<?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="00039429_0001"/>
'I<lb/>
C ount amhe ad<lb/>
W  and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Vol. 1 No. 5<lb/>
East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
September 25, 1969<lb/>
?2 i<lb/>
"YOUR FATHER'S MUSTACHE a banjo band from New York, will kick off Parent's Day this year<lb/>
Saturday will also feature a game between the Pirates and Louisiana Tech. (See page ZJ<lb/>
Campus is preparing<lb/>
to entertain parents<lb/>
see page 2<lb/>
IBM computer arranges<lb/>
tabulation of election<lb/>
 see page 2<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2, Fountainhead, Thursday, Sept. 25, 1969<lb/>
IBM counts ballots<lb/>
Ballots for the day student<lb/>
candidates in Tuesday's SGA<lb/>
elections were processed by a<lb/>
computer.<lb/>
East Carolina is the only<lb/>
college in the country that has<lb/>
ever computerized election<lb/>
results, and is one of few schools<lb/>
which offer a minor in computer<lb/>
sciences.<lb/>
There had been some trouble<lb/>
when the computer was used in<lb/>
last summer's elections because<lb/>
many people marked their<lb/>
ballots wrong.<lb/>
But everything went<lb/>
smoothly Tuesday.<lb/>
Phil Dixon, the elections<lb/>
chairman, was hoping the<lb/>
returns would be completed by<lb/>
8:30 p.m. Tuesday.<lb/>
They were, thanks to the<lb/>
computer.<lb/>
The ballots were improved<lb/>
for the election to avoid errors.<lb/>
Tuesday's ballots must have<lb/>
all been marked correctly,<lb/>
because all of the ballots were<lb/>
tallied.<lb/>
Because it was a success, the<lb/>
computer will be used in all<lb/>
upcoming elections.<lb/>
The computer is more<lb/>
accurate. It can also process the<lb/>
percentage of votes each<lb/>
candidate received, the number<lb/>
of ballots cast, and the<lb/>
numerical vote for each<lb/>
candidate.<lb/>
All this takes less time than it<lb/>
would take to find the numerical<lb/>
Banjos will play<lb/>
for Parents' Day<lb/>
Sept. 27 will be Parents' Day<lb/>
this year. One of the main<lb/>
events will be a pops concert on<lb/>
the mail featuring "Your<lb/>
Father's Mustache a New York<lb/>
banjo band.<lb/>
The combo has five members<lb/>
who play Gay Nineties music<lb/>
with a tuba, trombone, piano,<lb/>
banjo, and washboard.<lb/>
Joel Schiavone, owner of the<lb/>
Greenwich Village banjo parlor<lb/>
where the group performs, says<lb/>
the nusic may lack technical<lb/>
proficiency, but that it generates<lb/>
enthusiasm in the audience.<lb/>
Mr. Schiavone also says the<lb/>
group is not professional andthat<lb/>
most of the musicians "drift in"<lb/>
the nightspot looking for jobs.<lb/>
Most are college graduates or<lb/>
dropouts.<lb/>
The banjo is the main<lb/>
instrument used in the group.<lb/>
Though this instrument was<lb/>
popular in the 20's, it fell into<lb/>
disgrace during the depression.<lb/>
Now it has had a resurgence,<lb/>
characterized as "footstomping,<lb/>
beer drinking" music.<lb/>
The concert is scheduled for<lb/>
3 p.m. on the University Mall.<lb/>
Admission is free.<lb/>
After the concert, the Pirates<lb/>
will play Louisiana Tech at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Ficklen Stadium. Then<lb/>
Ginger Thompson will sing at<lb/>
the Union Dance starting at 9<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Dan Summers, press secretary<lb/>
of the SGA, said the Union will<lb/>
not have an open house for the<lb/>
public this year.<lb/>
"Rather than have an open<lb/>
house that would conflict with<lb/>
the concert, the union decided<lb/>
against the idea<lb/>
Besides the time conflict,<lb/>
Miss Cynthia Mendenhall said<lb/>
there was not enough response<lb/>
from the public last year to<lb/>
justify having the tea again this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
5 ECU students studying<lb/>
aboard Coast Guard ship<lb/>
Five East Carolina students<lb/>
studying biology and geology at<lb/>
the Manteo Marine Resources<lb/>
Center boarded the U.S. Coast<lb/>
Guard ship, the USS Rockaway,<lb/>
an oceanographic research vessel,<lb/>
to learn how such a ship<lb/>
operates.<lb/>
The ship is bound for<lb/>
international waters off the<lb/>
coast of Wilmington, where it<lb/>
will do research on continental<lb/>
shelf.<lb/>
The Coast Guard will do the<lb/>
actual research and compiling.<lb/>
The students will assist the<lb/>
researchers to gain experience<lb/>
working under realistic<lb/>
conditions.<lb/>
The expedition will return to<lb/>
poit Saturday and will release its<lb/>
data soon afterward.<lb/>
vote for any one candidate if the<lb/>
work were done manually.<lb/>
The computer used is the<lb/>
IBM Optical Mark Page Reader<lb/>
No. 1231N1. It is one of the few<lb/>
such machines on the East<lb/>
Coast.<lb/>
The marked ballots are<lb/>
stacked in the feeding bin, and<lb/>
from there, no one has to touch<lb/>
them.<lb/>
The computer has an<lb/>
electrical eye that scans the<lb/>
entire ballot at once and<lb/>
electronically tallies the votes.<lb/>
The tally is then transferred<lb/>
to a tape wl.ere it is sent through<lb/>
another computer to tabulate<lb/>
the percentage of votes.<lb/>
The information is typed<lb/>
onto an IBM master information<lb/>
sheet and is ieady for<lb/>
publication.<lb/>
The ballots were tabulated<lb/>
from each dorm separately and<lb/>
then as a whole, so that a<lb/>
candidate who wants to run<lb/>
again will know where he was<lb/>
weak.<lb/>
The man responsible foi all<lb/>
this is Dr. Milam Johnson,<lb/>
director of the computer<lb/>
program at East Carolina.<lb/>
New plan<lb/>
announce<lb/>
East Carolina is getting a new<lb/>
package this year Spirit,<lb/>
wrapped in purple and gold<lb/>
excitement and plans.<lb/>
Students and coaches with a<lb/>
"big concern over the lack of<lb/>
spirit on ECU's campus" have<lb/>
designed a year round program<lb/>
to strengthen a lagging school<lb/>
enthusiasm.<lb/>
Bob Whitley, one of the<lb/>
group members, said that "many<lb/>
students don't even realize that<lb/>
ECU's colors are purple and<lb/>
gold<lb/>
In the future the group would<lb/>
like to see trash cans and signs<lb/>
on campus painted in purple and<lb/>
gold.<lb/>
Cheerleaders plan a caravan<lb/>
to the dorms, ending on the mall<lb/>
with a pep rally before each<lb/>
home game.<lb/>
Their first pep rally is<lb/>
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today<lb/>
on the mall.<lb/>
The group's plans don't stop<lb/>
with school colors and a pep<lb/>
DR. MILAM JOHNSON, director of Computer Sciences,<lb/>
displays the revised ballot used in Tuesday's campus<lb/>
elections. ECU is the only college in the U.S. to use<lb/>
computerized election results.<lb/>
s for schoo<lb/>
d by pep<lb/>
rally. Coaches in the group want<lb/>
to work more closely with<lb/>
organizations and fraternities.<lb/>
They plan to meet with the<lb/>
organizations for a few minutes<lb/>
to explain the spirit movement<lb/>
and how each of them can<lb/>
become involved.<lb/>
To urge competition between<lb/>
organizations, a contest is<lb/>
planned for each home game.<lb/>
The group with the best sign<lb/>
would receive a "spirit stick"<lb/>
until the next home game<lb/>
Then, at the end of the<lb/>
season, the group which has<lb/>
received the spirit stick most<lb/>
often will be presented a trophy.<lb/>
Booster buttons have been<lb/>
ordered for students to wear to<lb/>
games and activities on campus<lb/>
The buttons will be sold by the<lb/>
cheerleaders.<lb/>
Any profit from the sale of<lb/>
the buttons will be used for the<lb/>
"spirit movement<lb/>
BillCain, head freshman<lb/>
football coach, hopes to stir up<lb/>
I spirit<lb/>
group<lb/>
"more student insight and<lb/>
"create excitement in town and<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
The group plans to run a<lb/>
player of the week and possibly<lb/>
a feature athlete story.<lb/>
Better half time shows are<lb/>
planned for the season and the<lb/>
group is trying to get a victory<lb/>
bell.<lb/>
In the past a Spirit<lb/>
Committee existed in the SGA,<lb/>
but was abolished when it<lb/>
stopped functioning.<lb/>
The group hopes to<lb/>
re-establish a spirit committee<lb/>
which would solicit cooperation<lb/>
from Greenville merchants.<lb/>
Whitley said the goal of the<lb/>
group is that "when this year<lb/>
ends there will be a marked and<lb/>
significant difference in school<lb/>
spirit on this campus<lb/>
He added that "the group is<lb/>
open to any suggestions and<lb/>
help<lb/>
Interested students should<lb/>
contact Bob Whitley in the SGA<lb/>
offices.<lb/>
f Nuclear physicist will speak<lb/>
on reality of flying saucers<lb/>
STANTON FRIEDMAN<lb/>
UFO expert<lb/>
Stanton T. Friedman, a<lb/>
nuclear physicist, will speak on<lb/>
"Flying Saucers Are Real" at 8<lb/>
p.m. Wednesday in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
"After considerable study,<lb/>
first-hand investigation, and<lb/>
review of a great variety of data,<lb/>
I have concluded that the<lb/>
evidence is overwhelming that<lb/>
the earth is being visited by<lb/>
intelligently controlled vehicles<lb/>
whose origin is extraterrestrial<lb/>
Friedman has said.<lb/>
1 Freidman is affiliated with<lb/>
the Aerial Phenomena Research<lb/>
Organization, the National<lb/>
Investigation Committee on<lb/>
Aerial Phenomena, and other<lb/>
such organizations.<lb/>
He was one of twelve<lb/>
contributors at the UFO<lb/>
symposium sponsored by the<lb/>
U.S. Congress.<lb/>
He has a master's degree in<lb/>
physics from the University of<lb/>
Chicago.<lb/>
Students and faculty will be<lb/>
admitted free with their ID<lb/>
cards. Admission price for staff<lb/>
members is $1.50 and for the<lb/>
public, $2.<lb/>
Tickets are on sale in the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in the<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
;8<lb/>
Cla<lb/>
Senior Class Pres.<lb/>
David Guilford<lb/>
Chuck Kalaf, Jr.<lb/>
Senior V.P.<lb/>
Stephanie Standafer<lb/>
Paul Breitman<lb/>
Senior Secretary<lb/>
Mary Ann Dupree<lb/>
Ann Marie Reinhardt<lb/>
Senior Treasurer<lb/>
Sandra Storall Mims<lb/>
Lionel Katzen<lb/>
Junior President<lb/>
John Cooper<lb/>
Frederick Smith<lb/>
Paul Monroe, Jr.<lb/>
Junior V.P.<lb/>
Suzanne Jenkins<lb/>
Junior Secretary<lb/>
Delia Clegg<lb/>
Lynn Harris<lb/>
Junior Treasurer<lb/>
Katherine Moulton<lb/>
Mary Clarke<lb/>
Sophomore President<lb/>
Jeff Mann<lb/>
Lee Durham<lb/>
Gerry Smith<lb/>
Tommy Clay<lb/>
Wanda Maqurean<lb/>
Bancroft<lb/>
Sophomore V.P.<lb/>
Sarah Sanders<lb/>
Charlie Garrell<lb/>
Sophomore Secretary<lb/>
Marsha Brooks<lb/>
Edwina Lee<lb/>
Faye Reaves<lb/>
Constance Boger<lb/>
Sophomore Treasurer<lb/>
Pamela Myers<lb/>
Thomas Autry<lb/>
Freshman Pres.<lb/>
Steve Banks<lb/>
Jimmy Smith<lb/>
Freshman V.P.<lb/>
Susan Hunt<lb/>
Freshman Secretary<lb/>
Beverly Cotten<lb/>
Verna Phillips<lb/>
Freshman Treasurer<lb/>
Susan Dutt<lb/>
Dana Ivy<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0003"/><lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 25, 1969, F ountainhead, Page 3<lb/>
Classes select leaders<lb/>
Senior Class Pres.<lb/>
David Guilford<lb/>
Chuck Kalaf, Jr.<lb/>
Senior V.P.<lb/>
Stephanie Standafer<lb/>
Paul Breitman<lb/>
Senior Secretary<lb/>
Mary Ann Dupree<lb/>
Ann Marie Reinhardt<lb/>
C<lb/>
3<lb/>
5'<lb/>
3<lb/>
154<lb/>
57<lb/>
95<lb/>
114<lb/>
82<lb/>
125<lb/>
I<lb/>
CO<lb/>
5<lb/>
6<lb/>
6<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
12<lb/>
10<lb/>
11<lb/>
11<lb/>
I<lb/>
19 14<lb/>
6 3<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
o<lb/>
9<lb/>
9<lb/>
6 1<lb/>
11<lb/>
3 3<lb/>
3? ft<lb/>
C)<lb/>
I<lb/>
5?<lb/>
.<lb/>
03<lb/>
3<lb/>
E<lb/>
CD<lb/>
<lb/>
5<lb/>
25<lb/>
7<lb/>
11<lb/>
21<lb/>
9<lb/>
23<lb/>
CD<lb/>
o<lb/>
ar<lb/>
CD<lb/>
ru<lb/>
CO<lb/>
CD<lb/>
CD<lb/>
3<lb/>
CD<lb/>
35'<lb/>
40<lb/>
12<lb/>
17<lb/>
35<lb/>
33<lb/>
19<lb/>
121<lb/>
3<lb/>
10<lb/>
14<lb/>
8<lb/>
16<lb/>
20<lb/>
19<lb/>
16<lb/>
23<lb/>
18<lb/>
21<lb/>
6<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
3<lb/>
31<lb/>
CD<lb/>
3<lb/>
5'<lb/>
(0<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
?<lb/>
33 CD<lb/>
1311<lb/>
121<lb/>
184<lb/>
1244<lb/>
183<lb/>
1241<lb/>
Senior Treasurer<lb/>
Sandra Storall Mims<lb/>
Lionel Katzen<lb/>
110<lb/>
92<lb/>
8<lb/>
3<lb/>
15<lb/>
7<lb/>
13<lb/>
4 1<lb/>
4<lb/>
?<lb/>
19<lb/>
12<lb/>
26<lb/>
19<lb/>
15<lb/>
9<lb/>
23<lb/>
14<lb/>
4<lb/>
7<lb/>
239<lb/>
171<lb/>
i:8?<lb/>
Junior President<lb/>
John Cooper<lb/>
Frederick Smith<lb/>
Paul Monroe, Jr.<lb/>
Junior V.P.<lb/>
Suzanne Jenkins<lb/>
83<lb/>
56<lb/>
140<lb/>
9<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
20<lb/>
12<lb/>
18<lb/>
5<lb/>
31<lb/>
11<lb/>
10<lb/>
11<lb/>
29<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
53<lb/>
11<lb/>
27<lb/>
30<lb/>
18<lb/>
9<lb/>
9<lb/>
34<lb/>
5<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
10<lb/>
22<lb/>
12<lb/>
12<lb/>
25<lb/>
6<lb/>
4<lb/>
38 33<lb/>
6<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
8<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
251<lb/>
133<lb/>
140<lb/>
437<lb/>
Junior Secretary<lb/>
Delia Clegg<lb/>
Lynn Harris<lb/>
75<lb/>
104<lb/>
13<lb/>
9<lb/>
21<lb/>
13<lb/>
18<lb/>
16<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
52<lb/>
33<lb/>
20<lb/>
14<lb/>
4<lb/>
7<lb/>
26<lb/>
20<lb/>
26<lb/>
11<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
2<lb/>
5<lb/>
oco<lb/>
248<lb/>
Junior Treasurer<lb/>
Katherine Moulton<lb/>
Mary Clarke<lb/>
Sophomore President<lb/>
Jeff Mann<lb/>
Lee Durham<lb/>
Gerry Smith<lb/>
Tommy Clay<lb/>
Wanda Maqurean<lb/>
Bancroft<lb/>
67<lb/>
104<lb/>
11<lb/>
11<lb/>
13<lb/>
22<lb/>
10<lb/>
23<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
31<lb/>
56<lb/>
12<lb/>
23<lb/>
35<lb/>
9<lb/>
10<lb/>
6<lb/>
12<lb/>
6<lb/>
6<lb/>
20<lb/>
2<lb/>
14<lb/>
25<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
30<lb/>
24<lb/>
35<lb/>
1C<lb/>
1<lb/>
7<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
12<lb/>
4<lb/>
7<lb/>
3<lb/>
8<lb/>
13<lb/>
31<lb/>
8<lb/>
29<lb/>
2<lb/>
7<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
7<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
180<lb/>
323<lb/>
117<lb/>
55<lb/>
136<lb/>
14<lb/>
36<lb/>
12<lb/>
Sophomore V.P.<lb/>
Sarah Sanders<lb/>
Charlie Garrell<lb/>
61<lb/>
64<lb/>
15<lb/>
15<lb/>
15<lb/>
23<lb/>
21<lb/>
37<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
10<lb/>
58<lb/>
78<lb/>
10<lb/>
17<lb/>
17<lb/>
23<lb/>
2<lb/>
7<lb/>
13<lb/>
19<lb/>
5<lb/>
3<lb/>
7<lb/>
11<lb/>
234<lb/>
315<lb/>
Sophomore Secretary<lb/>
Marsha Brooks<lb/>
Edwina Lee<lb/>
Faye Reaves<lb/>
Constance Boger<lb/>
66<lb/>
12<lb/>
22<lb/>
35<lb/>
16<lb/>
5<lb/>
2<lb/>
7<lb/>
18<lb/>
4<lb/>
6<lb/>
9<lb/>
27<lb/>
6<lb/>
13<lb/>
13<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
53<lb/>
33<lb/>
12<lb/>
37<lb/>
17<lb/>
3<lb/>
5<lb/>
7<lb/>
16<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
15<lb/>
o<lb/>
3<lb/>
5<lb/>
2<lb/>
12<lb/>
3<lb/>
11<lb/>
6<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
6<lb/>
1<lb/>
8<lb/>
254<lb/>
76<lb/>
92<lb/>
144<lb/>
Sophomore Treasurer<lb/>
Pamela Myers<lb/>
Thomas Autry<lb/>
54 9<lb/>
73 21<lb/>
20<lb/>
20<lb/>
20<lb/>
39<lb/>
1<lb/>
7<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
3 45 9 28<lb/>
9 91 21 13<lb/>
17 T 1 8 1<lb/>
16 7 10 2<lb/>
219<lb/>
331<lb/>
Freshman Pres.<lb/>
Steve Banks<lb/>
Jimmy Smith<lb/>
36 33<lb/>
24 29<lb/>
6<lb/>
11<lb/>
11 73 46 125 44 6 22 3 2 14<lb/>
10 46 46 69 52 30 7 1 13<lb/>
15<lb/>
35<lb/>
27<lb/>
34<lb/>
73<lb/>
10<lb/>
33<lb/>
513<lb/>
4 95<lb/>
Freshman V.P.<lb/>
Susan Hunt<lb/>
52 57<lb/>
15<lb/>
19<lb/>
109 86<lb/>
176 94 5 49<lb/>
26<lb/>
22<lb/>
52<lb/>
92<lb/>
39<lb/>
905<lb/>
Freshman Secretary<lb/>
Beverly Cotten<lb/>
Verna Phillips<lb/>
Freshman Treasurer<lb/>
Susan Dutt<lb/>
Dana Ivy<lb/>
43 50<lb/>
13 12<lb/>
45 20<lb/>
11 20<lb/>
11<lb/>
6<lb/>
9<lb/>
8<lb/>
19<lb/>
2<lb/>
15<lb/>
6<lb/>
104 67 164 7(5 4 18<lb/>
'8 23 29 20 2 34<lb/>
96 69 161 65 4 25<lb/>
26 21 29 30 2 26<lb/>
721612397724733<lb/>
211210222919254<lb/>
631518417918689<lb/>
3134202721267<lb/>
officers are chosen<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4, Fountainhead, Thursday, Sept. 25, 1969<lb/>
Musical to be produced fountainhead<lb/>
"Finn's Rainbow the Senator Billboard Rawkins. This Isn't Love Nancy I ?<lb/>
"FiniaP's Rainbow the<lb/>
humorous musical fantasy that<lb/>
has delighted theatre-goers for<lb/>
years - and more recently,<lb/>
screen fans with a new movie<lb/>
starring Petula Clark and Fred<lb/>
Astaire - will bring its pot of<lb/>
gold, its leprechaun and its<lb/>
collection of famous song-hits to<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium as the<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse opens<lb/>
its current season, Oct. 22 25.<lb/>
Following 'Finian's<lb/>
Rainbow" will be productions of<lb/>
"A Flea in Her Ear<lb/>
"Macbeth "The Goodwoman<lb/>
c Setzuan and "Lion in<lb/>
Vvinter<lb/>
"Finian's Rainbow" concerns<lb/>
an Irishman and his daughter<lb/>
who steal away a pot of gold<lb/>
from the leprechauns of their<lb/>
country and bring it to Rainbow<lb/>
Valley, in the American state of<lb/>
Missitucky, which is an idyllic<lb/>
spot except for one handicap.<lb/>
The handicap is that Rainbow<lb/>
Valley and its singing citizens are<lb/>
afflicted with an old-fashioned<lb/>
bigot politician, not too deeply<lb/>
disguised under the name of<lb/>
Senator Billboard Rawkins.<lb/>
The whimsical plot revolves<lb/>
about the magic that is wrought<lb/>
on the pro-segregations-spirited<lb/>
Senator by the pot of gold, and<lb/>
the geniality of the Irishman and<lb/>
his daughter, plus the<lb/>
sprightliness of a leprechaun<lb/>
who also arrives in pursuit of the<lb/>
stolen pot of gold.<lb/>
Vicki Summers stars as the<lb/>
Irish lass who sings the haunting<lb/>
hit-parade number, "How Are<lb/>
Things in Glocca Morra?" The<lb/>
Dart of her father, Finian<lb/>
McLonergan, will be played by<lb/>
Mark Ramsey. James Slaughter<lb/>
will he the leprechaun, and<lb/>
heard also, since his assignment<lb/>
includes singing two of the<lb/>
show's most popular songs,<lb/>
"Something Sort of Grandish"<lb/>
and "If I'm Not Near the Girl I<lb/>
Love, I Love the Girl I'm Near<lb/>
Jim Longacre will have the<lb/>
hero's role as the Rainbow<lb/>
Valley farmer with whom<lb/>
Sharon McLonergan falls in love,<lb/>
and with whom she sings the<lb/>
exuberant and well-known<lb/>
songs, "Old Devil Moon" and "If<lb/>
This Isn't Love Nancy<lb/>
Mellichamp will play his sister,<lb/>
Susan, a mute who "dances" her<lb/>
words and falls in love with the<lb/>
leprecl" jun.<lb/>
"Finian's Rainbow" has been<lb/>
particularly praised for the fact<lb/>
that it combines both<lb/>
entertainment and some sharp<lb/>
social commentary. One of the<lb/>
wonders worked by<lb/>
McLonergan's pot of gold is the<lb/>
granting of three wishes.<lb/>
Season tickets for the<lb/>
Playhouse season are now<lb/>
available to the general public at<lb/>
a fifty percent saving five<lb/>
productions for five dollars.<lb/>
They may be purchased at<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium, by mail<lb/>
at Box 2712, Greenville, N.C or<lb/>
by phone at 758 6390.<lb/>
The full schedule includes:<lb/>
"Finian's Rainbow Oct. 22 25;<lb/>
"A Fleas in Her Ear Dec.<lb/>
10-13; "Macbeth Feb. 17-21;<lb/>
"The Good Woman of Setzuan<lb/>
April 15-18; and "The Lion in<lb/>
Winter May 13-16.<lb/>
BRathskeller<lb/>
Pizzas<lb/>
Lunches Reasonable Prices<lb/>
Daily Drawing for Free Mea!<lb/>
east otfii, si<lb/>
HATHAWAY<lb/>
SPOKEN<lb/>
HERE<lb/>
Fortheslave-<lb/>
ffil iraOP UnAuu nnrhaine <lb/>
?  Wl IUII !vJ<lb/>
For the master-<lb/>
desire knew no color<lb/>
in the savage world<lb/>
of the Old South!<lb/>
One hour<lb/>
'mminizinG<lb/>
CERTIFIES <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/>
tephen Boyd-Dionne Warwic<lb/>
thea<lb/>
Now Thru Tuesday<lb/>
Shows At: 1-3-5-7-9-<lb/>
is rowing.<lb/>
We recently purchased the Associated Press<lb/>
wire service.<lb/>
As soon as the telephone company can install<lb/>
our Teletypewriter, we will be able to print<lb/>
national, international and state news.<lb/>
We are also negotiating for a Washington and<lb/>
a Kaleigh bureau which will be run by<lb/>
professional journalists.<lb/>
We feel obligated to publish the whole truth-<lb/>
not just part of it. We are not out to stir up<lb/>
controversy, but we are not going to avoid it<lb/>
by playing down the news.<lb/>
If you are interested in a position on a<lb/>
growing newspaper, visit our office in<lb/>
the Wright building or call 758-6366.<lb/>
? 3-HOCR 8HTRT SERVICE<lb/>
? 1-HOUR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DRIVE-IN CURB 8ERV1CK<lb/>
14th and Charles St. Corner AcroM Pnm Hrde ?<lb/>
Complete Laundry and Dry Cfaaatnf Serrtoe<lb/>
uJVoTtetvt? Fur wit are<lb/>
"to College $tdet??<lb/>
' " Do)<lb/>
A news <lb/>
Duke.<lb/>
By DAVID DA<lb/>
Associate Edi<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenk<lb/>
looking out for thf<lb/>
of the state. Thi<lb/>
trying to get a<lb/>
industry to locate r<lb/>
Fiber Industi<lb/>
originally had plan<lb/>
new plant on sc<lb/>
Orange County i<lb/>
primitive forest<lb/>
Duke Unh'ersh<lb/>
University of Nort<lb/>
Chapel Hill use fc<lb/>
ecology. (Chape<lb/>
Orange County.)<lb/>
They had filed<lb/>
reoning with<lb/>
BROTHERS<lb/>
24-27. New plec<lb/>
news br<lb/>
There will be<lb/>
elections for soph<lb/>
president. Jeff Man<lb/>
candidates, withdrew<lb/>
"Throne of Blo<lb/>
the International<lb/>
will be shown at 8<lb/>
in Wright Auditoriui<lb/>
Admission for st<lb/>
ID and activity card:<lb/>
The official fall<lb/>
being held this week<lb/>
to 4 p.m. in the<lb/>
Union at the ring ca<lb/>
representative will bi<lb/>
Students with<lb/>
hours can order ring;<lb/>
WANTED:1 or<lb/>
share ciuplex<lb/>
MarshallHatfie<lb/>
East 1stStrei<lb/>
752-6489.<lb/>
r? 1<lb/>
<lb/>
 HAIR CUTS $1.7<lb/>
I<lb/>
?-? ? -m? ??-<lb/>
T<lb/>
STl<lb/>
Sti<lb/>
214 K<lb/>
jf<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0005"/><lb/>
d<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 25, 1969, F ountainhead, Page 5<lb/>
lee'i<lb/>
4<lb/>
9<lb/>
A news analysis<lb/>
Duke, UNO spurn fiber plant-Jenkins invites it<lb/>
By DAVID DALTON<lb/>
Associate Editor<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins again is<lb/>
looking out for the eastern part<lb/>
of the state. This time he is<lb/>
trying to get a $100 million<lb/>
industry to locate here.<lb/>
Fiber Industries, Inc<lb/>
originally had planned to build a<lb/>
new plant on some land in<lb/>
Orange County adjoining the<lb/>
primitive forest which both<lb/>
Duke University and the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill use for research in<lb/>
ecology. (Chapel Hill is in<lb/>
Orange County.)<lb/>
They had filed a request for<lb/>
reoning with the county<lb/>
commissioners since theland was<lb/>
zoned only as a residential area.<lb/>
Faculty members from Duke<lb/>
and UNC showed up at the<lb/>
public hearing to ask the<lb/>
commissioners not to grant the<lb/>
rezoning request.<lb/>
They told the commissioners<lb/>
that the waste products from the<lb/>
plant would ruin the ecology in<lb/>
the primitive forest.<lb/>
Fiber Industries offered to<lb/>
install a long pipeline to carry<lb/>
the wastes away from the forest,<lb/>
but still the universities<lb/>
complained.<lb/>
The county commissioners<lb/>
postponed a decision to a later<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Before the meeting, the<lb/>
president of Fiber Industries<lb/>
wrote a letter to the<lb/>
commissioners withdrawing the<lb/>
rezoning request - apparently<lb/>
indicating they would not build<lb/>
the plant in Orange County.<lb/>
The letter said that Fiber<lb/>
Industries felt it was necessary<lb/>
to have "near unanimous"<lb/>
support from a community<lb/>
before they would consider<lb/>
building there.<lb/>
The company still owns the<lb/>
large plot of land in Orange<lb/>
County adjoining the primitive<lb/>
forest.<lb/>
They did not give any<lb/>
indication of what they wouid<lb/>
do with their land.<lb/>
The president of the<lb/>
company said they still planned<lb/>
to build a new plant somewhere,<lb/>
and that it could be "anywhere<lb/>
in the southeastern United<lb/>
States<lb/>
Not too many weeks later,<lb/>
BROTHERS FRATERNIZE WITH rushees during IFC Formal Rush Week, Sept.<lb/>
24-27. New pledges picked up bids yesterday at the Methodist Student Center.<lb/>
news briefs<lb/>
There will be no run-off<lb/>
elections for sophomore class<lb/>
president. Jeff Mann, one of the<lb/>
candidates, withdrew.<lb/>
"Throne of Blood part of<lb/>
the International Film Series,<lb/>
will be shown at 8 p.m. tonight<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Admission for students is by<lb/>
ID and activity cards.<lb/>
The official fall ring sale is<lb/>
being held this week from 9 a.m.<lb/>
to 4 p.m. in the University<lb/>
Union at the ring case. A Balfour<lb/>
representative will be there.<lb/>
Students with 96 quarter<lb/>
hours can order rings.<lb/>
State Bank<lb/>
and Trust Co,<lb/>
5 Point<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Member F. D. I. C.<lb/>
WANTED:1 or 2men to<lb/>
share dupi ex apt. See<lb/>
MarshallHatfield,605 A<lb/>
East 1stStreetor call<lb/>
752-6489.<lb/>
Be the first to wear your greek letters<lb/>
All types of Monograms<lb/>
758-1419-Anytime<lb/>
VARSITY BARBER SHOP<lb/>
I<lb/>
) HAIR CUTS $1.75 RAZOR CUTS $2.00 WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE TO CAMPUS<lb/>
!<lb/>
J<lb/>
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.<lb/>
STUDENT DESK LAMPS C7REETING CARDS<lb/>
Student Stationery ? Professional Filing Supplies<lb/>
Drafting and Art Supplies School Supplies<lb/>
21 4 East 5t h Street 752'2 75<lb/>
Journal. He talked with officials<lb/>
of the two universities, the<lb/>
president of Fiber Industries, the<lb/>
chairman of the Orange County<lb/>
commissioners and the Orange<lb/>
County zoning officer.<lb/>
Jenkins asked the plant to locate<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Fiber Industries agreed to<lb/>
study the possibility of locating<lb/>
in this part of the state, but they<lb/>
have not yet made a decision.<lb/>
As usual, the Raleigh News<lb/>
and Observer struck out at<lb/>
Jenkins editorially, accusing him<lb/>
of "good faith booster ism<lb/>
The president of Fiber<lb/>
Industries says the company still<lb/>
needs to build a large plant ?<lb/>
somewhere.<lb/>
No one knows when they will<lb/>
decide where they will build the<lb/>
plant.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Mr. Dalton<lb/>
covered the controversy in<lb/>
Orange County this summer<lb/>
while working as an intern<lb/>
reporter with the Winston-Salem<lb/>
K3OOOOOO000000O0O00O0000 0000000j<lb/>
Positions are still open on<lb/>
several student committees.<lb/>
The men's judiciary needs<lb/>
two alternates.<lb/>
The men's honor counci<lb/>
needs one member.<lb/>
The university council and<lb/>
the academic committees also<lb/>
need members.<lb/>
THE REBEL could be your bag. That is,<lb/>
IF<lb/>
you've got something to say and know how<lb/>
to say it.<lb/>
Contribute to the REBEL<lb/>
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooocA<lb/>
( orange blosnom<lb/>
To the girl who knows what she<lb/>
wants but not where to find it.<lb/>
Match your style with our<lb/>
many distinctive designs. And<lb/>
ask us about our famous<lb/>
Oiange Blossom guarantee.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
est's<lb/>
jeAxlers<lb/>
402 EVANS STREET<lb/>
7523175<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6, Founninhead, Thursday, Sept. 25, 1969<lb/>
n<lb/>
Hijw,wnwjwwwwv<lb/>
Schools threatened by bill i Big posters or debate?<lb/>
A news analysis<lb/>
w-<lb/>
By SHARON SCHAUDIES<lb/>
The life support of many<lb/>
worthwhile organisations<lb/>
dependant upon funds from<lb/>
individuals and foundations has<lb/>
been threatened A bill that<lb/>
recently passed the House of<lb/>
Representatives would restrict<lb/>
the commonly used tax loophole<lb/>
of large gifts in the form of<lb/>
property and securities to<lb/>
non-profit, public oiganizations.<lb/>
The gifts would no longer be<lb/>
tax-exempt; and restrictions<lb/>
would be placed on the receiver.<lb/>
Institutions would be limited to<lb/>
25 per cent of their income from<lb/>
one source. And 85 per cent<lb/>
must come from at least five<lb/>
"<lb/>
TINY TIM<lb/>
TIPTOES DOWN<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
Go with itaffects<lb/>
the heart, the head<lb/>
&amp; the gut<lb/>
Magazine<lb/>
ii ? ?<lb/>
Juditn Crist. N.Y.<lb/>
younger set<lb/>
Renata Adler. N.Y. Times<lb/>
"A stunning speakout<lb/>
a jarring cinematic trip"<lb/>
Bob Salmaggi, WINS Radio<lb/>
"TOTAL CINEMA"<lb/>
Playboy Magazine<lb/>
"Brilliant a happening<lb/>
a powerhouse"<lb/>
Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post<lb/>
"WILL BLAST YOUR<lb/>
EYEBALLS<lb/>
Ann Guarmo. Daily News<lb/>
Eastman COLOR<lb/>
Shows Daily At 1-3-5-7-9<lb/>
STARTS SUNDAY<lb/>
MON. THRl FRI.<lb/>
??? OPEN I1L SHOW-TIME<lb/>
?M?<lb/>
PRO<lb/>
SOU I CCS.<lb/>
The bill also would penalize<lb/>
foundations who support<lb/>
organizations that propagandize,<lb/>
affect legislation ot influence a<lb/>
political campaign.<lb/>
The National Educational<lb/>
Television Corporation feels that<lb/>
then programming would be so<lb/>
restricted that the system's<lb/>
future would be jeopardized.<lb/>
NET is very upset about the<lb/>
provision that would restrict<lb/>
theii systems of public opinion<lb/>
which might influence<lb/>
legislation. The provision<lb/>
"would efficiently wipe out our<lb/>
public affairs broadcasting says<lb/>
James Day, president of the<lb/>
NET radio and television center.<lb/>
"Programs that might be deemed<lb/>
improper include the weekly<lb/>
'NET Journal a recent drama<lb/>
on student unrest titled<lb/>
'Confrontation and 'Black<lb/>
Journal a monthly program<lb/>
focusing on the racial problem<lb/>
The penalties are so severe,<lb/>
I'm afraid caution would<lb/>
prevail Day said. "If you were<lb/>
McGeorge Bundy (president of the Senate<lb/>
the Ford Foundation, NET's<lb/>
major supporter), would you<lb/>
give us money, knowing that<lb/>
you could be fined if it were<lb/>
spent" on programs that could<lb/>
be seen as propaganda or an<lb/>
attempt to influence legislation?<lb/>
private colleges, 56 per cent of<lb/>
the gifts this year were real<lb/>
estate and securities.<lb/>
"I know several institutions<lb/>
that couldn't take it declares<lb/>
Leonard Buchlin, director of<lb/>
development at St. Lawrence<lb/>
University. "I don't think they<lb/>
would close their doors, but<lb/>
they would have to become<lb/>
public institutions (who receive<lb/>
federal funds and lesser tax<lb/>
restrictions in the bill<lb/>
"The ability of a school of<lb/>
our type to get gifts outright is<lb/>
decreasing rapidly says Rolan<lb/>
C. Matthies, vice president of<lb/>
Wittenburg University. "Our<lb/>
benefactors aren't wealthy<lb/>
enough to surrender income<lb/>
WittenDurg is currently receiving<lb/>
S4 million in gifts of this type;<lb/>
one third of their entire<lb/>
endowment.<lb/>
Many colleges already are<lb/>
feeling the effects of the<lb/>
proposed legislation.<lb/>
Foundations and individuals are<lb/>
reluctant to commit themselves<lb/>
until the bill comes to a vote in<lb/>
"Perhaps even our folksingers<lb/>
could be a problem he add<lb/>
"Have you ever listened to Pete<lb/>
Seeger"<lb/>
The impact on private<lb/>
colleges could be fatal. In a<lb/>
survey of 28 Massachusetts<lb/>
An official of one large<lb/>
charitable foundation said, "It's<lb/>
hard to think of an area of<lb/>
philanthropy that wouldn't be<lb/>
significantly affected by this<lb/>
bill Many see it as<lb/>
"anti-philanthropic<lb/>
Editor's Note: The basis for this<lb/>
article is an editorial written by<lb/>
Frederick Andrews in the "Wall<lb/>
Street Journal" printed<lb/>
Friday, Sept. 12, 1969.<lb/>
on<lb/>
1 ?I Sail<lb/>
WELCOME STUDENTS<lb/>
Get away from the<lb/>
ordinary<lb/>
Location:<lb/>
Behind airport next<lb/>
to the wildlife<lb/>
reserves past<lb/>
the Sandpits<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR 6:30-<lb/>
-8:30 EVERY NIGHT<lb/>
OPEN<lb/>
3:00 P.M11:45 P.M.<lb/>
By bob McDowell<lb/>
Once again a campus election<lb/>
has reached its final stages<lb/>
without the discussion of any<lb/>
important issues. It is quite<lb/>
obvious that popularity and<lb/>
money aie all it takes to run<lb/>
and win a campaign.<lb/>
The upsurgenc e o f<lb/>
"independents" among the<lb/>
candidates is not indicative of<lb/>
any radical change in thinking<lb/>
among the candidates; but<lb/>
rather, is the acknowledgement<lb/>
that campus political parties no<lb/>
longer carry ihe "clout" with<lb/>
the voters that they once did.<lb/>
It is too late now to inject<lb/>
substance into the campaign.<lb/>
And though an editorialist might<lb/>
protest against the student<lb/>
apathy that has allowed such a<lb/>
state of ,iff,ins to exist, he might<lb/>
bettei focus his attack on the<lb/>
candidates who don't run or the<lb/>
concerned students who won't<lb/>
force the issues to become Part<lb/>
of the campaign.<lb/>
It should be rememberer that<lb/>
the students - not th<lb/>
candidates are the winners and<lb/>
losers of the election. What the<lb/>
students lose in representation<lb/>
and voice in their own affairs<lb/>
cannot be regained until the<lb/>
next election but by then the<lb/>
activity fees will have been spent<lb/>
on entertainment that the<lb/>
students don't want, the<lb/>
legislature will have failed, again<lb/>
to reform itself so that it might<lb/>
become the student's voiee jn<lb/>
the affairs of the university, and<lb/>
another opportunity for a truly<lb/>
representative "student"<lb/>
government will have been lost<lb/>
But the failures of the past -<lb/>
and the present will play no<lb/>
part in this election. Perhaps<lb/>
next year<lb/>
Until then, may the biggest<lb/>
banner win1<lb/>
Chappaquiddic tragedy<lb/>
clouds Kennedy's future<lb/>
By MAUREEN SCHUL<lb/>
Occassionally, an issue of<lb/>
policy may be so controversial it<lb/>
may split the sentiments of<lb/>
liberal Democrats and<lb/>
conservative Republicans<lb/>
directly in two. Most recently<lb/>
the issue that has caused such a<lb/>
split has not been connected<lb/>
with domestic or foreign policy,<lb/>
but rather what the effects of<lb/>
the Chappaquiddick tragedy<lb/>
may do to Sen. Edward<lb/>
Kennedy's future role in<lb/>
American politics.<lb/>
It is quite clear that the<lb/>
attitude of most conservatives<lb/>
concerning the recent fate of<lb/>
Sen. Kennedy is quite opposite<lb/>
that of liberals. In short, the<lb/>
party of which Sen. Kennedy<lb/>
does not belong, is transforming<lb/>
a tragedy in which he wcis<lb/>
connected into a political drive<lb/>
to weaken his voice on problems<lb/>
that need to be examined.<lb/>
Certain conservative citizens<lb/>
have seen the injustice of this<lb/>
condition to the point of being<lb/>
willing to add to it. Their despair<lb/>
in seeing this political terms,<lb/>
rather than personal ones, is<lb/>
what constitutes then strength.<lb/>
The sometimes overlooked<lb/>
point of the matter is that a life<lb/>
has been lost. Only time and<lb/>
evidence will prove if blame is to<lb/>
be placed on someone.<lb/>
Knowing these things, <lb/>
should not attempt to take sides<lb/>
in this matter for political<lb/>
power, but rather for, and only<lb/>
for, justice. Let us not, if<lb/>
have something to say, voice' our<lb/>
opinions concerning this tragedy<lb/>
for politics, but rather for ethics.<lb/>
Days ago. Sen. Kennedy<lb/>
spoke out on the Vietnam war.<lb/>
Much discontent was expressed<lb/>
because of the time and<lb/>
publicity given him aftei the<lb/>
tragedy at Chappaquiddick.<lb/>
Any barrier against him now<lb/>
would be unjustifiable.<lb/>
It is too serious a chance to<lb/>
take just because our political<lb/>
beliefs differ ftom his.<lb/>
i<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
Lautares Jewelers<lb/>
Diamond Specialists<lb/>
Registered Jewelers Certified Gemologists<lb/>
Special Credit terms for ECU Students<lb/>
See George Lautaures, ECU '41<lb/>
An action<lb/>
The<lb/>
Now that<lb/>
operation, whai<lb/>
suit? C.G.<lb/>
Nothing.<lb/>
In the new <lb/>
are not allowec<lb/>
activities Thi<lb/>
that will requir<lb/>
K.C.<lb/>
There has b<lb/>
Miss Carolyn !<lb/>
schedules listin<lb/>
use the kitcher<lb/>
now being in<lb/>
counselor.<lb/>
The Key sa<lb/>
telephone calls<lb/>
Upperclass wor<lb/>
some counseloi<lb/>
upperclass won<lb/>
inform them? V<lb/>
Dean Fulqhi<lb/>
informed that<lb/>
local calls after<lb/>
If a student<lb/>
one? S.P.<lb/>
Rudolph Ale<lb/>
says new cards<lb/>
in Wright Auditi<lb/>
Counselors i<lb/>
stolen signout <lb/>
for two days. I<lb/>
time she will re<lb/>
It isn't. Dea<lb/>
will be reissued<lb/>
stolen cards.<lb/>
Is it viue th<lb/>
last year? D.B.<lb/>
Yes. The cap<lb/>
was a 22 per cer<lb/>
jj The Action L,<lb/>
land to cut red taf.<lb/>
If you have a qut<lb/>
'Editor, P.O. Box<lb/>
0 ? i <lb/>
Duk? 'a B ??<lb/>
Jtiigh l'H<lb/>
Los An<lb/>
UNC'?<lb/>
Thursday Oct<lb/>
Ticke<lb/>
Spc<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0007"/><lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 25, 1969, F ountainhead. Page 7<lb/>
biggest<lb/>
W'<lb/>
An action line<lb/>
The column<lb/>
?j: Now that the library has extended its hours of :?:?<lb/>
?:? operation, what has the student union done to follow :?:?<lb/>
?:? suit? C.G. ?:?:<lb/>
 ?'??'?<lb/>
?:?: Nothing. ?:<lb/>
OOO <lb/>
 '?<lb/>
'?; In the new girls' dorms there are kitchens which we K<lb/>
S are not allowed to use because they are for "dormitory X<lb/>
 activities There are no dormitory activities planned<lb/>
$: that will require the use of the kitchens. Why kitchens? :?:<lb/>
 K.C. ?<lb/>
? $<lb/>
?I ?<lb/>
:?: There has been an obvious failure to communicate. :?!<lb/>
:?: Miss Carolyn Fulghum, dean of women, told us that <lb/>
:?: schedules listing the hours when dormitory residents can :?:<lb/>
:?: use the kitchens will be posted soon. The final drafts are !?:<lb/>
;?: now being ironed out by Miss Fulghum and the :?:<lb/>
:? counselor. :?:<lb/>
S OOO ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
 The Key says that freshmen girls cannot receive local <lb/>
?:? telephone calls one half hour after dormitory closing. <lb/>
: Upperclass women are above this restriction and yet v<lb/>
;?:? some counselors haven't learned the difference between ?:?<lb/>
ft upperclass women and freshmen girls. Will you please v<lb/>
:?: inform them? W.B. $<lb/>
:?: :?:<lb/>
?:?: Dean Ful()hum assures us that the counselors will be ?:?<lb/>
?! informer! that u)perclasswomen will be able to receive v<lb/>
?:j: local calls after dormitory closing. '<lb/>
OOO ?:<lb/>
If a student loses his ID card, how can he get a new :?:<lb/>
? one? S.P. <lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, assistant dean of student affair :?:?<lb/>
? says new cards can be made any Tuesday from 2-3 p.m. y,<lb/>
:?: in Wright Auditorium. The cost is $2. :?<lb/>
OOO 8<lb/>
:?: Counselors in New C have placed a penalty on lost or jjj;<lb/>
:j: stolen signout cards. No card will be given to the student<lb/>
:?: for two days. If the student leaves the dorm during this :v<lb/>
time she wiil receive two demerits. How is this so? S.B. :?:<lb/>
:? It isn't. Dean Fulghum will correct the matter. Cards <lb/>
V V<lb/>
 will be reissued and there will be no demerits for lost or :?:<lb/>
? stolen cards. $<lb/>
:j OOO :?:<lb/>
 Is it ue that the ROTC enrollment dropped from :?:<lb/>
?:? last year? D.B. ?:?<lb/>
v Yes. The captain of theROTC program here said there jjj<lb/>
?:? was a 22 per cent decline in enrollment. ?:?<lb/>
? ' <lb/>
OOO <lb/>
:j The Action Line will try to answer your questionsx<lb/>
and to cut red tape in problems with the administration. ?<lb/>
?If you have a question or a problem, write: Action Line<lb/>
: Editor, P. U. Box 25 16, ECU Station; or call 758-6366. j:j<lb/>
? fWIWrs ,vw ???, ??w ????'7?C?i?lf WMI ? ???- mtv.LA ' V.<lb/>
ritw ' va"<lb/>
a?5fc<lb/>
PRO BASKFf?Ail fl<lb/>
?3?na<lb/>
<lb/>
??,??<lb/>
L i B ? v- rf &amp;<lb/>
vs<lb/>
11 M<lb/>
-<lb/>
?. ?<lb/>
Los Angeles Stars<lb/>
UNC'i Larry Miller<lb/>
m<lb/>
??<lb/>
Thursday Oct. 2nd, MinRe ;iseum, Greenville, 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets: Adults: Advance $2.50; Gate, ?3.00<lb/>
Student's and Children, $2.00<lb/>
Sponsored by North Carolina Jayeees<lb/>
Tickets Available<lb/>
at<lb/>
ECU Student Supply<lb/>
Store<lb/>
lifT r i HifWiPIW?? W 'I' 111<lb/>
No Matter<lb/>
What Shape<lb/>
It Pays<lb/>
You're In To Advertise<lb/>
ouritainhead<lb/>
ri'in the in,th shall make you tree<lb/>
Ad Manager Jimmy Teal<lb/>
758-6367 758-6366<lb/>
FIRST IN<lb/>
FASHIONS<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C<lb/>
Downtown Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Dear Students:<lb/>
It gives us a great deal of pleasure to welcome yon to East Carolina<lb/>
University and Greenville for Fall Term 1969. We hope your stay will he a<lb/>
source of real joy and happiness.<lb/>
Here at Brody's in Downtown Greenville and Pitt Plaza Shopping Center,<lb/>
it has been our pleasure to serve the college students for over a quarter of a<lb/>
century.<lb/>
Having college fashions for the discriminative taste has been our goal. We<lb/>
feature such college fashions as John Meyer, Ladybug, McMullen,<lb/>
Austin Hill, and Denise Dresses. Also, London Fog, Frank Cardone, and Pass<lb/>
Weejuns to name a few.<lb/>
Colleoe students will find Brody's a pleasant place to shop. We invite you<lb/>
to use our free local telephones, our clean rest rooms, and our free check<lb/>
chashing service.<lb/>
College students have always found a charoe account convenient. We will<lb/>
he delighted to open one tailored to your needs.<lb/>
He sure that you will find everyone friendly and courteous, eager to help<lb/>
in every possible way. We do hope to see you soon.<lb/>
Cordially,<lb/>
PRODY'S INC<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
Pitt Plaza<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8, Fountainhead, Thursday, Sept. 25, 1969<lb/>
Artist talks about education<lb/>
By GINGER MCDEARMON<lb/>
Staff Reporter<lb/>
"As for teaching, I feel that a<lb/>
very large part of what the<lb/>
learning process involves is<lb/>
exposure. If the young people<lb/>
are not exposed to the man who<lb/>
practices what he preaches, there<lb/>
are always the 'professional<lb/>
educators' hanging on.<lb/>
"Part of the reason for my<lb/>
teaching is born of my<lb/>
determination to keep these<lb/>
people out. Don't get me wrong<lb/>
about professional<lb/>
educatorssome of my best<lb/>
friends are in this group<lb/>
A.B. Jackson, an artist whose<lb/>
works are on display in the Art<lb/>
Department, 3rd floor Rawi,<lb/>
made this statement on his<lb/>
personal feelings about the<lb/>
artist's role as a teacher and as a<lb/>
human being.<lb/>
His work uses pen and ink,<lb/>
brush, charcoal, and mixed<lb/>
media. Jackson's work has been<lb/>
called a response to his<lb/>
environment and shows a<lb/>
segment of people in figure<lb/>
studies.<lb/>
After receiving his Bachelor<lb/>
of Fine Arts Degree in 1953, and<lb/>
his master's degree from Yale in<lb/>
1955, Jackson worked in<lb/>
advertising for a while and was a<lb/>
professor of art at Old Dominion<lb/>
University.<lb/>
His works have been shown in<lb/>
regional and national shows over<lb/>
the country and he has had<lb/>
one-man shows in Virginia<lb/>
gallc:es and museums Among<lb/>
his private collectors are Mrs.<lb/>
Lyndon B. Johnson and Mrs.<lb/>
Dean Rusk.<lb/>
Some of the studies are<lb/>
particularly exciting and unusual<lb/>
because of their detail and<lb/>
minute structure. Others are<lb/>
colorful and very delicately<lb/>
defined, or very bold in black<lb/>
and white.<lb/>
Along with Jackson's work is<lb/>
the work of Fay Zetlin, also a<lb/>
professor at Old Dominion<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Having studied under Charles<lb/>
Sibley, a professor of art at Old<lb/>
Dominion, and other artists, Fay<lb/>
Zetlin has won many<lb/>
outstanding awards, such as the<lb/>
Norfolk City Arts Festival, Best<lb/>
in Oils, 1963; the Tidewater<lb/>
Annuals '58, '59, '60, '63; and<lb/>
the Mint Museum Purchase<lb/>
Award, '67. Her works have also<lb/>
been exhibited extensively in<lb/>
such galleries as the American<lb/>
Drawing Annual, Norfolk<lb/>
Museum; the Virginia Museum<lb/>
A i t m o b i I e; and the<lb/>
VVeatherspoon Annual, Art on<lb/>
Paper, North Carolina. Some of<lb/>
her private collections are found<lb/>
THIS PAiNTiNG' ENTITLED "Epilogue was created<lb/>
by Fay Zetlin and is presented in the Art Exhibit.<lb/>
at Brown University and Mint<lb/>
Museum of Art at Charlotte.<lb/>
Anthony Cacalano, professor<lb/>
of art at East Carolina, said he<lb/>
thought it would be significant<lb/>
to note that A.B Jackson was<lb/>
probably one of the first black<lb/>
artists, if not the first black<lb/>
artist, displayed at East Carolina.<lb/>
He said that Jackson thought of<lb/>
himself as a draftsman instead of<lb/>
an artist.<lb/>
About Miss Zetlin, Cacalano<lb/>
said she could be consirleied a<lb/>
20th Century religious painter.<lb/>
He commented that she once<lb/>
made a reference to the circle in<lb/>
her works as symbolizing God -<lb/>
a continuum with no beginning<lb/>
or end.<lb/>
A.B. Jackson and Fay Zetlin<lb/>
have given the campus a very<lb/>
stimulating exhibit. The exhibit<lb/>
ends Sept. 30.<lb/>
The reel scene<lb/>
Hollywood revolution<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
"THREE TONDO ONE of the drawings exhibited in<lb/>
Jackson.<lb/>
Rawl, is the work of A.B.<lb/>
StactiuHi<lb/>
Drive-In<lb/>
Qeaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
1 Hr Cleamng 3 Hr Shirt Service<lb/>
Contribute to<lb/>
THE REBEL MAGAZINE<lb/>
(student literary magazine)<lb/>
By A. W. Olson<lb/>
Omar Sharif olayed Che. Jack<lb/>
Palance played Fidel. Other<lb/>
people played other parts. This<lb/>
film biography is presented as a<lb/>
pseudo documentary. In<lb/>
Technicolor.<lb/>
Fidel and Che and many<lb/>
warriors invaded Cuba. Fidel's<lb/>
troops wore green khaki<lb/>
uniforms. Neatly pressed. For<lb/>
two years. Batista's troops wore<lb/>
tan khaki uniforms. Fidel's<lb/>
RICKS SERVICE CENTER<lb/>
Cor ftli &amp; Evor? Sts. - Diol PL I 4342<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
tioops fought Batista's troops in<lb/>
the hills and towns of Cuba. For<lb/>
two years. Many people, civilian<lb/>
and military, were murdered.<lb/>
Fidel's band of "cornmymsts"<lb/>
won. Hemingway and Batista<lb/>
left Cuba The island was<lb/>
liberated. Hooray. Fidel talked<lb/>
on the tube. For hours.<lb/>
Che wanted some more<lb/>
action. The bay had pigs.<lb/>
Kennedy talked on the tube.<lb/>
The pigs left the island. Hooray.<lb/>
Che wanted to conquer South<lb/>
America. He went to Bolivia. He<lb/>
called the Bolivians 'stupid He<lb/>
couldn't get any support for his<lb/>
cause. The CIA trained people to<lb/>
go and hurt Che. They did. Che<lb/>
died. Too bad.<lb/>
"Che" is a very poor film.<lb/>
C. Heber Forbes<lb/>
'?r-<lb/>
?<lb/>
Exclusive Apparel for Women<lb/>
Hollywood<lb/>
Vassarette<lb/>
Vanity Fair Lingerie<lb/>
phone PI-23468<lb/>
k<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0009"/><lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 25, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 9<lb/>
created<lb/>
, Cacalano<lb/>
nsideied a<lb/>
is painter.<lb/>
she once<lb/>
ie circle in<lb/>
ing God<lb/>
beginning<lb/>
:ay Zetlin<lb/>
us a very<lb/>
ie exhibit<lb/>
ion<lb/>
troops m<lb/>
2uba. For<lb/>
f civilian<lb/>
nurdered.<lb/>
mymsts"<lb/>
I Batista<lb/>
and was<lb/>
el talked<lb/>
i e more<lb/>
iad pigs,<lb/>
he tube.<lb/>
Hooiay.<lb/>
sr South<lb/>
)livia. He<lb/>
jpid He<lb/>
t for his<lb/>
people to<lb/>
did. Che<lb/>
film.<lb/>
Pirate defenders<lb/>
enjoy challenge<lb/>
Parents night foe<lb/>
is Louisana Tech<lb/>
You might think that East<lb/>
Carolina's defense shudders at<lb/>
the thought of playing Louisiana<lb/>
Tech and Terry Bradshaw<lb/>
Saturday night in their home<lb/>
opener but that's not the case at<lb/>
all.<lb/>
"Actually our defensive team<lb/>
is looking forward to the<lb/>
challenge says Bob Gantt,<lb/>
defensive chief of the Pirates.<lb/>
"It's like getting a shot at the<lb/>
heavyweight championship if<lb/>
you arc a boxer. It's the kind of<lb/>
opportunity all good athletes<lb/>
look for and I feel they will do a<lb/>
good job<lb/>
The Pirate defenders, many<lb/>
of them veterans from last year,<lb/>
played a good game last week<lb/>
against East Tennessee, but the<lb/>
competition will be stiffer this<lb/>
time.<lb/>
"I've been quiet pleased with<lb/>
the progress of the defensive<lb/>
interior said Coach Henry<lb/>
Vansant after Wednesday's<lb/>
practice. "The front five played<lb/>
well against East Tennessee and<lb/>
on five occasions got to their<lb/>
passer<lb/>
Drawing praise from Vansant<lb/>
were two seniors, George<lb/>
Wheeler and Jamie Louis and<lb/>
juniors Walter Adams and Jim<lb/>
Gudger.<lb/>
Capt. Roger Bost, who plays<lb/>
end on the five-man front, twice<lb/>
got to the East Tennessee passer.<lb/>
"When people think of pass<lb/>
defense they usually think of it<lb/>
only in terms of the secondary<lb/>
says Gantt, "but a good pass<lb/>
defense has to involve the entire<lb/>
defensive team.<lb/>
"The responsibility just<lb/>
doesn't belong to the backs.<lb/>
Everybody is in on it. Although<lb/>
Bradshaw is a great passer, he<lb/>
isn't the only important factor<lb/>
in their passing game. He has<lb/>
three outstanding receivers and<lb/>
the challenge of the halfbacks is<lb/>
to cover the receivers.<lb/>
"But the linemen are looking<lb/>
forward to seeing if they can get<lb/>
to Bradshaw. That's certainly a<lb/>
prime consideration on pass<lb/>
defense<lb/>
A study of last year's game<lb/>
films shows that the defense<lb/>
actually played a good game for<lb/>
a half.<lb/>
"If we are able to get to the<lb/>
passer with a good rush it will<lb/>
make receiver coverage Gantt<lb/>
explained of the hopes that the<lb/>
front line can harass Bradshaw<lb/>
consistently.<lb/>
"We realize they will be<lb/>
better at giving protection to<lb/>
Ssisfi<lb/>
III<lb/>
PIRATE DEFENSIVE SPECIALIST WALTER ADAMS<lb/>
G?b Thinqs<lb/>
floors U ftfl ? 1 Pm C?ffi!Ui jgjjjjjgf.<lb/>
Join The ftQ Crowd<lb/>
Pizza lun<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Paas)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 756-9991<lb/>
their passer than East Tennessee<lb/>
was because that is their<lb/>
speciality and they work on it<lb/>
constantly. But we were pleased<lb/>
with our pass defense at East<lb/>
Tennessee. We feel like with a<lb/>
good constant effort we can get<lb/>
to this guy some<lb/>
The Pirate coach said one<lb/>
thing he has been steadily telling<lb/>
the defenders that they must<lb/>
expect to have Bradshaw<lb/>
connect and the defense in turn<lb/>
must do something to offset<lb/>
these completions.<lb/>
"We have to set him back<lb/>
with some losses to counteract<lb/>
his strikes Gantt said. "It will<lb/>
be absolutely necessary to<lb/>
intercept some. Actually, the<lb/>
only way to stop a pass offense<lb/>
is on takeovers and throwing<lb/>
him for a loss. One thing for<lb/>
certain, you can't count on him<lb/>
missing three straight on you.<lb/>
You have to hope to intercept<lb/>
him or throw him for a loss<lb/>
Since this is Louisiana Tech's<lb/>
opening game, the Pirates<lb/>
haven't had a chance to scout<lb/>
them and Gantt figures they<lb/>
may have added a few wrinkles.<lb/>
"They might have come up<lb/>
with a good running game since<lb/>
last year to go with Bradshaw's<lb/>
passing Bantt says. "We have<lb/>
to be ready for that, too<lb/>
East Carolina's Pirates open<lb/>
their home football season<lb/>
Saturday night in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium at 8 p.m.<lb/>
It will be Parents Night.<lb/>
The foe will be Louisiana<lb/>
State University, a team which<lb/>
features the nations's passing<lb/>
and total offense leader last<lb/>
season. Terry Bradshaw, a senior<lb/>
who figures to the the No. 1 pro<lb/>
draft choice in the winter,<lb/>
completed 176 passes of 339<lb/>
attempts for 2.890 yards and 22<lb/>
touchdowns. Besides earning for<lb/>
himself the 1969 national<lb/>
championships in passing and<lb/>
ii ii<lb/>
GEORGE WHEELER<lb/>
one of Big Four<lb/>
total offense, he helped his team<lb/>
to the same honors.<lb/>
To complement the<lb/>
golden-armed Bradshaw, the<lb/>
Bulldogs will bring along<lb/>
Tommy Spinks, a high school<lb/>
teammate of the Tech passer,<lb/>
who owns the Gulf States<lb/>
Conference all-time record for<lb/>
receptions.<lb/>
Bradshaw paced the Bulldogs<lb/>
to a 9-2 record last season,<lb/>
including a 35 7 win over East<lb/>
Carolina and victory in the<lb/>
Grantland Rice Bowl, 33-13 over<lb/>
favored Akron.<lb/>
"Bradshaw is an outstanding<lb/>
passer says Coach Clarence<lb/>
Stasavich of the Pirates. "He's<lb/>
probably the best in the<lb/>
country, from what we hear<lb/>
Although the Bulldogs aren't<lb/>
noted for their running game,<lb/>
they have some fine backs to<lb/>
keep the defense honest.<lb/>
Fullback Buster Herren is<lb/>
considered all-conference<lb/>
material this year as are split end<lb/>
Spinks, who has cuaght 136<lb/>
passes during his career for<lb/>
1,968 yards and tight end Larry<lb/>
Brewer, who has 44 receptions<lb/>
for 434 yards.<lb/>
All told, there are 32<lb/>
lettermen returning on the<lb/>
Louisiana Tech roster and 11 of<lb/>
them were starters last season.<lb/>
ear<lb/>
eca<lb/>
teia<lb/>
Bast Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
 Class Rina .<lb/>
Kohl ni'? ili-iflii feature- larr,<lb/>
li;iml-l;i J date :?i??l dearer<lb/>
Idler New addition- In the<lb/>
traditional il-ij;ii inehuh 11? -<lb/>
V . "Mali- seal In-low the I ?<lb/>
Oiiam N ideri on lln lonnlain<lb/>
-ide ami lln uimla of ii-tin<lb/>
aide in lour -I I.  In addition<lb/>
In a -iiimtIi miniature there are<lb/>
three elej?nl dinner riii:?.<lb/>
?ui Ulino la-hinn 11 i ti 111 ? ?.? I?1 -<lb/>
thai are :il home in imi -oeial<lb/>
I'roinl -Mnliol of I . ( Hall our<lb/>
Jewelr'? line-lrafl-llieli.<lb/>
wlm-e privilege it list lieen to<lb/>
-ere our -ehool for the pa-l<lb/>
fifteen ear .<lb/>
Goailable to Qualifyec)<lb/>
louk ytuc)ent<lb/>
September 22-26 .<lb/>
9 to 12 and 1 to 4<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0010"/><lb/>
???? '<lb/>
Page 10, F on ntainhead, Ihursday, Sept. 25, 1969<lb/>
An air raid<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
football team will open its 1969<lb/>
home season Saturday night<lb/>
against Terry Bradshaw, oops,<lb/>
Louisiana Tech.<lb/>
Well, when football fans hear<lb/>
the name Louisiana Tech,<lb/>
All-America quarterback Terry<lb/>
Bradshaw is usually the first<lb/>
thing they think of. Or maybe<lb/>
they think of the Blond Bomber,<lb/>
The Riflemean, or Terrific Terry<lb/>
because he is all the same<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Bradshaw has been called the<lb/>
nation's number one<lb/>
quarterback by his coaches at<lb/>
Louisiana Tech and not because<lb/>
they are prejudice but because<lb/>
he is the nation's number 1<lb/>
quarterback according to several<lb/>
pro scouts, including Gil Brandt,<lb/>
the chief talent scout for the<lb/>
Dallas Cowboys of the National<lb/>
Football League.<lb/>
First win?<lb/>
The Pirates will be out<lb/>
looking for their first win of the<lb/>
young season after dropping the<lb/>
opener last weekend to East<lb/>
Tennessee. Louisiana Tech will<lb/>
also be looking for their first<lb/>
victory, this being their opening<lb/>
game.<lb/>
And if Bradshaw performs<lb/>
like he finished the 1968 season<lb/>
the Pirates will have their hands<lb/>
full. Some people call him a big<lb/>
man, not because he stands 6-2<lb/>
and weighs 215, but because his<lb/>
records prove he is the big man<lb/>
in Louisiana Tech's offense.<lb/>
Perhaps a game that aii Tech<lb/>
fans will remember happened in<lb/>
Murfreesboro, Tenn. against the<lb/>
University of Akron in the<lb/>
Grantland Rice Bowl on a cold,<lb/>
cold day last December. Despite<lb/>
sub-freezing temperatures,<lb/>
whirling snow and 25-mile an<lb/>
hour winds, Bradshaw looked<lb/>
like a pro, just like he did all last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"Mr. Everything"<lb/>
He led his Bulldogs tc a 33-13<lb/>
vicotry over Akron with 19<lb/>
completions in 33 tries for 261<lb/>
yards and two touchdowns.<lb/>
When he couldn't find a receiver,<lb/>
"Mr. Everything" for Louisiana<lb/>
Tech transformed himself into<lb/>
O.J. Simpson and ran and ran<lb/>
and ran. He scored two<lb/>
touchdowns himself.<lb/>
Even that performance was<lb/>
not his best of the season. He<lb/>
was like that game if not better.<lb/>
The last regular season game<lb/>
against New Mexico State (when<lb/>
ihe Bulldogs came up with a<lb/>
42-24 victory), he threw for 445<lb/>
yards, four touchdowns and led<lb/>
the Bulldogs to 588 yards total<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
Set records<lb/>
Playing in this fashion, he set<lb/>
Louisiana Tech football records<lb/>
at a furious pace, not to mention<lb/>
that he and his teammates set 25<lb/>
Gulf States Conference records<lb/>
during the season.<lb/>
This probably doesn't impress<lb/>
anyone who is not a Gulf States<lb/>
Conference follower, but from a<lb/>
national wipvAnnint ho rvrocontH<lb/>
I !?!?? I- .<lb/>
H. L. HODGES &amp; CO Inc.<lb/>
Student Sports Headquarters<lb/>
Dial PL 2-4156<lb/>
'effc TyCer<lb/>
3uifdinQ ft<lb/>
rjshion Picture<lb/>
?<lb/>
li<lb/>
7hz Greof<lb/>
Boofery Movernenff<lb/>
doos foKe on ou<lb/>
necjj lootc! rhcC<lb/>
Sfmpes Qod<lb/>
buckles.<lb/>
Sizes 5'A<lb/>
ro o.<lb/>
Q1K.N MON. THURS. Fpt. Tic 9M<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
Louisiana Tech with the national<lb/>
championship in both total<lb/>
offense and passing with 176<lb/>
completions in 339 attempts for<lb/>
2,980 yards and 22 touchdowns.<lb/>
With his performance, the<lb/>
American Football Coaches<lb/>
Association duly rewarded him<lb/>
by naming him first team<lb/>
All-America. He was also<lb/>
honored several times by the<lb/>
Gulf States Conference.<lb/>
Gets awards<lb/>
He was named the<lb/>
Outstanding Back in the league,<lb/>
he was selected the Most<lb/>
Valuable Player by his<lb/>
teammates last fall and was<lb/>
recently named the Conference's<lb/>
Athlete of the Year.<lb/>
Even that performance was<lb/>
not his best of the season. He<lb/>
was like that game after game, if<lb/>
not better.<lb/>
He set 15 individual records<lb/>
at Louisiana Tech last year.<lb/>
LOUISIANA TECH'S TERRY BRADSHAW<lb/>
blonde bomber<lb/>
is on the way<lb/>
A game-by-game record of his<lb/>
performances last season would<lb/>
sound like a fairy tale but his<lb/>
performances were true, very<lb/>
true. In the opener against<lb/>
Mississippi State he completed<lb/>
12 of 30 passes, leading his team<lb/>
to a 20-13 come-from-behind<lb/>
win. He threw one touchdown<lb/>
UOJ Ul ICi<lb/>
u-i nm<lb/>
I ICJVJ ?-KJ <lb/>
yaruS passing.<lb/>
Against the Pirates last fall he<lb/>
played only half the game but<lb/>
still completed eight of 15 passes<lb/>
for 105 yards. Then, against<lb/>
McNeese State he connected on<lb/>
20 of 38 aerials for 319 yards<lb/>
and three touchdowns, but the<lb/>
Bulldogs lost 27-20.<lb/>
At Southwestern Louisiana<lb/>
the Bulldogs lost 28 24 but<lb/>
Bradshaw was unbelievable. He<lb/>
put the ball in the air 47 times<lb/>
and his teammates pulled in 28<lb/>
of those for 432 yards and three<lb/>
touchdown passes. He also<lb/>
rushed for 38 yards for a total<lb/>
offense game of 470 yards.<lb/>
Statistics fail to tell the<lb/>
complete story of Bradshaw's<lb/>
performance against<lb/>
Northwestern Louisiana. He<lb/>
passed for 258 yards on 13<lb/>
completions in 29 attempts for<lb/>
two touchdown passes and<lb/>
scored three times himself as the<lb/>
Bulldogs edged out a 42-39<lb/>
victory in the final seconds.<lb/>
At Southern Mississippi last<lb/>
season, Tech won 27 20 as he<lb/>
passed for 248 yards on 15<lb/>
completions in 33 attempts,<lb/>
including a 70 yard bomb to<lb/>
flanker Ken Liberto. He played<lb/>
on three quarters against<lb/>
Southeastern Louisiana but<lb/>
completed 21 of 38 passes for<lb/>
three touchdowns and 328 yards<lb/>
as Tech chalked up a 35 7 win.<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
208 E. 5th St.<lb/>
One Block From Campus<lb/>
Get Away Prom The Ordinary<lb/>
Enjoy Greenville's Finest Foods<lb/>
in our quiet intimate atmosphere<lb/>
JHelcome Students<lb/>
Against Lamat Tech, he was<lb/>
equally outstanding playing only<lb/>
one half yet he completed 19 ot<lb/>
30 passes for 339 yards and<lb/>
three touchdown passes as the<lb/>
Bulldogs eased to a 34 7 win.<lb/>
Next, Tech played the<lb/>
toughest defense in the Gulf<lb/>
States Conference, facing<lb/>
Northeast Louisiana on the road<lb/>
But, Bradshaw performed in his<lb/>
familiar s u p e r hero ro I e<lb/>
completing 16 of 30 passes foi<lb/>
200 yards and one touchdc n<lb/>
He adjusted his offense by<lb/>
rushing foi 155 yards and scored<lb/>
one time himself as Tech scored<lb/>
a 25 10 victory.<lb/>
His career record sounds<lb/>
unbelievable' but Tech fans can<lb/>
tell you that fiction it's not. In<lb/>
703 plays, he has completed 228<lb/>
passes in 5 59 tries foi a<lb/>
percentage of 51.2. His aerials<lb/>
have coveted 4,275 yards and<lb/>
have accounted for 25<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
Just ask the pro scouts what<lb/>
they think about him Saturday<lb/>
night. Ficklen Stadium will be<lb/>
full of them.<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 Dtelirfcia Flavon<lb/>
of Ice Cream<lb/>
Try a Delicious Banaaa<lb/>
Split or Sundae<lb/>
264 By-Pass, GreenriBe<lb/>
j5Syr '? ?- ?- v! A ?' AwMJBsB<lb/>
i j r, ?? r ? j  .jf'r 4<lb/>
 i -J ??<lb/>
Sf<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
 W '<lb/>
r -<lb/>
dii ib not<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mela<lb/>
served the Democrats<lb/>
Congressional intern<lb/>
summers and as a stc<lb/>
for Orville Freeman,<lb/>
for the Democratic<lb/>
Committee and w<lb/>
chairman of a (<lb/>
precinct at the age of<lb/>
It's about time<lb/>
admitted that all is noi<lb/>
the Democratic Party<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
State party chairman<lb/>
Johnson, in a recent<lb/>
the Mecklenburg<lb/>
Democratic Men's Clul<lb/>
party has ' 'effect!<lb/>
systematically shut ou<lb/>
of dissent<lb/>
Johnson is right,<lb/>
organization serves th<lb/>
of the governor (whe<lb/>
some 70 years,<lb/>
Democrat). Whene<lb/>
faction of the party cc<lb/>
organization, every ot<lb/>
is cut out of the action<lb/>
Governor Bob Si<lb/>
planned to name<lb/>
committe to study thi<lb/>
of his party in North C<lb/>
will have the ma<lb/>
Worse than traitor<lb/>
are the men who <lb/>
loyalty to the Flag,<lb/>
fatten on the misfortu<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Congressional C<lb/>
Re<lb/>
Our modern day sup<lb/>
has finally found what<lb/>
is his ideal h,<lb/>
love-it-or-leave-it coi<lb/>
provides a situation in i<lb/>
anti-dissenter can at<lb/>
satisfied, while in the n<lb/>
denying othe<lb/>
constitutional rights h<lb/>
loudly proclaimed.<lb/>
As an elitist wc<lb/>
super-patriot seeks to p<lb/>
the status quo for<lb/>
benefit. He receives<lb/>
amount of the profits <lb/>
of economic exploitatk<lb/>
jobs and opportunities<lb/>
racist system, and moi<lb/>
for his country f<lb/>
sometimes imper<lb/>
worldwide maneuvers.<lb/>
Although the super<lb/>
satisfied from h<lb/>
viewpoint, he must re<lb/>
many of the systems frc<lb/>
his profits and satisfad<lb/>
c ontrad ict the v<lb/>
Philosophy of this coun<lb/>
The super patriot ha;<lb/>
so satisfied as the syste<lb/>
to fill his own ma<lb/>
needs that he blocks all<lb/>
of constructive criticism<lb/>
A feeling of social su<lb/>
arises from the fact<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0011"/><lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 25, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 11<lb/>
he . as<lb/>
?:?:?:<lb/>
?sv<lb/>
Images on a paper mirror<lb/>
By SONNY McLAWHORN<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mclawhorn has<lb/>
served the Democratic Party as a<lb/>
Congressional intern for two<lb/>
summers and as a staff member<lb/>
for Orville Freeman. He worked<lb/>
for the Democratic National<lb/>
Committee and was elected<lb/>
chairman of a Greenville<lb/>
precinct at the age of 20.<lb/>
It's about time somebody<lb/>
admitted that all is not well with<lb/>
the Democratic Party in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
State party chairman James V.<lb/>
Johnson, in a recent speech to<lb/>
the Mecklenburg County<lb/>
Democratic Men's Club, said the<lb/>
party has "effectively and<lb/>
systematically shut out the voice<lb/>
of dissent<lb/>
Johnson is right. The state<lb/>
organization serves the pleasure<lb/>
of the governor (who has, for<lb/>
some 70 years, been a<lb/>
Democrat). Whenever one<lb/>
faction of the party controls the<lb/>
organization, every other group<lb/>
is cut out of the action.<lb/>
Governor Bob Scott has<lb/>
planned to name a special<lb/>
committe to study the ailments<lb/>
of his party in North Carolina. It<lb/>
will have the mandate to<lb/>
recommend change in the party<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
"Some of us have outlived our<lb/>
usefulness Johnson declared.<lb/>
Some of them have, indeed, but<lb/>
not those who recognize the<lb/>
need for a more energetic<lb/>
Democratic Party.<lb/>
Most of the precincts and<lb/>
counties in this state are<lb/>
controlled by those who have<lb/>
little interest in a more viable<lb/>
party structure. They are<lb/>
content to maintain their own<lb/>
fortress the local party - as it<lb/>
is.<lb/>
The men who are useless to this<lb/>
party gained their prestigious<lb/>
positions because there is apathy<lb/>
among the rank and-file.<lb/>
The Democratic Party in this<lb/>
state is filled with intelligent,<lb/>
forward-looking people. They<lb/>
understand the candidates and<lb/>
the issues state, national and<lb/>
international. But they don't<lb/>
understand that they can<lb/>
drastically alter the party merely<lb/>
by showing up at the precinct<lb/>
meeting at the fire station down<lb/>
the block. Maybe the new<lb/>
committee will point this out.<lb/>
No one else has.<lb/>
A film festival at East<lb/>
Carolina University? With films<lb/>
done by ECU students? It will<lb/>
never happen.<lb/>
At least, a year ago it would<lb/>
never have happened. But now it<lb/>
is not only possible, but in the<lb/>
planning stages. The Fine Arts<lb/>
Committee is making it possible,<lb/>
and if the money can be<lb/>
obtained, there will be a film<lb/>
festival during spring quarter this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The Fine Arts Committee is a<lb/>
group of students with fine arts<lb/>
majors who got together last<lb/>
year to try to improve the<lb/>
cultural level of East Carolina.<lb/>
Of course the students have the<lb/>
popular films, the concerts, the<lb/>
lecture series and the artists<lb/>
series, but the student is not<lb/>
really involved in any of these<lb/>
events.<lb/>
The committee represents<lb/>
students from the drama, music,<lb/>
and art departments. The art<lb/>
students make up the bulk of<lb/>
the membership. Because of this,<lb/>
most of the programs are<lb/>
oriented toward art. Besides, the<lb/>
music and drama departments<lb/>
Up against the wa<lb/>
v.v<lb/>
t ? ? ?<lb/>
m<lb/>
XV<lb/>
Worse than traitors in arms<lb/>
are the men who pretending<lb/>
loyalty to the Flag, feast and<lb/>
fatten on the misfortunes of the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Congressional Committee<lb/>
Report, 1863<lb/>
Our modern day super-patriot<lb/>
has finally found what he thinks<lb/>
is his ideal habitat,<lb/>
love it or-leave-it country. It<lb/>
provides a situation in which the<lb/>
anti-dissenter can at last be<lb/>
satisfied, while in the mean time<lb/>
denying others the<lb/>
constitutional rights he has so<lb/>
loudly proclaimed.<lb/>
As an elitist would, the<lb/>
super-patriot seeks to perpetuate<lb/>
the status quo for his own<lb/>
benefit. He receives a larger<lb/>
amount of the profits as a result<lb/>
of economic exploitation, better<lb/>
jobs and opportunities from a<lb/>
racist system, and more profits<lb/>
for his country from its<lb/>
sometimes imperialistic<lb/>
worldwide maneuvers.<lb/>
Although the super patriot is<lb/>
satisfied from his own<lb/>
viewpoint, he must realize that<lb/>
many of the systems from which<lb/>
his profits and satisfaction flow<lb/>
c ontradict the written<lb/>
Philosophy of this country.<lb/>
The super patriot has become<lb/>
so satisfied as the system works<lb/>
to fill his own materialistic<lb/>
needs that he blocks all attempts<lb/>
of constructive criticism.<lb/>
A feeling of social superiority<lb/>
arises from the fact that the<lb/>
By BEN CURRENCE<lb/>
United States is better,<lb/>
comparatively speaking, than<lb/>
many other countries at the<lb/>
present. However, as the<lb/>
super patriot will agree, this does<lb/>
not mean that the United States<lb/>
has reached a Utopian state.<lb/>
History tells us that despite<lb/>
those who were satisfied during<lb/>
the American Revolution, there<lb/>
were those who strove to make<lb/>
this country a better place in<lb/>
which to live.<lb/>
Super patriot refuses to<lb/>
believe that there are now those<lb/>
who love their country enough<lb/>
to try to change it for the better.<lb/>
To him, anyone striving for a<lb/>
change cannot love his country,<lb/>
but must be either an anarchist,<lb/>
a communist, or just plain<lb/>
mixed-up.<lb/>
It must be funny to the<lb/>
demonstrators of the Civil<lb/>
Rights era, the Freedom Riders,<lb/>
the Grant Park "delegation" to<lb/>
the Democratic National<lb/>
Convention, free speech<lb/>
advocates, etc. when they hear<lb/>
"Stand up for America<lb/>
What more could one do,<lb/>
when he loves a country enough<lb/>
to die for it right on Main<lb/>
Street?<lb/>
By WAYNE EADS<lb/>
both have their own programs<lb/>
for public consumption.<lb/>
The FAC envisions a very<lb/>
ambit'ous program for the<lb/>
coming year. Whether the entire<lb/>
program actually materializes<lb/>
will depend on the amount of<lb/>
money that the committee can<lb/>
get, both from the SGA, who<lb/>
recognizes them as a campus<lb/>
group, and from the members.<lb/>
Another factor involved is the<lb/>
number of members the<lb/>
committee has. Many freshmen<lb/>
members attended the first<lb/>
meeting, but many of the older<lb/>
members of the art department<lb/>
have not shown an interest in<lb/>
the committee. And their<lb/>
non-involvement is justified, for<lb/>
the committee last year did<lb/>
nothing that they could see and<lb/>
get interested in. But this year it<lb/>
is different.<lb/>
A chalk-in between Rawl and<lb/>
Wright will serve next week to<lb/>
draw attention to the group, and<lb/>
may help in the membership<lb/>
drive.<lb/>
The program for this year<lb/>
includes an art show and sell, an<lb/>
art contest with mone prizes, a<lb/>
festival to revive old films, and<lb/>
finally, their most laudatory<lb/>
idea, a fiim festival.<lb/>
The film festival is to be the<lb/>
event that should get the most<lb/>
attention from the students.<lb/>
Like the art show, it will be<lb/>
open to anyone, including<lb/>
persons not in the fine arts<lb/>
departments. For those who<lb/>
make and enter a film, there will<lb/>
be the possibility of winning a<lb/>
substantial first or second prize.<lb/>
The showing of the entries will<lb/>
be open to the public also, and<lb/>
should draw attention from the<lb/>
entire state. Students will travel<lb/>
from all over the state to see the<lb/>
films, just as they did for the<lb/>
Louisberg Film Festival last<lb/>
week and again this week.<lb/>
The Fine Arts Committee<lb/>
promises to bring to East<lb/>
Carolina some of the culture<lb/>
that is conspicuously lacking,<lb/>
and has been for many years. If<lb/>
this institution expects to<lb/>
become a university in fact as<lb/>
well as in name, it must pay<lb/>
more attention to the cultural<lb/>
aspect of the community. ECU<lb/>
is expected to be a cultural<lb/>
leader, and support for the Fine<lb/>
Arts Committee will help<lb/>
accomplish this goal.<lb/>
I have often written about<lb/>
the role of the university and the<lb/>
role of the student in the<lb/>
university system. My comments<lb/>
have been aimed at getting the<lb/>
"common" student involved in<lb/>
some small way in the life of the<lb/>
university. Any contribution,<lb/>
even one so minute as reyular<lb/>
class attendance or good grades,<lb/>
will suffice. But for those<lb/>
students who are not satisfied<lb/>
with the minimum performance,<lb/>
there will always be ways of<lb/>
expending their extra energy.<lb/>
The FAC is an excellent way of<lb/>
aiding the academic community<lb/>
and takes very little time.<lb/>
Students who are interested in<lb/>
joining or in getting more<lb/>
information about the<lb/>
committee should attend the<lb/>
meetings on Mondays at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in room 302, Rawl<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Folk music group to meet<lb/>
The American Folk Music<lb/>
Club will meet at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday in room 212, University<lb/>
Union for an organizational<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
"Persons disturbed by the<lb/>
exaggerated degree of<lb/>
geocultural in the area in which<lb/>
they are now residing and wish<lb/>
to rid this most odious cesspool<lb/>
of musical deprivation of its<lb/>
cacaphonous discords by<lb/>
contributing the soothing sounds<lb/>
of folk music are cordially<lb/>
invited to attend said organizer<lb/>
Woody Thurman.<lb/>
All i nterested persons are<lb/>
invited to bring their<lb/>
instruments (whatever they may<lb/>
be) for a session after the<lb/>
business is over.<lb/>
AVi<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0012"/><lb/>
Draft reduction ?<lb/>
a whitewash job?<lb/>
President Nixon moved in the right direction last<lb/>
week by reducing draft calls and planning a shift toward<lb/>
a fairer selection system that will reduce the period of<lb/>
draft eligibility for most young men. The present day<lb/>
draft has become a blight on the lives of American<lb/>
young people and revision of the system is essential.<lb/>
The Democratic Congressional leaders replied to<lb/>
Nixon's proposal with a callous reply that<lb/>
business-as-usual probably will keep them from getting<lb/>
to long-term draft reform this session.<lb/>
Nixon's actions, welcome as they are, do not get to<lb/>
the heart of the matter. For one thing, canceling the<lb/>
planned call for 50,000 men in November and<lb/>
December will mean that only5,600 men fewer than last<lb/>
year will have been drafted in 1969. Without the<lb/>
announced cancellations, therefore, the Nixon<lb/>
Administration would have drafted in its first year of<lb/>
waging the war 44,000 men more than the Johnson<lb/>
Administration in its last.<lb/>
Thus, we feel that this is another attempt by the<lb/>
Nixon administration to pull the wool over the eyes of<lb/>
the American populace.<lb/>
This is becoming a pattern in the Nixon<lb/>
Administration's life. In dealing with the war, the cities,<lb/>
the races, or the inflation, Nixon is making small<lb/>
concessions to deal with vast problems, and the more<lb/>
concessions he makes the more he is asked to make.<lb/>
His troop withdrawals, far from satisfying the<lb/>
opposition, have merely raised the cries of the families<lb/>
whose men are left on the battlefield.<lb/>
And now the opposition is growing firmer in its<lb/>
demands. Millions of college students throughout the<lb/>
United States have been planning a massive peaceful<lb/>
demonstration in their college towns on Oct. 15, calling<lb/>
for an immediate end to the war in Vietnam.<lb/>
Leaders of the demonstration say that Nixon's<lb/>
announcement does not alter their plans. One of the<lb/>
students called Nixon's plans a "cynical and calculated<lb/>
attempt to fool the public<lb/>
And now sources close to the President say that<lb/>
Nixon will make no further concessions until the enemy<lb/>
shows some "favorable response<lb/>
So, the question is and will remain, whether Nixon<lb/>
wants primarily to end the war; or whether he insists on<lb/>
pursuing it at heartbreaking cost in dubious hope of<lb/>
achieving some political end not yet possible.<lb/>
The President wants to reduce the cost of the war,<lb/>
cut the casualties and the draft and reduce the<lb/>
opposition so that he can gain more time to fight and<lb/>
negotiate. His opposition challenges his premise and<lb/>
wants not limited casualties or limited draft calls but no<lb/>
casualties and no draft calland above all, no war.<lb/>
&amp;?<lb/>
Student forum<lb/>
<lb/>
Paul F. (Chip) Callaway<lb/>
Editor-in Chief<lb/>
Phyllis Bridgeman .Managing Editor<lb/>
Robert ThonenBusiness Manager<lb/>
David DaltonAssociate Editor<lb/>
Bob McDowell Special Projects<lb/>
Keith ParrishLayout Editor<lb/>
Robert TallonProduction Manager<lb/>
Jim Teal Ad Manager<lb/>
Gail BurtonNews Editor<lb/>
Sonny LeaSports Editor<lb/>
Elaine Harbin Secretary<lb/>
Ira L. BakerAdvisor<lb/>
Wyatt BrownConsultant<lb/>
Staff<lb/>
Wayne Eads, Ginger McDearmon, Sharon Schaudies,<lb/>
Patience Collie, Ken Finch, James Hord, Rhonda Nicoll, Alan Olson,<lb/>
George Burbella, Bruce Parrish, Walter Kerns, Karen Blansfield, Ed Brodie,<lb/>
Sam Beasley, Al Dean, Albert Dulin, Vera Husenovic, Peg Mason, Ed<lb/>
Medbury, Dianne Pedin, Donna Pierce, Frankie Adkins, Harry Bushwit,<lb/>
Bob Gentiel, Ed Greer, Wilma Holland, Mike Jacobson, Gloria Janney,<lb/>
Butch Kornegay, Susie Long.<lb/>
Fountainhead, Box 25I6 ECU Station<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Opinions expressed in this newspaper do not<lb/>
necessarily represent the viewpoint<lb/>
of East Carolina University.<lb/>
r f B<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Closed study, a bug affecting<lb/>
freshman dormitory students,<lb/>
has no cure on file in the<lb/>
infirmary. Nor is it a social<lb/>
guidance problem relieved by a<lb/>
visit to the dormitory counselr<lb/>
and a tranquilizer. To the<lb/>
freshman girl it is an incurrable<lb/>
disease.<lb/>
The only logic to be found<lb/>
concerning the cause of the<lb/>
disease supports the general<lb/>
thought hat the average<lb/>
freshman dormitory students is<lb/>
an immature, flighty,<lb/>
non-studious, nieve sex-pot. And<lb/>
for some miraculous reason she<lb/>
is cured of all these ills in 12<lb/>
weeks. Assuming that this is<lb/>
true sincf those who believe so<lb/>
are at least 20 years older and<lb/>
two degrees farther, the<lb/>
argument shall refute the<lb/>
methods of cure.<lb/>
CJosed study is a relaxing time;<lb/>
with doors slamming and<lb/>
windows rattling. It is a very<lb/>
studious time; studying the<lb/>
latest rock music and love letters<lb/>
communally. One learns so<lb/>
many things during closed<lb/>
study; like the Morse code being<lb/>
tapped from wall to wall, and<lb/>
why not to draw to an inside<lb/>
straight. Closed study is so<lb/>
effective; that is why so many<lb/>
girls sleep during closed study<lb/>
and study after closing hours.<lb/>
Besides closed study is so<lb/>
conducive to regular study<lb/>
habits; Monday night the library<lb/>
(no one saw freshmen women at<lb/>
the CU did they?), Tuesday<lb/>
night the movie "Bell, Book, and<lb/>
Candle" (what w is it about any<lb/>
- i i . ii. . .   u . u , I i C<lb/>
Wdyr, vvwuiiesuciy myiu mc vj.o.<lb/>
Army Field Band concert<lb/>
(Lum's sure does have good<lb/>
beer!), Thursday night the Udall<lb/>
lecture (met this really neat guy<lb/>
at the Buccaneer!), Friday night<lb/>
well the Greenville area<lb/>
(these rush parties really swing!).<lb/>
On the overall the closed study<lb/>
system seems somewhat<lb/>
ineffective. Several girls in my<lb/>
dorm have suggested a<lb/>
mandatory and tightly restricted<lb/>
quiet two hours from 7-9 for<lb/>
those who wish to study.<lb/>
Sharon Shaudies<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
I have an "A" average in a<lb/>
certain course taught at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, however if I continue<lb/>
this average for the remainder of<lb/>
the quarter I will receive a grade<lb/>
of "F" with minus seventeen<lb/>
(17) quality points. Sound<lb/>
inconceivable? Welcome to the<lb/>
club!<lb/>
You see, ten minutes having<lb/>
been allotted to walk or ride<lb/>
from Flanagan at eleven fifty to<lb/>
Minges by twelve o'clock and<lb/>
walking that distance in the<lb/>
prescribed time being almost<lb/>
impossible, the only alternative<lb/>
is riding the bus. If one is<lb/>
fortunate and is one of the<lb/>
students swept into the mob<lb/>
that "urgently need a ride back<lb/>
to the mens dormitory and<lb/>
upon entering the bus is still<lb/>
alive and physically able to walk<lb/>
through the valley of the shadow<lb/>
if evil and all of the time fearing<lb/>
death, then he arrives at his class<lb/>
about ten minutes late. After<lb/>
having taken thirty five minutes<lb/>
during class to revive your<lb/>
suffocated and mangled body, it<lb/>
is necessary to leave class five<lb/>
minutes early to get on the<lb/>
killer bus to take you to N.<lb/>
Austin for your next class. Each were poss.ble for me to thank<lb/>
day fifteen of the appropriated each and every one of them<lb/>
fifty minutes of class is spent personally for their ass.stance<lb/>
netting to and from class; but since this is impossible, l.aj<lb/>
approximately one-third of each the representative of the<lb/>
dav. Greenville Fire Department send<lb/>
Due to the amount and you our heartfelt thanks for the<lb/>
length of tardiness Doctor "X" help of your young boys of the<lb/>
counts every third late arrival as University.<lb/>
and also minus two If the Greenville Fire<lb/>
Department can assist y0u i<lb/>
any way, please call on us.<lb/>
Jesse R. Smith<lb/>
Chief Fire Dept.<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
This is a rebuttal to the letter<lb/>
from Allen Rutledge, Buster<lb/>
Ward, William Harrell, and David<lb/>
Whitiey from the Sept. 23 issue<lb/>
one cut<lb/>
points from the final grade.<lb/>
What incentive have I to study?<lb/>
"F" and 17 q.ps?<lb/>
Is the prerequisite for having<lb/>
a class at Minges owning a car or<lb/>
running the one mile dash with<lb/>
five pounds of books and an<lb/>
umbrella in ten minutes when it's<lb/>
raining?<lb/>
Is ECU getting too big for its<lb/>
pants?<lb/>
When votes were cast for the of the Fountainhead in which<lb/>
transit system it was believed they charge your newspaper<lb/>
that the transit system would with having "Marxist bias on<lb/>
surely provide adequate news presentation<lb/>
transportation for students in ye-v begin by stating that<lb/>
need of a way to classes before you a r e a leftist<lb/>
engaging itself toward providing pSe-udo-intellectual elite" who<lb/>
transportation to any private have performed a "coup de grace<lb/>
enterprise such as Pitt Plaa. on ecu's main news media<lb/>
Should the bus schedule be This is completely false. Many of<lb/>
congruent with the class your staffers were on the staff of<lb/>
schedules or should we change the -East Carolinian" for three<lb/>
the class times to fit the bus ancj four years.<lb/>
schedule? Next, they charge that you<lb/>
Is there any possibility in the nave a "Marxist bias on news<lb/>
future for a five hour course presentation This really takes<lb/>
being offered in 'bus riding" so the cake; and it shows a lack of<lb/>
that I can pull up my "F" and knowledge on their part .is to<lb/>
?17 q.ps? However all is not in what a news story is.<lb/>
vain, for perhaps with Briefly, a news story is a<lb/>
continuing schedules like the completely objective account of<lb/>
present ones, if I flunk out of an event deemed by the editors<lb/>
ECU, who knows, maybe I can to be "newsworthy Then-is no<lb/>
drive my own 'V Wealing, room fot "slanting" oi bias in<lb/>
tfwntc rtnn oc<lb/>
But editorials and columns<lb/>
are different. By then very<lb/>
nature they have to be biased,<lb/>
and present a point of iew.<lb/>
Maybe this is wh.it they are<lb/>
referring to, but certainly there<lb/>
is no "Marxist bias" of your<lb/>
editorial staff.<lb/>
As to where they dug up the<lb/>
charge that the newspaper has<lb/>
"proposed revolution as though<lb/>
it were an acceptable goal" is<lb/>
beyond comprehension. This<lb/>
hiryr I e-smashing<lb/>
silver bomb!<lb/>
green and<lb/>
Ford" Duggins<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
I PROTEST! And I hope<lb/>
others will also. If you don't<lb/>
want your Buccaneer portrait to<lb/>
be the same as everyone else's,<lb/>
then protest by letters to the<lb/>
editor or to the SGA or to the<lb/>
Editor of the Buccaneer. Let<lb/>
them know if you want to be<lb/>
yourself in your yearbook. Let<lb/>
them know you don't want to charge only brought about a few<lb/>
search for your own face in a good laughs.<lb/>
mass of blue blazers and round<lb/>
white collars. Let them know if<lb/>
you don't own a round white<lb/>
collar or a white shirt. Let them<lb/>
know you want to do your own<lb/>
thing. Let them know it is your<lb/>
moiey that pays for it. LET<lb/>
THEM KNOW!<lb/>
Charles Griffin<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
I would like to take<lb/>
opportunity to express<lb/>
personal appreciation, as<lb/>
Cheif of the Greenville<lb/>
Department, and<lb/>
Forum policy!<lb/>
In short, their letter shows a<lb/>
complete lack of understanding<lb/>
regarding the purpose and<lb/>
function of a college newspaper.<lb/>
Also, their babblings about<lb/>
"Marxist bias" and "revolution"<lb/>
only succeded in exposing their<lb/>
level of intellectual development<lb/>
James Hord<lb/>
Allen Jones<lb/>
Cliff Guess<lb/>
?osv<lb/>
this<lb/>
my :?<lb/>
Fire.<lb/>
Fire Students and employees of<lb/>
thev'the University are urged tog<lb/>
appreciation of my men of the-i-express their opinions in the<lb/>
department for the valuablexStudent Forum. $<lb/>
assistance your students - Letters should be concise<lb/>
volunteered and rendered during and to the point. ?:<lb/>
the warehouse fire last week. :?: - Letters must not exceed<lb/>
I am sure that there were300 words. ?:?:<lb/>
people who did not recognize - The editors reserve theg<lb/>
the gravity of this fire, therefore ij-right to edit all letters for style<lb/>
we had several hundred errors and length. ?<lb/>
spectators. We, as firemen, saw'j: All letters must be signed<lb/>
the dangers of the numerous jljwith the name of the writer<lb/>
bulk oil tanks, so close by and?uPon the writer's personal<lb/>
knew it could become a gravevrequest, his name will be<lb/>
situation. j-jwitheld. ?:?<lb/>
I am sure these students were Signed articles on this page<lb/>
close enough to draw the same:vreflect the opinions of the;<lb/>
conclusion as we did, but they:ywr'ter and not necessarily those<lb/>
still remained with us I'jjjof Fountainhead or E'ist<lb/>
As the Fire Chief I wish jti&amp;Carolina University. &amp;<lb/>
Vol. I No 6<lb/>
Gre<lb/>
for<lb/>
Act<lb/>
are<lb/>
BILL<lb/>
the Ea<lb/>
lost to<lb/>
<pb facs="00039429_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>