<?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="00039427_0001"/>
m<lb/>
" ?<lb/>
ountainhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Vol. 1 No. 3<lb/>
East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
September 18, 1969<lb/>
Opposition to the draft<lb/>
organizing in N.C.<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
see page 2<lb/>
Mrs. Leo Jenkins<lb/>
Always entertaining<lb/>
 ? see page 5<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2, Fountainhead, Thursday, Sept. 18, 1969<lb/>
Anti-draftgroup formed<lb/>
On educatio<lb/>
By PEGGY MASON<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
FAYETTEVILLE- A<lb/>
committee to form a permanent<lb/>
North Carolina Council to<lb/>
Repeal the Draft was set up<lb/>
Monday night in a meeting at<lb/>
Fayetteville.<lb/>
Jo Lee Davis, secretary of the<lb/>
National Council to Repeal the<lb/>
Draft, was in charge of the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Fayetteville businessmen, high<lb/>
school students, students from<lb/>
Methodist College and Duke<lb/>
University, and members of<lb/>
G.ls United Against the War in<lb/>
Vietnam from Fort Bragg<lb/>
attended.<lb/>
The Fayetteville Area Council<lb/>
to Repeal the Draft will be made<lb/>
up of Fayette ille residents<lb/>
including politicians,<lb/>
businessmen, and students. The<lb/>
council will collect names of<lb/>
people who endorse draft repeal.<lb/>
They will begin a letter writing<lb/>
campaign, pass out leaflets, talk<lb/>
with church and civic clubs to<lb/>
build support for draft repeal,<lb/>
and help other North Carolina<lb/>
cities form draft repeal councils.<lb/>
A North Carolina Council to<lb/>
Repeal the Draft will be formed<lb/>
by a combination of these area<lb/>
councils.<lb/>
The National Council to Repeal<lb/>
the Draft was set up this spring<lb/>
by unofficial representatives<lb/>
from nearly forty national<lb/>
organizations. The council is<lb/>
supported by groups from many<lb/>
facets of American life - church<lb/>
and civic groups, peace<lb/>
movements, labor, women's<lb/>
organizations, nd the student<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
One of the main purposes of<lb/>
the council is to organize every<lb/>
state and get support for draft<lb/>
repeal from the public.<lb/>
The council hopes to get<lb/>
endorsement from national<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
So far Alabama, Georgia,<lb/>
Tennessee, Northern California,<lb/>
Southern California, Ohio,<lb/>
Michigan, and Virginia have<lb/>
strong state councils.<lb/>
Five states besides North<lb/>
Carolina are in the organizing<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
Tom Reeves, National Director,<lb/>
said in an article, "The draft is a<lb/>
cause and effect of a growing<lb/>
trend in America to rely on<lb/>
military solutions and to<lb/>
increase the power of the<lb/>
military sector. Without<lb/>
peacetime conscription, the<lb/>
United States could not wage<lb/>
The reel scene<lb/>
By STAN OLSEN<lb/>
Tuesday night, instead of<lb/>
digging "Sgt. York'her? in town,<lb/>
I went up to Louisburg College<lb/>
and caught the first of three<lb/>
programs entitled "The Kinetic<lb/>
Art Tuesday's presentation<lb/>
consisted of ten short films.<lb/>
Their veriety of technique and<lb/>
content produced an intense,<lb/>
involving two-hour short<lb/>
experience in true film Art.<lb/>
A collection of 26 short films<lb/>
from nine countries by<lb/>
outstanding film makers from<lb/>
Europe, the United States and<lb/>
Japan are included in the show<lb/>
which is presented on three<lb/>
separate evenings.<lb/>
The next program, scheduled<lb/>
for Wednesday, Sept. 24, has<lb/>
some highly controversial (lots<lb/>
of skin) footage entitled<lb/>
"Tonight Let's All Make Love In<lb/>
London" with Michael Caine,<lb/>
Julie Christie, Mick Jagger and<lb/>
others.<lb/>
The other titles for this second<lb/>
proyram in the senes inciuue:<lb/>
"Et Cetera "Miracle there.<lb/>
"Elegia "What Do You<lb/>
Think and "Paris Mai 1968 a<lb/>
documentary on the French<lb/>
student revolt.<lb/>
The third program contains<lb/>
nine more films and will be held<lb/>
Oct. 2 at Louisburg.<lb/>
I highly advise all those<lb/>
thousands of people on campus<lb/>
(who care about or want to find<lb/>
out about what and where the<lb/>
Art film is aiming) to take the<lb/>
hour-and-a-half drive and spend<lb/>
fifty cents on a fabulously<lb/>
frenetic evening.<lb/>
Show time is 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
-? r- I I r r r <lb/>
?m i ri 11 n r 11 h<lb/>
Greek organizations<lb/>
sponsor rush week<lb/>
Food service<lb/>
is extended<lb/>
by Slater<lb/>
Several hundred East Carolina<lb/>
students are now going through<lb/>
rush week.<lb/>
The rush parties, combo<lb/>
parties, teas and open houses all<lb/>
lead to the same end<lb/>
membership in a fraternity or<lb/>
sorority.<lb/>
To be able to attend rushes,<lb/>
men must sign up and pay a S2<lb/>
rush fee.<lb/>
Women must have completed<lb/>
12 quarter hours to be eligible<lb/>
for a sorority.<lb/>
After signing up, men can<lb/>
attend all the rush parties and<lb/>
combo parties, said Charles<lb/>
Strickland, the Inter-Fraternity<lb/>
Council President.<lb/>
No one is obligated to pledge if<lb/>
he gets a bid, and a student can<lb/>
drop out of rush any time he<lb/>
wants to.<lb/>
Women have an informal rush.<lb/>
If a woman wants to try for<lb/>
memberhship in a sorority, she<lb/>
attends the party she wants to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Soroi ,ty bids began going out<lb/>
last Tuesday.<lb/>
Fraternity bids will go out<lb/>
Sept. 24 at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center from 1 to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Library extends services<lb/>
Joyner Library has extended<lb/>
its hours beginning fall quarter.<lb/>
All departments will be open<lb/>
from 7:45 a.m. to 9 p.m. during<lb/>
the weekdays Monday through<lb/>
Thursday. The first floor reading<lb/>
rooms will remain open from<lb/>
7:45 a.m. to 12 midnight. All<lb/>
departments will be open on<lb/>
Friday and Saturday from 8 a.m.<lb/>
to 5 p.m. On Sunday, all<lb/>
departments will be open from 1<lb/>
p.m. until 9 p.m the first floor<lb/>
reading rooms will be open from<lb/>
1 p.m. until 12 midnight.<lb/>
Access will be available until<lb/>
midnight for Reference, Reserve<lb/>
and Current Periodical materials,<lb/>
on Sunday through Thursday.<lb/>
Those with stack permits will be<lb/>
able to use the stacks until<lb/>
closing time on all days.<lb/>
There will be no paging of<lb/>
materials in the stacks after 9<lb/>
p.m. Although the room will be<lb/>
open, there will not be anyone<lb/>
available to offer reference<lb/>
service after 9 p.m.<lb/>
Several new ideas for the<lb/>
cafeteria will be put into use<lb/>
soon a speed line for quick,<lb/>
hot lunches; a new recipe<lb/>
system; and a food committee to<lb/>
handle student complaints and<lb/>
suggestions.<lb/>
A. Harry Pitts, the new<lb/>
cafeteria director, said the speed<lb/>
line "is designed for the student<lb/>
with a limited amount of time<lb/>
for lunch.<lb/>
"The menu will consist of a hot<lb/>
sandwich, such as roast beef, and<lb/>
french fries<lb/>
The speed line will carry a<lb/>
limited selection of foods and<lb/>
will not replace the regular lunch<lb/>
line.<lb/>
The new recipe system is a part<lb/>
of the recent changeover to<lb/>
Slater Service. The university<lb/>
used to run the cafeterias.<lb/>
Pitts said the recipe system is<lb/>
meant to provide new dishes as<lb/>
well as improve on old ones. He<lb/>
said this policy has been in<lb/>
effect since the beginning of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
If the SGA approves, a food<lb/>
committee will be set up to<lb/>
handle complaints and<lb/>
suggestions.<lb/>
Pitts said he will handle all<lb/>
complaints and suggestions<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
He said there seems to be no<lb/>
chance of reducing food prices.<lb/>
He hopes to improve the quality<lb/>
of the food, however.<lb/>
major wars like Vietnam unless<lb/>
Congress declared them. With<lb/>
draft repeal, U.S. leaders would<lb/>
not be so tempted to rely on an<lb/>
endless source of slave labor.<lb/>
Foreign policy making would be<lb/>
restored to the Congress<lb/>
According to the council,<lb/>
reform will not do away with<lb/>
the present draft dissent. A<lb/>
lottery, they say, will mean that<lb/>
men will still serve and die<lb/>
involuntarily while others will<lb/>
live because of their luck.<lb/>
A voluntary army would insure<lb/>
that the military wouid be kept<lb/>
down to a small size,<lb/>
inappropriate for aggression, the<lb/>
council believes.<lb/>
Civilian checks couid be placed<lb/>
on the military to assure the<lb/>
soldiers of their rights. The<lb/>
council maintains that these<lb/>
goals can only be secured by<lb/>
total repeal of the draft.<lb/>
The present draft laws will be<lb/>
brought before the Congress in<lb/>
1971. Before then a lottery<lb/>
system will be in effect, the<lb/>
council believes.<lb/>
The council believes that this<lb/>
will be the last time for<lb/>
opposition to be effective. They<lb/>
hope to be organized enough to<lb/>
fight for a citizen's army, one<lb/>
that is voluntary and defensive<lb/>
and one that will not be kept at<lb/>
full force during peacetime.<lb/>
African friendliness<lb/>
impresses professor<lb/>
Dr. Blanche Watrous almost<lb/>
didn't make it back to the<lb/>
United States this summer after<lb/>
her study trip to Africa.<lb/>
She arrived in Nairobi, Kenya,<lb/>
on the same day that a<lb/>
prominent figure in the<lb/>
government was assassinated.<lb/>
Dr. Watrous attended a<lb/>
memorial service for the man,<lb/>
Tom Mboya, at the Catholic<lb/>
Cathedral in Nairobi.<lb/>
President Jomo Kenyatta also<lb/>
attended.<lb/>
When the president rtepped<lb/>
form his car, member, nf a<lb/>
hostile tribe started throwing<lb/>
shoes and stones at the<lb/>
president, who belongs to a rival<lb/>
tribe.<lb/>
Police began to use tear gas to<lb/>
disperse the demonstrators. Dr.<lb/>
Watrous said she ran back to her<lb/>
hotel.<lb/>
"I was very lucky that the<lb/>
doorman recognized me and let<lb/>
me into the hotel she said.<lb/>
"Just as I got in, a bomb<lb/>
exploded on the steps behind<lb/>
me<lb/>
Dr. Watrous and Mrs. Jan<lb/>
Peterson of the Geography<lb/>
Department visited Africa this<lb/>
summer on a FulbrightHays<lb/>
scholarship<lb/>
Last summer, they had studied<lb/>
Swahili and East African<lb/>
languages and cultures at the<lb/>
University of California to<lb/>
prepare for the trip.<lb/>
They left the United States in<lb/>
early June. They visited Senegal,<lb/>
The Gambia, Ghana, Kenya,<lb/>
Tanzania, Uganda and Ethiopia.<lb/>
Dr. Watrous studied African<lb/>
dance with the National Ballet<lb/>
of Ghana. The ballet will he<lb/>
touring in the United States next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"The friendliness of the people<lb/>
everywhere in Africa was the<lb/>
most impressive aspect of the<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
"The energy and drive of the<lb/>
people in developing their new<lb/>
nations was astounding she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Dr. Watrous and Mrs. Peterson<lb/>
are both involved in the African<lb/>
Studies Department here.<lb/>
Placement Bureau<lb/>
helps with<lb/>
jobs<lb/>
East Carolina's placement<lb/>
bureau helps find jobs for<lb/>
seniors who are going to<lb/>
graduate soon.<lb/>
DuPont, Union Carbide,<lb/>
Burlington Industries and<lb/>
Colgate-Palmolive are among the<lb/>
many companies represented at<lb/>
the bureau. Representatives<lb/>
from these companies come<lb/>
from as far away as Los Angeles,<lb/>
New York and Miami to<lb/>
interview East Carolina students.<lb/>
Furney K. James is the director<lb/>
of the placement service, which<lb/>
is a non-profit organization.<lb/>
James has served as a counselor<lb/>
at Pitt Technical Institute. He<lb/>
has degrees in guidance and<lb/>
counseling and business<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
Every two weeks, the bureau<lb/>
sends a list of job openings and<lb/>
interview announcements to<lb/>
registered seniors.<lb/>
Seniors should register by Oct.<lb/>
15 in James's office behind<lb/>
North Cafeteria.<lb/>
The bureau will send a letter to<lb/>
any prospective employer listing<lb/>
the senior's credentials.<lb/>
Large turnout expected<lb/>
Phil Dixon, SGA elections<lb/>
chairman, expects a large<lb/>
number of voters for the class<lb/>
officers and legislative elections<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
East Carolina is believed to be<lb/>
the first school in the nation to<lb/>
use IBM computer service to<lb/>
process election ballots this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
A computer will be used again<lb/>
Tuesday to process the ballots.<lb/>
Students will vote in the<lb/>
student union.<lb/>
A number two pencil must be<lb/>
used to completely darken the<lb/>
space beside the candidates<lb/>
name. Tha ballot cannot be<lb/>
bent.<lb/>
The polls will be open from<lb/>
8:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesday.<lb/>
Jen<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins,<lb/>
the university, v<lb/>
write about th<lb/>
university, his rol<lb/>
of East Carolina L<lb/>
the students' role i<lb/>
This is Jenkins's r<lb/>
There has been m<lb/>
in the past year<lb/>
universities in<lb/>
society and tr<lb/>
tribulations of<lb/>
administrative offi<lb/>
Occasional ly<lb/>
tabulation of the<lb/>
presidencies accoi<lb/>
listing of the reas<lb/>
would want to ass<lb/>
of such a frustratir<lb/>
These negative a<lb/>
to recognize that;<lb/>
position has i<lb/>
whether it be an<lb/>
higher education,<lb/>
or a government t<lb/>
it overlooks the<lb/>
fact of I i f<lb/>
rapid-changing,<lb/>
society; that ev<lb/>
frustrations, wha<lb/>
may be.<lb/>
A university<lb/>
problems are<lb/>
increased this<lb/>
everybody's probl<lb/>
into searching<lb/>
solutions to our<lb/>
the resuIt i<lb/>
uncertainty abc<lb/>
organization of s<lb/>
is or will become.<lb/>
But this is no<lb/>
negative, defeatis<lb/>
has often been s<lb/>
past decade that<lb/>
enough to make<lb/>
better or to des<lb/>
To a large extent<lb/>
has been gent<lb/>
preserved in the w<lb/>
The individual n<lb/>
academic com<lb/>
sought it did<lb/>
betterment of m;<lb/>
its destruction. Wl<lb/>
the positive side,<lb/>
role of the unive<lb/>
the appl icat<lb/>
knowledge to im<lb/>
and reduce our fn<lb/>
A college preside<lb/>
its purposes as<lb/>
problems. A col<lb/>
has a unique o<lb/>
coordinate the re<lb/>
university - its st<lb/>
and physical plar<lb/>
solution of socie<lb/>
A college preside<lb/>
He does not con<lb/>
to achieve an<lb/>
among a grea<lb/>
relatively indepen<lb/>
The Board<lb/>
expresses wha<lb/>
public expect<lb/>
institution. They<lb/>
as they can get fc<lb/>
The student an(<lb/>
represent a pc<lb/>
general public v<lb/>
education at t<lb/>
Today, many stui<lb/>
more freedom in<lb/>
life and a revisi<lb/>
Some of their<lb/>
about the conce;<lb/>
university is willi<lb/>
some of these poi<lb/>
The alumni h;<lb/>
different concep<lb/>
school. Some w<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0003"/><lb/>
d De placed<lb/>
assure the<lb/>
r'ghts. The<lb/>
that these<lb/>
secured by<lb/>
3ft.<lb/>
aws will be<lb/>
Congress in<lb/>
a lottery<lb/>
effect, the<lb/>
?s that this<lb/>
time for<lb/>
ctive. They<lb/>
I enough to<lb/>
army, one<lb/>
d defensive<lb/>
be kept at<lb/>
Btime.<lb/>
5S<lb/>
tor<lb/>
Mrs. Jan<lb/>
Geography<lb/>
Africa this<lb/>
bright Hays<lb/>
lad studied<lb/>
African<lb/>
es at the<lb/>
ifornia to<lb/>
J States in<lb/>
sd Senegal,<lb/>
a, Kenya,<lb/>
1 Ethiopia.<lb/>
I African<lb/>
mal Ballet<lb/>
3t will be<lb/>
States next<lb/>
the people<lb/>
a was the<lb/>
?ct of the<lb/>
ive of the<lb/>
their new<lb/>
ling she<lb/>
s. Peterson<lb/>
he African<lb/>
ere.<lb/>
counselor<lb/>
stitute. He<lb/>
iance and<lb/>
business<lb/>
:he bureau<lb/>
enings and<lb/>
jments to<lb/>
;er by Oct.<lb/>
ce behind<lb/>
I a letter to<lb/>
ayer listing<lb/>
ie ballots,<lb/>
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:andidate's<lb/>
:annot be<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 18, I969, Fountainhead, Page 3<lb/>
On education<lb/>
Jenkins: role of the university<lb/>
Agree or disagree?<lb/>
pen<lb/>
Irom<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, president of<lb/>
the university, was asked to<lb/>
write about the role of a<lb/>
university, his role as president<lb/>
of East Carolina University, anc<lb/>
the students' role in his job.<lb/>
This is Jenkins's reply:<lb/>
There has been much discussion<lb/>
in the past year of the role of<lb/>
universities in our changing<lb/>
society and the trials and<lb/>
tribulations of their chief<lb/>
administrative officers.<lb/>
Occasionally we see a<lb/>
tabulation of the vacant college<lb/>
presidencies accompanied by a<lb/>
listing of the reasons no person<lb/>
would want to assume the duties<lb/>
of such a frustrating job.<lb/>
These negative assessments fail<lb/>
to recognize that any managerial<lb/>
position has its problems,<lb/>
whether it be an institution of<lb/>
higher education, a corporation,<lb/>
or a government bureau. Indeed,<lb/>
it overlooks the fundamental<lb/>
fact of life in this<lb/>
rapid-changing, technological<lb/>
society; that everybody faces<lb/>
frustrations, whatever his job<lb/>
may be.<lb/>
A university president's<lb/>
problems are considerably<lb/>
increased this year because<lb/>
everybody's problems goad him<lb/>
into searching for better<lb/>
solutions to our situation and<lb/>
the result is a general<lb/>
uncertainty about what the<lb/>
organization of society actually<lb/>
is or will become.<lb/>
But this is no reason for a<lb/>
negative, defeatist approach. It<lb/>
has often been said during the<lb/>
past decade that we now know<lb/>
enough to make life infinitely<lb/>
better or to destroy ourselves.<lb/>
To a large extent this knowledge<lb/>
has been generated and is<lb/>
preserved in the universities.<lb/>
The individual members of the<lb/>
academic community who<lb/>
sought it did so for the<lb/>
betterment of mankind, not for<lb/>
its destruction. When we look on<lb/>
the positive side, it is clearly the<lb/>
role of the university to lead in<lb/>
the application of this<lb/>
knowledge to improve our life<lb/>
and reduce our frustrations.<lb/>
A college presidency, then, has<lb/>
its purposes as well as its<lb/>
problems. A college president<lb/>
has a unique opportunity to<lb/>
coordinate the resources of the<lb/>
university - its students, faculty<lb/>
and physical plant - toward a<lb/>
solution of society's problems.<lb/>
A college president coordinates.<lb/>
He does not control. He works<lb/>
to achieve an accomodation<lb/>
among a great variety of<lb/>
relatively independent groups.<lb/>
The Board of Trustees<lb/>
expresses what the general<lb/>
public expects from the<lb/>
institution. They want as much<lb/>
as they can get for their money.<lb/>
The student and their parents<lb/>
represent a portion of the<lb/>
general public who expect an<lb/>
education at the university.<lb/>
Today, many students strive for<lb/>
more freedom in their personal<lb/>
life and a revised curriculum.<lb/>
Some of their parents worry<lb/>
about the concessions that the<lb/>
university is willing to make on<lb/>
some of these points.<lb/>
The alumni have a slightly<lb/>
different concept of the old<lb/>
school. Some want it to win<lb/>
more football games while<lb/>
others are sometimes dismayed<lb/>
when the image of the<lb/>
institution changes.<lb/>
The faculty requires special<lb/>
accommodations to pursue<lb/>
advancement in each of the<lb/>
professions represented, while it<lb/>
often resists any concessions<lb/>
made to other groups that<lb/>
interfere with its academic<lb/>
freedom to seek knowledge and<lb/>
teach.<lb/>
The president is coordinator of<lb/>
these interests so diverse that a<lb/>
university has sometimes been<lb/>
described as being held together<lb/>
by a common agreement to<lb/>
disagree. Nevertheless, the<lb/>
coordinator has an invigorating<lb/>
challenge.<lb/>
In Eastern North Carolina,<lb/>
especially, there is a great deal of<lb/>
worthwhile work to be done.<lb/>
This is a frontier that excites the<lb/>
adventurous; this is a region on<lb/>
the move.<lb/>
Those who imagine that this<lb/>
countryside can remain a rustic<lb/>
paradise with no mining of its<lb/>
minerals, no industries to<lb/>
process its fibers, no modern<lb/>
hospitals to heal the sick, or any<lb/>
other phenomena of modern<lb/>
society underestimate the<lb/>
determination of the people of<lb/>
this region and the adaptability<lb/>
of this university to their needs.<lb/>
They overlook, too, that the<lb/>
diverse elements complicating<lb/>
the life of a university president<lb/>
are also a source of great<lb/>
support. For in spite of their<lb/>
conflicts, they are also joined in<lb/>
one common effort - even in<lb/>
the moments when they seem<lb/>
most unaware of it - to<lb/>
cooperate to the end that the<lb/>
university's resources will be<lb/>
used for improvement rather<lb/>
than destruction. They respond<lb/>
to reasonable requests and they<lb/>
support sound proposals for<lb/>
progress.<lb/>
This is no time to be negative!<lb/>
The university is now being<lb/>
rediscovered as a practical<lb/>
institution to be used to assist in<lb/>
the improvement of our lives.<lb/>
We have the opportunity to<lb/>
demonstrate that it can fulfill<lb/>
that mission.<lb/>
OOOOOOG<lb/>
DR. LEO JENKINS<lb/>
makes statement<lb/>
THE 50'S - "The kids, and<lb/>
there were not many of us in<lb/>
those days, were more or less<lb/>
left out of things. We inhabited a<lb/>
shadow area within the culture -<lb/>
nothing was important about us<lb/>
except the fact that eventually<lb/>
we'd grow up. We were the last<lb/>
generation to grow up without<lb/>
television<lb/>
FRANK CON ROY<lb/>
"My Generation"<lb/>
ESQUIRE - Oct. 1968<lb/>
THE 30'S - "It is a generation<lb/>
staunch by i nheritance,<lb/>
sophisiacated by fact - and<lb/>
rather deeply wise. More than<lb/>
that, what I feel about them is<lb/>
summed up in a line of Willa<lb/>
Cather's: 'We possess, together,<lb/>
the precious, the<lb/>
incommunicable past<lb/>
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD<lb/>
"My Generation"<lb/>
ESQUIRE - Oct. 1968<lb/>
THE 40 'S "We were<lb/>
traumatized not only by what<lb/>
we had been through and by the<lb/>
almost unimaginable presence of<lb/>
the bomb, but by the realization<lb/>
that the entire mess was not<lb/>
finished after all: there now was<lb/>
the Cold War to face, and its<lb/>
clammy presence oozed into our<lb/>
nights and days<lb/>
WILLIAM STY RON<lb/>
"My Generation"<lb/>
ESQUIRE - Oct. 1968<lb/>
I<lb/>
11<lb/>
Grand Opening<lb/>
429 Evans St.<lb/>
1<lb/>
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Greenville's No. 1 Store<lb/>
for health &amp; beauty<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039427_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4, Fountainhead, Thursday, Sept. 18, 1969<lb/>
Kennedy dilemma vexes Democrats<lb/>
m<lb/>
By SONNY McLAWHORN<lb/>
How does Ted Kennedy's<lb/>
personal dilemma affect the<lb/>
future of the Democratic Party?<lb/>
This question is on the minds<lb/>
of many political speculators.<lb/>
Some of the party professionals<lb/>
have already written Kennedy<lb/>
off as a potential presidential<lb/>
candidate. The Kennedy<lb/>
admirers, however, hope for the<lb/>
senator's entry in the 1972 race,<lb/>
despite disclaimers on his part.<lb/>
Certainly Ed Muskie is<lb/>
already a strong contender for<lb/>
the next nomination. Muskie,<lb/>
although widely respected in<lb/>
Washington for several years, did<lb/>
not become a national figure<lb/>
until his selection as Hubert<lb/>
Humphrey's running mate in<lb/>
1968.<lb/>
Muskie has a charisma which<lb/>
is difficult to resist. He shuns<lb/>
power in its most primitive<lb/>
form, a refreshing change from<lb/>
President Johnson's style. Like<lb/>
H. L. HODGES &amp; CO Inc.<lb/>
Student? Sports Headquarters<lb/>
Dial PL 2-4156<lb/>
Kennedy, he has earned the<lb/>
respect of his colleagues in the<lb/>
Senate. Humphrey's choice of<lb/>
Muskie as running mate was<lb/>
considered by many to be the<lb/>
former vice president's finest<lb/>
hour of the campaign.<lb/>
Although Muskie's stance on<lb/>
national issues is predominately<lb/>
liberal, he would probably<lb/>
outshine Kennedy or any other<lb/>
major contender in the southern<lb/>
region of the United States.<lb/>
Muskie's visceral style and his<lb/>
Lincolnesque image would<lb/>
indeed serve him well<lb/>
throughout the nation - even<lb/>
among some former Wallace<lb/>
supporters, who felt that the<lb/>
former Alabama governor was<lb/>
the only candidate who<lb/>
expressed his convictions.<lb/>
Humphrey's last-minute surge<lb/>
in the 1968 campaign has earned<lb/>
him serious consideration as a<lb/>
candidate in 1972. Eugene<lb/>
McCarthy's announcement that<lb/>
he would not seek his Minnesota<lb/>
senate seat in 1970 grants<lb/>
Humphrey a potential power<lb/>
base from which to seek the<lb/>
presidency. After four years of<lb/>
Nixon, Humphrey Democrats<lb/>
think the nation will have<lb/>
forgotten its vendetta against<lb/>
Johnson -? and with it, much of<lb/>
the dislike for Humphrey. It is<lb/>
true that Humphrey's eloquence<lb/>
earned him the dubious honor of<lb/>
speaking up for the war in<lb/>
Vietnam. If he were to seek the<lb/>
nomination again, he could<lb/>
certainly assume another vantage<lb/>
point.<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 because 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 to.<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
The mysterious Senator<lb/>
McCarthy appears to have given<lb/>
up the ghost. His refusal to seek<lb/>
power in the party (considered<lb/>
by many of his supporters to be<lb/>
a virtue) is certainly a<lb/>
death blow in the presence of a<lb/>
Kennedy or Muskie. McCarthy's<lb/>
most enthusiastic followers will<lb/>
undoubtedly attempt to build a<lb/>
base of power for their leader,<lb/>
but it is doubtful that the<lb/>
dissidents have yet learned that<lb/>
much about precinct and county<lb/>
organization. At any rate, the<lb/>
entrenchment of party "pros" is<lb/>
invincible under present<lb/>
conditions.<lb/>
Insiders feel party chairman<lb/>
Fred Harris has ambitions fot<lb/>
the presidency. The Oklahoma<lb/>
senator took the reigns of a<lb/>
battle weary Democratic Party<lb/>
in February and has done a<lb/>
creditable job of spearheading its<lb/>
reconstruction. Harris is young<lb/>
and he is vigorous. Since the<lb/>
midwest and the southwest, with<lb/>
the exception of Texas, have<lb/>
failed to deliver Democratic<lb/>
votes during the past 20 years,<lb/>
Harris might be a logical choice<lb/>
for running mate on any ticket.<lb/>
North Carolina's Terry<lb/>
Sanford continues to command<lb/>
the respect of national<lb/>
Democrats. He was a leading<lb/>
contender for the vice<lb/>
presidential spot on the<lb/>
Humphrey, but unlike Harris,<lb/>
who vigorously campaigned for<lb/>
n.irtv rhairmnshin Sanford has<lb/>
-?? . .<lb/>
not openly sought any political<lb/>
office since leaving the<lb/>
Governor's Mansion in 1964.<lb/>
Sanford supporters are still very<lb/>
much alive throughout the state,<lb/>
and his consideration of a return<lb/>
to his old position or a chance at<lb/>
a senate seat might preclude any<lb/>
prospect of his accepting a vice<lb/>
presidential nomination.<lb/>
For the time being,<lb/>
Democrats are resigned to a<lb/>
wait-and-see attitude.<lb/>
Undoubtedly, Richard Nixon's<lb/>
success in ending the war in<lb/>
Southeast Asia will be the major<lb/>
determinant of the opposition<lb/>
party's future.<lb/>
This year<lb/>
why not<lb/>
invite<lb/>
your<lb/>
overseas<lb/>
friends<lb/>
over<lb/>
here.<lb/>
?dv?rti?ing contributed tot th? pub'te good<lb/>
Member P.D.I.C.<lb/>
UNITTD STKTES TRAVEL SERVICE<lb/>
An Agn o( (J S DenMmni o Comment<lb/>
Ja<lb/>
Mrs. I<lb/>
a wai<lb/>
Lillian Jenkins<lb/>
person who, when<lb/>
her, makes you<lb/>
you have known<lb/>
life. Her gentle<lb/>
warm smile m<lb/>
completely at hon<lb/>
Contrary to wi<lb/>
think, she has m<lb/>
the wife of<lb/>
president, other<lb/>
amount of entert;<lb/>
This year a I<lb/>
entertained abou<lb/>
The largest singl<lb/>
reception for 15C<lb/>
did ii all myself<lb/>
Her upcomi<lb/>
includes receptio<lb/>
faculty, the<lb/>
reception for tin<lb/>
women. Miss Cai<lb/>
S h e p r e f e i<lb/>
entertaining to t<lb/>
she used when<lb/>
became presi(<lb/>
Carolina in 1960.<lb/>
Funny co<lb/>
She was c <lb/>
informality in i<lb/>
way.<lb/>
For one of her<lb/>
she had preparec<lb/>
formally<lb/>
rec<lb/>
everything jusl<lb/>
The table in tr<lb/>
was covered<lb/>
floor-length cioth<lb/>
As the guests<lb/>
through, a few<lb/>
and then oth<lb/>
Rather confused<lb/>
investiyaled, and<lb/>
her three-year-ol<lb/>
firing at the I<lb/>
loaded water<lb/>
underneath the t<lb/>
After that, she<lb/>
would be nor<lb/>
when she enterta<lb/>
She entertains<lb/>
of students ea<lb/>
which she enjov<lb/>
She loves to b<lb/>
people, and is d<lb/>
them stop b<lb/>
whenever they ft<lb/>
"Frequently, w<lb/>
Closed<lb/>
ru<lb/>
le m<lb/>
There has<lb/>
confusion for<lb/>
about where f<lb/>
are ? jpposed tc<lb/>
and 11 p.m.<lb/>
Some dorr<lb/>
allowing callers<lb/>
not.<lb/>
Miss Carolyn F<lb/>
women, said m<lb/>
being issued t<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
Freshmen wor<lb/>
allowed to hav(<lb/>
between 10 and<lb/>
They may<lb/>
emergencies, ou<lb/>
and school func<lb/>
Freshmen wor<lb/>
by 11 p.m.<lb/>
"I feel that<lb/>
necessary to h(<lb/>
women adjust t<lb/>
to build stud'<lb/>
Fulghum said.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0005"/><lb/>
its<lb/>
Senator<lb/>
have given<lb/>
sal to seek<lb/>
considered<lb/>
rters to be<lb/>
tainly a<lb/>
sence of a<lb/>
IcCarthy's<lb/>
owers will<lb/>
to build a<lb/>
eir leader.<lb/>
that the<lb/>
rned that<lb/>
nd county<lb/>
rate, the<lb/>
' "pros" is<lb/>
present<lb/>
chairman<lb/>
itions fot<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
gns of a<lb/>
tic Party<lb/>
i done a<lb/>
leading its<lb/>
is young<lb/>
Since the<lb/>
vest, with<lb/>
as, have<lb/>
emocratic<lb/>
20 years,<lb/>
:al choice<lb/>
ny ticket.<lb/>
S Terry<lb/>
command<lb/>
national<lb/>
a leading<lb/>
he vice<lb/>
on the<lb/>
e Harris,<lb/>
igned for<lb/>
nford has<lb/>
' political<lb/>
ing the<lb/>
in 1964.<lb/>
still very<lb/>
the state,<lb/>
f a return<lb/>
chance at<lb/>
elude any<lb/>
ing a vice<lb/>
i.<lb/>
being,<lb/>
ed to a<lb/>
t i t ude.<lb/>
Nixon's<lb/>
i war in<lb/>
the major<lb/>
pposition<lb/>
ar<lb/>
t<lb/>
as<lb/>
?C?I'?.<lb/>
? tDr<lb/>
lsotvkx<lb/>
it of ComrTKf<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 18, I969, Fountainhead, Page 5<lb/>
Mrs. Leo Jenkins:<lb/>
a warm, gentle lady<lb/>
Lillian Jenkins is the kind of<lb/>
person who, when you first meet<lb/>
her, makes you feel as though<lb/>
you have known her all your<lb/>
life. Her gentle manner and<lb/>
warm smile make one feel<lb/>
completely at home.<lb/>
Contrary to what one might<lb/>
think, she has no real duties as<lb/>
the wife of a university<lb/>
president, other than a vast<lb/>
amount of entertaining.<lb/>
This year alone, she has<lb/>
entertained about 3,000 people.<lb/>
The largest single group was a<lb/>
reception for 150 legislators. ("I<lb/>
did it all myself she said.)<lb/>
Her upcoming schedule<lb/>
includes receptions for the new<lb/>
faculty, the SGA, and a<lb/>
reception for the new dean of<lb/>
women. Miss Carolyn Fulghum.<lb/>
She prefers informal<lb/>
entertaining to the formal style<lb/>
she used when her husband<lb/>
became president of East<lb/>
Carolina in 1960.<lb/>
Funny conversion<lb/>
She was converted to<lb/>
informality in a very amusing<lb/>
way.<lb/>
For one of her first receptions,<lb/>
she had prepared everytmg very<lb/>
formally "receiving line and<lb/>
eveiything just truly elegant<lb/>
The table in the dining room<lb/>
was covered with a large,<lb/>
floor-length cioth.<lb/>
As the guesis were passing<lb/>
through, a few began laughing,<lb/>
and then others joined in.<lb/>
Rather confused, Mres. Jenkins<lb/>
invesugaieu, anu aiscoierea cui<lb/>
her three-year-old son Jack was<lb/>
firing at the ladies with his<lb/>
loaded water pistol from<lb/>
underneath the table.<lb/>
After that, she decided, there<lb/>
would be nor more formality<lb/>
when she entertained.<lb/>
She entertains a large number<lb/>
of students each year, a job<lb/>
which she enjoys "very much<lb/>
She loves to be around young<lb/>
people, and is delighted to have<lb/>
them stop by the house<lb/>
whenever they feel like it.<lb/>
"Frequently, when my husband<lb/>
Closed study<lb/>
rule made<lb/>
There has been a lot of<lb/>
confusion for the past week<lb/>
about where freshmen women<lb/>
are ?; jpposed to be between 10<lb/>
and 11 p.m.<lb/>
Some dormitories were<lb/>
allowing callers and others were<lb/>
not.<lb/>
Miss Carolyn Fulghum, dean of<lb/>
women, said new directives are<lb/>
being issued to clear up the<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
Freshmen women will not be<lb/>
allowed to have callers or dates<lb/>
between 10 and 11 p.m.<lb/>
They may leave only for<lb/>
emergencies, out-of-town callers<lb/>
and school functions.<lb/>
Freshmen women must be in<lb/>
by 11 p.m.<lb/>
"I feel that closed study is<lb/>
necessary to help the freshmen<lb/>
women adjust to college life and<lb/>
to build study habits Miss<lb/>
Fulghum said.<lb/>
and I are sitting on the front<lb/>
porch, students passing by will<lb/>
wave at us She laughed as she<lb/>
recalled one time in particular<lb/>
when a group sauntered by, and<lb/>
somone yelled, "Hi there, Leo<lb/>
Six children<lb/>
Her own six children seem to<lb/>
be her favorite subject of<lb/>
discussion.<lb/>
The oldest, Jimmy, a<lb/>
fourth-year medical student at<lb/>
Chapel Hill, wasman ied this past<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Jeff is a rising senior at Chapel<lb/>
Hill who hopes to go into<lb/>
banking. He has worked with<lb/>
Wachovia Bank and Trust Co.<lb/>
for the past four summers.<lb/>
Suzanne is a junior at East<lb/>
Carolina, majoring in primary<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Patricia is a senior and Sally is a<lb/>
sophomore, both in high school.<lb/>
Jack, 12, the youngest of the<lb/>
family, is a Little Leaguer.<lb/>
Before her marriage, Mrs.<lb/>
Jenkins was an elementary<lb/>
school teacher.<lb/>
She is rather nonchalant about<lb/>
the campus disorders last spring,<lb/>
when a group of student<lb/>
protestors descended on her<lb/>
home.<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
MRS. Lll JAN JENKINS<lb/>
No big thing<lb/>
"No one likes to have a mob<lb/>
around the house she said,<lb/>
"but if they have something to<lb/>
say, if they feel they have a<lb/>
nnint then it's not as bad. They<lb/>
asked my husband questions,<lb/>
and he answered them. It wasn't<lb/>
that big a thing<lb/>
Mrs. Jenkins is an ardent<lb/>
reader, she also does some<lb/>
crewel work. She enjoys<lb/>
gardening, but since the<lb/>
university takes care of tending<lb/>
her home, she doesn't have<lb/>
much chance to practice it.<lb/>
In the summer, she is most<lb/>
likely to be found near a beach<lb/>
or swimming pool.<lb/>
"When things are straight at<lb/>
home she likes to take trips<lb/>
with hei husband. This weekend,<lb/>
they are planning to attend the<lb/>
football game at East Tennessee<lb/>
State University.<lb/>
Among her other activities, she<lb/>
belongs to the St. James<lb/>
Methodist Church, the Faculty<lb/>
Wives Club, and works with the<lb/>
Chi Omega girls.<lb/>
Student art<lb/>
Her Spanish home is fiiied with<lb/>
painting done by university art<lb/>
students, which are changed<lb/>
periodically.<lb/>
One part of the hallway wall is<lb/>
occupied by a miniature family<lb/>
gallery, including photographs of<lb/>
such people as former North<lb/>
 .i;n. wr??-tr Torn<lb/>
Ooroi Ina uu?-miui . . ,<lb/>
Sanford, J. Edgar Hoover, John<lb/>
F. Kennedy, Willie Mays,<lb/>
Meadowlark Lemmon of the<lb/>
Harlem Globetrotters, and one<lb/>
of Richard Nixon, "which we<lb/>
had packed away in the attic<lb/>
until he became President<lb/>
There is also a photograph of<lb/>
the actual Iwo Jima. A friend<lb/>
took it, and sent them a copy<lb/>
with a note saying, "Maybe<lb/>
someday it'll be famous<lb/>
It's now a statue in Washington.<lb/>
Shoney's<lb/>
VV elconne<lb/>
Bark Students<lb/>
0 Coffee tflicfi<lb/>
e(k Tyfer<lb/>
'Bat Id ing flfash'on ftcfart "<lb/>
j&amp;iSWI&amp;SffiM.Wi'sX&amp;nW'iti't  .1000110<lb/>
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VS6<lb/>
1.00-bW:<lb/>
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TfalMOMMIIM<lb/>
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Squares, rectanqc5<lb/>
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Is Spreading!<lb/>
3.Ho 25.00<lb/>
Choose frorn cl u,de raaqe<lb/>
sraue-Ppe, SKrty c?r5<lb/>
b,qh cua5, np rders,<lb/>
TuxedS, fajPs, Pr,nff Q<lb/>
 , 5TrPe5y CXECA5, 5otf$.<lb/>
?<lb/>
MWMm<lb/>
fill hnfowk<lb/>
WOO<lb/>
Go lonqond<lb/>
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sr<lb/>
5hoe5<lb/>
tvwxWtffiSWS<lb/>
&amp;lau?Sf I<lb/>
TashbT) CoUatt<lb/>
KoOO<lb/>
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 lonq foil 1<lb/>
cuffed skeu&amp;H<lb/>
up<lb/>
llllllii)iffliilllilHlllllllltiillHHIWIMIHWMWIIMMMtlllT<lb/>
tMMKMMMWMWMtMtMnHnMMMM<lb/>
Toe6 ore wooded,<lb/>
yteeis fhicJC and<lb/>
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Q-o Chunky I ibo Shod<lb/>
I7W<lb/>
Striae mo Szaua<lb/>
In many syes.<lb/>
At) lenqhtS (rrtdJ-<lb/>
heaoy tots ofxxifaq iot -ffared Pants<lb/>
tmmitmmttitttfitiiiiitttiKMiiiiiiiMKiKmxM<lb/>
wsttmamaiMt<lb/>
d<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6, Fountainhead, Thursday, Sept. 18, 1969<lb/>
Errors mar Spring 'Rebel'<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: The spring<lb/>
Rebel was published last spring<lb/>
quarter - too late to be included<lb/>
in an earlier edition of the<lb/>
Fountainhead.<lb/>
First reactions to the Spring<lb/>
1969 issue of the Rebel are<lb/>
surprisingly ambivalent.<lb/>
A superficial analysis of the<lb/>
format, content, and style of the<lb/>
"new" Rebel is misleading. At<lb/>
first glance, the product appears<lb/>
impressive; but closer analysis<lb/>
reveals a variety of technical<lb/>
errors which, although the<lb/>
average reader might overlook<lb/>
them, would be damned by the<lb/>
judges who have awarded the<lb/>
magazine an All-American rating<lb/>
for the past two years.<lb/>
The most obvious error is<lb/>
found in the table of contents<lb/>
which includes a listing of "arts<lb/>
festival winners" - which are<lb/>
not included in the magazine. In<lb/>
addition, there are many<lb/>
inconsistencies in "style"<lb/>
throughout the issue. The<lb/>
constant alternation between<lb/>
"up-style" and "down-style" is<lb/>
annoying, to say the least.<lb/>
Perhaps it is redundant - but,<lb/>
certainly, not irrelevant - to<lb/>
point out that the use of<lb/>
different sizes and families of<lb/>
"body" type throughout the<lb/>
issue detracts from the<lb/>
jiuuui-iiuii ? aiiu i,u3i3 jUiih.o in<lb/>
the judging.<lb/>
The content is rather mediocre<lb/>
throughout the issue. As usual,<lb/>
the poetry selection is erratic. A<lb/>
few strong works sandwiched<lb/>
between the sophomoric and the<lb/>
sensational.<lb/>
The closest thing to a poem in<lb/>
the issue is Charles Griffin's<lb/>
"Love, Song of the Seasons IV<lb/>
Griffin mixes sensual imagery<lb/>
with verdant patterns of<lb/>
becoming, blending the best of<lb/>
the East - which he visited<lb/>
while a Peace Corps Volunteer<lb/>
(India) and the West. The<lb/>
poem fails because its rich<lb/>
texture runs into sentiment.<lb/>
The other poems in the issue<lb/>
are worth mentioning only as<lb/>
attempts. Joseph Harrison<lb/>
Goodwin's haikus are<lb/>
Pertalion is an excellent short<lb/>
story which is handicapped by<lb/>
poor graphic design and layout.<lb/>
The theme of the story is almost<lb/>
a cliche, but superb writing and<lb/>
inventive dialogue overcome any<lb/>
faults.<lb/>
The overall graphic design is an<lb/>
atrocious combination of excess<lb/>
and obscurity. It can best be<lb/>
described as crudely imitative,<lb/>
rather than inventive or<lb/>
innovative. The illustrations lack<lb/>
originality and inspiration.<lb/>
Walter Quade's "photo essay"<lb/>
is interesting for the techniques<lb/>
employed; but it, aiso, lacks<lb/>
originality in composition and<lb/>
subject matter.<lb/>
The Spring 1969 Rebel is an<lb/>
expensive experiment in<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/>
formula-creations which lack the magazine techniques which fail<lb/>
fragile beauty of the Orient, because it lacks originality and<lb/>
Eileen Barnum is limited by creativity. Perhaps it is an<lb/>
poor editing which exposed the indication that clever editing<lb/>
brutal side of her poetry without cannot make up for lack of<lb/>
balancing the selection with COntent.<lb/>
some of her more mature work.<lb/>
Notice the difference in attitude<lb/>
in her review of Tar River Poets.<lb/>
Claire Pittman is not at her best<lb/>
m this issue. Both of her efforts portraits for<lb/>
are best described as images - Buccaneer,<lb/>
not poems. Students should report to the<lb/>
The Rebel's reputation for third floor of Wright Building<lb/>
excellent interviews is from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m.<lb/>
maintained in this issue. Doris Woman are required to wear<lb/>
Betts is well represented in a white blouses with round collars,<lb/>
finely-edited interview. Men are required to wear white<lb/>
"John Jr. Is a Jew" by Albert shirts, dark ties, and dark coats.<lb/>
Say cheese<lb/>
Photographers are now making<lb/>
the 1969 70<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/>
mrcreco<lb/>
i i<lb/>
the rebel magazine J<lb/>
is now accepting manuscripts for its fall edition,<lb/>
if you have poems, essays, short fiction, etc. that<lb/>
you would like to submit, please send them to<lb/>
The Rebel, Box 2486, Greenville,<lb/>
the rebel is an All American publication of ecu.<lb/>
Bast Carolina<lb/>
Class Ring<lb/>
l.nl.l nt'U il.?i?n fiiilnri - l:iru?<lb/>
li:iml-l;i? il ilati anil illuri?'<lb/>
lrllrr?. No. mi l 111 i n li<lb/>
Iraililimiul il?-?i?ii iiiilinl. ii<lb/>
Y . "Mai. sl ?.?? ?. <lb/>
iiiinj: nil<lb/>
i- imu ,n ail-<lb/>
alili in<lb/>
li ;i -iiin il<lb/>
llin i i li iiii illniii r riii;<lb/>
sinrkliiiM la-liimi liiiililii'l<lb/>
.Hi- :il Ilium in<lb/>
?-l ti ?!?<lb/>
I'n.iiil miiiIiuI if I . ( Italfniir<lb/>
Jiw.lrx. I inI (raflm.il.<lb/>
lio?r iriil??. il ha? In to<lb/>
?rr our school for ill. ?a-l<lb/>
fifli'ii ?ar?.<lb/>
Goailabie to Quatikecl<lb/>
Qb noul student<lb/>
September 22-26<lb/>
9 to 12 and 1 to 4<lb/>
One hour<lb/>
mniimnns:<lb/>
CBBTIFIES<lb/>
THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING<lb/>
FREE COLOR TV<lb/>
To Be Given Away<lb/>
October 25th<lb/>
Students are invited<lb/>
to Register<lb/>
111 E. Tenth St 1401 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
J<lb/>
.1 <lb/>
EAST CARC<lb/>
Ch<lb/>
eer<lb/>
prepa<lb/>
East Caroline<lb/>
were named one<lb/>
cheering squads<lb/>
the National Ch<lb/>
in Misenheimer t<lb/>
Each day "spir<lb/>
awarded to tl"<lb/>
showing the mc<lb/>
day's activities<lb/>
stick three days<lb/>
to keep it. The E<lb/>
won the stick<lb/>
days. They reci<lb/>
mention each o<lb/>
days.<lb/>
Bob Rankin, cl<lb/>
says that the rr<lb/>
cheers, and stur<lb/>
back with them<lb/>
their cheering gn<lb/>
Rankin hopes<lb/>
new ideas this<lb/>
student spirit,<lb/>
awarded to<lb/>
r<lb/>
Atl<lb/>
CITY<lb/>
Leave yo<lb/>
1 Hr. Flu<lb/>
Laund<lb/>
DRY<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0007"/><lb/>
nel.<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 18, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 7<lb/>
Jr time<lb/>
have a<lb/>
id floor<lb/>
?<lb/>
ING<lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
4ie.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S CHEERLEADERS practice on the mall.<lb/>
Cheerleading squad<lb/>
prepares '69 season<lb/>
East Carolina's cheerleaders<lb/>
were named one of the top three<lb/>
cheering squads that attended<lb/>
the National Cheerleading Camp<lb/>
in Misenheimer this summer.<lb/>
Each day "spirit sticks" were<lb/>
awarded to the two squads<lb/>
showing the most spirit in the<lb/>
day's activities After winning a<lb/>
stick three days, the squads got<lb/>
to keep it. The ECU cheerleaders<lb/>
won the stick the first three<lb/>
days. They received honorable<lb/>
mention each of the other two<lb/>
days.<lb/>
Bob Rankin, chief cheerleader,<lb/>
says that the many new ideas,<lb/>
cheers, and stunts they brought<lb/>
back with them should improve<lb/>
their cheering greatly.<lb/>
Rankin hopes to use several<lb/>
new ideas this year to increase<lb/>
student spirit. Trophies will be<lb/>
awarded to the groups in<lb/>
intra-fraternity, intra-group, and<lb/>
intra-class competition who<lb/>
show the most spirit throughout<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
Tentative plans have been made<lb/>
for a raily squad. This would<lb/>
give students a chance to get<lb/>
better seating at home games<lb/>
thoir cnirit<lb/>
student sections of the football<lb/>
stadium may be divided into<lb/>
three groups. At half time,<lb/>
footballs would be thrown to<lb/>
the group having shown the<lb/>
most spirit.<lb/>
"The spirit shown by the fans<lb/>
gives the football team the<lb/>
motivation they need to win. If<lb/>
we start out with winning spirit,<lb/>
we'll end up with a winning<lb/>
team. I can't think of anything<lb/>
better than spending Christmas<lb/>
vacation in the Tangerine Bowl<lb/>
Rankin said.<lb/>
State Bank<lb/>
and Trust Co.<lb/>
5 Potato<lb/>
Greenyflle, N. C.<lb/>
Membe? F. D. I. C.<lb/>
Aftehtion: students<lb/>
and Faculty<lb/>
I CITY LAUNDERETTE<lb/>
Leave your laundry, we do it for you.<lb/>
1 Hr. Fluff Dried Laundry Service<lb/>
Includes soap and bleach<lb/>
Laundry 9l2 lbs. 83c, Folded 93c<lb/>
DRY CLEANING and SHIRTS<lb/>
813 Evans Street<lb/>
Down from Burger Chef<lb/>
Is there<lb/>
intelligent<lb/>
life on<lb/>
earth?<lb/>
Is there a part of the world<lb/>
where a whole generation has<lb/>
grown up safe from armed ag-<lb/>
gression?where people are free<lb/>
to build the life they want?<lb/>
Yes. In the part of the world pro-<lb/>
tected by NATO. Support NATO<lb/>
?and build on it.<lb/>
If NATO wasn't here,<lb/>
maybe we wouldn't<lb/>
be here either<lb/>
VWWWWyWVWrWWWrWrWWVVW<lb/>
NEW from KLH<lb/>
ja?<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE MODEL TWENTY-SIX<lb/>
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is strictly tor tne record.<lb/>
CIRCUITRY: All solid state, de-<lb/>
signed and built entirety b KLH.<lb/>
20 watts IHF music power (40<lb/>
watts El A ?Electrical Industries<lb/>
Association-peak power). Low fre-<lb/>
quency power contoured to speaker<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
TURNTABLE: Garrard auto-<lb/>
matic turntable made to KLH<lb/>
specifications. Very low-mass tone<lb/>
arm resists jarring, tracks even<lb/>
badly warped records. Cueing lever.<lb/>
Pickering V-15 magnetic cartridge<lb/>
with diamond stylus. Turntable<lb/>
shuts off system automatically,<lb/>
whether on automatic or manual.<lb/>
CONTROLS: Treble, Bass, Bal-<lb/>
ance and Volume. Bass and Treble<lb/>
controls are Baxandall-type. which<lb/>
means they can serve as effective<lb/>
filters for bass and treble record<lb/>
troubles (rumble and scratch).<lb/>
Rocker Switches: Mono-Stereo.<lb/>
Tape-Source (for monitoring dur-<lb/>
ing tape recording, with recorders<lb/>
that provide for such monitoring ?<lb/>
our own Model Forty for example<lb/>
but not our Model Korty-One).<lb/>
Auxiliary-Phono. On-OfT (On for<lb/>
listening to auxiliary sources In<lb/>
off position, operating the turn-<lb/>
table switches system on automat-<lb/>
ically.)<lb/>
SPEAKERS: Designed and built<lb/>
by KLH. Two 8" acoustic suspen-<lb/>
sion woofers. Two 2" wide-disper-<lb/>
sion tweeters.<lb/>
FLEXIBILITY: Pair of Auxil<lb/>
iarv inputs for external mono or<lb/>
stereo sources such as AM or FM<lb/>
tuner. Pair of Tape Play inputs for<lb/>
tape recorder. Pair of Tape outputs<lb/>
lor recording either from records<lb/>
or external source. Headphone jack.<lb/>
LIMITATIONS: No radio. Not<lb/>
quite so powerful as our own<lb/>
Model Twenty.<lb/>
ETC Oiled walnut cabinets, each<lb/>
finished on four sides. Snap-out<lb/>
recoverable speaker grille panels.<lb/>
Control Center. 18" W x 14's" D x<lb/>
83s" H (with automatic spindle in<lb/>
place). Speaker Cabinets, each:<lb/>
10' i" W x 18" H x 75 i6" D.<lb/>
Suggested price: $249.95.<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
'Downtown Greenville'<lb/>
752-3651 401 Evans St.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8, Fountainhead, Thursday, Sept. 18, 1969<lb/>
t ? ? ?<lb/>
Off the record<lb/>
By SONNY LEA<lb/>
When the football team takes to the field for its season openei<lb/>
against East Tennessee Saturday, they will be led by the third<lb/>
winningest football coach in the nation.<lb/>
Clai Stasavich, who begins his eighth season at the helm, has<lb/>
a record of 168 wins, 57 losses, and eight ties, which ranks him<lb/>
beh- ul "Bear" Bryant of Alabama and Johnny Vaught of<lb/>
Mississippi in total wins.<lb/>
Bryant leads the nation in total wins with 187 in 24 years ol<lb/>
coaching while Vaught's mark of 1 70 victories has been compiled<lb/>
over a 22 year span.<lb/>
Stasavich, who has been head coaching for 24 years, ranks sixth<lb/>
on entage basis with a mark of .738, compared to<lb/>
pen leader Bob Devaney of Nebraska with .772. Behind<lb/>
Devaney in order are Vaught with .755, B.yant with .754, Dan<lb/>
Dev Missouri with .747 and Frank Kush of Arizona State<lb/>
with .741<lb/>
Sta who is a native of Georgetown, III. came to North<lb/>
Can s an undergraduate at Lenoir Rhyne. He later compiled<lb/>
ding football record there before comingherein 1962.<lb/>
Aft ompletedrvs undergraduate work at Lenoii Rhyne, he<lb/>
coa, I Campbell College where he three years be-<lb/>
ret to Lenoir Rhyne as an.assistant in 1938.<lb/>
Fol a stint in the U.S. Navy during World Wat II,<lb/>
Stas returned to Lenoir Rhyne in 1946 ,md rapidly bi<lb/>
building a gridiron powerhouse that won nine Carolina<lb/>
Conference championships and in 1960 claimed the National<lb/>
Association of Intercollegiate Athletic national title.<lb/>
Today, we are the only major college in the nation using the<lb/>
single wing. Some people look at this fact with the idea that<lb/>
football at East Carolina is outdated but Stasavich's record defies<lb/>
this remark.<lb/>
Stasavich has won many outstanding awards since entering the<lb/>
coaching profession. He wab named district coach of the year five<lb/>
times in a span of six years, he was named American Football<lb/>
Coaches Association College Coach of the Year in 1964, after<lb/>
having gained the same distinction in the NAIA in 1959 and being<lb/>
placed in the Helms Foundation Hall of Fame in 1960.<lb/>
Yet with his record and his brand of football, people still tend to<lb/>
Kejieve th3t East Carolina football is outdated. We have a bad<lb/>
season and the entire student body starts thinking we had better<lb/>
wise up and run the same type of offense everyone else is<lb/>
running.<lb/>
Last season Stasavich recorded his worst record since coming<lb/>
here. The Pirates won three of the last four games of the season<lb/>
to finish 4-6. Previously Stasavich's worst year at East Carolina<lb/>
was in 1966 when his forces finished 4-5-1.<lb/>
But he followed up that bad season in 1967 with an 8-2 season,<lb/>
and maybe this year he will have a perfect season.<lb/>
His record at East Carolina cannot be laughed at. Since arriving<lb/>
here in 1962 his teams have compiled a record of 48 wins, 20<lb/>
losses and one tie, including three straight 9-1 seasons when the<lb/>
Pirates won three bowl championships.<lb/>
In 1963, his first 9 1 season here, Stasavich and the Pirates<lb/>
defeated Northeastern University 27-6 in the Eastern Bowl in<lb/>
Allentown, Pa.<lb/>
The following year the Pirates edged Massachusetts 14-13 in the<lb/>
Tangerine Bowl and in 1965 his Pirates ripped Maine, 31-0 in the<lb/>
same bowl game.<lb/>
This season the Pirates face the toughest schedule in their<lb/>
football history which began in 1932. Football has come a long<lb/>
way at East Carolina since 1932 when the Pirates finished 0-5 and<lb/>
were outscored 187 0.<lb/>
East Carolina stayed with football and before long we were<lb/>
lucky enough to get one of the most successful coaches in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
This year, with one of the most heralded group of shophmores<lb/>
since Stasavich came to East Carolina, he and all the rest of the<lb/>
Pirates will be out to put a stop to the doubters of East Carolina<lb/>
football.<lb/>
Rally planned at<lb/>
m.<lb/>
A pep rally will be at 7:30 p.<lb/>
at Ficklen Stadium for the game<lb/>
Saturday between ECU and East<lb/>
Tennessee State. The Sports<lb/>
Department urges all students to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Roger Bost and Mike Boaz,<lb/>
co-captains for the 1969 season<lb/>
will also make comments on the<lb/>
team and their outlook for the<lb/>
coming season. Roger and Mike<lb/>
were both previous co-captains<lb/>
of their high school teams,<lb/>
Roger with Statesville High<lb/>
School and Mike with Fairmont<lb/>
High School.<lb/>
In their past three seasons at<lb/>
East CArolina they both feel<lb/>
that the football spirit has<lb/>
progressed rapidly but hope to<lb/>
see it boom this season. With a<lb/>
flurry of fine sophomores in the<lb/>
lineup along with exceptional<lb/>
senior returness, the Pirates<lb/>
carry a powerful punch. Coach<lb/>
Stasavich calls the sophomore<lb/>
team this year the finest he has<lb/>
seen in eight years. Roger and<lb/>
Mike feel that the players on the<lb/>
team on a whole have more<lb/>
spirit and more communication<lb/>
with each other than in previous<lb/>
years. Roger was especially<lb/>
praise worthy of the defense<lb/>
singling out sophomore Wes<lb/>
Rothrock and Monty Kiernan as<lb/>
looking fine in both the practice<lb/>
game last Saturday and practice<lb/>
this week.<lb/>
'?<lb/>
?<lb/>
UNDER WATCHFUL EYES - David Brill, hands on hips and facing left in the picture, calls a play<lb/>
during practice as head coach Clarence Stasavich watches. Brill, a junior, will be the starting<lb/>
blocking back and signal caller for the Pirates Saturday night when East Carolina opens its 1968<lb/>
football season against East Tennsessee in Johnson City at 8 p.m CDT.<lb/>
frGSS countr1 team opens<lb/>
1969 season Saturday<lb/>
The age old saying, "looks can<lb/>
be deceiving is a perfect<lb/>
description of the preseason<lb/>
outlook for the cross country<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Although dominated by<lb/>
freshmen and sophomores,<lb/>
coach Bill Carson feels this<lb/>
year's squad will be one of the<lb/>
strongest ever fielded here.<lb/>
"We have five of the top six<lb/>
runners back from last year<lb/>
Carson said, "and four of those<lb/>
are sophomores so we do have<lb/>
experience<lb/>
One senior<lb/>
Leading the charge this season<lb/>
will be Ken Voss, a senior who<lb/>
was the number two man last<lb/>
season. Voss, this year's captain,<lb/>
is the only senior on the squad,<lb/>
and has improved tremendously.<lb/>
"Ken should have a great<lb/>
season Carson said. "I think he<lb/>
realizes this is his last year and I<lb/>
believe he is going to strive to<lb/>
make it his best<lb/>
Back along with Voss are Neill<lb/>
Ross, who ran number three a<lb/>
year ago and made All-State and<lb/>
All-Conference teams as a<lb/>
freshman. Over the summer, he<lb/>
added both strength and weight<lb/>
and he should have an excellent<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Also returning from last year's<lb/>
squad are James Kidd, Lanny<lb/>
Davis and Joe Day. Kidd, also a<lb/>
sophomore, alternated with<lb/>
Lanny Davis for number five<lb/>
man last season and should be<lb/>
the most improved man on the<lb/>
squad this season.<lb/>
"James had a very fine outdoor<lb/>
season last spring Carson said.<lb/>
"He has gained a little weight<lb/>
and added strength and<lb/>
endurance so he should become<lb/>
a very fine distance man. He will<lb/>
miss Saturday's meet because of<lb/>
a foot injury<lb/>
Davis, a sophomore from<lb/>
Charlotte, should run in the<lb/>
number five spot this season<lb/>
according to the preseason<lb/>
forecast. According to Carson,<lb/>
Davis could be the key man in<lb/>
the success of the Pirates, who<lb/>
will be gunning for the North<lb/>
Carolina Championship, an<lb/>
honor they won in 1967.<lb/>
Number four man, Joe Day, is<lb/>
back but will miss the first meet<lb/>
because of an injury. With added<lb/>
maturity Joe could challenge the<lb/>
number one position this season.<lb/>
No replacement<lb/>
One of the biggest problems<lb/>
Carson will face all season<lb/>
besides the tough schedule<lb/>
which includes such powers as<lb/>
West Virginia, Penn State, and<lb/>
the University of North<lb/>
Carolina, will be trying to find a<lb/>
replacement for the graduated<lb/>
Don Jayroe, number one man<lb/>
for the 1968 squad.<lb/>
But, with a fine crop of<lb/>
incoming freshmen, Carson's<lb/>
replacement job seems twice as<lb/>
easy. Leading freshman charges<lb/>
is Gary Allen, who could break<lb/>
into the top seven if he can<lb/>
overcome a foot injury which<lb/>
has sidelined him most of the<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Along with Allen, is Rusty<lb/>
Carraway, who needs only<lb/>
experience to break into the top<lb/>
seven. Other new recruits<lb/>
include Ralph Veytia, who needs<lb/>
only the experience to become a<lb/>
fine distance man.<lb/>
John Hood is a very strong<lb/>
runner but has had very little<lb/>
experience running long<lb/>
distances. Richard McDonald is a<lb/>
runner who gets better as the<lb/>
race progresses and could very<lb/>
well help the Pirate runners.<lb/>
Dennis Smith is another first<lb/>
year man who will run in the top<lb/>
10 once he gets the needed<lb/>
experience. A very fine distance<lb/>
man, he is also very strong and<lb/>
could see action this fall.<lb/>
Also in Carson's little bag of<lb/>
tricks are sophomore, Mike<lb/>
Woosley, who could become a<lb/>
very fine cross country man if he<lb/>
can overcome a knee injury<lb/>
which plagued him last season.<lb/>
Grayson Mullins is another<lb/>
sophomore back. At the end of<lb/>
last season he was strong and he<lb/>
could possibly break into the<lb/>
top 10 this fall.<lb/>
Spirit strong<lb/>
Carson can rely on the "spirit<lb/>
of the team. Gary Wright, a<lb/>
junior, is expected to be far<lb/>
improved over last season and<lb/>
could possible run in the top 10<lb/>
as the season progresses.<lb/>
The Pirates will open their<lb/>
season on the road Saturday,<lb/>
running Baptist College in<lb/>
Charleston, S.C.<lb/>
Pin<lb/>
East Carolina r<lb/>
twenty in nation,<lb/>
dream? East Caro<lb/>
top ten in the<lb/>
Carolina rated in t<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Well, it may soun<lb/>
but it could becc<lb/>
this season when tr<lb/>
South Carolina C<lb/>
South Carolina,<lb/>
preseason basket<lb/>
could very well be<lb/>
one in the natio<lb/>
take to the hardwi<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
As any loyal Pir<lb/>
fan knows, losse<lb/>
Coliseum don't coi<lb/>
for Tom Quinn's<lb/>
season, the Bucs h<lb/>
three times and<lb/>
were on consecutix<lb/>
the Eastern Carol<lb/>
Christmas. The<lb/>
came at the h<lb/>
Dominion by one<lb/>
The Pirates<lb/>
respectable recorc<lb/>
and three loss<lb/>
homecourt last se;<lb/>
second in th<lb/>
Conference behir<lb/>
sixth ranked David<lb/>
So, who knows,<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0009"/><lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 18, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 9<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Pp<lb/>
PIRATE CAGE FANS can expect a lot from these players this year. They are, Tom Miller, Jim Modlin and Jim Gregory.<lb/>
Pirates to rate in top five?<lb/>
East Carolina rated in top<lb/>
twenty in nation. Sound like a<lb/>
dream7 East Carolina rated in<lb/>
top ten in the nation. East<lb/>
Carolina rated in top five in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Well, it may sound like a dream<lb/>
but it could become 3 reality<lb/>
this season when the Pirates host<lb/>
South Carolina December 10.<lb/>
South Carolina, one of the<lb/>
preseason basketball favorites,<lb/>
could very well be rated number<lb/>
one in the nation when they<lb/>
take to the hardwood in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
As any loyal Pirate basketball<lb/>
fan knows, losses in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum don't come very often<lb/>
for Tom Quinn's team. All last<lb/>
season, the Bucs lost there only<lb/>
three times and two of those<lb/>
were on consecutive days during<lb/>
the Eastern Carolina Classic at<lb/>
Christmas. The other defeat<lb/>
came at the hands of Old<lb/>
Dominion by one point, 75-74.<lb/>
The Pirates compiled a<lb/>
respectable record of 11 wins<lb/>
and three losses on their<lb/>
homecourt last season, finishing<lb/>
second in the Southern<lb/>
Conference behind nationally<lb/>
sixth ranked Davidson.<lb/>
holds up and the Gamecocks<lb/>
come to Greenville rated number<lb/>
one and undefeated, they just<lb/>
might go home still rated<lb/>
number one but with one loss.<lb/>
Last Year's game with the<lb/>
Gamecocks could have very well<lb/>
gone either way.<lb/>
But if the Pirates are successful<lb/>
with their intended revenge the<lb/>
avid Pirate fan might get quite a<lb/>
shock Tuesday morning when he<lb/>
thumbs through the sports page<lb/>
and sees ECU beside names like<lb/>
UCLA, North Carolina and<lb/>
Davidson just to name a few.<lb/>
Fairytale<lb/>
This might sound like a fairy<lb/>
tale to some, but Tom Quinn's<lb/>
Pirates could very well turn the<lb/>
trick this season. For starters,<lb/>
the Pirates have three of the<lb/>
starting five from last year<lb/>
returning.<lb/>
Leading the list is junior Jim<lb/>
Gregory, who was one of the top<lb/>
sophomores in the conference a<lb/>
year ago, and was named the<lb/>
Most Valuable Player on the<lb/>
Pirate basketball team last<lb/>
winter.<lb/>
So, who knows, if the streak Gregory set an East aroina<lb/>
rebounding record last year as a<lb/>
sophomore with 11.2 average<lb/>
per game. He also scored a 12.2<lb/>
clip but he was noticed more<lb/>
bacause of his defensive ability,<lb/>
his uncannyknack at blocking<lb/>
shots.<lb/>
Aiong with Gregory is 6 7<lb/>
center Jim Modlin, a senior and<lb/>
co-captain, who averaged 15.4<lb/>
points per game last year. This<lb/>
year, a iirtie iighter and much<lb/>
stronger, Modlin could be one of<lb/>
the best in the conference.<lb/>
Modlin, who does most of his<lb/>
work from inside, also has a fine<lb/>
outside jump shot which he uses<lb/>
at will. Last season he led the<lb/>
Bucs on floor shooting with a<lb/>
percentage of 54.2.<lb/>
Also returning from last year's<lb/>
starters is Tom Miller, playmaker<lb/>
for the past two seasons. Last<lb/>
year he shot for a 14.2 scoring<lb/>
average and led the Pirates in<lb/>
assists.<lb/>
Replacement problem<lb/>
Quinn's only problem will be<lb/>
finding replacements for the<lb/>
graduated Richard Keir and Ear!<lb/>
Thompson. Perhaps co-captain<lb/>
Jim Kiernan can fill in for<lb/>
Thompson. Kiernan, a 6-0 guard<lb/>
from basketball country (New<lb/>
York City), is a good floor man squac js Bob Haubenreiser, who<lb/>
and does not hesitate to go saw action as a reserve forward,<lb/>
inside against the bigger men. At 6-5, he is tough and battles<lb/>
Also back from last year's the bigger men for rebounds.<lb/>
ood<lb/>
THE REBEL could be your bag.<lb/>
That is, if you have something to say<lb/>
and know how to say it.<lb/>
Contribute to THE REBEL.<lb/>
Box PISS ECU Static1" Orppnville.<lb/>
ooo<lb/>
WE<lb/>
ARE AN<lb/>
ALL-AMERICAN<lb/>
PUBLICATION<lb/>
oooooc<lb/>
RING DAY<lb/>
September 18<lb/>
9:30-4:00<lb/>
in 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 WEEK SHIPMENT<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10, Fountainhead. Thursday, Sept. 18, 1969<lb/>
Fourteen Pi rates return<lb/>
The Pirates will have 14<lb/>
returning starters on the field<lb/>
Saturday night when they open<lb/>
their 1969 football season<lb/>
against East Tennessee State at<lb/>
Johnson City at 8 p.m.<lb/>
For those unable to make the<lb/>
trip, the game will be broadcast<lb/>
on WNCT Radio beginning at<lb/>
7:45 p.m. There will be a<lb/>
half-hour show with films and<lb/>
comments by the coaching staff<lb/>
on WNBE-TV, Channel 12, in<lb/>
New Bern at 1 p.m. Sunday.<lb/>
Head coach Clerence Stasavich,<lb/>
after three weeks of pre-season<lb/>
practice, settled on a starting<lb/>
lineup that has two seniors, six<lb/>
juniors and three sophomores on<lb/>
offesne. The defense, however, is<lb/>
loaded with seniors. No less than<lb/>
eight dot the defense and the<lb/>
remaining three are two juniors<lb/>
and one sophomore.<lb/>
Of the 22 starters, the majority<lb/>
were expected to be where they<lb/>
are when preseason practice<lb/>
began. However, there have been<lb/>
some unexpected changes. On<lb/>
offense, Garland Ballard, a<lb/>
sophomore tackle from New<lb/>
Bern, and Tom Pulley, a junior<lb/>
end from Durham, weren't<lb/>
figured as starters when the drills<lb/>
began. The same was true of<lb/>
sophomore Ronnie Peed, a<lb/>
tackle from Hurdle Mills.<lb/>
Defensively there are three<lb/>
players who werp not listed as<lb/>
No. 1 when workouts began in<lb/>
August. Danny Wilmer, a senior<lb/>
from Buena Vista, Va has been<lb/>
shifted from offensive end to<lb/>
defense and will start. Jamie<lb/>
Louis, who had a poor spring<lb/>
practice, has vaulted into the<lb/>
No. 1 middle guard slot. He's a<lb/>
senior from Blacksburg, Va.<lb/>
George Whitley, a junior from<lb/>
Huntersville, will be at safety.<lb/>
Otherwise the lineup has been<lb/>
much as expected. The Pirates<lb/>
have had three weeks of rugged<lb/>
workouts and at one time or<lb/>
another no less than 14 players<lb/>
have been on the injured list.<lb/>
Most, if not all, however, will be<lb/>
able to suit up for the opener.<lb/>
"We have had more injuries<lb/>
than you would normally expect<lb/>
because of the unusual amount<lb/>
of contact work Stasavich said.<lb/>
"The extra contact work was<lb/>
necessary because of the large<lb/>
number of sophomores on the<lb/>
1vlt I.<lb/>
sq<lb/>
Although the Pirate freshman<lb/>
team didn't have a winning<lb/>
season last year, the squad is<lb/>
considered to be the best ever<lb/>
recruited by the Pirate coaching<lb/>
staff. The offensive team in<lb/>
particular is loaded with<lb/>
sophomores, where, besides the<lb/>
starters, the entire second unit<lb/>
back field is made up of<lb/>
sohpomores and the line<lb/>
includes six more.<lb/>
Like the defensive line, the<lb/>
starting backfield is a veterna<lb/>
outfit. At tailback is senior Billy<lb/>
Wightman, a 175 pounder from<lb/>
Burlington. Butch Colson, a 205<lb/>
pound senior from Elizabeth<lb/>
City and the sophomore<lb/>
sensation of two years ago has<lb/>
returned as fullback; David Brill,<lb/>
a fire-plug built 198 pound<lb/>
junior from Woodstock, Va<lb/>
returns at blocking back; and<lb/>
Dwight Flanagan, a 175 pound<lb/>
junior from Edenton is the<lb/>
wingback.<lb/>
Flanagan was a defensive starter<lb/>
last year but was injured in the<lb/>
first game of the season and<lb/>
missed the remainder of the<lb/>
campaign. Richard Corrada, who<lb/>
was the wingback starter after<lb/>
mid season 1968, is also on the<lb/>
starting unit, having moved to<lb/>
split end. Junior Terry<lb/>
Edmondson, a 185 pounder<lb/>
from Fayetteville is the center<lb/>
and Butch Brittona, a<lb/>
200-pound junior from<lb/>
Chincoteague, Va is at left<lb/>
guard. Britton's running mate at<lb/>
right guard is John<lb/>
Hollingsworth, a 200-pounder<lb/>
from Fayetteville who is a<lb/>
sophomore.<lb/>
Offensively, other sophomores<lb/>
who are expected to see<lb/>
considerable action are Bob<lb/>
Millie at end, Duke Clarke at<lb/>
center, John Hollenbach at<lb/>
guard, Gorver Truslow at tackle<lb/>
and Fred Harris at end. In the<lb/>
backfield are tailback Jack<lb/>
Patterson, fullback Billy Wallace,<lb/>
Tim llderton at blocking back<lb/>
and William Mitchell at<lb/>
wingback.<lb/>
Flanagan was a defensive starter<lb/>
last year but was injured in the<lb/>
first game of the season and<lb/>
missed the remainder of the<lb/>
campaign. Richard Corrada, who<lb/>
was the wingback starter after<lb/>
mid-season 1968, is also on the<lb/>
starting unit, having moved to<lb/>
split end. Junior Terry<lb/>
Edmondson, a 185-pounder<lb/>
from Fayetteville is the center<lb/>
and Butch Brittona, a<lb/>
200 pound junior from<lb/>
Chincoteague, Va, is at left<lb/>
guard. Britton's running mate at<lb/>
right guard is Jo h n<lb/>
Hollingsworth, a 200 pounder<lb/>
from Fayetteville who is a<lb/>
sophomore.<lb/>
Offensively, other sophomores<lb/>
who are expected to see<lb/>
considerable action are Bob<lb/>
Millie at end, Duke Clarke at<lb/>
center, John Hollenback at<lb/>
guard, Grover Truslow at tackle<lb/>
and Fred Harris at end. In the<lb/>
backfield are tailback Jack<lb/>
Patterson, fullback Billy Wallace,<lb/>
Tim llderton at blocking back<lb/>
and William Mitchell at<lb/>
wingback.<lb/>
Besides Wilmer and Louis in the<lb/>
defensive line are junior Walter,<lb/>
Adams, 230 pound tackle from<lb/>
Deptford, N.J George Wheeler,<lb/>
230-pound tackle from Buena<lb/>
Vista, Va and Capt. Rober<lb/>
Bost, 200 pounder from<lb/>
Statesville.<lb/>
Linebackers are senior Paul<lb/>
Weathersbee, 200 pounder from<lb/>
NorWOOd 'rtH M r?n tw tior-non t<lb/>
200 pound sophomore from<lb/>
Irvington On Hudson, NY.<lb/>
Alternate Capt. Mike Boaz at<lb/>
rover back, a senior from<lb/>
Fairmont, leads the secondary.<lb/>
Halfbacks are seniors Stu Garrett<lb/>
of Richmond, Va and Tommy<lb/>
Bullock, a senior from Raleigh<lb/>
Whitley will be the safety.<lb/>
Join The qQ Crowd<lb/>
Pizza leu<lb/>
421 Creonville Blvd.<lb/>
' 264 By-Pass)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 756-9991<lb/>
T<lb/>
(floob Thin<lb/>
for<lb/>
Quisle r4efU<lb/>
Co<lb/>
Dr. Alfred<lb/>
president of th<lb/>
Art Society,<lb/>
semi-annual n<lb/>
executive board.<lb/>
The meeting w<lb/>
Wednesday at th<lb/>
The art center<lb/>
sidewalk art sh(<lb/>
Sept. 26 and 27.<lb/>
An exhibition<lb/>
Roosevelt of O'<lb/>
will show throui<lb/>
Arts Center.<lb/>
Staff members c<lb/>
driver's license or<lb/>
requirement care<lb/>
tickets for S<lb/>
reduced rates.<lb/>
Rudolph Alexa<lb/>
dean of students<lb/>
earlier thai: rei<lb/>
would be used,<lb/>
most staff memo<lb/>
retirement cards<lb/>
the policy so thai<lb/>
can also be used.<lb/>
Dr. Charles<lb/>
become director<lb/>
development.<lb/>
This is a new<lb/>
Dean Robert L<lb/>
:ope with the i<lb/>
,hp university<lb/>
Brown, who<lb/>
chairman of<lb/>
department sine<lb/>
as "campus plan<lb/>
Stuart L. L<lb/>
Secretary of th<lb/>
speak at 8 p.m. t<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Udall was appc<lb/>
of the Interior i<lb/>
also recently pul<lb/>
Coca<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0011"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 18, I969, Fouiitainhead, Page 11<lb/>
Campus Hi-lites<lb/>
condensed news briefs<lb/>
isive starter<lb/>
ured in the<lb/>
season and<lb/>
er of the<lb/>
rrada, who<lb/>
tarter after<lb/>
so on the<lb/>
moved to<lb/>
or Terry<lb/>
55-pounder<lb/>
the center<lb/>
:tona, a<lb/>
01 from<lb/>
s at left<lb/>
rg mate at<lb/>
s J o h n<lb/>
?0 pounder<lb/>
vho is a<lb/>
)phomores<lb/>
I to see<lb/>
are Bob<lb/>
Clarke at<lb/>
nback at<lb/>
i at tackle<lb/>
kI. In the<lb/>
ack Jack<lb/>
y Wallace,<lb/>
ing back<lb/>
chell at<lb/>
)uis in the<lb/>
ar Walter,<lb/>
:kle from<lb/>
1 Wheeler,<lb/>
m Buena<lb/>
t. Rober<lb/>
jr from<lb/>
ior Paul<lb/>
der from<lb/>
' lorn on a<lb/>
? ? X - ' I ' ' ? II IJ<lb/>
?re from<lb/>
I.Y.<lb/>
Boaz at<lb/>
or from<lb/>
icondary.<lb/>
u Garrett<lb/>
Tommy<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
y-<lb/>
QS<lb/>
1<lb/>
ad<lb/>
Dr. Alfred H. Yongue,<lb/>
president of the East Carolina<lb/>
Art Society, has called the<lb/>
semi-annual meeting of the<lb/>
executive board.<lb/>
The meeting will be at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday at the Art Center.<lb/>
The art center will sponsor a<lb/>
sidewalk art show at Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Sept. 26 and 27.<lb/>
An exhibition by Frances W.<lb/>
Roosevelt of Oyster Bay, N.Y<lb/>
will show through Oct. 14 at the<lb/>
Arts Center.<lb/>
Staff members can use either a<lb/>
driver's license or North Carolina<lb/>
requirement cards to purchase<lb/>
tickets for SGA events at<lb/>
reduced rates.<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, assistant<lb/>
dean of students had announced<lb/>
earlier thai retirement cards<lb/>
would be used. He found that<lb/>
most staff members do not have<lb/>
retirement cards, and changed<lb/>
the policy so that driver's license<lb/>
can also be used.<lb/>
Dr. Charles Q. Brown has<lb/>
become director of institutional<lb/>
development.<lb/>
This is a new post created by<lb/>
Dean Robert L. Holt to help<lb/>
:ope with the rapid growth of<lb/>
,he university.<lb/>
Brown, who has served as<lb/>
chairman of the geology<lb/>
department since 1966, will act<lb/>
as "campus planner<lb/>
Stuart L. Udall, former<lb/>
Secretary of the Interior, will<lb/>
speak at 8 p.m. tonight in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Udall was appointed secretary<lb/>
of the Interior in 1961. He has<lb/>
also recently published a book.<lb/>
Paul Topper, chairman of the<lb/>
string music faculty here, had a<lb/>
paper published in the August<lb/>
edition of an English music<lb/>
journal.<lb/>
The article, "The Condition of<lb/>
Violin Strings in Use by School<lb/>
Students as Revealed by a Test<lb/>
appeared in The Strad, one of<lb/>
the oldest string journals in<lb/>
England.<lb/>
Topper is a 1950 graduate of<lb/>
the Juliard School of Music. He<lb/>
has a master's degree in violin<lb/>
from the University of Michigan,<lb/>
where he is now working on his<lb/>
doctor's degree.<lb/>
Topper is beginning his seventh<lb/>
year at East Carolina.<lb/>
Intramural sports are beginning<lb/>
to get organized.<lb/>
Field hockey practice has<lb/>
already begun. Volleyball<lb/>
practice will begin Sept. 29.<lb/>
Later this quarter, teams will be<lb/>
formed for badminton and cross<lb/>
country.<lb/>
exploring. Now almost any<lb/>
outdoor activity is considered.<lb/>
Membership is open to all East<lb/>
Carolina students.<lb/>
M. Andre Baeyens, legal advisor<lb/>
and cultural relations officer for<lb/>
the French Embassy in<lb/>
Washington, will speak at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday in the Joyner library<lb/>
auditorium.<lb/>
Baeyens was born in Paris but<lb/>
spent most his childhood in<lb/>
Washington and New York He<lb/>
attended the Institute of<lb/>
Political Studies and Law and<lb/>
the Ecole Nationale d'<lb/>
Administration.<lb/>
He has been in the diplomatic<lb/>
service since 1957 and has served<lb/>
as secretary to the United<lb/>
Nations French delegation.<lb/>
The outing club is planning<lb/>
another anything-goes race down<lb/>
the Tar River this fall.<lb/>
Students and faculty may use<lb/>
their canoes, kiacks, surfboards,<lb/>
inner tubes or even lawn chairs.<lb/>
Dr. Fred Adler used a lawn<lb/>
chair to race down the river<lb/>
during the first race this spring.<lb/>
He lost.<lb/>
The outing club is beginning its<lb/>
ihirdyear at East Carolina. Their<lb/>
activities include cave exploring,<lb/>
camping in Virginia and hiking<lb/>
in the Appalachians.<lb/>
Tentative plans for this year<lb/>
include a weekend trip to Spruce<lb/>
Pines. A trip can be planned any<lb/>
time someone has c. good idea<lb/>
and transportation can be found.<lb/>
During the club's first year,<lb/>
activities were limited to cave<lb/>
? 3-HOPH SHTRT SERVICE<lb/>
? 1-HOUR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DRIVE-IN CURB SERVICE<lb/>
14th &amp;nd ChMrltm St. Corner Acrow From Hardee'i<lb/>
Complete Laundry and Dry dourinr Serrtoe<lb/>
things go<lb/>
Svlth<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Coca Cola Bottling Company<lb/>
of Greenville<lb/>
A study skills course is again<lb/>
being offered by Dr. George<lb/>
Weigand, director of the<lb/>
Guidance and Counciling<lb/>
Department. The class is taught<lb/>
daily at 1 p.m. in 209 Wright<lb/>
building.<lb/>
The course teaches a student<lb/>
how to take notes and exams,<lb/>
and improves his reading<lb/>
efficiency and comprehension.<lb/>
There are no grades scored, no<lb/>
credit given, and no registration.<lb/>
Students may come even though<lb/>
classes have already started.<lb/>
More male singers are needed<lb/>
for the production of the<lb/>
musical, "Finian's Rainbow<lb/>
Since auditions have already<lb/>
been held, anyone interested in a<lb/>
part should see Edgar Loessin,<lb/>
chairman of the department of<lb/>
drama and speech.<lb/>
Ronald Nelson Braunhardt, an<lb/>
East Carolina student, has been<lb/>
selected to attend the meeting of<lb/>
the Air Force Association in<lb/>
Washington Sept. 22-24.<lb/>
Braunhardt is a member of the<lb/>
executive board of the Arnold<lb/>
Air Society, the honor society of<lb/>
the Air Force ROTC. He also is<lb/>
the commander for area B-2<lb/>
which includes seven colleges<lb/>
and two states.<lb/>
Special events this quarter will<lb/>
include the opening football<lb/>
game against Tennessee State<lb/>
Sept. 20, SGA elections Sept.<lb/>
23, preregistration for winter<lb/>
quarter Oct. 13-17, and<lb/>
Homecoming weekend Nov. 8<lb/>
and 9. The quarter will end Nov.<lb/>
26.<lb/>
Officials enrollment figures for<lb/>
this quarter will be announced<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
This is East Carolina's 61st year<lb/>
as a college and third year as a<lb/>
university.<lb/>
Freshmen were honored this<lb/>
week at a street dance and an<lb/>
open house. Both were<lb/>
sponsored by the student union.<lb/>
Bus leaves every hour from ? 25 till<lb/>
7:00 a.m. ? :Q0 p.m. daily<lb/>
GREEN SCHEDULE<lb/>
Leave - 25 till . . . .Green Dorm Area<lb/>
Arrive - 22 till . . Library &amp; Cafeteria<lb/>
Arrive - 19 till . . .Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Arrive - 17 tillNorth Cafeteria<lb/>
Arrive - 14 tillGreen Dorm<lb/>
Arrive - 9 till . . . Library &amp; Cafeteria<lb/>
Arrive - 5 till . . . .Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Arrive - on the hour . . . Green Dorm<lb/>
Leae 5 after . . .Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Arrive - 18 after Arrives at Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Leave - 19 after . . . .Leaves Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Arrive - 30 after .Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Arrive - 25 tillGreen Dorm<lb/>
RED SCHEDULE<lb/>
Leaves - 25 tillBelk Dorm Stop<lb/>
Arrive - 20 till .Education and Psych<lb/>
Arrive - 15 tillBelk Dorm Stop<lb/>
Arrive - 13 tillMinges<lb/>
Arrive - 9 tillBelk Dorm Stop<lb/>
Arrive - 5 till . .Education and Psych<lb/>
Arrive - on the hour Belk Dorm Stop<lb/>
Arrive - 5 after Minges<lb/>
Arrive - 9 after  Belk Dorm Stop<lb/>
Arrive - 13 afterEducation and Psych.<lb/>
Arrive - 17 after . . Buccaneer Courts<lb/>
Arrive - 22 afterEducation and Psych.<lb/>
Arrive - 27 after . . . Belk Dorm Stop<lb/>
?Except from 11:05 to 11.35 a.m.<lb/>
StwCiuHi<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/>
Pirr plaza<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 Delicicus Flavors<lb/>
of Ice Cream<lb/>
Try a Delicious Banana<lb/>
Split or Sundae<lb/>
264 By-Pass, GreenviDe<lb/>
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.<lb/>
STUDENT DESK LAMPS ? GREETING CARDS<lb/>
Student Stationery ? Professional Filing Supplies<lb/>
Drafting and Art Supplies ? School Supplies<lb/>
214 East 5th Street 752-2175<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0012"/><lb/>
iMMmnHVK<lb/>
 .<lb/>
Page 12, Fountainhead, Thursday, Sept. 18, 1969<lb/>
President should<lb/>
remove Hershey<lb/>
Once again the issue of draft reform is scheduled for<lb/>
examination in Congress and on an executive level.<lb/>
Aides to President Nixon have hinted that there is a<lb/>
strong possibility that the Selective Service System<lb/>
might be temporarily suspended because of the decrease<lb/>
in manpower requirements caused by the United States'<lb/>
troop withdrawals from Vietnam. The necessity for new<lb/>
inductions has been considerably lessened by the<lb/>
increased "Vietnamization" of the war.<lb/>
Considering the element of controversy that has<lb/>
surrounded the operation of the draft, such a policy<lb/>
would be interpreted as a move toward peace on two<lb/>
levels - foreign and domestic.<lb/>
Yet, fundamental to the reform and reorganization of<lb/>
the Selective Service System would be the removal of its<lb/>
controversial director Lt. General Lewis B. Hershey - a<lb/>
policy move which Nixon is not likely to affect.<lb/>
Hershey's flagrant misuse of his monumental power<lb/>
over the young has often been a target of criticism from<lb/>
young and old alike; moreover, in the eyes of the young,<lb/>
the aging director has become the personification of all<lb/>
that is corrupt and degrading in the system of American<lb/>
politics.<lb/>
Hershey's mismanagement of the draft has affected<lb/>
thousands of lives, causing needless hardship and<lb/>
suffering for the individual whose rights he has<lb/>
arbitrarily abridged.<lb/>
The General's careless disregard for the Constitution,<lb/>
the Bill of Rights, court decisions, and human dignity<lb/>
has never been challenged on an executive level.<lb/>
Hershey's power has remained absolute through a<lb/>
succession of presidents.<lb/>
Certainly the reform of the Selective Service System is<lb/>
long overdue. But it is also manifest that the reform<lb/>
must begin from the top with the dismissal of<lb/>
Hershey and the disavowal of his tyrannical policies.<lb/>
Images on a paper mirror<lb/>
Library is praised<lb/>
for longer hours<lb/>
The administration of Joyner Library is to be<lb/>
commended for the recent extension of operation<lb/>
hours. Longer operating hours have been needed for<lb/>
some time now, and have been the complaint of many<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Although full scale operation of the library from 9 to<lb/>
12 p.m. has been cut back, students still have a readily<lb/>
accessible place in which to study.<lb/>
In any university, the library has to be the focal point<lb/>
of academic endeavor, and because of the many<lb/>
different schedules of students, long operating hours are<lb/>
essential.<lb/>
At Chapel Hill, the library is open 24 hours a day<lb/>
seven days per week.<lb/>
If we are to progress into a major university, the library<lb/>
has to be in the vanguard of this growthand longer<lb/>
operating hours are a starting point.<lb/>
The next consideration should be the extension of<lb/>
operating hours in other departments of the library<lb/>
such as in the reserve room and in the North Carolina<lb/>
room. Also, the ratio of volumns of books to the<lb/>
number of students has to be drastically increased but<lb/>
that's another editorial.<lb/>
Paul F. (Ch.p) Callaway . . . CH<lb/>
Phyll.s Bndgeman  JEd.tOMn-Chief<lb/>
Robert Thcnen ? Managmg Ed.tor<lb/>
Dav.d Dalton Business Manager<lb/>
News Ed,tor  Assoc.ate Ed.tor<lb/>
Copy Editor . . .  ?? Gail Burton<lb/>
Secretary Sharon Schaudies<lb/>
Adv.sor Elaine Harb.n<lb/>
Consultant ra L- Baker<lb/>
Wyatt Browne<lb/>
The ducks de plotting to take<lb/>
over the wo'ld. Yes, ducks. The<lb/>
biggest threat to world security<lb/>
is not Communism, but ducks.<lb/>
Webster's Seventh New<lb/>
Collegiate Dictionary defines a<lb/>
duck as: "any of various<lb/>
swimming birds in which the<lb/>
neck and legs are short, the body<lb/>
more or less depressed, the bill<lb/>
often broad and flat, and the<lb/>
sexes almost always different<lb/>
from each other in piummage<lb/>
The ducks have been deceiving<lb/>
the world for thousands of years<lb/>
Their diabolical little minds have<lb/>
been busy with the problems of<lb/>
comspiring to overthrow the<lb/>
Establishment, and no one has<lb/>
suspected. No, not even the<lb/>
leaders of the free world. Not<lb/>
the leaders of the enemies of the<lb/>
free world.<lb/>
Ducks just seem too innocent.<lb/>
Who would suspect, by reading<lb/>
the above definition, that a duck<lb/>
could be harmful' But one who<lb/>
is very familiar with ducks, as I<lb/>
am, can tell you that everything<lb/>
is not always as it seems. Ducks<lb/>
are killers, out to conquer the<lb/>
world, and I can prove it.<lb/>
In New York State alone there<lb/>
are fourteen million ducks, three<lb/>
to five million of which are<lb/>
massed in the New York City<lb/>
area. But they are there for a<lb/>
purpose, for this is the training<lb/>
ground for guerrilla ducks, the<lb/>
scourge of mankind. It is here<lb/>
that ducks are trained in all the<lb/>
devious and deathly arts of the<lb/>
East, the technology of the<lb/>
West, and the vengeous<lb/>
anti-human philosophy of their<lb/>
leaders, the militant and<lb/>
semi-insane members of the<lb/>
Central Committee's Joint<lb/>
Chiefs of Staff. The leaders of<lb/>
the duck revolution are without<lb/>
morals or religion, for their<lb/>
monopoly on the materials of<lb/>
war have caused them to lose<lb/>
faith in all else.<lb/>
They are using New York as a<lb/>
base; it is the second largest city<lb/>
in North America, it is a cultural<lb/>
center of the United States, and<lb/>
it is the headquarters for the<lb/>
United Nations, ihe hope of<lb/>
mankind. The ducks chose well,<lb/>
for they wish to conquer the<lb/>
city, and from there, spread<lb/>
their revolution and culture to<lb/>
the rest of the United States, the<lb/>
rest of North America, and the<lb/>
rest of the Earth.<lb/>
They have trained well. If you<lb/>
have ever seen a flock of ducks,<lb/>
you can observe the fact that<lb/>
they fly jn perfect formation,<lb/>
and the flight leader is<lb/>
all powerful Everyone knows<lb/>
that certain birds fly south in<lb/>
the winter, but a common<lb/>
illusion is that they fly south<lb/>
because of the cold. But the<lb/>
ducks are smart. They make use<lb/>
of this misconception to go on<lb/>
maneuvers without arousing<lb/>
suspicion. Thus far, they have<lb/>
been successful.<lb/>
In the last years of the reign of<lb/>
Lyndon Johnson, strong<lb/>
measures where proposed for the<lb/>
control of the sale of firearms.<lb/>
These measures had the support<lb/>
of LBJ, a lame-duck president.<lb/>
Does this not suffice to prove his<lb/>
By WAYNE EADS<lb/>
guilt, his connection with them?<lb/>
The ducks have a very<lb/>
highly developed system of<lb/>
communications and espionage.<lb/>
Witness the thousands of field<lb/>
agents that they have stationed<lb/>
on farm ponds across the nation.<lb/>
Look on the lakes of most city<lb/>
parks. You piobably never even<lb/>
suspected. They communicate<lb/>
by ESP, for you never hear a<lb/>
duck speak. This is one way of<lb/>
alerting then spies, jtiti their<lb/>
spies are many. Donald Duck has<lb/>
been spying in the homes of<lb/>
millions for a hundred years.<lb/>
But back to the question of<lb/>
spies. Few of them are evei<lb/>
caught. Only the leadei of these<lb/>
creatures of darkness has truly<lb/>
been exposed. He is the<lb/>
universally known and feared<lb/>
guerilla, Che Duck. Perhaps you<lb/>
have seen him. He is tall, for a<lb/>
duck, and where he goes, he<lb/>
leaves no sign. He will vanish<lb/>
into the night if he suspects that<lb/>
his presence is known. You will<lb/>
know him by his long black Fu<lb/>
Manchu moustache, the stinking<lb/>
Cuban cigars he constantly<lb/>
smokes, the bandeliersof bullets<lb/>
thrown over each shoulder, and<lb/>
the submachine gun that he<lb/>
always carries at the ready. He is<lb/>
heavily armed and considered<lb/>
dangerous; do not provoke him<lb/>
if you should chance to run<lb/>
across him, instead, withdraw<lb/>
quickly and report his<lb/>
whereabouts to the local<lb/>
authorities.<lb/>
What is this great conspiracy<lb/>
that threatens the Earth? It is<lb/>
the work of a diabolical genius<lb/>
who plans everything and<lb/>
makes no move without<lb/>
consulting the stars. His works<lb/>
never fail, and most are never<lb/>
suspected for what they really<lb/>
are. He crucified Christi<lb/>
anity, he<lb/>
is killing Communism, the wbriiJ<lb/>
is fighting over his works but<lb/>
still only a few even suspect<lb/>
Soon, unless he is stopped the<lb/>
leader of the ducks will have<lb/>
accomplished his goal. He will<lb/>
have made the world safe for the<lb/>
habitation of ducks.<lb/>
Only a few humans will survive<lb/>
Perhaps they will be his slaves<lb/>
perhaps they will be sent mto<lb/>
the mountains as exiles. Who<lb/>
knows? These survivors an those<lb/>
who wear the symbol ol eace<lb/>
the sign of the webbed toot'<lb/>
Only these will not be destroyed<lb/>
by the docks, for they are<lb/>
protected by the ancient sacred<lb/>
symbol, and cannot be han<lb/>
even by those who hate and<lb/>
abuse them. They are weak, they<lb/>
are mild mannered (unlike<lb/>
Clark Kent), defenseless But<lb/>
they will survive long aftei the<lb/>
ducks turn on each other They<lb/>
will inherit the Earth. Is all this<lb/>
possible?<lb/>
Those of you who have lead<lb/>
this column have doubtless<lb/>
gotten many good laughs But<lb/>
the world has always laughed at<lb/>
those who understood the ducks<lb/>
and what they are trying to do.<lb/>
Somewhere in this story, mixed<lb/>
in with the usual lies, is a vein ot<lb/>
logic. It is there for those who<lb/>
have the wisdom to find it. And<lb/>
when you do, you will no<lb/>
longer laugh, for you will fear<lb/>
the consequences, and shrink<lb/>
from the truth. But that is life,<lb/>
and you must live with it, or<lb/>
destroy the ducks in order to<lb/>
change it. As long as there are<lb/>
ducks in the world, there can<lb/>
never be Utopia, but if the ducks<lb/>
are gone, there will still nevet be<lb/>
Utopia. It's a vicious<lb/>
entanglement; don't you agree?<lb/>
?"???<lb/>
A<lb/>
Vol. 1 No. 4<lb/>
Ch<lb/>
re1<lb/>
?SSSSMSMHHMBi<lb/>
<pb facs="00039427_0013"/>
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