<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039426_0001"/>
an<lb/>
ountainhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Vol. 1 No. 2<lb/>
East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
September 16, 169<lb/>
U University newspaper editor<lb/>
condemns national Guard during riots<lb/>
 see page 2<lb/>
Woodstock: Tranquility<lb/>
despite the thousands<lb/>
 see pages 8,9<lb/>
IV oo<lb/>
dstock Music &amp; Art Fair - July 4 6,1969<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2,<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
A &amp; T University editor<lb/>
lashes National Guard<lb/>
RALEIGH - The editor of<lb/>
the newspaper at A &amp; T<lb/>
University at Greensboro told<lb/>
Gov Robert Scott last week that<lb/>
the students at A &amp; T were<lb/>
alienated toward the<lb/>
administration because of the<lb/>
"heinous way the National<lb/>
Guard acted when they were on<lb/>
our campus during the riots last<lb/>
spring<lb/>
He made the statement last<lb/>
Tuesday at a meeting of all the<lb/>
newspaper editors and Student<lb/>
Government Association<lb/>
presidents at the governor's<lb/>
mansion. Scott called the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
The editor said guardsmen<lb/>
stole clothes, books, record<lb/>
players and other items which<lb/>
belonged to the students<lb/>
the SGA at East Carolina, and they wanted to talk over.<lb/>
Chip Callaway, editor-in-chief of Schofield said he thought he<lb/>
the Fountainhead, were at the most important outcome of the<lb/>
meeting. meeting was the tentative plans<lb/>
One student editor told Scott for forming some kind of<lb/>
that faculty members were beiny organization including students<lb/>
dismissed from his university for and members of theStateBoard<lb/>
"viewpoints that conflicted to of Higher Education,<lb/>
those of the university<lb/>
administration<lb/>
Lack of communication<lb/>
between the student body and<lb/>
student leaders was also<lb/>
discussed.<lb/>
Schofield said students<lb/>
needed respect for the SGA so<lb/>
they would come to the SGA<lb/>
with problems.<lb/>
Other problems discussed at<lb/>
the meeting were the high cost<lb/>
of books and tuition, the food<lb/>
service, lack of parking space on<lb/>
He also said the guardsmen campus, and students' objection<lb/>
were "unnecessarily destructive<lb/>
when looking for firearms in the<lb/>
dormitories.<lb/>
He said many students were<lb/>
not able to return to school<lb/>
because they could not afford to<lb/>
buy new clothes and pay tuition<lb/>
at the same time.<lb/>
John Schofield, president of<lb/>
to the school having authority<lb/>
which they feel only their<lb/>
parents should have.<lb/>
Callaway said after the<lb/>
meeting that the governor was<lb/>
attentive to what the students<lb/>
had to say. He said Scott invited<lb/>
the students to his office<lb/>
"whenever they had problems<lb/>
SGA passes policy<lb/>
on faculty admissions<lb/>
�" as adopted new<lb/>
�cies for faculty<lb/>
The SGA<lb/>
admission pc<lb/>
and staff members to campus<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
ID cards for faculty members<lb/>
and their families will be made<lb/>
Wednesday through Friday from<lb/>
9 a m. to 6 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
The cards will admit holders<lb/>
to both the popular and<lb/>
international films, the lecture<lb/>
series and the travel-adventure<lb/>
film series.<lb/>
Staff members will use N.C.<lb/>
retirement cards instead of ID<lb/>
cards. ID cards will not be<lb/>
available for staff members.<lb/>
Facuiiy and staff card holders<lb/>
will be charged $1 under the<lb/>
public price for popular<lb/>
entertainment and $2 more than<lb/>
the student service charge for<lb/>
the artists series. There will be<lb/>
alimit of two tickets per family.<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
Season tickets for the artists<lb/>
series will cost $10. Staff<lb/>
members can buy season tickets<lb/>
to popular and international<lb/>
films for $1.<lb/>
Lecture series tickets for staff<lb/>
members will be $1.50 per<lb/>
lecture or $3.50 for a season<lb/>
ticket. Travel-adventure film<lb/>
tickets are 75 cents per film or<lb/>
$2.50 for a season ticket.<lb/>
There is also a $10 package<lb/>
plan for staff members.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
The SGA last week approved<lb/>
$40,000 to continue the campus<lb/>
bus system and named the<lb/>
members of the honor and<lb/>
judiciary councils.<lb/>
The meeting Wednesday was<lb/>
the last meeting of the 1968-69<lb/>
SGA. New members will be<lb/>
elected this month.<lb/>
Honor Council<lb/>
Members of the Men's Honor<lb/>
Council are Brian VanDercook,<lb/>
Steve Owens, Tim Kesler, Jens<lb/>
Bang, Tom Leinbach, Jim Hicks,<lb/>
and Franklin Adams. Alternates<lb/>
are Gary B. Williams and Steele<lb/>
Trail.<lb/>
Members of the Men's<lb/>
Judiciary Council are Lee Lewis,<lb/>
Nathan Weavil, John Craig<lb/>
Souza, Gary King, George<lb/>
Marijuana<lb/>
charge sticks<lb/>
Fountainhead City Bureau<lb/>
Two East Carolina students<lb/>
who were charged this summer<lb/>
with tending a patch of<lb/>
marijuana in a wooded area near<lb/>
Greenville were bound over to<lb/>
Superior Court after a hearing<lb/>
last Friday.<lb/>
They are Richard Day of<lb/>
Winston-Salem and Thomas<lb/>
Cramer of Long Island, N.Y.<lb/>
The two had been arrested on<lb/>
a misdeamor charge July 22.<lb/>
Officers said they had observed<lb/>
them tending a marijuana patch<lb/>
for some time.<lb/>
They had also been charged<lb/>
with possessing marijuana.<lb/>
A report read at the hearing<lb/>
said they had 5.8 grams of<lb/>
marijuana. Their warrants were<lb/>
chanqed from a misdemeanor<lb/>
charge to a felony charge.<lb/>
Judge Herbert Phillips, who<lb/>
presided at the hearing, did not<lb/>
set a date for the trial.<lb/>
Day and Cramer are free on<lb/>
$500 bond.<lb/>
THE CAMPUS CHIME system will soon be installed<lb/>
permanently.<lb/>
Chimes will ring<lb/>
atop New Austin<lb/>
The electronic chime system<lb/>
installed this summer on the<lb/>
Physics building has passed its<lb/>
trial period.<lb/>
It will be installed<lb/>
permanently on New Austin<lb/>
within the next two weeks, said<lb/>
Bill Eyerman, director of the<lb/>
Alumni Association.<lb/>
The senior class of 1969 gave<lb/>
$1,000 as their class gift to help<lb/>
pay for the chime system. The<lb/>
alumni association contributed<lb/>
$500.<lb/>
The SGA will vote Sept. 29<lb/>
on whether to appropriate<lb/>
$2,500 for the system.<lb/>
Originally, the senior class<lb/>
had considered getting a brass<lb/>
bell for Ficklen Stadium, but<lb/>
decided the chimes would be<lb/>
more feasible.<lb/>
The chime system is similar<lb/>
to a stereo tape player. There is<lb/>
a control unit housing the timer,<lb/>
the tapes, and connections for<lb/>
the six loud speakers.<lb/>
Special tapes can be played,<lb/>
such as Christmas carols, victory<lb/>
songs, a death knoll, or the Alma<lb/>
Mater.<lb/>
The Alma Mater plays at<lb/>
noon daily. There are<lb/>
Westminster Chimes every hour<lb/>
VJtl ��� I I<lb/>
tl l-�"� r<lb/>
at � t �vk. t<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
exceeds<lb/>
construction<lb/>
$7 million<lb/>
Four new buildings costing<lb/>
more than seven million dollars<lb/>
are now under construction on<lb/>
Georghiou, Bill Shaw, and Tracy campus, and five other buildings<lb/>
and projects are planned.<lb/>
About three-fourths of the<lb/>
new Biology and Physics<lb/>
buiiding is already being used.<lb/>
F.D. Duncan, vice president<lb/>
in charge of business, said the<lb/>
last wing of the new building<lb/>
will open in two or three weeks.<lb/>
The building cost $3 million.<lb/>
The new men's dormitory,<lb/>
which opened for the firt time<lb/>
this fail, houses 500 students. It<lb/>
cost $1,680,000.<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
Members of the Women's<lb/>
Honor Council are Chere<lb/>
Randall, Virginia Lanam, Caroi<lb/>
Mabe, Lynn Quisenberry,<lb/>
Susann Brown, Nancy Sheppard,<lb/>
and Wanda Wentz. Alternates are<lb/>
Ann Breeze and Stephanie<lb/>
Standafer.<lb/>
Members of the Review<lb/>
Board are Steve Sharpe, Rex<lb/>
Meade, Edna Cascioli and Paul<lb/>
Breitman.<lb/>
The new ten-story women's<lb/>
dorm houses 400 students and<lb/>
cost $1,305,000.<lb/>
On U.S. 264 Bypass near Pitt<lb/>
Plaza, a clinic for handicapped<lb/>
children is being built. It will<lb/>
cost $292,770.<lb/>
A soda shop is being built on<lb/>
campus between the nursing<lb/>
building and the music building.<lb/>
It will cost $237,000.<lb/>
Construction will begin early<lb/>
next year on a new elementary<lb/>
education laboratory school. It<lb/>
will cost $1,150,000.<lb/>
A new student union will be<lb/>
built near Eighth Street.<lb/>
Ayers joins administration<lb/>
as new special assistant<lb/>
Construction is expected to start<lb/>
early next year. This building<lb/>
will cost 2,940,000.<lb/>
A new building for the<lb/>
School of Health Professions is<lb/>
being designed. It will cost<lb/>
373.000. Construction will<lb/>
begin next spring.<lb/>
Plans are being made to put<lb/>
the campus electrical wiring<lb/>
underground. This project will<lb/>
cost $525,000.<lb/>
Air conditioning is planned<lb/>
for the Graham Building. This<lb/>
will cost $90,000.<lb/>
Within the next three weeks,<lb/>
renovation of the underground<lb/>
storm drainage system will<lb/>
begin. This will cost about<lb/>
$216,000.<lb/>
All-weather tennis courts will<lb/>
be ready next spring. They will<lb/>
be built just south of Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. The tennis courts will<lb/>
cost $55,000.<lb/>
John Ayers, who is Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins's new special assistant,<lb/>
got a parking ticket last week -<lb/>
for parking an unregistered car<lb/>
in a staff parking area.<lb/>
"I guess I'll have to pay the<lb/>
ticket because they were right<lb/>
Ayers said.<lb/>
"I couldn't get the old sticker<lb/>
scraped off, so I hadn't put the<lb/>
new one on yet<lb/>
Ayers has been assistant to<lb/>
the president of the university Assembly when they visit Nov.<lb/>
for three months. 1 �<lb/>
Before coming here, he Ayers said that since his job<lb/>
taught adult courser, at Camp has just been created, he does<lb/>
Lejeune, Cherry Point and not know exactly what he can<lb/>
Goldsboro. He also taught one expect his job to become or how<lb/>
quarter here. closely he will work with the<lb/>
Ayers duties i nclude students,<lb/>
researching Jenkins's speeches He said he would like to be<lb/>
and raising money. He will also able to help students with<lb/>
make plans to entertain the problems such as registration,<lb/>
members of the General drop-add and parking.<lb/>
"The streets of our<lb/>
country are in turmoil. The<lb/>
universities are filled with<lb/>
students rebelling and<lb/>
rioting. Communists are<lb/>
seeking to destroy our<lb/>
country. Russia is<lb/>
threatening us with her<lb/>
might, and the republic is in<lb/>
danger. Yes, danger from<lb/>
within and without. We<lb/>
need law and order or our<lb/>
nation cannot survive<lb/>
Adolf Hitler<lb/>
Septembf<lb/>
Fin<lb/>
lat<lb/>
by Sam B<lb/>
Fountain<lb/>
A fire lat<lb/>
Cannon'<lb/>
downtown<lb/>
two fire<lb/>
petroleum 1<lb/>
and caused<lb/>
several mill<lb/>
The fire<lb/>
control ab<lb/>
was still bi<lb/>
there was<lb/>
would spre.<lb/>
bottled ga:<lb/>
gasol ine<lb/>
warehouse.<lb/>
Nurses i<lb/>
Hospital s<lb/>
asked to<lb/>
number of<lb/>
was dange<lb/>
explode.<lb/>
Police s<lb/>
reached t<lb/>
they felt tr<lb/>
evacuate th<lb/>
The sk<lb/>
was lit brie<lb/>
which beg<lb/>
p.m. Fire d<lb/>
said severa<lb/>
was still oi<lb/>
were still s<lb/>
U. tnAraA f<lb/>
llllllUU.li I<lb/>
Fountain!<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Wi Inert<lb/>
service s<lb/>
hundred<lb/>
warehouse,<lb/>
He said a 1<lb/>
the wareht<lb/>
electrical li<lb/>
"One<lb/>
could have<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He said<lb/>
arrived qui<lb/>
setting up.<lb/>
The s<lb/>
warehouse<lb/>
w ere for<lb/>
a I u m i n u<lb/>
warehouse<lb/>
� 1<lb/>
Where Is<lb/>
Poets Resp<lb/>
Lowenfels,<lb/>
York, 1<lb/>
Company,<lb/>
That does n<lb/>
her poets<lb/>
them. I swea<lb/>
1<lb/>
is top seen<lb/>
That will<lb/>
subversive li<lb/>
that is doom<lb/>
To accept d(<lb/>
Eveline<lb/>
fitting ii<lb/>
Join<lb/>
p<lb/>
DIN<lb/>
call A<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0003"/><lb/>
ber 16, 1969<lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
installed<lb/>
! senior class<lb/>
etting a brass<lb/>
Stadium, but<lb/>
nes would be<lb/>
stem is similar<lb/>
layer. There is<lb/>
sing the timer,<lb/>
nnections for<lb/>
?rs.<lb/>
:an be played,<lb/>
carols, victory<lb/>
II, or the Alma<lb/>
ater plays at<lb/>
There are<lb/>
es every hour<lb/>
1<lb/>
pected to start<lb/>
This building<lb/>
0.<lb/>
ding for the<lb/>
Professions is<lb/>
It will cost<lb/>
struction will<lb/>
) made to put<lb/>
ctrical wiring<lb/>
s project will<lb/>
ng is planned<lb/>
Building. This<lb/>
t three weeks,<lb/>
l underground<lb/>
system will<lb/>
I cost about<lb/>
nis courts will<lb/>
ing. They will<lb/>
ith of Minges<lb/>
nis courts will<lb/>
its of our<lb/>
urmoil. The<lb/>
filled with<lb/>
ei I ing and<lb/>
nunists are<lb/>
lestroy our<lb/>
I u ss i a is<lb/>
; with her<lb/>
epublic is in<lb/>
langer from<lb/>
'ithout. We<lb/>
rder or our<lb/>
irvive<lb/>
A dolf Hitler<lb/>
Fire destroys warehouse<lb/>
late yesterday evening<lb/>
by Sam Beasley and Al Dean<lb/>
Fountainhead City Bureau<lb/>
A fire late last night destroyed<lb/>
Cannon's Warehouse in<lb/>
downtown Greenville, injured<lb/>
two firemen, threatened<lb/>
petroleum tanks across the street<lb/>
and caused what may amount to<lb/>
several million dollars in damage.<lb/>
The fire was brought under<lb/>
control about 3 a.m. The fire<lb/>
was still burning but police said<lb/>
there was little danger that it<lb/>
would spread to heatiri"g fuel and<lb/>
bottled gas storage tanks and<lb/>
gasoline stations near the<lb/>
warehouse.<lb/>
Nurses aides at Pitt County<lb/>
Hospital said they had been<lb/>
asked to prepare for a large<lb/>
number of casualties while there<lb/>
was danger the tanks would<lb/>
explode.<lb/>
Police said if the fire had<lb/>
reached the gasoline station,<lb/>
they felt they would have had to<lb/>
evacuate the area.<lb/>
The sky all over Greenville<lb/>
was lit bright orange by the fire<lb/>
which began shortly after 11<lb/>
p.m. Fire department spokesmen<lb/>
said several hours later the fire<lb/>
was still out of control. Flames<lb/>
were still shooting more than a<lb/>
hundred feet into the air at<lb/>
Fountainhead deadline last<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Wilbert Manning, who runs a<lb/>
service station less than a<lb/>
hundred feet from the<lb/>
warehouse, saw the fire begin.<lb/>
He said a truck was driving into<lb/>
the warehouse when it hit an<lb/>
electrical line.<lb/>
"One damned water hose<lb/>
could have put it out Manning<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He said the fire department<lb/>
arrived quickly but was slow in<lb/>
setting up.<lb/>
The streets near the<lb/>
warehouse were so hot they<lb/>
were forming steam. The<lb/>
aluminum siding on the<lb/>
warehouse was completly melted<lb/>
down and the steel girders<lb/>
supporting the building were<lb/>
buckled.<lb/>
There were natural gas storage<lb/>
tanks near the warehouse.<lb/>
Fireman were releasing the gas<lb/>
slowly and allowing it to burn<lb/>
off to prevent an explosion.<lb/>
There were also large tanks of<lb/>
oil in at Atlantic Oil Co.<lb/>
distributing center across the<lb/>
street. One small fire broke out<lb/>
near there, but firemen kept it<lb/>
away from the tanks.<lb/>
Manning said the warehouse<lb/>
was fiiied nearly to capacity<lb/>
because the first sale was to be<lb/>
held there today. No estimate of<lb/>
the value of the buildings,<lb/>
contents or lost petroleum could<lb/>
be found last night.<lb/>
At 12:20 a.m. this morning,<lb/>
when the fire was still far from<lb/>
under control, two firemen were<lb/>
taken to Pitt County hospital in<lb/>
fire department rescue squad<lb/>
trucks.<lb/>
The nursing supervisor at the<lb/>
hospital said both had been<lb/>
overcome by heat and smoke.<lb/>
She said they might be admitted<lb/>
to the hospital.<lb/>
She identified the two<lb/>
firemen as R. P. Rogers Jr 26,<lb/>
and James K. Hathaway, about<lb/>
35, both of Greenville.<lb/>
Several thousand people stood<lb/>
around the warehouse watching<lb/>
the fire.<lb/>
Policemen drove by with<lb/>
loudspeakers and told the<lb/>
spectators to stand back. Most<lb/>
of them appeared to be<lb/>
university students. They jeered<lb/>
and applauded the firemen and<lb/>
policemen.<lb/>
About a hundred university<lb/>
men were helping fight the fire.<lb/>
A member of the Alpha<lb/>
Epsilon Pi fraternity said they<lb/>
had gone to the fire and offered<lb/>
their help.<lb/>
Greenville citizens were also<lb/>
helping with the fire. They had<lb/>
no protective clothing.<lb/>
A fire department spokesman<lb/>
'Where Is Vietnam?'<lb/>
Where Is Vietnam? American<lb/>
Poets Respond. Edited by Walter<lb/>
Lowenfels, Garden City, New<lb/>
York, 1967. Doubleday &amp;<lb/>
Company, Inc. $1.25.<lb/>
The Writing on the Wall. 108<lb/>
American Poems of Protest.<lb/>
Edited by Walter Lowenfels,<lb/>
Garden City, New York, 1969.<lb/>
Doubleday &amp; Company, Inc.<lb/>
$1.95.<lb/>
A nation<lb/>
That does not invite rebellion among<lb/>
her poets has already destroyed<lb/>
them. I swear<lb/>
that every tree<lb/>
is top secret, green with shady clues<lb/>
That will inevitably suggest a<lb/>
subversive line of inquiry, N, there<lb/>
is never a society<lb/>
that is doomed before its poets choose<lb/>
To accept doom.<lb/>
Eveline Bates<lb/>
Eveline Bates has supplied a<lb/>
fitting invocation to Walter<lb/>
Lowenfels' anthologies of<lb/>
American protest poems.<lb/>
It is the spirit and vitality of<lb/>
the poets, the living verse, that<lb/>
rejects the pentagons<lb/>
fabrications, that abhors the<lb/>
statistical fascinations of the<lb/>
petty and the powerful, that<lb/>
discovers the lie of the big<lb/>
numbers and small humanity.<lb/>
Where Is Vietnam?and The<lb/>
Writing on the Wall are divergent<lb/>
(continued on page 6)<lb/>
Join The QU Crowd<lb/>
Pizza tat<lb/>
42! (Trecnville Blvd.<lb/>
I264 Ry-Paas)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Teleuhune 756-9991<lb/>
said shortly before midnight that<lb/>
there were only five units at the<lb/>
fire.<lb/>
i The firemen had set up hoses<lb/>
to spray down the units closer to<lb/>
the fire because of the intense<lb/>
heat.<lb/>
The streets were cluttered<lb/>
with fire hoses and there were<lb/>
frequently flashes of light from<lb/>
power lines burned out by the<lb/>
fire.<lb/>
A thermometer on a fence less<lb/>
than a hundred feet from the<lb/>
fire was registering the<lb/>
maximum.<lb/>
House mother becomes<lb/>
friend and advisor<lb/>
The traditional image of the the room check. Miss Fulghum<lb/>
house mother - warden, law<lb/>
enforcement officer, or mother -<lb/>
is going to change this year, said<lb/>
Miss Carolyn Fulghum, Dean of<lb/>
Women.<lb/>
"The new image of being a<lb/>
friend, counselor and advisor has<lb/>
been caused by the changing<lb/>
times said Miss Fulghum.<lb/>
Enforcing regulations will be<lb/>
left to the house councils and<lb/>
hall procters, she said.<lb/>
An example of the change is<lb/>
???�<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The house counselor will<lb/>
check the room only for<lb/>
damages. If a woman wants to<lb/>
live in filth, that will be her<lb/>
problem, Miss fulghum said.<lb/>
Thirteen of the university's<lb/>
18 house counselors now have<lb/>
master's degrees in guidance and<lb/>
counseling, Miss Fulghum said,<lb/>
so the counsellors are qualified<lb/>
for their new role.<lb/>
"I believe that if the cities arc permitted to deteriorate, then the aca-<lb/>
demic institutions in those cities must inevitably suffer<lb/>
BOSTON MAYOR KEVIN WHITE<lb/>
Everyone freaks when you sa1 confrontation. Currently their image<lb/>
is Columbia: boom, smash, rubble. But the matter's more subtle than<lb/>
that. For confrontation is the open expression of conflict of interests<lb/>
HEKKELEY VETERAN MICHAEL ROSSMAN<lb/>
"This is the danger of education, that it be so tightly planned that it<lb/>
becomes terminal �terminal in number of years and courses of study,<lb/>
and even more dangerously, terminal in the limits on the student's<lb/>
freedom of choice jerroldzacharias<lb/>
J<lb/>
STUDENTS.<lb/>
Crowell at 'The Campus Corner<lb/>
says - CHARGE IT<lb/>
Students, faculty, administrators, as a matter of fact<lb/>
President Jenkins - We welcome you as an account.<lb/>
Crowell wants new accounts so bad<lb/>
he's giving away a FREE SUIT to some<lb/>
lucky person. "The Campus Corner"<lb/>
offers the finest collection of traditional<lb/>
clothing in Greenville.<lb/>
The FREE SUIT will be given away on OCTOBER 4<lb/>
- Before Homecoming - all you need to do to register<lb/>
is open an account at 'The Campus Corner<lb/>
Gentleman's Attire<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Welcome tftudenfo<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4,<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
<lb/>
ONFEBERAT<lb/>
tormiDi i<lb/>
Cullop publishes<lb/>
book on South<lb/>
Dr. Charles P. Cullop, an<lb/>
associate professor of history,<lb/>
has just published a book called<lb/>
' 'Confederate Propaganda in<lb/>
Europe- 1861-1866!<lb/>
The book covers the<lb/>
establishment of the<lb/>
Confederate newspaper, the<lb/>
efforts of the South to<lb/>
discourage the immigration of<lb/>
Europeans to the North, and the<lb/>
work of the most active English<lb/>
propagandists.<lb/>
Cullop received his Ph.D.<lb/>
from the University of Virginia.<lb/>
He has also done post-doctoral<lb/>
study at Harvard University.<lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
Long hair on young men has<lb/>
probably caused more family quarrels<lb/>
during the past years than any other<lb/>
single subject, and while father may<lb/>
still scream about the length of<lb/>
his son's locks, the old man has been<lb/>
letting his own grow a bit on top<lb/>
and discovered that longer sideburns<lb/>
are really quite becoming<lb/>
FRANCES MOFFAT<lb/>
"What the Hippies Gave Us"<lb/>
San Francisco Chronicle,<lb/>
 in order to awaken, a combina-<lb/>
tion of efforts is needed. It is<lb/>
necessary that somebody should look<lb/>
after the man who wakes him; it is<lb/>
necessary to have alarm clocks and<lb/>
it is also necessary continually to<lb/>
invent new alarm clocks.<lb/>
"But in order to achieve all this and<lb/>
to obtain results, a certain number of<lb/>
people must work together.<lb/>
"One man can do nothing<lb/>
The Morning c' the Magicians<lb/>
Great Southern Finance<lb/>
$ Cash Loans $<lb/>
A special rate for College Students. From $12<lb/>
to $70 for only $12 a month<lb/>
752 7117<lb/>
405 Evans Street<lb/>
THE FIRST BOOK by Dr. Charles P. Cullop of the ECU Department<lb/>
of History bears this dust jacket. The slim monograph deals with the<lb/>
activities of the Confederacy's leading propagandist, Henry Holtze, as<lb/>
he attempted to win the sympathy or the suuthern cause frornr.sutra!<lb/>
Europeans. (ECU News Bureau Photo)<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
WRANGLER<lb/>
TAPER-FIT JEANS<lb/>
ECU Campus<lb/>
Easy Walking Distance to Complete Shopping Center for Students<lb/>
"SUPER LEANS"<lb/>
BLUE DENIM JEANS<lb/>
SIZES: 2738 14 oz. plus coarse weave denim � Heaviest denim ever<lb/>
made �exclusive with WRANGLER western wear.<lb/>
Nsvy Blue<lb/>
$ 4.98<lb/>
Septembei<lb/>
Me<lb/>
One of<lb/>
societies in<lb/>
nothing aboi<lb/>
standing o<lb/>
members. T<lb/>
need an ode<lb/>
offbeat hobl<lb/>
blood type,<lb/>
average in<lb/>
except one.<lb/>
Uppi<lb/>
To be v<lb/>
organization<lb/>
Mensa, you<lb/>
I.Q. test th�<lb/>
than 98 <lb/>
population.<lb/>
Last year<lb/>
was starte<lb/>
faculty a<lb/>
member. By<lb/>
the member<lb/>
16 students <lb/>
Activi<lb/>
Dr. Willi<lb/>
Professor o1<lb/>
member frc<lb/>
long time<lb/>
forsees an<lb/>
activities fo<lb/>
"We did<lb/>
late last tei<lb/>
time was sp<lb/>
This year<lb/>
more produ<lb/>
NummateO<lb/>
WRa<lb/>
toir<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mucu<lb/>
Nominated BES<lb/>
St<lb/>
thep<lb/>
Ph<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0005"/><lb/>
er 16, 1969<lb/>
has<lb/>
illy quarrels<lb/>
any other<lb/>
ither may<lb/>
thof<lb/>
1 has been<lb/>
n top<lb/>
- sideburns<lb/>
Js"<lb/>
i combina-<lb/>
;eded. It is<lb/>
hould look<lb/>
is him; it is<lb/>
:locks and<lb/>
itinually to<lb/>
rm clocks,<lb/>
all this and<lb/>
number of<lb/>
k together.<lb/>
) nothing<lb/>
ans<lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
&amp;12<lb/>
7<lb/>
treet<lb/>
4m<lb/>
'9<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
 �<lb/>
EANS<lb/>
denim ever<lb/>
$ 4.98<lb/>
Mensa exists for top two percent<lb/>
One of the most exclusive<lb/>
societies in the world cares<lb/>
nothing about the income, social<lb/>
standing or ancestry of its<lb/>
members. To join, you don't<lb/>
need an odd occupation or an<lb/>
offbeat hobby, or even a rare<lb/>
blood type. You can be quite<lb/>
average in every respect �<lb/>
except one.<lb/>
Upper 98<lb/>
To be welcomed into the<lb/>
organization which calls itself<lb/>
Mensa, you must prove by an<lb/>
I.Q. test that you are smarter<lb/>
than 98 per cent o. the<lb/>
population.<lb/>
Last year a chapter of Mensa<lb/>
was started here with one<lb/>
faculty and one student<lb/>
member. By the end of the year<lb/>
the membership had grown to<lb/>
16 students and faculty.<lb/>
Activities expanded<lb/>
Dr. William White, Assistant<lb/>
Professor of History, the faculty<lb/>
member from last year and a<lb/>
long time member of Mensa,<lb/>
forsees an expanded range of<lb/>
activities for the group this year.<lb/>
"We didn't get started until<lb/>
late last term and most of the<lb/>
time was spent on organization.<lb/>
This year should prove much<lb/>
more productive said White.<lb/>
eo BEST FILM Be-l.rFM<lb/>
What happens<lb/>
to innocence<lb/>
when young<lb/>
� passions<lb/>
rage out of<lb/>
control?<lb/>
inferno of<lb/>
First Ldve<lb/>
.iiwiiiuiii'<lb/>
win it illli<lb/>
5uMitl�,<lb/>
Nominated BEST FILM Berlin Film Festwa<lb/>
Starts Sunday<lb/>
theatre<lb/>
Phone: 752-7649<lb/>
University suggested that a panel<lb/>
of extra-intelligent people might<lb/>
be usef il to statesmen and other<lb/>
decision-makers.<lb/>
Spread like crabgrass<lb/>
Since then, Mensa has spread<lb/>
like crabgrass to some fifty<lb/>
countries and now has<lb/>
approximately 13,000 members<lb/>
in North America.<lb/>
The group takes its name<lb/>
from the Latin word for "table<lb/>
signifying a round table of<lb/>
equals. There is perhaps a<lb/>
glancing pun on the Latin word<lb/>
for mind, mens.<lb/>
Why do they join? Some do it<lb/>
for status: "It appealed to my<lb/>
ego said one secretary who<lb/>
applied for membership.<lb/>
Some like its novelty: "I'm<lb/>
attracted to the offbeat a<lb/>
professor-member confessed.<lb/>
Red-bearded, jovial Voctor<lb/>
Serebriakoff, International<lb/>
Secretary of Mensa said, "When<lb/>
I joined Mensa I thought, 'Now I<lb/>
am joining a bunch of very<lb/>
bright people; therefore,<lb/>
everyone will agree with me.<lb/>
Alas, this turned out not to be<lb/>
so. Then I married a member<lb/>
and began to learn the full<lb/>
extent, breadth and profundity<lb/>
of human disagreement<lb/>
How do you join? The only<lb/>
requirement for membership is<lb/>
evidence of scoring in the top<lb/>
two it of any standard<lb/>
intelligence test.<lb/>
Would-be Mensas who lack<lb/>
proof of their I.Q. level can be<lb/>
tested by Mensa.<lb/>
"Provisions have been made<lb/>
for taking the test at ECU said<lb/>
White. "We can now offer<lb/>
prospective members the chance<lb/>
to complete the entire procedure<lb/>
on ramnnc "<lb/>
The local chapter will have its<lb/>
first meeting at 7p.m. next<lb/>
Tuesday in room 136, New<lb/>
Austin building.<lb/>
Fountainhead solicits letters<lb/>
to the editor. Any student,<lb/>
faculty member or administrator<lb/>
who wishes to express himself in<lb/>
a letter to the editor should mail<lb/>
it to Box 2516, ECU Station,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Letters should be brief. The<lb/>
editors reserve the right to edit<lb/>
all letters to conform with<lb/>
journalistic style.<lb/>
Elevate your mind. Join the REBEL staff. Our first organizational<lb/>
meeting win De Weanesuay, oepiemuei natu h��� ru� �<lb/>
in Wright Annex.<lb/>
3<lb/>
(and how to avoid it<lb/>
The Cash Bash is a<lb/>
chronic hang-up that comes<lb/>
from carrying money around<lb/>
with you on campus.<lb/>
Like discovering you left<lb/>
your wallet in the locker room<lb/>
 three minutes after some-<lb/>
body else does. Or finding<lb/>
yourself short on Saturday<lb/>
night hecause it was too easy<lb/>
to shell out all week. Or get-<lb/>
ting known as a soft touch for<lb/>
a loan because you're a<lb/>
walking cash box.<lb/>
How to avoid these situa-<lb/>
tions? Get yourself a Wachovia<lb/>
Checking Account.<lb/>
Your money is safe, so<lb/>
you don't have that to worry<lb/>
about. And you're not as apt<lb/>
to spend it when it's not<lb/>
bulging out of your billfold.<lb/>
You have an accurate record<lb/>
of how much you spent and<lb/>
what for, so you can flash it<lb/>
for your father when he asks.<lb/>
And when Max (or<lb/>
Millie) the Moocher shows up,<lb/>
you can honestly say all you<lb/>
have on you is a Canadian<lb/>
nickel. And hope he's not a<lb/>
numismatist<lb/>
Of course, you don't have<lb/>
to open your account with<lb/>
Wachovia. But we think you'll<lb/>
like us. After all, we wouldn't<lb/>
ask for your business if we<lb/>
didn't know how to treat you<lb/>
right. Right?<lb/>
Drop by. We're easy to<lb/>
talk co.<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Member F.U.I.C.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6,<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Sept<lb/>
1C<lb/>
6, 18GS<lb/>
September H<lb/>
I<lb/>
The role of a university<lb/>
a univBiaiiy ill<lb/>
Bill of Rights protects students<lb/>
. �:� onH hptiAPPn anv presented to the SGA and<lb/>
In the first column of this obvious. A student cannot<lb/>
series, this definition of the role function at his peak in an<lb/>
of a university was given: The atmosphere in which his right<lb/>
role of a university in general is and freedoms are in doubt or<lb/>
to provide its students with a change from day to day.<lb/>
liberal and practical education Free inquiry and free<lb/>
improve the society through the expression are indispensable to<lb/>
innovation of new ideas and the attainment of the goal of a<lb/>
better methods of accomplishing university. Critical judgment and<lb/>
its aims In light of this goal, the independent thought are vital to<lb/>
university must provide an the search for truth in an<lb/>
atmosphere which is conducive academic community, standards<lb/>
to learning and to expanding for the protection of these rights<lb/>
cultural horizons of the must be instituted at every<lb/>
students as well as the university in the nation. East<lb/>
community'itself. Carolina University is fortunate<lb/>
Since this idea was develoDed in having a document which<lb/>
in the first column, there is no undertakes a minumun<lb/>
need to elaborate on the general guarantee of these rights,<lb/>
definition. Instead, this column The present SGA Bill of<lb/>
will focus on the Student Bill of Rights is the end product of the<lb/>
Rights, a document which is work of a campus group entitled<lb/>
intended to be the guardian of simply: GAP. The name signifies<lb/>
the rights of all students in an the fact that there is a gap in the<lb/>
academic environment. The communications between the<lb/>
relation of a Student Bill of students and faculty, between<lb/>
Rights to this definition is the faculty and the<lb/>
adminstration, and between any<lb/>
given campus group and any<lb/>
other campus group.<lb/>
The student-faculty group<lb/>
began work on its project in<lb/>
July, 1968. The national interest<lb/>
in student rights at the time and<lb/>
certain campus disorders were<lb/>
the sparks that kindled the<lb/>
action on the ECU campus. At<lb/>
the time, and even now, very<lb/>
few schools in the nation had a<lb/>
written guarantee of student<lb/>
rights because the institution of<lb/>
such a document was hindered<lb/>
by the adminstrations and the<lb/>
student government associations.<lb/>
The Bill was drawn up by<lb/>
students and underwent six<lb/>
revisions before they were<lb/>
satisfied. Constitutional lawyers<lb/>
were consulted and the final<lb/>
document was presented to the<lb/>
students. A petition was begun<lb/>
and 2600 students signed to<lb/>
show their support of the bill.<lb/>
The petition and the bill were<lb/>
presented to the SGA and the<lb/>
bill was altered only slightly<lb/>
before it was passed into lav<lb/>
With the passaj of this<lb/>
Student Bill of Rights, the SGA<lb/>
recognizes and guarantees<lb/>
sixteen rights of students. This<lb/>
by WAYNE EADS<lb/>
Bill can be found as Article IX<lb/>
of the SGA constitution.<lb/>
The GAP document was based<lb/>
on the AAUP Statement on the<lb/>
Rights and Freedoms of<lb/>
Students and the Bill of Rights<lb/>
of the University of Michigan.<lb/>
I 'When Is Vietnam?'<lb/>
(continued from page 3)<lb/>
in theme and subject matter.<lb/>
Where Is Vietnam? benef its from<lb/>
narrowness of focus; it contains<lb/>
a particular set of poems aimed<lb/>
at a "particular" war. This sinyle<lb/>
purpose gives the book an<lb/>
internal strength and a unity<lb/>
that is lacking in The Writing on<lb/>
the Wall because of divergent<lb/>
subject matter.<lb/>
Where Is Vie am? is a moral<lb/>
testiment on America's greatest<lb/>
atrocity. The book strikes out at<lb/>
the blindness manifested by<lb/>
America's apathetic masses; We<lb/>
are prosecuting a "genocidal"<lb/>
war, the book tells us the<lb/>
jungles of Vietnam are being<lb/>
purposefully depopulated; we<lb/>
are fighting an "imperialistic"<lb/>
war � the natural resources of<lb/>
Southeast Asia are the actual<lb/>
object of our attack, and we are<lb/>
fighting an "immoral insane,<lb/>
and utterly despicable war to<lb/>
keep the tyrants in Asia <lb/>
there is no longer the pretense of<lb/>
popular elections because the<lb/>
regime we support cannot<lb/>
survive the implementation of<lb/>
democracy.<lb/>
The failure of The Writing on<lb/>
the Wall comes from a deviation<lb/>
from this standard.<lb/>
11 is not a particular<lb/>
memorable anthology, The<lb/>
authors, for the most part, are<lb/>
obscure. The themes are<lb/>
redundant.<lb/>
There is no ostensible<lb/>
purpose in the process of<lb/>
selection, except a desire to<lb/>
collect a cross section of the<lb/>
currents of American protest.<lb/>
One of the most eloquent<lb/>
pieces in the book is Chief<lb/>
Joseph's "Surrender Speech a<lb/>
moving statement of the plight<lb/>
of the American Indian<lb/>
defeated, scorned, outcast from<lb/>
the land which was his<lb/>
birthright.<lb/>
The faces of America's<lb/>
dispossessed often form the<lb/>
subjects of protest. The<lb/>
conditions of the Negro, the<lb/>
poor white, the Indian, and the<lb/>
immigrant laborers give lie to the<lb/>
"American dream<lb/>
by Gob McDowell<lb/>
� 3-HOUR SHTRT SERVICE<lb/>
� 1-HOUR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DRIVE-IN CURB SERVICE<lb/>
14th mad Charles Ht Corner Acrooa Prom<lb/>
Complete Laundry and Dry Cleaning Serrloe<lb/>
Jr- I w m f 1�3BState Bank<lb/>
1and Trust Co. 5 Points<lb/>
MLKbHGreenville, N. C<lb/>
f?i9 fSmMember F. D. I. C.<lb/>
? �2MlWA<lb/>
things go<lb/>
better<lb/>
with<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
��� ���� �,<lb/>
Coca Cola Bottling Company<lb/>
of Greenville<lb/>
By A<lb/>
Boring E<lb/>
complete witl<lb/>
("True Grit")<lb/>
patch is fighti<lb/>
his death<lb/>
fairyland castl<lb/>
Cinema this w<lb/>
I can't rec(<lb/>
of time oi<lb/>
trumped-up m<lb/>
n tryinc<lb/>
grossness of v<lb/>
it only makes<lb/>
for the Piltdc<lb/>
crowd, which<lb/>
small when I<lb/>
Friday night.<lb/>
The few wt<lb/>
meaningful) :<lb/>
warrant the i<lb/>
going down<lb/>
theater.<lb/>
Hopefully<lb/>
found in the<lb/>
f o I I o w i n<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
my opinion c<lb/>
seen and I<lb/>
judgment.<lb/>
If you, th<lb/>
review agreee<lb/>
agree or disag<lb/>
of my prone<lb/>
Newspapers<lb/>
News can't <lb/>
Newspapers<lb/>
Expe<lb/>
on tr<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0007"/><lb/>
ber 16, J9G9<lb/>
�i<lb/>
September 16, 19G3<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
DS<lb/>
s Article IX<lb/>
tution.<lb/>
snt was based<lb/>
3ment on the<lb/>
eedoms of<lb/>
Jill of Rights<lb/>
Michigan.<lb/>
M<lb/>
mentation of<lb/>
he Writing on<lb/>
n a deviation<lb/>
particular<lb/>
i o logy, The<lb/>
iost part, are<lb/>
h ernes are<lb/>
ostensible<lb/>
process of<lb/>
a desire to<lb/>
tion of the<lb/>
can protest.<lb/>
st eloquent<lb/>
sk is Chief<lb/>
r Speech a<lb/>
Df the plight<lb/>
Indian<lb/>
)utcast from<lb/>
i was his<lb/>
America's<lb/>
i form the<lb/>
)test. The<lb/>
Negro, the<lb/>
Man, and the<lb/>
live lie to the<lb/>
well<lb/>
ters<lb/>
m Hmrd�o'�<lb/>
Serrtoc<lb/>
tank<lb/>
rt Co.<lb/>
n. a<lb/>
0. I. c.<lb/>
any<lb/>
Film mistake<lb/>
hits Greenville<lb/>
By A. Olsen<lb/>
Boring Burt Lancaster,<lb/>
complete with a genuine John<lb/>
("True Grit") Wayne black eye<lb/>
patch is fighting the Germans to<lb/>
his death in an art filled<lb/>
fairyland castle out at the Plaza<lb/>
Cinema this week.<lb/>
I can't recommend the waste<lb/>
of time or cash for this<lb/>
trumped-up mistake of a film.<lb/>
In trying to reveal the<lb/>
rossness of war, etc etc etc<lb/>
only makes it more attractive<lb/>
or the Piltdown people in the<lb/>
rowd, which was beautifully<lb/>
mall when I visited the theater<lb/>
riday night.<lb/>
The few well-done (an almost<lb/>
eaningful) scenes just don't<lb/>
effort involved in<lb/>
the aisles of the<lb/>
scribble a note of protest and<lb/>
take it to the office. It'll find my<lb/>
eyes someday, I promise.<lb/>
This column may not get into<lb/>
every issue because of several<lb/>
reasons. The most likely reason<lb/>
is that the Greenville theaters<lb/>
don't have an eye for good films<lb/>
unless they also happen to be<lb/>
good at the box office. We'll see<lb/>
how it works out.<lb/>
Cheets.<lb/>
vWWWYWWWVWWV<lb/>
arrant the<lb/>
joing down<lb/>
theater.<lb/>
Hopefully this column will be<lb/>
found in the majority of the<lb/>
following issues of<lb/>
Fountainhead. It will be only<lb/>
my opinion on the films I have<lb/>
seen and bothered to pass<lb/>
judgment.<lb/>
If you, the reader, find the<lb/>
review agreeable, fine. If you<lb/>
agree or disagree with any or all<lb/>
of my pronouncements, please<lb/>
 a new spirit is abroad to meet<lb/>
the challenge of a new era in the<lb/>
history of the world. Our method of<lb/>
establishing the probable existence<lb/>
of an 'awaker.ed' state will not be<lb/>
exclusively religious, or esoteric, or<lb/>
poetic or scientific, but will be a blend<lb/>
of all these and in contradiction to<lb/>
all the disciplines. That is what we<lb/>
call a Renaissance: a soup contain-<lb/>
ing a mixture of the methods of<lb/>
theologians, scientists, magicians,<lb/>
and children<lb/>
LOUIS PAUWELS<lb/>
AND JACQUES BERGIER<lb/>
The Morning of the Magicians<lb/>
ArVWWrWWSrWWrW<lb/>
Newspapers can not exist without news.<lb/>
News can't be gathered without reporters.<lb/>
Newspapers can't be printed without layout personel.<lb/>
o<lb/>
So, lets face it. We need YOU.<lb/>
We need all the help we can get.<lb/>
Experienced or not, there is a need for you<lb/>
on the Fountainhead staff.<lb/>
If you can give a little bit of your time<lb/>
to help East Carolina University have a<lb/>
better student newspaper,<lb/>
drop by our office on the second floor<lb/>
of<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
Some salaried positions<lb/>
are still available.<lb/>
L<lb/>
HURRY UP AND WAITwas the order of the day for students shuffling through<lb/>
long slow registration lines at East Carolina University this week. An estimate 9,500<lb/>
students registered for classes for the 1969-70 academic year at ECU. (ECU News<lb/>
bureau Phot by Charles Griffin)<lb/>
Grand Opening<lb/>
429 Evans St.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Greenville's No. 1 Store<lb/>
for health &amp; beauty<lb/>
99c VALUE<lb/>
SUAVE HAIR<lb/>
SPRAY<lb/>
YOU SAVE Sue<lb/>
m<lb/>
REGULAR $1.19<lb/>
MENT OR REG.<lb/>
RAPID SHAVE<lb/>
REG. $2.50 VALUE BY REVLON<lb/>
AQUAMARINE<lb/>
LOTION<lb/>
BIG<lb/>
VALUE<lb/>
PRICE<lb/>
REGULAR $1.29 VALUE SHICK<lb/>
LATHER SHAVE<lb/>
REGULAR OR MINT<lb/>
BIG<lb/>
VALUE<lb/>
PRICE<lb/>
REGULAR $1.19<lb/>
LISTERINE<lb/>
BIG<lb/>
VALUE<lb/>
PRICE<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0008"/><lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
September 1(<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
it<lb/>
By WAYNE EADS<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
Th� iact wpet-scented wisps of marijuana smoke dissipated in<lb/>
?����?� � e Catski" ntain, T e few<lb/>
remaining nakeds sadly put on their clodies - all but one<lb/>
voung man whom police found hiking homeward in the buff. Cars<lb/>
campers. microbusW. U-Haul trucks and columns of plodding<lb/>
gangster clooged the roadsThe halt-moon hillside of Max<lb/>
vVsaur's dairy farm lay under a miry blanket of Coke cans. Gallo<lb/>
ki� sandwh wrappers, mud-stiffened pants and blankets and<lb/>
SinTbaThe detritus left behind by 400 000 of the rock<lb/>
gene at on after their biggest turn-on ever. An electric pot<lb/>
dreamnot only had come true but survived to a more or less happy<lb/>
ending<lb/>
This was Newsweek summation of the end of the Woodstock Mu.c and Arts<lb/>
Fair held in Bethel. N.Y. But it could well apply to any of the many pop<lb/>
RICHIE HAVENS OPENS Woodstock Pop.<lb/>
festivals of summer, 1969. Only the setting would change.<lb/>
Travel, traffic jams, massive crowds, drugs and music day and night.<lb/>
These are some of the sights and sounds of the pop festival - a relatively new<lb/>
invention that seems to be an outgrowth of a cultural revolution among the<lb/>
youth of America.<lb/>
Since the Monterrey Pop Festival in California, the events have spread to the<lb/>
East Coast. The first of the big ones on this side of the country was the Miami<lb/>
Pop Festival last December.<lb/>
That was the spark.<lb/>
This summer the fire spread far away from its most enthusiastic founders.<lb/>
Atlanta, Ga Prairieville, La Tenino, Wash Lewisviile, Tex Newport, R.I and<lb/>
Atlantic City, N.J. got into the act with a few of the many festivals this summer.<lb/>
The rage even crossed the Atlantic to the Isle of Wight, where Bob Dylan - no<lb/>
introduction needed - drew a crowd of 220,000 hip Britishers.<lb/>
Atlanta had the first big concert of the summer. Beginning on July 4, the<lb/>
JAMS JOPLIN<lb/>
show ran for two days of peace, music, and happiness.<lb/>
The only big problem was the heat. The temperature reached 105 degrees in<lb/>
the shade on Saturday. But despite the heat, the show went on.<lb/>
The police were asked to remain outside the gates by the show's producers,<lb/>
and there was no trouble. The crowd was inexplicably peaceful for its size.<lb/>
At all the pop festivals, the locals were hesitant to allow all those hippy<lb/>
degenerates" to congregate in that particular location, but in most cases, the end<lb/>
of the festival brought a new realization to those people.<lb/>
The critics cried that there would be violence if such a crowd were brougm<lb/>
together, but there was seldom violence - especially if the police stayed out ana<lb/>
left the kids alone. . ,<lb/>
Even then, while drugs were seldom hard to find, there were relatively tpw<lb/>
cases of people treated for drug abuse. Peace and brotherhood were<lb/>
watch-words.<lb/>
Then came Woodstock. <lb/>
Woodstock was a turning point for a lot of things. How can one describe iu<lb/>
The consequences will not be known until historians look back and try<lb/>
discover what really happened at Woodstock.<lb/>
But let us look at the events as best we can.<lb/>
Mike Lang, 24, one of four producers of the event, had originally planned x<lb/>
hold the festival somewhere else. However, complications arose, mostly dreame<lb/>
up by irate townspeople, and the event had to be relocated.<lb/>
It was finally scheduled to be a three-day event at Bethel, N.Y. It was bi<lb/>
as "An Aquarian Exposition" - three days of peace and music.<lb/>
The 600 acre dairy farm of Max Yasgur, near White Lake, was rented tor<lb/>
occasion. <lb/>
There were few sanitation facilities, but there was plenty of open space<lb/>
there were streams to bathe in.<lb/>
Camping was to be done on the farm and on the concert grounds close<lb/>
The preparations were more than adequate for the 150,000 people the produce.<lb/>
expected.<lb/>
Everything seemed to be fine. ,<lb/>
The performers at Woodstock included some of the biggest names in roc?<lb/>
music: The Creedence Clearwater Revival, Joan Baez, Arlo Guthrie, men<lb/>
Havens, The Incredible String Bank. Ravi Shankar, Sweetwater, The Joshu<lb/>
Light Show, The Canned Heat, The Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, The Who, am<lb/>
Crosby, Stills and Nash. j<lb/>
Also there were Sly and the Family Stone he Jefferson Airplane, The Ban<lb/>
Country Joe and<lb/>
Blood, Sweat, and<lb/>
The producers<lb/>
opened.<lb/>
The magic of 1<lb/>
the news of the it<lb/>
The organizers<lb/>
town was small<lb/>
continued and be<lb/>
By early Frid<lb/>
the public that tl<lb/>
it impossible to<lb/>
advance were col<lb/>
tried to enter the<lb/>
The producer<lb/>
the way to he f�<lb/>
But still they<lb/>
Traffic jams <lb/>
came. On foot, c<lb/>
When it rair<lb/>
temporarily slov<lb/>
They formec<lb/>
huddled in blar<lb/>
entire concert fi<lb/>
Thesituatior<lb/>
Food and v<lb/>
members of a o<lb/>
The membei<lb/>
than 15,000 pe<lb/>
The free me;<lb/>
That was oi<lb/>
deeper points t<lb/>
For exampl<lb/>
FREAKS<lb/>
during that v<lb/>
It was th<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
It was a c<lb/>
There we<lb/>
shocking.<lb/>
It wasshf<lb/>
There wt<lb/>
who headed<lb/>
There w(<lb/>
gathering of<lb/>
It is true<lb/>
and that th<lb/>
Jersey turnf<lb/>
Some thi<lb/>
Time wil<lb/>
A lot of<lb/>
live togethe<lb/>
least a basis<lb/>
Despite<lb/>
company e:<lb/>
had as cust<lb/>
Medical<lb/>
"I foun<lb/>
there's no<lb/>
THE MASSES GROOVE on into the nigfit.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0009"/><lb/>
r16, 1969<lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Page �<lb/>
assi<lb/>
ned 105 degrees in<lb/>
show's producers,<lb/>
I for its size<lb/>
j all those "hippy<lb/>
nost cases, the end<lb/>
owd were brought<lb/>
lice stayed out and<lb/>
were relatively few<lb/>
lerhood were the<lb/>
:an one describe it?<lb/>
 back and try to<lb/>
riginally planned to<lb/>
se, mostly dreamed<lb/>
N.Y. It was billed<lb/>
c.<lb/>
was rented for the<lb/>
of open space<lb/>
and<lb/>
t grounds close by<lb/>
eople the producers<lb/>
igest names in rod<lb/>
rlo Guthrie, Rich<lb/>
twater, The Joshu<lb/>
,plin. The Who, art<lb/>
Airplane, The Ban<lb/>
Country Joe and the Fish. Jimi Hendrix, the Iron Butterfly. Johnny Winter, and<lb/>
BIO�h;SpToducTrs wTre'totally unprepared for what happened after the show<lb/>
0PThe magic of the event had spread far across the United States and Canada -<lb/>
the news of the music, the people, the drugs, the fun<lb/>
The organizers were not prepared for the response. Everyth.ng was fragile, the<lb/>
toJn was small and food and water were scarce. But somehow the festival<lb/>
continued and became the chaotic spectacle that many feared ,t would.<lb/>
L earlv Friday, even before the festival opened, the producers announced to<lb/>
the public that the rest of the events would be free. The size of the crowds made<lb/>
t impo sbe to sell tickets at the door. Only the tickets that were sold in<lb/>
advance were collected. After a while, no attempt was made to stop anyone who<lb/>
trl ThpTSuSed over radio and television, asking anyone who was on<lb/>
the way to he festival to turn around and go home.<lb/>
Tr'itnty miles long and cars had to be abondoned. Still they<lb/>
oo On foot on bicycles, on motorcycles.<lb/>
When Hined on Friday and Saturday, the incoming lines were only<lb/>
"ToT'tonSl we, procession toward the .arm. and those already there<lb/>
huddled n cLkets and under improvised shelters unt� the ram stopped. The<lb/>
entire concert field had become a sea of mud. but the show wen, on.<lb/>
ThP situation often came close to disaster.<lb/>
Food and water ran short, bu, the people of nearby Mont.cello and 100<lb/>
than 15 000 people Saturday morning.<lb/>
The free meal included crushed oats, raisins, honey, sugar, and dried fru.t.<lb/>
That was oniar, of the Woodstock Music and Arts Fair. There are some<lb/>
rSSreESS. a million people gathered in Bethel<lb/>
FREAKS LOOK ON at Atlanta.<lb/>
"rwhlrd largest city in New York and the eighth larges, city in ,he<lb/>
nation. , �0�:tatinn and food problems.<lb/>
� was a city, with births and deaths and ��� �� � crime rate was<lb/>
There were other problems, but tor a cixy u<lb/>
shocking. . t<lb/>
It was shocking because it almost d.dn ex s . weekend the policemen<lb/>
There were no fights or even arguments during the weeKen<lb/>
who headed the security force said. few for a<lb/>
There were no arrests for violence and the drug arrests<lb/>
gathering of that size. permissive attitude toward drugs<lb/>
It is true that the festival-goe had J vioations except on the New<lb/>
and that the police did not try to stop che drug<lb/>
Jersey turnpike. . 1.<lb/>
Some think that indicates that the nation's drug laws are obsolete.<lb/>
Time will tell. nrmPH that people could<lb/>
A lot of people refuse to believe that the young,ersproved � . P P <lb/>
live together as brothers, that love could prevail, and that<lb/>
least a basis in reality. . rpx0utionary ideas, a bus<lb/>
Despite ,he long ZZ�E &amp; �� had ever<lb/>
company employee said they were xne mu<lb/>
had as customers. . , in those they treated.<lb/>
Medical people said ,here were no J JmorMt, and<lb/>
"I found no correlation betweenclea- Joe Kimble,the<lb/>
there's no correlation between long hair and immora<lb/>
FIREMEN COOL CROWDS in 105 " heat.<lb/>
police chief of Beverly Hills, Calif who wen, to observe.<lb/>
If, hard for the older generation to judge the Woodstock festival<lb/>
Allen Ginsberg sees it as "a major planetary happening W-TJ<lb/>
Abbie Hoffman sees it as "the birth of the Woodstock nation and the death of<lb/>
the American dinosaur<lb/>
�T�� J5X -s that there are "lots and<lb/>
lots and lots of Ts more than anybody ever though, before. We used to think of<lb/>
ouLTvest Utde'clumps of weirdo, But now we're a whole new minority<lb/>
group .<lb/>
un-Establishment v.ew . .g M, of ohvious<lb/>
festiva tamed outto be mn . yed rtrength ea<lb/>
r'pUtirmly'weuCt as one of the significant political and sociological<lb/>
"Tor" one thing the Bethel scene demonstrated more c.ear.y than �W batons<lb/>
the �SJL. a national subcufrure -JgJJ<lb/>
rousing the crowd to "ostidy pohoe mad,tmm � on that all<lb/>
charges. By and large, the U.S. has W�mw' " universal<lb/>
narcotics are dangerous -JJSJS. Ution of how<lb/>
r:jlZX caVn rein in force without seemin9<lb/>
as wr rss sssz� -�M .<lb/>
V�"ngifwPasVato a demonstration to the adult world that young people could<lb/>
the kind envisioned by Chicago's Mayor Daley.<lb/>
This was the beginning institutions that they are<lb/>
They0U�9ahou, and Ten hey will find new problems ,ha, they need to<lb/>
� co0:ec,rPWsbt�ocUk sTowstatyoudtbasmore wisdom than many adults wan, to<lb/>
give them credit for.<lb/>
PHOTO CREDITS<lb/>
Hendrix &amp; Havens<lb/>
- Elliot Landy<lb/>
Others - Ozzie Sweet<lb/>
Technical assistance<lb/>
- Kelly Adams<lb/>
JIMI HENDRIX PLAYS finele.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
Fill<lb/>
Mtt<lb/>
Supply store justifies<lb/>
prices on their way up<lb/>
by Ozzie Sweet<lb/>
The Student Supply Store has<lb/>
been widely criticized by the<lb/>
student body recently.<lb/>
The store has been accused of<lb/>
incompetency and exploitation.<lb/>
Since a student's purchases<lb/>
are very likely to put a large hole<lb/>
in his pocket (the initial outlay<lb/>
for one art student this quartet<lb/>
was S75), and since he is<lb/>
sometimes forced to deal with a<lb/>
bookstore monopoly, the<lb/>
CQmnjgintc �jrg likply In ronTinilP<lb/>
with or without .eason.<lb/>
Joseph Clark, executive<lb/>
man if the Student Supply<lb/>
Store, describes the bookstore as<lb/>
a fellow victim of circumstances<lb/>
e the student.<lb/>
Mark up<lb/>
One major accusation from<lb/>
students is that book prices are<lb/>
marked up from publishers<lb/>
suggested retail prices.<lb/>
Clark said that publishers are<lb/>
constantly raising the prices of<lb/>
books, often without printing<lb/>
new jackets to advertise the<lb/>
BLOW<lb/>
YOURSELF UP<lb/>
t<lb/>
An I u<lb/>
$2<lb/>
Slack and White<lb/>
2 ft. x 3 ft. Poster c<lb/>
($4.95 value)<lb/>
with plastic frame $4 ($7.95 value)<lb/>
Send any black &amp; white or color photo<lb/>
up to 8' x 10' (no negatives) and the<lb/>
name "Swmgline" cut from any<lb/>
Swingline stapler or staple refill package<lb/>
to: Poster-Mart. P. 0 Box 165.<lb/>
Woodside, N. Y. 11377. Enclose cash,<lb/>
check or money order (no C O.Ds) in<lb/>
the amount of $2.00 tor each blow-up;<lb/>
$4.00 for blow-up and frame as shown.<lb/>
Add sales tax where applicable Original<lb/>
material returned undamaged. Satisfac-<lb/>
tion guaranteed Allow 30 days for delivery.<lb/>
THE<lb/>
GREAT<lb/>
SWINGLINE<lb/>
I 01 STAPLER<lb/>
The world's largest selling<lb/>
stapler yet no larger than a -v<lb/>
pack ot gum. ONLY 98 with 1000 FREE staples!<lb/>
'  . THE GREAT NEW<lb/>
" S ' SWINGLINE<lb/>
V<lb/>
CUB<lb/>
HAND &amp;<lb/>
DESK STAPLERS<lb/>
ONLY $1.69 each.<lb/>
Witn looo staples<lb/>
only $1.93 each.<lb/>
11 00 SftlUMAfl JUtNUC.<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
mmuMocm �� moi<lb/>
increase.<lb/>
Instead, "suspicious" stickets<lb/>
are placed over the price mark<lb/>
by the publisher and never by<lb/>
the bookstore, Clark said.<lb/>
Formerly, it was the policy of<lb/>
the store to return books with<lb/>
such mark up stickers or to<lb/>
charge the publisher the<lb/>
difference between the old and<lb/>
new prices.<lb/>
Unfortunately, the present<lb/>
nomic situation favors the<lb/>
publisher, and they need not<lb/>
heed university complaints so<lb/>
much.<lb/>
Scholarship funds<lb/>
The Student Supply Store<lb/>
does not deny that it is out to<lb/>
make money, but the<lb/>
justification for this is the 75<lb/>
minimum of the profits which<lb/>
goes into scholarship funds.<lb/>
' 'Without them (the<lb/>
scholarships) hundreds of<lb/>
students would never have been<lb/>
able to attend the University<lb/>
the freshman orientation folio<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Neverthei<lb/>
C 3 J ,<lb/>
f the<lb/>
responsibility for high prices at<lb/>
the bookstore is to fall on<lb/>
scholarships, then it follows that<lb/>
there may be some poorer<lb/>
students applying for financial<lb/>
aid or even dropping out.<lb/>
The other 25 profit goes to<lb/>
activities "for the benefit of the<lb/>
students (for example, the new<lb/>
- r-� " is<lb/>
V C I HI I I I L)<lb/>
machines).<lb/>
The univeisities' voice in<lb/>
dealing with publishing<lb/>
companies is the National<lb/>
Association of College Stores<lb/>
which, Claik says, has often<lb/>
exchanged harsh words with<lb/>
these companies. Yet, regardless<lb/>
of potential power, the<lb/>
association has had little success<lb/>
in lowering prices foi students.<lb/>
One alternative might be the<lb/>
German publishing company<lb/>
Reclam, which specializes in<lb/>
inexpensive paperback books.<lb/>
Assured of a constant market,<lb/>
Reclam can afford to buy rights<lb/>
to quality books and print them<lb/>
in editions costing only a few<lb/>
cents each. This requires<lb/>
motivation beyond greed - too<lb/>
much to ask of American<lb/>
publishers?<lb/>
Profit small<lb/>
The bookstore's share in the<lb/>
profit is comparatively small<lb/>
three cents out of a dollar while<lb/>
the publisher gets 7.8 cents.<lb/>
When operating expenses are<lb/>
considered, the profit is less -<lb/>
1.7 cents per duilar.<lb/>
Publishing and supply<lb/>
companies are generally to<lb/>
blame for prices at the Student<lb/>
Supply Store, but there are<lb/>
alternatives.<lb/>
Some of the alternatives<lb/>
could pass on more of the 20 per<lb/>
cent discount the stores get from<lb/>
too rii r ifknfp<lb/>
�� �w f u � r . � . �i I I . i i<lb/>
As<lb/>
Staduuu<lb/>
Drive-in<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts Greenville, N.C<lb/>
1 Hr Cleaning 3 Hr Shirt Service<lb/>
DR. BLANCHE WATROUS displays one of her summer<lb/>
prizes, the results of a trip to Africa. (Upcoming feature<lb/>
this Thursday)<lb/>
Noted film director<lb/>
speaks to students<lb/>
Susami Ham, who has been Award and the Golden Ducat<lb/>
called one of Japan's best movie Award.<lb/>
directors, was here yesterday to Nanami Inferno of First<lb/>
speak to members of the drama Love, Hani's new film, has<lb/>
department alread" won the best film award<lb/>
One critic has described his at the Berlin Film Festival late<lb/>
style as reflecting today's youth<lb/>
and their stumbling entry into<lb/>
the perverse adult world,<lb/>
rejecting the traditional ancestor<lb/>
worship of the Japanese.<lb/>
His work has been compared<lb/>
to that of Sweden's Ingmar<lb/>
Bergman and Italy's Federico<lb/>
Fellini.<lb/>
Hani's first awards came in<lb/>
1951 with his first film, "Pupils<lb/>
in the Classroom Awards since<lb/>
then include the London Critic's<lb/>
this spring.<lb/>
When shown to members of<lb/>
the United Nations, Nanami<lb/>
received a standing ovation. The<lb/>
auditorium at Brandeis<lb/>
University was filled the three<lb/>
nights it played.<lb/>
This story of the love affair<lb/>
between a 17 year-old boy and<lb/>
girl is set in modern Tokyo. The<lb/>
score consists primarily of recent<lb/>
Japanese pop music.<lb/>
TAFT OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.<lb/>
STUDENT DESK LAMPS � GREETING CARDS<lb/>
Student Stationery � Professional Filing Supplies<lb/>
Drafting and AH Supplies - - School Supplies<lb/>
214 East 5th Street 752-2175<lb/>
Shirley's Georgetown Barber Shop<lb/>
PUIconu jltutbttts<lb/>
Haircuts<lb/>
Razor Cuts<lb/>
Hair Styling<lb/>
Georgetowne Shoppes Near Campus<lb/>
(ood lVnq tor QaW,0peL,<lb/>
�� Most revelent work<lb/>
Hani considers this his most<lb/>
relevent work, and has written:<lb/>
"We are now living between<lb/>
two worlds of morality the<lb/>
old traditional one which is<lb/>
crumbling, and the new one<lb/>
which is burgeoning. Living<lb/>
between both, we are<lb/>
confronted by both<lb/>
"Consequently, we live in<lb/>
frustration, afraid to leap into<lb/>
the depths of ourselves, content<lb/>
to see merely our outer image, as<lb/>
in a mirror. In this film, I want<lb/>
to look straightly, fearlessly into<lb/>
the depths, into that part of a<lb/>
human being which is most<lb/>
personally his<lb/>
Nanami will be opening at the<lb/>
State Theater Sunday.<lb/>
StOciiuHi<lb/>
Drive-In<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts Greenville, N C<lb/>
� Hr Cleaninq t w, cu . t-<lb/>
-3 Hr Shirt Service<lb/>
September 16, 196<lb/>
Ca<lb/>
Udall s,<lb/>
Stewart L.<lb/>
Secretary of the<lb/>
begin this year's<lb/>
Thursday with a I<lb/>
Value Revolut<lb/>
America's Prioriti<lb/>
The lecture w<lb/>
in Wright Auditor<lb/>
Udall was<lb/>
Secretary of the I<lb/>
when he was ser<lb/>
term as U.S.<lb/>
from Arizona's 5<lb/>
He recently pt<lb/>
1976: Agenda I<lb/>
His book calls<lb/>
government to c<lb/>
tension, student<lb/>
decay of Americc<lb/>
Udall is a na<lb/>
An. He is a g<lb/>
University of An<lb/>
in the Air Fore<lb/>
War II.<lb/>
Students and<lb/>
admitted free<lb/>
cards. Admissior<lb/>
members is $1<lb/>
public, S2.<lb/>
Tickets are<lb/>
Central Ticket<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
Portaits<lb/>
Photographers<lb/>
portraits yesti<lb/>
1969 70 Buccau<lb/>
Thn nortraits<lb/>
from 9 a.m. until<lb/>
the third floor<lb/>
union.<lb/>
Miss Donna <lb/>
the Buccaneer,<lb/>
required to we;<lb/>
dark ties and dar<lb/>
Women are n<lb/>
white blouses wi'<lb/>
Miss Dixon<lb/>
students shot<lb/>
portrait mad i<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Playhous<lb/>
The East Ca<lb/>
will open its St<lb/>
. . . L r r � �- y ff r<lb/>
UVI ID I It J L. J<lb/>
"Finian's Rainb<lb/>
Tryouts fo<lb/>
musical began I,<lb/>
continue tonig<lb/>
will run from<lb/>
tonight in McGi<lb/>
The cast is lar<lb/>
white and Negi<lb/>
and dancers.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0011"/><lb/>
-xrr<lb/>
September 16, 1969,<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Campus Hi-lites<lb/>
condensed news briefs<lb/>
Udall speaks<lb/>
Stewart L. Udall, former<lb/>
Secretary of the Interior, will<lb/>
begin this year's lecture series<lb/>
Thuisday with a lecture on "The<lb/>
Value Revolution: Changing<lb/>
America's Priorities<lb/>
The lecture will be at 8 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Udall was appoint ed<lb/>
Secretary of the Interior in 1961<lb/>
when he was serving his fourth<lb/>
term as U.S. Representative<lb/>
from Arizona's Second District<lb/>
He recently published a book,<lb/>
1976: Agenda for Tomorrow.<lb/>
His book calls for changes in<lb/>
government to deal with racial<lb/>
tension, student unrest and the<lb/>
decay of American cities.<lb/>
Udall is a native of Tucson,<lb/>
Ariz. He is a graduate of the<lb/>
University of Ariona and served<lb/>
in the Air Force during World<lb/>
War II.<lb/>
Students and faculty will be<lb/>
admitted free with their ID<lb/>
cards. Admission price for staff<lb/>
members is S1.5C and for the<lb/>
public, S2.<lb/>
Tickets are on sale in the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in the<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
Portaits taken<lb/>
Photographers began making<lb/>
portraits yesterday for the<lb/>
1969 70 Buccaneer.<lb/>
The portraits arp being made<lb/>
from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. daily on<lb/>
the third floor of the student<lb/>
union.<lb/>
Miss Donna Dixon, editor of<lb/>
the Buccaneer, said men are<lb/>
required to wear white shirts,<lb/>
dark ties and dark coats.<lb/>
Women are required to wear<lb/>
white blouses with round collars.<lb/>
Miss Dixon said that all<lb/>
students should have theit<lb/>
portrait made as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Playhouse opens<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
will open its season in October<lb/>
"Finian's Rainbow" was first<lb/>
produced in New York in 1948.<lb/>
It is considered the first musical<lb/>
with an integrated cast to deal<lb/>
comically with race relations.<lb/>
John Sneden will design<lb/>
scenery, Andrew Gilfillan will<lb/>
plan the lighting and Margaret<lb/>
Gilfillan will design the<lb/>
costumes.<lb/>
The musical will be presented<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. Oct. 22-25 in<lb/>
McGinnis Audotorium.<lb/>
Music committees<lb/>
Music majors may soon help<lb/>
decide on matters such as<lb/>
curriculum, course content, and<lb/>
degree requirements for the<lb/>
School of Music.<lb/>
Dean Thomas W. Miller of the<lb/>
School of Music discusses plans<lb/>
for including student<lb/>
representatives as voting<lb/>
members of formerly all-faculty<lb/>
committees at a meeting of<lb/>
music majors Thursday.<lb/>
The newly created policies<lb/>
committee and the remaining<lb/>
members of the student forum<lb/>
will be working with Miller to<lb/>
determine the number of<lb/>
student representatives which<lb/>
committees should have students<lb/>
on them, and how these students<lb/>
should be chosen.<lb/>
Grants made<lb/>
Dr. Robert C. lamb,<lb/>
chairman of the chemistry<lb/>
department, hac received a<lb/>
$20,100 grant for research on<lb/>
organic derivatives of hydrogen<lb/>
peroxide. He received the grant<lb/>
from the National Science<lb/>
Foundation.<lb/>
The school of nursing has<lb/>
received a $12,400 grant which<lb/>
will be used for financial aid for<lb/>
students who want to become<lb/>
protessional nurses. The six<lb/>
students who receive the grant<lb/>
will get a monthly stipend for<lb/>
living expenses, and tuition and<lb/>
fees for a year.<lb/>
���- r�i rrtt"<lb/>
the tin 11 c i r AI<lb/>
Poetry needed<lb/>
"Finian's Rainbow<lb/>
Try outs for roles in the<lb/>
musical began last night and will<lb/>
continue tonight. The tryouts<lb/>
will run from 7:30 to 10 p.m.<lb/>
tonight in McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
The cast is large, and includes<lb/>
white and Negro singers, actors<lb/>
and dancers.<lb/>
The Rebel, the university's<lb/>
literary magazine, is now<lb/>
accepting manuscripts in room<lb/>
215 in the student union<lb/>
The magazine publishes<lb/>
poetry, short stories, essays and<lb/>
reviews.<lb/>
Film changed<lb/>
A substitution has been made<lb/>
in the International Film<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
"Bell, Book, and Candle" was<lb/>
schedules for Sept. 16. Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander, assistant dean of<lb/>
student affairs, said the film has<lb/>
been damaged and cannot be<lb/>
shown.<lb/>
"Sergeant York" will be<lb/>
shown instead.<lb/>
band visits<lb/>
The U.S. Army Field Band<lb/>
and Soldiers' Chorus will gi"e a<lb/>
concert at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Students who did not get<lb/>
tickets last week will be<lb/>
admitted free at the door.<lb/>
The band travels up to<lb/>
40,000 miles a year and has<lb/>
given concerts in London,<lb/>
Edinburgh, Paris and<lb/>
Amsterdam<lb/>
Courses offered<lb/>
Education this fail will offer<lb/>
courses in shorthand, typing,<lb/>
office procedures, drawing,<lb/>
painting and investing. All are<lb/>
non-credit courses. Registration<lb/>
has already begun.<lb/>
Political science<lb/>
meets<lb/>
Faculty and students in the<lb/>
political science department will<lb/>
meet at 7 p.m. Monday in the<lb/>
Nursing Building auditorium,<lb/>
room 101.<lb/>
Political science majors are<lb/>
required to attend.<lb/>
Candidates chosen<lb/>
The University Party last<lb/>
Thursday chose candidates for<lb/>
1969 70classofficers.<lb/>
Senior candidates are David<lb/>
Guilford, who is running for<lb/>
president, and Stephanie<lb/>
Standafer, vice president.<lb/>
Junior candidates are John<lb/>
Cooper, president; Suzanne<lb/>
Jenkins, vice president; Mary<lb/>
Clark, treasurer; and Dede Clegg,<lb/>
secretary.<lb/>
Sophomore candidates are<lb/>
Marsha Brooks, secretary; and<lb/>
Tommy Autry, treasurer.<lb/>
Freshman candidates are Lila<lb/>
Daugherty, president; Susan<lb/>
Hunt, vice president; and<lb/>
Beverly Cotten, secretary.<lb/>
The election will be Sept. 23.<lb/>
Baha'i Faith<lb/>
A new religious group on<lb/>
campus, the Baha'i Faith, began<lb/>
a series of weekly fireside<lb/>
meetings last night.<lb/>
Cammi Thomas, a<lb/>
sophomore, is leading the<lb/>
meetings. The group meets in<lb/>
room 206 of the student union<lb/>
at 7 p.m. each Monday night.<lb/>
Miss Thomas said the Baha'i<lb/>
Faith believes there is only one<lb/>
God, and that He has revealed<lb/>
himself progressively throughout<lb/>
history in such people as Jesus,<lb/>
Moses, and Baha'u'llah, the<lb/>
founder of the religion.<lb/>
She said the religion believes<lb/>
in "the oneness of mankind"<lb/>
and the elimination of all<lb/>
prejudice.<lb/>
Welcomes jStwUttt<lb/>
"In the exclusive 200 Block"<lb/>
East Fifth Street <lb/>
Kershaw exhibits<lb/>
work<lb/>
Rock Kershaw, a graduate<lb/>
student in the art department, is<lb/>
exhibiting portraits in a<lb/>
three-man exhibition at the<lb/>
Asheville Art Museum.<lb/>
The portraits are of ECU<lb/>
students and popular musicians<lb/>
including Jimi Hendrix and the<lb/>
Jefferson Airplane.<lb/>
The exhibit ends Sept. 28.<lb/>
Kim travels<lb/>
to Miami<lb/>
Dr. Jung-Gun Kirn, associate<lb/>
professor of political science,<lb/>
will attend a meeting Nov. 6-8 of<lb/>
the Southern Political Science<lb/>
Association. The meeting will be<lb/>
held in Miami.<lb/>
Judicial position<lb/>
open<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
applying for the offices of<lb/>
attorney general or public<lb/>
defender of the Women's<lb/>
Judicial Council, has been asked<lb/>
to contact the Dean of Women<lb/>
before Friday.<lb/>
e(k Tyler<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
Coeds!<lb/>
Belk Tyler is the place to shop!<lb/>
Always First in Fashion.<lb/>
Fashion<lb/>
Favorites<lb/>
From Century.<lb/>
Here's where the Great<lb/>
'Put Together Look" Starts<lb/>
Mix and match plaids,<lb/>
diagonal tweeds, prints and solids.<lb/>
Two great color groups,<lb/>
cocoa brown and mist green.<lb/>
In Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Shop Mon , Thurs. &amp; Ft i. Til 9 p.m.<lb/>
 -r.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0012"/><lb/>
Paqe 12<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
September 16, 19<lb/>
Pirates will open on road Saturday<lb/>
W3P.  �<lb/>
L031 Utn wi j<lb/>
NEW PIRATE CAPTAINS � Coach Clarence Stasavich, ieft, is shown with<lb/>
football captains for 1969 soon after their election by teammates. In the center is alternate captain<lb/>
Mike Boaz, senior defensive rover back, and at right is Rober Bost, senior defensive end. Boaz is<lb/>
from Fairmont and Bost is from Statesville.<lb/>
Defensive pair<lb/>
to lead Pirates<lb/>
A pair of defensive aces who<lb/>
have had outstanding careers<lb/>
here, have been named captain<lb/>
and alternate of the football<lb/>
team.<lb/>
End Roger Bost, who was<lb/>
named outstanding freshman<lb/>
(his first year with the football<lb/>
program) was named captain.<lb/>
Mike Eoaz, who has been a<lb/>
starter for two years was named<lb/>
alternate captain.<lb/>
After playing one full season<lb/>
at rover back and moving to<lb/>
defensive halfback last year and<lb/>
starting the first nine games,<lb/>
Boaz missed the last game of the<lb/>
season with a broken collarbone.<lb/>
Boaz, 5 10, 176 pounds, went<lb/>
out for the freshman team and<lb/>
despite his size, his coaches<lb/>
were impressed with his ability<lb/>
from the start.<lb/>
As a sophomore he was twice<lb/>
named 'knocker of the week<lb/>
an award given the player who<lb/>
does the hardest hitting during<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Bost put on weight during the<lb/>
summer and seems prepared for<lb/>
an outstanding season. After<lb/>
being named the top player on<lb/>
the undefeated 1966 freshman<lb/>
team, he was sidelined because<lb/>
of injuries as a sophomore, but<lb/>
came back last season with<lb/>
consistantly good performances<lb/>
as defensive end.<lb/>
He had an outstanding spring<lb/>
practice and came back in good<lb/>
condition for the campaign this<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
"Our squad members have<lb/>
made excellent choices for their<lb/>
captains in 1969. Both players<lb/>
are not only proven performers<lb/>
at their respective positions but<lb/>
they are good on and off the<lb/>
field leaders as well Stasavich<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Athletic department<lb/>
names two coaches<lb/>
The athletic department has transferring to the University of<lb/>
named two new coaches. Indiana where he won three<lb/>
John Lovstedt, a native of varsity letters in diving.<lb/>
Detroit, will be diving and soccer Dickens received his<lb/>
coach. He will also advise the bachelor's degree from East<lb/>
lacrosse club. Carolina in 1967. He received his<lb/>
Bill Dickens, a native of master's degree in physical<lb/>
Wilson, will be tennis coach and education in 1968.<lb/>
assistant football coach. He became an instructor in<lb/>
Lovstedt has eight and a half the physical education<lb/>
years of diving experience. He department last year and was<lb/>
attended Ohio University before advisor to the lacrosse club.<lb/>
The Pirates open their 1969<lb/>
season Saturday in the same<lb/>
place they closed the 1968<lb/>
season, but they hope to change<lb/>
the script a little.<lb/>
The Pirates will travel Friday<lb/>
to Johnson City, Tenn to take<lb/>
on the East Tennessee<lb/>
Buccaneers and besides wanting<lb/>
to have a winning start in this<lb/>
campaign, they hope to erase the<lb/>
memory of the closing defeat in<lb/>
the previous season.<lb/>
Stasavich pleased<lb/>
Coach Clarence Stasavich, as<lb/>
he headed into the final week of<lb/>
pre season practice, appeared to<lb/>
be pleased with the results of the<lb/>
first two weeks of woik, but said<lb/>
there was still some<lb/>
improvement needed and that<lb/>
more lineup changes might be<lb/>
made.<lb/>
A f t (,m last Saturday's<lb/>
scrimmage, there were no less<lb/>
than 14 players who have missed<lb/>
woik out because of injuries, but<lb/>
most of them are expected to be<lb/>
ready for the opener, according<lb/>
to trainer Terry Wills.<lb/>
"We've had more contact<lb/>
work during preseason practice<lb/>
than we have had in the past<lb/>
Stasavich said, "and this is the<lb/>
chief reason for the large<lb/>
number of players being injured.<lb/>
'The increase in contact<lb/>
work is due largely to the<lb/>
number of sophomores who will<lb/>
be playing. And, in the process<lb/>
of preparation, this contact<lb/>
work has rpsiiltprl in more<lb/>
injuries than would normally<lb/>
occur<lb/>
Wills, after checking over the<lb/>
injury list Sunday, said he felt<lb/>
that all but one of the players<lb/>
would be able to suit up in the<lb/>
opener. Gerald Wrenn, a split<lb/>
end who has a knee injury,<lb/>
definitely will not make it.<lb/>
'Saturday's scrimmage<lb/>
showed that there may be some<lb/>
additional shifting of<lb/>
personnel Stasavich said,<lb/>
"particularly on offense<lb/>
"George Whitley has been<lb/>
very outstanding at safety in<lb/>
practice and Stu Garrett at<lb/>
defensive left half has also been<lb/>
a standout Stasavich said.<lb/>
The Pirate offensive backfield<lb/>
against East Tennessee will be in<lb/>
the hands of veterans. Heading<lb/>
the list is senior fullback Butch<lb/>
Colson, who as a sophomore set<lb/>
the Southern Conference rushing<lb/>
record with 1,135 yards. Billy<lb/>
Wightman, senior tailback who<lb/>
was the total offense leader last<lb/>
season, will also return. David<lb/>
Brill who assumed starting status<lb/>
at mid season last year, is the<lb/>
blocking back.<lb/>
Dwight Flanagan, a defensive<lb/>
specialist last year who was<lb/>
injured in the opener and missed<lb/>
the remainder of the reason, will<lb/>
be at wingback. Richard<lb/>
Corrada, who claimed starting<lb/>
duties at mid season last year,<lb/>
has moved to split end and is the<lb/>
chief target of Wightman and<lb/>
Colson when it comes to passes.<lb/>
Good defense<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates have<lb/>
looked best in the secondary<lb/>
Besides Whitley and Garrett,<lb/>
Tommy Bullock at right half and<lb/>
Mike Boaz as alternate captain at<lb/>
rover, make up the starters.<lb/>
"They have been particularly<lb/>
tough against our passing<lb/>
Stasavich said. "That could<lb/>
mean, however, that our passing<lb/>
attack isn't too strong<lb/>
Other defenders who have<lb/>
looked good include Walter<lb/>
Adams and George Wheeler as<lb/>
tackles and captain Roger Bost<lb/>
at end. When asked to take a<lb/>
long view on the season,<lb/>
Stasavich said: "It's hard to say<lb/>
just how we'll be because right<lb/>
now we are comparing our<lb/>
offense and defense against each<lb/>
other. We can't tell if either one<lb/>
is strong enough.<lb/>
"It will be necessary to play a<lb/>
couple of games to find out just<lb/>
how good we are<lb/>
Uph<lb/>
By GEORGE B<lb/>
It looks like ;<lb/>
for the football te<lb/>
for the 196<lb/>
Conference title.<lb/>
The Pirate c<lb/>
must show great<lb/>
over last year's sc<lb/>
TJI nrintS tO O<lb/>
most humiliating<lb/>
65 0 loss<lb/>
Mississippi. To he<lb/>
of last year's mis<lb/>
has changed<lb/>
formation fror<lb/>
alignment to the<lb/>
rover back.<lb/>
Defensive<lb/>
The return c<lb/>
starters from I<lb/>
undoubtedly hel<lb/>
lineup. Top<lb/>
�&amp;� -<lb/>
Sfai<lb/>
BILLY WALLACE<lb/>
S�n?!X!rf� !U"ba,Ck,and ,aHbaCk' W3S injUred la,e in ,he w�"� b"� � �!��� t. be "back a, full .11,<lb/>
rirates went into their final week of preseason practice.<lb/>
i�rtI?M?REJfrT Edenton rjPs off one of seve gains in Saturday's scrimmage at Fickeln Stadiu<lb/>
m.<lb/>
as the<lb/>
INTERCEPT<lb/>
pulling in int<lb/>
 ifaS fojfejasSifeifcfC<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0013"/><lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Page 13<lb/>
��<lb/>
1<lb/>
Pirate defensive backfield players<lb/>
'Uphill fight' needed for title<lb/>
 � . two starting halfback spots, heroes of foe<lb/>
By GEORGE BURBELLA<lb/>
starting berths in the front five<lb/>
will be Roger Bost, 205 pounds,<lb/>
It looks like an uphill fight and Don jyson 230 pounds; at<lb/>
for the football team in its quest<lb/>
for the 1969 Southern<lb/>
Conference title.<lb/>
The Pirate defensive unit<lb/>
must show great improvement<lb/>
over last year's squad which lost<lb/>
231 points to opponents. The<lb/>
most humiliating defeat was the<lb/>
65 0 loss to Southern<lb/>
Mississippi. To help correct some<lb/>
of last year's mistakes, Stasavich<lb/>
has changed his defensive<lb/>
formation from the six-one<lb/>
alignment to the five two with a<lb/>
rover back.<lb/>
Defensive starters<lb/>
The return of 10 defensive<lb/>
starters from last season will<lb/>
undoubtedly help strengthen the<lb/>
lineup. Top contenders for<lb/>
ends, Tim Tyler at tackle<lb/>
weighing 252 pounds and Steve<lb/>
Davis and George Wheeler at<lb/>
guards, both weighing more than<lb/>
230 pounds.<lb/>
New linebacker<lb/>
The linebacker jobs should go<lb/>
to Paul Weathersbee, a starter<lb/>
from a year ago and Monty<lb/>
Kierman, a rising sophomore<lb/>
with much promise.<lb/>
The important position of<lb/>
rover back has Mike Boaz as the<lb/>
top candidate.<lb/>
The backfield in the 5-2<lb/>
defense will include George<lb/>
Whitley, Tommy Bullock, Rich<lb/>
Elliott, Chuck McClintock,<lb/>
Gerald Wren and Matt Walker<lb/>
trying to nail down one of the<lb/>
two starting halfback spots.<lb/>
Experienced players Stu Garrett<lb/>
and Mike Mills are competing for<lb/>
the starting safety position.<lb/>
The offensive team has its<lb/>
entire starting backfield back<lb/>
from last year Billy Whightman<lb/>
at tailback, Butch Colson at<lb/>
fullback, David Brill at blocking<lb/>
back and Rich Corrada at<lb/>
vvingback.<lb/>
Single wing<lb/>
To get Stasavich's single wing<lb/>
attack moving, there needs to be<lb/>
a marked improvement in<lb/>
passing. Billy Whightman threw<lb/>
only 55 times last year while<lb/>
ECU averaged just 18.7 points<lb/>
per game, well below Stasavich's<lb/>
standards. Sophomore Jack<lb/>
Patterson should boost the<lb/>
passing game.<lb/>
The offensive linemen,<lb/>
commonly known as the unsung<lb/>
heroes of football, stack up with<lb/>
veterans Dave Roberts and Phil<lb/>
Bilodeau at tackles, Terry<lb/>
Edmondson at center and Butch<lb/>
Britton and Stuart Laney as<lb/>
guards. Their ability to open up<lb/>
holes in opposing lines will<lb/>
determine how well the Pirates<lb/>
do their running attack.<lb/>
Some sophomores who may<lb/>
break into the start' g lineup<lb/>
other than those already<lb/>
mentioned are Bill Wallace,<lb/>
fullback; Willie Mitchell,<lb/>
wingback; John Hollingsworth,<lb/>
tackle; Fred Harris and Eddie<lb/>
Greene, ends; Grover Truslow,<lb/>
Garland Ballerd, Don<lb/>
Mollenhaver, Ted Salmon and<lb/>
Tom Gammache all on the<lb/>
defensive line.<lb/>
Toughtest schedule<lb/>
East Carolina's 1969 football<lb/>
schedule could be the toughest<lb/>
in years. It includes such<lb/>
outstanding teams as Louisiana<lb/>
Tech, Southern Mississippi and<lb/>
Richmond. If the offense can<lb/>
live up to expectations and if the<lb/>
defensive unit can adjust to its<lb/>
new alignment, the Pirates could<lb/>
have some interesting surprises<lb/>
for their opponents this season.<lb/>
'Same' team<lb/>
expected<lb/>
The football team can expect<lb/>
to see virtually the same team<lb/>
Saturday night in the opener<lb/>
that caused a 17-7 upset in the<lb/>
final game of the 1968 season.<lb/>
Vansant, who watched the East<lb/>
Tennessee team in their 18-16<lb/>
victory over Appalachian State<lb/>
University Saturday night, says<lb/>
that all but three starters from<lb/>
the 1968 team are back this<lb/>
year. "They are missing a<lb/>
fullback, a tackle and an<lb/>
All-America safety Vansant<lb/>
said, "but they appear to have a<lb/>
strong club<lb/>
Good recievers<lb/>
Vansant appeared to be<lb/>
particularly impressed with<lb/>
receivers Ron Causey and John<lb/>
Gibson, a pair of ends. Gibson<lb/>
caught four passes for 54 yards<lb/>
in the game against Appalachian.<lb/>
Mike Young, a senior tailback<lb/>
at 178 pounds, is the chief<lb/>
runner for the East Tennessee<lb/>
team. He picked up 117 yards in<lb/>
18 carries and scored one<lb/>
touchdown. Fullback Mike<lb/>
Roberts, a sophomore, scored<lb/>
once and netted 32 yeards on<lb/>
the ground, and fullback Andy<lb/>
Brooks, another sophomore,<lb/>
scored the third touchdown<lb/>
while also netting 32 yards.<lb/>
No quaterback<lb/>
"They appeared to be<lb/>
unsettled on who they wanted at<lb/>
quarterback Vansant said.<lb/>
' 'They started with a<lb/>
ennhnmnrp Richard McGlothin.<lb/>
"r ��- � -<lb/>
but it was Larry Graham, who<lb/>
was last year's starter, who came<lb/>
on in the fourth quarter to bring<lb/>
them from behind to beat<lb/>
Appalachian Graham<lb/>
completed six of 16 passes for<lb/>
102 yards after McGlothin had<lb/>
completed all but two of five<lb/>
passes for 13 yards, and had one<lb/>
interception.<lb/>
As a team, East Tennessee<lb/>
rolled up 168 yards rushing and<lb/>
picked up 120 through the air.<lb/>
Defensively, East Tennessee<lb/>
has a line anchored by a rugged<lb/>
middle guard, Butch Buchannan<lb/>
and a pair of mobile linebackers,<lb/>
Bubba Timms and Doug<lb/>
Lineberger. They also have a fine<lb/>
end Ron Mendheim. The<lb/>
defensive backfield is headed up<lb/>
by Al Guy, a returning starter.<lb/>
Eight players injured<lb/>
in football scrimage<lb/>
.NTERCEPT.ON. - DEFENSIVE HALFBACK John Brothers is hauled down from beh.nd after<lb/>
pulling in interception during Saturday's scrimmage.<lb/>
Coach Clarence Stasavich sent<lb/>
his troops through a full game<lb/>
scrimmage Saturday afternoon<lb/>
that was so intense eight piayers<lb/>
were injured.<lb/>
"The overall performance was<lb/>
much better than last weekend's<lb/>
scrimmage Stasavich said, "We<lb/>
made wonderful progress in<lb/>
carrying out techniques. For the<lb/>
first time this season we had<lb/>
some very fine contact during<lb/>
the game<lb/>
There was so much contact<lb/>
that sophomore tailback<lb/>
-fullback Billy Wallace was<lb/>
carried to the hospital late in the<lb/>
fourth quarter with a neck<lb/>
injury, and second string<lb/>
tailback Jack Patterson had to<lb/>
leave in the second quarter with<lb/>
a knee injury.<lb/>
The Pirates now have 14 on<lb/>
the injured list.<lb/>
"In the first quarter the<lb/>
offense had trouble blocking but<lb/>
as the game progressed they<lb/>
seemed to get the proper<lb/>
technique to execute their<lb/>
blocking Stasavich said. "The<lb/>
kicking game looked good but<lb/>
our coverage on kickoffs wasn't<lb/>
quite what we expected but it<lb/>
was fairly good<lb/>
This will be the last big<lb/>
scrimmage before the Pirates<lb/>
travel to Johnson City, Tenn to<lb/>
meet East Tennessee in the<lb/>
opening game Saturday.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0014"/><lb/>
Page 14<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
September 16, H<lb/>
vjkv<lb/>
Pirates could be in store<lb/>
for banner season<lb/>
As the East Carolina teams Durjng (he pgs1 twQ yegrs g<lb/>
begin their fall season, it's time fjerce tva(.y has deve)oped<lb/>
between the Citadel and East<lb/>
to compare last year s teams<lb/>
with what can be expected this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Last yeai, East Carolina<lb/>
teams completely dominated<lb/>
athletics in the Southern<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
if the Southern Conference<lb/>
had made an award foi<lb/>
yeai round athletic supremacy as<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
does with its Carmichael Cup,<lb/>
East Carolina would have taken<lb/>
top honors<lb/>
This ear's athletic activities<lb/>
will gel then start with the three<lb/>
fall sports football,<lb/>
cross-country, and soccei.<lb/>
Carolina. Two years ago East<lb/>
Carolina was coasting along on a<lb/>
6 0 record when the Citadel<lb/>
Bulldogs came to Greenville for<lb/>
East Carolina's homecoming<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Everyone was shocked when<lb/>
the Citadel beat East Carolina<lb/>
21 19, causing East Carolina to<lb/>
lose the conference title,<lb/>
destroying an undefeated season<lb/>
and ruining homecoming<lb/>
weekend for alumni and<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Last year it was the Pirate's<lb/>
turn to be the spoilers.<lb/>
East Carolina beat the Citadel<lb/>
All three are expecting toOQ1� �  n . <lb/>
2314 in the Citadels<lb/>
homecoming game and knocked<lb/>
them out of the conference title.<lb/>
This year's game with the<lb/>
Citadel is not on homecoming<lb/>
but it is a vital game for both<lb/>
teams in their quest for the<lb/>
conference title.<lb/>
The Richmond game is<lb/>
another must for the Pirates,<lb/>
because the Richmond Spiders<lb/>
are the overwhelming favorite to<lb/>
win the conference<lb/>
championship and a trip to the<lb/>
Tangerine Bowl.<lb/>
Twenty-nine lettermen return<lb/>
from last year and an<lb/>
outstanding crop of sophomores<lb/>
improve on their records from<lb/>
last year<lb/>
The football team should be<lb/>
vastly improved over last<lb/>
season's squad which compiled a<lb/>
4 6 record<lb/>
It will be hard to increase the<lb/>
winning percentage, however,<lb/>
because the Pirate's schedule this<lb/>
year will be the toughest ever.<lb/>
Louisiana Tech and Southern<lb/>
Mississippi are expected to have<lb/>
one of their best seasons, as are<lb/>
Richmond and the Citadel.<lb/>
The two must important<lb/>
games of the season will be Oct.<lb/>
4 against the Citadel and Oct. 18<lb/>
against Richmond.<lb/>
should help boost the lineup.<lb/>
The defensive and offensive<lb/>
line ne&amp;. improvement for East<lb/>
Carolina to have a successful<lb/>
season.<lb/>
This year's crosscountry<lb/>
team could be the best ever at<lb/>
East Carolina and possibly the<lb/>
best in the state and conference.<lb/>
Coach Carson has three of his<lb/>
top five runners returning from<lb/>
last year in addition to a fine<lb/>
group of freshmen and other<lb/>
returning lettermen.<lb/>
A veiy demanding schedule is<lb/>
in store foi East Carolina's<lb/>
harriers<lb/>
Teams from such schools as<lb/>
Penn State, West Virginia, N.C.<lb/>
State, the University of North<lb/>
Carolina, Virginia Polytechnic<lb/>
Institute and William and Mary<lb/>
head the dual meet schedule<lb/>
along with the state, conference,<lb/>
NCAA regional and NCAA<lb/>
national championship meets.<lb/>
East Carolina's soccer team<lb/>
finished with a 36 1 record last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
It was the best season ever by<lb/>
a Pirate soccer team and there is<lb/>
hope of improving their showing<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
If East Carolina's athletic<lb/>
teams cam improve on their<lb/>
performances of last year, this<lb/>
should be a banner year foi the<lb/>
Pirates in the Southern<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
Photo by Richard Ram,<lb/>
BULLOCK SNARES PASS � Tommy Bullock, who usually is a<lb/>
defensive speaicalist, plucks a pass during a spell at offensive<lb/>
wingback during Saturday's scrimmage at Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
�<lb/>
One hour<lb/>
"mminizm"<lb/>
CERTIFIES<lb/>
THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
COLOR<lb/>
ONE HOUR MARTINIZING<lb/>
'WORLD'S MOST POPULAR DRY CLEANER'<lb/>
111 E. Tenth St.<lb/>
1401 Dickinson Ave<lb/>
G. E. Portacolor TV<lb/>
Drawing October 25th<lb/>
Color TV from GREENVILLE TV &amp; APPLIANCE<lb/>
Come in and Register<lb/>
No Purchase Necessary<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0015"/><lb/>
6. 1969<lb/>
September 16, 1969<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Page 15<lb/>
�<lb/>
3rd Rairif<lb/>
ally is a<lb/>
ffensive<lb/>
tadium.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Up against the wall <lb/>
<lb/>
By BENCURRENCE<lb/>
When it all boils down, what's left is nothing but<lb/>
good old Christian ethic. You can't respect a man who<lb/>
doesn't practice what he preaches.<lb/>
To get to the point, our flag-waving<lb/>
cham pion-agai nst-evil white liberals and<lb/>
"revolutionaries" should consider re-analyzing their<lb/>
programs. Philosophy and rhetoric are both good, but<lb/>
for very limited uses. Convincing one's personal<lb/>
acquaintances, unless you're a mighty good convincer<lb/>
with a lot of friends, makes only a minute dent in the<lb/>
masses of people to be dealt with.<lb/>
Those of the new "liheral elite" who consider<lb/>
themselves politically together, humanistically<lb/>
conscious, and prepared to take care of business must<lb/>
realize that mass participation, not useless rhetoric, will<lb/>
bring about a revolution.<lb/>
Hiding behind drugs, long hair and such slogans as<lb/>
love and brotherhood belies the fact that these are the<lb/>
necessary ingredients that can supercede the reality they<lb/>
are criticizing.<lb/>
Aware of the fact that our society failed because it so<lb/>
loosely used the words "love and brotherhood the<lb/>
super-liberal is nevertheless falling into the same pit of<lb/>
illusions.<lb/>
The endless repetition of such terms day after day<lb/>
renders them meaningless mirages. To break it down,<lb/>
the super-liberal is advocating it so hard he doesn't have<lb/>
time to practice it.<lb/>
To avoid becoming a part of the New Establishment,<lb/>
the super-liberal must turn his attention to that which<lb/>
he has been criticizing yet practicing himself.<lb/>
If the "super-liberal" is really uptight about<lb/>
economic exploitation, crass materialism, avaricious<lb/>
imperialism, and blatant institutional racism, he has to<lb/>
refrain from letting these things pass by.<lb/>
His only alternative is to turn toward economic<lb/>
honesty, a life style filled with something more than<lb/>
money and possessions, and a love and brotherhood<lb/>
with meaning.<lb/>
Our white liberal has removed himself from the goals<lb/>
of revolutionary political thought. In effect he has been<lb/>
a part of the "established" middle class bureaucracy,<lb/>
not so much because he has committed a revolutionary<lb/>
sin but because he left out the real meaning in what he<lb/>
is doing.<lb/>
To paraphrase Brother Huey Newton, a principal<lb/>
founder of the Black Panther Party, the mother country<lb/>
radical or the white liberal (depending on where your<lb/>
head is) has a definite role in the movement. He must<lb/>
first choose his friends and define his enemies.<lb/>
Then he must not only regain his moral standard and<lb/>
align himself with humanity, but also put this into<lb/>
practice by attacking the protectors of the institutions.<lb/>
Christian ethic, leaving out the mysticism of religion,<lb/>
is the obvious alternative to the contradictions and<lb/>
failing points of the society the white liberal is<lb/>
concerned with.<lb/>
vw �-<lb/>
Pot 3etM Heeler ?<lb/>
eoe,o if yoo ctont ate'v<lb/>
totSomething you n�eor<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
All Students, faculty<lb/>
members, and the<lb/>
administrators are urged to<lb/>
express their opinions in<lb/>
writing in the ECU Forum.<lb/>
When writing letters to<lb/>
the Forum, the following<lb/>
procedure should be<lb/>
followed:<lb/>
� Letters should be<lb/>
concise and to the point.<lb/>
-Length should not<lb/>
exceed 300 words. The<lb/>
Editorial Board reserves the<lb/>
right to edit letters to<lb/>
conform to this<lb/>
requirement.<lb/>
� All letters must be<lb/>
signed with the name of the<lb/>
the writer. However, upon<lb/>
author's request his name<lb/>
may be withheld.<lb/>
Signed articles on this<lb/>
page reflect the opinions of<lb/>
the author, and not those of<lb/>
"The East Carolinian<lb/>
September 18<lb/>
9:30 - 4:00<lb/>
in<lb/>
the<lb/>
University<lb/>
Book Exchange<lb/>
BUDD CRONIN<lb/>
a Trained College<lb/>
Specialist from<lb/>
JOHN ROBERTS<lb/>
wants to meet you<lb/>
He will assist you in selecting the ring that is<lb/>
right for you . . . with the proper stone, weight<lb/>
and style, for the most lasting and beautiful<lb/>
symbol of your educational achievement.<lb/>
FOUR IVEEK SHIPMENT<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0016"/><lb/>
Social revolution's<lb/>
effects being felt<lb/>
A new kind of revolution is taking place in the<lb/>
United States today. It is not a revolution in the<lb/>
traditional sense of the word. It does not require<lb/>
viole ice and bloodshed.<lb/>
Rather, it is best described as a social revolution<lb/>
bringing about sweeping and far reaching changes in the<lb/>
social relationship of one man to another.<lb/>
The revolution is the challenge to authority that we<lb/>
experience today.<lb/>
This change can be seen in almost all phases of man's<lb/>
life in the schools, colleges, factories, offices and in<lb/>
the home. Women are demanding equal rights. Students<lb/>
are rejecting their servile role in the classroom. The<lb/>
"subculture" is challenging the authority of the<lb/>
"establishment Workers no longer look upon their<lb/>
boss as a towering father figure meting out rewards and<lb/>
punishments.<lb/>
People at all levels and stations in life are demanding<lb/>
equality:<lb/>
The authority of the professor is being challenged<lb/>
in the classroom. No longer do students accept what the<lb/>
professor says as infallible.<lb/>
No longer do many young people in society follow<lb/>
the values that society says are "qood Witness the<lb/>
Woodstock Folk Festival last month. The 400.000<lb/>
people who attended the festival rejected many<lb/>
established values by ignoring laws, using drugs and<lb/>
co-habitating.<lb/>
- No longer do housewives look upon the husband as<lb/>
their soul support. Many have become independent and<lb/>
could get along as well without him.<lb/>
All around, people are finding the old<lb/>
"superior subordinate" relationship fading.<lb/>
This "right of authortiy" revolution will bring about<lb/>
any far-reaching changes in the political and social<lb/>
nature of man. Whether all of them will be beneficial or<lb/>
not is debatable.<lb/>
One thing is certain about the revolution. The<lb/>
towering dominance of some people based on false<lb/>
statutes and shakey hierarchies will be dimmshed if not<lb/>
totally abolished.<lb/>
Registration system<lb/>
demands revamping<lb/>
The administration needs to be complimented for<lb/>
one improvement, however. There was only one<lb/>
emergency locator card to be filled out this year. Last<lb/>
year there were six.<lb/>
This fortifies our faith in the bureaucratic machine.<lb/>
It shows that someone has finally done something to<lb/>
answer thousands of student and faculty complaints<lb/>
over the past four years.<lb/>
Many students have recommended that schedules be<lb/>
mailed to the students before they get here. This would<lb/>
alleviate much of the misery.<lb/>
But this plea has fallen on deaf ears. Here, again, the<lb/>
student newspaper asks the administration to study this<lb/>
proposal and tell us why this has not been done in the<lb/>
past. If it is the question of the money involved in<lb/>
mailing the class schedules, we feel sure the students<lb/>
would gladly pay the postage involved to avoid those<lb/>
lines.<lb/>
Registration must be revamped. Improvements must<lb/>
be made before the students and faculty members are<lb/>
subjected to registration again.<lb/>
Paul F ICh.l Callaway<lb/>
Phyllis Bndgeman<lb/>
Robert Thorn<lb/>
David Daltoi<lb/>
New, F ditor<lb/>
Cony f dttoi<lb/>
Secretai v<lb/>
Advisor<lb/>
Consultant<lb/>
E ditor in Chief<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Assoi late E ditor<lb/>
Gail Burton<lb/>
lai bin<lb/>
Ira I Baker<lb/>
Wyjtt Browne<lb/>
�77<lb/>
4<lb/>
V<lb/>
fhu<lb/>
OS1 N"HH1 I 111<lb/>
pfl IN<lb/>
'L<lb/>
<lb/>
K<lb/>
M -<lb/>
i<lb/>
M<lb/>
'�<lb/>
�"Vv<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
i m<lb/>
T<lb/>
L ' i<lb/>
&amp; ' Vl' v<lb/>
rxj<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
" -�<lb/>
I<lb/>
Sostf<lb/>
iC<lb/>
J<lb/>
V �<lb/>
' am a slave1<lb/>
By Bill Owens<lb/>
I stand here with my garbage sack and<lb/>
wonder why these dormitories seem to<lb/>
grow younger but stronger and wiser each<lb/>
year. They all stand there and seem to<lb/>
absorb the knowledge that the carefree<lb/>
students pursue. Eachbuilding molds itself<lb/>
into the hill and they never seem to stop<lb/>
thinking, and they never seem to stop<lb/>
looking at me. I keep their front lawns<lb/>
and honl I'jtinr and ciHp<lb/>
lnm�nr nlnnn<lb/>
lUVVIIJ L-IUI I.<lb/>
wash the window through which they see<lb/>
me. No matter where I am, they see me. I<lb/>
clean their walkways over which the<lb/>
thousands of idiots of knowledge pass<lb/>
everyday. I clean these dormitories; Jones,<lb/>
Aycock, Scott, Belk.<lb/>
But did I always pick up the paper and<lb/>
scrub the halls and wash the comodes?<lb/>
No, not always. For I helped raise the<lb/>
hammers that pounded life into the first<lb/>
dormitory years ago. I helped to tote the<lb/>
bricks, to mix the cement, to lay the<lb/>
pipelines of the first of these dungeons.<lb/>
And when the first form was finished, I<lb/>
took care of it. And the other dorms<lb/>
followed and I took care of them. The big<lb/>
white boss said "Keep 'em clean" and I<lb/>
said "yessir, and thank you sir That was<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
A bag and a stick<lb/>
Come rain or shine, I keep the lawns<lb/>
clean, me and my bag and my stick. In<lb/>
summer the sun scorches my clothes and<lb/>
blisters my back and dries my eyes. I pick<lb/>
up the drinking cups, and gum wrappers,<lb/>
and thousands of other chips of paper. I<lb/>
pick up love letters sometimes and I read<lb/>
them. People in love never have problems,<lb/>
just love. I pick up school papers with F<lb/>
marks on them and papers with no marks.<lb/>
In winter, I move the snow and ice. I haul<lb/>
dirt for the sidewalks and move it again<lb/>
the next day when the ice melts. When<lb/>
the freezing rains come down, I must<lb/>
work fast so that the water will not rot<lb/>
the paper and cause me to stop and bend<lb/>
my back. Because, you see, the sun makes<lb/>
my skin tight and the cold makes my<lb/>
joints stiff. The wrinkles on my face are<lb/>
the wrinkles carved by rheumatism and<lb/>
sickdays. I must work because people hate<lb/>
filth. I must clean up the filth that they<lb/>
spread. And I must keep the grounds<lb/>
clean.<lb/>
I think my job will .ever get easier. I<lb/>
see another building going up, and I see<lb/>
much more paper to pick up. I see more<lb/>
bathrooms to clean, comodes to scrub,<lb/>
beer cans to tote. I feel my bones reject<lb/>
the thought of one more year.<lb/>
All cleanup men are black, and black<lb/>
men cannot be bosses, I think. For no one<lb/>
knows more about cleaning than I, yet I<lb/>
am no one's boss, not even my own. I<lb/>
have to tell mv white boss man how the<lb/>
cleaning should be done because he does<lb/>
not know. ! am 60 and he is 33. ! have<lb/>
cleaned and worked here at this school for<lb/>
33 years and he has never cleaned. I<lb/>
wonder why white men are always thi<lb/>
boss.<lb/>
"I am a slave"<lb/>
But I must work for my family<lb/>
though my pay is the pay of a child. My<lb/>
children are smart; I must make them<lb/>
bosses They must not be the slave that I<lb/>
am. I am a slave. Years ago, I could have<lb/>
boarded the progress express and ridden it<lb/>
into many other fields and gone many<lb/>
other places. But, I jumped the train that<lb/>
moved in one small circle just because it<lb/>
was moving. And now, no matter how fast<lb/>
I go, I still move in that same small circle<lb/>
which neither contracts nor expands. I am<lb/>
where I was 33 years ago. I have ridden<lb/>
this train through hard times. I have<lb/>
picked up tons of paper and seen the<lb/>
temperature drop so that I have to pry the<lb/>
paper up from the ground with my hands.<lb/>
I have caught volleys of snowballs from<lb/>
ignorant fools whose pursuit or<lb/>
knowledge has taught them that a freezing<lb/>
janitor is fun to harass. I have seen the<lb/>
temperature rise so that I had to cany<lb/>
water to keept the plants from dying. I<lb/>
have worked all day in the blistering sun<lb/>
and heard the crowds pass and say that I<lb/>
smelled. I have taken with the ears of a<lb/>
deaf man the curses and have been called<lb/>
names by students who themselves were<lb/>
not worth the breath it took to utter<lb/>
these curses. I have forced myself to reply<lb/>
"good morning" to the words that meant<lb/>
good morning and the tone that meant<lb/>
"go to hell I have been the slave to ten<lb/>
thousand masters.<lb/>
I keep my job because no one eise will<lb/>
have it, and because no one will have me.<lb/>
I take orders because I cannot give them. !<lb/>
take the pay because I must live. I think<lb/>
maybe I shall make it.<lb/>
Vol. 1 No. 3<lb/>
Of<lb/>
or<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
Al<lb/>
<pb facs="00039426_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>