Fountainhead, October 6, 1970


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





tmalu
head, Saturday. October 3,1"70
ention j
attitudes1
WFORD
len's Liberation was comprised
nal leanings
ong, we lefl believing the same
n's Liberation conference was
rpt. N
iintainhead suit get out on the
fight, or (at the very least) an
nted with our liberated sisters
layrnarket Square, a rambling
rock gatherings and pacifist
ipitalism advised the graffiti
about tryingThe only wa
le
e contributors had displayed a
my, trade sour placards tor a
evolution
VERE LOSERS
n a laige circle in the Square's
id looking terribly, terribly
s, arms khakis, t-shuts and
Had they been grotesque to
tesquc alter joining Women's
uiizers wok- losers, leu or 15
een hopelessly trapped as
JologistS or knitters ol lumps
iisin in our Political Science
istructoi at Chapel Hill,
volunteered a high school
led.
e club said another, and all
NAL REPORTS
rated woman rose and gave a
ise present-a blonde from
m Ft. Bragg-were given rin-
ds
Women's Liberation front in
nd came to North Carolina a
ments concerned the croup
F chapters.
lower she said, "and when
lecome corrupt
tion for perhaps a single
Black present
n's Lib groups for military
WLF axiom that the women
h school women and G.I.
progress. A high school
? of passing Women's Lib
chool headed by "Hitler's
AST NAMES'
ayettevuTe for four months
' She planned to attend the
in Montreal. "M name's
name because women can't
ited to form a women's
ared away, the Fayetteville
dution They had picketed
jly 4 beauty contest lor
ousting unfair wages for
iman rose to demand that
not sexual, order.
RATURE
r it had resembled nothing
eeting. More correctly, it
rnpaiiy that did a great deal
, and very little of anything
itainhead mingled, aigued,
table. The pamphlet titles
"The Myth of Women's
man and Dating "High
h of the Vaginal Orgasm
and wandered off to grill
riONING'
made a few intelligent
and very idealistic, most
stures and sweeping arm
ted to possess more sanity
sly-mentioned Chapel Hill
re personal liberation; her
ent was to provide more
cal Science.
le said. This was a marked
I that there was no "real"
i matter of conditioning
ers stated the reasons for
n't say 'stop fightingwe
laekswe aren't all black,
'e're women. We have to
V
ly before the second half
nembers had been taping
reorder. Suddenly one of
the group's unofficial
she said "What arc we
1 of pamphlets she was
d. "the only people here
ig are the men Go ask
king male expertise to
Journalism now a minor,
adds instructor, new lab
"A free press is a bulwark ol democracy.
alui out job must be to maintain and
perpetuate this as we prepare students foi
careers in the mass media said Ira L. Baker
about the role oi journalism studies at the
n'liege level.
Baker directs the oumalism program at
U 1
Until recently, ECU's journalism offerings
consoled ol .i lew isolated courses.
During Baker's two years at East Carolina,
the journalism program has grown into a
lull-fledged concentration of courses covering
Dearly all aspects ol the field.
Beginning this fall, ECU students may
adopt journalism as a minor area of study.
The journalism curriculum has become
quite comprehensive.
There are courses in writing and editing for
newspapers and magazines, courses in
make-upipage design), courses which prepare a
potential reporter to gather and research
factual news articles, and even a course in
editorial writing.
ADVANCED COURSES
Mok advanced courses involve such aspects
ol journalism as advising student
publications-a valuable asset to those who
plan to teach at the high school or junior
college level-and the role ol the piess in
modern soslctv. politically, economically and
socially .
Other c mirses Involve more individual
initiative on the student's part and less time in
the classroom, such as "Journalistic
Production in which the students actually
work on one of the campus publications for
credit toward a degree, and special studies
seminars in journalism m which the students
work on topics ul special interest.
Some ot the topics selected by students
who intend to take this course include the
influence ol the newspaper editorial on the
public, problems of censorship, black
journalism, and the underground press.
Baker is particularly concerned with th
new journalism laboratory, a simulated "news
room" with copy desks, typewriters, and a
"morgue" (files o back issues) am clippings
The laboratory will have access to a i
service teletype which is located in the
of the ECU campus newspaper.
"Fountainhead
Besides his academic role. Baker serves the
twice-weekly "Fountainhead" as faculty
adviser.
Most of the students on its staff have some
background in journalism studies, so that the
writing, editing and lay-out of the
Fountainhead show considerable improvement
over past years
While serving the campus as the mam organ
of communication, Fountainhead is at the
same time one of several training gn.unds tor
future journalists.
Some students work on various newspapers
during summer vacations as temporary
employees and interns.
Next summer. Baker expects to pla
good main student journalists with
newspapers across the state.
"Until now. only one institution in North
Carolina has offered an extensive program in
journalism he noted.
"We consider the establishment of a
journalism minor here at ECU to be an
important opportunity to serve the state's
various news media '
Baker holds degrees from Wake I orest.
Columbia and Illinois Universities.
BAKER
He has taught at NSi :e and at High
Point College, and advised campus
publications at boil, places.
He was foi many years head ot the
journalism department at Furman University,
and has co-authored a textbook, "Modern
Journalism
Other publications include an artisle in
"l.ditor and Publisher the national trade
journal of the newspapei industry.
He belongs to several organizations lor
; i ifessional journalists ami educators, and at
present is the editot ol "hi Collegiate
Journalist the publicatioi I Uph Phi
Gamma, national journalism fraternity
Last year, he was one ol seven advisers it
college newspapers throughout the nation to
receive an "Outstanding Adviser Avi
the Associated illi gi iti I'
Baker is assisted by Maigaret Blanchard a
veteran newspaperwoman who came t ECU
this tall alter holdine reporting and editorial
positions on the Miami Herald
She has achieved recognition from the
Florida Women's Press Club tor an in-depth
series of artisles about the placing ol children
by adoption agen
EXPANSION IN MIND
Together. Bakei and Mis- Blanchard plan
to work with ECU'S existing
program with future expansion in mind
"Although at the present tune there an
journalism scholarships offered here, w
hope that in the near futuie. individuals.
newspapers oi ss associations will
donate funds for such scholarships Baker
said.
"The scholarships, even though they might
be small, would irthei inducement to
serious students who intend to pursue sareers
in journalism he added.
There are a number ol careers open to
student journalists, the most well-paid being in
the field of public i ind promotion.
And there are careen for journalists in the
various mass media whish are essential in
modern society.
While newspapers, magazines and other
publications offei j variety of possibilities to
aspiring journalists, Bakei stresses the gr
importance of othei communications media.
sikIi as radio and television, which rely
heavily upon good ji irnalistic principles and
practises
ountainhead
and the truth shall make you free
Volume II. Number 10
Greenville, North Carolina
ibei o. N70
ACLU studies desecration
Court convictions cut
WASHINGTON (CPS) Protesters charged
with misusing the American Hag are seldom
convicted, but the courts are resisting
arguments based on first amendment rights,
instead throwing the cases out on narrower
grounds, according .i study by the American
Civil Liberties Union.
See:a! joints have rules that variations on
the flag which make political points are not
violations of Hag desecration laws, generally
because the new item is not a tlag.
In Minnesota, lor example, a man was
acquitted of desecration charges after he
displayed a flag with a pease symbol instead of
st s Hie court held that the Hag was not a tlag
within the meaning ot the law. ignoring the
target question ot the constitutionality of the
flag desecratiin laws
INCIDENTS
A Pennsylvania student was held on S75.000
bail attei painting a flag on a sheet and
displaying it on his house. For the stars, he
substituted ciosses and Stars of David to
represent the wai dead peace symbol was
painted ovei the stripe- Convicted in a lower
court, he appealed and won The case was
dismissed
In Colorado, a youth who ripped a flag to
dramatize a class speech was reinstated at
school by court order He was expelled under a
state law prohibiting behavioi "inimical to the
welfare safety, and morals ol other pupils
I he court overturned the expulsion on grounds
that the student had noi damaged his fellow
students' "welfare, saiety. and morals" It
refused to sa whethet the expulsion violated

SEVERAL COURTS have ruled that
a flag in a peace symbol is not
actually a flag within the meaning of
the law, and therefore not flag
desecration.
the fust amendment rights of the student
In Washington State and New Hampshire
persons have been treed attei arrests in sewing
the flag onto another item, a sar in Washin
and a jacket in New Hampshire. In one ase the
charges were dismissed, while they were
dropped in the odier.
FLAG BURNING
In the state ol Washington, a trial which had
aroused considerable publicity resulted in a
conviction of the defendant tor tlag burning
despite evidence he wasn't there at the time and
a confession front another man
The ludge sentenced the defendant to six
months in rail and fined him S500. observing
that "1 here is too much ot this going on in our
country today Freedom is a one-was street
Freedom is the right to do the right thing, not
as someone pleases "
CONFLICTING DECIS.ONS
In many sascs. lawyers are present
collection ot more than 100 flag items collected
by Pennsylvania lawyet Bernard 1 Segal
Included arc a cancelled ("defaced") U.S
Six-cent tlag stamp, a bikini, ties, belts, a
photograph ot Roy Rogers and Dale Evans m
flag vests, a toilei lid, a beer serving tray. and a
civil war photogi ipl ? I 1 iiicoln and McClellan
in a tent eating from a table covered with a flag
There have been conflicting federal court
decisions on whethet a youth has the light to
remain seated du-mg the pledge ot allegiance to
the tlag Iwo judges haw held that sucl an act
al. but one held that it intruded on "the
educational cxp ienCCI ol others "
Janis Joplin found
dead in Hollywood
7045 points out of 7100
Buccaneer gets
'First Class'rating
Janis Joplin. whose uninhibited,
screaming, wailing style made her a top
pop singer, was found dead Sunday night
in her Hollywood hotel room
Police said there were Iresh hypodermic
needle maiks on her lelt arm.
The bods was found by John Cooke, a
guitarist with the Jams Joplm Full Tilt
Boogie rock gioup She had been dead
about 12 hours
An autopsy was ordered to determine the
cause ot death
"There were no dings in the loom only
tequila vodka and wine a police
spokesman said
.n ambulance attendant said Miss Joplm.
27 was wearing a nightgown and her death
"didn't look like foul play. It looked like
she had just fallen ovei "
She admitted to being a heavy bourbon
drinkci often dunking dining hei
performances
When asked whether her all-out
performances might cut her cartel short.
she once said "maybe I won last as long
as other singers, but I think vou can
destroy your now b worrying about
tomorrow
She first gamed fame with Big Biothei
and the Holding Vo . and did some
recording foi Columbia Records in
Hollywood
I he Holding Co was ai 111 this fall
entertaining at the street dance
The Last Caiolina
BUCCANH R stall lias been
awarded a rating of First Class
by the Associate Collegiate
Press for it's work on the 1970
BUCCANEi R
Out ot i possible 100
points the Bl'CC N1 1 R
received 7045, an IncreaM
over the 6605 ot last eai and
only 55 points awa from
i onsideration foi
All-American, an honor
bestowed on only 5-15 per
cent ot the division
The BUCCAN1 I R was
judged in a class with schools
from 10.000 to 15.000.
therefore competing with
schools ol a much larger
student bods
Thc were judged on all
phases ol then woik from
their lav out to then finances
The opening section oi
coloi photos and the "Student
Lite" section received bonus
points but they lost more
points m the "Organization"
section than in any other
because ot the difficulty m
x a i i np poses of so mans
different groups
They suffered mostlv from
the b I a v k and white
photography
MARGARET BLANCHARD AND
IRA BAKER examine materials for
the new journalism lab which includes
a simulated "news room
Theme of report
is reconcilation
WASHINGTON-(( PS i I h. ? the
report of the President's Commission On
Campus L'nrest includes a sera
mmendations to the Presidi
rnment, law enforcement officials,
universities, and students.
The sections dealing specifically with the
killings at Kent State and Jackson State
which prompted President Nixot to appoint
'he nine-member commission headed
former Pennsylvania Go William Sera
had a release date four das after the mam
report. That part of the report will strongly
condemn the Kent and Jackson
Killings as completely unjustified.
The strongest theme of the report '?'
reconciliation between the students who
protest and the Establishment which . ?
to limn that protest. The primars
responsibility tor 'he reconciliati I wha
the sioi alls "a srisis ol violence
and a nsis oi understanding" is piaed on
Nixon The report sails upon the President
to exett "r-oral leadership to bring the
country together again
FIVE CONDITIONS
The report noted live that are
contributing . ainpus unrest
The pressing problem) I lericai
societs. particularly the war in Southeast
Asia and the conditi I linority groups.
?-The changing status and attitude
south in America
The distinctive sharaster ot the
American university during the postwar
period.
-An escalating spuai of reaction to
m pun.is i i . I,si a,
escalating spiral oi violence; and
-Broad evolutionary changes occurring in
the culture and structure ot modern
Western societs
GOAL IS RECONCILIATION
The report also contained longer chapters
on a history of student protest in the Us.
the sauses of student protest, the black
student movement, the university's res:
to campus disorder, the law enforcement
response, university reform, and the
government
The report attributes blame to each one
ol the groups invoked in the campus The
recommendations made in the report
admits Scranton, won't solve campus unrest
The goal is to bring about a reconciliation
between disputing tastions in the country
"We teel serv strongly that divisions in
the nation between blacks and whites, old
against young, are ol such proportion at
this time that we have a matter ot great
urgency betorc us said Scranton at a
news conference Saturday. Sept. 26.
"II something isn't done soon, we'll wind
up with anarchy or repression, and in
America the choke would be repression
he added
VAGUE AND GENERAL
Such, strong statements were not present
in the report itsell The recommendations
M largelv ague and general, and
unspecific in terms ot their desired
implementation
The report recommended to Nixon that
he
?convey his understanding ot the
? the divisions :n this sountry
its citizens, particularly to si
- " ral authority ot hi- iffici
ricans ot the need to
o n 11. nr candidly tin serious and
continuing problems ot the nation
delivet a maior address reaffirming the
nation's and his administration's
commitment to realizing the long-denied
birthright of Black Americans
?urge mem1- his administration
and Americans l all parties and persuas
to :esist the temptation to capitalize upoi
the divisions within the country foi pal tisan
political gain
-?"deal with students and young people
generally as constituents and citizens
"renew the national commitment to lull
social justice, and to be aware ot increasing
charges of repressii i
"lend his personal support and assistance
to American universities to accomplish the
changes and reiorms suggested in this
report
'sail a senes ol national meetings
designed to toster understanding amond
those who are now divided
OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS
The repoit also recommended that
governors should hold meetings and
develoi contact; il 'hi school sear
to lurther the filiation
"state and local officials make plans tor
handling campus disorders in lull
cooperation with one anothei and with the
universities, including the establishment ol
guidelines
?the government increase financial
support of higher education, especially black
schoi
j-uhlis ottuials should not punish
universities toi the actions ot some oi its
members
the Department ol Defense establish
some alt ROH
?-the more
tor
recruiting blacl Mexic; P
Rican and othi
-the prompt ?i?i
over the i sfei and
the state and federal level;
LAW ENFORCEMENT
The ' laW
that
-better trained and equip i
and human
- -1 h e r e b i
?
?-the usi houldet
shotguns and rifles should be
? .
: ei fire or armed resi
the Nati ? a: ' ? . ;rung
in not control tl
equipment
CODE NECESSARY
The I riive . v
promulgate a ? .
limits ol permissal
in advance whal n tsui willing to
? to imj ermissable
? d .
when snminal violet the
campus university
the assistanci
agencies
-respond .ntema
?ien: conduct
-?make its tea1 . .
structure, and transter and iea.
more flexible arni more aired m order to
enhance the quality and voluntarinei
university study.
not permit "faculty members who
engage or lead disruptive conduct" to
remain on campus;
"universities is institui ?
politically neuti.
"urn. ? ind tasuln members should
utside ser rtments.
large universities should tak steps ti
centralize or reorganize
-university governing systems sh
reformed to include student and faculty
participation, "but L niversities cannot he
I tai ' asi with
participation oi all members on all issues
TO STUDENTS
1 hi Coi ays thistudents:
students must? risibility
ot presenting thenasonable
and persuasive mamognize
that they arc it .a nation vshish
I;d diversity
they musi bco1standing ol
with whom they ditlc "
students must proteci the righi ot all
? ers to be heard. ;vet when they
disagree with tin point ol viev. expressed
1 e w e
intensity
deten
natiot
thai
uade
isalK and immediately
the
disagree I spc t
rule iw
Members oi the Commission othei than
'iisiudi New Haven police chiel
James 1 hcrn Christian Sici1 MonitOI
tot I ?" ? D .n ha Howard
I nisersirs President James ek Get
Benjamin o Davis. Boston College political
v. ience i Martha Di tick
Stani In iversity I av? s ? IH ai
ss Mai ning. formei ericai Ha'
sso President R '? !
and Harvard Junior Joseph Rhodes J'
Jenkins now
a granddad
1(1 President Leo Jenkins and his wile.
Mrs I illian Jenkins, are grandparents.
Then first grandchild, a boy, wa horn
Sept. 21 at the Norfolk Naval Hospital.
Portsmouth. Va.
The father is Lt James J Jenkins. CSV
a graduate ol the ! nn.eisnv ot North
Carolina-Chapel Hill School ol Medicine,
who is interning a! the Naval Hospital
Portsmouth
The mothei is the formei Nancy J
ot Raleigh. The baby weighed cigjit and a
hall pounds and is named Jason Arnold
Jenkins





11
I mi
t l
m4B
Coke considers itself
an American institution
State zoo planned,
location undecided
I : I wii iln Iitgltw is ii h'
(intent. Ii ? ' ? Kveryi
" I In ? wards "i .1 "lt .iin ?
.DNll
? I i ??
Vtlicll tlk'S I
a ith the (For '
U 1:1
'Couldn't hack it anymore'
Hippie priest gives up beat
EISFNBl Hi;
I '
?
N.Y. Supreme Court freezes
Albany State activity funds
A LANDMARK
I
GUIDELINES
I
puses I
I
Thurber to teach
in Medical Science
Most bathrooms are pink
BA(
st 1 I CTION
Greenville
observes
fire week
i : i
?
nicht. H
JOSHUA HECHT will appear in the
East Carolina Playhouse production of
"Man of La Mancha" October 14 17
at 8.15 p.m. in McGinnis Auditorium.
Playhouse opens with Hecht
as Quixote in 'La Mancha'
By JAMES SLAUGHTER
M :
anccs ot
V ericans
M ? I
bast Ca ma I'
MAJOR FESTIVALS
WIDE RANGE
I hi H
ADMISSION
Th
man
By (ill Bl I
l
Week
ft
. ?
Ills 111
Bui
simpli
W
next, ?
thud :
iil
d
nd
are noi
Idn'li them
? iblj
particular
withni?
indui'HAMME
?
phot
leliveia?
mon il
?
()i.
win

ll IV
Wit'
l ?
1. .
I Ma
By KAY TYNDAl
Sepi
frai ' '

1(1
()! this
compli'
at tivil
M ll
picked
rnitie?
rush fhi
Kappa
I
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SWANK INC -Sole Diit





lanned,
Jecided
I RlIVI R!
?enville
serves
3 week
ha 0( tober 14 17
Ginnis Auditorium.
Hecht
icha'
V1 i
S ? ?
I.
ADMISSION
The daily paper:
man's best friend
Wh
tt.
Hv Gil HI U I l SMITH
N.itH m
I
week t'
Well.
ve Ai
his h
But, perhaps ihe besi reason is a
simple ? d iil; ew papei is .1 friend,
W e it one da ii the
next, it's .1 friend vhen thai ramihat
thud doesn't hii the I
Natui il ind v n in the busi
are not unpri ibom .ill this you
wouldn't expect them to be Howevei
probal ; attention to this
rs closel) allied
with, but noi I die new ?;
industry
HAMMERLOCK
R e p o rIe 1 I 1 1 1b 1 i she r s
photograpl
i" delivei to note mud
mort al 1 tl than thai
n
Oik
why
s.nd Witl
newspapers withi ui
lattei i" ili sii !
begin tin
paper 1
appn iatioi Bui
withoul it, i
THINGS TO CHEER
I heie .11 e u ncounted ai I
thing: I hei Lei
hit mation 01 So oi
tells i citizen w tl
hotm towi ? hi ??? ? 1
Well-ki
? itemenl I
dlssi'
Cronkil
television and radi

? ? n lid the
Ilgll A llll I
'
Majority pledge
By KAY TYNDALL
Si I '
?
??
Inter I
Pi lenl
lit
01 this ?
I
. :
picked
til
rush rhi
? 1
e s 1 a I
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JJtriyyWyljH J

Q
SAAD'S SHOE SWOP
Quality work
fcVe do not pick up shoos
Located College View
Cleaners Main Plant
oooooc
JADE
HAST
SWANK INC -Sole Distributor
0
Teco Echo'
First editors reminisce
(? f DWARD BKOOII
M I 1
H ?
STAFF
STAFF MEETINGS
o fvi'
.
V
MISS DEANIE BOONE HASKETT
editor of the first East Caroliri
"7
TREAT
YOURSELF
The Record Bar's
Hits You May Have Missed Sale
-A great char a for you to pick up
some great aioums at great prices-
Jamcs Taylor 'Sweet Baby James'
contains hit single Fire & Rain
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MAN DOES NOT LIVE
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Ordinary cash will do the job, but put a little
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You gei all the safety, records, and discipline
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Slop by any Wachovia office and order yours
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1nl 1 I
Neil Young .After r
onlv 3.24
iautanB-v.iTmiu: ?
Wk
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s D
hour Tops
contains In; singles S 1
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onlv 3.24
1 V. c
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Right Now
onlv 3.24
JUST ARRIVED
THE NEW ALLMAN BROTHERS IDLEWILD SOUTH'
"
open nights til 10
521 S. Cotanche St
a
iMM-onl bar
discount records and tapes





Sororority formal rush WECU
holds insights for women
1
Math Congress
held in France
plays more
than most others
ANDY OVEHCAHSH
U
isn'i inte j
M : ? idual.
?
saul .1 mi
ll- jockeys
I I act thai a
h
with j
I he
?
' ' well
I
NUMBER 1
THE WECU STAFF: back row (lr:
Guss Pistolis, Bud Holmes, Richard
Brown, Nancy Bready, Jeff Cheak, Al
Kirshner, Dave York, Jim Hicks, and
Larry Fitzgerald. Middle row Marti
Van Hoy, Boh Lohmeyer, Richard
U i
Harris, Susan Baker, Dave Boston,
Jim Davis Front row Bill Doeg, Jim
Deans, Mike Ross, Rufus Walston.
Carl Davis, Becky Thompson, and
Tom Peelei
I i i
Seco
as P
Hy JON THAUSN1
i I I'
FALLSSHORf
Will
'
STAFF
BROADCASTS
m
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Delivery Service
752-7483
4PM to Midnight
SUNTHUR.
Pizza Spaghetti, Oven Burgers
529 Contanche St
wt '4i.lliiiMj6
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??? ? H
41

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XOAVNDVIAJ
? u I Harold
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By MOMCII O KOVACFVIC

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Components FMAM RadiosJheAwo
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Cornet
STUDEIN
Free Car V
TIRED
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on
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Here is a free, no
i?( mrse and discussto
,in intelligent quest
to the am ient hoc
Questions vuii be en
Any interested pen
creed ot lack oi i
Room 212, I du
Instructor; James
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v Bill Doeg, Jim
Rufus Walston,
Thompson, and
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Second half rally fails ciub loses, 12-6
as Pirates lose, 42-30
Hy DON ruAir
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lUCKV IOHWIN
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Sports
:
Buses chartered
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ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
lead quarters
ess bib D
RICH PEELER (upper right)
Southern Conference Defensive Playei
foi his play against West !??? howi
are Carl 11 i loi I upper lefl I, Billy
lefl hi ileorge Whitle
STUDENTS! FACULTY! MAKE IT HAPPEN!
GOOD LHANCE
Jll SIlfllH fOI 11
i BUY lp RECORDS PRE RECORDED TaPES. AUDIO
EQUIPMENT ACCESSORIES, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
SELL :??? .ET rOUR OWN PROFIT PICTURE
? MEET and BEAT ALL COMPETITION
F THIS IS YOUR BAG CONTACT
SMG
THE MODEL TWENT
?1 ?:
?? I 11378
" ?? : ENIN
HARMONY
HOUSE
. EADING Si
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JEWELERS
LEO'S PERCO
Corner of 14th and Washington
758 0808
STUDENTDISCOUNT
Discount Gas
Greenbax Stamps
I ree Car Washing Facilities Availafc ?
things 0()

TIRED OF IGNORANT,
FUNDAMENTALIST NONSENSE
ABOUT
OS IOTO
Here is a free, no strings attached Bible study
course and discussion group for those interested in
,in intelligent questioning, but reverent approach
the ancient books A real discussion course
Questions viili be encouraged and freely discussed
Any interested person is welcome regardless of
creed oi lark ol creed Thursdays 6:00 p.m
Room 212 Education-Psychology Building,
Instructor James Boswell, chaplain, Christian
Church
CRAIG
Eight Track Tape Recorder Deck
$129.95
ADVANCED AUTOMATIC LEVEL. CONTROL FOR MUSIC RECORDING
? AUTO-STOP AFTER ONE OR FOUR PROGRAMS. OR REPEAT
? RECORD SIGNAL METER
? "E-Z-JECT" CARTRIDGE RELEASE BUTTON
? RECORD BUTTON RELEASED AT AUTO-STOP
? WALNUT-FINISH WOOD CABINET
PAIR ELECTRONICS INC
phone 756- 229?

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frc4cu'ah ana wommenla
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Paee (1 I mi i
Hippies beat mercilessly
at peaceful gathering
Positive action needed
Publications Board meets
under adverse conditions
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Life would be sustained
Only recourse is anarchy
Complicated draff procedure explained
The 'stalling' trap
By JOHN STRIK' R and ANDREW SHAPIRO

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excludes the student from the
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Wayne Eads
waging i
Robert R Thonen
Editor In Chief
David Landt
Business Manager
a) -i the availability oi preinduction
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Title
Fountainhead, October 6, 1970
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
October 06, 1970
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.71
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39495
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