<?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="00057206_0001"/>
-? culation 4,000<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
10<lb/>
55 No. ?<lb/>
26 Julv 1979<lb/>
NsJongeruseable<lb/>
McGinnis theatre to<lb/>
h LLs DKKW<lb/>
Vcifa ktittui<lb/>
t<lb/>
?- fme, a may have been the most<lb/>
rau elemenury-school auditorium in the<lb/>
? for the needs of the ECU Drama<lb/>
"ir hOVNCVCr' McG'nniS the - - 'onger<lb/>
????V was built as a part of ECU's<lb/>
'  Uburatory School in 1951. The school<lb/>
aV. ,K.IloCat,on' bul lts ol? theatre has<lb/>
" ?? b) ECU since the inception of the drama<lb/>
????' ? 13. David Downing, an instructor ,n<lb/>
Apartment, says that the theatre "was never<lb/>
gaed to be used the wa  is novv be, USJ<lb/>
-not des.gned for the staging of the New<lb/>
?1I? productions thai we do here. Con-<lb/>
g's il was inadequate tor that sort of thing "<lb/>
"?ng uto. several fad that make the theatre<lb/>
unalle lor the tvpe u productions that the<lb/>
i rim en I puts on.<lb/>
many disadvantages<lb/>
H explained that the stage area was too small<lb/>
-date the elaborate scene, involved "nd<lb/>
 ?pen. mo ? our time Just <lb/>
; ? he' - -re going to put' those<lb/>
?" length of the theatre posed another problem<lb/>
1iVW,h lhC aC?UStics and " ght-bne"<lb/>
aud.et.ee were olten experienced. According<lb/>
;n?ngi when y?u WCre in the back (of the<lb/>
 you were really in the back<lb/>
During musical productions, the placement of the<lb/>
orchestra often prevented a satisfactory performance<lb/>
Since the orchestra area and the floor of the theatre<lb/>
were both on the same level, the audience in the<lb/>
hrsl several rows had to view the performance<lb/>
through the orchestra. In addition, the dialogue on<lb/>
stage was often inaudible to these people because<lb/>
ol the volume of the music.<lb/>
fbe lighting in the theatre was another<lb/>
hindrance encountered by the department. Often,<lb/>
positions of lights were inadequate and had to be<lb/>
adapted. According to Preston Sisk, also an<lb/>
instructor in the department, most of the major<lb/>
advancements in lighting technique have been made<lb/>
since the theatre was built, making the original<lb/>
system awkward and outdated. Sisk also pointed out<lb/>
lhat some of the wiring was as old as the building<lb/>
ilycll and several small electrical fires had em i,d.<lb/>
it s just an unsafe building he said.<lb/>
Fortunately, most ol these and other problems<lb/>
will be remedied in the near future. After almost<lb/>
miic years of planning and research, designs for<lb/>
extrusive renovations have been approved and are<lb/>
scheduled to begin at the end of this year.<lb/>
I he project will consist of two phases and<lb/>
involve three buildings. Phase One, tentatively<lb/>
scheduled to begin around Christmas, will include<lb/>
renovations ol the old theatre and of the dance<lb/>
studios in the old school. Phase Two will include<lb/>
the- building of a scene shop, repairs to classrooms,<lb/>
and installation of air-conditioning throughout the<lb/>
buildings.<lb/>
I'hase One has been alloted 1.9 million dollars<lb/>
help<lb/>
Noted scholar appointed<lb/>
111  O ? . Jm JL.<lb/>
and  cxumcd ,o be completed one year after<lb/>
-Uual construction begins. Phase Two ' will cost<lb/>
'or Us beginning.<lb/>
better facilities needed<lb/>
The first step ?f Phase One will be the<lb/>
???Ih? ol the "stage-house the entire stage<lb/>
area, with reconstruction that will enlarge it to three<lb/>
?'?? 's present sue. The ceiling will be raised to<lb/>
allow lor better use of Hying scenery that presentlv<lb/>
tam,ot be- concealed because the ceding is too low<lb/>
?An entirely new rigging system for this kind of<lb/>
scciicr) will be installed.<lb/>
In order to compensate for the acoustical and<lb/>
Mghl-lme problems, the "rake" of the house will be<lb/>
"?creased. Ih.s means that the incline of the floor<lb/>
"HardI the back will be steeper. Downing says that<lb/>
the ellect this has "is psychological, but' quite<lb/>
The orchestra area will be lowered to create an<lb/>
orchestra pit. ' This will put the orchestra out of<lb/>
sight ol tlu- audience, where they will not K.?,<lb/>
the dialogue- with their music.<lb/>
Downing explained that only if the renovations<lb/>
are dum under budget" will they be abb , ? m , urc<lb/>
new ligliiniif svsleuis U<lb/>
h , systems He is concerned that the<lb/>
'?gluing Ik acquired since he feels that the<lb/>
department loses man prospective students because<lb/>
??l -is present equipment. "It's what they see that<lb/>
make, the first impression. A prospective student<lb/>
doesiil see the quality of the teaching or the<lb/>
production when he looks at the theatre It's<lb/>
important to have- a good facilitv to attrae! them "<lb/>
He added thai the theatre would, howei<lb/>
rewired.<lb/>
I he plans lr the renovations ol the dance<lb/>
studios include new flooring. A dancer can re<lb/>
serious leg injuries il thc-v dance on a floor I ha<lb/>
 'Mr,j- ' downing explained. When<lb/>
hard surtaee, the- dancer's bod) absorbs all<lb/>
"Hk- M?e '? Hor.ng w.ll be - rned to<lb/>
eliminate this problem. It will consist<lb/>
linoleum and a layer  plywood on supports<lb/>
skrepers . 1l?-r supports are- designed l<lb/>
and there-lore- absorb the -hock wh<lb/>
u the- Hour.<lb/>
?W One plan, will also melude new f,e<lb/>
"?? ?? ?b, theatre and a new - lg<lb/>
at seating capacil) w.ll be slightlv -<lb/>
'??? "?v c.d bu. Downing do n?,<lb/>
a sign il,cam reduction.<lb/>
handicap facilities<lb/>
Another neccssar) addition to MeGinni, ,<lb/>
 'r lhc ??w" - ? the ;<lb/>
Mmps and handicap parking will .<lb/>
Ine renovation<lb/>
1' "a. taken the department . g<lb/>
ivlL?T uxeculr -<lb/>
 k" ?K a?? the be the <lb/>
 ?ur??o?e. e had to take<lb/>
, l iAan 'use when they're I<lb/>
(hanging them<lb/>
News Bureau<lb/>
 noted<lb/>
si and<lb/>
experienced<lb/>
scholar,<lb/>
richly<lb/>
university<lb/>
administrator todav was<lb/>
a,llcd t fhief academic<lb/>
r f"r Eat Carolina<lb/>
L niversitv.<lb/>
Dr. Robert H V.?,<lb/>
51, was chosen Ibi the<lb/>
M"M at ECL while<lb/>
serving as chairman of<lb/>
a select search commit-<lb/>
I,t' which will recom-<lb/>
mend a new president<lb/>
ol the<lb/>
W ISC<lb/>
.niver-it v<lb/>
ol<lb/>
 11 111<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Dr. Robert H.Maier<lb/>
Maier ha held increas-<lb/>
ing!) important academ-<lb/>
ic and administrative<lb/>
posts at the University<lb/>
ol Wisconsin-Green Bay<lb/>
lor the past 12 ears.<lb/>
At ECU he will<lb/>
become Vice Chancellor<lb/>
lor Academic Affairs.<lb/>
with administrative res-<lb/>
pbnsibilit) for all of<lb/>
LCU s 11 colleges and<lb/>
professional schools<lb/>
except medicine, inclu-<lb/>
dig all academic<lb/>
departments and related<lb/>
programs and functions.<lb/>
"The possibilities for<lb/>
I he future at East<lb/>
Carolina are exciting<lb/>
and challenging Maier<lb/>
said in a telephone<lb/>
interview. He considers<lb/>
tCU a dynamic<lb/>
institution of the fu-<lb/>
ture which is now<lb/>
lacing "new turns and<lb/>
a new direction<lb/>
He said the task of<lb/>
"building on strengths<lb/>
we already have is very<lb/>
much in line with my<lb/>
background and experi-<lb/>
ence<lb/>
Chancellor Thomas<lb/>
B. Brewer said, "Dr.<lb/>
Maier is among our<lb/>
nation's leading edu-<lb/>
cators. His outstanding<lb/>
qualifications and ex-<lb/>
perience in educational<lb/>
administration and t-a-<lb/>
ehing and research will<lb/>
add greatly to the<lb/>
strength of the univer-<lb/>
sal). We are most<lb/>
fortunate that he and<lb/>
his family will join East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Maier will replace<lb/>
Dr. John M. Howell,<lb/>
V ice Chancellor for<lb/>
Academic Affairs since<lb/>
1972, who requested<lb/>
last January that he<lb/>
relinquish administrative<lb/>
duties to return to<lb/>
leaching and research.<lb/>
A committee conducted<lb/>
an intensive nationwide<lb/>
search before choosing<lb/>
Maier.<lb/>
At the time, Maier<lb/>
had been named chair-<lb/>
man of the search<lb/>
committee for a new<lb/>
president of the Univer-<lb/>
sit) ed Wisconsin s)s-<lb/>
lem. Ke nmediatelv<lb/>
asked n,ai he- In-<lb/>
replaced as chairman of<lb/>
lhat committee.<lb/>
Since 1975, Dr.<lb/>
Maier has held the rank<lb/>
ol prokssor of Science<lb/>
a?d Environmental<lb/>
Change and of Public<lb/>
and Environmental Ad-<lb/>
ministration, UW-Green<lb/>
Bay. From 1969 to 1975<lb/>
he was Vice Chancellor<lb/>
of UW-Green Bay and<lb/>
also Professor of En-<lb/>
vironmental Sciences,<lb/>
1970-75. Earlier he was<lb/>
Assistant Chancellor for<lb/>
Instruction and Re-<lb/>
search. He went to<lb/>
Green Bay in 1967 as<lb/>
Professor of Chemistry.<lb/>
In 1965-66, he was<lb/>
one of 23 Fellows in<lb/>
Academic Administration<lb/>
chosen b) the American<lb/>
Council on Education<lb/>
and vva aligned to the<lb/>
Uuiversi!) 0 torln<lb/>
Carolina gcmral ?dmin-<lb/>
istration in Chapel Hill<lb/>
to work in the offices of<lb/>
the President of the<lb/>
U.NC system.<lb/>
Academically, his<lb/>
field ol specialtv i.?, soil<lb/>
chemist r) and he has<lb/>
undertaken extensive<lb/>
research project! and<lb/>
authored numerous pu-<lb/>
blications, and holds<lb/>
mail) professional mem-<lb/>
berships, honors and<lb/>
recognilivc awards. He<lb/>
served eight vears on<lb/>
? he lacultv of Agricul-<lb/>
tural Chemist r) and<lb/>
Soils, Universit) of<lb/>
Arizona, and served a<lb/>
)car, 1966-67, as<lb/>
assistant dean of the<lb/>
Graduate College, Uni-<lb/>
versit) of Arizona.<lb/>
He also served a<lb/>
year as a technical<lb/>
a?lvi?,or to the U.S.<lb/>
Arm) Chemical Corps in<lb/>
classified biological re-<lb/>
search.<lb/>
At the Universit) of<lb/>
Wisconsin-Green Ba),<lb/>
Dr. Maier was des-<lb/>
ignated Depulv Chan-<lb/>
iell.tr ed the Green Bay<lb/>
campus bv recommen-<lb/>
dation ol the chancellor<lb/>
-it approval of the<lb/>
Board ol Regents and<lb/>
See SCHOLAR p. I.<lb/>
?.<lb/>
wkAT'S INskfe<lb/>
I Sign controversy endsp.3<lb/>
I A look at Disco p.6<lb/>
ECL vs. UNCp.7<lb/>
Action taken to<lb/>
aid campus safi<lb/>
B JANE BIDDIX<lb/>
Stuff Writer<lb/>
committee draft<lb/>
In a meeting of the<lb/>
Save the Trees Sub-<lb/>
committee last week, a<lb/>
letter was drafted to<lb/>
Chancellor Brewer con-<lb/>
cerning the Committee's<lb/>
ttaitd on campus plan<lb/>
ning.<lb/>
A le-tler wa nec-<lb/>
essar) a Dr. Brewer is<lb/>
?Mil ol town ami would<lb/>
be- unable- to meet with<lb/>
? he subcommittee until<lb/>
alter August 1. It is the<lb/>
I'opes of the subcom-<lb/>
Housing contract<lb/>
deadUne announced<lb/>
Dan K. Wooten, Director of Housing, has taaued<lb/>
the following statement:<lb/>
r ?P?,V? the i,em?nd for residence hall housing<lb/>
for Fall Semester 1979, the contract cancellation and<lb/>
room deposit refund deadline has been extended<lb/>
Trom June 1 to August 17. Interested students who<lb/>
-are eligible to move from residence hails should<lb/>
contact the Housing Office in order to cancel their<lb/>
contracts.<lb/>
mitlee thai this letter<lb/>
reaches Dr. Brewer in<lb/>
lime for him to take<lb/>
immediate action on one<lb/>
particular request due<lb/>
? o pending construction.<lb/>
While the committee<lb/>
endorses the modifica-<lb/>
tions ? made in the ex-<lb/>
isting plans, the action<lb/>
requested in the letter<lb/>
concerns the Erwin Hall<lb/>
parking lot and asks<lb/>
lhat the contract be<lb/>
either voided, have ex-<lb/>
tensive modifications<lb/>
made, or be suspended<lb/>
lemporaril) to consider<lb/>
observations made by<lb/>
the com mil lee.<lb/>
The committee ob-<lb/>
served that, as now<lb/>
planned, the Erwin Hall<lb/>
lut will not gain any<lb/>
parking spaces and so,<lb/>
with landscape gravel<lb/>
and woodbeams, drain-<lb/>
age can be maintained,<lb/>
trees saved ami future<lb/>
reversal of the lot<lb/>
would be made easier,<lb/>
as thi i an especial!)<lb/>
wooded area in the<lb/>
evnlral campus.<lb/>
Further, the com-<lb/>
mittee suggests that the<lb/>
lot is dominated by<lb/>
Universit) vehicles that<lb/>
ma) be relocated to<lb/>
Iree spaces on campus.<lb/>
The' plan would be to<lb/>
relocate these vehicles<lb/>
to a lar western portion<lb/>
of ihe Allied Health<lb/>
parking lot which is not<lb/>
full) utilized. This plan<lb/>
also lends itself to<lb/>
having ihe Usi.r 0j ,nc<lb/>
Universit) vehicle park<lb/>
at the Allied Health lot<lb/>
rather than in a highly<lb/>
desireable spot on cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Other recommen-<lb/>
dations made by the<lb/>
committee are for<lb/>
Brewer to pledge to the<lb/>
committee that no fur-<lb/>
ther contract or orders<lb/>
be issued lor design of<lb/>
lacilitifs which mav re-<lb/>
quire- tree removal until<lb/>
Ihe long range plans for<lb/>
campus are completed,<lb/>
reviewed and adopted<lb/>
with tipporlunil) far fu-<lb/>
eultv, -dueleiit and coin-<lb/>
muuitv input.<lb/>
In addition the ceim-<lb/>
mittee felt ' it necessary<lb/>
to state thai, as the)<lb/>
understand that ECU<lb/>
shall be a pedestrian<lb/>
campus, increases in<lb/>
pcrmuneni parking fa-<lb/>
cilities are inconsistent<lb/>
with that polic).<lb/>
Ihe committee has<lb/>
further suggestions re-<lb/>
garding permanent input<lb/>
in Campus Planning<lb/>
which they plan to pre-<lb/>
sent to Brewer at" the<lb/>
earliest possible date.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Bv USA DREW<lb/>
Acic.N Edit or<lb/>
Safet) at the 10th<lb/>
Sireet-ColUge Hill in-<lb/>
tersection has, until re-<lb/>
cenllv, been minimal at<lb/>
best, with 0,000 stu-<lb/>
dents und 12,000 motor<lb/>
vehicles crossing the in-<lb/>
le-rseclioii daily, a sig-<lb/>
nificant danger exil<lb/>
lor anyone crossing at<lb/>
that intersection. Fin-<lb/>
aiiv, some action ha<lb/>
been taken to improve<lb/>
the situation.<lb/>
The State Highwa)<lb/>
Commission recently in-<lb/>
stalled yellow cautiou-<lb/>
hghls that warn cars<lb/>
ol pedestrians crossing<lb/>
the road.<lb/>
In a letter to SGA ice<lb/>
President Charlie Sher-<lb/>
r?ii from the North<lb/>
Carolina Secretarv of<lb/>
1 raiisporlation, it uUs<lb/>
indicated that additional<lb/>
speed limit signs had<lb/>
been posted at the<lb/>
intersection. The letter<lb/>
also slated that the citv<lb/>
of Greenville had been<lb/>
orge-d to monitor e-<lb/>
ieve speeds ,n ,u.<lb/>
area clos.iv.<lb/>
pre-<lb/>
that<lb/>
HI .1<lb/>
,<lb/>
cull<lb/>
SImthhI had<lb/>
viotislv requested<lb/>
these measures ?<lb/>
Haled. and -aid.<lb/>
recent im r .<lb/>
erelan Bradshaw's<lb/>
urn an.i immediate<lb/>
-aleiv additions are<lb/>
commendable He- aske-d<lb/>
on- personal!) to urge-<lb/>
student to use the- tullv<lb/>
actuated control svstem<lb/>
at the intersection. Cur-<lb/>
rentlv. verv lew take<lb/>
the- lime to punch the<lb/>
button and wail lor the-<lb/>
ualk Mgnal. When<lb/>
classes are- changing, a<lb/>
hazardous pedeirian<lb/>
proldeui exists ami it t<lb/>
imperative that students<lb/>
iim' the available- aletv<lb/>
dev ic?-s<lb/>
Sherri??l went on to<lb/>
sav lhat an overpass tor<lb/>
the inle-r-eehon is feas-<lb/>
ible but vve?ubl tucil<lb/>
luudiiig since the est-<lb/>
imated costs arc- close<lb/>
? i?23o.uuo.<lb/>
when<lb/>
??tin . -ah I) pre, <lb/>
 . ??mini :<lb/>
-hnb-ul vmil.<lb/>
i?.til game I<lb/>
 ?'?  -<lb/>
-lode.i! Ulteildl<lb/>
tii'ai; gam?- w?tub<lb/>
drunk and throw<lb/>
U-ltie. It ?M-<lb/>
p? lied. and itie.iu<lb/>
was ui! -<lb/>
l . athb-lii<lb/>
direi i at E(.l . -a<lb/>
relation to lhi, that<lb/>
llgblfl  V t, V <lb/>
prevail al lootb,<lb/>
il aim - tin- (all. and<lb/>
 I an v bo) i (, - <lb/>
? i'l- in lh? -  iium<lb/>
woukl be eoiili-eai<lb/>
si,? i rod admitted<lb/>
lhal In- ihouglu -tudent-<lb/>
would trv i -in ak<lb/>
l.ollle ?, ,u, ,tl, j(<lb/>
lioped that their eoiHe-rn<lb/>
tor oihe-r- would prevail<lb/>
ami that the v Might "at<lb/>
I' a-l bring the b.M.e- in<lb/>
pla-lu con!aiiier-<lb/>
National Clown Week slated<lb/>
August 1 - 7 is<lb/>
National Clown Week.<lb/>
Members of Greenville<lb/>
Clown Allev will ob-<lb/>
serve the week with an<lb/>
appearance at a local<lb/>
nursing home and a<lb/>
performance during<lb/>
Children's Hour at<lb/>
Sheppard Memorial<lb/>
Library on August 8.<lb/>
The Allev has been<lb/>
in existence for three<lb/>
ears and was chartered<lb/>
m , March of I979 as<lb/>
Clow iis of America<lb/>
Allev N. The) have<lb/>
performed in a volun-<lb/>
teer capacit) at numer-<lb/>
ous benefits this vear.<lb/>
Members ol the<lb/>
Alley meet the second<lb/>
and lourth Tuesdav- ol<lb/>
each mouth at 7:30<lb/>
p in. at the Senior<lb/>
Citucifs Center on the<lb/>
corner ol Fourth and<lb/>
Greene Streets.<lb/>
All) students inter-<lb/>
ested in clow ning are<lb/>
invited to attend or<lb/>
contact Dot Gronet at<lb/>
Hungate's.<lb/>
 m .? f, <lb/>
??? . , - ? ??<lb/>
????  m "?.j0<lb/>
<pb facs="00057206_0002"/><lb/>
VOICES &amp; OPINIONS Xt?<lb/>
Page 2 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 July 1979<lb/>
'Drinking and driving don't mix<lb/>
Most of us have had the warning<lb/>
Drinking and driving don't mix"<lb/>
drummed into our heads since we<lb/>
were old enough to get behind the<lb/>
wheel of a car. As a result of this,<lb/>
we have become conditioned to<lb/>
hearing the phrase without thinking<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
By now, most readers are probably<lb/>
thinking "Qh, it's another article on<lb/>
the evils of drinking WRONG.<lb/>
First of all, it would be<lb/>
hypocritical to state that I believe<lb/>
drinking is wrong. Secondly, my<lb/>
intention is not to offer commentary<lb/>
on the act of drinking or on the legal<lb/>
aspects of alcohol consumption. Drink-<lb/>
ing is now, as it should be, a matter<lb/>
of individual choice.<lb/>
The individual choice refers to our<lb/>
own responsibility for what we put<lb/>
into our bodies or what we do to<lb/>
them. However, the decision and<lb/>
effects of such are no longer<lb/>
individualized when they pose a threat<lb/>
to other people's lives and property.<lb/>
The threat to which I am referring<lb/>
is that which occurs when anyone<lb/>
assumes the responsibility of operating<lb/>
an automobile while under the<lb/>
influence of alcohol.<lb/>
Earlier this month, a Fountainhead<lb/>
employee was en route to the beach,<lb/>
-hen at ten o'clock in the morning,<lb/>
the vehicle in which she was riding<lb/>
as struck by a woman driving under<lb/>
the influence of alcohol. To date the<lb/>
employee has not recovered con-<lb/>
sciousness, or stabilized enough to be<lb/>
moved from the intensive care unit.<lb/>
In addition, she has sustained such<lb/>
physical damage as two broken legs,<lb/>
and possible brain damage.<lb/>
In another instance, a -student<lb/>
related that she had gone out of town<lb/>
last weekend, after leaving her car<lb/>
legally parked on the street in front<lb/>
of her house. Friday night, a driver<lb/>
under the influence hit the car,<lb/>
knocked it approximately 30 feet down<lb/>
the street, and left the scene. She<lb/>
returned to find her car gone (it had<lb/>
ibeen towed away since it was not<lb/>
drivaole). The driver was charged<lb/>
with hit and run and driving while<lb/>
under the influence of alcohol<lb/>
These are only two examples of a<lb/>
staggering number of accident and<lb/>
injury cases which result from<lb/>
drinking and driving. Until it hits us<lb/>
close to home, it is merely another<lb/>
statistic.<lb/>
There is another aspect of<lb/>
responsibility in this situation to be<lb/>
considered. How many times has each<lb/>
one of us witnessed an obviously<lb/>
intoxicated person about to get into<lb/>
an automobile and drive away? How<lb/>
many times have we seen a car<lb/>
weaving down the road, and reacted<lb/>
with "I sure hope that guygirl<lb/>
doesn't hit somebody?"<lb/>
Do we not have a collective<lb/>
responsibility to report such occur-<lb/>
ances in the interest of preventing<lb/>
accidents which could kill or cripple?<lb/>
How many tragedies must we witness<lb/>
or read about before we can put our<lb/>
selfish concerns aside and look out for<lb/>
the other guy" as well?<lb/>
r It's something to think about.<lb/>
-L.B.<lb/>
women<lb/>
G.C.<lb/>
Carter<lb/>
Origins of Uppity Women9 traced<lb/>
I l   I 1.1.lit VY ?? ?' I<lb/>
i la!<lb/>
nit? r-<lb/>
I? Till<lb/>
h ?<lb/>
i eadcr-<lb/>
it-<lb/>
Have receivec<lb/>
requests from<lb/>
I" define the<lb/>
I I'l'ii omen<lb/>
hi- that some<lb/>
have been led<lb/>
Ueve that "uppity<lb/>
women art- snobs or<lb/>
are wealthy and lacking<lb/>
tn conscience. While I<lb/>
did iht originate the<lb/>
ml I'T this editorial<lb/>
column, I feel obligated<lb/>
ililfiid it from<lb/>
m interpretation.<lb/>
Ih original "Uppity<lb/>
W omen editorials were<lb/>
irn Iroin the pen ol<lb/>
Hester Petty, and ran<lb/>
i" I lie Fountainhead<lb/>
from September, 1978,<lb/>
through January, 1979.<lb/>
Ms. Petty, in one ol<lb/>
her lal columns, asked<lb/>
lor someone to please<lb/>
lake oer the editorial.<lb/>
Because I fell verv<lb/>
strongly that ihe femi-<lb/>
nist i uniagf pniiii<lb/>
needed publication, I<lb/>
submitted a column to<lb/>
the Fountainhead. It<lb/>
was printed, and 1<lb/>
began to write one<lb/>
column a week.<lb/>
I ueer asked Hester<lb/>
why she chose the title<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Lynn Beyar<lb/>
COPY EDITOR<lb/>
Barry Clayton<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Jeff Rollins<lb/>
ASST.<lb/>
TRENDS EDITOR<lb/>
Bill Jones<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS<lb/>
Lisa Drew<lb/>
Stuart Morgan<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Jimmy DuPree<lb/>
ASST.<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
Debby Newby<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
Steve Bachner<lb/>
AD MANAGER<lb/>
Robert Swaim<lb/>
ASST. AD MANAGER<lb/>
Paul Lincke<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student newspaper ol<lb/>
East Carolina University sponsored by the Madia<lb/>
Board ol ECU and is distributed each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic year (weekly during<lb/>
ihe summer).<lb/>
Editorial opinions are thoee ol the Editorial Board<lb/>
and do not necessarily relied the opinions ol Ihe<lb/>
university or the Media Board.<lb/>
Our offices are located on the second Door ol the<lb/>
Publications Center (Old South Building; Our mailing<lb/>
MJdres is. Old South Building. ECU, Greenville<lb/>
N C 27834<lb/>
Our phone numbers ere: 7S7-6366, OS7, and<lb/>
6309. Subscriptions are S10 annually, alumni M<lb/>
annually Subscription requests should be addreeeed<lb/>
to the Circulation Manager.<lb/>
Uppity Women1 I<lb/>
guess that's because it<lb/>
never occurred to me<lb/>
that someone might<lb/>
misunderstand. 1 kept<lb/>
the "Uppity Women"<lb/>
heading as a tribute to<lb/>
Hester initiative in<lb/>
creating and developing<lb/>
the column, and I<lb/>
believe that I have an<lb/>
understanding ol what<lb/>
she meant by "uppitv<lb/>
women although it<lb/>
must be made clear<lb/>
that I am not assuming<lb/>
to -peak lor her.<lb/>
Ihe adjective "uppity"<lb/>
is, ol course, an<lb/>
American colioquiallism.<lb/>
I he dang dictionaries<lb/>
carry the definitions ol<lb/>
"fought' "arrogant<lb/>
'upper-class' etc but<lb/>
I lure was also another<lb/>
context, and 1 believe<lb/>
Ifol Ms. Petty was<lb/>
referring io the latter.<lb/>
Ihe other context had<lb/>
Io do with people who<lb/>
are not "in iheir<lb/>
place socially.<lb/>
Uppity" was used to<lb/>
refer to someone who<lb/>
was high-talking while<lb/>
intoxicated with alcohol.<lb/>
I he earliest reference I<lb/>
was able to find was<lb/>
one regarding<lb/>
'educated Negroes be-<lb/>
coming uppilv<lb/>
I did not find a<lb/>
reference made specif-<lb/>
ically to any of the<lb/>
first-wave feminists as<lb/>
"uppity but no doubt<lb/>
the reference was made<lb/>
many times. It must be<lb/>
remembered that over<lb/>
one hundred years ago,<lb/>
when I ?minists were<lb/>
beginning to speak out<lb/>
question<lb/>
place" vva-<lb/>
same thing<lb/>
tioning Cod.<lb/>
woman s<lb/>
about the<lb/>
as ques-<lb/>
lor women's rights<lb/>
own property and<lb/>
anyone<lb/>
vote, for<lb/>
to<lb/>
to<lb/>
to<lb/>
Ihe women's rights<lb/>
movement in America<lb/>
was originally an<lb/>
oil-hoot ol the anli-<lb/>
slavery, Abolitionist<lb/>
movement. . . ial<lb/>
dedicated Vmerican<lb/>
female abolitionists were<lb/>
reIused seals at a<lb/>
World Anti-Slavery<lb/>
Convention in London in<lb/>
1810. ("Gentlemen only<lb/>
an- expected to at-<lb/>
tend)<lb/>
The Convention<lb/>
"compromised" in<lb/>
sealing the women<lb/>
behind a . urj.un,<lb/>
when- they vv? ; ? ex-<lb/>
pected to listen, lull<lb/>
not to participate. The<lb/>
women walked out. A<lb/>
lew years later, some of<lb/>
these same women re-<lb/>
assembled in Seneca<lb/>
Falls, New Wk, and<lb/>
began to actively<lb/>
campaign lor American<lb/>
women's rights.<lb/>
By 1851, Lucretia<lb/>
Mott, Elizabeth St an ton,<lb/>
and the indomitable<lb/>
Susan B. Anthony had<lb/>
joined forces. They had<lb/>
to endure insult, slan-<lb/>
der, libel, threats, and<lb/>
physical abuse during<lb/>
their campaigns, which<lb/>
consisted mainly of<lb/>
speaking engagements<lb/>
and collecting signa-<lb/>
tures.<lb/>
Susan B. Anthony<lb/>
spent the winter of 1854<lb/>
traveling New York<lb/>
Stale, collecting signa-<lb/>
tures on a women's<lb/>
rights petition to be<lb/>
presented to the New<lb/>
York State Legislature.<lb/>
She suffered frostbite,<lb/>
and miserable accom-<lb/>
modations, along with<lb/>
amencan<lb/>
.David<lb/>
Armstrong<lb/>
Health foods:<lb/>
It - 115 degrees outside under a pitiless sun, but<lb/>
inside, amidst the air-conditioned kitsch of the Las<lb/>
Vegas Hilton, delegates to the health food industry's<lb/>
annual convention are coolly assessing their future<lb/>
And ihe luture, on the surface, at least, looks<lb/>
bright.<lb/>
Once considered beyond the pale of respectabili-<lb/>
ty, these erstwhile food faddists have done a good<lb/>
deal to spark Americas surge of interest in diet<lb/>
iid nutrition and natural lifestyles. In the process<lb/>
their once-liny industry has grown taster than a<lb/>
zucchini squash in a summer garden.<lb/>
,)v,r na"  'fo country's 6,600 health food<lb/>
-lores did not exist only five years ago. Yet, retail<lb/>
al.a lasi year were a cool SI.6 billion, and even<lb/>
conventional supermarkets are stuffing their shelves<lb/>
with natural" products to cash in on the trend.<lb/>
Closely allied with the growth of natural foods i<lb/>
the increasing popularitv of holistic, preventive<lb/>
medicine, in which diet, yoga, megav.tamin therapv<lb/>
and other techniques are posed as alternatives to<lb/>
drugs ami surgery. Indeed, manv of the thousands<lb/>
ol products on d.splay here deal not onlv with<lb/>
eating but with healing.<lb/>
II one is to believe the smiling spiels of health<lb/>
food promoters, the sky ,s the limit. But behind the<lb/>
smiles hes concern that recession and repression<lb/>
could arrest the trends towards natural food and<lb/>
medicine belore they really take hold.<lb/>
A lull-Hedged recession would probablv take the<lb/>
wind out ol the sails of the health food industrv<lb/>
Health loods  because of their relatively small<lb/>
volume, spotty distribution, hard-to-get ' natural<lb/>
. ingredients ami sometimes-hefty markup  cost far<lb/>
more than conventional foods. That makes them<lb/>
desirable extras, not necessities, on most people"<lb/>
shopping lists.<lb/>
Repression is another, at least as thornv<lb/>
problem. In their lootrace to success, health food<lb/>
entrepreneurs have stepped on some intluencial<lb/>
toes: those ol the pharmaceutical giants and<lb/>
conventional lood processors, for example. Holistic<lb/>
health advocates have, likewise, made powerful<lb/>
enemies in the medical establishment. Both have<lb/>
drawn the fire of government regulatory agencies.<lb/>
Ihe L.S. Food and Drug Administration recent! v<lb/>
proposed that some vitamin and mineral<lb/>
supplements - vitamin E and magnesium, among<lb/>
?hem  be withdrawn from over-the-counter sales<lb/>
ami reclassil.cd as prescription drugs. Organizations<lb/>
hke the National Nutritional Foods Association<lb/>
sponsor ol the Las Vegas confab, have vociferouslv<lb/>
attacked the FDA plan, arguing that it violates the<lb/>
consumer s Ireedom of choice and reflects the ill<lb/>
will ol powerful special interests towards the health<lb/>
lood industrv.<lb/>
Will government policies<lb/>
stunt rapid growth?<lb/>
Similarly, scientist- dose In the health I<lb/>
h" - neahh movements arc finding<lb/>
uudittg are drying Uf. i a in point -<lb/>
that ol Dr. Linus Pauling, the two-time Nobel Prue<lb/>
winner whose work with vitamin C on the comn<lb/>
v'ld ami earner have made him a parial<lb/>
orthodox medical circles. Pauling, h?<lb/>
patient. uiih vitamin C - . .<lb/>
Institute m California and cites<lb/>
remarkable successes bv Dr Kuan Camef<lb/>
Scotland ha- been repealed. domed funds<lb/>
expand his research.<lb/>
hauling is at the convention, a era.<lb/>
war old with a -hock ol white hair and a .<lb/>
l-rcelul way ol speaking. His speech ,s the m -<lb/>
warmly-rcceived ot the convent.on. topptUi: ?? ,hd<lb/>
i,eahhUrg ?KUmi'n "? l? a hero ?o lh,<lb/>
health lood movement when his Se.ate<lb/>
bcomniutee on Nutntum recommended a t<lb/>
away ,rom Big Macs 'and Ding Dong. <lb/>
UttprHVsscd, whole loods. <lb/>
dm, lu pauj(Ug m,gaiW oJ utanm<lb/>
1 ,  " a dj oil the bodv a<lb/>
di'cae' ,nUmUU- protect.ng u ff<lb/>
disease Ke.ernng to a recent, highlv -pubhc<lb/>
Mud by ,U. Mau Ctlm. that <lb/>
dupbeate Lwan Cameron ; test remits .ltn<lb/>
U,U - Ruling .ays that the Mavo Chna as<lb/>
jancer patients whose heavy dose, ot chemothera'<lb/>
had already destrmed ,he,r immune svstems. (Jok'a<lb/>
hundlu ol ,? patients Cameron studied had had<lb/>
;heo,herapy. According to Paulmg. the M<lb/>
Cbmc didnt publicize t.u radical departure V<lb/>
Cameron s work.<lb/>
None of the toregomg ,s to suggest that health<lb/>
lood and holistic health devotees are .? La<lb/>
year ,? Los Angeles, a seller ol an Vg?-tr(<lb/>
mayonnaise substitute was tound to be sell,?,<lb/>
standard mayonnaise. w?h eggs, unuVr J?<lb/>
evpens.vc health lood label. And when a T<lb/>
Matio also ,u Los Angeles, tested "organic-<lb/>
produce there earlier this year, pesticide res.dues L<lb/>
ugh as ,ht.se on supermarket produce showed mm<lb/>
Clearly, some regulation is needed<lb/>
But repression ?, the gu.se of regulation vW,<lb/>
do America needs the elemental bodv wisdom ?<lb/>
the natural lood and hohstu, health movemen,<lb/>
Swithet, foods hke synthetic fuels, wo,?<lb/>
???. ?hI , h fce oan-<lb/>
W Jm t, a ,v?r,ro, rmimmmmt. U<lb/>
1211<lb/>
many icy receptions ami<lb/>
doors slammed in her<lb/>
lace, bul she collected<lb/>
lour thousand signatures<lb/>
that winter.<lb/>
The New York<lb/>
Legislature appointed a<lb/>
special committee to<lb/>
consider the petition. In<lb/>
their report, the Com-<lb/>
millee concluded.  . .<lb/>
bnlies always have the<lb/>
besl place, ami choicest<lb/>
litlbils ul the table.<lb/>
They always have the<lb/>
best seat tu Ihe . cars,<lb/>
carriages, and sleighs;<lb/>
the warmest place in<lb/>
the winter and the<lb/>
coolest place in the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
A lady's dress<lb/>
costs three limes as<lb/>
much as that of a<lb/>
gentleman; and, at the<lb/>
present time, with the<lb/>
prevailing fashion, one<lb/>
lady occupies three<lb/>
times as much space in<lb/>
ihe world as a gentle-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
It has ihus ap-<lb/>
peared to t,r married<lb/>
gentlemen ol the Com-<lb/>
millee, being a majorilv<lb/>
? ?  that it there is<lb/>
any inequity or op-<lb/>
pression in the case,<lb/>
the gentlemen are llu<lb/>
sufferers. . . On the<lb/>
whole, the Committee<lb/>
has com hided t rnvM.<lb/>
mend no measure,<lb/>
except as thev have<lb/>
the bttsisattd mav wear<lb/>
pellicoat- and ihe wile<lb/>
tin breeches, ami thu-<lb/>
indicate to their neigh-<lb/>
bor- ih, true relation in<lb/>
which they stand to<lb/>
each o(h,r. "<lb/>
Un-<lb/>
til<lb/>
e iiu-<lb/>
Uiic get-<lb/>
prrssiiHi thai "uppilv"<lb/>
Was. pr.d.ablv ??ie ,5 u.<lb/>
in.?<lb/>
ti-ed ?i <lb/>
carl tt?iuuii-1<lb/>
Ol tlOt , ,j<lb/>
lit.  ,arjx<lb/>
lesmmsu. that jj<lb/>
(X  ?? ?Ufe her<lb/>
? "Junto I ,? .<lb/>
???? proud<lb/>
?? ? al i on ,i,<lb/>
tile Iri.ts<lb/>
iloll.<lb/>
several in-<lb/>
which hus-<lb/>
wife have<lb/>
same pe-<lb/>
observed<lb/>
stances in<lb/>
band and<lb/>
signed the<lb/>
lit ion.<lb/>
In such case,<lb/>
they would recommend<lb/>
the parlies to apply for !<lb/>
a law authorizing them<lb/>
U? change dress, that<lb/>
Vigil to be observ<lb/>
rer-m- ui-hmg  orve a lent<lb/>
regarding pending drat! legislation mav gather<lb/>
the Lvans Street Mall on the ,rs, and ,hi<lb/>
Uetlnestlays ol each month, un1 e legislation ha<lb/>
been acted on. This v,g, will also U- observed b<lb/>
group, ?, other parts of the nation. Person, arc-<lb/>
ane, to assemble at twelve noon and observe<lb/>
'U"t vigd until twelve thirty. This demonstration ,<lb/>
sponsored by the Grcenvdie Peace CommiUee<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
????-rr,r<lb/>
  ?, ? ? <lb/>
 4TV!Tte- <lb/>
<pb facs="00057206_0003"/><lb/>
26 July 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD P<lb/>
1 Wit II IDE l<lb/>
Despite what th<lb/>
, J?T fhe elMraHic ?? <lb/>
Controversy ends<lb/>
"l! VKT MORGAN<lb/>
 ?'? s Editor<lb/>
 I<lb/>
"Hi Car<lb/>
ciU'raTs<lb/>
 i ii i a<lb/>
Of-<lb/>
' "Jl'i thai th<lb/>
'g" ?'M Last<lb/>
I niversiiv pro-<lb/>
.ii id corner o<lb/>
 -iii.l Charles<lb/>
 not violate<lb/>
Cilv u Creenville<lb/>
( I ,<lb/>
llldlHc<lb/>
<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
. to Rov <lb/>
? assistant al-<lb/>
ii, ill zo-<lb/>
"Ills lor i lllr-<lb/>
 applies "to<lb/>
i its a-<lb/>
? regard<lb/>
i m, coll-<lb/>
ude l<lb/>
-laic<lb/>
' ?' i ' ruling,<lb/>
Creem die<lb/>
igtl va-<lb/>
advertising<lb/>
i - prohibit! 11<lb/>
"Hire ami<lb/>
ssi! i, a 11. i<lb/>
r, -i  il<lb/>
a 11iir! i,?<lb/>
and at-<lb/>
alum id<lb/>
ii trover- i<lb/>
i in il, -d ? m<lb/>
? i<lb/>
?mi weeks ;<lb/>
ig ih" contro-<lb/>
1 rev al han, a<lb/>
Greenville resilient who<lb/>
"role a letter to The<lb/>
Dailv Refle ir and con<lb/>
laeti'ij ilu- cii manager<lb/>
and tnavor complaining<lb/>
about the sign ,? Juyt<lb/>
-aid M,uida she had<lb/>
three objections to the<lb/>
-ign.<lb/>
She ain , ihe sign<lb/>
aa- a liatln hazard al<lb/>
 "I the uios) on<lb/>
-l' ted intersections in<lb/>
llu" -?ate 2) that she<lb/>
??hje? led to private eon<lb/>
cei'i "I individuals: u<lb/>
,h'A Male propert) lor<lb/>
publieil) purposes, and<lb/>
; 'hat she thought the<lb/>
-?gn va "tack) as all<lb/>
4' i "in lor the dignitv<lb/>
?'I the university ad-<lb/>
'i'?ig thai it gave ECL a<lb/>
Cone) Island" atmos<lb/>
l'lu'1 c.<lb/>
I still feel verv<lb/>
much the same con-<lb/>
cerning all three<lb/>
??'?iUs Trevathan -aid.<lb/>
' l!i"ik there has been<lb/>
1  "I controversy. I<lb/>
paid fur bv the Athletic<lb/>
Lhpartment Cain ex-<lb/>
plained. "The nionev<lb/>
?as paid to the Am-<lb/>
?M,an Sign ami Indi<lb/>
itor C<lb/>
onipanv<lb/>
hn'k ulol of<lb/>
people<lb/>
li-agr?e vxitli ihe sign.<lb/>
 "ling in illiam<lb/>
r?  ECl alhle <lb/>
I11 l??r, the sign ai ti .<lb/>
oiner ol the interscc-<lb/>
ion and the scoreboard<lb/>
" Kieklen Stadium is<lb/>
 l??tal package paid<lb/>
??" b the five local<lb/>
nisiiiesses who po<lb/>
led it.<lb/>
Il was installed and<lb/>
? "iistructed the sign<lb/>
According to (am.<lb/>
a??oui SIU,0)0 m alhlel.c<lb/>
motie) ? not state<lb/>
?nev ? was used in<lb/>
lull ihe electronic<lb/>
"gu and build its brick<lb/>
-i i ucturc.<lb/>
Ihe purpose ol the<lb/>
-?gn is io provide infor-<lb/>
mation to the public<lb/>
cuiieerning activ ities<lb/>
both athletic and cam-<lb/>
pu wide he further<lb/>
explained. "h j? ,<lb/>
public information cen-<lb/>
l,r hir the universit)<lb/>
d not just limited to<lb/>
 univer-ifv athletic<lb/>
depai Inn<lb/>
" l' ' ' v ' JIM 'i A I , I I<lb/>
Ihe ilifiereni .leparl<lb/>
ments on campus, and<lb/>
ai wani lo hdp 1(,r<lb/>
? partments get jtor.<lb/>
maiion on thuri center<lb/>
li added.<lb/>
Able lo run simul-<lb/>
icousl) niih the<lb/>
Moreboard in Kieklen<lb/>
Radium, Cam described<lb/>
ihe -1? 111 as being<lb/>
unique He- added,<lb/>
We still have i . <lb/>
ihnigs thai can be put<lb/>
11 " ha! can be ol<lb/>
 'l'v to the univer<lb/>
ECU Professor Selected<lb/>
for National Program<lb/>
I l . . w - Bureau<lb/>
Vila Kosenleld,<lb/>
(person ol home<lb/>
mill - educal urn hi<lb/>
li-i Carolina Uni-<lb/>
l" Iiool ol Home<lb/>
io, has been<lb/>
?'?Ieie.d i" participate in<lb/>
National Consumer<lb/>
I -1 i 11 o in i e ? Program<lb/>
? the IV7?J-80 fiscal<lb/>
I he program. con-<lb/>
hv the Joint<lb/>
' cil on economic<lb/>
ion, will imple-<lb/>
'II V I i I, ? coll ?<lb/>
loiuii project<lb/>
I II" -ouiicil <lb/>
network ol state coun-<lb/>
cils and economic edu-<lb/>
1 alum centers.<lb/>
Ir. Kosenleld i one<lb/>
"I M) leading college<lb/>
anil university lacullv<lb/>
members chosen lor the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Wlivilies include an<lb/>
m-iiiule hosted bv the<lb/>
" "igia Council on<lb/>
hconomic Kducalion on<lb/>
develupineill ol prefer<lb/>
k?ee and uiservici1 con<lb/>
"inner eilui alum leach-<lb/>
1 '?.?. pai In ipaills in<lb/>
"M nielli i iih councils<lb/>
ami centers in their<lb/>
" " ?live -tales, a<lb/>
meeting ol the Joint<lb/>
uncil on Economics<lb/>
Ilocation hi loronto,<lb/>
l.anada, ami lormation<lb/>
adion plan- h<lb/>
participating lacullv<lb/>
ii" inher<lb/>
Ir. Koseuiehi is na-<lb/>
lioualh recognized lor<lb/>
"? ' wirk in (he o-<lb/>
lalioiial education and<lb/>
"Otsumer education<lb/>
?Mills. Mie has direcled<lb/>
?"?veral special training<lb/>
" ' v h-e projects with<lb/>
iniiiiing Iroin national<lb/>
and stale agencies.<lb/>
Burt Reynolds<lb/>
Jon Voight<lb/>
Deliverance<lb/>
Monday night at 9<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
HELP YOU!<lb/>
- If you're interested in a challenging,<lb/>
rewarding experience on a very<lb/>
flexible part-time basis then read on.<lb/>
. The FOUNTAINHEAD needs a few ,<lb/>
energetic, creative people to join the<lb/>
advertising staff. The requirements '<lb/>
are simple: You must be willing to<lb/>
devote a reasonable amount of your<lb/>
spare time to this occupation. You<lb/>
should be willing to dress in a neat,<lb/>
businesslike manner and follow<lb/>
through on assignments.<lb/>
' Y.2ur Pcome will be determined bv<lb/>
your degree of effectiveness as a<lb/>
salesperson; all earnings will be<lb/>
based on sales volume. In addition,<lb/>
you will gain valuable sales<lb/>
experience along with exposure to<lb/>
all types of businesses.<lb/>
If the prospect of earning extra<lb/>
money, gaining valuable experience<lb/>
and accepting a genuine challenge<lb/>
appeals to you then we need to talk<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
To arrange an appointment that<lb/>
could make this school year<lb/>
something really special call:<lb/>
Mr. Robert Swaim at 757-6366<lb/>
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. or fill<lb/>
out an application at the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD offices.<lb/>
Neatness and attractive appearance<lb/>
are essential.<lb/>
11. Business minded females are<lb/>
especially encouraged to apply.<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
SSfijflpQr- .? r - - -r<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057206_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4 FOUNTAINHEAD 26 July 1979<lb/>
r<lb/>
Med School faculty expanded<lb/>
By LISA DREW<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Several new additions have recently been made<lb/>
to the East Carolina University Shool of Medicine's<lb/>
lacull .<lb/>
Dr. L. Jarrett Barnhiil, a child psychiatrist, has<lb/>
been appointed assistant professor of psychiatry. He<lb/>
will be responsible lor the development of a<lb/>
pediatric laison program between the Department of<lb/>
Pediatrics and Pill County Mental Health Center.<lb/>
Barnhiil is a native of Rober'sonville, North<lb/>
Carolina, and received his undergraduate degree<lb/>
from I NC-Chapel Hill and his MD from Bowman<lb/>
Gra) School of Medicine. He completed his<lb/>
post-graduate medical training at North Carolina<lb/>
Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill, and North<lb/>
Carolina Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem.<lb/>
" Paul L. Fletcher, a specialist in protein<lb/>
ihemixtry, has been appointed associate professor of<lb/>
Scholar named<lb/>
to ECU faculty<lb/>
itral ion on major<lb/>
program cost analysis.<lb/>
His research and<lb/>
publications both in the<lb/>
scientific id academic<lb/>
planning holds are<lb/>
voluminous. He also<lb/>
served in numerous<lb/>
consulting capacities<lb/>
centering on academic<lb/>
planning and budgeting.<lb/>
As an undergradu-<lb/>
ate, Maicr had a dual<lb/>
major in chemistry and<lb/>
botaii) at the University<lb/>
ol Miami, in 1951,<lb/>
taking cum laude honors<lb/>
with his BS degree. An<lb/>
MS and PhD in plant<lb/>
and soil chemistry with<lb/>
ininois in analytical<lb/>
chemistry and botany<lb/>
vere taken at the<lb/>
I nix ?i -it of Illinois,<lb/>
1952 and 195 1.<lb/>
1 lie recommendation<lb/>
ol liis appointment was<lb/>
reached by the ECU<lb/>
Soared Committee sev-<lb/>
eral weeks ago ami was<lb/>
approved b (hi ECL<lb/>
Board ol I rustees and<lb/>
lorwarded to President<lb/>
 iliiain C. Friday of<lb/>
the University ol North<lb/>
Carolina vho presented<lb/>
11 if recommendation to<lb/>
the L C Board ol<lb/>
Governors.<lb/>
microbiology. He will establish a protein chemistry<lb/>
aboratory in the Department of Microbiology and<lb/>
Immunology, which will provide research services for<lb/>
the various med school departments.<lb/>
Fletcher has formerly taught at Yale and<lb/>
Rockefeller Universities, and is currently researching<lb/>
neurolovins from scorpion venom on a grant from<lb/>
the National Institutes of Health.<lb/>
Dr. Mohammad Saeed Dar has joined the school<lb/>
as visiting assistant research professor in the<lb/>
Department of Pharmacology. Prior to his appoint-<lb/>
ment, Dar was associate professor of pharmacology<lb/>
al Pahlavi University Medical School in Shiraz, Iran.<lb/>
He vsas involved there in research sponsored partly<lb/>
by Burroughs Wellcome, Traingle Park, which<lb/>
involved certain properties of medicinal plants in<lb/>
Iran.<lb/>
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? "Drug laws in countries abroad are a lot easier than in the<lb/>
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? D No matter what happens, the US. Embassy can bail me<lb/>
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? "The best way to carry money abroad is in good old Amer-<lb/>
ican dollars If I run short, I can always cash a check"<lb/>
? " I can always go to the American Embassy if I need to have<lb/>
hotel or travel reservations made or if I need to cash a check"<lb/>
If you MM "FALSE" to HI of 0M afore, than Hi<lb/>
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five years and you need not have specific travel plans at the time you<lb/>
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without advising family, friends &amp; business associates of their itineraries<lb/>
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of mind and for those left at home. Each year the State Department s<lb/>
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whereaoouts inquiries on Americans abroad, in too many cases family<lb/>
and friends can only provide minimal information on the parson abroad<lb/>
We do our best, but it is often like looking for the proverbial needle<lb/>
in a haystack REMEMBER-leave a detailed itinerary, tf you alter your<lb/>
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ff you do become involved, you're running a high risk of being among<lb/>
IHfJJ?0? Cleans.arrested abroad each year, almost half on drug-<lb/>
2S2J SB ,A?ARE ?in ?mi- JShSmS St be<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057206_0005"/><lb/>
TRENDS<lb/>
26 July 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 5<lb/>
Wa<lb/>
rren re leases new book<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Trends Editor<lb/>
in<lb/>
Ur'Y ma? ? Otters, Robert Pe,?, Warren<lb/>
'he I it si niri  i ? ?!<lb/>
lil(( Nostalg.c , consists of poems<lb/>
"tll the abiht, to transform his personal<lb/>
, , , , .V I" , hl c?"hood into universal<lb/>
' . Speculative consists of poems<lb/>
h   metaphysical inquiries into the nature<lb/>
fllneJL. SPaCe' ml? lhC natUre 0f memor and<lb/>
Jarren is truly the mos. respected author living<lb/>
 lia. He ,s a critic, poet, novelist, essayist!<lb/>
1 -lor, writer and dramatist - a notable<lb/>
-li lor someone who began college with<lb/>
"ll ?? majoring in chemistry<lb/>
instruction in chemistry and god$<lb/>
,lruc  freshman English '(John Crowe'<lb/>
Ransom) influenced Warren's decision to turn to<lb/>
literature, lie was also one of Donald Davidson's<lb/>
students ai Vanderbilt, and for a time he roomed<lb/>
with Mien Tate and Ridley Wills, who took him to<lb/>
nm lings ol the Fugitives, a group in Nashville<lb/>
interested in poetry.<lb/>
I be lirsi poem in the first section is entitled<lb/>
'American Portrait: Old Style It is Penn Warren's<lb/>
fern Hill complete with a momento mori image,<lb/>
that ol a skull Warren found as a child. Another of<lb/>
the Nostalgic poems is entitled "Amazing Grace<lb/>
hi the Back t.ouulry" the subject of which is<lb/>
Warrens experience in one of the old-time revival<lb/>
lenis thai still tour in the rural United States. In<lb/>
Boy Wandering in Simms' Valley" the boy roams<lb/>
around in an old, deserted house and thinks of the<lb/>
ghosts that live there, and how they loved each<lb/>
other as real people.<lb/>
Another poem deals with his seeing an "old<lb/>
I lame ol his alter she has grown old and ugly.<lb/>
And yet another poem deals with a boy from an<lb/>
orphanage thai Warren used to know as a youth.<lb/>
these autobiographical poems give an intimate<lb/>
glimpse of Pemi Warren the man.<lb/>
The necessity of getting art from life has<lb/>
concerned Warren throughout his life. On his<lb/>
approaches to writing, Warren had this to say in<lb/>
Hie Pans Review "You don't choose a story it<lb/>
'Looses y?u. You get together with that story<lb/>
somehow; you're stuck with itThe business of<lb/>
researching lor a book strikes me as sort of<lb/>
obscenity<lb/>
What 1 mean is, researching for a book in the<lb/>
sense ol trying to find a book to write. Once you<lb/>
are engaged by a subject, and have your idea you<lb/>
"lay or may not want to do some investigating But<lb/>
you ought to do ,t in the same spirit in which<lb/>
you di lake a walk in the evening air to think things<lb/>
mrr.<lb/>
Bastille Day celebrated<lb/>
 W BE, K<lb/>
Edilui<lb/>
French Indepen-<lb/>
Day, known as<lb/>
Ba-lille Ua" is<lb/>
lionally celebrated<lb/>
July 16. An<lb/>
? ition ol this took<lb/>
ai Dominique's, a<lb/>
iranl in Washing-<lb/>
D i and two ECL<lb/>
nl- were on hand<lb/>
in participate.<lb/>
I he major event in<lb/>
the Bastille Day cele-<lb/>
bration al Dominique's<lb/>
involves nailers and<lb/>
waitresses Ironi around<lb/>
the country racing over<lb/>
l,?e mile, with a<lb/>
champagne tray in one<lb/>
hand.<lb/>
I In- two ECL<lb/>
students, Eric Johnston<lb/>
and Jell Smith, were<lb/>
sponsored bv the<lb/>
Gathering Place restaur-<lb/>
ant in Greenville where<lb/>
according to John Cox,<lb/>
part owner el the<lb/>
establishment, both are<lb/>
employed as waiters.<lb/>
Siniih, a graduate<lb/>
-tudenl in biology, and<lb/>
Johnston, an art major,<lb/>
placed in the lop ten in<lb/>
u field ol over 100<lb/>
competitors. The pair<lb/>
had been training for<lb/>
months by entering<lb/>
various "fun runs" and<lb/>
oilier such events<lb/>
around ihe stale.<lb/>
Dominique's pro ided<lb/>
Iree beer .umI enter-<lb/>
lainmenl for all parli-<lb/>
 ipanl - " follow nig the<lb/>
race and presented the<lb/>
winner with a trip to<lb/>
Pans.<lb/>
II m the first, "Nostalgic part of the book we<lb/>
get a picture ol the young Warren, a man in the<lb/>
world, in the second part of the book, the<lb/>
Speculative" gives us an image of Warren the<lb/>
thinker. Ihe different, more abstract quality of these<lb/>
i' m- is reflected in some of their titles, "Dream "<lb/>
D.vam ol a Dream "Ah, Anima and others. '<lb/>
Warren expresses a view of transcendence and a<lb/>
love lor the earth in "Diver" much like Frost's in<lb/>
Swinger ol Birches<lb/>
Arrowed, the body flies in light.<lb/>
Ihe heels Jlash as water closes.<lb/>
Ihe hoard yet  rA where feet struck.<lb/>
Concentric to the water's wound,<lb/>
In live geometry the bright-<lb/>
Horn circles widen tar get wise<lb/>
In rnathemultc accuracy.<lb/>
Sow in the water's inner gleam,<lb/>
K here no sound comes, and yap and nag<lb/>
OJ the world's old currish annoy is stilled,<lb/>
Ihe body glides. In timeless peace<lb/>
Ihe mover that shows no movement moves<lb/>
behind the prow of a diver's hands,<lb/>
And in our watching hearts we know<lb/>
An unsuspected depth and calm<lb/>
OJ identity we had never dreamed.<lb/>
1 poetry, a<lb/>
?i lion ol<lb/>
essav<lb/>
relation- m nieriea. Thi-<lb/>
lair<lb/>
But look! The face is up, dark hi<lb/>
Snaps side wise to show the boyish grin.<lb/>
Ind we smile, too, in welcome back<lb/>
Poet Robert Penn Warren<lb/>
? all the joy and anguish oj<lb/>
The earth we walk on, tie down in.<lb/>
Warren is an accomplished artist in each ol his<lb/>
eWn Ijeld. His book. Brother to Dragons<lb/>
a-m,i Warren ol a prominent position among<lb/>
"?? ?'?l??ran poets. He has published manv books<lb/>
"leliiuiiig ten novels, iwce vounu.? <lb/>
volume ol short stories, a plav ,<lb/>
critical essays, a biography, two<lb/>
ami two studies <lb/>
'??i ol work has been published j? a "period"ol"w<lb/>
Vars - during which Warren has also fuel a<lb/>
career a a professor ol English.<lb/>
He wo the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction lor ill the<lb/>
kings Men  1946. His book Promises in 1957<lb/>
won Ihe Pulitzer Prize lor Poetry and tin Nal,onal<lb/>
Book Award. He has won nearly even major<lb/>
recognition lor talent in creative writing and is<lb/>
Chancellor ol the Academy ol American Poets. H<lb/>
lives m Connecticut with his wife anI their Iwo<lb/>
children, Kosauna and Gabriel.<lb/>
Sou: and Then. Poems 1976-1978 is the latest<lb/>
work published to date by one ol Mneri V- i<lb/>
imporiaul ami respected writer Fni<lb/>
ihe hook has historical importance. Bu: reviewer<lb/>
-ugge-t- that you read Mou and inen lor a<lb/>
dilli rein reason. And that reason is thai the poi<lb/>
in this book sweats with life, and is lull ol ihe<lb/>
imaginative spirit ol a very imaginative man.<lb/>
MacDonald pens bestseller<lb/>
Eric Johnston and Jeff Smith<lb/>
Photo by John Cox<lb/>
B WILLIAM JONES<lb/>
Awl. Trends Editor<lb/>
I he liout cover of<lb/>
John D. MacDonaid's<lb/>
latest suspense novel"<lb/>
claims the book a<lb/>
coast-lo-coast best-<lb/>
seller . It ought to be.<lb/>
The Empty Copper Sea,<lb/>
the Mveiiienlh of the<lb/>
lravis McCee adventure<lb/>
stories, is every bit as<lb/>
brilliant a piece of<lb/>
writing as the book's<lb/>
mirrory copper cover is<lb/>
eyecatching .<lb/>
lravis McGec is a<lb/>
salvage expert which<lb/>
really means, no mailer<lb/>
what the circumstances,<lb/>
he can generally come<lb/>
up vvilh a way of<lb/>
getting what he's alter.<lb/>
Be it anything from<lb/>
sunken treasure lo, as<lb/>
is the case in The<lb/>
Empty Copper Seu, re-<lb/>
scuing a proud man's<lb/>
reputation.<lb/>
I i MeCee is a<lb/>
typical hero ol the<lb/>
James Bond-Nick Dan-<lb/>
ger genre. A 'y pica I in<lb/>
thai, while he possesses<lb/>
the standard accoutre-<lb/>
ments ol such a lively<lb/>
occupation ? lasl lists,<lb/>
quick wits and superb<lb/>
physical conditioning, a-<lb/>
loug vvilh a six loot-plus<lb/>
stature and rugged good<lb/>
looks thai have women<lb/>
literally fighting over<lb/>
him, our James West of<lb/>
the Florida coast is sur-<lb/>
prisingly sensitive, com-<lb/>
passionate and humanly<lb/>
vulnerable. And il is in<lb/>
conveying ibis refresh-<lb/>
ingly human adventur-<lb/>
er s personal develop-<lb/>
ment that John D.<lb/>
MacDonald proves his<lb/>
worth a- a writer and<lb/>
The Lin ply Clipper Seu<lb/>
llllds it s success a- a<lb/>
uov el.<lb/>
In The Empty Cop<lb/>
pet Seu. McCee finds<lb/>
huiisell once<lb/>
again<lb/>
home on his r"t. Lau-<lb/>
derdale based house-<lb/>
boal, The !? i Flush.<lb/>
alter tw. urdous iiouths<lb/>
oi sailing a -ma!1 boat<lb/>
back to Miami from the<lb/>
Carribbean, McCee is<lb/>
approached by an old<lb/>
inend. Van Harder, a<lb/>
rehabilitated alcoholic,<lb/>
w ho s captain s license<lb/>
has been revoked and<lb/>
good named ruined bv<lb/>
a lalal accident on a<lb/>
l???ul hi w Inch In a -<lb/>
i aplaiumg.<lb/>
Mi l,i ,<lb/>
attempt to re-hm to-<lb/>
ll 'ii ml - repula <lb/>
long with a<lb/>
Meyer who ha- a I'<lb/>
hi ei oitouiic- and<lb/>
untg v a - i ? i maki a<lb/>
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where 11 accident<lb/>
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the gui-c ot poteulial<lb/>
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begin in uncover more <lb/>
and in' ii i? ev idence tl<lb/>
Hub Lawle tin ,e<lb/>
i idcul - wealthv i iclim.<lb/>
.1 lot .il land uiagna<lb/>
P - Mti lh,n .<lb/>
ECU Summer Theatre to stage two productions<lb/>
l.l.l New- Bureau<lb/>
The Ea-t Carolina<lb/>
I uiversil y cam pus is<lb/>
resounding with bright<lb/>
-oiig- these days as<lb/>
Producer-Director Edgar<lb/>
H. Loess in puts his cast<lb/>
? ?I polished professionals<lb/>
through their paces in<lb/>
preparation lor East<lb/>
Carolina Summer Thea-<lb/>
tre- "demi-season<lb/>
scheduled to open<lb/>
Monday Julv 30 in A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Hall. The<lb/>
season will consist ol<lb/>
t w o productions:<lb/>
"Starting Here, Starting<lb/>
Now a fun-filled,<lb/>
sophisticated celebration<lb/>
ol the pleasures and<lb/>
pitlalls of being in love<lb/>
written by Richard<lb/>
Mallby, Jr and David<lb/>
I Shire; and "Side By<lb/>
Side By Sondheim the<lb/>
musical tribute to one<lb/>
of Broadway's favorite<lb/>
composers which took<lb/>
New York by storm a<lb/>
couple of seasons ago.<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
Summer Theatre's cast<lb/>
for the shows features<lb/>
some familiar faces as<lb/>
well as some new<lb/>
? i lends. Fresh from an<lb/>
engagement as director<lb/>
for the outdoor drama<lb/>
"First Eor Freedom" in<lb/>
Halifax, Del Lewis will<lb/>
perlorm in both "Start-<lb/>
ing Here, Starling<lb/>
Now and in "Side By<lb/>
Side By Sondheim A<lb/>
newcomer lo Summer<lb/>
Theatre, Lewis' profess-<lb/>
ional credits include<lb/>
broad way appearances<lb/>
in 'The Rothchilds"<lb/>
and in "Fiddler on the<lb/>
Roof as well as<lb/>
off-Broadway, summer<lb/>
slock, and road show<lb/>
appearances and in<lb/>
films. He was the<lb/>
founder of the Madison<lb/>
Civic Repertory Theatre<lb/>
in Madison, Wisconsin,<lb/>
and currently serves on<lb/>
the laculty in acting al<lb/>
East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
Appearing opposite<lb/>
Mr. Lewis in both<lb/>
shows is Michelle<lb/>
Reilley, a guest artist<lb/>
appearing through spe-<lb/>
cial arrangement with<lb/>
Actors Equity Associ-<lb/>
ation. Ms. Reilley<lb/>
trained in London at the<lb/>
Weber Douglas Acad-<lb/>
emy of Dramatic Art,<lb/>
and has extensive acting<lb/>
credits in regional<lb/>
professional theatres<lb/>
around the U.S. She<lb/>
has appeared as Polly<lb/>
Peach u in in the Barter<lb/>
Ihealre production of<lb/>
Berlolt Brecht's "The<lb/>
threepenny Opera as<lb/>
Agnes in ihe Cleveland<lb/>
Play House production<lb/>
of Moliere's "Ihe<lb/>
School lor Wives and<lb/>
in "A Yard of Sun<lb/>
directed by Jose Ferrer.<lb/>
Ibis season is her first<lb/>
with the East Carolina<lb/>
Summer Theatre.<lb/>
Rodney Freeze, a<lb/>
graduate of ECU's<lb/>
acting program whose<lb/>
credits include outdoor<lb/>
drama and productions<lb/>
in New York and<lb/>
Washington, D.C will<lb/>
appear in "Side By<lb/>
Side By Sondheim as<lb/>
will Amanda Muir, a<lb/>
veteran Summer Theatre<lb/>
actress whom audiences<lb/>
will remember for her<lb/>
performances as Ellen<lb/>
in "Any Wednesday"<lb/>
and as Faye Templeton<lb/>
in "George M<lb/>
Producer - Director<lb/>
Edgar R. Loessin hardly<lb/>
needs an introduction to<lb/>
Summer Theatre fans.<lb/>
Ihe founder of the East<lb/>
Carolina Summer Thea-<lb/>
tre - and, incidentally,<lb/>
the ECU Drama and<lb/>
Speech Department<lb/>
has worked on produc-<lb/>
tions on Broadway and<lb/>
in summer stock, and<lb/>
has directed al one time<lb/>
or another almost every<lb/>
major outdoor drama in<lb/>
the South. Mr. Loessin<lb/>
will direct both pro-<lb/>
ductions.<lb/>
Musical Director for<lb/>
the season is Brett<lb/>
Waison of the ECU<lb/>
School of Music faculty.<lb/>
Waison directs the ECU<lb/>
Choir, and holds de-<lb/>
grees in music from the<lb/>
Eastman School of<lb/>
Music and the Univer-<lb/>
sity ol Southern Cali-<lb/>
lornia. He has been<lb/>
selected to participate,<lb/>
later this summer, as<lb/>
one of 25 conductors<lb/>
from the United States<lb/>
and Europe, in the<lb/>
Bach Academy at<lb/>
Stutlgari, Germany,<lb/>
where he will study<lb/>
under the direction of<lb/>
world-renowned conduc-<lb/>
tor Helmut Rilling.<lb/>
Terry Rieser, Chore-<lb/>
ographer for both<lb/>
shows, began her<lb/>
professional career<lb/>
working with Jimmy<lb/>
Durante. She has been<lb/>
seen on the Jackie<lb/>
Cleason Show, Sesame<lb/>
Street, the Sonny Bono<lb/>
Show, and scores of<lb/>
other television appear-<lb/>
ances. She has worked<lb/>
in regional ihealre and<lb/>
on Broadway, and has<lb/>
choreographed musicals<lb/>
in New ork, Florida<lb/>
and California.<lb/>
rickets lor the two<lb/>
-how- are on sale al<lb/>
the Ea-t Carolina<lb/>
Summer Ihealre Box<lb/>
Ollice. Subscriptions,<lb/>
good lor a hike! lo<lb/>
each show, are $10<lb/>
eaih. or tickets mav be<lb/>
I'lii cha-ed Ii M llldiv idtial<lb/>
-how- al 7. Seals are<lb/>
reset ed. and reset a<lb/>
lion- may be made .<lb/>
i ailing 757-?.9U. in li<lb/>
iv riling Suimnei I<lb/>
lr?"i Ea-t Carolina<lb/>
1 niei-n. Greenville,<lb/>
North Carolina  1.<lb/>
Jane Heit returns to ECU<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The Easl Carolina<lb/>
Summer Theaire is buz-<lb/>
zing with excitement<lb/>
over a special attraction<lb/>
which has been added<lb/>
to this summer's<lb/>
demi-season Veteran<lb/>
Summer Theatre per-<lb/>
former Sally-Jane Heit<lb/>
is returning from New<lb/>
 ork to perform her<lb/>
popular one-woman<lb/>
show, "The Heit Report<lb/>
(In Prime Time)" Aug-<lb/>
ust 13 through 17 at<lb/>
8:15 p.m. in A.J. Flet-<lb/>
cher Hull on the ECU<lb/>
Campus, with a matinee<lb/>
performance on Wed-<lb/>
nesday, August 15.<lb/>
East Carolina Sum-<lb/>
mer Theatre audiences<lb/>
will remember Sally-<lb/>
Jane as the dazzling<lb/>
performer who set them<lb/>
cheering with her per-<lb/>
formances, beginning<lb/>
the premiere season<lb/>
vvilh Reno Sweeny in<lb/>
"Anything Goes" and<lb/>
every season thereafter,<lb/>
including such memor-<lb/>
able roles as Dollv Levi<lb/>
in "Hello Dully" and<lb/>
Golde in "Fiddler on<lb/>
the Rool<lb/>
The Heit Report"<lb/>
played a successful lim-<lb/>
ited engagement during<lb/>
ihe past season in New<lb/>
Nork, and Sally-Jane is<lb/>
"coming home" to<lb/>
Greenville to work on a<lb/>
lew revisions with Sum-<lb/>
mer Theatre Producer<lb/>
Director Edgar R. Loe-<lb/>
ssin. The well-knit pro-<lb/>
gram is a witty com-<lb/>
ment on the pretensions<lb/>
and vulnerabilities of<lb/>
? he contemporary wo<lb/>
an caught between<lb/>
conventional upbringing<lb/>
and rapidly changing<lb/>
tunes.<lb/>
Iickels r K. pr((.<lb/>
duclion are S3 each,<lb/>
and are available bv<lb/>
calling ihe East Carolina<lb/>
Summer ihealre Box<lb/>
Office, (919) 757-6390<lb/>
between 9 and 5 Mon-<lb/>
day through Friday, or<lb/>
by ?v riling Summer<lb/>
Theatre, East Carolina<lb/>
University, Greenville,<lb/>
North Carolina 27834.<lb/>
9 W ?" -<lb/>
?i mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057206_0006"/><lb/>
,e 6 FQUNTAINHEAD 26 July 1<lb/>
Disco evaluated as cultural phenomenon<lb/>
urmali) reviews in Trends are of specific albums,<lb/>
movies or books. We offer the following article,<lb/>
though as a review of a more general phenomenon<lb/>
in our culture, that of disco.<lb/>
? Trends Ed.<lb/>
B PATRICK MINCES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
It's Iragic how certain relatively harmless words<lb/>
take on a sinister new meaning when taken in a<lb/>
rerlaiii contextual or situational manner. Freak!<lb/>
Black! Queer! Jock! Sorority Cirl! Slow! These come<lb/>
to be catchwords ol a new elite, more subliminal,<lb/>
ilisula) ol an old scourge of mankind, prejudice.<lb/>
V luii prejudict rears n uglv head, it dehumanizes<lb/>
and robs one ol his individuality, disallowing lor<lb/>
one - treedotn ol choice in choosing the lifestyle<lb/>
which beuetits him. To be corny, the ideals on<lb/>
which tin- country is founded: individuality, freedom<lb/>
ol choice, and the pursuit of happiness, can create<lb/>
plane? thai separate individuals who each possess<lb/>
ilit ark ol humanity. Lately, a simple matter of<lb/>
musical taste, can doom one to a plethora of<lb/>
ilctpaacies. We arc discussing disco.<lb/>
I have a preference for disco music can be<lb/>
a?.ociated with mans other societal maladies such<lb/>
upcrficialih. boringness, anti-intellectualism,<lb/>
lacking in personal depth, and specializing in the<lb/>
cdinn-dance. I heir only goals in life are purported<lb/>
?d look good moves, and a good one<lb/>
-land. Some -ee them to have the emotional<lb/>
I<lb/>
ychulogical depth of a blown<lb/>
'&amp;&amp;?<lb/>
wi<lb/>
th<lb/>
a<lb/>
p i-onaliiv ju-i as fragile. All of the grand illusions<lb/>
n' bared on a -ingle characteristic, their choice of<lb/>
-ib' Such is the stuff of which prejudice is<lb/>
n or<lb/>
riion<lb/>
not. Disco i- here to stay. It is a<lb/>
that i- as uniquely a product of the<lb/>
nock i- the sixties. W i have survived<lb/>
j Mi-<lb/>
ami tribulation<lb/>
ul<lb/>
the sixties.<lb/>
a<lb/>
generation lorn by strife, and are left drained both<lb/>
psychological!) and spiritually. To coin a phrase<lb/>
from the media, the seventies are the "Me<lb/>
Generation A period of hedonism, when the<lb/>
emphasis has shitted from concern for social<lb/>
wellare, the the emphasis of maximization of<lb/>
personal wealth. This is the era of the material, the<lb/>
exterior is ol paramount importance, and we have<lb/>
burgeoned a new generation of "pleasure seekers<lb/>
In this spirit ol the seventies, disco was generated.<lb/>
believe it or not, disco had it's genesis in the<lb/>
gay bars ol New York City and Philadelphia. The<lb/>
clothes, the songs, and the dances all were born<lb/>
out ol the sweltering heal of the gay bars in major<lb/>
metropolitan areas of the North. It finds its musical<lb/>
basis in the Rhythm and Blues of the Blacks, who<lb/>
shared it's promulgation with the gays. Isn't it<lb/>
luniiy how minorities establish the trends, which<lb/>
-weep the populace to become incorporated in the<lb/>
largely while mainstream Americana. Disco first<lb/>
-wept Southward in the early seventies and enjoyed<lb/>
a brief but frantic stint of popularity. Disco had<lb/>
almost perished when a single social event<lb/>
catapulted it into the limelight of American fantasy.<lb/>
John Travolta, in his infamous portrayal of Tony,<lb/>
in Saturday ight Fever, rocketed Disco from a<lb/>
pleasant pasttime into a nationwide social phenom-<lb/>
enon, today, the Disco life-style is at the apex of<lb/>
its popularity, and vet grows further, and has<lb/>
iM-come the dominant phenomenon in musical and<lb/>
social occurances. It is important, lor those who<lb/>
don't have a preference lor disco, to develop an<lb/>
understanding and appreciation tor the positive<lb/>
aspects ol the Disco life-style.<lb/>
I he main theme expounded upon in Saturday<lb/>
i?lu bever was Tony's attempt to remove himsell<lb/>
Irom the nefarious surroundings ol the South Bronx.<lb/>
Each Saturday night, Tony escaped from the familial<lb/>
idiosviierases and animalistic environment in which<lb/>
he endured during the week. Through dance, an<lb/>
existential catharsis is performed on him and he<lb/>
transcends his earthly limitations. Look around you.<lb/>
Inflation and unemployment are devastating the<lb/>
economy. Multinational corporations dictate their<lb/>
demands to our national leadership, which is<lb/>
universal!) depicted throughout the world. Crises<lb/>
arc rampant. The harsh realities of life in America,<lb/>
or the world, are becoming taxing on the indivudal<lb/>
and flight Irom realilv is a predominant theme in<lb/>
the American life-style. Fantasy is a prevalent<lb/>
ihemc in cinema, theatre, fiction, and television as<lb/>
Americans seek to flee the daily<lb/>
existence.<lb/>
traumas of<lb/>
Deer Hunter merits look<lb/>
?<lb/>
II<lb/>
w<lb/>
By PATRICK MINCES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
tragedy that was Vietnam lives on. and the<lb/>
- horror continues to invade our minds.<lb/>
H would be better left dead, if it were not<lb/>
that we a- rational, thinking men<lb/>
from the mistakes of our past.<lb/>
.v - 'I is the concept behind the recent<lb/>
endeavor- dealing with the conflict that<lb/>
?I uur nation and cost u- such a tremendous<lb/>
? are discussing Michael Cimino's brilliant<lb/>
ard winning film The Deer Hunter.<lb/>
Hunter captures the tremendous<lb/>
impact upon the individual and on the<lb/>
: a war without cause, without morality, and<lb/>
Lb u. gams accomplished. Cimino's film is by far<lb/>
"  picture ol the year, and well deserving of<lb/>
lades given to it by the academy. Cimino's<lb/>
i, paired with chilling photographic techn tie<lb/>
Viluios Zsigmond, capture the spirit of the times<lb/>
??'i- Vietnam and the U.S. during this era.<lb/>
I'm quality of die acting m The Deer Hunter is<lb/>
iiisurpassed b) n motion picture released this<lb/>
tsl year. Robet De Niro, the finest actor<lb/>
ibnes, is superb, Christopher Walken's<lb/>
?'V1' "I Nick i- perhaps the strongest role in<lb/>
i?, but the performances o! Meryl Streep and<lb/>
? are dynamic also. (A strange<lb/>
J Savage plays another good boy<lb/>
'I  a bad war. in Milor Forman's Hair,<lb/>
Vietnam era film.) Stanley Mver's music is<lb/>
another strong virtue ol the' dim, a blend of<lb/>
p, sacred, country, ami beautiful orchestrial<lb/>
raiigements.<lb/>
n slor ? ?' "I three Russo-American vouths<lb/>
bave grown up together in a 'small<lb/>
Vmisylvaiiia steel town. Michael Uronsky, played<lb/>
 N '? is ltu' leader of a group of voung<lb/>
ds who are revelling their last few days away<lb/>
j" iilering the Army and going to Vietnam<lb/>
X,IN'  inend i- Nick, who seems to be a<lb/>
Higent, sensitive young man who is<lb/>
? hi love with Linda, Meryl Streep. The<lb/>
member ol the trio is little Stevie, played by<lb/>
age. Stevie is getting married just before<lb/>
b-u ftith Mike and Nick for Vietnam and Cimino<lb/>
-I lluun lime in his characterzations and the<lb/>
personal interactions among his characters and their<lb/>
n in unit v.<lb/>
from tin- beautiful setting, we are thrusl into<lb/>
the curnage and maelstrom that was a Vietnamese<lb/>
baltlelield. A marvelous cinematic technique, it<lb/>
capture- the culture shock and disorientation that<lb/>
plagued our servicemen. We next find<lb/>
our<lb/>
protagonists at the hand- ol Viet Cong captor- in a<lb/>
defiled and disgusting waterside pn-on. The<lb/>
prisoner- are lorced to ptav Russian roulette, an<lb/>
ironic twist, while their captors gamble over their<lb/>
late. It i- a scene ol intense, mental anguish, and<lb/>
ils ellecls on Niek, Mike, and Steve remain<lb/>
throughout the denounient of the movie, lor , one<lb/>
really recover- Irom it- elicits. In fact, this Russian<lb/>
roulette is a dominant theme throughout the movie<lb/>
perhaps epitomizing the tenuous aspects of our stint<lb/>
in Vietnam.<lb/>
And in the end. each must endure Three men<lb/>
leave the country, to return never the same. Three<lb/>
women stay at home and yet their lives are forever<lb/>
changed. I hose who survive must piece together the<lb/>
fragments ol their existence. For theirs is the most<lb/>
difficult ol tasks - to learn from the inconsistencies<lb/>
ol the past, and build a plan lor the future. In the<lb/>
Imal scene id The Deer Hunter, wits are collected.<lb/>
and faith in the future of the U.S. is reaffirmed.<lb/>
Mm- the lesson lor the United States, to have<lb/>
collected our wits, healed the wound and look to<lb/>
the luture lor a world without war. As Ceorge<lb/>
Santayana slates, "Those who forget the past are<lb/>
doomed to repeal ii<lb/>
 a world ol complexity, simplicity is our<lb/>
destination. Disco, loo, is a flight from the' mundane<lb/>
uur1,1 1?  fantasy world of sparkling clothing,<lb/>
Hashing light graceful dance, and music which is<lb/>
good for the soul Each night amidst the glow and<lb/>
glitter ol the fantasy world of the Disco, one leaves<lb/>
behind the intricacies of the all too real world.<lb/>
Perhaps the most beneficial aspect of the disco<lb/>
phenomenon is that it is bringing dance back to the<lb/>
lore runt l the American social scene. Organized,<lb/>
coordinated dancing somewhat floundered during the<lb/>
sixties, a lime ol rock and free spirited reactions to<lb/>
l,M' rhythmic fluctuations ol such. In Disco, the<lb/>
music is fluid and the dance attempts to match the<lb/>
iluidity with physical motion. To borrow an idea<lb/>
Irom Joel Oppeiiheimer. dance is a response to a)<lb/>
Ihc music; b) his partner; c) his culture. 1 see Disco<lb/>
a- a combination of the above, a cultural response<lb/>
<lb/>
Eli<lb/>
10th. St.<lb/>
RUDY NEWSOME<lb/>
Body Shop Inc.<lb/>
Route 3, Box 103<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Phone 758-7185<lb/>
Hwv. 33<lb/>
3 Miles<lb/>
NEWSOME, INC.<lb/>
Complete Body Repair<lb/>
And Refinishing<lb/>
Both Foreign And Domestic<lb/>
? i ir. m?.ic And hopefully a gloriously<lb/>
lo strongly melodic music anu up e <lb/>
beautiful partner. In a time when many lorces work<lb/>
against the unification of personalities sometimes<lb/>
manifested through dance, it is refreshing to see<lb/>
social dancing once again take it place in American<lb/>
custom.<lb/>
One ol the more persistent assaults on the Disco<lb/>
movement is thai the music is so simple and<lb/>
redundant that it ? ? totally boring. One must realize<lb/>
thai D.seo is just coming into Ms own as a musical<lb/>
I having its birth only in 'thWjr ade Mosl<lb/>
oihei musical forms are many MjtoUivr ,han<lb/>
Disco, and its closes! compelitor MxKo. k, which<lb/>
is twice as old as Disco. Disco mirfcav. time in<lb/>
orde. ior .1 to develop into a thriving unique<lb/>
musical ! ? e. Diseo music mu-i seen as<lb/>
produce. eplui?Jv lor dance, a- opposed to Rod or<lb/>
J ahi.h is oriented more lor one listening<lb/>
pleasure. One mu-l have a different el ol<lb/>
expectations for Disco musk than mo-l form- Disco<lb/>
must lirsi provide the rhythmic basis lor dame, and<lb/>
from there musi progress into a more complex<lb/>
musical form. One can easily learn lo judge Di-o<lb/>
within it- limitation to be young and different is<lb/>
not to be had.<lb/>
Di-eo is a phenomenon, which to be best<lb/>
appreciated, must be attempted lo be understood. It<lb/>
i- ju-t a search lor a release Irom the pressures ol<lb/>
I he lasl paced modern lifestyh. One should not I<lb/>
stereotyped or condemned, sole!) on the basis ol his<lb/>
-election ol lifestyle. V- I 'horeau states, ll<lb/>
I - mt keep pace with hi- comrades, perhaps it<lb/>
inai he marches t the beat ol a different drum<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO 12TH<lb/>
WEEK OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$150.22<lb/>
pregnancy test btrtl<lb/>
problem pregnancy co<lb/>
in a<lb/>
? 800-2 ??<lb/>
9AM-5PW<lb/>
Raleigh Women's Health<lb/>
Organization<lb/>
917 West Morgan St<lb/>
Raleigh. N.C. 27603<lb/>
264 PLAYHOUSE<lb/>
6 Miles West of Greenville<lb/>
On U.S. 264 Farmville Hwy.<lb/>
ft Real Rdult Love Hatch<lb/>
HCf<lb/>
RACKETS<lb/>
honM<lb/>
CANDIDA R0YAUE<lb/>
DEStRK CLEARBRANCH<lb/>
JON MARTIN<lb/>
Increase<lb/>
your<lb/>
vocabulary<lb/>
laliri. an ancient<lb/>
( ?j l(alu origln<lb/>
who we iv located in<lb/>
southern Etruria in the<lb/>
th century B.C. and<lb/>
whose chief town was<lb/>
I alt i ii.<lb/>
Students write a song<lb/>
second part<lb/>
u rilten by<lb/>
m - ?J the 79<lb/>
I  Resean h<lb/>
t ivlti School.<lb/>
I lien am I no cooler<lb/>
? in.ml -<lb/>
II - enough lo make ou<lb/>
er,<lb/>
W g? In -It ? p alone al<lb/>
nilii<lb/>
nd dream ol cooler<lb/>
joe<lb/>
We goi i hem hot-ami-<lb/>
horn). bad-ass<lb/>
nrora Borealis Blue?<lb/>
I In- damn muck divin's<lb/>
ot me down<lb/>
I ure do liate that<lb/>
-lull.<lb/>
MacDonald<lb/>
continued from p.5)<lb/>
and developer, ma not<lb/>
be dead at all.<lb/>
John D. MacDonald<lb/>
? rites with an exper-<lb/>
ienced Nourish which<lb/>
earr the reader along<lb/>
at an attention riviting<lb/>
Id die thai harbor<lb/>
e i ? r 11 a)<lb/>
ll onlv il va mull<lb/>
I joi iliem linger-lickin<lb/>
bad-ass<lb/>
urora Borealis Blues<lb/>
W ere gonna least on<lb/>
crabmeat. Vt lien Steve<lb/>
gels oul ol jail,<lb/>
Well have to hock his<lb/>
erab pots<lb/>
To go Ul Blue Claw's<lb/>
bail<lb/>
lie's got them sticky<lb/>
lingered, bad-ass<lb/>
Aurora Borealis Blues<lb/>
Our Picket! dive got<lb/>
elip and et spares no<lb/>
detail even in the me-<lb/>
anderiugs of McGee's<lb/>
mind in sell- ??valuationi.<lb/>
In tact, these am all<lb/>
detours Irom ihe plot of<lb/>
the stor) contribute sig-<lb/>
nilicantlv to the novel's<lb/>
rcadabilit) and help se-<lb/>
cure The Empty Copper<lb/>
Sea Irom sliding oil into<lb/>
that already overpopu-<lb/>
lated wasteland of the<lb/>
busied oul<lb/>
Ihe river was in flood,<lb/>
We rambled down to<lb/>
Hodman's Creek<lb/>
And rooted in the mud<lb/>
We got them Carter<lb/>
Leary-ed, bad-ass<lb/>
Aurora Borealis Blues<lb/>
Inn Smith don't need a<lb/>
rocket<lb/>
I'd be an astronaut,<lb/>
He used a telephoto<lb/>
lens<lb/>
lo take a line moon<lb/>
shot<lb/>
He's got them bikini-<lb/>
bottom, bad-ass<lb/>
Aurora Borealis Blues<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
N.C No. 3 1 Nightclub<lb/>
lrite, formula series no-<lb/>
vel.<lb/>
The Empty Copper<lb/>
Sea bus everything it<lb/>
takes to make a sus-<lb/>
pense novel successful:<lb/>
action, mystery, unsac-<lb/>
eharined romance, even<lb/>
a warm, feeling phil-<lb/>
osophy of the human<lb/>
dilemma- Such a novel<lb/>
deserves to be a best<lb/>
?seller.<lb/>
?ur.<lb/>
"Carolina<lb/>
Original<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Festival'9<lb/>
3 BANDS<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
JESSE<lb/>
BOLT<lb/>
Sun. SHOTZ<lb/>
ppf p pF 1<lb/>
Next Wed. we will<lb/>
have another<lb/>
FREE trip to<lb/>
Bush Gardens.<lb/>
Thur. Aug. 2<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
Aug. 3&amp;4<lb/>
CHERRY<lb/>
SMASH<lb/>
CLIFF'S<lb/>
.<lb/>
Showing only the finest<lb/>
in Adult Entertainment<lb/>
Sunday Aug. 5th<lb/>
" SSSSF"<lb/>
Recording Artists<lb/>
IRON<lb/>
BUTTERFLY<lb/>
Capricorn<lb/>
Recording Artist<lb/>
CAPTAIN<lb/>
BEYOND<lb/>
ft<lb/>
NIORT LIFE<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Monday thru<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
FISH SPECIALS<lb/>
$1.25 &amp; up<lb/>
WASHINGTON HIGHWAY (N.C. 33 Ext.<lb/>
GREENVILLE PHONE 752 3172<lb/>
TOGA!<lb/>
TONITE !<lb/>
at the<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
Don't miss This Summer's<lb/>
1st &amp;ONLY<lb/>
TOGA PARTY<lb/>
with FREE admission &amp; more<lb/>
for all toga's plus $50.00 1st<lb/>
place for the best TOGA and!<lb/>
GRAPE EATING CON,?5,F <lb/>
BE THERE<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Tues. July 31st a<lb/>
'CRAAZY" Tues.<lb/>
OSTUME PARTY<lb/>
The ELBO "Disgorilla" has<lb/>
$75.00 for the best costume<lb/>
plus contests, prizes &amp; gifts<lb/>
for the end of the semester.<lb/>
CRAAZY Tues. Costume<lb/>
Party, at the<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
TUES. JULY 31st:<lb/>
Patronize<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Advertisers<lb/>
ARMY.NAVY STORE <lb/>
1501 S. Evans S.<lb/>
Italian shorts 3.95<lb/>
S Khaki pants 4.95<lb/>
amping, SportineCoods,<lb/>
Footwear, Back Packs.<lb/>
400 different items.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Pizzaixuti<lb/>
AMERICAS FAVORITE PIZZA<lb/>
Sherlock's<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
On 5th St. across from<lb/>
the Book Barn.<lb/>
Good Food &amp;<lb/>
Good People<lb/>
Vogotarlan dloti<lb/>
rotpoctod<lb/>
MonS?t. 11-9<lb/>
PIZZA BUFFET<lb/>
ALL THE PIZZA AND<lb/>
SALAD YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
Mon. - Fri. 11x30-2:00<lb/>
Mon. fip Tues. 6iOO-8:00<lb/>
758 6366 Hwy 26 byPM8 Greei<lb/>
,v?le, N. C.<lb/>
t<lb/>
T<lb/>
?-?? ?'Vv'? ? <lb/>
 -<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057206_0007"/><lb/>
 f<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
26 July 1979 FOUNTAINHEAD Page 7<lb/>
?lL' Caroling football in<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
renew<lb/>
story may repeat itself,but narrow losses don't<lb/>
i; IN. McDAVID<lb/>
H rite,<lb/>
,Ml Rl M.S CONT'D)<lb/>
S i'1' "it If (970 A . ?; .<lb/>
Ni" Stadium i , i<lb/>
"um to .m almost<lb/>
?l() sweating tans<lb/>
?nfrontation between ECU<lb/>
was kept on the edge ol its<lb/>
covered m Vt' r i i ? ?<lb/>
1  r.l.l tumble vsiib<lb/>
"mn to give them a<lb/>
was a bitter letdown<lb/>
'?"appointing firs! hall<lb/>
k " completely dominate<lb/>
1 lra, literallj dismantled the<lb/>
,se l to have a near<lb/>
!  ?' 28-yard Kupe, to<lb/>
1 hal ? play was probablv<lb/>
-??"?? With that gam in<lb/>
 looking forward to<lb/>
'I I irolina.<lb/>
lJlv i. I C hopes to<lb/>
' ? record of last year.<lb/>
Crum has<lb/>
nucleus<lb/>
coming back, f<lb/>
I starters<lb/>
his team.<lb/>
are in pretty good shape<lb/>
he quarterback<lb/>
' -?ir; however, it most<lb/>
V1 K ?: ? ' Kupec<lb/>
Passes for 691 vards. He also<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
 larterback is behind renter.<lb/>
?w to in Hanker<lb/>
1 lb. M'inor. collected 20<lb/>
si yeai t the other<lb/>
W ay ne I ucker (6- $,2G0).<lb/>
? I and Kenn Rogers<lb/>
'  olleiisivc lint will have three -<lb/>
  help open up hole lor<lb/>
" re guard Ron Woolen (6-f.2<lb/>
" ' ?? Juiikmanii (6-l,250,sr and<lb/>
Donualh . (G 2,2 15).<lb/>
S nioi Carl II . 6-2,21<lb/>
RuImtsuh (6 J.255)<lb/>
" K250J WILL HUH KOR llir<lb/>
1 VCKLL SPOJ l'h m,?v guar(j ,<lb/>
by eithei Mark - . .<lb/>
"?- l,260,jr.).<lb/>
nip-on<lb/>
?i <lb/>
I<lb/>
. i<lb/>
-<lb/>
 <lb/>
V.<lb/>
Pirate football action during last year's ECU-UNC<lb/>
game.<lb/>
u<lb/>
(' ?'? i i are<lb/>
<lb/>
Carolina has ,i multitude ol<lb/>
Head in j. - <lb/>
re i) :<lb/>
. ;? ? ii j <lb/>
?1 I'l battle for the light<lb/>
. I<lb/>
'III I'll!<lb/>
pjality runningbaeks,<lb/>
merican i andidate <lb/>
.awrence rushed for 1,013<lb/>
asl year. His two vears'<lb/>
? ?.<lb/>
10"<lb/>
Basketball camps benefit all<lb/>
- - ? )l ards. Joining him in th<lb/>
Greenville native Doug Paschal, a<lb/>
vho racked up 199 vard<lb/>
Other uniuigl<lb/>
"  Ihis season are Billy Johnson<lb/>
!l1 ? waiter Sturdivanl (5-10,195 jr.).<lb/>
arnes last a<lb/>
RKK<lb/>
? ' H<lb/>
<lb/>
-port.<lb/>
t't in June,<lb/>
serves as<lb/>
11 reet o i<lb/>
dy Inv itational<lb/>
Basketball Camp<lb/>
" I '? Ulg as a I ,i-<lb/>
i amps, a,<lb/>
to Vndru,<lb/>
a multitude oi<lb/>
 ? VI with<lb/>
ua h Marcia<lb/>
?- she ha- been<lb/>
?'i tu some ol the<lb/>
high school tali<lb/>
nunlrv.<lb/>
vv e e seen a<lb/>
ipIc o I girls<lb/>
be intcrei( in,<lb/>
i said.<lb/>
Obi . - ,i strong<lb/>
luulrv<lb/>
1 ' : tin si weeks<lb/>
program, u<lb/>
els to West<lb/>
V lrginia, Ohio, Virginia,<lb/>
Masr-ai husetts, Georgia,<lb/>
and I- loi ida instruct oil'<lb/>
potential collegiate in<lb/>
the lundamentals  the<lb/>
me.<lb/>
Vide I rum her op-<lb/>
rt unity  the<lb/>
he sport in<lb/>
l,i  summei<lb/>
' amp . in uil also bene-<lb/>
members ol the<lb/>
I idy But - squad.<lb/>
I hrei newt Diners to<lb/>
l'u' r-Ct program have<lb/>
' ?' during the sum-<lb/>
mei as ei .utiselors.<lb/>
Mary Denkler, Fran<lb/>
Hooks and Donna<lb/>
Moody (team i aptain lor<lb/>
1 lie v ietorious hast<lb/>
uad in his eai "s<lb/>
K VM LSI , S<lb/>
garni i have lollowed the<lb/>
til<lb/>
1 "?' h. gaining v aluabli<lb/>
pra lit c and know ledge<lb/>
I avers' abili-<lb/>
ii ka.s a real<lb/>
1 Vpei lein e beeause the<lb/>
girls had<lb/>
' "ii their -Kill<lb/>
Vndruzzi. "It "s<lb/>
gi ken oui kids a lot ol<lb/>
'?pport unity to pa a-<lb/>
gaini some ol the<lb/>
girl- in tin- countr.<lb/>
l lie ,i in i- a I sii<lb/>
gai ha-l .i<lb/>
uable<lb/>
large seale<lb/>
arolina sal-<lb/>
vposure on a<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
Exciting soccer season scheduled<lb/>
w<lb/>
? VK-D.W ID<lb/>
r ?<lb/>
A III<lb/>
eld in<lb/>
-? - 111 be freshman<lb/>
per Duane Degae<lb/>
I a no and junior Steve<lb/>
?" Degaetano was<lb/>
a member ol his -ll-<lb/>
State high school team<lb/>
Nv" rt .brsey. Steve<lb/>
 omes to ECl<lb/>
Irom Sullolk Community<lb/>
"i Long lsa?d,<lb/>
York, where<lb/>
made ll-Region.<lb/>
 id Coach<lb/>
Smith. Vmong the<lb/>
!ir"i"M i- standout<lb/>
rtingman Phil Martin.<lb/>
Defensive star Jeff<lb/>
Kluger also will be back<lb/>
1,1 i?J the Pirate<lb/>
 tcrs his defensive<lb/>
prowess. The Bucs's<lb/>
leading scorer in 1973<lb/>
ie also will 1<lb/>
 present this<lb/>
? 1111<lb/>
idents<lb/>
hie for<lb/>
Vmong<lb/>
I ii' Pirates have 18<lb/>
dars returning Irom<lb/>
last year's learn. . " ,?<lb/>
(il two starters, a<lb/>
goalie and a -weeper<lb/>
ear. Brad Winchell led<lb/>
lllr ring altaek last<lb/>
year while he was just<lb/>
1 Iri-stimaii.<lb/>
The '79 soccer<lb/>
schedule promises to be<lb/>
Soccer play this year should prove just as exciting as<lb/>
last year's play<lb/>
-111 exciting one. 11<lb/>
bide- 20 games, the<lb/>
lengthiest schedule the<lb/>
Pirates have ever<lb/>
played, and consists ol<lb/>
10 home game- and III<lb/>
aw ay . Some ol I he<lb/>
teams thai highlight the<lb/>
schedule are C(<lb/>
I NC, and Duke. Also<lb/>
Idghly rated South<lb/>
Carolina will come to<lb/>
Greenville for a match<lb/>
Oil September 27.<lb/>
Smith pointed mi t<lb/>
that East Carolina<lb/>
finished third in the<lb/>
North Carolina Spring<lb/>
League, higher than am<lb/>
other school team in the<lb/>
stale. I wo club teams<lb/>
composed ol ex-college<lb/>
players plated ahead ol<lb/>
the Pirates. As a result<lb/>
ol the Hooters' success<lb/>
"i the spring. Smith<lb/>
said he is optimistic<lb/>
aooul the upcoming<lb/>
season.<lb/>
I he Pirates' season<lb/>
opens with the second<lb/>
annual Mayor's Cup<lb/>
louruament. It was<lb/>
played in Raleigh last<lb/>
year. Also vying tor<lb/>
lirsi plate in the<lb/>
tournament will (??<lb/>
Duke, NCSl . and<lb/>
Carolina. Play will take<lb/>
plait- in Greenville this<lb/>
year. The tournament<lb/>
should be a good<lb/>
indication of the type of<lb/>
year ahead lor East<lb/>
Carolina in soccer. Even<lb/>
with the team's scant)<lb/>
budget, it looks to be a<lb/>
promising fall.<lb/>
Coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
Photo courtesy of Karen Caddell<lb/>
Sports medicine offers many opportunities<lb/>
i; Dhbin t;vvB<lb/>
IW. Spin s l.iitot<lb/>
lh, Sport- Medicine Prgram at ECU is perhaps<lb/>
  (- l1 "i ib?' Southeast. This program<lb/>
'dlers a variety ol opportunities, placing emphasis<lb/>
  prevention, evalution, and treatment of<lb/>
athleth injuries ol the student-athletes.<lb/>
Vn actual sports medicine degree is not offered<lb/>
 l institutions, including ECU. Instead, a<lb/>
b.ur-yeai program specializing in sports medicine is<lb/>
available, with a Physical Education degree or a<lb/>
'logree in School and Community Health Education<lb/>
l?ig I lie two most compatible degrees with the<lb/>
?sp 'i i - Medicine Program.<lb/>
 hrl ear  ,l program is an orientation<lb/>
"j  the undergraduate. During this year the<lb/>
-iudci.1  introduced to the field ol sports medicine<lb/>
Ulnl i.ialK being evaluated on his ur her<lb/>
l'r'r A" i'tremel important phase ol the<lb/>
'??luealioiial program is the practical experience the<lb/>
lude?l trainer receives. Student trainers mav work<lb/>
Vlth lllr ars???) l miot vars.tv athletic 'teams<lb/>
?amural activities, club sports, physical education<lb/>
classes and special athletic events.<lb/>
Jim Keating, Assistant Athletic Trainer of the<lb/>
Sports Medicine Division, leels that the practical<lb/>
training experience is perhaps the most valuable<lb/>
asset o id program.<lb/>
I he lour year program allows a lot of practical<lb/>
hours, and that's where you learn a lot Keating<lb/>
-aid. A student will be exposed to over 2,400<lb/>
practical hours ol sports medicine training over a<lb/>
?"ur year period. We give them a lot of<lb/>
responsibility<lb/>
froJhI Srr,i " Pn,gram a,SO relies on the aid<lb/>
from local physicians. Th<lb/>
phy  ians on (luisultanl -  . -<lb/>
being the stall phvsi<lb/>
Do, tors are becoming m<lb/>
"I ih injured athlete I<lb/>
bavc the linal mi K -<lb/>
Sports ii,<lb/>
preventive medit hough.<lb/>
VW try to involve th, <lb/>
als.<lb/>
U' ? trying to teach them<lb/>
techniques ami .irr jUsl tr<lb/>
more. , also trv i,<lb/>
d to be -een )V<lb/>
phys i<lb/>
?' n.aK, any medical I <lb/>
i "Iplei.on oi tlie lour war pn.gran<lb/>
l'11  M ,? take the Natnma <lb/>
 U   l ' rtihcation exaiiiiiKUinn <lb/>
l;1   i?riilud a- an athletic trainer<lb/>
 ' ar? i a red ti<lb/>
'?k( the National<lb/>
 ?Hir graduates have<lb/>
' rtilieatioii exam None<lb/>
tailed ii. Keating saiil.<lb/>
I,H ia,ut ?' "P??rt medicine to t,lt. Mutlcnt<lb/>
l,h' , ?"at.it. bu, netimes ?tH<lb/>
uuiiotn ed.<lb/>
U( ,i" d  ,na? '  stvn, esM?allv on the<lb/>
-?rcas ol pievent an,l treatment. It something is<lb/>
-ak. ,  ,mpor.au. ?, strengthen  And it's<lb/>
??'P?r?u?l  stretch. Bu. one ot the most important<lb/>
things (l know is vshal nt i i<lb/>
b wnai needs to be seen and<lb/>
,riaUd   " ?n wan Keating said.<lb/>
Ihe program otters .several job opportunities fo,<lb/>
IW interested ?, the mcdual aspects ,? athletics.<lb/>
N?e high sehool h-vel is where the most<lb/>
"H-r.un?,es arc. And the opportunities are better<lb/>
Z" r r?nU'n lhan h?r men. probablv<lb/>
because ol the growth ol women's athletics<lb/>
Keating did. e have<lb/>
and we'll probablv have<lb/>
ere are approximately 14 trainers as male trainers ,n the fall<lb/>
a co-educational facility,<lb/>
as many lemale student<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057206_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Sports in brief<lb/>
Paaa 8 FOUNTAINHEAff ft yf 1?79<lb/>
Torborg fired, Cain's death still a mysterv<lb/>
u jimm Di prff ? .  r ?f<lb/>
B) JIMM Dl PREE<lb/>
Sports tauor<lb/>
 tl another proles-<lb/>
-tonal baseball manager<lb/>
ilu- dus? Monday as<lb/>
Cleveland Indians<lb/>
 ' Jell I urhorg and<lb/>
(bird base coach<lb/>
v Garcia lo serve as<lb/>
rim manager.<lb/>
rg replaced<lb/>
I nk Kobinson, major<lb/>
baseball's firsl<lb/>
N inanagei. in June<lb/>
i?inurg-iea m-<lb/>
" i"1 : 157-201<lb/>
during ? the one<lb/>
ii and two<lb/>
ns.<lb/>
V h Monda)<lb/>
id was in<lb/>
? ii l he m<lb/>
igue - east di-<lb/>
diead ol onl<lb/>
Iurouto<lb/>
vent<lb/>
 ? livi-<lb/>
i lunore<lb/>
-<lb/>
Indian President,<lb/>
Gabe Paul, confirmed in<lb/>
a press conference in<lb/>
lale June that he had<lb/>
negotiated with former<lb/>
Mew York Yankee skip-<lb/>
per Bid) Lemon in an<lb/>
effort to dismiss Tor-<lb/>
borg.<lb/>
Hiose negotiations<lb/>
apparent!) collapsed<lb/>
kvhen Lemon decided to<lb/>
,a) with the Yanks'<lb/>
Ironi office.<lb/>
???<lb/>
Outfielder Lee Maz-<lb/>
l' "I the New York<lb/>
Met va.s released<lb/>
I uesdav I rum a Los<lb/>
ngeles hospital where<lb/>
he ua treated following<lb/>
a Monda) collision with<lb/>
nghtfielder Dan .Norman<lb/>
 a game with the<lb/>
Dodgers.<lb/>
A spokesman tor the<lb/>
Mets reported thai<lb/>
Mazzilli could return to<lb/>
action tonight, j his<lb/>
progress continues.<lb/>
Sr?<lb/>
??<lb/>
game, as he belted a<lb/>
bonier over the left<lb/>
field wall of Seattle's<lb/>
Kingdom to tie the<lb/>
game and later was<lb/>
walked bv Yankee ace<lb/>
Ron Guidry, forcing the<lb/>
winning run over the<lb/>
plate.<lb/>
4HHMMMMMM?<lb/>
LeeMazilli<lb/>
Maz.ilh, one ol the<lb/>
bright young stars ol<lb/>
baseball, virtualiv sin-<lb/>
gte-handedl) defeated<lb/>
the American League in<lb/>
last weeks's All Star<lb/>
Intramural action in<lb/>
A coroner has el-<lb/>
iminated the possibility<lb/>
ol a heart attack as the<lb/>
cause ol the death of<lb/>
the Si. Louis Cardinals'<lb/>
JV . Cain.<lb/>
The 28-year-old tight<lb/>
end collapsed on the<lb/>
training held during a<lb/>
workout Sunday night.<lb/>
Coroner Joseph<lb/>
Mueller said that<lb/>
whereas a heart attack<lb/>
was not the cause of<lb/>
Cain s death, weakened<lb/>
review<lb/>
BOB K0.<lb/>
nac eur-<lb/>
- Mi.all.<lb/>
Monday,<lb/>
 -<lb/>
ou rnament<lb/>
i,rm<lb/>
30.<lb/>
b? seeded<lb/>
stand-<lb/>
robin<lb/>
current<lb/>
ippers<lb/>
- Row are<lb/>
learns,<lb/>
ited<lb/>
.11 the last<lb/>
round ol robin play.<lb/>
I he Roundtrippers<lb/>
won the firs! session<lb/>
round robin title but<lb/>
were deleated in the<lb/>
Imals ol tournament<lb/>
phi) b) Murderer's<lb/>
liie finals could<lb/>
bi a rematch ol their<lb/>
lirsl session battle.<lb/>
i on i BASKETBALL<lb/>
ADUI (Awesome<lb/>
Display ol Talent) re-<lb/>
main- undefeated in<lb/>
basketball followed<lb/>
closely by the Heart-<lb/>
break Kids. fwo days<lb/>
"I round robin pla re-<lb/>
main.<lb/>
tournament plav will<lb/>
In gili fuesday, July 3J<lb/>
i)() I lo ?ks strong<lb/>
enough to become the<lb/>
 w 3-on-3 basketball<lb/>
champion. It will take a<lb/>
sterling ellori by one of<lb/>
the other team- lo de-<lb/>
rail I he ADOl express.<lb/>
. i W<lb/>
tennis result- are<lb/>
slowly being reported.<lb/>
I'layera are reminded lo<lb/>
drop by the IM office<lb/>
a- -ii.iri as a match is<lb/>
completed so that the<lb/>
standings can be up-<lb/>
daled.<lb/>
I ournameul play be-<lb/>
gins alter the complc-<lb/>
iiou ol matches sche-<lb/>
duled lur Thursday,<lb/>
July 2tK At the time,<lb/>
Robert Bamhill and Al-<lb/>
"ii.o Newby are the top<lb/>
seeded players.<lb/>
I'l-I'si PHYSICAL <lb/>
illMS CLL li<lb/>
Members ol the 1(JU,<lb/>
500, or 1000 mile run,<lb/>
swim or walk club are<lb/>
reuiiuded to report their<lb/>
mileage to the IM<lb/>
oil ice.<lb/>
Members who have<lb/>
reached one uf ,Mt.<lb/>
goals ol luu, 500. or<lb/>
'?? miles receive<lb/>
I -Inn- commemorating<lb/>
? dedication and el<lb/>
?? Hie competitive<lb/>
car began August 26,<lb/>
Io and ends August<lb/>
25, !??.<lb/>
heart muscles not re-<lb/>
vealed by an autopsy<lb/>
might have been.<lb/>
Cam had just com-<lb/>
pleted a pass pattern in<lb/>
a no-contact drill when<lb/>
I reportedly turned,<lb/>
took several steps and<lb/>
collapsed to the turf.<lb/>
learn trainer John<lb/>
Omohuudro applied<lb/>
mouth-to-inouth resus-<lb/>
ilation and team doctor<lb/>
Bernard Carlinkel used<lb/>
cardiosupporl equipment<lb/>
"i efforts to revive the<lb/>
lallen veteran starter.<lb/>
Lucille Ball says,<lb/>
"Gfteagiftof<lb/>
?ou.BeaRedOross<lb/>
whinteer"<lb/>
SING San Diego Zoo armadillos<lb/>
r. Kurt Bemrschke explores smg!e-<lb/>
egg twinning, which in humans is<lb/>
assocated with increased risk of<lb/>
birth detects Armadillos are the<lb/>
only species that regularly produce<lb/>
multip'e offspring from a single cell<lb/>
The project is funded by the Ma'Ch<lb/>
of Dimes whose aim is prevention<lb/>
of birt defects<lb/>
A Putc Srvc? ol Th? Newxacc ? the Aowns-ng C? fj!<lb/>
Interested in the endless rewards of being<lb/>
a staff writer for Sports in the Fall?<lb/>
)tjS<lb/>
Call 757-6309<lb/>
for additional<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Ovouc <lb/>
Located on<lb/>
Hwy. 264 East<lb/>
one mile<lb/>
past<lb/>
Hastings<lb/>
Ford, if j<lb/>
on the<lb/>
right.<lb/>
3S?5S<lb/>
Don't<lb/>
Miss<lb/>
NASHVILLE WEEK<lb/>
i ? Monday Jwly 3 ? Sat. July 28.<lb/>
John Long Band from NASHVILLE<lb/>
wt n ALL WEEK LONG. <lb/>
FREE PIG PICKIN with IlllrS.WIth "John Long Band'<lb/>
Bluegraes Band wo have the "BILL LYERXY BAND9<lb/>
With th? "John Long Band" LADIES FREE!<lb/>
"AMBUSH<lb/>
i run i.r o Fri. &amp; Sat.NAEKS"<lb/>
dtAJ0?S?:?"t? M?AZZY BAttEY<lb/>
<lb/>
L<lb/>
Tuesday thru Friday s SOCIABLE GATHERING<lb/>
ya a HOP, do? at 7u? w<lb/>
t<lb/>
?5-?l. <lb/>
, ? ? - . -fc ?-? ' - ? '? ?? .<lb/>
?,? ? ?? v ,? ?? " <lb/>
 ? ? t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057206_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>