ountainhead and the truth shall make you free’ A . . aces ~ 2 Vol.1 No.2 East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C. September 16, 1569 H&T University newspaper editor condemns flational Guard during riots ** * see page 2 Woodstock: Tranquility despite the thousands... ** * see pages 8,9 Woodstock Music & Art Fair - July 4-6,1969 Page 2, A & T University editor . National Guard lashes RALEIGH — The editor of the newspaper at A & T University at Greensboro told Gov. Robert Scott last week that the students at A & T were alienated toward the administration because of the ‘heinous way the National Guard acted when they were on our campus during the riots last spring.” He made the statement last Tuesday at a meeting of all the newspaper editors and Student Government Association presidents at the governor’s mansion. Scott called the meeting. The editor said guardsmen stole clothes, books, record players and other items which belonged to the students. He also said the guardsmen were “unnecessarily destructive” when looking for firearms in the dormitories. He said many students were not able to return to school because they could not afford to buy new clothes and pay tuition at the same time. John Schofield, president of SGA passes the SGA at East Carolina, and Chip Callaway, editor-in-chief of the Fountainhead, were at the meeting. One student editor told Scott that faculty members were beiny dismissed from his university for “viewpoints that conflicted to those of the university administration.” Lack of communication between the student body and student leaders was also discussed. Schofie!d said students needed respect for the SGA so they would come to the SGA with problems. Other problems discussed at the meeting were the high cost of books and tuition, the food service, lack of parking space on campus, and students’ objection to the school having authority which they feel only their parents should have. Callaway said after the meeting that the governor was attentive to what the students had to say. He said Scott invited the students to his office “whenever they had problems policy on faculty admissions The SGA tas adopted new admission pc icies for faculty and staff members to campus activities. ID cards for faculty members. and their families will be made Wednesday through Friday from 9 am. to 6 p.m. in Wright Auditorium. The cards will admit holders to both the popular and international films, the lecture series and the travel-adventure film series. Staff members will use N.C. retirement cards instead of ID cards. ID cards will not be available for staff members. Faculty and siaff card hoiders will be charged $1 under the public price for popular entertainment and $2 more than the student service charge for the artists series. There will be alimit of two tickets per family. Tickets Season tickets for the artists series will cost $10. Staff members can buy season tickets to popular and_ international films for $1. Lecture series tickets for staff members will be $1.50 per lecture or $3.50 for a season ticket. Travel-adventure film tickets are 75 cents per film or $2.50 for a season ticket. There is also a $10 package plan for staff members. SGA The SGA last week approved $40,000 to continue the campus bus system and named the members of the honor and judiciary councils. The meeting Wednesday was the last meeting of the 1968-69 SGA. New members will be elected this month. Honor Council Members of the Men’s Honor Council are Brian VanDercook, Steve Owens, Tim Kesler, Jens Bang, Tom Leinbach, Jim Hicks, and Franklin Adams. Alternates are Gary B. Williams and Steele Trail. Members of the Men’s Judiciary Council are Lee Lewis, Nathan Weavil, John Craig Souza, Gary King, George Georghiou, Bill Shaw, and Tracy Hill. Members of the Women’s Honor Council are Chere Randaii, Virginia Lanam, Caroi Mabe, Lynn Quisenberry, Susann Brown, Nancy Sheppard, and Wanda Wentz. Alternates are Ann Breeze and Stephanie Standafer. Members of the Review Board are Steve Sharpe, Rex Meade, Edna Cascioli and Paul Breitman. ° Fountainhead they wanted to talk over.” Schofield said he thought the most important outcome of the meeting was the tentative plans for forming some kind of organization including students and members of the State Board of Higher Education. Marijuana charge sticks Fountainhead City Bureau Two East Carolina students who were charged this summer with tending a patch of marijuana in a wooded area near Greenville were bound over to Superior Court after a hearing last Friday. They are Richard Day of Winston-Salem and Thomas Cramer of Long Island, N.Y. The two had been arrested on a misdeamor charge July 22. Officers said they had observed them tending a marijuana patch for some time. They had also been charged with possessing marijuana. A report read at the hearing said they had 5.8 grams of marijuana. Their warrants were changed froma misdemeanor charge to a felony charge. Judge Herbert Phillips, who presided at the hearing, did not set a date for the trial. Day and Cramer are free on $500 bond. = wie es THE CAMPUS CHIME system will soon be installed permanently. Chimes will September 16, 1969 we ring atop New Austin The electronic chime system installed this summer on the Physics building has assed its trial period. It will be installed permanently on New Austin within the next two weeks, said Bill Eyerman, director of the Alumni Association. The senior class of 1969 gave $1,000 as their class gift to help pay for the chime system. The alumni association contributed $500. The SGA will vote Sept. 29 on whether to appropriate $2,500 for the system. Originally, the senior class had considered getting a brass bell for Ficklen Stadium, but decided the chimes would be more feasible. The chime system is similar to a stereo tape player. There is a control unit housing the timer, the tapes, and connections for the six loud speakers. Special tapes can be played, such as Christmas carols, victory songs, a death knoll, or the Alma Mater. The Aima Mater plays at noon daily. There are Westminster Chimes every hour and half hour Gnider wOur. Campus construction exceeds $7 million Four new buildings costing more than seven million dollars are now under construction on campus, and five other buildings and projects are planned. About three-fourths of the new Bidlogy and Physics buiiding is already being used. F.D. Duncan, vice president in charge of business, said the last wing of the new building will open in two or three weeks. The building cost $3 million. The new men’s dormitory, which opened for the firt time this fail, houses 500 students. It cost $1,680,000. The new ten-story women’s dorm houses 400 students and cost $1,305,000. On U.S. 264 Bypass near Pitt Plaza, a clinic for handicapped children is being built. It will cost $292,770. A soda shop is being built on campus between the nursing building and the music building. It will cost $237,000. Construction will begin early next year on a new elementary education laboratory school. It will cost $1,150,000. A new student union will be built near Eighth Street. Ayers joins administration as new special assistant John Ayers, who is Dr. Leo Jenkins’s new special assistant, got a parking ticket last week — for parking an unregistered car in a staff parking area. “4 guess I'll have to pay the ticket because they were right,” Ayers said. “| couldn't get the old sticker scraped off, so | hadn't put the new one on yet.” Ayers has been assistant to the president of the university Assembly when they visit Nov. 1. for three months. Before coming here, he taught adult courses at Camp has just been created, he does Point and not know exactly what he can Goldsboro. He also taught one expect his job to become or how closely he will work with the include students. Lejeune, Cherry quarter here. Ayers duties researching Jenkins’s speeches and raising money. He will also able make plans to entertain the problems such as registration, of the General drop-add and parking. members Ayers said that since his job He said he would like to be to help students with Construction is expected to start early next year. This building will cost 2,940,000. A new building for the School of Health Professions is being designed. It will cost !,373,600. Construction will begin next spring. Plans are being made to put the campus electrical wiring underground. This project will cost $525,000. Air conditioning is planned for the Graham Building. This will cost $90,000. Within the next three weeks, renovation of the underground storm drainage system will begin. This will cost about $216,000. All-weather tennis courts will be ready next spring. They will be built just south of Minges Coliseum. The tennis courts will cost $55,000. ‘The streets of our country are in turmoil. The | universities are filled with students rebelling and rioting. Communists are seeking to destroy our country. Russia is threatening us with her might, and the republic is in danger. Yes, danger from within and without. We need law and order or our nation cannot survive.” Adolf Hitler Septembe ——— Fire lat by Sam B Fountain A fire lat Cannon’ downtown two. fire petroleum 1 and caused several mill The fire control ab was still bt there was would spre bottled ga gasoline warehouse. Nurses <¢ Hospitals asked to number of | was dangeé explode. Police reached t they felt tr evacuate th The sky was lit bric which beg p.m. Fire d said severa was still o were stiil s hundred f Fountain! night. Wilbert service § hundred warehouse, He said a t the wareh electrical li “One could have said. He said arrived qui setting up. The s warehouse were for aluminu warehouse | 4 ae | Where Is Posts Resp Lowenfels, York, 1! Company, That does n her poets them. | sweé t is top secri That will subversive li that is doom To accept di Eveline fitting ir ber 16, 1969 . oo” installed » senior class etting a brass Stadium, but nes would be stem is similar layer. There is sing the timer, ynnections for rs. an be played, carols, victory ll, or the Alma ater plays at There are es every hour pected to start This building 0. ding for the Professions is It will cost struction will j made to put ctrical wiring S project will ng is planned Building. This t three weeks, » underground system will | cost about nis courts will ing. They will ith of Minges nis courts will ts of our urmoil. The filled with elling and nunists are lestroy our ussia is ; with her epubiic is in langer from ithout. We wrder or our irvive.”” Adolf Hitler September 16, 1969 Fountainhead Page 3 Fire destroys warehouse late yesterday evening by Sam Beasley and Al Dean Fountainhead City Bureau A fire late last night destroyed Cannon's Warehouse in downtown Greenville, injured two firemen, threatened petroleum tanks across the street and caused what may amount to several million dollars in damage. The fire was brought under control about 3 a.m. The fire was still burning but police said there was little danger that it would spread to heating fuel and bottled gas storage tanks and gasoline stations near the warehouse. Nurses aides at Pitt County Hospital said they had been asked to prepare for a large number of casualities while there was danger the tanks would explode. Police said if the fire had reached the gasoline station, they felt they would have had to evacuate the area. The sky all over Greenville was lit bright orange by the fire which began shortly after 11 p.m. Fire department spokesmen said several hours later the fire was still out of control. Flames were still shooting more than a feet the air at deadline last hundred into Fountainhead night. Wilbert Manning, who runs a service station less than a hundred feet from the warehouse, saw the fire begin. He said a truck was driving into the warehouse when it hit an electrical line. ‘One damned water hose could have put it out,’” Manning said. He said the fire department arrived quickly but was slow in setting up. The streets near the warehouse were so hot they were forming steam. The aluminum. siding on the warehouse was completly melted down and the steel girders supporting the building were buckled. There were natural gas storage ~~ : mag jolage to spray down the units closer to tanks near the warehouse. Fireman were releasing the gas slowly and allowing it to burn off to prevent an explosion. There were also large tanks of oil in at Atlantic Oil Co. distributing center across the street. One small fire broke out near there, but firemen kept it away from the tanks. Manning said the warehouse was filled nearly to capacity because the first sale was to be held there today. No estimate of the value of the buildings, contents or lost petroleum could be found last night. At 12:20 a.m. this morning, when the fire was still far from under control, two firemen were taken to Pitt County hospital in fire department rescue squad trucks. The nursing supervisor at the hospital said both had been overcome by heat and smoke. She said they might be admitted to the hospital. She identified the two firemen as R. P. Rogers Jr., 26, and James K. Hathaway, about 35, both of Greenville. Several thousand people stood around the warehouse watching the fire. Policemen drove by with loudspeakers and told the spectators to stand back. Most of them appeared to be university students. They jeered and applauded the firemen and policemen. About a hundred university men were helping fight the fire. A member of the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity said they had gone to the fire and offered their help. Greenville citizens were also helping with the fire. They had no protective clothing. A fire department spokesman | : | ‘Where Is Vietnam? | Where Is Vietnam? American The Writing on the Wall. 108 Posts Respond. Edited by Walter American Poems of Protest. Lowenfels, Garden City, New York, 1967. Doubleday & Company, Inc. $1.25. A nation That does not invite rebellion among her poets has already destroyed them. | swear that every tree is top secret, green with shady clues That will inevitably suggest a subversive line of inquiry, N, there is never a society that is doomed before its poets choose To accept doom. ——Eveline Bates Eveline Bates has supplied a fitting invocation to Walter (264 By-Pass) Join The [f) Crowd Pizza ion 421 Greenville Blvd. DINE INN or TAKE OUT Call Ahead For Faster Service Telephune 756-9991 Edited by Walter’ Lowenfels, Garden City, New York, 1969. Doubleday & Company, Inc. $1.95. Lowenfels’ anthologies of American protest poems. It is the spirit and vitality of the poets, the living verse, that rejects the pentagons fabrications, that abhors the statistical fascinations of the petty and the powerful, that discovers the lie of the big numbers and small humanity. Where Is Vietnam?and The Writing on the Wall are divergent (continued on page 6) said shortly before midnight that there were only five units at the fire. The firemen had set up hoses the fire because of the intense heat. The streets were cluttered: with fire hoses and there were frequently flashes of light from power lines burned out by the fire. A thermometer on a fence less than a hundred feet from the fire was registering the maximum. House mother becomes friend and advisor the room check, Miss Fulghum said. The traditional image of the house mother warden, law enforcement officer, or mother - is going to change this year, said Miss Carolyn Fulghum, Dean of Women. “The new image of being a friend, counselor and advisor has been caused by the changing times,’’ said Miss Fulghum. Enforcing regulations will be left to the house councils and hall procters, she said. An example of the change is The house counselor will check the room _ only for damages. If a woman wants to live in filth, that will be her problem, Miss fulghum said. Thirteen of the university’s 18 house counselors now have master’s degrees in guidance and counseling, Miss Fulghum said, so the counsellors are qualified for their new role. BOOS SS SSS SSS SSS SSS SF SFO SFH SPSS PS SS SOSseosoeoese **T believe that if the cities are permitted to deteriorate. then the aca- demic institutions in those cities must inevitably suffer.*” BOSTON M AYOR KEVIN WHITE **Evervone freaks when you sat confrontation. Currently their image is Columbia: boom. smash. rubble. But the matter’s more subtle than that. For confrontation is the open expression of conflict of interests. ** BERKELEY VETERAN MICHAEL ROSSMAN **This is the danger of education, that it be so tightly planned that it becomes terminal—terminal in number of years and courses of study. and even more dangerously. terminal in the limits on the student’s JERROLD ZACHARIAS freedom of choice.” POSSESS SCOSOCOOOOOSD AP RAP VP says - 201 E. Fifth Street Welcome Students STUDENTS : Crowell at ‘The Campus Corner’ “CHARGE IT’. S Gentleman's Attire POoeoe ti lag i: easinaaaiaaadi: | Students, faculty, administrators, as a matter of fact President Jenkins - We welcome you as an account. Crowell wants new accounts so bad he’s giving away a FREE SUIT to some lucky person. ‘‘The Campus Corner” offers the finest collection of traditional clothing in Greenville. The FREE SUIT will be given away on OCTOBER 4 - Before Homecoming - all you need to do to register /s open an account at ‘The Campus Corner’. Greenville, N.C. September 16, 1969 “Long hair on young men has robably caused more family quarrels Cullop publishes uring the past years than any other single subject, and while father may b O O k O n S O U t h still scream about the length of his son’s locks, the old man has been Dr. Charles P. Cullop, an i i ri : . letting his own grow a bit on top epccasiirty a abana et Re tok and discovered that longer sideburns has just published a boo called are really quite becoming.” “Confederate Propagandain | FRANCES MOFFAT Page 4 Fountainhead societies in Europe — 1861-1865. “What the Hippies Gave Us” nothing abot The book covers the . ; ; het : on ae San Francisco Chronicle, standing o en establishm canner, ae “in order to awaken, a combina- members. T Confederate newspaper, tion of efforts is needed. It is need an odc efforts of the South tO [necessary that somebody should look ffbeat hob discourage the immigration of after the man who wakes him; it is blatant aie Europeans to the North, and the necessary to have alarm clocks and i cat ive English it is also necessary continually to average in work of the most active Eng}isi invent new alarm clocks. except one. propagandists. : “But in order to achieve all this and Cullop received his Ph.D. to obtain results, a certain number of from the University of Virginia. people must work together. He has also done post-doctoral “One man can do nothing.” Upp study at Harvard University. The Morning cf the Magicians To be w organization Great Southern Finance Mensa, you 1.0. test th $ Cash Loans $ than 98 | : population. ‘ ! Last year A special rate for College Students. From $12 weak shart to $70 for only $12a month = faculty a : member. By the member 752-7117 16 students 405 Evans Street He Activi Dr. Willi Professor of WRANGLER member fri long time forsees an activities fo “We did late last te time was sf This year more produ a Nominateo B TAPER-FIT JEANS * % THE FIRST BOOK by Dr. Charles P. Cullop of the ECU Department of History bears this dust jacket. The slim monograph deals with the activities of the Confederacy’s leading propagandist, Henry Holtze, as setenl he attempted towinthe sym pathy for the southern cause from neutrat Europeans. (ECU News Bureau Photo) iis oe aaah eeccccoed 18841S 4G 22S Up ECU Campus Nominated BES St DOWNTOWN SHOPPING CENTER AGT JICKIN Ve “SUPER LEANS”— BLUE DENIM JEANS SIZES: 27/38 14 oz. plus coarse weave denim — Heaviest denim ever made — exclusive with WRANGLER western wear. Navy Blue $ 4.98 FREE PARKING. Easy Walking Distance to Complete Shopping Center for Students PODOCe DOPSOSOOSS SSCS SOSOSOSOSOSOOCOSCOOOOOSD er 16, 1969 any other ither may th of 1 has been mm top sideburns 2] Js” 1 combina- 2eded. It is hould look s him; it is clocks and itinually to rm clocks. all this and number of k together. ) nothing.” ans B12 treet 2 EANS denim ever $ 4.98 September 16, 1969 Fountainhead Mensa exists for top two percent One of the most exclusive societies in the world cares nothing about the income, social standing or ancestry of its members. To join, you don’t need an odd occupation or an offbeat hobby, or even a rare blood type. You can be quite average in every respect — except one. Upper 98% To be welcomed into the organization which calls itself Mensa, you must prove by an 1.0. test that you are smarter than 98 per cent of the population. Last year a chapter of Mensa University suggested that a panel applied for membership. of extra-intelligent people might Some like its novelty: ‘I’m be useful to statesmen and other attracted to the offbeat,” a decision-makers. Spread like crabgrass Since then, Mensa has spread like crabgrass to some fifty countries and now has approximately 13,000 members in North America. The. group takes its name from the Latin word for ‘‘table,”’ signifying a round table of equals. There is perhaps a glancing pun on the Latin word for mind, mens. Why do they join? Some do it for status: ‘It appealed to my ego,’ said one secretary who professor-member confessed. Red-bearded, jovial Voctor Serebriakoff, International Secretary of Mensa said, ‘‘When | joined Mensa | thoug)t, ‘Now | am joining a bunch of very bright people; therefore, everyone will agree with me. Alas, this turned out not to be so. Then | married a member and began to learn the full extent, breadth and profundity of human disagreement.” How do you join? The only requirement for membership is evidence of scoring in the top two _it Of any standard intelligence test. Would-be Mensas who _ lack proof of their 1.0. level can be tested by Mensa. “Provisions have been made for taking the test at ECU,” said White. “We can now offer prospective members the chance to complete the entire procedure on camnuie The local chapter will have its first meeting at 7p.m. next Tuesday in room 136, New Austin building. Fountainhead solicits letters to the editor. Any student, faculty member or administrator who wishes to express himself in a letter to the editor should mail it to Box 2516, ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. Letters should be brief. The editors reserve the right to edit all letters to conform with journalistic style. ! Elevate your mind. Join the REBEL staff. Our first organizational meeting will be Wednesday, September 17 at 8 p.m. in Room 215 in Wright Annex. was started here with one faculty and one student member. By the end of the year the membership had grown to 16 students and faculty. the Activities expanded Dr. William White, Assistant Professor of History, the faculty member from last year and a long time member of Mensa, forsees an expanded range of activities for the group this year. “We didn’t get started until late last term and most of the time was spent on organization. This year should prove much more productive,” said White. Nominatea BEST FILM Beriin Fim Festival A 4 What happens to innocence when young passions rage out of The Cash Bash is a chronic hang-up that comes from carrying money around with you on campus. Like discovering you left your wallet in the locker room ... three minutes after some- body else does. Or finding yourself short on Saturday night because it was too easy to shell out all week. Or get- ting known as a soft touch for a loan because you’re a walking cash box. How to avoid these situa- tions? Get yourself a Wachovia Checking Account. Your money is safe, so you don’t have that to worry about. And you’re not as apt to spend it when it’s not bulging out of your billfold. You have an accurate record of how much you spent and what for, so you can flash it for your father when he asks. And when Max (or Millie) the Moocher shows up, you can honestly say all you have on you is a Canadian nickel. And hope he’s not a numismatist. Of course, you don’t have to open your account with Wachovia. But we think you'll like us. After all, we wouldn’t ask for your business if we didn’t know how to treat you right. Right? Drop by. We’re easy to talk to. Wachovia am IM == os Nomnated BEST FILM seri fm Festiwal GRD Starts Sunday ‘theatre’ Phone: 752-7649 (and how to avoid it.) Member F.D.1.C. The role of a university Bill of Rights prot In. the first column of this series, this definition of the role of a university was given: The role of a university in general is to provide its students with a liberal and practical education improve the society through the innovation of new ideas and better methods of accomplishing its aims. In light of this goal, the university must provide an atmosphere which is conducive to learning and to expanding cultural horizons of the students, as well as the community itself. Since this idea was developed in the first column, there is no need to elaborate on the general definition. Instead, this column will focus on the Student Bill of Rights, a document which is intended to be the guardian of the rights of all students in an academic environment. The relation of a Student Bill of Rights to this definition is obvious. A student cannot function at his peak in an atinosphere in which his rights and freedoms are in doubt or change from day to day. Free inquiry and free expression are indispensable to the attainment of the goal of a university. Critical judgment and independent thought are vital to the search for truth in an academic community. Standards for the protection of these rights must be instituted at every university in the nation. East Carolina University is fortunate in having a document which undertakes a minumun guarantee of these rights. The present SGA Bill ot Rights is the end product of the work of acampus group entitled simply: GAP. The name signifies the fact that there is a gap in the communications between the students and faculty, between the faculty and the eer = NeW NUMBER TO REMEMBER, SUIT WITH FALL'S MOST STRIKING SILHOUETTE From $89.95 Ce FOR THE SIH-BUTTON offmans MENS WEAR Feeney =, _ Fountainhead adminstration, and between any given campus group and any other campus group. The student-faculty group began work on its project in July, 1968. The national interest in student rights at the time and certain campus disorders were the sparks that kindled the action on the ECU campus. At the time, and even now, very few schools in the nation had a written guarantee of student rights because the institution of such a document was hindered by the adminstrations and the student government associations. The Bill was drawn up by students and underwent six revisions before they were satisfied. Constitutional lawyers were consulted and the final document was presented to the students. A petition was begun and 2600 students signed to show their support of the bill. The petition and the bill were presented to the SGA and the bill was altered only slightly before it was passed into law. With the passa, of this Student Bill of Rights, the SCA recognizes and guarantees sixteen rights of students. This | | ‘Where Is Vietnam?’ (continued from page 3) in theme and subject matter. Where Is Vietnam? benefitsfrom narrowness of focus; it contains a particular set of poems aimed at a ‘particular’ war. This single purpose gives the book an internal strength and a unity that is lacking in The Writing on the Wall because of divergent subject matter. Where Is Vie testiment on America’s greatest atrocity. The book strikes out at the blindness manifested by America’s apathetic masses; We are prosecuting a ‘‘genocidal”’ war, the book tells us the jungles of Vietnam are being purposefully depopulated; we are fighting an ‘‘imperialistic”’ war —-— the natural resources of Southeast Asia are the actual object of our attack; and we are fighting an ‘‘immoral,”’ insane, and utterly despicable war to keep the tyrants in Asia there is no longer the pretense of popular elections because the regime we support cannot am? is amoral Complete Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service Coca Cola Bottling Company of Greenville September 16, 1969 Meee cera ere ccrrr meee na resasaimimanashinutonmmnamaintirvd:osiaveeiscs cers, noe ects students ........ Bill can be found as Article 1x of the SGA constitution. The GAP document was based on the AAUP Statement on the Rights and Freedoms of Students and the Bill of Rights of the University of Michigan. <_ | | RA mentation o particular Friday night. \ology, The ~The few well-done (an almost : P ost part, are meaningful) scenes just don’t “... anew spirit is abroad to meet #2 ia hemes are warrant the effort involved in the challenge of a new era in the Pt gf 4 So ay / , going down the aisles of the Mey of the world. Our method of HURRY UP AND WAIT...was the order of the day for students shuffling through ostensible theater. ee La ars a long slow registration lines at East Carolina University this week. An estimate 9,500 process of : exclusively religious, or esoteric, a students registered for classes for the 1969-70 academic year at ECU. (ECU News a desire to ee poetic or scientific, but will be a blend bureau Phot by Charles Griffin) tion of the of all these and in contradiction tO pa ee ae ae ae ae ae ae eee ee — + can protest. -. Hopefully this column will be ae ee. ov ee i | st eloquent ' found in the majority of the ing a mixture of the methods of a ok is Chief “following issues of theologians, scientists, magicians, nin r Speech," a Fountainhead. It will be only ana childrens B| G G ra nd 0 p e »f the plight my opinion on the films | have LOUIS PAUWELS Indian “seen and bothered to pass AND JACQUES BERGIER 4 The Morning of the Magicians outcast from ~~ gudgment. A | U F 42 9 Evans St 2 oo If you, the reader, find the A : review agreeable, fine. If YOU es f Me ica:s agree or disagree with any or all ee ee an ome of my pronouncements, please ytest. The " . ae | Greenville’s No. 1 Store lian, and the oa 2 ithout : ects the “BNewspapers can not exist without news for hea Ith gz beauty ‘BNews can’t be gathered without reporters. well oe ~ WNewspapers can’t be printed without layout personel. 99e VALUE iers So, lets face it. We need YOU. SUAVE HAIR m Hardec's We need all the help we can get. Service Experienced or not, there is a need for you on the Fountainhead staff. If you can give a little bit of your time REG. $2.50 VALUE BY REVLON REGULAR $1.19. AQUAMARINE MENT OR REG. to help East Carolina University have a better student newspaper, RAPID SHAVE LOTION ¢ BIG drop by our office on the second floor VALUE PRICE Ofig.. Wright Building. REGULAR $1.29 VALUE SHICK REGULAR $1.19 LATHER SHAVE mm LISTERINE REGULAR OR MINT BIG ¢ =| Bic ¢ VALUE || S23 || VALUE PRICE : Some salaried positions are still available. ‘o ® ny ~ > 3 > ® ae >= o < n < s 3 = o = Ss Re] c Le} is s =) eo, Cole any Yo Fountainhead Page 8 By WAYNE EADS Staff Reporter f marijuana smoke dissipated in a freshening breeze out of the Catskill Mountains. The few remaining nakeds sadly put on their clothes — all but one iking homeward in the buff. Cars, U-Haul trucks and columns of plodding campers, microbuses, Is | youngsters clogged the roads...The half-moon hillside of Max oke cans, Gallo Yasgur’s dairy farm lay under a miry bianket of Coke c jugs, sandwich wrappers, mud-stiffened pants and blankets and sleeping bags — the detritus left behind by 400,000 of the rock generation after their biggest turn-on ever. An electric pot dream...not only had come true but survived to a more or less happy ending.” This was Newsweek ‘s summation of the end of the Woodstock Music and Arts Fair held in Bethel, N.Y. But it could well apply to any of the many pop i | he last sweet-scented wisps 0 RICHIE HAVENS OPENS Woodstock Pop, festivals of summer, 1969. Only the setting would change. Travel, traffic jams, massive crowds, drugs and music day and night. These are some of the sights and sounds of the pop festival — a relatively new invention that seems to be an outgrowth of a cultural revolution among the youth of America. Since the Monterrey Pop Festival in California, the events have spread to the East Coast. The first of the big ones on this side of the country was the Miami Pop Festival last December. That was the spark. This summer the fire spread far away from its most enthusiastic founders. Atlanta, Ga., Prairieville, La., Tenino, Wash., Lewisville, Tex., Newport, R.!., and Atlantic City, N.J. got into the act with a few of the many festivals this summer. The rage even crossed the Atlantic to the Isle of Wight, where Bob Dylan - no introduction needed - drew a crowd of 220,000 hip Britishers. Atlanta had the first big concert of the summer. Beginning on July 4, the THE MASSES GROOVE on into the night . September 16, 1969 September 11 Country Joe and Blood, Sweat, and The producers opened. The magic of | the news of the The organizers town was small continued and be By early Fridé the public that tl it impossible to advance were co! tried to enter the The producer the way to the fe But still they Traffic jams \ came. On foot, ¢ When it rait temporarily slov They formec huddled in blar entire concert fi The situatior Food and v members of a c! The membe than 15,000 pe The free me That was of deeper points t For exampl JANIS JOPLIN show ran for two days of peace, music, and happiness. The only big problem was the heat. The temperature reached 105 degrees in the shade on Saturday. But despite the heat, the show went on. The police were asked to remain outside the gates by the show’ and there was no trouble. The crowd was inexplicably peaceful for it At all the pop festivals, the locals ‘were hesitant to allow all those ‘hippy degenerates’ to congregate in that particular location, but in most cases, the end of the festival brought a new realization to those people. The critics cried that there would be violence if such a crowd wer together, but there was seldom violence — especially if the police staye s producers, s size e brought 4 doutand © left the kids alone. FREAKS Even then, while drugs were seldom hard to find, there were relatively few cases of people treated for drug abuse. Peace and brotherhood were the during that v watch-words. It was th Then came Woodstock. nation. Woodstock was a turning point for a lot of things. How can one describe it? It was ac The consequences will not be known until historians look back and try to There we discover what really happened at Woodstock. shocking. But let us look at the events as best we can. It was she Mike Lang, 24, one of four producers of the event, had originally planned to There we hold the festival somewhere else. However, complications arose, mostly dreamed who headed up by irate townspeople, and the event had to be relocated. There wi It was finally scheduled to be a three-day event at Bethel, N.Y. It was billed gathering of as “An Aquarian Exposition” — three days of peace and music. It is tru The 600-acre dairy farm of Max Yasgur, near White Lake, was rented for the and that th occasion. Jersey turny There were few sanitation facilities, but there was plenty of open space anc Some thi there were streams to bathe in. Time wil Camping was to be done on the farm and on the concert grounds close by A lot of The preparations were more than adequate for the 150,000 people the producer live togethe expected. least a basis Everything seemed to be fine. Despite The performers at Woodstock included some of the biggest names in rock company ei music: The Creedence Clearwater Revival, Joan Baez, Arlo Guthrie, Richi had as cust Havens, The Incredible String Bank, Ravi Shankar, Sweetwater, The Joshu Medical Light Show, The Canned Heat, The Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, The Who, a” a ave there’s no Crosby, Stills and Nash. Also there were Sly and the Family Stone, © he Jefferson Airplane, The Bane Co th to It tr Cc t hed 105 degrees In show’s producers, | for its size. 1 all those ‘hippy nost cases, the end owd were brought — 4 lice stayed out and : vere relatively few rverhood were the ‘an one describe it? ¢ back and try t0 riginally planned to se, mostly dreamed |, N.Y. It was billed C. , was rented for the of open space an¢ t grounds close by eople the producers gest names in rock rlo Guthrie, Richi twater, The Joshu plin, The Who, an Airplane, The Bane Blood, Sweat, and Tears. opened. continued and be: the public that the rest 0 advance were collected. After a while, no the way t huddled in blankets and under impr entire co untry Joe and the Fish, Jimi Hendrix, the tron Butterfly, Johnny Winter, and The producers were totally unprepared for what happened after the show f the event had spread far across the United States and Canada — music, the people, the drugs, the fun. The organizers were not prepared for the response. Everything was fragile, the wn was small and food and water were scarce. But somehow, the festival came the chaotic spectacle that many feared it would. y, even before the festival opened, the producers announced to £ the events would be free. The size of the crowds made kets at the door. Only the tickets that were sold in attempt was made to stop anyone who The magic 0 e news of the By early Frida impossible to sell tic ied to enter the gates. The producers asked over radio o the festival to turn around and go home. But still they came. Traffic jams were twenty mi ame. On foot, on bicycles, on motorcycles. When it rained on Friday and Saturday, emporarily slowed. They formed a wet processi and television, asking anyone who was on les long and cars had to be abondoned. Still they the incoming lines were only on toward the farm, and those already there ovised shelters until the rain stopped. The ncert field had become a sea of mud, but the show went on. The situation often came close to disaster. Food and water ran short, but the people of nearby Monticello and 100 members of a commune called the ‘Hog Farm” solved the problem. The members of the Hog Farm prepared and distributed breakfast to more than 15,000 people Saturday morning. The free meal included crushed oats, raisins, honey, sugar, and dried fruit. That was only part of the Woodstock Music and Arts Fair. There are some deeper points that need to be considered. For example, there were almost half a million people gathered in Bethel FREAKS LOOK ON at Atlanta. during that week. It was the third largest ci nation. It was a city, with births and There were other problems, shocking. It was shocking because it There were no fights or even argumen who headed the security force said. There were no arrests for violence and th gathering of that size. It is true that the festival-goers had a and that the police did not try to stop ¢ Jersey turnpike. Some think that indicates that the n Time will tell. A lot of people refuse to believe th live together as brothers, that love could prevail, and tha least a basis in reality. Despite the long hair, shaggy dress, drugs and re company employee said they were the most courteous peop had as customers. Medical people said there were no wounds of war in those they treated. -shaven cheek and morality — and “1 found no correlation between a clean ! i there’s no correlation between long hair and immorality,” said Joe Kimble, the ty in New York and the eighth largest city in the deaths and sanitation and food problems. but for a city of that size, the crime rate was almost didn’t exist. ts during the weekend, the policemen e drug arrests were very few for a e toward drugs very permissive attitud pt on the New he drug violations exce ation’s drug laws are obsolete. at the youngsters proved that people could t their idealism had at volutionary ideas, a bus le that he had ever Fountainhead FIREMEN COOL CROWDS in 105 ° heat. police chief of Beverly Hills, Calif., who went to observe. It’s hard for the older generation to judge the Woodstock festival. Allen Ginsberg sees it as ‘a major planetary happening,” while Yippie leader Abbie Hoffman sees it as “the birth of the Woodstock nation and the death of the American dinosaur.” Some call it part of a cultural revolution. Janis Joplin, who everyone has at least h lots and lots of us, more than anybody ever ourselves as little clumps of weirdos. But no group.” The editorial writers for Time \ook different point of view than many critics 0 un-Establishment view. To quote from 7ime: turning points and significant events: or disposed, and now, seemingly, plane great groundwells of popular movemen eard of, says that there are “lots and thought before. We used to think of w we're a whole new minority ed at the festival from a somewhat n the subject. They take a surprisingly “The baffling history of mankind is full of obvious battles won, treaties signed, rulers elected ts conquered. Equally important are the ts that affect the minds and values of a generation or more, not all of which can be neatly tied to a time and place... The fastival turned out to be history's largest happening. As the moment when the ‘60's openly displayed its strength, appeal special culture of U.S. youth of the and power, it may well rank as one of the significant political and sociological bafaron ated more cieariy than ever oerore i f drugs...Perhaps out of fear of lity, police made fewer than 100 arrests on narcotics U.S. has accepted the oversimplification that all narcotics are dangerous and thus should be outlawed. The all but universal acceptance of marijuana, at least among the young, raises the question of how long the nation’s present laws against its use can remain in force without seeming as absurd and hypocritical as Prohibition.” Time also talks of the unique sense of toget young displayed. “it was also a demonstration to create a kind of peace in a situation w' they followed a mysterious inner code 0 the kind envisioned by Chicago’s Mayor Daley.” This was the beginning. The young in the future will try t now griping about and then they wi correct. Woodstock shows that youthhasmore wisdom tha give them credit for. the pervasiveness of an rousing the crowd to hosti charges. By and large, the herness and brotherhood that the the adult world that young people could here none should have existed, and that law and order infinitely different from ‘o change those institutions that they are ll find new problems that they need to n many adults want to PHOTO CREDITS Hendrix & Havens Others - Ozzie Sweet Technical assistance JIM! HENDRIX PLAYS finale. — Elliot Landy — Kelly Adams Page 10 Fountainhead Supply store ju stifies prices on their way up by Ozzie Sweet ra increase ~ n . F ticke The Student Supply store has Instead suspicious. stickers > mark been idely criticized by the are placed over the price mark bee vi y it t ' 1 we : student body recently the publisher ana never The store has been accused of the bookstore, Clark said 1competency and exploitation Formerly, it was the policy ot t books ith “ 1 ver sn a r ff 7 ol 1 cSt is q I 5 SINCE € ° rc f ¢ tt ? are th ) i} wVvOors S ind the ] rsity complaints i St Supply Store yes not deny that it is out to k money, but the justification for this is the 75% minimum of the profits which gces into scholarship funds ‘Without them (the scholarships) hundreds of Vat DOOK prices are ublishers students would never have been able to attend the University,” the freshman orientation folio t publishers are the prices of ften without printing says Nevertheless, if the responsibility for high prices at advertise the ew aCKets tO the bookstore is to fall on scholarships, then it follows that there may be some poorer students applying for financial aid or even dropping out The other 25% profit goes to activities ‘‘for the benefit of the students,”’ (for example, the new BLOW YOURSELF UP enarnk hor a: SHACK oat ai Cleaners Slack and White 2 ft.x 3 ft. Poster ($4.95 value) with plastic frame $4 ($7.95 value) Send any black & or color photo up to 8” x 10” ¢ egatives) and the name ‘Swingline’ cut from any Swingline stapler or staple refill package to: Poster-Mart, P.O. Box 165, Woodside, N. Y. 11377. Enclose cash, check or money order (no C.0.D.'s) in the amount of $2.00 tor each blow-up; $4.00 for blow-up and frame as shown Add sales tax where applicable. Original material returned undamaged. Satisfac tion guaranteed. Allow 30 days for delivery. Cor, 10th & Cota 1 Hr Cleaning THE GREAT SWINGLINE TOT srarcee The world’s large g stapler yet no larger than a f pack ot gum. ONLY 98¢ with 1000 FREE staples! ee THE GREAT NEW SWINGLINE AND & “CUR SK STAPLERS = ONLY $1 69 6 ach T Witn 1000 staples a ) only $1.93 each, - Gg ® inc. 32-00 SKILLMAN AVENUE, J LONG ISLANO CITY. WY. 11101 Wow \ were qlad oore Hock — MS o Seow 1 Hfiew} Xown Widhox yoo! UMM nw Au nis aes een Sf Onigoe Shop with cod s yor Qauxle. ey nee \\ ios TPM (hh 62M on Sot. ) Haircuts Drive-In machines) The universities’ voice In fealing with publishing omnanies is the National Association of College Stores which, Clark says, has often exchanged harsh words with these companies. Yet, regardless a potential power, the sOCcI yn has had little success lowering prices for students. One alternative might be the German publishing company Reclam, which specializes in inexpensive paperback books Assured of a constant market, xclam can afford to buy rights quality books and print them editions costing only a few cents each. This requires motivation beyond greed too much to ask of American publishers? Profit small The bookstore’s share in the profit is comparatively small three cents out of a dollar while the publisher gets 7.8 cents. When operating expenses are considered, the profit is fess 1./ cents per dollai Publishing and supply companies are generally to blame for prices at the Student Supply Store, but there are alternatives Some of the alternatives could pass on more of the 20 per cent discount the stores get from & Launderers nche Sts. Greenville, N.C 3 Hr. Shirt Service Shirley’s Georgetown Barber Shop Weleume Students Razor Cuts Georgetowne Shoppes Near Campus rejecting the traditional ancestor worship of the Japanese then include the London Critic's TAFT OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO. STUDENT DESK LAMPS —- GREETING CARDS Student Stationery —— Professional Filing Supplies Drafting and Art Supplies -- School Supplies 214 East Sth Street Cor. 10th & Cotanche Sts 1 Hr Cleaning as September 16, 1969 DR. BLANCHE WATROUS displays one of her summer prizes, the results of a trip to Africa. (Upcoming feature this Thursday) Noted film director speaks to students vw Hanmi, who has been Award and the Gold called one of Japan's best movie Award Nanami Inferno of First speak to members of the drama Love, Hani’s new film, has department One critic has described his at the Berlin Film Festival late style as reflecting today’s youth — this spring and their stumbling entry into When shown to members of the perverse adult world, the United Nations, Nanami directors, was here yesterday to already wan the hect film award aireaay won the oest tim awara received a standing ovation. The auditorium at Brandeis His work has been compared University was filled the three f to that of Sweden's Ingmar nights it played. Bergman and_ Italy's Federico Fellini. between a 17-year-old boy and This story of the love affair Hani’s first awards came in girl is set in modern Tokyo. The 1951 with his first film, ‘‘Pupils score consists primarily of recent in the Classroom."’ Awards since Japanese pop music. Most revelent work Hani considers this his most relevent work, and has written: “We are now living between two worlds of morality the old traditional one which 1s crumbling, and the new one which is burgeoning. Living between both, we are confronted by both.’ “Consequently, we live in frustration, afraid to leap into the depths of ourselves, content to see merely our outer image, as in a mirror. In this film, | want to look straightly, fearlessly into the depths, into that part of a human being which is most personally his." Nanami will be opening at the State Theater Sunday. 752-2175 Hair Styling Cleaners & Launderers Sts. Greenvilie NC 2 Hr C + shirt Service b. swinger ent September 16, 19€ —— Ca Oa Si) Stewart L. Secretary of the begin this year’s Thursday with a| Value Revolut America’s Priorit The lecture w in Wright Auditor Udall was Secretary of the | when he was ser term as US. from Arizona's § He recently pt 1976: Agenda | His book calls government to ¢ tension, student decay of Americé Udall ts a na Ariz. He is a g University of Ari in the Atr Fore War II Students and admitted — free cards. Admissior members 1s $1: public, $2 Tickets are Central Ticket Wright Building. Portaits Photographers portraits yest 1969-70 Buccan The portraits from 9 a.m. until the third floor union Miss Donna LE the Buccaneer, required to we dark ties and dar Women are rr white blouses wt Miss Dixon students shot portrait mad possible Playhous The East Ce will open its se naire it” ra re wnenm it prese “Finian’s Rainb Tryouts fo musical began |. continue tonig will run from tonight in McGi The cast ts lar white and Neg and dancers ner ure Or 'S Oye aret WiiCdl First has award 1 late rs of inami The ideis three affair / and . The ecent most tten: ween the one iving are e in into tent je, as want into of a most t the Udall speaks Stewart L. Udall, former Secretary of the Interior, will begin this year's lecture series Thursday with a lecture on ‘The Value Revolution: Changing America’s Priorities.”” The lecture will be at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium. Udall was appointed Secretary of the Interior in 1961 when he was serving his fourth term as U.S. Representative from Arizona's Second District He recently published a book, 1976: Agenda for Tomorrow His book calls for changes in government to deal with racial tension, student unrest and the decay of American cities. Udall 1s a native of Tucson, Ariz. He is a graduate of the University of Arizona and served in the Air Force during World War Students and faculty will be admitted free with their ID cards. Admission price for staff members 1s $1.50 and for the public, $2 Tickets are on sale in. the Central Ticket Office in the Wright Building Portaits taken Photographers began making portraits yesterday for the 1969-70 Buccaneer The portraits are being made from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. daily on the third floor of the student union Miss Donna Dixon, editor of the Buccaneer, said men are required to weat white shirts, dark ties and dark coats Women are required to wear white blouses with round collars Miss Dixon said that all students should have thet portrait made as soon as possible Playhouse opens The East Carolina Playhouse will open its season in October aie i sents F ve when it presents the musical “Finian’s Rainbow.” Tryouts for roles in the musical began last night and will continue tonight. The tryouts will run from 7:30 to 10 p.m. tonight in McGinnis Auditorium The cast is large, and includes white and Negro singers, actors and dancers “Finian’s Rainbow” was first produced in New York in 1948. It is considered the first musical with an integrated cast to deal comically with race relations. John Sneden will design scenery, Andrew Gilfillan will plan the lighting and Margaret Gilfillan witli design the costumes. The musical will be presented at 8:15 p.m. Oct. 22-25 in McGinnis Audotorium. Music committees Music majors may soon help decide on matters such as curriculum, course content, and degree requirements for the School of Music Dean Thomas W. Miller of the School of Music discusses plans for tncluding student representatives as voting members of formerly all-faculty committees at a meeting of music majors Thursday. The newly created policies committee and the remaining members of the student forum will be working with Miller to determine the number of student representatives which committees should have students on them, and how these students should be chosen. Grants made Dr Robert C Lamb, chairman of the chemistry department, has received a $20,100 grant for research on organic derivatives of hydrogen peroxide. He received the grant from the National Science Foundation The school of nursing has received a $12,400 grant which will be used for financial aid for students who want to become protessional nurses. The six students who receive the grant will get a monthly stipend for living expenses, and tuition and fees for a yeat Poetry needed The Rebel, the university's literary magazine, !s now accepting manuscripts in room 215 in the student union The magazine publishes poetry, short stories, essays and reviews. Welcomes Students “in the exclusive 200 Block” Page 11 Dee Fountainhead Freshman candidates are Lila K “be i: : Kersha e inits Daugherty, president; Susan er haw y xh h Hunt, vice president; and work Beverly Cotten, secretary. The election will be Sept. 23. Film changed A substitution has been made Rock Kershaw, a graduate in the International Film student in the art department, is schedule. exhibiting portraits in a “Bell, Book, and Candie’ was three-man exhibition at the schedules for Sept. 16. Rudolph Bahai Faith Asheville Art Museum. Alexander, assistant dean of The portraits are of ECU student affairs, said the film has students and popular musicians been damaged and cannot be including Jimi Hendrix and the shown. Jefferson Airplane. “Sergeant York’ will be The exhibit ends Sept. 28 shown instead Kim travels I A new religious group on campus, the Baha‘i Faith, began a series of weekly fireside meetings last night. Cammi Thomas, a . ee ee eae to Miami Bana visits sophomore, 's eading the : : Be a meetings. The group meets in Dr. Jung-Gun Kim, associate professor of political science, will attend a meeting Nov. 6-8 of the Southern Political Science Miss Thomas said the Baha‘i Association. The meeting will be in Wright Auditorium. Faith believes there is only one held in Miami. a Students who did not get God, and that He has revealed Judicial position tickets last week wijl be himself progressively throughout open admitted free at the door. history in such people as Jesus, The band travels up to Moses, and Baha’u'llah, the 40,000 miles a year and has founder of the religion. attorney general or public gen) concerts in London, She said the religion believes defender of the Women’s Edinburgh, Paris and jn “the oneness of mankind’ Judicial Council, has been asked Amsterdam and the elimination of all to contact the Dean of Women prejudice. before Friday. Courses offered ——— a —SCtCtC«S elk Tyler Attention Coeds! Belk Tyler is the place to shop! Always First in Fashion. room 206 of the student union The U.S. Army Field Band at 7 p.m. each Monday night. and Soldiers’ Chorus will give a concert at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday Anyone interested in applying for the offices of Education this fall will offer courses in shorthand, typing, office procedures, drawing, painting and investing. All are non-credit courses. Registration has already begun. Political science meets Faculty and students in the political science department will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in the Nursing Building auditorium, room 101. Political science majors are required to attend. Candidates chosen The University Party last Thursday chose candidates for 1969-70 classofficers. Senior candidates are David Guilford, who is running for president, and Stephanie Standafer, vice president. Junior candidates are John Cooper, president; Suzanne Jenkins, vice president; Mary Clark, treasurer; and Dede Clegg, secretary. Sophomore candidates are Marsha Brooks, secretary; and Tommy Autry, treasurer. Fashion Favorites From Century. Here’s where the Great ‘Put -Together Look” Starts. Mix and match plaids, diagonal tweeds, prints and solids Two great color groups, cocoa brown and mist green In Downtown Greenville SAA NAA Th 2 onop Mon Thurs. & lei _——— oe i j ‘ } i H ; ' eae Page 12 Fountainhead ry September 16, 1969 Pirates will open on road Saturday NEW PIRATE CAPTAINS — — Coach Clarence Stasavich, ieft, is shown with football captains for 1969 soon after their election by teammates. In the center is alternate captain Mike Boaz, senior defensive rover back, and at right is Rober Bost, senior defensive end. Boaz is from Fairmont and Bost is from Statesville. Matan ciwa verensive p Gir to lead Pirates A A pair of defensive aces who outstanding here, have been named captain have had careers and alternate of the footbali team End Roger Bost named oat who was freshman (his first year with the football program) was named captain. Mike Boaz, who has been a starter for two years was named FCS: anding alternate captain. After playing one full season at rover back and moving to defensive halfback last year and starting the first nine games, Boaz missed the last game of the season with a broken collarbone. Boaz, 5-10, 176 pounds, went out for the freshman team and despite his size, his coaches d with his were mor from thes As a sophomore he was twice named ‘knocker of the week an award given the player who does the hardest hitting during the game Bost put on weight during the seems prepared for After ed the top player on the undefeated 1966 freshman team, ne was sidelined because of injuries as a sophomore, but came back last season with consistantly good performances summer ana an Outstanding season being nar as defensive end He had an outstanding spring practice and came back in good condition for the campaign this fall. “Our squad members have made excellent choices for their captains in 1969. Both players are not only proven performers at their respective positions but they are good on and off the field leaders as well,’’ Stasavich said Athlat Names (we ¢ Athletic department I} The athletic department has transferring to the University of named two new coaches. John Lovstedt, a native of Detroit, will be diving and soccer coach. He will also advise the lacrosse club. Bill Dickens, a native of Wilson, will be tennis coach and assistant football coach. Lovstedt has eight and a half years of diving experience. He attended Ohio University before where he won. three varsity letters in diving. Dickens received his bachelor’s degree from East Carolina in 1967. He received his master’s degree in physical education in 1968. He became an instructor in the physical education department last year and was advisor to the lacrosse club. Indiana Pirates went into their final week of preseason practice from Edenton, rips off one of severa! Wallace, who plays both fullback and tailback, was injured late in the worko Dp The Pirates open their 1969 season Saturday in the same place they closed the 1968 season, but they hope to change the script a little The Pirates will travel Friday to Johnson City, Tenn., to take on the East Tennessee Buccaneers and besides wanting to have a winning start in this campaign, they hope to erase the memory of the closing defeat in the previous season. Stasavich pleased Coach Clarence Stasavich, as Oo hoadad ir he headed it pre-season practice, appeared to be pleased with the results of the first two weeks of work, but said was still some needed and that = there Improvement more lineup changes might be made After last Saturday's scrimmage, there were no fess than 14 players who have missed work out because of injuries, but most of them are expected to be ready for the opener, according to trainer Terry Wills. “We've had work during pre-season practice than we have had in the past,” Stasavich said, ‘‘and this is the more contact chief reason for the large number of players being injured “The increase in contact work is due largely to the number of sophomores who will be playing. And, in the process of preparation, this work has contact resulted in more injuries than would normally occur.” Wills, after checking over the injury list Sunday, said he felt that all but one of the players would be able to suit up in the opener. Gerald Wrenn, a split end who has a knee injury, definitely will not make it. “Saturday's scrimmage showed that there may be some additional shifting of personnel,’’ Stasavich said, “particularly on offense.”’ gains in Saturday's scrimmage at Fickeln Stadium. ut, but was expected to be back at full tilt as the “George Whitley has been very outstanding at safety in practice and Stu Garrett at defensive left half has also been a standout,’’ Stasavich said. The Pirate offensive backfield against East Tennessee will be in the hands of veterans. Heading the list is senior fullback Butch Colson, who as a sophomore set the Southern Conference rushing record with 1,135 yards. Billy Wightman, senior tailback who was the total offense leader last season, will also return. David Brill who assumed starting status at mid-season last year, is the blocking back Dwight Flanagan, a defensive specialist last year who was injured in the opener and missed the remainder of the season, will be at wingback. Richard Corrada, who claimed starting duties at mid-season last year, has moved to split end and ts the chief target of Wightman and Colson when it comes to passes Good defense Defensively, the Pirates have looked best in. the secondary Besides Whitley and Garrett, Tommy Bullock at right half and Mike Boaz as alternate captain at rover, make up the starters “They have been particularly tough against our passing,” Stasavich said. ‘That mean, however, that our passing attack isn’t too strong.” Other defenders who have looked good Walter Adams and George Wheeler as tackles and captain Roger Bost at end. When asked to take a long view on _ the Stasavich said: ‘‘It’s hard to say just how we'll be because right now we are comparing our could include season, offense and defense against each other. We can’t tell if either one is strong enough. “It will be necessary to play a couple of games to find out just how good we are.” By GEORGE B It looks like « for the football te for the 196 Conference title. The Pirate ¢ must show great over last year’s sa 234 paints to © most humiliating 65 0 toss Mississippi. To he of last year’s mis has changed formation fror alignment to the rover back Defensive The return ¢ starters from | undoubtedly hel lineup. Top INTERCEPT puiling in int Fountainhead Page 13 ‘Same’ team as been ec expected afety in x rrett at 2 The football team can expect Iso been : to see virtually the same team id. ‘ Saturday night in the opener yack field that caused a 17-7 upset in the vill be in final game of the 1968 season. Heading Vansant, who watched the East k Butch f Tennessee team in their 18-16 more set 4 victory over Appalachian State > rushing a “ University Saturday night, says ds. Billy : that all but three starters from ick who the 1968 team are back this ader last a | year. ‘‘They are missing a 1. David 4 fullback, a tackle and an ng status All-America safety,” Vansant - is the ¥ said, “but they appear to have a + strong club.” lefensive Good recievers He MG f Vansant appeared to be oe particularly impressed with em will receivers Ron Causey and John melee Gibson, a pair of ends. Gibson daa caught four passes for 54 yards Be eet a “en, in the game against Appalachian. ie N 4" \ Mike Young, a senior tailback van and adit ws x a A . at 178 pounds, is the chief yindsses : reap F P : — - runner for the East Tennessee Pirate defensive backfield players team. He picked up 117 yards in a 18 carries and scored one es have ‘ 7 fi ht’ needed for title touchdown. Fullback Mike ondary e p | ig pole ie ae cage x ; : once and nette eards on uae By GEORGE BURBELLA Pi bette medene sive ee eine teak apa. heroes of Feats l, sack ap Ge ground, and fuleek erry valf and will be Roger Bost, 205 pounds, aici players er carer veterans Dave Roberts and Phil Brooks, another sophomore ptain at It looks like an uphill 0K saa Don Tyson, 280 pounds; at 2" Mike Milis are competing for Bilodeau at tackles, Tey Cree dye tne scianehonn . for the football team in its quest ends, Tim Tyler at tackle the oo safety evi Edmondson at center and Butch while aleo aetting 22 yards. icularly for the 1969 Southern weighing 252 pounds and Give The (e) fensive team as its Britton and Stuart Laney as . assing,”” Conference title. Davis and George Wheeler at entire starting backfield back guards. Their ability to open up o quaterback oe The Pirate defensive UNIT GQ yards, both weighing more than post ay pe oe i Wits Wu) ‘They appeared to be passing must show great improvement 5399 en at tailback, Butch Colson at determine how well the Pirates unsettled on who they wanted at over last year’s squad which lost : fullback, David Brill at blocking do their running attack. quarterback,” Vansant said. » have 234 points to opponents. The New linebacker back and Rich Corrada at Some sophomores who may ‘‘They started with a Walter most humiliating defeat was the The linebacker jobs should go Wingback. break into the starti q lineup sophomore, Richard McGlothin, eler as 65 0 loss to Southern to Paul Weathersbee, a starter Single wing other than those already byt it was Larry Graham, who ar Bost Mississippi. To help correct some from a year ago and Monty To get Stasavich’s single wing dit a pi foals Wallace, was last year’s starter, who came take a of last year’s mistakes, Stasavich Kierman, a rising sophomore attack moving, there needs to be . ac ue ittie Mitchell, on in the fourth quarter to bring season, has changed his defensive with much promise. a marked improvement in pe snags John Hollingsworth, them from behind to beat to say formation from the six-one The important position of passing. Billy Whightman threw a e, is, we ee Eddie Appalachian.'’ Graham e right alignment to the five-two with a_ rover back has Mike Boaz asthe only 55 times last year while mee a va ae a completed six of 16 passes for ig our rover back top candidate. ECU averaged just 18.7 points 40 a a erd, Don 102 yards after McGlothin had st each : The backfield in the 5-2 per game, well below Stasavich’s ollenhaver, Ted Salmon and completed all but two of five ler one GTEMEE SxaraGr® defense will include George standards. Sophomore Jack Tom _Gammache all on the asses for 13 yards, and had one The return of 10 defensive Whitley, Tommy Bullock, Rich Patterson should boost the Ceseiislve ile: interception. play a starters from last season will Elliott, Chuck McClintock, passing game. Toughtest schedule As a team, East Tennessee Gerald Wren and Matt Walker The offensive linemen, East Carolina’s 1969 football rolled up 168 yards rushing and ut just undoubtedly help strengthen the for lineup. Top contenders INTERCEPTION! —— DEFENSIVE HALFBA trying to nail down one of the puiling in interception during Saturday's scrimmage. conimonly known as the unsung cK John Brothers is hauled down from behind after schedule could be the toughest in years. It includes such outstanding teams as Louisiana Tech, Southern Mississippi and Richmond. If the offense can picked up 120 through the air. Defensively, East Tennessee has a line anchored by a rugged middle guard, Butch Buchannan and a pair of mobile linebackers, live up to expectations and ifthe Bubba Timms and Doug defensive unit can adjust to its Lineberger. They also have a fine end Ron Mendheim. The have some interesting surprises for their opponents this season. defensive backfield is headed up by Al Guy, a returning starter. Eight players injured in football Coach Clarence Stasavich sent his troops through a full game scrimmage Saturday afternoon that was so intense eignt piayers were injured. “'The overall performance was much better than last weekend's scrimmage,’’ Stasavich said, “‘We made wonderful progress in carrying out techniques. For the first time this season we had some very fine contact during the game.” There was so much contact that sophomore tailback fullback Billy Wallace was carried to the hospital late in the fourth quarter with a neck injury, and second string tailback Jack Patterson had to scrimage leave in the second quarter with a knee injury. The Pirates now have 14 on the injured list. ‘In the first quarter the offense had trouble blocking but as the game progressed they seemed to get the proper technique to execute their blocking,” Stasavich said. ‘The kicking game looked good but our coverage on kickoffs wasn’t quite what we expected but it was fairly good.” This will be the last big scrimmage before the Pirates travel to Johnson City, Tenn., to meet East Tennessee in the opening game Saturday. so fis oro earaas September 16, 1969 September 16, 15 a Page 14 Fountainhead Pirates could be in store for banner As the East Carolina teams their fall season, it's time During the past two years, a fierce rivalry has developed season should help boost the lineup The defensive and offensive vege | vent for East 1 7 year team . line need tmproveme as to compare last years l€aMS J oween the Citadel and East ' I ear hat n be expected this , Carolina to have a_ successtu with what c aoa Carolina. Two years ago East ul Carolina wa yasting alongona #0" ms Carolina was coasting alon¢ é : ; ee Il t ar East Carolina. = : a 1 This year’s cross-country ahs iz i 6-0 record when the Citadel a t mpletel Jominated . team could be the best ever a Suu } oe Bulldogs came to Greenville for ‘ cine te t Southern East Carolina and possibly the East Carolina's homecoming yame Everyone was shocked when the Citadel beat East Carolina best in the state and conference. Coach Carson has three of his top five runners returning from last year in addition to a fine } ithleti ICY < Bi f . 1.19, causing East Carolina to +h Atlant Coast Conference ; : poe group of freshmen and other Ee. sc ee lose the conference title, ‘ {oes tt ts Carmichael Cup returning lettermen 1 : destroying an undefeated season Dies vould have taken d 1intng homecomine ] j veekend for alumni and A very demanding schedule is in store for East Carolina’s harriers students th the three . ie Pirate Teams from such schools as : Last year it was the Pirate's : if footba : ne ti ; Penn State, West Virginia, N.C turn to be the spoilers i d soccer : e : State, the University of North East Carolina beat the Citade! é a \ pecting to 53 44 i OHA clolrc Carolina, Virginia Polytechnic £u 4 in Alic) teaches their re 1s fron Institute and William and Mar ’ mee homecoming game and knocked oe ay them out of the conference title head the dual meet schedule along with the state, conference, Tt foott t 1 should be T ' This year’s game with the : nproved over fast , NCAA _ regional and NCAA AS) es ‘St’ Citadel is not on homecoming a sgt i ; season’s squad which compiled < national championship meets eas naa Wine cOMPIEG a bit jt is a vital came fer both | s ey ; nee A61 1S aolina’s soccer team eee teams in their quest for the . : : : be hard to increase the Bee nen atte finished with a 3-6-1 record last i conference title \nNing percentage. however year pe tage, however, The Richmond game_ is Mes cause the Pirate’s schedule this ill be the toughest ever Loutsiana Tech and Southern Mississippi are expected to have yne of their best seasons, as are Richmond and the Citadel The two most important games of the season will be Oct. 4 against the Citadel and Oct. 18 against Richmond. — = _— MARTINIZING another must for the Pirates, because the Richmond Spiders are the overwhelming favorite to win the conference championship and a trip to the Tangerine Bowl Twenty-nine lettermen return trom last year and an outstanding crop of sophomores CERTIFIES THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING COLOR TV It was the best season ever by a Pirate soccer team and there is hope of improving their showing this season. If East Carolina's athletic teams cam improve on_ their performa should be a banner year for the Pirates in the Southern Conference BULLOCK SNARES PASS —~ Tommy Bullock, who usually is a defensive speaicalist, plucks a pass during a spell at offensive wingback during Saturday’s scrimmage at Ficklen Stadium. FREE UR MARTINIZING “WORLD'S MOST POPULAR DRY CLEANER” 1401 Dickinson Ave. Ienth St. rri G. E. Portacolor TV Drawing October 25th Color TV from GREENVILLE TV & APPLIANCE Photo by Richard Rain: Come in and Register No Purchase Necessary ard Rainey ally isa ffensive tadium. Fountainhead Up against the wall ... By BEN CURRENCE When it all boils down, what's left is nothing but good old Christian ethic. You can’t respect a man who doesn't practice what he preaches. To get to the point, our flag-waving champion-against-evil white liberals and ‘revolutionaries’ should consider re-analyzing their programs. Philosophy and rhetoric are both good, out for very limited uses. Convincing one’s personal acquaintances, unless you’re a mighty good convincer with a lot of friends, makes only a minute dent in the masses of people to be dealt with. Those of the new “‘liberal elite’’ who consider themselves politically together, humanistically conscious, and prepared to take care of business must realize that mass participation, not useless rhetoric, will bring about a revolution. Hiding behind drugs, long hair and such slogans as love and brotherhood belies the fact that these are the necessary ingredients that can supercede the reality they are criticizing. Aware of the fact that our society failed because it so loosely used the words “‘love and brotherhood,” the super-liberal is nevertheless falling into the same pit of illusions. The endless repetition of such terms day after day renders them meaningless mirages. To break it down, the super-liberal is advocating it so hard he doesn’t have time to practice it. To avoid becoming a part of the New Establishment, the super-liberal must turn his attention to that which he has been criticizing yet practicing himself. if the “super-liberal’’ is really uptight about economic exploitation, crass materialism, avaricious imperialism, and blatant institutional racism, he has to refrain from letting these things pass by. His only alternative is to turn toward economic honesty, a life style filled with something more than money and possessions, and a love and brotherhood with meaning. Our white liberal has removed himself from the goals of revolutionary political thought. In effect he has been a part of the ‘‘established”’ middle class bureaucracy, not so much because he has committed a revolutionary sin but because he left out the real meaning in what he is doing. To paraphrase Brother Huey Newton, a principal founder of the Black Panther Party, the mother country radical or the white liberal (depending on where your head is) has a definite role in the movement. He must first choose his friends and define his enemies. Then he must not only regain his moral standard and align himself with humanity, but also put this into practice by attacking the protectors of the institutions. Christian ethic, leaving out the mysticism of religion, is the obvious alternative to the contradictions and failing points of the society the white liberal is concerned with. Need oc Pol Bellied Heoter ? évew if you dont weve gol some thing you neeal Ken 5 Furnifur € G03 Dickinson 754-36 83 members, and the 3g administrators are urged to Page 15 Letters All Students, faculty express their opinions in writing in the ECU Forum. When writing letters to the Forum, the following ea procedure should be Please come and followed: work for us. —Letters should be Please come and concise and to the point. work for us. —Length should not Please come and exceed 300 words. The work for us. Editorial Board reserves the Please come and right to edit letters to work for us. conform to this Please come and requirement. work Tor us. —AI! letters must be signed with the name of the the writer. However, upon ...§ author’s request his name = may be withheld. Please come and the Fountainhead Wright Building the author, and not those of _ ar “The East Carolinian.”’ = September 18 9:30 - 4:00 in the University Book Exchange BUDD CRONIN a Trained College Specialist from JOHN ROBERTS wants to meet you He will assist you in selecting the ring that is right for you... . with the proper stone, weight and style, for the most lasting and beautiful symbol of your educational achievement FOUR WEEK SHIPMENT sia oene Social revolution's ANG Bo Wes YERE WE ARE ASA Qy TRO. ANDI HER \ effects being felt (al kind of revolution is taking place in the RS, ALK ! ites today. It Is not revolution in the , \ . cm \ *nse of the word t does not require ~ gah | \ WA] ALN, | U/L] s 1. sodshed ~ Va, \ i ce and bloodshed. eo BINA 3s Ken em Se \ | it is best described as a social revolution \ e ” a 5; HM ccnvnicicaamcossiiciiii ; in the " | “a Vol. 1 No.3 bringing about sweeping and far reaching changes In the 4 , \S Pe ors | Ww / \ social r tionship of one man to another 0 y * / . \ | T volution is the challenge to authority that we slik \ ‘ / exper! ( today os | | | CU | | = ] inge can be seen in almost all phases of man’s 4 CY leet | | { 1 TETPABY oe Ny / schools, colleges, factories offices and tn / tn Women are demanding equal rights. Students \ ae ' Fabs ogee ee gee apley | y lilel ser Vile FrOrm tl lle CldsstQOtll ee - is challenging the authority of the snt.'’ Workers no longer !ook upon their hos ywertng father tigure rmeting out rewards ind ' all levels and stations in life are deinanding ity of the professor is being challenged yom. Ne longer do students accept what the vs as infallible ger do many young people in society follow the values that society says are ood.’’ Witness the Woodstock Folk Festival last month. The 400,000 peor o attended the festival rejected many est shed values by ignoring laws, using drugs and abitatir see another building going up, and | see No longer do housewives !ook upon the husband as support. Many have become independent and C ng as well without him A around, people are finding the old yerior subordinate” relationship fading jnt of authortiy”’ revolution will bring about ching changes in the political and social Whether all of them will be beneficial or 1g IS certain about the revolution. The By Bill Owens | stand here with my garbage sack ana wonder why these dormitories seem to grow younger but stronger and wiser each year. They all stand there and seem to absorb the knowledge that the carefree students pursue. Eachbutlding molds itself into the hill and they never seem to stop thinking, and they never seem to stop looking at me. | keep their front lawns much more paper to pick up. | see more bathrooms to clean, comodes to scrub, beer cans to tote. | feel my bones reject the thought of one more year. All cleanup men are black, and black men cannot be bosses, | think. For no one knows more about cleaning than I, yet | my own. | dim no : have to tell my white boss man how the cleaning should be done because he does Owering Gominance of some people based on false and back lawns and side lawns clean. | mot know. | am 6O and he is 33. ! haw + 1d shez e hierarchies 1 . : : ang Dacre taWwns ai Sik H Sis, ; sgt i y ruerarenies will be aimingked Ifnot wash she window through which they see cleaned and worked here at this school for een 33 years and he has never cleaned. | Registration system demands revamping me. No matter where | am, they see me. | their walkways over which the of idiots of knowledge pass everyday. | clean these dormitories; Jones, Aycock, Scott, Belk. But did | always pick up the paper and scrub the halls and wash the comodes? No, not always. For | helned raise the hammers that pounded life into the first clear tho wonder why white men are always t! boss “Tam a slave’ But | must work for my fami though my pay is the pay of a child. My children are smart; | must make then bosses. They must not be the slave that | tion needs to be ympliment am. | am a slave. Years ago, | could have however. There w ; ee eee | helped to tote the boarded the progress express and ridden it rgency locator card to be filled out this year. Last bricks, to mix the cement, to lay the into many other fields and gone many y é ; pipelines of the first of these dungeons. — other places But, | jumped the train that This fortifies our faith in the bureaucratic machin¢ And when the first form was finished, | moved in one small circle just because it t st that someone has took care of it. And the other dorms finally something to »f student and faculty complaints > past TOur years. students have recommended that schedules be ) the students before they get here. This would much of the misery. irs. Here, again, the asks the administration to study this ewspaper followed and | took care of them. The big white boss said ‘‘Keep ‘em clean’ and | said ‘‘yessir, and thank you sir.’’ That was years ago. A bag and a stick Come rain or shine, | keep the lawns clean, me and my bag and my stick. In was moving. And now, no matter how fast | go, | still move in that same small circle which neither contracts nor expands. | am where | was 33 years ago. | have ridden this train through hard times. | have nicked up tons of paper and seen the temperature drop so that | have to pry the paper up from the ground with my hands. proposal and tell us why this has not been done in the summer the sun scorches my clothes and | have caught volluys of snowballs from Tit is the question of the money involved in blisters my back and dries my eyes. | pick ignorant ‘fools whose pursuit or the class schedules, we feel sure the students up the drinking cups, and gum wrappers, knowledge has taught them that a freezing iid gladly pay the posted ived @ aa hols and thousands of other chips of paper. | janitor is fun to harass. | have seen the pick up love letters sometimes and | read temperature rise so that | had to carry é mMprovements must them. People in love never have problems, water to keept the plants from dying. | i) nembers at just love. | pick up school papers with F have worked all day in the blistering sun ree marks on them and papers with no marks eee a In winter, | move the snow and ice. | haul dirt for the sidewalks and move it again xt day when the ice melts. When the freezing rains come down, | must work fast so that the water will not rot the paper and cause me to stop and bend my back. Because, you see, the sun makes my skin tight and the cold makes my joints stiff. The wrinkles on my face are the wrinkles carved by rheumatism and the ne and heard the crowds pass and say that | smelled. | have taken with the ears of a deaf man the curses and have been called names by students who themselves were not worth the breath it took to utter these curses. | have forced myself to reply “good morning” to the words that meant good morning and the tone that meant “go to hell.” | have been the slave to ten thousand masters sickdays. | must work because people hate | keep my job because no one eise will filt nust clean up the filth that they have it, and because no one will have me spread. And | must keep the grounds | take orders because | cannot give them. | clea take the pay because | must live. | think | b | get easier maybe | shal! make it Al