lb/>
i hampionships<lb/>
Sports Si<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree<lb/>
�ach retained<lb/>
Swimmer improving,<lb/>
hv i<lb/>
 1 � - �<lb/>
BiiM-hall briefs<lb/>
 I I '�. 1 <lb/>
' ' M �� i i .ill il<lb/>
: f i - p I a v c r s<lb/>
I<lb/>
! I Max<lb/>
; . ; Bill) Bri 294<lb/>
lo finished the vear with 10<lb/>
tin -quad i kiri- ad ises thai<lb/>
in the top 20 home run<lb/>
V. when their final stats are<lb/>
tblished one Pirate seasonal record<lb/>
stand for quite few years. In 170<lb/>
B( tru k out only twice, tor a phenomenal<lb/>
ntage<lb/>
played errorless centerfield while<lb/>
 -OUtS.<lb/>
iiinl, Bobb) Patterson posted a 6-2<lb/>
the staff. Parker Davis took top honors<lb/>
run average with a 1.62 in 83 innings<lb/>
- 2. 17 ERA rank- them forth<lb/>
 respectable 25-19 rcord in their 1979<lb/>
: man of the starters returning, new<lb/>
I , Baird can take a position of comfortable<lb/>
the 1980 Pirate baseball season.<lb/>
), 1,1 Newl.x<lb/>
 ' . I litoi<lb/>
hi in i in<lb/>
.iim!<lb/>
u i haek ard<lb/>
the<lb/>
I)<lb/>
M<lb/>
Dl lel in  kic<lb/>
in<lb/>
�<lb/>
Pa . and<lb/>
md<lb/>
i . <lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
 i i<lb/>
1 I1 jdai<lb/>
li�lp in i �<lb/>
Mih<lb/>
! Killer.<lb/>
 I <lb/>
M<lb/>
S)<lb/>
�<lb/>
. I<lb/>
(photo byjt)hn H. Grogan)<lb/>
Pirates look ahead to a new horizon<lb/>
Though the Pirates dropped the contest 95- 76, forward Clarences Miles<lb/>
and the rest of the young ECC squad played with intensity. Now they look<lb/>
forward to a new tteanon with a new coach. Dare Odom.<lb/>
Cookie McPhatter<lb/>
returns from AIAV5<lb/>
Nationals in Miehigan<lb/>
Rules eominittee<lb/>
makes changes:<lb/>
rejects clock<lb/>
 iillllllrlll- -<lb/>
I Deluded<lb/>
rich<lb/>
.<lb/>
�n a-<lb/>
I'll up-<lb/>
�<lb/>
t lie hall<lb/>
-� i otids.<lb/>
Wi dunl w<lb/>
into ride- that<lb/>
u- u tial kin �<lb/>
w �� going to har<lb/>
play<lb/>
Sieii noted that<lb/>
mm h ol the . lamoi for<lb/>
a shot i . � alter<lb/>
an t Ian tit ast<lb/>
Conference game in<lb/>
which Duke led North<lb/>
I arolina, 7-0, a: halt-<lb/>
tin:<lb/>
"Bui lha � -<lb/>
ol just 50,000 games in<lb/>
a week SteitZ -aid.<lb/>
and because ol the<lb/>
tinusual -iore, it the<lb/>
one thai get- all the<lb/>
publicity "<lb/>
mes<lb/>
pa-t r -<lb/>
'�' <lb/>
IdatantU <lb/>
g .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057198_0008"/><lb/>
Page 6 FOUNTAINHEAD 31 May 1979<lb/>
Smalley, Koosman star<lb/>
Twins refuse to accept predictions<lb/>
By Jimmy DuPree I<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Before the start of<lb/>
the 1979 Major League<lb/>
Ba�etall season very<lb/>
tew "intellects" would<lb/>
have given the Min-<lb/>
nesota Twins any hope<lb/>
i! advancing beyond the<lb/>
forth place slot they<lb/>
maintained most of last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Having lost perennial<lb/>
meriean Leagut- bat-<lb/>
ting champion Rod Car-<lb/>
ew in the wealth of-<lb/>
lered b the California<lb/>
vngels, ami considering<lb/>
the no-name roster of<lb/>
the lunis. these intel-<lb/>
lects based their op-<lb/>
inions on sound judge-<lb/>
ment supported by<lb/>
tart<lb/>
One flaw to the<lb/>
theory remains evident,<lb/>
�M'ver; no one in-<lb/>
formed the Twins of<lb/>
their destiny.<lb/>
With the hot bat ot<lb/>
versatile Roy Smalley<lb/>
leading all hitters at<lb/>
.390, along with ten<lb/>
homers, Minnesota cur-<lb/>
rently stands in second<lb/>
place in the AL's west-<lb/>
ern division, though<lb/>
thev have led the Car-<lb/>
ew Angels most of the<lb/>
voung season.<lb/>
After a dismal 1978<lb/>
campaign (73-89, 19<lb/>
games behind the div-<lb/>
ision leading Kansas<lb/>
City Royals), the Twins<lb/>
took a chance on the<lb/>
aging Jerry Koosman,<lb/>
who last season posted<lb/>
a 3-15 mark, for the<lb/>
New York Mets.<lb/>
The gamble has paid<lb/>
oil lor Minnesota thus<lb/>
lar. The pitching ace of<lb/>
the 19 World Champ-<lb/>
ion " Amazin' Mets"<lb/>
has earned a 7-2 record<lb/>
lor his new club.<lb/>
The Twins' pitching<lb/>
-tall otherwise could be<lb/>
Roy Smalley<lb/>
considered shakev, at<lb/>
best. Their starting ro-<lb/>
tation consists of right-<lb/>
handers Dave Goltz<lb/>
(15-10 in '78) and Roger<lb/>
Erickson (14-13) and<lb/>
southpaw Geoff Zahn<lb/>
(14-4).<lb/>
Manager Gene<lb/>
Maueh has had num-<lb/>
erous problems to con-<lb/>
tend with, outside of<lb/>
kbe loss of Carew.<lb/>
bullpen ace Mike<lb/>
Marshall contemplated<lb/>
exiting with his 21<lb/>
saves from the 1978<lb/>
effort, but has since<lb/>
elected to slay, posting<lb/>
a 7-4 mark with a 1.80<lb/>
earned run average.<lb/>
A recurring hinder-<lb/>
anee to the Twins has<lb/>
been the lack of a<lb/>
power hitter. Since the<lb/>
retirement of legendary<lb/>
slugger Harmon Kille-<lb/>
brew several years ago,<lb/>
Minnesota has had to<lb/>
survive without a con-<lb/>
sistanl long-ball threat.<lb/>
Smalley led the team<lb/>
last season with 19<lb/>
homers; hardly to be<lb/>
considered endangering<lb/>
to Boston's Jim Rice<lb/>
with 46.<lb/>
In an effort to al-<lb/>
leviate this problem, the<lb/>
Twins acquired strong<lb/>
hitting Ron Jackson<lb/>
from the Angels in the<lb/>
Carew deal. They also<lb/>
promoted infielder Dan<lb/>
Graham from their Tol-<lb/>
edo farm club, where<lb/>
he had 28 round-trip-<lb/>
pers last season.<lb/>
Their hitting with<lb/>
men on the bags was<lb/>
also limited. Now de-<lb/>
parted Danny Ford led<lb/>
the '78 Twins with only<lb/>
82 RBIs. Again there is<lb/>
no comparison to Rice's<lb/>
139 total. .<lb/>
A now addition from<lb/>
California in the Carew<lb/>
trade has been out-<lb/>
fielder Ken Landreaux<lb/>
who currently holds a<lb/>
.321 average after bat-<lb/>
ting only .223 last<lb/>
season in 93 games.<lb/>
oung infielder Rob<lb/>
Wilfong stands at .317,<lb/>
alter only hitting .266<lb/>
in 1978.<lb/>
Catcher Butch Wyn-<lb/>
egar again provides the<lb/>
squad with a consistant<lb/>
.300 hitter.<lb/>
California swiped<lb/>
first from the Twins<lb/>
following a successful<lb/>
weekend campaign at<lb/>
Chicago. Carew, though<lb/>
baiting .353, finds him-<lb/>
self in the third place<lb/>
in the early standings<lb/>
for the batting title he<lb/>
had held for the past<lb/>
lew years.<lb/>
Will the Minnesota<lb/>
Twins hang on and<lb/>
capture the AL West<lb/>
pennant and go on to<lb/>
win the World Series in<lb/>
October? Only time will<lb/>
tell. Injuries, slumps,<lb/>
errors; all these will be<lb/>
major factors in the<lb/>
final outcome, but the<lb/>
other 51 teams in Major<lb/>
League Baseball must<lb/>
also deal with these<lb/>
barrier<lb/>
Not for women only<lb/>
TRAMURAt SPOKT SUMMEK SCHEDIXE:<lb/>
7. � Entry Date Pla Begin<lb/>
Activity<lb/>
Tennis Classic <lb/>
Raquetball Tour.<lb/>
IM Open (Golf)<lb/>
Backyard Volley-<lb/>
ball (C-R)<lb/>
521-5 31<lb/>
5 21-5.31<lb/>
5 29-6 19<lb/>
529-6 8<lb/>
6 4<lb/>
6 4<lb/>
6 21-22<lb/>
6 12<lb/>
CREATIVE CO-REC CHALLENGES<lb/>
r r 8:30 am<lb/>
IM Run for Fun Mingeg Pfk Ut<lb/>
Great Canoe Race 2:00 pm<lb/>
(Deadline 613) Tar River<lb/>
IM Run for Fun 8:30 am<lb/>
Minges Prk. Lot<lb/>
Sat. June 2<lb/>
Fri. June 15<lb/>
Sat. JuK U<lb/>
FAMILY FIN FESTIVITIES<lb/>
What:<lb/>
Frolic and fun for everyone in badmm<lb/>
basketball, volleyball, and swimming!<lb/>
WTio?<lb/>
All ECU students, faculty, staff, and all famil)<lb/>
members are invited!<lb/>
Where?<lb/>
Memorial Fymnasium and Memorial Pool<lb/>
When?<lb/>
7:00-9:00 pm on these Wednesdays:<lb/>
May 23<lb/>
June6<lb/>
June 20<lb/>
July 11<lb/>
Julv 25 <lb/>
Title IX affects all ECU athletes<lb/>
By Debbj Newby<lb/>
ssistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Title IX. Don't<lb/>
hurriedly -kip over this<lb/>
article vet, dear reader.<lb/>
I have something im-<lb/>
portant to tell you that<lb/>
 ou probably ha en't<lb/>
heard muc h about, or it<lb/>
urn do know about it.<lb/>
ou probably don t lull<lb/>
understand it.<lb/>
i ontinue reading,<lb/>
and I'll guarantee you<lb/>
hat vii li learn some-<lb/>
� Heller yet,<lb/>
some-<lb/>
- seven years<lb/>
l exa<lb/>
 hal I've been re-<lb/>
is Title IX, a<lb/>
was enacted in<lb/>
1972 quires<lb/>
I'Mi .alitv in edu-<lb/>
institutions that<lb/>
federal i funds.<lb/>
I has its greatest<lb/>
impael on athletics,<lb/>
ti would mean that<lb/>
there must be equal<lb/>
rt un it tor male<lb/>
nali athletes.<lb/>
Even I hough ECU's<lb/>
athlei ii d- partment does<lb/>
rectly receive<lb/>
lederal assistance, the<lb/>
education , pro-<lb/>
gram ol the university<lb/>
does, which makes KCl<lb/>
responsible lor the en-<lb/>
forcement of Title IX. A<lb/>
violation of Title IX<lb/>
would re-lilt in a with-<lb/>
draw! ol federal funds<lb/>
from the involved uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
The interpretation<lb/>
and enactment of Title<lb/>
l has been disputed<lb/>
and questioned in the<lb/>
past. The core ol the<lb/>
dispute was touched oil<lb/>
last December when the<lb/>
Department ot Health.<lb/>
Education and elfare<lb/>
proposed new guidelines<lb/>
to make equal porcapita<lb/>
expenditures for men<lb/>
and women college"<lb/>
athletes a primary re-<lb/>
quirement lor compli-<lb/>
ance with the 172 Law.<lb/>
(Per capita expense is<lb/>
calculated bv dividing<lb/>
the total number of<lb/>
participating athletes of<lb/>
each sex into the total<lb/>
cost ot the sports tor<lb/>
each sex.)<lb/>
bout 300 colleges<lb/>
and universities sub-<lb/>
sequently joined forces<lb/>
with the National Col-<lb/>
legiate Athletic Associa-<lb/>
tion (NCAA) to lobby<lb/>
Congress to exempt<lb/>
revenue-producing sports<lb/>
from HEW's proposed<lb/>
guidelines.The success<lb/>
ol these attempts will<lb/>
be determined in the<lb/>
immediate future when<lb/>
HEW releases the final<lb/>
guidelines.<lb/>
 hat should be<lb/>
stressed is that Title IX<lb/>
has never been a dollar<lb/>
lor dollar mandate to<lb/>
spend the same amount<lb/>
ol money on women's<lb/>
sports as on money-<lb/>
making tootball and<lb/>
basketball programs for<lb/>
the men.<lb/>
 hat is suggested,<lb/>
according to Margot<lb/>
Poliv v, a Vv ashington<lb/>
attorney tor the Asso-<lb/>
ciation for Intercollegiate<lb/>
Athletics for Women, is<lb/>
that "there be equal<lb/>
opportunity and com-<lb/>
parability and that per<lb/>
capita expenditure in<lb/>
certain areas would be<lb/>
a good guideline to<lb/>
follow<lb/>
There have been<lb/>
other misconceptions of<lb/>
Title IX, Polivy said.<lb/>
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SATISFACTION GUARANTEED<lb/>
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� and a complete line off tools and accessories<lb/>
Including suntour and campagnolo<lb/>
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Mike Flinn and Mike Sizemore<lb/>
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would like to invite you<lb/>
to drop by for a visit<lb/>
RIDE FOR YOUR HEALTH<lb/>
"The Title IX regulation<lb/>
does not require an<lb/>
equal number of men's<lb/>
and women's sports.<lb/>
Rather, it requires, that<lb/>
the interests and abil-<lb/>
itiesof men and women<lb/>
be equally accom-<lb/>
modated<lb/>
Also, rather than<lb/>
looking at each individ-<lb/>
ual sport, according to<lb/>
HEW, it is acceptable<lb/>
to look at the overall<lb/>
athletic program in<lb/>
determining whether an<lb/>
institution is practicing<lb/>
sex discrimination.<lb/>
This approach pro-<lb/>
vides that the overall<lb/>
athletic program ensures<lb/>
equal opportunity for<lb/>
members of both sexes.<lb/>
The effect Title IX<lb/>
has on athletic pro-<lb/>
grams, especially<lb/>
women's programs, is<lb/>
powerful. The legislation<lb/>
requires equal oppor-<lb/>
tunity, comparable<lb/>
standards to be set<lb/>
where there are ele-<lb/>
ments that aren't easily<lb/>
measurable, and pro-<lb/>
cedures lor upgrading<lb/>
women's athletics.<lb/>
"Anyone who doubts<lb/>
the importance of equal<lb/>
opportunity lor women<lb/>
said Joseph Calitano,<lb/>
Secretary of HEW, "need<lb/>
only rc-member those<lb/>
things we have all<lb/>
heard throughout our<lb/>
lives about participation<lb/>
in sports: That ath-<lb/>
letics leach both team-<lb/>
work and leadership;<lb/>
that athletics create<lb/>
pride in accomplish-<lb/>
ment; that athletics<lb/>
teach sportsmanship, how<lb/>
to win and how to<lb/>
lose; that competitive<lb/>
-port build character.<lb/>
Does anyone think for a<lb/>
moment that these<lb/>
benefits apply only to<lb/>
men?"<lb/>
South Seas<lb/>
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Guinea Pigs reg. $7. now<lb/>
$���Cages S13.9S<lb/>
Mob.<lb/>
thru<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
129 p.<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
All Tennis Clothes &amp; Tennis Shoes<lb/>
for men and women 12 OFF<lb/>
12 OFF on ALL warm-up suits<lb/>
All tennis rackets 25 OFF<lb/>
All ladies golf outfits, skirts, tops<lb/>
and pants 40 OFF<lb/>
ALL IZOD LaCosta shirts on SALE<lb/>
$15.00 each (men's &amp; women's)<lb/>
Sizes 12-20 $10.75<lb/>
ALL P.I.C. cotton men's<lb/>
golf shirts 12 price<lb/>
All IZOD men's pants NOW5.00<lb/>
All men's Thompson golf slacks<lb/>
reduced from38.00 to15.00 pr<lb/>
All new &amp; used golf clubs reduced<lb/>
for QUICK sale.<lb/>
We accept old clubs on trade .<lb/>
SALE ENDS JUNE 15, 1979<lb/>
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SALE RUNS THRU<lb/>
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reg. Sale price<lb/>
30.95 21.95<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057198_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>