Fountainhead, June 22, 1970


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





ountainhead
and the truth shall make you free'
East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville. N. C
June 22.1970
i
By ROBGRINGLE
It would be difficult to live in
Greenville and not be aware of
the latest evening spectator
sport: fires.
;Ven our relatively isolated
university property was
surrounded by intrigue
jhursday night. 1 entered
Wright Auditorium rather late
my way to Fountainhead
es. A flashlight beamed on.
shining in my face. I walked
towards the source of light. The
flashlight mumbled something
about my identification. A
ampus policeman glanced at
. full-color l.D. card, and I
sed on.
minor hassle. I thought.
? u almost get used to such
things after a while. It is perhaps
; of our times that it didn't
occui to me anything out of the
rdinary had occured.
Later I came down stairs. The
inliceman unlocked the door
me. The sky was orange and
iky. Something exploded in
distance.
Fertilizer plant. Second fire
t.ir n
this week. Both about the same
time he informed me.
'Oh. Looks pretty big 1
more or less answered.
"This one's dangerous. People
could get killed. Then it would
be murder too
"Oh?"
"I'd hate to bo whoever
started these fires. Arson's a
federal offense. The FBI will
investigate and those guys know
what they're doing
I agreed they were indeed
thorough and walked down the
steps toward the library. A
police car stopped and shined a
spotlight in my face. The
spotlight asked me a few
questions. Told me there had
been a phone threat of fire on
campus and all the buildings
were being guarded.
1 managed to sneak to my ear
without further detection. I
drove toward the fire. Cars were
bumpcr-to-bumper moving in
the same general direction.
People were walking toward the
? ? I ? "?
FERTILIZER PLANT burns in background as firemen
take break from the heat
Fountainheadlines
Rhodes Brothers will perform see page 3
Greenville citizens hold Peace Vig.l every week see page 3
Mike McGee to coach All Stars with Graham see page 2
ACE workshop bridges gap see page 2
Revolution or Evolution? see page 11
Greek interviews see page 7
"Let It Be" screens elements of Beatle music see page 6
Elbow Room hosts trio see page 9
Wooles accepts position as director at ECU see page 4
orange light or sitting on their
porches in small groups talking
and pointing.
I finally managed to get up to
the fire and find a parking place.
The firemen were professional
and courageous. Some were
standing on top of tank trucks,
squirting water on the burning
tires. Others were standing
between large tanks and fire,
wetting down the area to
prevent the tanks from
exploding.
The crowd of onlookers
seemed to be in a festive mood.
"Next time I'm gonna set up
a hot dog stand someone said.
?Hell. I'll bring mah own and
roast 'em in the fahr someone
else replied. Another budding
entrepreneur suggested ice
cream or cold soda as being
more profitable.
-Wow. Wish I was stoned
came from another as he was
leaving.
"Should rainsomeone mutter
ed . "I ain't an atheist, but God
ain't helpin" out any
I walked back to my car. A
man was having trouble staiting
his car. I helped him get it
started.
"Where yah frum?" he asked.
I told him
"Things are going to get
wurse he informed me.
I asked him if he thought the
fires were planned.
"Yep. And there's going to be
fires every night, and things are
gonna get wurse between white
and black and this country's
gonna have a revolution before
it's over. I carry a gun and
knife he informed me, "and I
wuz in the arny in Green Berets
and I'll be ready
He told me l should buy a
gun, pointing at my hair as if to
prove his point "It's you that's
gonna get it first he said, "the
way you look. That long hair.
Any 'trouble and they'll come
after you first because of the
way you look"
As I drove away I wondered
if only certain people go to
watch fires, or if fires bring out
certain characteristics hidden in
each of us. It's probably an idle
question. If revolution by fire
comes, it won't matter much
one way or another
FIREMEN administer first aid to a fellow fire-fighter who
was caught by a wind change.
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Nixon says that while
he may not always agree with
what he reads in the newspapers
he recognizes an unfettered
press is a "guardian of
freedom
The President's words of
praise came Monday night
during informal remarks at a
White House reception for
members of the International
Federation of Newspapers.
Earlier in the day the
publishers' group had listened to
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
revew his criticism of some
elements of the nation's news
media.
The vice president, without
citing specific examples, said
some of the nation's most
influential newspapers and
television networks had
abandoned the practice of
"telling both sides of the
story
The President in his later talk
said it would be an unhappy
situation for the United States
"if we lived in a country where
we did not have that free
press
American government leaders
know their every decision will
"be held up to the closest
scrutiny and the most effective
possible criticism the
President added.
This, he said, "is essential to
the survival of freedom





?,? A????? -
Page 2. Kouiu.iinhc.id. Monday. June 22. 1970
Refrigerators delayed aq workshop bridges gap
fhe Orient; Issue ot the R ? "
The Orient; - the
Foui tainhead
cerning the S(
Si 5 rh(
as thost
s who went
rh?
? ! ck es
WUs N. '
. ? s ai
that they had aj
,ersai
Bob w ?sideni
;e was
g; ling the ? its
SOLUTION
The problem has " Ived
however, and the refrigerat
are nov here, in the possessi n
of SGA officials A part-tn
K. ? eei tor Mai Deei
, and he will b.
? ?m 12 30 until 1 30
?m 301 Wright
?
laredSteens
' 5 8 -6 2 6 2 d
FAULTY UNITS
5

- I
Stevens i
Whit ley ?'?? ????
-
t xn rente '
two hav
of the first sessi n. and I
who have them first session will
have tunity to r,
their rental.
Investigators probe fires
GREENVILLE. N.C 1AP1
rs are probing the
a fires in Greenville
Thursday night which resulted
?? ? -100 000 damage t
elementary sch I and a raili dd
ight stati ? facility The : -
were both reported within a
? h
Three il of to n fire
departments were .ailed in to
help fight the fires which
? imed the contt I i I rmer
athletic facility and storage
building at the Third Street
Elementary School and
destroyed buildings belonging
the Seaboard Coast Lii
Railroad.
Agents from the State Bureau
oi Investigation along with
officials from other state and
local law enforcement agencies
launched a probe to determine
if the fires were deliberately set.
Several oily containers were
found at the site of the school
fire.
It was the fifth fire to hit city
school units in the last seven
n nths. Over the past two years
five buildings in the Pitt County
school systems also have been
damaged by fire
Mike McGee to coach
All-Stars with Graham
By DAVE ITTERMANN
ECU Head Football Coach
Mike McGee will leave I
Chicago July 8 to begin
preparation for the College
All-Star game The game will be
played on Soldier's Field,
pitting the College All-Stars
ag3inst the World Champion
Kansas City Chiefs
McGee will join All-Star Head
Coach Otto Graham, the former
head c -? if the Washington
Redskins and the present head
. ach at the U S Coast Guard
Academy; and the former pro
stars. Willie Davis. Bobby Joe
Conrad. Prentis Gautt and Wait
Corey
Mike Phipps. the
All-American from Purdue, will
head the All-Stars. Other college
greats playing in the game will
be Dennis Shaw. Steve Owens
Mike Reid.and Terry Bradshaw
McGee said. "Pass protection
is most important The team
that functions best at this will
have a tremendous advantage, in
this 'no-holds-barred' gam
When askc .
McGee replied, it's no sh
order, but I'n sure we won't
disappoint .
s v t ion
Chi 11 I lion (ACE)
ii! Divisi ' l
Mate
D
(
I
at
? s
Honor society founded
The German Department has
recei I ? i stalled a new honoi
for students and
ited the charter members
Eta M .hapter if Delta Phi
Alpha, the national German
iet . was installed
? May 19 Special guests for
:ne were Dr Ricl
i inwpll Dean rts
See, . Mn I ap?
Wand
t ne 11-
pa rt menl
Wand
?
expressed hii great satisfacti i
with the founding of
honorary chapter in which he
sees a welc n . i academic
achievement.
Delta Phi Alpha recognizes
students who have achieved a
high level ol performance in
Germ ind who shi
except iona ii teresi ii I ?. ??
studies A high B average in
rman courses and a g
average are
ihip

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is the

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N . (tending
CONSULTANTS
I nsutants s ' the
Di I
I . Lai Methodist
Church. Dallas rex
n Scott Ji U.S :i Force,
Washingi DC; Leland
Vllsbi ? l ardinator ol
Physical 1 ducation. Greenville
Is: Dr tsa C Grant.
Chief. Chronic Disease Section,
Si ite Board oi Health. Dr Bill
H Ii mbe, Superintendent oi
Schools, Marion. S.C. Dr
Monnie Hedges. Professor oi
Psychology . Developmental
1 lation Clinic. ECU; and Dr
1) iglas R Jones. Dean. School
of 1 ication, ECU
Vccording to assistant dean
Research project
receives grant
Dr Warren A McAllister of
the Chemistry Department is to
direct a research project
concerning air pollution control.
The project was made possible
by n award of 58,580from the
Public Health Service
According to McAllister the
ECU research will focus on
transition metal chemistry ol
two common air pollutants or
the use ol catalysts to convert
toxics in the atmosphere to
n on-toxics
Panhellenics
hold workshop
The eight greek letter
- .nties at ECU, all members
? National Panhellenic Council.
recently held a workshop during
which the date for rush was
.d and new officers I i
the 191 scl year were
installed
Rush will begin Oct 31
?her than in January, as has
been the custom foi ?evei
vear Tie new time I i i i
a new Banhellenic
jp im which will be n a
ir trial basis
Mrs Frank exand :?- ol
Charlotte. National Panhellenic
? inference Area Advis i
I liege Panhellenics in North
( a r o 1 i n a and Virginia,
le w
I
N e w P a n h e
died were ! I ???
idenl Vickie L
president. Cameron Payne
ling secretary . Sherry
P r e s n e 11
ry Margarei I ni
? Mart Housi
chair B ' ? P
I Patl 1
ECU STUDENTS show their concern for captive U.S.
servicemen in North Vietnam by signing petition,
Relatii mship "Opp rtunitia
for P- I . . Chanj
"Relatii nship ???
Service . "Health
- a l
: ontinuing Education,
Garlan Bailey, two units credit
foi tort if K ate Renewal.
applicable to the 1975-80
renewal period, will be given
upon completion oi the
workship on June 3.
TOPICS EXPLORED
Topics being explored
include "The School and the
Public1 Tnderstanding the
( immunity, ' S t a 11
Relations Public
Service
Agent
Educat
Ph
Ac I ai ns ir(
available I niversitJ
dormitories participant
wishing ' . bul
most of the p ? ts wifl
commute
Adutt education grants
made for nation's poor
Twenty-one experimental
demonstration projects designed
to improve basic education
programs for poor,
undereducated adults will
receive S4.8 million in Federal
grants during 1970 1. HEW's
Office of Education announced
Fridav
The projects, authorized
under the Adult Education Act
of 1966. will be administered by-
State and local education
agencies, colleges and
universities, and other public
ana private non-profit agencies
in P States and the District oi
Columbia. Several programs are
ntinuations ol projects
previously funded
PROVISIONS
Typical projects provide for.
-Use oi college students
from poverty areas as teachers
of adult basic education to
teach illiterate residents oi
mountain areas in Appalachia.
-Improving the quality oi
adult basic education
instruction in eight States
having the largest precentage oi
functional illiterates by using
resources and faculties oi two
universities in each State.
i p g r a d i n g the State
Departments of Education and
imp loving skills ol local
teachers
MONOGRAPHS
D ? lent by a State
iniversity f n I graphs tor
. . by classroom teachers that
strati pplicatioi
rch ' ems in the
stitutions
Recruiti- -
of paraprofessionals I - Sttti
university. whidi ill ?
resources oi
inner-city comn inity l ?
us educai ???-?.
producing a I ind series o
in st ructional guides
teacher-training - "
-The second phase -? ?
experimental pt Vn
measure effects -??
and social educati i program
,n post-release ? ?J
educational achievemeiil
inmates in - "?-?
institutions
Journalism minor
Journalism has beer: pj-jj
Department and wUJ -
effect next fall ,
L Baker, h
Ira
r n ai i sn
teaches
delighted tthat hi ? ?
a minor u
many
enter the
practitioners
who will b dent
and a d v s
publications ,
??Both those
tremendous cha - lg do
prepared;
our best oo&W)
profession
trained pers nssns
Presently. Bxj e
journalism P? ad
English
another ir. ' savail?bl5
Some g , .
uillbe-TheP .
1
S ii - I
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s gap
:ern for captive U.S.
gning petition.
Kip "Opp ?
Prod - Change
:e gi ? ;ie$ "Healtl
as a Coramunicatw
t ' P'r
?
: ns art
able I niver$itj
itories : artk panu
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ute
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rces ? astinf - &&
cit community t( ??
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rimenta! p &'n
ire effects I idull ?
social educau n p'v?g
ost-release adjustmeni in
ational achiever!
ate, :r- - rrecll ?
utions
irnalism minor
urnaliw has been pjjejj
trtment ?nd !li
t next fall
, l Baker, wh(
let journalism ?y$.?
htedtthatECU ?
? students wh? ?
the profe2i0
titioners :
will be
'??
jcations
Both
tendous
arcd ' NC
best 1
ession the
led pen
resently. Ba
nalisn P? '
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on
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ty.
News
Monday. June 22 1970. Fountainhead. Page 3
Agnew criticizes Rhodes
JAC McCRACKEN, summa cum laude graduate of the
School of Music, is congratulated
First Fulbright scholar
ECU's first Fulbright scholar,
Jac McCracken, is a young man
who has been a budding,
promising and brilliant concert
pianist almost from the time he
began study of music at the age
of nine.
But still it was no easy road
to valedictorian of the ECU
class of 1970 and a summa cum
laude degree from the School of
Music topped by the prized
Fulbright award for a full year's
study in Italy
Now 22 years old, tall and
blond Jac McCracken of Oak
City. N.C paraphrases
Paderewski in telling about it.
Padercwski is supposed to have
said musical ability may require
some talent, but it's nine tenths
hard work and sometimes
requires practicing 18 hours a
day.
HARD WORK
McCracken kept no record of
his long hours of practice but
says "it's been a matter of
working very hard He adds.
"I've been playing in
competitions ever since I
began
His list of activities, awards
and honors is lengthy. A few of
them include winning an East
Carolina Merit Scholarship,
1966-70; performing the
Khachaturian Concerto with the
Charleston. S.C Symphony in
1968; seven performances of the
Liszt Concerto in E flat with the
North Carolina Symphony in
1969; the Ravel Left hand
Concerto with the ECU
Symphony in 1970: a full
fellowship as a Performing
Participant in the International
Bach Society Advanced Study
Summer session in 1969: thud
place winner in the national
finals of the National
federation o' Music Clubs
Student Musicians Auditions.
1969; and numerous other
competitions and recitals.
McCracken became East
Carolina's first male
valedictorian and led the
traditional acedemic procession
in Commencement exercises on
May 31.
VALEDICTORIAN
For the past seven years he
has been a pupil of Dr. Robert
Carter, Professor of Music,
having started under Dr. Carter's
tutelage as a sophomore in high
school. In 1966 he was
valedictorian of his high school
graduating class.
Last January he began study
with Byron Janis of New York.
This study will continue
through the summer.
In addition to his practice,
McCracken expects to spend
some of the summer "brushing
up" on Italian before leaving for
Rome in August In Italy he will
study at the Conservatory of St.
Cecilia and be taught by several
noted concert pianists including
Guido Ngosti.
He contemplates a number of
possible piano competitions in
Europe.
The Fulbright-Hays study
awards under government
sponsorship are reciprocal
agreement for study abroad
with other governments. As a
Fulbright recipient, he will
represent the United States
abroad, says Dr. John B. Ebbs.
Professor of English and campus
representative for the
Fulbright-Hays Fellowship
Foundation.
Joe Maynor. director oi
ECU's News Bureau, is resigning
his post to accept the position
of News Manager for WSOC-TV
and Radio in Charlotte.
Maynor. who came to the
Nous Bureau last year.
expressed regrel at leaving. "I've
enjoyed my associations here
and have made many friends 1 11
hate to leave
Russian urges world peace
States and the Soviet Union will
cooperate inactions that favor
world peace.
-One such action is that ol
forbidding the transfer by gift
sales of jet planes, bombs.
WASHINGTON (AP) Dr.
Linus Pauling, accepting
Russia's Lenin Peace Prize, has
urged the United States and the
Soviet Union to ban arms
transfers to poor nations.
In his speech at the Soviel
Embassy Monday night. Pauling.
69. said he hoped "the United
or sales oi ci ??
tanks guns, ammunition to the
loss developed nations. he
added.
By HUGH MORGAN
Associated Press Writer
DEI ROIT (AP) Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew
criticized a young member of
the President's Commission on
Campus Unrest last week and
said if remarks attributed to
Joseph Rhodes Jr. are accurate
he should resign.
Rhodes. 22. a junior fellow at
Harvard University was
appointed Saturday by
President Nixon to serve on the
commission headed by former
Republican Gov. William W.
Scranton of Pennsylvania.
PROVOKED VIOLENCE
In an interview published
Monday, the New York Times
quoted Rhodes as saying the
Nixon administration has
provoked campus violence.
"The kids have got to feel
someone has the power to really
investigate the grave charges
being brought against the
government
Commenting on the interview
at a news conference. Agnew
said: "Rhodes lost no time in
letting the public know how he
intends to utilize his new post
to lift him from obscurity of an
unpublicized position to
national notoriety
Agnew emphasized his
remarks about Rhodes should
not be interpreted as an implied
criticism of the President. He
also emphasized that his
criticism of Rhodes was based
on what he had read in the
newspaper.
?'Rhodes showed a
transparent bias that will make
him counterproductive to the
work of the commission the
vice president said.
"Unless the Times reporter is
in error. Mr. Rhodes should
resign
Rhodes was quoted in the
Times' interview as saying he
feels he has a "solemn
responsibility" to prevent
further deaths on college
campuses.
STOP KILLING
"I'll do anything even talk
to the devil if I can stop
people from being killed
Rhodes was quoted as saying by
the Times.
Agnew was in Detroit to
speak at a Republican party
fund-raising dinner. He told
4.000 Republicans at the
SlOO-a-plate dinner Monday
night that a group he calls the
"emotionaries" is trying to
corral the right to dissent during
this year's elections.
He said rational dissent and
the proper use of rhetoric are
required to bring "progressive
partisanship" to the campaigns.
"We are entering our
traditional period of intensified
partisanship before an election
campaign. Whether that period
will be productive of intelligent
challenge and debate, or sterile
and conducive to angry
shouting, is a test that we as a
people will have to take he
said.
Greenville citizens hold
Peace Vigil every week
There will be a "Vigil for
Peace" every Wednesday from
noon to 1 p.m. at the United
States Post Office on Greene
Street.
The Greenville United
Citizens for Peace, led by Mrs.
Lou Paul of Greenville,
announced that they intend to
continue the vigil each week
until all U.S. troops are
withdrawn from Cambodia.
The vigils began as silent
protests against the war. but
they are not now silent vigils.
The group invites anyone to
come by and discuss the subject
with them. Leaflets and other
meeting of the First
Congressional District Voter
Education Project voted
unanimously to support the
Greenville vigil.
People come from as far away
as Kinston to stand with the
group every week. Twelve to 25
persons have attended the vigil
every week, including one
woman in her 70s who has not
missed one of the six or seven
vigils to date.
The Greenville United
Citizens for Peace, invite the
public to participate in their
efforts to peacefully end the
war. Students as well as older
information are passed out by members of the community are
the group during the hour. active in the group.
The Elizabeth Citv executive
Mrs Dodd started Rhodes Brothers will perform
first Father's Day
By RICHARD ZAHLER
Associated Press Writer
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP)
Sunday was Father's Day, and
Mrs. John Bruce Dodd, who
conceived it 60 years ago, says
"I am just thrilied" with the
way the idea caught on.
Mrs. Dodd. 88. even approves
of the commercialization of
what she originally saw as a
spiritual occasion:
"One of my special ideas was
to have gifts foi fathers. Fathers
are always great gift-givers and
t h e appreciate the
reciprocity.
Mrs. Dodd. a published poet
and writei a painter and an
artist in ceramics, received the
inspiration for Father's Day
June 5 1910. her fathers
birthday.
Her father moved to the
Northwest in the 1880s from a
farm near Jenny Lind. Ark. Mrs.
Dodd was 6. oldest of five
children, when her mother died
in 1898.
-Our father came in and told
us our mothei had gone away
she recalled man interview.
-From that time on he was a
father and mothei both
(continued on page 5)
The Rhodes Brothers, a vocal
and comedy trio, will perform
the first concert for the 1970
summer school session at 8 p.m.
Thursday on the Mall. The
group is backed by a powerful
seven-piece band.
This successful trio operates
their own nightclub in Miami.
Florida. When they are not at
their club, the Rhodes Brothers
are either performing on
university campuses or
appearing as guests on
television.
They have been featured on
the Tonight Show the Merv
Griffir. Show, the Mike Douglas
Show the the Mike Douglas
Special with Johnny Mathis.
This summer, the Rhodes
Brothers will begin their own
television show.
The Rhodes Brothers perform
all kinds of music from hard
rock to the soft easy-listening
type.
THE RHODES BROTHERS will perform on the mall
Thursday at 8 p.m.
(CM
111





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Wooles accepts position as director at ECU
v
DEGREES
ft
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.
Dr ft
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Mass . he
asters
B ' ?
is PhD in
the 1 niversity
K M
? MCV, h;s .
included
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Campus Hi-lites
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undergo . ? .
and the
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" " I I .
a r t i c i e s
p h a r n i ac .
reports
1
condensed news briefs
Scholarship award made
? ltl
i for It 1" - '
micron Pi achapter
' "rrwiddic ' Andrew
Tl- - ?? ? - ? -For. Md . th rority
- aJ ? r
' ' ! ? " . Zeta P
: the :h a p t e l t igfcthe Pa award i the
besi iverag - - - rating
- ? -2.7( arr ng the soroi
MeSSCr i SCI " ' the - "
School Music receives grant
The award was given b the
I men Musk Project
Washington, DC which is
jnder the auspices of the Musk
Educators' National Conference
Scl
55.2325 for th
?- ' ? ping its
??'?
in c rianship
Love appointed to be chairman
Union displays photography
ft rki r ph ' graphv
Elizat - gen Waters
traduate student
exhibit ?e:e j let the
iirecti : Frank D EUer,
Arthur R Rasch and Willis M
S:e'?er.i - members 1 the
. mge f the ca pu si it ?
-V r'ese Mrs Waters a
fc'atei H 4 grad -direct : f the Tar Hee
: East at lina : it aTwirling and Cheerkading
bache . nan ?- it! at: a m p j and a m a j : el: t
err phasi culpturemstruci r and j idge
. ? e itemi presented
D: Sash ft Love has
r e e r. a p p o i n t e d
. ? f the Department
Child Devel ptnent and Family
Re f the School
I . - imics
Dr Love .ores to ECU from
F rida State Universit where
he received the PhD in Child
Devei ipment in March
As chairman, Dr Love will
.rer?;se the five-member
faculty and the two nursery
programs in the department
which offers both gri-ate and
undergraduate -esrees He will
also coordinate the
interdisciplinary graduate
program and supervise faculty
and graduate research.
Dr. Love recieved the BA and
MA degrees from Baylor
University He was a member of
the Special Education
Department faculty of
Northwestern State College.
Natchitoches. La . and
administrator oi the Special
Education Branch Center in
Shreveport La prior to his
recent graduate work at FSU
Professor attends program
D- Carlt in Heckrotte,
; ite pi fess i f Biol g. is
cheduled I itte . the 1970
Bi pace Techi r- Training
P- gran at NASA ft,
Stati Wall r Island. Va
ugust 3-21.
According lr. Patrir.
Da ighen ? bi gy r art
kesmai the pi zran
Lost:
Male Silver-Grey
PERSIAN CAT
wearing a blue
collar.
REWARD $100.00
Last seen around
Cotanche and
Eleventh.
George Rountree
406 E. Eighth St.
- -pose is to give life scientists
from government installations,
universities and research
nizations "an opportunity
bee roe acquainted with the
: engineering and
Nsary to plan
and c n d u c t biological
.nmenis in space The
ft a : - Island station is
prin arily a launch facility for
n d u c t i n g scientific
? ?? the said.
Dr Hecki tte. whose
resesearch interests are snake
siotogy and behavior.
received the PhD degree from
the Univcsitv of Illinois
Announcements
GRADING SVSTE1
The Gr F a c u 11 j
adopted a re grading teti
on May 18 wl
effect Fall Q
This systen en :
grades of Her -
Fail (F), Deferred
Incomplete h
GRANT
The School f Nui g
been awarded a S3 454 grant
from the Pubbc Heahn Service
The grant is to re ised for th?
training of nurses for th? faekl
of pubbc health
NEW OFFICERS
The Zeta Ps; o ' phi
Omicron Pi. a roritv
recentlv electee new R ersfH
the 197071 acadei yen
Officers are Myrna P?
president. She Spruffl
treasurer, and ft -
H ward naing
secretary
These new tie th?
girls to men' e
sorority's
Council
MOVIES
UIJ
Castle Keer
Columbia wa
starring Burt La
Patrick O'Neal
8 p.m. Wednesday
Auditorium
The Detective' -
a drama from 2
Fox. stars Frank v
Lee Remick and
at 8 p.m. Fndav i
-
? Uld
- -
ftngrit
entury
StacCluAi
w Drive-in
Cleaners & Launderers
HOUR
Cor 10th & Cotanche Sts Greenville. N C
1 r Clean,ng 3 Hr. Shx-t S
Greenville's Only Bridal Shop
ride
?
(j eautjful
ftnu fyJA aA 3cW (Av
230 J?EENfVILLE BLVD , SUITE 2 ? OlAL 756-1744 ? GREENVILLE NORTH CAROLIMA 27834
Playclothes, and Pants, and Pretty Party Somethings for liruies and After iwt: and Inings





Monday. June 22. 1970. Fountainhead. Page 5
?:?:?:?:??:?:??:????
x-xWxx-xXvX-x-xm
Summer Theater
productions set
ECU students will be able to
see all the productions of the
East Carolina Summer Theatre
at a substantial saving, it was
announced.
In making the announcement.
Summer Theatre General
Manager James Slaughter stated:
"We want the students on this
campus to sample and take
advantage of all the color, fun
and excitement that our
professional musical theatre has
to offer. To that end we have
established a special price for
university students of $2 per
show
Salughter added that the
special rate represents a
substantial saving over the S4.90
per show price to the public.
Students may purchase
tickets singly or for the whole
season, beginning at 10:30 a.m.
June 29 at the Mediums box
.U'ice.
The Summer's bill includes:
?'Hello. Dolly - July 8 -July
Pirates of Penzancc"
July 20-Julv 25.
Th.
M'
Julv 27
George
August I.
"A Funny ThingHappend on
the Way to the Forum" - August
? - August 8.
"Man of La Mancha"
August 10 - August 15 and
Matinees August 12 and August
Father's Day
(continued from page 3)
The day after her father's
birthday in 1910 the Spokane
Ministerial Alliance accepted
Mrs. Dodd's proposal to set
aside one day each year for a
tribute to father's.
The day was celebrated
locally for six years, then
received national attention in
I') 16 when President Woodrow
Wilson officially opened a
Father's Day church service in
Spokane.
Cardboard Flaps
Q? DHD HDIMr.l C ?Mkrtjr" r.mnr ki; rl I I ITlKl ill II ' !fY? VXP WAtt
By ROBGRINGLE
There is a disturbing tendency among record reviewers and
listeners to over classify music, to hang labels on certain types of
music.
Mention soul music, for instance, and most people at ECU think
of top 40 radio and relatively straight, clean-cut people doing the
bop while drinking beer.
Mention underground rock, and most people think of FM radio,
long hair, incense, candles and pot. The value of music, as music, is
lost along the way.
People, for instance, who really dig Janis Joplin don't listen to
Aretha Franklin, and vice versa. Music is the closest thing to a
universal language we have, and should be judged as music first. The
labels and classification of music should act as a clarification, not a
standard for judgment.
ACAPPELA
Now the Persuasions are. first and foremost, five talented singers
who've been around for awhile. "Acappcla" (Straight RS6394) is
the name of their album. It means, basically, sung without
instrumental accompaniment. (If you can't afford instruments, you
had better be satisfied with your voice or start looking for another
line of work.)
Maybe you'll get together with some others and start sounding
real soulful. Maybe the Man will "discover" you some day and offer
you a recording contract. Maybe you accept. Maybe in the studio
the Man will say hey-that's outasight but if you want to make it big
we gotta clean up your material a little bit. Add a little brass and a
violin here and there So you cut a record and after all the
processing and additions it sounds like a hundred other songs, and
not much like you anymore at all.
The Persuasions never made it this way. Frank Zappa offered
them a record contract, and Frank Zappa isn't the Man. One thing
he promised the Persuasions was total artistic freedom. The result is
a fine example of acappela on record.
NO INTRUSIONS
The Persuasions sing soul music their way with no intrusions
from slick record producers or weary studio instrumentalists.
Perhaps the most successful cut on this album is. surprisingly
enough "Old Man River" recorded live with an audience of
enthusiastic brothers and sisters. Th s old show tune gives one of the
finest bass singers anywhere. James Hayes, a chance to solo.
The Other songs are almost as hackneyed and familiar as ' Old
Man River but they deserve your attention. These soulful
renditions of old songs are in many ways essential to an
understanding of the true talent that lies beneath the quagmire o
other soul groups who are commercially-hyped, over-produced and
shamelessly white-washed.
Back in the early 60s synthetic folk music captivated the US ot
A Dozens of well-scrubbed musicians with acoustic guitars, levis
and V-neck sweaters cut hundreds of albums and cajoled audiences
to "sing along" The popularity of the movement was doomed from
US TheSidiom was limiting, the supply of traditional folk songs
anything but limitless. After a time, audiences tired of the seemingly
endless supply of New-Plastic Ramblers, or whoever.
introducing
COL. SANDERS' RECIPl g J A I
its finger (idirigood
X$Jj
FREE DELIVERY
on orders of $10
or more
East Fifth Stn-ct Ext.
GREENVILLE, N.C.
Phone 752-5184
"their" songs by mumbling ' Next we wanna do fer yew a number
we learnt from an ol" song by Woody or whatever.
Record buyers soon started hunting for the original versions, and
record companies always on the lookout for ways of making easy
money, gathered together all their old 78s, "rechanneled" them for
stereo listening.
Many "folk singers" faded back into the woodwork where they
unquestionably belonged Others, those with real talent and creative
writing abilities prevailed. Among these Simon and Garfunkel.
Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell and Joan Baez.
Perhaps because these creative talents have prevailed and
prospered, record companies try to find and record other "creative'
folkies. At any rate, record companies periodically push
"refreshing" "original" folkish talents onto the unsuspecting public.
JILL WILLIAMS
"Jill Williams (RCA Victor LSP 4314). songs and lyrics by Jill
Williams, is fairly representative of where the "new" folkies are at:
highly introspective lyrics of an apparently autobiographical nature,
highly repetitive music. It all adds up to cuteness and little else.
Essra Mohawk is. on the other hand, anything but cute sounding
or pseudo-folkish. Her album "Primordial Lovers" (Reprise R6214)
has an underlying tough bitchiness. She always keeps on top of her
material, exercising a control which enables her to avoid the
theatrical excesses of. say, Janis Joplins.
Miss Mohawk's voice is an instrument of destruction and
salvation in itself. Witness "I Have Been Here Before" for example:
a song which slowly builds to a virtual orgasmic release, and then
fades back into a bitter sweet sadness of tone, the perfect musical
counterpart to post-coital depression:
Please don't mind my bite
Flesh is out of sight
The voice snaps and growls. A few minutes later, a sad world
weary lady reiterates:
1 have been here before
Now I'm here with you
in a drawn out voice hitting notes in unexplored territory
somewhere between sharps and flats.
Each song is a complex mixture of musical changes. "Looking
Forward To The Dawn" begins with a pure, crisp, vibrating soprano
voice, and moves with remarkable ease into a broad gospel idiom
with lyrics which make all the difference:
To tear you to pieces
Is knowing the pain
And the joy that is Jesus.
"Lion On The Wing" is perhaps at the heart of this strangely
beautiful album, and perhaps explains all the bitter sweet
ambiguities:
The sound of your breath when we make love
Is the music I like the best
And it makes me wonder
Why 1 ever make love with anyone but you.
Oh yes the instrumental back up varies from Essra and her
piano to Essra and organ, electric guitar, vibraphone sax. french
horn trumpets, electric bass, drums, trombone, and oboe all ot
which might intimidate a lesser talent, but not Essra Mohawk
I refuse to attempt to catagorize Essra Mohawk s music. It is not
rock jazz. folk. soul, blues, classic, country, nor eastern. It defies
stereotyped labels; but should. I think, appeal to anyone who enjoys
Primordial Lovers" will wear well over the years and I think
you'll return to it again and again long after you have grown tired of
other recordings.
By DWAINSKEEN
If vou are looking for something different and refreshing in
music "Paul Beaver and Bernie Krause might have just what you are
k ng for in a Wild Sanctuary. (W.B. 1850) is definitely different
The most notable factor in making this record different is the use o
the Moog Synthesizer as the principle instrument. However the use
of environmental sounds, such as birds, running water, and ocean
waves have contributed greatly to the uniqueness of this cord
bag then vou will really dig In A Wild
(continued on page 6)
If variety is your
I
$





.r0m?. ?iiUK? IBm
id. V lav. June 2-
Let it Be' screens elements of Beatle music
By rob gringle
;
-
-
E
?
raben
gthestai
gtva)
? ft kinf
SEQUENCES
FILMS

HI o)
i
-
f the
: f the Sal
stai as
? ?
Wai
-
?? rig like
pi - aS Such
? ?? hows ii x ted
pa nces. exa
-1 - ?? i I " :reat i
IK
"Let It Be" c i have been a
net back' statement
The sequential movement ol the
unflinchingly shows the
. . lans getting together
with their rough musical ideav
king them over with one
?her. playing disjointed riffs.
f j a irking, always
impi tying I ha ideas until
the become whole songs
MUSIC SESSION
The film takes the audience
a music session. The
lives the drudger)
flare-ups. and confusions o the
Beatles We experience ho
beatle music comes about We
live the joyous breakthroughs
hen the musical pieces fall into
place and a complete song
emerges Now e're told the
Bea 11
'? v
musical wil
their pen i
the fabric I
ideas
agei
n? inoi
ngei i rt
; - ? ??
.
SAD PORTRAYAL
Seel
documei I
protra) al ol
.id havt ?
11 i wei ?-?
find the -
treasure it. Soi
the ? ?
defeated the -
purpose ? ? gs and
film b
a stud. ? . plavjnj
ell togeth
Cardboard Flaps
Ice

aqe
Sanctuan There is everything from jazz to the s) ind f
2001 A Spact Odyssey Between these extrer - find lv.
contentporai) music that Lawrence Welk fans could
music that would make native Caribbeans jeal hard
core blues that releases a full effect b having a i intair rtrean
trickling in the background
If you are f those who say today's mu going to pot
(no pun intended). tr In A Wild Sanctu) it I
everyone.
By ROBERT McDOWELL
Basket of Ligfit, The Pentangle (Repnse 6372 i
The Pentangle arrived vuth the brightest
England's folk groups Their previous albums h -
If Basket i Light has any fault, it lies in trying t - pete it
the group's initial successes
st half the selections n this alb
arranged for accousi i I vocal blend. "Once 1 Had i
ke-Wake Dirse "The Cucl
?H
.
beautifully updated h the Pen tangle's superb n i
Eacl - ?up was well-ki
the Pentangle I I. Bert Jansch (bai
. s earl) c n tions Johi Rei
h in demai II tudi orl
Terrv k (drums and gtocl '?' "
Dai . 11 ? ? - I I ' I wei
? ? i
(, Round the R -?-?
J ? . : ? ? ' i
teiev ? ? ? for "Take 1
by difl ' ? ges from 58 1
Idle and back to 58
"Tra n Song Iwhicl the title
? -l . of the steam train
Conley provides guide
for Richardson fellows
.
by DAVID OVERMAN
r he N rth Cai nj
hip Fellow I rmerl
? ? ? as the Richai Is ?
i indati appears, front all
a ail able sources, to be
:essful at ECU Since its
mcej ? ? 1968. the S20.000
is av. arded 35
fell ?
remaining
at an)
participating
UNC and V -
Dr Albert I
Graduate Si
S '
. . HOUR Stfllll SERVIO
? I HOt RCU iNINC
Hour Glass Cleaners
DJUVI INCDFBSERVia
uth-nJ (rin s?. Comei cro?Fi
CompkteU??dryMDO'Cle?MitS





Monday, June 22. 1970. Fountainhead. Page 7
Greek Interviews
By WALTER WHITTEMORE
This article was originally
intended to provide Greeks an
opportunity to learn what
people think about ECU's social
fraternities and sororities.
Unfortunately, the majority of
people interviewed declined
permission to use their names.
Despite this unexpected
development, there were several
worthwhile and interesting
observations made which bear
reporting. The ones which
follow of course are those which
were most frequently
mentioned.
People generally agreed that
social fraternities and sororities
provide certain benefits to
students. These of course are in
the form of companionship and
friendship. One professor noted
that students often come t
ECU without a single friend or
campus. Joining a fraternity oi
sorority often provides a ready
solution to this loneliness.
A graduate student pointed
out that Greeks make other
contributions on campus.
Notably, these are the
contributions made to that
mythical creature, "school
spirit" It was pointed out that
Greeks never go unnoticed at
athletic contests, that they are
very active during Homecoming,
and that they are responsible for
many big dances.
However, most people would
grant social fraternity and
sororities credit for little else.
When asked about Greek
community projects, one Senior
(continued on page 8)
Are there typical fraternity men?
. , m
By JIM TEAL
Will Rogers used to preface
his droll comments on Congress
with the excuse. "All I know is
what I read in the papers
Depending solely on the press
for knowledge of college
fraternities does not tell the
whole story.
Too often, with the
fraternity, as with any other
traditional institutions, printed
news is not news. Journalists
tend to play up collegiate
high-jinks, implying that all
Maternities are frivolous.
Is there such a thing as a
"typical fraternity man?'
According to traditional
concepts, the youth who joins a
Greek-letter society is forthwith
subjected to group pressures
whuh turn him into a
stereotyped conformist in his
dress, speech, habits even
thinking.
TRUE CONCEPTS
Sadly enough, these concepts
arc true to some extent. It is
with these concepts in mind
that the conclusion can be
brought forth: As they exist
now, fraternities are dead.
What the fraternity must
offer the college man today is
not just a social center, not just
a ?snobbish" group, calling
themselves the socially elite.
Fraternities must re-assess
themselves, the ultimate goal
being "that of providing for its
members an opportunity to
preserved their own identities and
their individuality, which,
regretfully, is becoming
increasingly difficult in this era
of multi-university and the
"computerized student They
furthermore must condition
themselves to stimulate the
intellectual as well as the social
MODERNIZE
During the surge oi
free-thinking that has become so
popular on campuses today
(ECU is no exception). Greek
systems have been slow to
"modernize As a result
memberships have slumped, and
ideals have become clouded.
With the introduction of drugs
(marijuana, emphetarmnes, etc.)
college men have found it
burdensome to conform to the
strict regulations imposed by
their brotherhood. The typical
beer busts" are becoming
extinct
The past year has seen a rapid
increase in hair lengths, often
accompanied with beards,
among fraternity members. This
too is conformity: however, it is
the moral and intellectual ideals
that go along with this
conformity that now must be
added. The ultimate survival or
death of the fraternity system
will depend upon their ability to
challenge the individual.
providing him with a means to
achieve scholarship,
brotherhood and a sense of
relevance to college life.
EXPENSIVE
The luxury o' a fraternity is
an expensive one. National and
chaptei dues normally involve at
least ten percent o' the total
expenses in college life. To sa
that fraternities are cheaper than
independent social activities is
an outright lie. The fact is
however, that fraternities
remain a selective group of men
to share their interests. After all.
all societies arc selective with
individuals tending to associate
with those people who are more
his peers. In this aspect.
fraternities are "typical
Fraternity chapters being
composed of humans are
fallable and often imperfect. In
this respect they are not unlike
colleges or churches or
governments. Most fraternities,
like most persons, could do
better. As a social institution
fraternities probably will not
die, at least not in the near
future, but in order to grow and
produce they must change.
They can no longer sit idly and
e.xpect to prosper.
No epithets
for frats
By PENNY BENNETT
"A bunch of fraternity men
in their Mustangs! In the
intelectual hip world of
California, there is no more
scathing epithet imaginable. A
bunch of fraternity men in
their Mustangs. Just savor it. Oh
Mario, and Dylan, and Joan
(Continued on page 8)
Sororities provide new
shine for new decade
By BECKY NOBLE
Now that we have a new
decade before us. let's take out
our old treasures and buff the
dull tarnish off the 60s until our
ideas and institutions shine with
a new glow for the 70s.
Our sororities have a new
shine for the 70s. but it wasn't
an overnight thing.
The changes that have
occurred and will continue to
occur in sororities are the same
changes that all college students
have undergone and will
continue to undergo.
Their opinions have become
more liberal, and they no longer
submit to the standards of an
older generation without
question.
The days are fading fast when
Miss Sally Sorority would only
appear in public dressed in her
Papagallo shoes her McMullen
blouse, her Ladybug skirt, thai
neat little gold bracelet and her
hair combed perfectly.
Now she can make it to class
in her sandals, bells, a T-shirt
and with her hair flvina in the
Tim Mills
Randy Dixon
Donnie Dixon
Jonny Weatherington
?? TOJR?
Barber Shop
752 3318
A & P SHOPPING CENTER E. 10th ST.
GREENVILLE. N. C.
things gO
Jth
Coke
Coca-Cola Bottling Company, Inc.
Greenville, N.C.
breeze.
And there are thousands of
independents who mirror this
same change.
Yes. sororities have changed,
but only the way everyone else
has changed.
They still have their same
ideals and goals to which every
sister, upon initiation, binds
herself.
These ideals entail such
easiersaid-than-done equalities
as tolerance, sisterhood,
scholarship, and personal
integrity.
Any organization entails
responsibility.
During college anyone who
adds to the task of maintaining
good grades the responsibility of
being loyal to and working for a
sorority builds her character,
and thus has a strong base on
which to stand in our working
society.
Working for a sorority
(Continued on page 8)
SALES
AND SERVICE
Open until 9p.m.
daily
STARR
BEATON
CHEVROLET
Highway 70 West
Kinston
Phone 523-4123
1





.??? fc-fMi?ii-s av?Wf-? ?
Page 8. Founi v
Page 8 Fountamneaa i nuj j ? ? " A - A - ?
Greek ramblings Sororit.es require co-operation
if Thi sampling studc .veraii quality point but such
? ?
H
?
A,
.
n a I
STUDENT NEEDS
?es a
?? " ?
eht I
V, king for a s
, : ? ? another s
h e s p e r a t i o i
. best
, for self. 1
'?
I
verall quality point
? Greek women is 2 6,
whereas the overall women's
average is 2.4
RESTRAINT
Man times working foi a
s roritv involves curbing youi
and restraining your
actions, remembering "my
actions reflect not only on me.
but also on my sorority
Many people believe such
Greeks spend allowance to be hip
? p coolness that surrounds the
?OI It) freak) ? jre sev hi Why W. 1 ?
, ?that 1 w
ting 3'? acid cubes? heads
? 1 don't
? . I eai I;
i clothes a ' '?)
I 1 mighi
ket (like K
K I
? . that
1
? j out
. ? "
n v I reek reai
COOLNESS
irse j
vitri lie ab it it isn't the
e the Greeks, like
vy the a ?'
Be independent this summer and make money too!
Sell and set up unique new product called
The Pleasure Pagoda
Excellent profit selling independently through us.
Please contact or call collect:
MR ART ANTHONY
SALES MANAGER
BAUGHMAN OSTER INC
Box 368
Taylorville, Illinois 62568
Phone '2171 824 3305
;oolneSS that surrounds the
rdon the expression
hippies " The fact thai th
people are hip makes the
"straights" a little uneasy. like.
what am I n issing out on'1 What
they know that 1 don't ' The
hip life style ? relaxed.
the flow And you
gCl ?? ? , ? . times that
. arc feeling "Ma the is
thing And if aren't one
? . . better not try to look
straight is a straight is
a straight " And so on Hut I
hope that just a minority ol
ido-hippies
COOL IS HIP
The point is. everybody
(except the absolute creeps)
wants to be part of what is cool
md oi camp is cool is hip
Hip is long hair and beads and
feet and the whole bit. But
it also means . ; the
ca ises I free i ?m. and rights.
rj taring about the
n dividuality of others. It isn't
I a lot of trappings and
tie-dyed T-shirts and pretending
be something you aren't
Wl ? say that alter all the
Rushing and Beer Parties and
Pin getting and the whole
aking mess there can't be real
human beings underneath? It
iust t likely
University Book Exchange
Off Campus Book Store
offers you new and used textbooks
at a tremendous savings
528 South Cotanche
restraint is
beneficial to a person's career
Sororities help men gro
socially also beca i? ?:?
so mans new .
I he so ;
different they i , vave
sim liar goals interests
because each I is
organization n th I
closely it . ? ? ? hls
standards m life
Through this ,
small circle
into a .
thousand ' I
the country
EIGHT MILLION
There fJOO
chapters
nties in V
with a total me p of
around eight mil
alumni memben
(j reeks wl
the acaden .
active in
majority of the v.
on the executh
judiciary K i ? i
lent go
whereas only
women tudenl
Not only
. ed the
hae alsohel
such ways ting foi
the heart, tubers
Dimes, and cerebra
helping n
financially and givinf
them
Each s rority
philanthn
sear
!
SURVEY
Bai?
? a that
A recent sun
I ek Excl
Creek meml
persistence t -
colleges and n ?
nationa ??'?;
fraternities, only '
the male si I
only 28 per cent ol
?
In sch ols "
?9 pei '
"
nties
grad late.
s . ? r i t i e s
treasures
basic material 1
change when the trei
because they
people, and p.
. tl ?
?
Wahl- Coates
principal
named
Ed
Dr. Rexl I Y
late, h
ncioal
-
d r 1
I mentary
ing sear
1' ? . r is i ?
h ead '
Departmei l ?
. eg ?
.ma
A me
Kappa and - ?
ganizatii
" ident of the N
p r e
English reachen
I to 1?






pointed
Richardson Foundation funds program
(continued from page 6) scholarships, grants or loans, as Carolina Leadershin Institute.
Monday, June 22. 1970. Fountainhead, Page 9
of business and director of the
leadership Fellows at FXU.
attributes the success of the
program here to several factors.
"We kept an eye on the other
schools said Conley, and
learned from their weaknesses.
:or instance, UNC spent all
their money on administration
and left too little for the
students themselves
The program here is very
unstructured with practically no
"chain of bureaucracy. The
ijtimale success or failure of the
program rests with the student
participants themselves.
GRANT
The Leadership Fellows
program itself was orginally
funded by a three-year grant
from the Smith Richardson
Foundation. Presently it
receives funds from Burlington
Industries. Duke Power co
North Carolina National Bank
and Wachovia Bank, in addition
to the. Richardson Foundation.
The Foundation has no stated
purposes or rigid goals except
those of "leadership selection
and training nevertheless, both
the students and the companies
derive mutual benefit from the
program.
The Institute awards no
scholarships, grants or loans, as
such. Instead it offers its
student selectees a chance to
work in an internship program
each summer in a field of their
own choosing. Jobs range from
research, social work and
writing to blueberry picking and
community organizing.
JOBS
According to one participant.
"These jobs give you a chance
to do something you really want
to do for a summer, rather than
sit on your ass behind a desk
from nine to five everyday
During the year, students
plan as many educational trips
to various points in the country
as funds will allow. Last year
excursions were made to
Boston. New York and
Washington, D.C. Weekly
dinners were also held, among
other things, to allow students
to air their problems and
grievances.
QUALIFICATIONS
How does one qualify for
acceptance into the Leadership
Fellows? Initially, Conley
compiles the high school records
of all prospective ECU freshmen
in order to spot potential
leaders. The chosen few are
further screened by the Board
of Trustees of the North
Carolina Leadership Institute,
with final acceptance coming
after a personal interview with
the trustees. Their criterion for
judgment is based primarily on
the applicant's potential for
leadership, based on his past
record.
CHANGES
Having undergone several
changes, the program now
concentrates on freshmen and
sophomores because nearly all
summer internship programs are
restricted to juniors and seniors
and this gives students a chance
to develop from the moment
they enter college.
SEE COUNSELOR
Any students, especially
freshmen, are encouraged to
talk with Conley in his office in
Rawl Building if they are
interested in the Leadership
Fellows program, regardless of
whether or not they received a
letter of invitation. Many
potential leaders cannot be
spotted before entering college,
so if one has a feeling that
college is more than merely
going to class, studying, and
hoping for a decent grade, then
perhaps there is a place for him
among the North Carolina
Leadership Fellows.
Elbow Room hosts trio
By DAVE ITTERMANN
Want a smooth, easygoing.
Virgin Island experience? Make
it down to the Elbow Room and
give a listen to the Jay
McCracken Trio. Their
diversified program has
sophistication and talent plus.
This group is trying to start
something in Greenville that no
one else has had the balls to do.
They put a brand of rhythm on
"Going out of My Head
"Light My Fire "Hey Jude
"Theme from A Man and A
Woman" and the "Theme from
Romeo and Juliet" that keeps
your foot tapping even after the
number is over.
Jay McCracken, head of the
group, plays drums in a way
that reaches that maximum
sound level without infringing
upon the other instruments. Ed
Watkins. piano and lead vocal,
gets through to the most avid
acid-rock fan, but maintains the
smoothness needed for
"Sunny
Bruce Bangley, lead trumpet,
does a couple of solos that let
the music come to visit you.
Last, but needed the most, is
Ron Alligood. bassman. Without
Alligood the meat in the
arrangements wouldn't be there.
ECU can claim all four as
Music majors, but their heads
are in a different place. This
group doesn't play for you; they
talk to you. (And besides they
told me they'd give me a beer.)
Karen Gandy
Where are you?
Join the iJQ Crowd
Pizza, inn
491 Greenville Blvd.
(264 By -Pass)
DINE INN or TAKE OUT
Call Ahead For Faster Service
Telephone 576 9991
" 1
bix RpcV Kfttv
re.sV
WvS.
W?,??. CwsMe (x"
CJ?
A ok fchffl $K)1
?:?
M
" ??.
A&i
i
tf
- .
t ??
?rjt
JAY McCRACKEN TRIO are performing at tne fcioow
Room.
Just arrived at
The Record Bar
Bob Dylan
"Self Portrait"
(a 2 record set)
plus
now only
For one week only
all Nonesuch stereo albums
98
i
per disc
I
record bar
discount records
DURHAM ? CHAPf I Hill ?

Cotanche St Greenville, N.C.





.SMM?fIIMIA?mMMIMq
Pace 10. Fountainhead. Mondav June
1970
t
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N.0 ONE 5 TK.fc'
IT YfT '
Four students honored
for finishing program
t
5
. ;est
lates have
: eted '
Pi igran ii Politi
and I i " ed the
acad : - distinction
by the department
They are Robert G Belcher. D.
Mitchell King Earl D Stalling
. Michael T Wheeler, four I
the fourteen completing the
The H nors Program in
Political Science is a rig
trse ' study ed tor
.dents who have
B" average in all their
the time the are
superior
earned a
luni
Q if : ' lei
the department to
participate in a nine
quarter-hour program extending
. r the academic year and
involving an orientation in
methodology, serious research
rj the writing of an honors
ay.
Those students completing
the Honors Program are
considered the best prepared of
all Political Science majors and
receive the department's highest
recommendations to graduate
s professional sch
and prospective empl ?. i
according to a department
man.
War causes division
By REV D T EARNHARDT
Editors note This art.de a tfM
f.rct of a series of columns written
for the summer Fcnint.imhid bv the
members of the United Campus
M.msterv ?v Dan.el T Earnhardt
,s presently serving as the Director of
the Wesley Foundation the campus
Methodist Student Center
11 e Wai in Southeast Vsia is
now generally recognized as the
single most divisive issue in
,rth me day I!lls issue
is separating once loyal
churchmen from the leaders ol
theii denominations It is
splitting student bodies on
campuses across the nation It is
dividing congressmen from their
parties and from each othei It
is bringing division into the
hon s ' the people setting
sons against fathers, mothers
against daughters, one
generation against another And
even among those who are
opposed, there are serious
disagreements as to method,
purpose, and time.
What ' we make ol this
division' There are some who
call this a Communist plot to
take ovei America There are
S0n , ? dismiss the debate as
"youthful ignorance Man are
fearful that it is only a surface
ie designed I ace i plish the
overthi ?? i the Vmerii
al system by some
ibversive organization. But
whatever we - ol it the
division is real. There is nothing
which c nfronts us as people
which iS evident as this
increasing divisi I
What is the answer0 Peace!
And once again, even with the
answer, comes division. There
are those who hasten to qualify
the answer bv saving. "Of
irse, the President has access
to information which we do not
have, and we must trust him to
act in our best interest " And
this group must live with the
recollection that this is precisely
the argument which nurtured
the rise of militarism in
Germany prioi to World Wai 11
And then there are those who
dismiss the popular demands foi
pease as a recent New I eftist
anti Vmerican trend To these
people to advocate peace (oi
withdrawal of troops oi
negotiation. Ol cessation ol
bombing o cutting ol the B 1
program) is to be unpatriotic
This position is completely
indifferent to American history .
a history which records the
refusal ol John d.m S to push
the country into war with
France1798 1800) despite the
urging of his party And o we
forget Henry (lav's stand
against the war with Mexico
(1844), and the New York riots
( 86 3 i which opposed
conscription into service (the
early draft)? Oi William
Jennings Bryan I l1"1 and his
determined opposition to the
Spanish-American wai as an
anti-imperalist In view ol
history, the only war receiving
??popular" support in America
was World Wai II
I hen come those who are
quite ready to pay lip senice to
peace, but become weak-kneed
when dealing with specifics.
Virtually all groups will talk
about pease in general
East West. Hanoi Saigon; New
Left Radical Right.
five-star-general conscientious
objector;arl Mclntire as well
as William Sloan Coffin. Yet it is
just here, in dealing with the
specifics, that man's survival will
become either a pitiful folly ?i a
lively possibility. To treat pease
only as a noble generality. while
encouraging a "militarized
society provides the
prerequisites for a tear In I
society, a self righteous society,
a sterile society. This is the
society which pays more tor
defense ol itself than it does to
operate its institutions, govern
its life, or pursue its ideals.
What does it mean. then, to
talk ol pease in specifics? One
thing is obvious when it is done
in terms ol those tilings which
are OU1 daily national diet, it
will involve risk To deal in
particulars means addressing the
war psychology
economy, the
Suddenly.
the war
wai system.
peace becomes a
"dirty" word in some very
respectable circles But emust
talk about pease with meanine
We must be willing to take the
hard task of dealing with pe
in contest, specifically,without
equivocation oi apology, If t0
do so is to be misunderstood as
being unpatriotic then let jj
also be understood to be true to
the imperatives placed upon all
who endorse thehristian ethic
Bishop James Armstrong, in
addressing a church assembh at
St. Louts, put it clearly when he
described what it meant to deal
with peace as people who folio
the teachings of Jesus of
Nazareth
"He (Jesus) said. Those who
live bv the sword w ill perish by
the sword Today we ate told
that we can overkill the
Russians about 160 times, they
can kill each ol is only about
100 times This gives us an
e x t r e m e 1 y i e assuring
advantage' And Jesus said.
"Blessed are the peacemakers! i
they shall be sailed the children
o God ' !)'? we who name his
name really believe that We
don't have to accept the ethical
imperatives ol the new covenant
if we don't want to. It we
choose to reject love and justice
and peace, well and good, e
have that right But we must
bear in mind what else and Who
else we are rejecting in the
process. If pease n.i dirty u rd
then Christ was a dirty liar and
history is a dirty ji ?
And what if we are not
Christian' Then we still must
deal with the matter of survival,
the matter of the quality ? of lite
as well as the quantity ol life,
the question of a future c
atomic destruction or atomic
peace ,
Are we to. peace? If so. then
let us seek peace with meaning
Le, us make peace as real o
the future as division is for the
present





J5M?.
Agnews leadership
is of inferior quality
"Government of the people, by the people, in spite
of the people, but never for the people! Dissent must
be destroyed; all must worship the government, and
all must sacrifice for the country
Spiro has done it again. This time the lire-breathing
administrative strong-man has attacked a young
member of the President's Commission on Campus
Unrest. Joseph Rhodes. Rhodes has sinned against the
country by rufusing to be an administrative puppet
and he even had the audacity to say that the
administration has provoked campus violence.
A New York Times interview quoted the 26 year
old Rhodes as saying that: The kids have got to feel
someone has the power to really investigate the grave
charges being brought against the government
Spiro hit at what he termed as Rhodes' use of his
position to rise to "national notoriety He also
criticized the Harvard junior fellow for his
transparent bias that will make him
counterproductive to the work of the commission
Perhaps the noble Mr. Agnew is afraid that the
commission will find some truth in the words of
Rhodes. Or maybe he is worried that Mr. Nixon is
going to try to get some men into his decaying
government that are not yes-men. but who actually
have the gall to think for themselves in this fine
"constitutional democracy
Agnew's fears, however, are entirely ungrounded.
From Rhodes, who could never be called a radical,
this nation has nothing to fear. But from Agnew. an
irrational bureaucrat, this nation has much to fear.
Men like Spiro do not belong in the government of
this nation. He is no longer even a bad joke. Agnew
should resign! The government of this nation needs a
higher quality in its leadership.
Supreme Court's draft
decision is laudable
The U.S. Supreme Court last week struck another
blow for freedom of conscience in regards to the
Selective Service System. The Court greatly expanded
the concept of conscientious objection by recognizing
that a man may "have deep moral and ethical
objections to war while not being religious in the
formal and traditional sense The decision not only
reflected the growing trend in America towards draft
resistance or objection, but also the spirit of
disinterest of youth toward the established rehgtons
of their fathers.
This decision of the Court is a much-needed
expansion of the interpretation of current Selective
Service laws. Now the peacetime draft should be
declared unconstitutional!
ounuinhead
mMmm STEPHEN BAILEY
WAYNE B. EADS Business Manager
Editor-in-Chief
Managing-Editor
Reid Overcash .News Editor
Linda Cleveland Features Editor
Rob Gnngle Sports Editor
Dave Ittermann Adviser
Ira Baker
ki at East Carolina University.
Student newspaper Publ,ed 27834 Adverting open
P.O. Box 25.6. G-ele' NOpnf758 6366 or 758367
rate is $1.80 per column inch Phone aa o-
T-cp.nn7pr?jdbv "rsity.
are not necessarily those of East Carolina
?"?:?:?:?:?"?:?:??:?:?:?:?:
Revolution or Evolution?
By CATHY STERLING
Editor's note: North Carolina
State Universit student body
President Cathy Sterling spoke at a
discussion group attended by some
25 persons at the Baptist Student
Center Thursday night. Her
comments are those of a
movement-oriented student, relative
not only to her campus, but to most
others. The text of her speech, which
was followed by a question and
answer period, is reprinted in part
below. The general topic of her
comments was: "Revolution in
Education
First, there is in my mind a
difference between the
REVOLUTION IN
EDUCATION and the general
state of campus unrest which
seems to be becoming an annual
Spring campus event. The
outbursts of violence so widely
publicized are manifestations of
concern, but they are more
from frustration than from a
desire to find constructive,
positive solutions to the
problems which are causing the
concern. Far less widely
publicized are the efforts of a
growing number of students
who are finding the means and
methods of modifying the
University as an institution
peacefully, lawfully, and
internally through what you
might call REVOLUTION, but
which I prefer to call
ACCELERATED EVOLUTION.
NEGETIVEVS POSITIVE
The difference in terms is
more than one of semantics; it is
evidence of a difference in
attitudes, the difference in a
negative vs. a positive approach.
While REVOLUTION conotates
disruption and possible violence,
EVOLUTION can be viewed as
a natural normal process.
ACELERATED
EVOLUTIONsimply identifies
the degree of urgency and
intensity with which we as
students feel the necessity of
bringing about change to keep
pace with the accelerated tempo
of contemporary life within the
American society today.
General explanations for the
underlying causes for student
unrest can be divided into
several categories:
First, the conflict between
the young and old the
celebrated Generation Gap
has been argued both from the
standpoint of natural rebellion
in youth who act out their
feelings by attacking tradition
and institutions, and also from
the standpoint of excessive
parental permissiveness in the
upbringing of their children.
Neither of these explanations
coincide with studies which
have shown that student
activists tend to come from a
highly principled family culture
that emphasizes reasoning and
persuasion as well as
independence in thought and
action. Often the leaders of
campus action groups were
former boy scouts, former high
school leaders, former active
church members, in short, true
"children of the American
Dream A student leader finds
himself labled "subversive"
because he cannot reconcile the
high ideals taught in his school,
church, and by his parents, with
the actions of the society he
sees around him. Americanism
the qualities of liberty,
equality, and justice appears
to be a faded and torn facsimile
of his childhood ideals, almost
unrecognizable.
Secondly, there is a drive
among students, who are
socially maturing in a television
world of instant awareness and
instant analysis to find means to
feel socially and personally
useful and relevant. College is
felt as a forced extension of
adolescence, as a means for
society to prolong the period of
"second-class citizenship The
pressures which drive students
into college are often other than
the primary desire to gain an
education.
AUTHORITY
Thirdly, authority, as it has
been traditionally held and
exercised; no longer commands
automatic respect. Students and
young faculty take little for
granted. Thus the traditional
campus governing systems are
no longer appreciated as
relevant, and campus activists
are working toward direct
participation, or at least
legitimate representation, in a
truly responsive governmental
system. University
administrators, in their failure
to involve other elements of the
campus community in working
out solutions to common
problems, set themselves in the
unfortunate and unnecessary
role of repressors. By choice or
circumstances, they become the
symbol of opposition, and the
decisions rendered too often
appear arbitrary and piecemeal.
In the view of the activist
( continued on page 12)

f i
$0&
' l
CATHY STERLING spoke on campus revolution,





?v?W ? i i i-1-??-4
Page 12 Fountainhcad. Monday. June 22. I
Student president discusses campus 'revolution'
-
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FILES
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tudent records e pt foi he
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? . ? .
?
. ? ?
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chosei ?? enforc
I niversitv codes and n
air Viob
f conduct, and fail -
?et coi petitive
severe . ?v
hich is expulsion The)
? ? rcement
as system of threats, rather
having a positive base
3 re oft
. and excessive As
normal daily procedure, campus
ice carry guns and MAC E,
unpopular segments
? the University community
Wiretapping, surveillance and
hiring oi student spies" are
imiliai methods
the University
Those ar-eed sometiri
- ' - illegal
- ? which i ' ? iggravates
n fit's
ght 1 ' ay and d
gnored by
? . a ho have
. had a free I i
lemic
and si . life
DISCRIMINATION
7) Ai " - ncern 1S
thai " i iscrirninal
.
hibit disc rimtnal
ra? &ex xonoi
- ? 1
I loyees openly profess and
? their prejudices
ients are also distressed
with bad teaching Material
taught is ften out o date or
reachers are loo
interested in their research
I ? jects and neglect the
classroom experience There
are not enough courses that
prepare the students to face the
major issues oi' our time
RIGIDITY
In general, when students try
to air their complaints and work
for positive alternatives, they
find the University machinery
too rigid Administrators are
adamant in their policies.
guarded and deceitful in their
decisions, and -gutless" when
fronted with major isa
Pi ?blems referred to faculty
fallowed up
and never heard from again If
j ire recommended, it
take dn inordinate amount oi
time to implement their.
Students are basically
. . ? r their citizenship
rig - . f fi lom to live and
wi tfith whom they
h Only a tew ad the
lestructioi -the
University
They ask that tl
ile by I
? ? be done aw
with
committee! 1 com
the University
detailed polk
be designed
rights and B . that
University ition be
available and re ab e
commun.
various Univi ?
open and h??? ?
academic pi g iified
to be more - : ?
needs of today
the institute i accept the
responsibilr ? I
social char o. tl I faculty ?? j
administrat i
individuals
issues. . anc
University
individual-
customers i
Continuti g i
the face f coi .dents
only limits
for construct ogt and
forces accept
revohiti n, witl gatrvt
connotai their only
workable all
and other
npus coi
responsive w
the evolu!
maintain ai
n t i n u e d
University
wit hu
-
H the
?
t the
Vol.
PROUD
OPENING
4t) St Greenville
grandly
announces
Thursday June 25
Come in - we'll be grand to serve you
mmsm
vx-hc?x??'?
&mz
2-41
with this coupon get TWO Corned Beef or P-istra
sandwiches for the price of ONE
during PROUD OPENING only





Title
Fountainhead, June 22, 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
June 22, 1970
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.55
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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