Fountainhead, November 4, 1969


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





ounuinheAd
and the truth shall make you free'
1 No. 16
East Carolina University, p.p. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C.
Nov. 4, 1969
Disney's happiness
inspires homecoming
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WALT DISNEY'S MAKE BELIEVE WORLD- the places- will be the theme for this year's Homecoming
world of Donand Duck, Mickey Mouse and far away "A Tribute to Walt Disney
'





1
.? ? .Mining iipii? ?
Seventeen coeds
serve as marshals
concert of the irear - : ?
Franc) W.ozs
? sowers de :

-
- .
Mallory denies plans
for visitation periods
British representative talks
about study abroad aid
- ?
itfp
International Studies
Abroad sponsors flights Spirit Committee to sell bells
-??- in Union lobbyWednesday
Folk Music Club discusses
folk enferfainmenf
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- " -
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jn high th?
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by the Che
and a rev
man Don
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North Carolina Library Assn.
names JoAnn Bell a director
Sh ep par d
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members
sc ence ;k$ artme
Eucatior al E C L
I Lar ei Lc s
Em . S. Boyce
DeBoard a-2
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5 - degree r -
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ibrary science
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Phi Kappa Tau sponsors
'Woman Haters Week'
Tuesday, November 4, 1969, Fountamhead, Page 3
a prelude to
the Phi Kappa
A s
Homecoming,
Tau fraternity is sponsoring
Woman Hater's Week.
The event started Sunday
and will climax Friday
afternoon.
During this week, the
brothers and pledges will not
date or talk to women. They
will be known by their
Blood drive
collects
1309 pints
ECU An Force
e Officer Training
olle ted 309 pints of
d foi donation to Red
chapters in the
itei area oi North
and Virginia during
. annual blood drive
last Wednesday and
:
A county quota of 330
had been se1 for the
Ken Kelly, the cadet in
ii i of the (ii ive said that,
h the quota was
the drive was "quite
Wednesday I54 pints
ere collected. On
, !55 pints of blood
i ited.
addition, 57 person
ffered to give blood but
not able to donate for
il ? jasons.
ents at FCU were not
, donors. One student
Cornell U nivei sity
blood. He had
led down to East
i to see a friend and
sip donating a pint of
1Griffin to
speak here By KEITH PARRISH
How.iid Griffin,
' of "Black Like Me
peal Thursday, Nov. 13 at
5in Wright Auditorium.
1 iff in, internationally
? eporter, humanitarian,
1 ident of primitive
will speak of his
ences while posing as a man. He had a physician 11! his skin pigment and months in 1959 he " through five Southern

. i??' ing to college
ents for the last five years
ism in America, he
-has repeatedly held the aud h , rl
? i1 ?, i iu. Master of Ceremonies Yle University was quoted
ling, "Superbheld
hef o i two and
6u' hours of lecture
HP(us questions and answers, n then, they lei him leave whe,i 1 insisted
; m for students and tV will be by ID cards
badges and unshaven faces.
During the week, the
fraternity expects raids on
the house by sororities and
dorm women.
Girls raiding the house will
do so at their own risk.
All brothers and pledges
violating the purpose of the
week will be caged on the
mall Friday afternoon. They
will serve as targets for
everybody interested.
The fraternity asks that no
eggs or paint be used in the
house raids. They just
completed painting the house.
The sorority showing the
most spirit during the week
will win the Phi Tau pledge
class for slaves for one
Saturday.
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EACH ENTRY in the Mini-Art show seemed to reflect the
world in miniature.
JOHN HOWARD GRIFFIN lived a black man's life once
for two months and lived to tell about it. His lecture
will be at 8 p.m. Thursday in Wright Auditorium.
One hour
i
$
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MIKE WINSLOW'S winning lithograph caught the eyes
of many students at the first annual Mini-Art show last
week.
Winslow wins grand
prize in mini-art show
The idea was unique and
the result was enchanting.
That was the way it was
at the first annual Mini-Art
Show. There were 75
entries, each reflecting the
world in miniature.
The winners in each
category were: Annette
Williams painting; Sissy
Price, d rawing; Mike
Winslow, printmaking; Roy
Brophy, photography;
Belinda Godwin, sculpture;
D.D. Stark, jewlery; and
Anna Murdock, crafts.
The grand prize winner
was Winslow. His winning
entry was a lithograph with
the inscription, "and some
men die knowing less than
when they were born
Homecoming Parade
will be largest ever
The Homecoming Parade
will begin at 10 a.m.
Saturday morning.
The theme of this years
parade is "Disneyland: A
Tribue to Walt Disney
"This is expected to be
the best parade of any we
have ever had according to
Dan Summers, SGA Press
Secretary.
Summers said that this
will be the largest
Homecoming Parade ever
held here. He said more
floats than ever before will
help comprise the 105 units
of the parade.
The parade will follow a
two and a half mile route.
Summers said that
i n v i tations have been
extended to everyone in the
surrounding area to attend.
Exclusive Apparel for Women
Hollywood
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phone PI 23468
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Disney-a creator or oyca,
m - we : start .?, - .
THE ENCHANTMENT OF Disneyland inspired Te
th p me for Homecorr no '96
o
if
4i
Hour Glass Cleaners
BE A WINNER
? not let The Campus Corner bring
back nto the gae with a double
? suit. Look for waist
pression jeep side or center ents,
s anted flapped pockets and wider
sps r'ou II be sure to win. Your
favor te will be priced frorr S90 to
S1 05
i f let m f - tu de n
Student charge accounts invited,
201 E. Fifth Street
Greenville, N.C.
?X"
tfl
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andneed Ar d the need
ar matedjsl for curing the - i
rr:r " - ?? the mj
gr ? i ; 's ? ri j . a
e : - and and -
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presenta prototype for the ; r
- r: H e begar ?
?i , ? -?'? hole .s D r and
Florida whicri ,?
Z 5 r I c -a n e ??. amusemeni parV
jucedmote hote reson
- H(OOcenters, an n dustr-a
? j ?comple ar airpon ?
L ives 3 ' r 1 ttl?Tomorro
arvH mrxlHp v .
; : . additions
recreat na "
ia- shrnent -
-i' tute ;? the
-
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- e : provide a p'ace t:
Jeveloi the taleni .? the
iomethmq
Walt Disney ? fe :s a true
success the " ever
he .vas se sketches tc
x s. and
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the reatest
- p - - -? . X
? n gdorr
imai ?'
?' r K
J ot
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xvered : sterr tc
.?. Disnev artoons
he set ?
1923 he had nothing but a
: - S4C and a
I ; nate fairy tale
?ubject S th he has
eceived ' E .
the world nc I
ees frorr a?
the P res lentia ' ?
P reed rr - tners
Walt D
his ' ' ?
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t tc ?
f i nd i no h e
where '
? si
as a
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f and
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Shoney's
Coffee -9hi
Be
By T
Bennet
with you
think wl
name? If
people,
some su
was on
fifteen
some of
and puns
possible i
human in
All m
just no
individual
on youi
Meet" 11!
much of
until L la
facts spea
As I h
is a r i
chap, ha
Columbia
also a
Kappa i
straight a:
be on
certainly
bi an
s u p p o
Bstablishn
SURP
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A
m
disci
Last
group of
"An Ever
discuss t
festival ;
winning i
or$50pri
Dulbei
inizat
and a cai
no mon
prompt in
others to
consisting
(double (
etc.).
explained
f,f cinema
If the
Arts
much im
c u a r t e r
it's th
the tit
Colleg
that's
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Bennet Cerf lauds students,
calls censorship un-American
Tuesday, November 4, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 5
By TAYLOR GREEN
honest
hear that
you're like most
think about
Bennett Cerf. Be
with yourself; what do you
think when you
name? If
people, you
some super square guy that
was on "What's My Line" for
fifteen years while telling
some of the corniest jokes
and puns you've ever believed
possible 10 be created in the
human mind.
All in ali, Bennett Gen is
just not one of those
individuals you'd like to put
on your "People I'd Like to
Meet" list. This writer was
much of the same opinion
until L last night. But let the
facts w?'ak out.
As I had guessed, Mr. Cerf
is a rather well educated
chap, having graduated from
Columbia University, and is
ilso a lifetime Phi Beta
Kappa member. As super
ht as the guy appears to
be on TV, you would
certainly think that he would
be in equally staunch
s u p p o r t e i of the
Establishment.
SURPRISE To quote
as possible, "You (the
nts) are right and they
rongand if they don't
listen to you, they are
blind
For the remainder of the
evening he had the students
in the palm of his hand. It
was also interesting to note
the change of attitude most
of the adults took after that
low blow. Sitting up in the
balcony I could see many a
nasty frown from many an
appalled adult.
Come to think of it, I
really don't think Mr. Cerf
had one thing to say in favor
of our elders. He also
indicated strong approval of
the Youths' work with the
Moratorium and said he
would like to see a quick
end to the war.
Censorship condemned
Mr. Cerf turned to that
old bugaboo in the publishing
world known as
CENSORSHIP he's against it.
He called it "un-American"
and self defeating.
He is very much disturbed
with those "well intentioned"
ladies and citizens who try to
say what others shall and
shall not read, see, hear, and
eventually think.
By pointing out that a
particular work is "dirty
many people who might
never otherwise have heard of
it are suddenly aware of it
Amateur film directors
discuss spring film fest
Last Wednesday night a
group of 20 film lovers met for
"An Evening with Dulberg to
discuss tin; first campus film
festival and their chances of
winning a possible $150, $100,
or $50 prize in the spring.
Dulberg is a two year-old
organization of five or six actors
and a cameraman. They make
no money but believe in
promoting?thuuiiims and
others to the world. Using films
consisting of special effects
(double exposures, animation,
etc.), Dulberg Productions
explained some basic mechanics
of cinematography.
If the SGA gives the Fine
Arts Committee its
much-needed money next
quarter, East Carolina
University will be on its way to
cultivating the art of cinema.
The film festival committee
has put out some basic
explanations of filmmakingand
some restrictions on the type of
films to be entered.
The rules are as follows:
length is to be anywhere from
one minute to 30 minutes; there
is no limit on subject matter;
there will be one dollar entry fee
"ToTeach' f rtm-f&-mm-ef14j-mm)
and there is no limit to the
number of entries, finally, the
sound for 8 mm films is to be
recorded on tapes or record disc
unless one has a personal
orchestra, 8 mm sound
projector, or no sound at all.
and run right out to read it,
see it, hear it, and naturally
think about it for years to
come.
Sick puns
Bennett Cerf wouldn't be
Bennett Cerf if he didn't
include a pun or two during
the course of his talk, which
he did at the conclusion of
his lecture. Great as he is on
everything else, Bennett Cerf
still tells the corniest puns
ever conceived by the human
mind. One of the sickest
ones had to do with Arthur
Rubenstein. It seems Mr.
Rubenstein was rehearsing on
a piano that needed tuning
very badly. A Mr.
Opornokity was called in to
fix the piano which he
proceeded to do for the next
three hours. Upon completion
of his task he left, whereby
Mr. Rubenstein started
practicing once more. Still
not satisfied with what he
heard, he instructed that Mr.
Opornokity be summoned
once again for further
retiming.
Change of opinions
Upon hearing that his
services were required a
second time, he replied, "I'm
sorry but Opornokity only
tunes once That's
something only Bennett Cerf
could get away with and live
to re-tell it.
Those of us who
previously thought cryptic
and cynical thoughts of
Bennett Cerf have now
altered their opinions by at
least 160 degrees. If he
didn't tell those God awful
puns, he might well have
captured the other 20
degrees.
Hats off to Bennett Cerf
he certainly is one for the
books. Upun my word!
MRS. RUTH PAULK, acting President,
prepares material for the League of Women
Woman Voters meet
next Tuesday nig,it
A pre-organizational
meeting for a Greenville-Pitt
County League of Women
Voters will be held at 8 p.m.
on Nov. 11 at St. Paul's
Episcopal Church.
The League of Women
Voters is a nonpartisan
organization open to
women citizens of voting
age to encourage the
informed and active
participation of ail citizens
in government and politics.
Mrs. Betty Casey, acting
publicity director for the
League, invited anyone
interested in responsible
action on community affairs
and those who would like to
be better informed from a
nonpartisan standpoint on
political issues to attend the
meeting next Tuesday.
The League of Women
Voters functions on three
levels: local, state, and
national. When a women
joins the League in her own
community, she also
becomes a member of her
state League and of the
League of Women Voters of
the United States.
Wherever she lives, she
works with other members
of her local League on issues
important to her own
community, to her state,
and to her country.
The League of Women
Voters of the United States
has 150,000 members in
more than 1,250 local
Leagues in all 50 states, the
District of Columbia and
the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico.
Representatives from the
State League will be present
at the local meeting to
answer questions and to
guide the group in setting
up necessary procedures
required for becoming
organized.
AVNAWWWWVwvVVVVWWWW





.0,HWMM?
Paqe 6, Fou , Tuesday, November 4. 196S
Marcuse retires to background
ByJIMHECK
-
SAN DIEGO, Cal - (CPS) -
There is a story that during the
May 1968, Sorbonne uprising,
militants earned about placards
that expressed solidarity with
"Marx?Marcuse
When American radicals saw
the photos and recalled that
Marcuse taught in the United
States, the story goes, they
hastily read his literature in the
hope of deifying a national
radical hero around whose
Geology the Movement could
be based. With the execution of
Cohn-Bendit. Marcuse is the
only not-young radical who has
written as extensively as Marx
and who advocates revolution.
Marcuse the only one left
But Cohn-Bendit fell into
disrepute with French
insurgents after his dubious role
in the Sorbonne-worker riots.
And so, only Herbert Marcuse
was left with the potential for
becoming the spokesman and
perhaps precursor of a national
Movement that drastically
needed direction.
But either Marcuse was too
unradical or the radicals v.ere
too irrational, and never the
twam shaii ev I
After a good yeai of
significant exposure Herbert
Marcuse is a red is i fl
gruff, but really sensitive old
man with flov ing white
Marcuse spends his
comfortably in a small off
overlooking a peaceful
University of California campus
at San Diego. He is busy, but
always seems available, an I
speaks with a tired, thick
accented German grow !
No more book projects
After producing numerous
books and articlesand his n
recent and perhaps too hast; .
compiled 'Essay on
Liberation which speculators
believe was a quid, attempt to
hit aware radicals m the
community v. it- a concise
explanation of a: his dogma,
Marcuse conceden, No I h3-
no more book projects in the
working. I've written enough in
my life
It is not that Marcuse has
written off the students, but
rather the reverse, that seems
true. Few radical groups really
quote Marcuse and hesitate to
allude to rather romantic
conception of possible Utopia.
The Progressive Labor Party has
ish attacked the
old professoi with such
ip 01
H. T. HODGES & CO Inc.
Students Sports Headquarters
Dial PL 2-4156
out
"I don't take that criticism
seriously
1st ? ractically all stu
ology in th her's
eyes. He claims students act for
actions sake and have
completely distorted the
? f rev dution.
They are not really
? onaries, he says, but in
part onl. ' ials divorced
form society as a v. hole.
His mam criticism ' the
?; emenl is the totally
outdated notions of the
working classes as a
revolutionary force in
United States
The Ivan ? i italistic
system, Marcuse explains, is
more and more dependent
on codegr it ? tuals
without whom the ?, I
cannot possibly gc i
Looks for revolution
3rcuse looks tc th
future for re. tion and
sees almost I iispr s
a ith radica' resurgenc ?
today as the s n p .
frustrat e ? ? cies f a
repressed culture.
"I have never contended
the student movement is a
i evolutionary force. I have
ays insisted that we do
net live in a revolutionary
situation. That it will take a
long time to get there and
that all their actions
WON'T YOU COME
TO OUR SS-1SH-
it s a ce'ebraticn ? cf
precis on tailoring, wh d1
: s the sx-button
jacket to give the proper
ivardrobe .vtu;ut extreme
appearance T-e suit is
one z' zi.r l- ghly recom-
mended candidates for the
seas: n the suave
sr ce I ustrated, or other
patterns just as d st r-c .e
Won , du come try-on?
Styled especially for
Homecoming Weekend by
College Hall Fashions to
the order of
oPfimani
yMgiNS WfAf
this present fact "
ih an a Imost
, jsposed position,
ireusi points to whal he
calls the greal defeatism on
,rt of students today
jn(i th Is1 t(l engage
IIU
He talks about the
unstudent student leaders
like Rudd, Ayers, Davis,
Hoffman, etc. all of
them he says: "If they are
0d, if they really know
what they are doing, if then
actions and then strategy
ised on a realistic
ilysis, then they can play
rtant parts in
guiding the Movement
But, he co n c I u d ed ,
dejectedly, in most
? ? ms this just isn't the
case.
T h e gi andfather
Uosopher is on a
completely different wave
lenqht than Movement
leaders who speak
vamgloriously of the merit
of spontaneous disruption
"For revolution Marcuse
says, "There is no such
thing as spontaneity per se "
He has never said it
precisely,but this seems to
be the center of his thinking
about Lenin's democratic
centralism, of the need for a
revolution to be guided by a
close knit critical thinking
revolutionary elite. This
naturally, alienates the
youthful espousers of
spontaneous and extensive
democracy. This is only
organized spontaneity, and
only t h i o u f h such
analytically organized
spontaneity can revolution
and his vague, Utopian New
Form come about.
Marine's body exhumed
after investigation
NEW YORK (AP) The
body of a 19-year-old Marine
who died at the Parns Island,
S. C, training base last July
will be exhumed in Brooklyn
today, Rep Mano Biaggi,
D Conservative, the Bronx
said Tuesday.
Biaggi op e n e d a n
investigation into the li ith
of Pvt. Jose T. Conception of
the Bronx a f t ei the
serviceman's widow said her
husband had complained of
being mistreated by
instructors at the base
Conception was buried in
E v er g reen Cemel ery in
Brooklyn.
MONOGRAM NECKLACE
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ests
JEWELERS
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Note: Orders for Christmas Delivery must be
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d
ith
of
he
hei
of
by
in
in
!?'
tack of understanding
cause of student crime
a c k of
many
that several
before the
in which the
The
understanding
students seemingly have of
the consequences mvolved
in committeing an illegal act
here is one of the factors
contributing to student
misconduct, according to
Stecle Trail, recording
chairman of the Men's
Honor Council
Trail said
cases came
Honoi Counci
accused student did not
consider the penalty of the
lction before he did it. He
attributed this to the fact
that the action the
University takes against law
breakers is not highly
publicized.
The Men's and Women's
Honor Councils hear the
cases for those students who
have committed an Honor
Code offense.
The code is stated in the
Key as "you are on your
honor not to cheat, steal or
lie
In one case this quarter,
two freshmen men were
charged with illegal entry of
a university building and
stealing.
During their hearing the
en said they knew they
ere breaking the law but
not think about the
possibility of being caught
and what would follow.
Trail said that this is a
common response He said
many students here attempt
things that are very difficult
"to get away with" because
they believe the
enforcement of campus
rules is lax.
T h e two men were
p laced on conduct
probation for fall quarter
and given suspended
suspension for the
remaining academic year.
Trail said in a book theft
case this quarter the student
did not know that the book
could be traced so easily.
T
?
?
?
?
?
Registered
Jewelers
1
t Certified
Gemologist
Ma
?
Lautares
Jewelers
The student said he sold the
book because he needed the
money and was unaware
that the students could get
temporary loans through
theSGA.
In other cases, Trail said
that the student did not
follow a rule because he felt
it was insignificant and he
would not do any harm by
ignoring it.
This was a case when a
sophomore man failed to
pick up his activity card and
then claimed that he had
puked one up and it had
been stolen.
He said he had lied
because it seemed practical.
He thought it would cut
some of the red tape
involved in geiting his card,
Trail said.
He was placed on
conduct probation through
winter quarter.
Trail said that this is an
instance where the student
abandoned a standard set-up
for the group because he
felt it did not serve the
individual.
The honor councils are
composed of nine members
each. All members are
students. They are
appointed by the SGA
president and approved by
the legislature.
Black teachers officials lose
jobs because of integration
WASHINGTON (CPS)
The black principal and the
black school teacher may be
a vanishing breed in the
South and the cause is the
Civil Rights Act of I964.
The act requires Southern
school districts to desegregate
their classrooms.
Desegregation frequently
means closing down formerly
black schools. And school
closings are just the excuse
that many districts need to
fire their Negro
personnel - rather than
transfer them to "white" or
integrated schools.
Thousands have lost their
jobs through this
"displacement according to
the National Education
Association (NEA.) The
practice doesn't always end
in firing, NEA says;
sometimes school staffs are
simply demoted-given lower
pay, less satisfactory
assignments. Sometimes, for
example, principals of black
schools are reassigned as
assistants to white supervisors
in central offices.
"Then as an NEA
spokesman put it, "they'd
better not let their cars break
down, because they would
miss their most important
assignment-driving the
supervisor to lunch
The pattern-pupil
integration and black staff
displacement-was evident as
early as I954 after the border
states began compliance with
the Supreme Court decision
(Brown vs. B oard of
Education) which ruled that
racial segregation could no
longer be tolerated in the
schools of the nation. It
picked up steam and moved
south after I965 when the
implimentation of the civil
rights act penetrated into the
southern states.
According to an NEA task
force on the subject, "In
I965, implementation of that
act accelerated the pace of
integration and increased the
number of children attending
integrated classroomsIn
general, the more extensive
the desegregation of students,
the greater the chance that
Negro teachers will be
adversely affected by
demotion, displacement, or
dismissal
The techniques employed
by school districts in the
South to displace their
teachers and principals are
many. They include:
wholesale dismissal, failure to
renew contracts, using other
"reasons" to justify firing on
an individual basis, and
requiring certain scores on
the National Teachers
Examination (run by the
Educational Testing Service)
before certification is granted.
An additional device
recently uncovered is:
reclassifying geral teaching
positions under such special
federally aided categories as
(Continued on page 9)
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www)t.MtmiM' T-ii?riiVnfc4-
?&? At" JM?w
mffinmin j"
x
"pagVbi-ountainhead.l uesday, "November 4, T9S?
Lower voting age
Ijy BILL SIEVERT
College Press Service
WASHINGTON - (CPS -
Hopes for lowering the voting
age nationally may hinge
upon the outcome of two
hotly contested referendums
Nov. 4 in Ohio and New
Jersey.
The two states are the
first to put the issue before
the people, and the results
are expected to give a strong
indication as to how voters
in other states will react, says
Youth Franchise Coalition
Coordinator Ian MacGowan.
Thirteen states have approved
public referendums on the
issue so far.
New Jersey ahead
The New Jersey campaign
hopes to lower the voting age
to 18, while the Ohio contest
is over the 19-year old vote.
"It looks very, very
according to Stewart
Rothskin, executive director
Mew Jersey Voting
Age Coalition. "We may be a
tiny bit ahead, but on .
few percentage points
The Ohio campaign is
somewhat less vocal and
dramatic than the New Jersey
effort, due in part to "the
more conservative nature" of
Ohio voters, Rothskin
maintains.
Statewide referendum
While in Ohio rallies have
Deen used only to encourage
volunteers to canvass, a
massive public rally was
organized for Trenton, New
Jersey's capital, to excite the
state's voters.
There is no organized
opposition to the referendum,
he said, just a "quiet
problem with the image of
youth
Pat Keefer, assistant
executive director of Ohio
Volunteers for Vote 19, said
the turning point in the Ohio
campaign w as Vietnam
Moratorium Day, Oct. 15,
? i
JSI
t
Wort. Qodl (tea. toi
4v
WKW
1
, hich was
sful" in the state
jt been disruptive things
might look a lot worse for us
today
Only two states, Kentucky
and Georgia, presently grant
the vote to persons under 21.
Both have the 18-year old
vote. But every state except
Mississippi (and the federally
dominated District of
Columbia) has devoted study
to the voting age issue since
June, '968. In the entire six
years before only 27 states
considered the issue.
Twenty states this yeai
have defeated bill which
would have put the issue
before statewide referendums.
Three other state legislatures
have killed bills without ver
oting on them.
Approved referendums
Of the state legislatures
which have approved
referendums to consider
lowering the voting age, seven
have set the minimum age at
19, five at 18, and one at 20.
States which havd approved
referendums on the issue are:
Alaska (18 years old),
Connecticut (18), Delaware
(19) Hawaii (18),
Massachusetts (19), Minnesota
(19), Montana (19), Nebraska
(20), Nevada (18), New Jersey
(18), Ohio (19), Oregon (19),
and Wyoming (19. These
st js, except for Qhi and
New Jersey, have set
referendums for 1970.
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"BiKtanm?(Bovtth
Board of Trustees
endorses policy
CHAPEL HILL (AP)
The University of North
iltna's board of tiustees
endorsed a policy
adopted a few months ago
by the executive committee
f0, dealing with campus
disruptions
The board took its action
Monday despite last minute
efforts to change the policy.
There was no discussion.
Student and faculty
leaders had recommended
alterations in the policy "The
i eco m m e n da 11 ons wei e
presented to the board's
executive committee at a
special 'I Sunday by
Alan Albright of Gastonia,
student body president at the
Chapel hill campus, and
Ity representatives from
the i onsolidated universities
units at Chapel Hill, Raleigh,
Charlotti d Greensboro
Archie K . Davis of
Wmston Salem, head of a
trustees committee which
drafted the policy, said his
committee's policy had
already been put into effect
and would nol be hanged
He s nd the goals of his
committee and Albright's
group appeared to be the
same avoid campus
disruptions
The policy provides f0r
the suspension, expulsion
discharge or dismissal of any
student, staff or faculty
member who wilfully disrupts
normal campus operations
The policy sets up a board
of inquiry and a hearing
committee to h indie the
cases of alleged disrupters
The chancellor appoints the
members of the two boards
and he may or may not
convene them to hear a case
dun pass judgment.
Albright's group proposed
that not o lly the chancellor,
but also the chairman of the
faculty and the student body
president have authority to
convene the committees.
Rep Ik e Andrews,
D Chatham, and former state
Sen. Roy Rowe of Burgaw
were elected to the board's
15 member executive
committee.
Former Sen. Tom White
of Kinston, a member of the
executive committee, asked
the trustees to determine if:
(I) There was "any value" in
p e emitting stud e n t
publications to use obscene
oi vulgai language, and (2)
the university can require
students to pay fees toward
t h e s u p poi t of these
publications.
Moscow says that US
must get out of Vietnam
0 SCOW A P )
Pravda, marking the fust
? ' ii . if the U.S.
? ng halt ovei North
id today the
Si
?
is must soonei
?' ognize that it
ut of Vietnam
mmunist party
peated the
nmunisl oh, e
sh i n gt o n is
responsible for the failure of
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Women Students
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in each Suite
tt i
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the Pans peace talks so fai
"The serious lessons of
the failure of the military
venture against North
Vietnam convincingly sh
that soonei oi latei the
United States will have to
recognize the impossibility
of solving the Vietnam
question by military means,
to agree to a political
settlement and gel out of
Vitnam the paper added.
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Red Cross urges public
to write North Vietnam
WASHINGTON, D.C.
The American Red Cross
has urged a massive
expression of indignation
over the treatment of U.S.
prisoners held by the North
Vietnamese. It called on the
American people to write
direct to the president of
the Democratic Republic of
North Vietnam to express
concern about Hanoi's
failure to give captured U.S.
military personnel the
benefits of the Geneva
Conventions.
Write the president
According to latest
Department of Defense
figures, 413 Americans are
known to be prisoners ot
and 918 others are
missing and believed
captured.
Pointing out that the
North Vietnamese are
signatory to the Geneva
Conventions, Red Cross
national headquarters here
said such a public outcr
might do much to ensure
that American prisoners will
receive the humane
treatment called for in the
Conventions. It urged that
appeals be addressed to:
Office of the President
Democratic Republic of
North Vietnam Hanoi,
North Vietnam
An airmail letter
weighing less than one half
ounce takes 25 cents in
postage, the Red Cross said.
Meanwhile, the American
Red Cross is continuing to
urge Red Cross societies in
all parts of the world to
intercede in behalf of the
U.S. prisoners with the Red
Cross Society of North
Vietnam and to ask that
their respective governments
take similar action with the
North Vietnamese
government.
Geneva benefits
In an American Red
Cross sponsored resolution
passed without a dissenting
vote by 77 governments and
91 national Red Crosss
societies, the International
Conference of the Red
Cross in Istanbul last month
urged that all
prisoners-of-war be given
the benefits and protection
of the Geneva Conventions.
The C ?neva Conventions
Biology students visit
Marine Studies Station
Fif.uen biology and
geology students will visit the
r i s t Carolina University
Marine Studies Station at
an
tco on Nov. 1 and 2.
The group, which includes
both under grarluate and
tour
the
now
give
graduate students will
the facilities and hear
ilty ind students
si itioned at Manteo
reports on the current status
of then tesearch projects.
Arranges trip
ot the
Dr. Vicent J.
Belli:
Department of Biology, is
arranging the trip. Dr.
Michael O'Connor and Dr.
Stanley Riggs, of the
Department of Geology, and
Francis Belcik, of the
Department of Biology, are
Fall Quarter staff members at
the Station.
The students enrolled at
the Laboratory during the
Fall Quarter are monitoring a
variety of physical and
biological factors at 12
stations that have been set
up in the area. The stations
are located in fresh, brackish.
and salt water on the
Alligator River, the Sound,
and the coast.
No course work will be
offered at the Manteo
Laboratory duringQuarter.
The Station will reopen for
the Spring Quarter with
course and research offerings
at the junior senioi and
graduate levels. Offerings will
depend, in part, on demand,
and any interested students
should make their preferences
known at the Geology and
?offices-
Biology departmental
before Spring Quarter couse
offerings are scheduled.
call for all prisoners to be
pr?omptly identified;
afforded an adequate diet
and medical care; permitted
to communicate with other
prisoners and the
"exterior promptly
repatriated if seriously sick
or wounded; and at all times
be protected from abuse or
r:l.
The Conventions also
state that a neutral
intermediary, such as the
all-Swiss International
Committee of the Red
Cross, be given free access
to prisoners and their places
of detention.
Job losses
attributed to
integration
(Continued from page 7)
Title I (poverty aid under the
Elementary and Secondary
Education Act), then failing
to comply with federal civil
rights requirements. When
federal funds are cut off (as
a result of noncompliance),
the teachers are told simply
that their jobs have been
abolished.
A precedent-setting ruling
l fj?i I Ana ; lulu ir
uy d icuciai juugc in Juiy lfi
a Mississippi case) held that
the wholesale dismissal of 71
black teachers and teacher
aids was illegal discrimination
on the grounds of race. In
this instance, the largest mass
firing to date, the board of
education followed the
reclassif ication technique
mentioned earlier.
In a second case, which
went to the Supreme Court,
the court ruled in favor of
an "above-average" teacher
dismissed because of her
voting-registration and other
political activities. The
decision established the right
oialltftsrhprs-nn matter
what their race-to exercise
their political rights without
reprisals.
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Tuesday, November 4, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 9
Peace Corps Director notes
department is lily-white
"The Peace Corps is
lily-white and we've got to
change that Peace Corps
Director Joe Blatchford said
this week in an interview on
Boston's "soul station WILD.
Blatchford said that upon
being appointed Director of
the Peace Corps he discovered
that the Peace Corps selection
process has been
unintentionally discouraging
app'ications from members of
minority arouDS.
Frightening application
"To begin with, a 16-page
application would frighten
anyone, but particularly those
who haven't made a career of
filling out forms as have most
middle-class Americans he
pointed out.
"Then there is the reference
system. The Peace Corps
requires a large number of
written references and
members of minority groups
are often from backgrounds in
which their friends and
associates are unfamiliar with
or reticent about filling out
government forms.
Consequently, many
applications from members of
minority groups never get
processed. They lack the
proper number of references
he said.
Simplify Applications
Blatchford noted that the
result of this system has been
that black Americans who
applied for the Peace Corps
were three times less likely to
be selected. He also said that in
the past training has not been
geared to the needs of minority
group members.
He s t a ted that the
application form will be
simplified and reduced in size,
and references obtained either
in person or by phone where
necessary.
"We are not looking toward
a quota system of anykind. We
don't even keep records
according to racial background,
although everyone who has
traveled overseas knows that
the face of a black,
Mexican-American or Puerto
Rican is very rare in the Peace
Corps. We are seeking
minorities because we want the
Peace Corps overseas to be
truly representative of this
country, and because these
people have a special
contribution to make. I suggest
the Peace Corps has an
obligation to remove barriers
which presently prevent all but
a small and largely
homogeneous group of
Americans from serving
overseas Blatchford said.
NSA endorses
Moratorium
WASHINGTON - (CPS) -
National Student Association
President Charles Palmer has
endorsed the Nov. 14 and 15
anti-war demonstrations in
Washington, D.C. and San
Francisco.
Palmer, in a press
conference, called for a
"united front" against the
war and reminded students of
their "right" to demonstrate
freely and peacefully. The
mid-November protests are
sponsored by the new
Mobilization Committee to
End the War in Vietnam.
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iMw Mi jr'to ?!
Page 10, Fountainhead, Tuesday, Novembei 4, 1969
p aye . w, . ?? ?
Pirates win over Paladins
Maybe one of these days the
populace will realize that the
Furman-East Carolina football
series offers more in the way of
excitement than anything else
on the Ficklen Stadium
schedule.
The conditions weren't the
best, but the weather didn't
bother the script at all
Saturday night as the Pirates
won 24-21 over the Paladins
before a crowd qenerously
estimated at 2,000 which
included Gov. Bob Scott.
The long play was the order
of the night. Of the six
touchdowns scored, three by
the Pirates and three by
Furman, only one came on a
play oft less than 39 yards.
There was one of 94 yards and
one of 85 yards by Furman,
and two by East Carolina's
Billy Wightman on runs of 77
and 53 yards.
Furman's two big ones were
on kickoff returns right after
Wightman got off his big plays
and the other Paladin score
came on a three yard pass to
give them a somewhat
short lived lead.
In the end, the difference
was a 34-yard field goal by
Steve Davis, who picked up a
total of six points for the night
kicking the ball.
And typically enough, the
game wasn't over when it was
supposed to be according to
the clock. As official time ran
out, East Carolina was
penalized and the Paladins got
a chance at a field goal that
would have tied it had they
not come up with a bad snap.
The Pirates put on a good rush.
A little background might
led at this pont. The
Pirate-Paladin series is i
seven games old and Fun
When you know
it's for keeps
All your sharing, all your
special memories have
grown into a precious and
enduring love. Happily, these
cherished moments will be
forever symbolized by your
diamond engagement ring.
If the name. Keepsake is in
the ring and on the tag. you
are assured of fine quality
and lasting satisfaction The
ngagement diamond is
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has averaged just under 20
points a game joi thePiratesa
little less than 21.
East Carolina leads in the
series by 5 2, but il hasn't been
easy just like it wasn't ?
Saturday night.
In the last three games
alone, these teams have come
up with games no Holly
screenwritei would iLv
present as a possibility, much
less an actuality. Three games
ago, the Pirates bolted oul
front 27 7. Then, bless youi
sideline markets, Furman came
back to lead 28-27.
But with the clock's tn
fleeing like a shadow from the
sun, Neal Hi I and Butch
Colson worked up ,m SOyaid
touchdown drive tha the
Pirates a 34 28 lead
Last year in Furman's home
base, the Pirates again gol off
to a quick lead and was
enjoying a 17 0 advantage
len Furman suddenly came
up with the excitement
combination and cu1 it do i
to 17 13. The final margin of
24-13 was achieved on the last
play of the game.
Saturday night n was
F ui man's turn again to
overcome an early East
Carolina lead- Aftei Billy
Wightman uncorked his
53 yardei with one second
short of three minutes gone in
the fust quarter, Dick Immell
came romping back on an
85 yaul ktckofi return that just
took the wind right out of the
Pirate sails.
And then, through the
,urtesy of a tumble, the
Paladins worked themselves
down to the FAst Carolina
three where Cleve Hightowei
threw a three yard pass to
, Vaughn and fin man
baiL- out fiout
mat e things even more
frustrating foi the Pirates v. as
the fad thev rei i -? ? red a
Fuimii fumble, a gift of Mim
Gud iei l( fensive unit,
? oi topped .it the one
yard line
Steve Davis had already
k icked - s fieli; g tal when the
Paladin defense held u) in the
grime and the slush and
F in man's 14 10 lead was
indeed imposing
But thm Jack Patterson, a
sophomi ire tailba h i ha
hopes of suci eeding the
veteran Billy Wightman next
year, connected with Dwiqh,
Flanagan on a 39 y.rd pass for
a score and the P?ates
trailed.
The first two quarters had
produced enough excitement
and nail chewing for one night
but the pulse rates rain,cold
wind and other weatherly
misery not withstanding - got
jacked up again early m the
thud quarter when Wightman
went bouncing, skinnma anH
1 ' ? i alto
dancing through the puddles
on a 77 yard run.
Before the Pirate following
could sigh with relief, Evans
Mai tin came bad" with a
94 yard run that looked like he
was taking part in a nO-contack
kick return workout on Friday
afternoon.
Aftei that, things sort of
settled down to a routine of
nobody doing much to
anybody, that is until the
Paladins came up with that last
fumble with less than a minute
to play.
Everybody was ringing
wet at the n(, but i am oi not,
everybody would have been
w rung out emot tonally
anyway. It was jusl that kind
of a a ie.
Ke
Players of the week
named by Bill Cain
Freshman Coach Bill Cam
has named foul Bucs as his
olayers of the week foi then
performance against Cho
College weekend before last
The players given credit for
leading the Baby Bucs to
victoiy are: Rick Page,
blocking back. Bob Johnson,
guard; Ron Konrady, defensive
back; and Ron Reynolds,
tackle.
Coach Cain Ih d the game
a gi eat team ef f j ever, ai
tney pulled off a 33 27
triumph ovei a I nigh Chi iv an
junior college who del ted the
Bucs last yeai
"Rick Page called an
I lent game and as
prominent in setting up the
winning touchdowns with
pitchouts and option plays
h Can commented. "Bob
Johnson did a fine job of
blocking on offense, which led
our team to gain som i 300
yard; rushing. I e pei : him to
continue to improve steadily
and make a bid for
considerable playing time on
the varsity next eai '
Of Konrady, a co-captain
from Egg Harbor, N.J Cam
improvement in his play
The Baby Bucs will play at
home foi the fust time Friday
afternoon when they take on
the Richmond freshmen.
said "He is the ti
am s leading
RICK PAGE
.pacer freshman
' ll ' ; ' a ml shows
improvement daily. He is an
outstanding candidate foi the
varsity next year
Reynolds, a Greensboro
Produci was the anchorman in
the defensive line againsl
Chowan. "He has the size and
sPd to be an outstanding
performer Cain said, "and
look f ;
ve
n t inu ed
RON KONRADY
outstanding defense
player
Union
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A casual observer
?
I
i
m
House investigates) from the Bema
SDS Weathermen)
ByBILLCONNELLY
Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON
The House Internal Security Committee (a new, sanitized name
the old House Unamencan Activities Committee) has now
. seveial months investigating the much-publicized
itherman" faction of the Students for a Democratic Society
(SDS)
The committee's tenacious investigators have sniffed around
is college campuses, inquiring about last year's disorders
.Meeting the literature of both the Left and the Radical Left.
And HISC (not HU AC, remember) has held some rather dull and
onclusive hearings on SDS activities at Georgetown, George
Washington, American and Kent State universities.
HISC members disagree on what their inquiry has proved. Some
scv they found Communists there, sure enough, just as they
cted. But some of the more moderate members, such as Rep.
Richardson Preyer of North Carolina's 6th District, have a different
impression.
Weathermen "juvenile and disorganized"
As Preyer reads the evidence, the SDS Weathermen have been a
pathetic failure on most campuses, and in any case, are much too
juvenile and disorganized to be part of anybody's conspiracy.
"The evidence so far indicates to me that they are remarkably
ineffective Preyer said in an interview. "They are a bunch of
pampered brats out to make a lot of noise. They have no apparent
intellectual content to anything they do. They express themselves
at the level of a 10 year-old's temper tantrum.
They are for change, but they have no conception of what kind
of change they want. They just want discourse in four-letter
wordsI think we'd be spooking ourselves to believe these people
area threat to our country
il illt'Y WeiK Weil UUjcinizeu and aiUciIHiy lotyC ylltJ .
students, they would be extremely dangerous. But the evidence
shows that this is not the case at all
The Weathermen, the loud, unkempt wing of the SDS, advocate
violent forms of protest. Because of their flamboyance, many
iressmen regard them with a mixture of fear and indignation.
Thru recent clashes with Chicago police received national
attention.
The other wing of SDS, the Progressive Labor Party, is quiet and
has low visibility. "This is the group that is more liable to be
dangerous, if any of them are Preyer said, "but they don't draw
h attention. We haven't investigated them yet, and I don't
much about them
Preyei said the HISC investigation clearly shows, however, that
eathermen have been ignored on most campuses, laughed off
le others, and physically evicted from at least one (American
eisity in Washington).
Harsh treatment gets sympathy
Their only success, he said, has been on campuses where
administrators treated them harshly or repressively, thereby
making moderate students sympathetic to their causes.
In some places, the SDS has received undeserved credit for
retorm. At American and George Washington universities, For
example, the organization included in its list of demands several
policy changes that the administration was known to be preparing
toannounce.
When the announcements came, the SDS took credit, and the
administration was promptly denounced by its critics for
capitulating to SDS.
Preyer, a former state and federal judge from Greensboro, is one
of four congressmen placed on the reorganized HISC early this year
by the House leadership in an effort to make the nine-member
committee more moderate.
Name change changes image?
He did not seek the assignment (which he holds in addition to a
seat on the Commerce Committee), but was drafted into it because
of his judicial background and his reputation as a political
moderate. House leaders were hopeful that by changing the
committee's name and membership it could be made more
restrained and less controversial. The old HUAC's reputation for
witch-hunting (not to mention headline-hunting) had become an
embarrassment.
There still is much debate, of course, whether there should be
such a committee. Many think the nation's internal security is
hetter left to the traditional institutions of law, the FBI, the courts.
Preyer himself is troubled by the question.
But the sanitized HISC has, at least, conducted its recent SDS
hearings in an atmosphere more like a courtroom than like a circus.
t has also shown more sensitivity to the individual liberties of the
People it investigates.
Don Osborne's well written
comments in his "On My
Mind" column in this
newspaper demonstrate more
clearly than any mass meeting
or vote the utter bankruptcy of
conservative thinking in the
United States. His chief sources
are 1. Eric Hoffer and 2. an
amateurish pseudo psychology.
Hoffer has become the very
intelligent spokesman for
middlebrow anti-
-intellectualism in America.
Hoffer rose to fame when
touched by the golden wand of
LBJ after blessing Johnson
over a California TV show as
the greatest U.S. President in
this century. An often
mistaken idea is that
anti intellectuals are stupid and
that intellectuals are by
definition, bright.
Harry Truman, Richard
Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev
are all men of great intelligence
yet dedicated anti intellectuals.
The sad aspect of Osborne's
approach is its frightening
naivete. The real reason for
Hitler and his views was the
rejection of the vision of
Woodrow Wilson's intellectual
concept of the road to
European peace by a lot of
anti intellectual isolationists
both abroad and in the U.S.
In effect the emotional
appeal of pseudo-patriotism
which beat post WWI Germany
to the ground caused both
4
Hitler and his success. Karl
Marx saw the utter horror of
life in a state rulee by
advocates of social-Darwinism,
stotes such as Germany and
England where child labor and
the 18 hour shift were
commonplace after the
Industrial Revolution. Marx
had an answer. We sincerely
believe now it was the wrong
answer but an answer it was.
Marx did not fit into the
social patterns of the time
because he could foresee that
the mixed oligarchy of ancient
royalties plus economic cartels
was doomed and his vision was
proven true by World War I
which saw the collapse of
European monarchy.
Malcolm X again
represented a certain foresight.
He clearly understood that
political-economic equality for
the black man would never
come through mere laws but
through a society governed by
pressure groups, trade unions,
political parties, military
contractors, farmers'
associations and other lobbies.
The only out was to form a
militant lobby of their own.
but let us now take a look
at other maladjusted persons.
Benjamin Franklin, let us
assume, was the father of an
illegitimate son while still a
teenager, a run-away, upstart,
radical, subversive, scheming,
rreligious, treasonable qoack.
Or take Albert Einstein, a
peculiar, eccentric,
anti -establishment,
pseudo-intellectual rejected by
his homeland, conside-ed a
dangerous radical by his
government, excluded from his
profession, unkempt, sloppy,
maladjusted and irreverent
I am sorry but the
comfortable platitudes about
peaceful change that Osborne
espouses are non-historical,
inaccurate and dangerous. And
I for one am thankful that
ECU has a president that
would participate in the Oct.
15 Moratorium -to state his
opinions in a market-place of
free speech and a Board of
Trustees that would invite
direct student participation
rather than wait for the gradual
change which would condemn
us to obsolete modes and
ultimate collapse before some
irresistable social revolutionary
forces of either the right of the
left.
Let us observe then the
conservatives on campus. What
do they espouse, these apostles
of the past, these fossils for the
status quo? Do they fit? And
who on earth wants to fit in a
society unable to criticise
itself, unable to change.
Socialism or liberalism?
By WILLIAM F. HARRELL
Today it is the "in thing"
to be a liberal. Ask any
college student today whether
he is a liberal or a
conservative and nine times
out of ten his answer will be
"liberalAsking him to
define the two terms is like
asking an aardvark to stop
eating ants. He can't.
Young people of today
are being systematically
conditioned to believe that
conservatism is synonymous
with bigotry and
narrow-mindedness. Not too
many years ayu peuple weie
told and believed that the
earth was flat. I guess that
was the "in thing" back
then.
Let's take a look at the
conservative and what he
believes. Most conservatives
are not opposed to change or
reform. They are, however,
opposed to change merely for
the sake of change.
Some things we can and
should change, and some we
can't and shouldn't. You can
raise a cow in your house,
but it won't change the cow
? only your house.
Most conservatives agree
that there has been too much
(pardon the term) "liberal"
interpretation of our
Constitution merely for the
sake of change.
The Constitution is an
inviolable contract which
clearly specifies the limit of
Federal power. Nowhere in
the Constitution is the
federal government granted
the authority to operate a
mandatory social security
system, give aid to foreign or
domertic governments, or
dispense welfare.
It is unconstitutional for
the federal government to
produce and distribute goods
and services in competition
with private enterprise, or to
dictate to property owners
how their property will be
used.
It is not only
unconstitutional but
treasonous to weaken our
national defenses to a point
where we can no longer
"proTecT"6ursinveslind "at the
same time to give aid and
comfort to our enemies. Yet
why have all these things
come about
The liberals call it
"progress I have another
word tor it.
Liberals and conservatives
alike, realize that our country
is being transformed repidly
into a socialist state. The
only difference is the liberals
welcome this "progress" with
open arms. The conservative
realizes that it is not
progress.
It is amusing that
America's starry-eyed liberals
not only propound socialist
ideology, but also join hands
with their comrades in
advancing their mutual cause. .
Yet the liberals refuse to call
themselves socialists.
To me, if one waddles like
a duck, quacks like a duck,
and keeps company with a
flock of ducks - he is inded
a duck
And now the ecu marching, pirated





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Title
Fountainhead, November 4, 1969
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
November 04, 1969
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.16
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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