<?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="00039439_0001"/>
I<lb/>
ountainhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Vol. 1 No. 15<lb/>
East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Oct. 30, 1969<lb/>
Board<lb/>
of Trustees<lb/>
invites<lb/>
students<lb/>
 <lb/>
see page 2<lb/>
Diane Spry<lb/>
wins<lb/>
1970<lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
Queen<lb/>
 see page 2<lb/>
Autumn evening<lb/>
From the amphitheater on the far western side of the campus, the sun<lb/>
gets dimmer and the lights in the dorms come on. The weather is<lb/>
cooler. The radiators are finally on. And tomorrow is Halloween.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0002"/><lb/>
?fcc-fe ??-<lb/>
Buccaneer names<lb/>
Spry 1970 Queen<lb/>
EC advances toward ASG<lb/>
legislature ratifies bill<lb/>
Hospital announces plans<lb/>
for renovations in near future<lb/>
LOVELY DIANE SpRY recei.es the title z' "970<lb/>
Buccaneer Queen from Patsy Simmons, las: gear's<lb/>
Quee"<lb/>
Board of Trustees<lb/>
invites student<lb/>
representatives<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
. j<lb/>
Growth demands<lb/>
air transportation<lb/>
bultur vhose  ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
H vard said as gn<lb/>
need r ? I - I<lb/>
Sinfonia leaves with honors<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
: ? in ir<lb/>
r" v Sch<lb/>
ins.<lb/>
Sinfonia,<lb/>
;t).<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
 -?<lb/>
-<lb/>
a I i h - D<lb/>
- ?  the<lb/>
fa<lb/>
<lb/>
this<lb/>
-?in y M'iS&amp;SSi<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0003"/><lb/>
Thursday, October 30, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 3<lb/>
Rose High School plans to open today<lb/>
Board of Education meets on problems<lb/>
Black parents and students<lb/>
and white parents met with<lb/>
the Greenville School Board<lb/>
Tuesday night in another<lb/>
attempt to solve the school's<lb/>
racial problem.<lb/>
The meeting was originally<lb/>
scheduled as restricted except<lb/>
to representative black and<lb/>
white parents. These parents<lb/>
were to meet with Rev.<lb/>
Robert Hufford, president of<lb/>
the Rose High PTA. Their<lb/>
purpose was to establish<lb/>
guidelines as to how the PTA<lb/>
could assist school board<lb/>
members. The board was to<lb/>
be present in an "unofficial<lb/>
capacity<lb/>
However, the presence of<lb/>
a student group and<lb/>
misunderstanding among<lb/>
officials resulted in Rev<lb/>
Hufford adjourning the<lb/>
meeting and in the school<lb/>
hoard calling a special session<lb/>
to hear the students present.<lb/>
Black students were<lb/>
represented by Michael<lb/>
Garrett, acting chairman of<lb/>
the Student Grievance<lb/>
Committee. Garrett, a student<lb/>
at North Carolina College at<lb/>
Durham, said the students<lb/>
had chosen him as spokesman<lb/>
to present their demands. He<lb/>
said the students felt they<lb/>
had been discriminated<lb/>
against<lb/>
Majorette decision<lb/>
Garrett cited three major<lb/>
points of dissatisfaction:<lb/>
negligence of the<lb/>
administration, the<lb/>
cheerleading situation (not<lb/>
enough blacks), and the<lb/>
majorette decision.<lb/>
He said that the decision<lb/>
not to let black majorette<lb/>
Beatrice Jones lead the Oct.<lb/>
17 Homecoming Parade was<lb/>
deemed as a direct act of<lb/>
aggression against blacks.<lb/>
Garrett said this problem was<lb/>
the reason for last Friday's<lb/>
outburst.<lb/>
Business as usual?<lb/>
He asked to hear what<lb/>
steps the board will take on<lb/>
these matters. He also<lb/>
charged Principal Edward N.<lb/>
Warren with negligence and<lb/>
asked what could be done if<lb/>
this were proven.<lb/>
Garrett further cited the<lb/>
school board's negligence for<lb/>
assuming that schools would<lb/>
operate with "business as<lb/>
usual" this year.<lb/>
Negro student Cheryl King<lb/>
complained that Warren had<lb/>
not made it clear as to what<lb/>
he expected of students.<lb/>
William Glidewell, a white<lb/>
parent pointed out that all<lb/>
students received a printed<lb/>
code of conduct in<lb/>
September. School officials<lb/>
confirmed this.<lb/>
Count von Westphalen speaks<lb/>
on West Germany's last election<lb/>
By BOB ROBINSON<lb/>
The present coalition<lb/>
governing West Germany is<lb/>
not an accurate reflection of<lb/>
voteis will, Count Frit<lb/>
von Westphalen of the<lb/>
German Information Agency<lb/>
in Bonn told a group of ECU<lb/>
student Tuesday.<lb/>
Count von Westphalen said<lb/>
this in response to a question<lb/>
aftei a lecture on the politics<lb/>
of West Germany after the<lb/>
last general election.<lb/>
The last election was the<lb/>
fust time that ihe Christain<lb/>
Democratic Union (CDU) lost<lb/>
since the enr' of World War<lb/>
II.<lb/>
A CDU member and a<lb/>
representative in the state<lb/>
parliament of North Rhine<lb/>
Westphalia, Count v o n<lb/>
Westphalen explained why he<lb/>
thought his party lost.<lb/>
'The CDU campaign<lb/>
concentrated on Chancellor<lb/>
Kissenger as the only man<lb/>
able to govern Germany he<lb/>
said. "The SPD (Social<lb/>
Democrats) had another<lb/>
slogan, 'We have the better<lb/>
team "<lb/>
Economic issues<lb/>
"The main issue in the<lb/>
campaign was economics. Dr.<lb/>
Schiller the Minister of<lb/>
Economic Affairs in the<lb/>
Grand Coalition was a<lb/>
member of the SPD and had<lb/>
successfully fought inflation.<lb/>
"Willy Brandt, Foreign<lb/>
Minister in the Grand<lb/>
Coalition, changed foreign<lb/>
Policy he said.<lb/>
Count von Westphalen also<lb/>
said that the German public<lb/>
w a s becoming more<lb/>
Politically mature. The<lb/>
Catholic bishops did not help<lb/>
the CDU as they had in the<lb/>
Past. The Catholic city of<lb/>
Cologne that had supported<lb/>
the CDU for the last twenty<lb/>
years voted SPD in this<lb/>
elction, as did all of North<lb/>
Rhine Westphalia, Germany's<lb/>
most populus state, he said.<lb/>
Issue-oriented<lb/>
"The voters now decide<lb/>
on the basis of the issues,<lb/>
and not the traditional<lb/>
dogma of the parties he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The CDU still got more<lb/>
votes with 46.1 per cent of<lb/>
the vote, which is why Count<lb/>
von Westphalen says that the<lb/>
coalition of the two smaller<lb/>
parties is not what the voters<lb/>
wanted.<lb/>
The changing of governing<lb/>
parties is probably a good<lb/>
thing for the Germans<lb/>
became they haven't had<lb/>
much .xperience in changing<lb/>
government, he said.<lb/>
The Count predicted that<lb/>
the Brandt government will<lb/>
be weak. The SPD and the<lb/>
Free Democrats have a<lb/>
majority of only 12 people,<lb/>
nine of which voted against<lb/>
Brandt in the Federal<lb/>
Parliament.<lb/>
The biggest domestic<lb/>
policy will be that of<lb/>
"co determination" whereby<lb/>
the unions will have<lb/>
representatives on the boards<lb/>
of directors of aM German<lb/>
FRITZ VON WESTPHALEN<lb/>
speaks here<lb/>
companies. The government<lb/>
will have to go slow on this<lb/>
however, because the Free<lb/>
Democrats are industry<lb/>
supported and don't favor<lb/>
"co-determination he said.<lb/>
In foreign policy the<lb/>
Brandt government will<lb/>
probably get along better<lb/>
with the Eastern Bloc, but<lb/>
there will be no major<lb/>
changes. Count von<lb/>
Westphalen said.<lb/>
The Count expects the<lb/>
Brandt government to call<lb/>
another general election soon<lb/>
to increase its majority.<lb/>
Irwin organ recital<lb/>
presents program<lb/>
of Brahms, Bach<lb/>
Dr. Robert Irwin, associate<lb/>
professor of music, will<lb/>
present a faculty organ recital<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. Monday in the<lb/>
Recital Hall.<lb/>
Irwin is a graduate of the<lb/>
Oberlin Conservatory of<lb/>
Music and Eastman School of<lb/>
Music. He is chairman of the<lb/>
Church Music curriculum<lb/>
here.<lb/>
He has played recitals this<lb/>
year in Norfolk, Va<lb/>
Roanoke Rapids and<lb/>
Wilmington. Currently he<lb/>
serves as state chairman of<lb/>
the organ division of the<lb/>
North Carolina Music<lb/>
Teachers Association.<lb/>
The program will include<lb/>
selections by Crahms, Mozart,<lb/>
Bach, Pachelbel, and Pepping.<lb/>
There is no admission charge.<lb/>
Ms. Marjone Perkins, a<lb/>
black parent, said that the<lb/>
matters of cheerleaders and<lb/>
majorettes should go through<lb/>
proper channels, but that<lb/>
getting schools open again<lb/>
was of prime importance<lb/>
now. She asked students to<lb/>
give the board a chance.<lb/>
Negro board member and<lb/>
parent, Mrs. Lucille Gorham<lb/>
assured students that every<lb/>
board member was for<lb/>
justice. However, she said<lb/>
that ihey couid not find fair<lb/>
and positive answers on the<lb/>
spur of the moment.<lb/>
Not ready<lb/>
In reference to reopening<lb/>
schools, Garrett said that if<lb/>
schools were no more ready<lb/>
to open Thursday than they<lb/>
were Monday, the same thing<lb/>
would happen as last Friday.<lb/>
He addressed the board as to<lb/>
who would be responsible for<lb/>
more trouble.<lb/>
J.C. Daniels, negro citizen,<lb/>
also urged that schools not<lb/>
open Thursday. He suggested<lb/>
a series of meetings within<lb/>
the next few days so that all<lb/>
blacks and whites would<lb/>
know exactly what is<lb/>
expected. He stated that<lb/>
whites do not realize the<lb/>
extent of the problem.<lb/>
Board member Louis<lb/>
Gaylord said that he felt that<lb/>
schools were ready to open.<lb/>
He said he hoped all would<lb/>
act with cooler minds in<lb/>
seeking solutions to the<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
Immediately following the<lb/>
presentation of demands by<lb/>
black students, the Greenville<lb/>
City Board of Education<lb/>
considered the demands and<lb/>
took the following action<lb/>
during an executive session:<lb/>
I. The school board<lb/>
instructed the associate<lb/>
superintendent to work with<lb/>
the high school administrators<lb/>
in relieving immediately the<lb/>
problem of school buses<lb/>
arriving late for first period<lb/>
classes. Furthermorp,<lb/>
arrangements will be made to<lb/>
relieve certain overcrowded<lb/>
conditions now existing<lb/>
through the use of activity<lb/>
buses or borrowed school<lb/>
buses. Following a full and<lb/>
final study, the board of<lb/>
education will purchase<lb/>
additional buses.<lb/>
II. The board of education<lb/>
will insist upon and insure<lb/>
fair treatment by instructors<lb/>
to all students regardless of<lb/>
race. Specific charges and<lb/>
facts concerning<lb/>
discriminatory actions<lb/>
presented in writing by<lb/>
aggrieved individuals to the<lb/>
board will be investigated and<lb/>
acted upon.<lb/>
Ill: The Rose High School<lb/>
administrators, supervisors<lb/>
and teachers are directed by<lb/>
the board of education to<lb/>
initiate a survey which will<lb/>
result in offering at the<lb/>
beginning of next semester a<lb/>
course in Black History if<lb/>
(continued on page 4)<lb/>
Publications meet<lb/>
at ACP convention<lb/>
Ten students and two<lb/>
faculty members are at the<lb/>
annual convention of the<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
and a meeting of the<lb/>
National Council of College<lb/>
Publications Advisers in<lb/>
Miami Beach this week.<lb/>
The meetings are<lb/>
scheduled Thursday Oct. 30<lb/>
through Saturday, Nov. 1 at<lb/>
the Americana Hotel.<lb/>
Two students will lead<lb/>
discussion groups at the<lb/>
convention. Paui F. (Chip)<lb/>
Callaway Jr. of Mount Airy,<lb/>
editor of the Fountainhead,<lb/>
will discuss in depth reporting<lb/>
on the college magazine; and<lb/>
Donna Dixon of Greenville,<lb/>
editor of the yearbook, will<lb/>
appear on a student panel to<lb/>
discuss campus publications.<lb/>
Other students attending<lb/>
include David Dalton, Rod<lb/>
Ketner, John Fulton, Kelly<lb/>
Almond, Sid Morris, Charles<lb/>
Griffin, Faye Shoffner and<lb/>
Judy Morris.<lb/>
Mrs. Mary Sorenson,<lb/>
Buccaneer advisor and<lb/>
assistant professor of English,<lb/>
will accompany the students.<lb/>
Ira L. Baker, assistant<lb/>
professor of English and<lb/>
campus newspaper advisor,<lb/>
will appear on the convention<lb/>
awards program.<lb/>
&amp;&amp;f.$$S&amp;S&amp;$0W<lb/>
Campus picks finalists<lb/>
for Homecoming Queen<lb/>
The student body will<lb/>
vote on Monday and<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 3 and 4, to<lb/>
select the six finalists for<lb/>
Homecoming Queen.<lb/>
The voting will be from 9<lb/>
a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Union<lb/>
Lobby.<lb/>
Photographs of the 49<lb/>
contestants will be posted in<lb/>
the Union Lobby through<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Dan Summers, SGA press<lb/>
secretar, said that 49 is the<lb/>
largest number of girls we<lb/>
have ever had in a single<lb/>
competition for the title.<lb/>
The six girls with the<lb/>
highest number of votes will<lb/>
become the finalists.<lb/>
Photographs of the<lb/>
finalists will remain in the<lb/>
Union Lobby throughout the<lb/>
Homecoming Weekend.<lb/>
The election of the<lb/>
Homecoming Queen and the<lb/>
runners-up will be from 9<lb/>
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 6 in the Union Lobby.<lb/>
The Homecoming Queen<lb/>
will be crowned during<lb/>
half-time at the Homecoming<lb/>
football game.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0004"/><lb/>
I ?.<lb/>
y. - -<lb/>
Board of Education convenes<lb/>
on Rose High's closing<lb/>
t<lb/>
GIRLS <lb/>
 HAVE DECIDED TO HELP'<lb/>
? ' fJ n r<lb/>
? j <lb/>
8-Track or Cassette<lb/>
Tape Players<lb/>
Tape Town &amp;<lb/>
Harmony House South<lb/>
One hour<lb/>
WMinizins<lb/>
l? tS<lb/>
THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING<lb/>
The Winning Number<lb/>
for the<lb/>
COLOR TV<lb/>
is 007929<lb/>
MRC begins<lb/>
bottle drive<lb/>
- TRANQUIL SCENE of an empty hallway in Rose<lb/>
- :h School belies the resentment that overflowed in<lb/>
the same place last week. The City Board of<lb/>
Education replied to the high schoolers' grievances<lb/>
this week after four days of an unexpected vacation.<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra gives<lb/>
first concert of year Sunday<lb/>
- JC<lb/>
A JNC<lb/>
5 y m p h o n Univers . 2- :hestra He hconcert each quarter on<lb/>
&amp;ent its ra Isc beer the :ond uc to atcampus For the past '? .<lb/>
at 2 ' 5the F lorida nternat narears, tri has : lyed<lb/>
 - xt1 ' : - ? z.  ? -cfi rrt :? the<lb/>
Pau Kosower the featun: .rh. fifth, and sixth ar I<lb/>
se ass stantce :  ; si s ar - stamof the Greer .?11e City<lb/>
"I'jS'C ,professor :? rr s ; here HeSchools.<lb/>
as tr a He ss s graduate : the levelaThe prograrr  Sunday's<lb/>
- 183 r nstitute Df  ; :UvifUCl 1 it iviUUC wjw<lb/>
: ? zformer!y taught a: rv jianaF'anc s Symphony in D<lb/>
 ecState Jr en ?. ivhere - -? inor, Mozart's Symphony<lb/>
? h eft as ir r r the res dentNo 29. and Boccherini's<lb/>
str  quartetConcerto for Cello and<lb/>
te  the orchestra s the :? .Orchestra<lb/>
res dent Drchestra - EasterrThere is ro admission<lb/>
" ,r" T " TMortf- Care na It plays onecnarge<lb/>
An<lb/>
No<lb/>
nual workshop begins<lb/>
v. 7 for piano students<lb/>
- D C<lb/>
. f the<lb/>
 ,? snop,<lb/>
?- Z ? - - . <lb/>
 ?  7(<lb/>
v severa sess<lb/>
- - 85 " Z ' - - <lb/>
m the School of Muslic<lb/>
Recital Hall and is open to<lb/>
teachers and students of<lb/>
piano<lb/>
The workshop is a<lb/>
non-credit program and is<lb/>
 nancialiy self-suuporting.<lb/>
Insufficient registration <lb/>
necessitate cancellation of the<lb/>
workshop.<lb/>
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO<lb/>
SJUDENl DESK LAMPS - CTREETING CARL,<lb/>
SuS?n) Slal "ei - Pr fessional Filing Supplies<lb/>
 Drar and Art Supplies School Supplies<lb/>
14 hai aU Mrt -o ?<lb/>
752-2175<lb/>
 ? Te<lb/>
an - <lb/>
R-L . Folk . CUJ<lb/>
fopiUr?C o ? a t r? - W eaten<lb/>
-?3N .  s-r-EC - -E.E. -s<lb/>
Pitt Plata 756-1511<lb/>
GrwxmlU. I. Q<lb/>
l. P. Albums $3.49 3<lb/>
5tereo Tapes<lb/>
5 - T ' 3; ana Casst'<lb/>
?a S-1 -19<lb/>
sv49<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0005"/><lb/>
Thursday, October 30,1969, Fountainhead, Page 5<lb/>
Dean of Men carries a big stick<lb/>
Most of the men going<lb/>
jnto James Mallory's office<lb/>
d0 not know that he is the<lb/>
personification of the<lb/>
nationial pastime.<lb/>
As Dean of Men, Mallory<lb/>
has been serving for several<lb/>
years. As a baseball player<lb/>
and coach, he has been in<lb/>
the field for thirty-two years.<lb/>
In 1937 Mallory started<lb/>
his career as a player for the<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
at Chapel Hill. By his junior<lb/>
yt,til he was co-captain of<lb/>
the baseball team and on the<lb/>
football team.<lb/>
In that bygone era, All<lb/>
Americans were chosen in the<lb/>
summer by playing<lb/>
semi-professional baseball.<lb/>
In 1940, Mallory played at<lb/>
Wichata, Kan. The team<lb/>
finished second in the nation.<lb/>
Mallory was selected Baseball<lb/>
Player of the Year and<lb/>
named an All American.<lb/>
Because of financial<lb/>
problems, Mallory turned pro,<lb/>
passing up his last year of<lb/>
school.<lb/>
His first season was spent<lb/>
 ith the Washington<lb/>
Senators. He started in the<lb/>
first game after he signed his<lb/>
ci mtract.<lb/>
'There<lb/>
was,<lb/>
poor<lb/>
Carolina boy playing the first<lb/>
pro game I had ever seen<lb/>
said Mallory.<lb/>
This was the beginning of<lb/>
a career with the Washington<lb/>
Senators, the Philadelphia<lb/>
Athletics, Saint Louis<lb/>
Cardinals and the New York<lb/>
Gaints. He played several<lb/>
farm teams in this time too.<lb/>
Mallory realized that he<lb/>
was limited to playing<lb/>
baseball. He prepared to go<lb/>
back to school.<lb/>
He got his degree in<lb/>
counciling and taught at<lb/>
several high schools and<lb/>
colleges, while coaching<lb/>
baseball.<lb/>
While at Elon College,<lb/>
Mallory coached his teams to<lb/>
six Carolina Conference<lb/>
championships in seven years.<lb/>
In 1953, Mallory cam to<lb/>
East Carolina as head baseball<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
In his first year, Mallory<lb/>
was sick and Earl Smith<lb/>
coached.<lb/>
He started the next year<lb/>
on a long string of victories.<lb/>
In eight years, he coached six<lb/>
championship teams.<lb/>
In 1957, Mallory became<lb/>
Dean of Men.<lb/>
The highlight of his career<lb/>
as coach came in 1961.<lb/>
His ECC Pirates won the<lb/>
the NAIA national<lb/>
championship, capturing every<lb/>
award presented, including<lb/>
the Sportsmanship Award.<lb/>
The team boasted three All<lb/>
Americans and the Most<lb/>
Valuable Player of the Year.<lb/>
That same year, Mallory<lb/>
received the Will Winne<lb/>
Award. This award was<lb/>
presented to him as the<lb/>
outstanding contributor to<lb/>
baseball from North Carolina.<lb/>
IN 1962, Mallory retired<lb/>
as head coach to become<lb/>
Dean of Men full time. The<lb/>
two jobs had grown too<lb/>
much for one man to handle.<lb/>
Mallory is still active in<lb/>
baseball. Every summer he<lb/>
coaches for two weeks at the<lb/>
TODAY HIS DUTIES as Dean of Men keep James<lb/>
Mallory away from the baseball diamond offically.<lb/>
DEAN JAMES MALLORY<lb/>
in Bainbridge, Ohio.<lb/>
Ted Kluszwski Baseball Camp<lb/>
at Baimbridge, Ohio.<lb/>
In 1963, he wrote<lb/>
"Baseball Fundamentals<lb/>
aimed at the college player.<lb/>
Last spring he wrote<lb/>
"Baseball Fundamentals for<lb/>
Teenage Players Both books<lb/>
(right) poses with members of his baseball club<lb/>
are widely used.<lb/>
Every spring Mallory helps<lb/>
with the baseball work outs<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Why did he give up<lb/>
baseball? "I wanted to work<lb/>
with all the men at ECU<lb/>
Mallory said.<lb/>
w?v?v<lb/>
??.v.v<lb/>
?-?.?<lb/>
?.???<lb/>
? III<lb/>
V.V<lb/>
t ? ? ? ?<lb/>
It's as simple as<lb/>
12 3<lb/>
making your Buccaneer Portrait<lb/>
BEFORE NOVEMBER 7TH<lb/>
on 3rd floor Wright annex<lb/>
? "?.?.??<lb/>
?-?.?.??<lb/>
? ?? ????.?<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
PICTURE SCHEDULE<lb/>
Wed. Oct 29th thru Tues. Nov 4th<lb/>
JOHN WAYNE<lb/>
ROMAN GABRIEL<lb/>
riUtN nuuauii<lb/>
m<lb/>
the<lb/>
PMHVISION<lb/>
COLOR B? MiUXE<lb/>
Undefeated<lb/>
C. Heber Forbes<lb/>
Exclusive Apparel for Women<lb/>
Hollywood<lb/>
Vassarette<lb/>
Vanity Fair Lingerie<lb/>
phone PI-23468<lb/>
Fri. Oct 31st<lb/>
Halloween Late Show<lb/>
DOUBLE FEATURE<lb/>
Edgar Allen Poes'<lb/>
'PIT AND THE PENDULUM"<lb/>
and<lb/>
"PREMATURE BURIAL"<lb/>
Sat. Nov 1st<lb/>
SPECIAL LATE SHOW<lb/>
KARL MALDEN - CARROLL BAKER<lb/>
LI WALLACH s?"<lb/>
Slo'?am)Sci?nPlj?b? fhteclpd b<lb/>
 ?M ? U?MtN<lb/>
Box Office Opens 10:30<lb/>
Doors Open 11:00<lb/>
Both Late Shows<lb/>
Regular Admission<lb/>
UNIVERSITY BOOK EXCHANGE<lb/>
YES! WE NOW HAVE THE ORIGINAL<lb/>
BLACKMAIL<lb/>
Wanted: Bartender for Candlewick Inn<lb/>
Restaurant. Saturday Evenings (1 'til<lb/>
Midnight) $2.00 per hour plus tips.<lb/>
CANDLEWICK INN<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0006"/><lb/>
0 MM ?-? -i t&amp;KA<lb/>
Robert Morgan combines<lb/>
law and politics in N. C.<lb/>
Political Science professor<lb/>
takes poll on attitudes<lb/>
toward demonstrations<lb/>
- ? -<lb/>
?<lb/>
why<lb/>
I:<lb/>
This year<lb/>
not<lb/>
i invite<lb/>
your<lb/>
overseas<lb/>
friends<lb/>
over<lb/>
here.<lb/>
le<lb/>
G<lb/>
"C. rn; -r. itr.or<lb/>
I<lb/>
7  :<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
-  " r - - .<lb/>
 ? -  - -<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
The. ? .<lb/>
272 si ents by V<lb/>
E Parks of th ?<lb/>
- ent. Al t hall f tt<lb/>
! ?ts  ere se e I<lb/>
lonn and the "? half <lb/>
? ?from Part polti<lb/>
Sanford proposes<lb/>
new bond is'iue<lb/>
REOSV'LLEr :ome he said, is rr at<lb/>
-  r'  "r I ?? - na? . ; .  . pfobiems<lb/>
.    3 f - ? . - <lb/>
ed that theThe lnt face ? I<lb/>
rr e : - 3 bond ssueere he d at Bets. Jeff 4 -<lb/>
Centei f the CH ?" ua-Pi<lb/>
plantat ? i F -  -<lb/>
 said : e g eThe three-day cc "?<lb/>
expenses and higr terestIs Sunday<lb/>
- - - T .  ' : iC : r fere - ? adet<lb/>
- - - " J .the, hav 1 eei lisappoii<lb/>
 " he bond  ? ?by the lack of interest<lb/>
-mee 1  in : a - ?<lb/>
? ? "colleges.<lb/>
 kJ e the rem art: , -  ?- ?<lb/>
jniversities in North Cai<lb/>
  . .sent r is? p ' e- n : a <lb/>
ree-da ?? - ?  ? conference leaders 5<lb/>
?  ?r.unJcat"a tri :?? 91 Wen i v" R 1<lb/>
 ?- ? ent;egates<lb/>
 - -The president<lb/>
 ?- . T ' ?; " . ?Caronna A&amp;T Statt<lb/>
? -T Lev. is Dowdy, and a wh "<lb/>
- ' ' - " ? .nstructor at North Cai<lb/>
 Central University ?'? <lb/>
r ? -  - ? -only representatives " '? ?? '<lb/>
 - he pi -ersities present.<lb/>
University Union sponsors<lb/>
 Halloween dance Friday<lb/>
Jr <lb/>
? i<lb/>
Esquires" on the Union<lb/>
. " . Friday, OCT 3! from<lb/>
3 00 pm to !2 00 midnight.<lb/>
Ail students are muted to<lb/>
the Halloween festivities<lb/>
TwMrsssssssvjwws VWVWW<lb/>
?VS?rVWVVWVVWVVVSf<lb/>
play,<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0007"/><lb/>
Thursday, October 30, 1969, Fountainhead. Page 7<lb/>
New Dimensions Playhouse casting<lb/>
perform on mall begins Nov.13<lb/>
By SAM BEASLEY<lb/>
There is a new sound<lb/>
across the country. It<lb/>
Salem, Oregon a<lb/>
and has worked<lb/>
coming<lb/>
started in<lb/>
month ago<lb/>
its way across the country.<lb/>
The New Dimensions were<lb/>
started by bank loans and<lb/>
the hope of a few young<lb/>
people. Rick Jeffers and his<lb/>
father felt that America<lb/>
needed a new voice to lead<lb/>
youth into the church. They<lb/>
felt that the church was not<lb/>
doing the job with the<lb/>
traditional means.<lb/>
With young people just<lb/>
out of college or on a leave<lb/>
of absence, Rick formed The<lb/>
New Dimensions. They set<lb/>
out in an old bus with a lot<lb/>
of hope and no bookings.<lb/>
That was a month ago.<lb/>
Since then they have traveled<lb/>
across the country, picking<lb/>
up bookings as they could,<lb/>
paying their own way.<lb/>
The sound they put out is<lb/>
contemporary, with a touch<lb/>
of "soul<lb/>
The group is made up of<lb/>
seven girls and four guys<lb/>
singing, with a drummer,<lb/>
pianist, guitarist, and a horn<lb/>
soction.<lb/>
In their appearance on the<lb/>
mall Tuesday afternoon, they<lb/>
had heads, freaks, straights<lb/>
and Greeks enjoying their<lb/>
sound They had a good<lb/>
Playhouse<lb/>
sells more<lb/>
tickets<lb/>
The East C a r ol i na<lb/>
Playhouse is doing better<lb/>
since it changed us form of<lb/>
financial management, said<lb/>
Jim Slaughter, playhouse<lb/>
business manager.<lb/>
"People who come to the<lb/>
theatei to gel their tickets<lb/>
will more likely come to the<lb/>
play Slaughter said<lb/>
He said that the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office which used to<lb/>
handle then tickets did this<lb/>
along with so many other<lb/>
tickets that few people were<lb/>
conscious of getting the<lb/>
playhouse tickets.<lb/>
Slaughter said the<lb/>
playhouse has more incentive<lb/>
to work under the new<lb/>
arrangement. This includes<lb/>
more ambitious publicity<lb/>
campaigns and more energetic<lb/>
ticket sales.<lb/>
According to Slaughter,<lb/>
the playhouse distributed<lb/>
more student tickets than<lb/>
ever before and has sold<lb/>
more season tickets; 342<lb/>
season tickets were sold this<lb/>
year as compared to the<lb/>
Previous record of 160.<lb/>
Slaughter said that he<lb/>
bought that this year's<lb/>
ason was one of the best<lb/>
that the playhouse has ever<lb/>
had.<lb/>
Slaughter also announced<lb/>
mat tryouts for "A Flea in<lb/>
hff Ear" Wi be hed on<lb/>
Nov 3 and 4<lb/>
sound that reached the<lb/>
people without being formal<lb/>
and stiff. To hold the mixed<lb/>
audience with rain<lb/>
threatening they had to be<lb/>
good.<lb/>
Rick Jeffers, leader of the<lb/>
group, said they did have<lb/>
some problems. "Some of the<lb/>
guys are having troubles with<lb/>
their draft boards. Some of<lb/>
us are l-A and the boards<lb/>
won't change the status<lb/>
They have met with<lb/>
resistance from some<lb/>
churches too. "Some people<lb/>
feel that our music is out of<lb/>
place in the church. I feel<lb/>
that the church needs an<lb/>
up-to-date style to reach the<lb/>
young people said Jeffers.<lb/>
Casting for what many<lb/>
critics consider the funniest<lb/>
play ever produced by the<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse will<lb/>
be held on Monday, Nov. 3<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium, or by<lb/>
appointment with the<lb/>
director.<lb/>
Theis play is "A Flea In<lb/>
Her Ear' by Georges<lb/>
Feydeau.<lb/>
The show, a smash hit<lb/>
recently in Paris, and now<lb/>
running in New York, is a<lb/>
perfect example of the classic<lb/>
French "risque" farce. The<lb/>
confusions, complications,<lb/>
reversals, double roles and<lb/>
double meanings take over<lb/>
with a hilarious, ridiculous<lb/>
logic in which the play<lb/>
operates.<lb/>
In beginning his talent<lb/>
search for the nine men and<lb/>
five women who make up<lb/>
the cast, the production's<lb/>
director, Edgar R. Loessin<lb/>
says he is going to "comb<lb/>
the countryside looking for<lb/>
new faces and 'types' to<lb/>
make up his cast. So much<lb/>
of the humor in this play<lb/>
depends on physical qualities,<lb/>
on looking a certain way<lb/>
he said, "that I want to<lb/>
exhaust all possibilities before<lb/>
settling on a cast<lb/>
To help the audition<lb/>
candidate prepare himself,<lb/>
scripts of the play are on<lb/>
reserve in Joyner Library on<lb/>
the ECU Campus. Lc<lb/>
urged each person who plans<lb/>
to tryout for the play to<lb/>
read the script first and to<lb/>
look at a specific scene. The<lb/>
age requirements of the roles<lb/>
in the show prohibit high<lb/>
school students from<lb/>
participating.<lb/>
Schedule for a four-night<lb/>
run in McGinnis Auditorium,<lb/>
the performances will begin<lb/>
on December 10 at 8:15 P.M.<lb/>
John A. Sneden will provide<lb/>
the two 1900 style sets for a<lb/>
drawing room and a locale in<lb/>
the Hotel Pussycat. Costumes<lb/>
of the same period are being<lb/>
created by Margaret Gilfillan<lb/>
and lighting will be by<lb/>
Andrew Gilfillan.<lb/>
H. L. HODGES &amp; CO Inc.<lb/>
Student Sports Headquarters<lb/>
Dial PL 2-4156<lb/>
VARSITY GULF STATION<lb/>
across from Adm. Office<lb/>
Fresh sandwiches<lb/>
Convient for quick snakes<lb/>
? Potato chips<lb/>
Drinks<lb/>
Why<lb/>
cant tninos De me way they used to be?<lb/>
Culver Pictures, Inc.<lb/>
You know. When the Negro "knew his place<lb/>
When students stayed in the classroom.<lb/>
When poverty was kept off page one.<lb/>
Ah, the good old days.<lb/>
But who's fooling whom? Was it really a better<lb/>
world? Or just a quieter one? A few years ago it<lb/>
was easy to hide from the evils around us.<lb/>
To turn our backs and pretend it really wasn't so.<lb/>
But God knows, it was. All that our modern<lb/>
communication system has done is bring it all out<lb/>
into the open. And about time.<lb/>
The fact is, God has probably been much too patient<lb/>
with our world. "Love your neighbor He told us<lb/>
long ago. Not enough of us were listening and that's<lb/>
what today's turmoil is all about.<lb/>
And think about this: maybe-just maybe-<lb/>
God put us here right now because we're the<lb/>
ones who can start setting things straight.<lb/>
Advertising contributed for the public good<lb/>
<lb/>
jH<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0008"/><lb/>
m ?,jt ?<lb/>
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JUMBO TRAY OF CHICKEN 1.75<lb/>
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Biscuits<lb/>
Hush Puppies<lb/>
'7Pl. 30c Pf. 50c<lb/>
2Pt. 25c Pt 40c<lb/>
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?40c per doz.<lb/>
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CAROLINA<lb/>
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DINNER TRAY<lb/>
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THRIFTY TRAY 950<lb/>
LARGE TRAY 1.25<lb/>
BARBECUE<lb/>
SANDWICH 50<lb/>
CHICKEN BREAST<lb/>
SANDWICH .55<lb/>
CAROLINA FRIED FISH<lb/>
Small Tray<lb/>
FROM THE SALAD<lb/>
Pofafo Salad<lb/>
Cole Slaw<lb/>
CASE<lb/>
Vi Pt 30c Pt.<lb/>
y2 Pt 3o pi<lb/>
50c<lb/>
50c<lb/>
FISH DINNER<lb/>
FAMILY TUB<lb/>
Fish Sandwich<lb/>
 85<lb/>
1.25<lb/>
3.95<lb/>
35<lb/>
e Cater Quantity Orders for Parties- Picnics- Chur<lb/>
ch<lb/>
PHONE YOUR ORDERS IN<lb/>
IT WILL BE WAITING<lb/>
-PHONE 758-1933-<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0009"/><lb/>
Thursday, October 30, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 9<lb/>
March Against Death' proceeds<lb/>
By DAVID WENDELIN<lb/>
plans for the November<lb/>
Vietnam Moratorium which<lb/>
will include a national march<lb/>
in Washington, D.C are<lb/>
being finalized.<lb/>
The ECU Moratorium<lb/>
Committee has begun<lb/>
preparations for Nov. 13-14.<lb/>
Tenative plans include a rally<lb/>
on the mall at II a.m. and a<lb/>
march through Greenville.<lb/>
Joe Underwood a member<lb/>
0f the ECU Moratorium<lb/>
Committee, had gone before<lb/>
the City Council to request a<lb/>
permi1 to march. Although<lb/>
the law states that a permit<lb/>
to march in the city of<lb/>
Greenville must be requested<lb/>
15 clays before the march<lb/>
date, the City Council has<lb/>
asked the Moratorium<lb/>
Committee here to present<lb/>
substantial justification for<lb/>
the march at the next City<lb/>
Council meeting.<lb/>
Dr. Howard Levy, the<lb/>
Army captain who was jailed<lb/>
for refusing to train Green<lb/>
Berets at Ft. Jackson, S.C<lb/>
and Donald Duncan, an<lb/>
ex-Green Beret, have been<lb/>
mentioned as possible<lb/>
speakers for the Nov. 13<lb/>
"teach in" at ECU.<lb/>
The ECU Moratorium<lb/>
Committee says that Nov. 14<lb/>
would be used to organize<lb/>
and send a group of students<lb/>
to the "March Against<lb/>
Death" on Nov. 15 in<lb/>
Washington. The committee is<lb/>
planning to provide<lb/>
transportation and housing<lb/>
for all students interested in<lb/>
participating in the "March<lb/>
Against Death<lb/>
The basic theme of the<lb/>
November Moratorium, as put<lb/>
forth by Jerome Grossman a<lb/>
key planner of the October<lb/>
Moratorium, will be to "bring<lb/>
the Congressmen home" for<lb/>
informal talks and public<lb/>
gatherings.<lb/>
The<lb/>
Death" is<lb/>
event.<lb/>
'March Against<lb/>
billed as the main<lb/>
Representative of STC<lb/>
discusses study abroad<lb/>
programs this Saturday<lb/>
Miss Elke Ohlrogge, a<lb/>
representative of the British<lb/>
Studenl Travel Centre will be<lb/>
here at 10 a.m. Saturday to<lb/>
discuss with all interested<lb/>
students the arrangements her<lb/>
organization can make for<lb/>
students to study abroad<lb/>
during the summer.<lb/>
The Student Travel Centre<lb/>
is a division of the British<lb/>
Universities Student Travel<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
The STC is a nonprofit<lb/>
organization which makes all<lb/>
the necessary arrangements<lb/>
for any student who wishes<lb/>
to attend a College or<lb/>
University in Great Britain or<lb/>
Europe. They also make<lb/>
arrangements for those who<lb/>
only want to travel.<lb/>
Miss Ohlrogge is associated<lb/>
with the Student Travel<lb/>
Centre which is responsible<lb/>
for receiving all the incoming<lb/>
students into Great Britain.<lb/>
Hans Indorf of the<lb/>
Political Science Department<lb/>
has taken a group of students<lb/>
abroad each summer for the<lb/>
past two years. He said that<lb/>
the assistance of the STC was<lb/>
very valuable to the group.<lb/>
Indorf said that the<lb/>
program the STC provides for<lb/>
six weeks of study costs the<lb/>
individual approximately<lb/>
S750. He said that they<lb/>
arrange trips for individuals<lb/>
as well as for groups.<lb/>
All students who wish to<lb/>
see Miss Ohlrogge on<lb/>
Saturday should contact John<lb/>
Dixon in the SGA External<lb/>
Affairs office.<lb/>
Hearing suspended<lb/>
ELON COLLEGE<lb/>
(AP) The hearing for an<lb/>
Elon College instructor<lb/>
suspended for refusing to<lb/>
hold classes on Vietnam<lb/>
Moratorium Day has been<lb/>
postponed indefinitely.<lb/>
The school's trustees were<lb/>
to meet today to hear the<lb/>
case of G. Michael Smith, 25,<lb/>
a" English instructor.<lb/>
President J. Earl Danieley of<lb/>
Elon said the meeting was<lb/>
Postponed because of the<lb/>
illness of the trustee<lb/>
chairman, Secretary of State<lb/>
Thad Eure.<lb/>
Smith is under suspension<lb/>
for disobeying orders to meet<lb/>
his classes Oct. 15. Danieley<lb/>
said Smith spent the day<lb/>
with students protesting the<lb/>
Wietnam war and participated<lb/>
in a march in Burlington.<lb/>
Elon is a 1,500 student<lb/>
school associated with the<lb/>
United Church of Christ.<lb/>
YDC to conduct membership<lb/>
drive Nov. 3 and 4<lb/>
The Young Democrats<lb/>
Club will be conducting a<lb/>
membership drive in the<lb/>
Union lobby Nov. 3 and 4<lb/>
from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m.<lb/>
The drive will be an effort<lb/>
to sign up all students who<lb/>
missed the last drive.<lb/>
Organizers of the march<lb/>
predict that as many as<lb/>
several hundred thousand<lb/>
people will participate in the<lb/>
march to express ' to ghe<lb/>
government directly their<lb/>
opposition to the war.<lb/>
The march, pending<lb/>
acquisition of official permits,<lb/>
will start at the Capitol<lb/>
Building, proceed down<lb/>
Pennsylvania Avenue around<lb/>
the White House, and then<lb/>
move to the Washington<lb/>
Monument for the rally. The<lb/>
rally will be led by Mrs.<lb/>
Coretta King, Dr. Benjamin<lb/>
Spock, and the Rev. William<lb/>
Sloan Coffin.<lb/>
Although there has been<lb/>
some talk about the<lb/>
hesitancy of the National<lb/>
Moratorium Committee to<lb/>
openly support the Nov. 15<lb/>
march, Sam BRown, one of<lb/>
the leading coordinators of<lb/>
the October Moratorium,<lb/>
stated that, "We support<lb/>
nonviolent actions against the<lb/>
war<lb/>
efk Tyfct<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
til<lb/>
9p.m.<lb/>
KINDNESS 20 HAIRSETTER<lb/>
16.88<lb/>
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In Downtown Greenville Shop Tonight til 9<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0010"/><lb/>
'nOM-l.??????<lb/>
Page 10, Fountainhead. Thursday Dctotx 3C<lb/>
Basketball team said to<lb/>
Quinn looks forward to<lb/>
be in good shape;<lb/>
winning season<lb/>
Bv SONNY LEE<lb/>
at '?' r <lb/>
C : seu m buzzes mi<lb/>
excitment The basketl ? "<lb/>
the "   zip  -Z<lb/>
the t as rts and the P r;t-<lb/>
- : ? ers ? at each Dther<lb/>
? ?  t ette'<lb/>
sst ear?<lb/>
. ? , - jpfi<lb/>
? ti i mendously<lb/>
v phase of the<lb/>
; in their<lb/>
jreat shape m<lb/>
? the team<lb/>
? ' ?<lb/>
Team in shape<lb/>
-? ??- is in<lb/>
es: :?<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
?  " this rii:<lb/>
But the schet<lb/>
Tough opponents<lb/>
the P " - ?<lb/>
Attention: Students<lb/>
and Faculty<lb/>
CITY LAUNDERETTE<lb/>
Leave your laundry, we do it for you.<lb/>
1 Hr. Fluff Dried Laundry Service<lb/>
Incudes soap arid bleach<lb/>
Laundry 912 lbs. 83c. Folded 9.3c<lb/>
DRY CLEANING and SHIRTS<lb/>
813 Evans Street<lb/>
Down from Burger Chef<lb/>
better<lb/>
thei team<lb/>
it East<lb/>
e four years I<lb/>
Quinn said<lb/>
r d a <lb/>
mil ites,<lb/>
te ha . es<lb/>
: tj me that<lb/>
? p physical<lb/>
d Quinn<lb/>
U nse much<lb/>
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thi iffense.<lb/>
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BRONSO.N MATNEY.JR<lb/>
AT<lb/>
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OFFERS IN APPREC1AIIQH?TO? STUDENTS<lb/>
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ALL CASSETTES AT $4.99<lb/>
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"The defense is much farthPr<lb/>
along than the defuse <lb/>
last year at this time Qu)n<lb/>
said.<lb/>
However, Quinn <lb/>
problems when practice began<lb/>
use only five players had<lb/>
varsity ball at East<lb/>
Carolina but after a ?veek of<lb/>
hing his system he fees<lb/>
this is under control now.<lb/>
There ' ?- some<lb/>
? ? faces in the P,rute ,ineup<lb/>
???hen the open Dec i<lb/>
nst Western Carolina in<lb/>
Minges, but maybe the results<lb/>
will be the same another<lb/>
season for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Nixon<lb/>
needs<lb/>
Agnew?<lb/>
WASHINGTON (API -<lb/>
Vice President Spiro T.<lb/>
Agnew told a meeting of the<lb/>
American Bakers Association<lb/>
hp rpntt.ttt.fl th  <lb/>
his remarks Monday, but said<lb/>
he had his reasons<lb/>
"The President needs me<lb/>
at the White House Agnew<lb/>
ex pi 'ied It's a itumn,<lb/>
you know, and the leaves<lb/>
need raking<lb/>
HOROSCOPE<lb/>
WEEK OF OCT. 27-NOV 2<lb/>
A R ; ES Mar 2 1 A:<lb/>
A line time to Mj<lb/>
ec t s I 11 I o i " ?' .<lb/>
:o<lb/>
TAURUS Apr. 21 May 21<lb/>
? force sies .? i<lb/>
sc I - y : ? Jsing taci<lb/>
pr ova ' be .i?. I  ?'<lb/>
' ? . r e  e? ' ?<lb/>
GEN1 . May 7'<lb/>
? ? utme activ.ties I<lb/>
,v.ri e e. en leaOJ<lb/>
e ; -e a d ? ?? ?<lb/>
. e ? c<lb/>
mem<lb/>
C A C E ? Ju ne 22 i ? - :<lb/>
A seud'dtori maoe n<lb/>
Dcson c ose to you n ??<lb/>
tamporary Dor t be al ? '?'<lb/>
g,e " ana s h o . y 0 u' " " e<lb/>
nature k. ndness s her.<lb/>
LEO Ju y 24A.g 23<lb/>
Be prepared ne- , u rece .e<lb/>
jrepeciei ??'es A s tot on<lb/>
that seems tragic now a won<lb/>
ce m n mzed Be pat ert<lb/>
Vi RGO I Aug 24 Sec- 23<lb/>
Do you' best to avo d antag<lb/>
on 7 ng friends espec ally<lb/>
financial matte's A;so t3vp<lb/>
t.me to catch up o neglected<lb/>
correspondence<lb/>
L BRA Sep 24 I 231<lb/>
Maintain i I i n itand ?'? 'h-3" i<lb/>
t e igautnor tar an I<lb/>
rr ate-s<lb/>
ee A ? Th gooi<lb/>
SCORPiO lOci<lb/>
Fo'iOrt adv ce given to you v<lb/>
superics Be alert foi new<lb/>
opportunities to advance vou'<lb/>
self stay abreast o tne news.<lb/>
SAGITTARIUS 'Nov 2j<lb/>
De 2 1 Romance S h 9h<lb/>
i.ghteci 'or you The one you<lb/>
least si.spec: may aci v re<lb/>
the ore to- you Ta-e care<lb/>
your dec sions.<lb/>
CAPRICORN Dec 22 Jan<lb/>
20 S-eei clea?  ' k v ?'<lb/>
ipa . at e ventures An 0fer<lb/>
that sounds ie" promising<lb/>
could turn out to be i " '<lb/>
CDe'ate . h ca' on<lb/>
AQUARIUS Jan<lb/>
19 Use th s oppo-<lb/>
morove yourself o<lb/>
M<lb/>
e<lb/>
PiSCE? : al 20 <lb/>
Postpo ne any i<lb/>
You may be neede I wl<lb/>
are now<lb/>
' V I<lb/>
?<lb/>
.<lb/>
'I<lb/>
By BICI<lb/>
Behind<lb/>
there is f"1<lb/>
who ,s<lb/>
mending a<lb/>
monsters<lb/>
Receiving<lb/>
foi his W<lb/>
i; keep<lb/>
football m<lb/>
in top s1<lb/>
i i r<lb/>
SeM i ec i<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
watches t<lb/>
hine ti<lb/>
without fal<lb/>
Of com<lb/>
i ev arding<lb/>
return in<lb/>
but thai<lb/>
This<lb/>
than "Dr<lb/>
"Dr " is n<lb/>
but to m<lb/>
on the tea<lb/>
including i<lb/>
Act)<lb/>
His d<lb/>
trainer to<lb/>
course, hi<lb/>
bandaging<lb/>
also requ<lb/>
budget eve<lb/>
that the<lb/>
the toad a<lb/>
Befon<lb/>
trainer's pi<lb/>
a rural m<lb/>
asked wh<lb/>
become .<lb/>
reply vis,<lb/>
desire to<lb/>
participate<lb/>
some soi<lb/>
chance ti<lb/>
taking tin<lb/>
was a Vc;<lb/>
East Carol<lb/>
His dei<lb/>
trainer w<lb/>
howevei.<lb/>
HI<lb/>
SPOC<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0011"/><lb/>
Thursday, October 30, 1969, Fountainhead, Page II<lb/>
'Dr Mills keeps the team going<lb/>
h<lb/>
11 '<lb/>
By RICHARD RAINEY<lb/>
Behind every football team<lb/>
there js one unheralded figure<lb/>
,  is responsible for<lb/>
ing and repairing those<lb/>
ters of the gridiron.<lb/>
I yery little praise<lb/>
fol hjs WOrk( it is his duty<lb/>
keep the cog in this<lb/>
ba machine running and<lb/>
ip shape at all times. He<lb/>
receive some<lb/>
ecogn11 ion every<lb/>
turday afternoon as he<lb/>
watches the parts to this<lb/>
ma( bine trot on to the field<lb/>
without falling apart.<lb/>
Of course it is particularly<lb/>
rding to watch them<lb/>
return in the same fashion<lb/>
but thai is not always the<lb/>
case This man is none other<lb/>
than "Dr Terry Mills. The<lb/>
"Di " is not an official title<lb/>
but to most (jf the players<lb/>
on the team he is a doctor,<lb/>
including a Jack of all-trades.<lb/>
Activities vary<lb/>
His Hu ties range from<lb/>
trainer to businessman. Of<lb/>
course, his main chore is<lb/>
bandaging athletes, but he is<lb/>
also required to make a<lb/>
budget every year and to see<lb/>
that the players are fed on<lb/>
the toad and at home.<lb/>
B efoi e entering the<lb/>
trainer's profession, Terry was<lb/>
a rural mail carrier. He was<lb/>
asked why he decided to<lb/>
become a trainer and his<lb/>
reply was, "I had an extreme<lb/>
desire to help athletes or<lb/>
participate in athletics of<lb/>
some sort Terry got a<lb/>
chance to do both. Before<lb/>
taking the trainer's job, he<lb/>
was a varsity letterman on<lb/>
East Carolina's track team.<lb/>
His decision to become a<lb/>
trainei was not automatic,<lb/>
however. He did not begin<lb/>
HALLOWE-&amp;M?<lb/>
SPOOK-A-RAMA<lb/>
R berl HaiKirof<lb/>
T ' nangrove Presents<lb/>
iHRCSoF<lb/>
G?TFROBE-SENTJAB?RGER<lb/>
LATE SHOW<lb/>
pRl. &amp; SAT. NITES<lb/>
1130 p.m.<lb/>
college until ten years after<lb/>
graduating from high school.<lb/>
After attending Chowan<lb/>
College, Terry transferee! to<lb/>
East Carolina in 1964 and<lb/>
began study in physical<lb/>
education. Currently he is<lb/>
writing a thesis which deals<lb/>
with kyrokinetics, a study of<lb/>
blood flow in the human<lb/>
body and cooling agents<lb/>
Trainers are important<lb/>
A trainer's job is more<lb/>
important than many people<lb/>
would think. Beginning<lb/>
January 1, 1970, the national<lb/>
government will require all<lb/>
athletic trainers to take a<lb/>
rigid examination to become<lb/>
a certified Athletic Therapist.<lb/>
This indicates there is rising<lb/>
demand for qualified athletic<lb/>
trainers. East Carolina has<lb/>
responded to the call for<lb/>
better qualified trainers by<lb/>
offering new courses through<lb/>
the physical therapy<lb/>
curriculum. Terry considers<lb/>
East Carolina as one of the<lb/>
finest schools in the state for<lb/>
turning out highly accredited<lb/>
athletic trainers.<lb/>
Enlarged facilities<lb/>
Terry has seen the<lb/>
facilities for his work<lb/>
enlarged from a mere<lb/>
hole-in-the-wall to a fine<lb/>
headquarters in the newly<lb/>
cons11 ui.lcu<lb/>
F ield<lb/>
House. Since his tenure at<lb/>
East Carolina the trainer's<lb/>
budget has boomed from a<lb/>
measly $6,000 to $20,000 a<lb/>
year. Working with a budget<lb/>
of this magnitude is an<lb/>
important task for an athletic<lb/>
trainer, but it does not<lb/>
bother Terry. As the old<lb/>
saying goes "the more<lb/>
merrier Terry feels the<lb/>
same way about his expense<lb/>
account. With a larger<lb/>
budget, he is given a greater<lb/>
responsibility for seeing that<lb/>
the players are always in the<lb/>
peak of condition.<lb/>
This year the athletic<lb/>
trainer is given a new<lb/>
responsibility that is of<lb/>
utmost importance. This task<lb/>
is feeding the players at the<lb/>
training table every night. If<lb/>
a trainer ever wanted to gain<lb/>
popularity with the players,<lb/>
this is a sure way to do it.<lb/>
Trainers as psychiatrists<lb/>
In many respects an<lb/>
athlet trainer could be<lb/>
called a psychiatrist, also<lb/>
because a major portion of<lb/>
his time is spent doctoring<lb/>
on injuries. These injuries are<lb/>
not always physical as may<lb/>
be expected. During a game a<lb/>
player may fake an injury<lb/>
turning out that it is more<lb/>
mental than physical. Without<lb/>
a doubt, Terry calls this his<lb/>
pet peeve.<lb/>
The worst injuries he has<lb/>
ever encountered, however,<lb/>
were a broken leg and one<lb/>
player being knocked<lb/>
unconscious. George Gay, a<lb/>
former Pirate player suffered<lb/>
the broken leg, and Billy<lb/>
Beard was knocked<lb/>
uncoosciouSi<lb/>
24-hour job<lb/>
As can be seen a trainer's<lb/>
job and the time spent in<lb/>
working is not exactly<lb/>
comparable to a banker's<lb/>
hours, but as Terry sees it.<lb/>
"DR. TERRY WILLS bandages the ankle of an ECU<lb/>
football player.<lb/>
the satisfaction comes with<lb/>
being involved in athletics.<lb/>
Terry is not responsible for<lb/>
making the Pirates win or<lb/>
lose, but he is a definite<lb/>
asset to the team. If one has<lb/>
doubts about his abilities just<lb/>
ask any East Carolina athlete<lb/>
or better still, drop by<lb/>
Terry's home located at<lb/>
Scales Field House open<lb/>
almost 24 hours a day!<lb/>
L7ui iuaii ii itau<lb/>
r<lb/>
w<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 Delicious Flavors<lb/>
of Ice- Cream<lb/>
Try a delicious Banana<lb/>
Split or Sundae<lb/>
264 By Pass, Greenville<lb/>
 I<lb/>
things gO<lb/>
better-<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Coca-cola Bottling Company, Inc.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
rtoor ufl.A1- IPm<lb/>
C ? r.<lb/>
ATTENTION CATHOLICS<lb/>
ALL SAINTS DAY MASSES<lb/>
Saturday, November 1st<lb/>
8:00 a.m.<lb/>
5:45 p.m.<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Y-Hut<lb/>
St. Peters<lb/>
St. Gabriel's<lb/>
transportation provided in front of<lb/>
Cotton and Jones Dorms at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Join The Q2 Crowd<lb/>
Pizza tan<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
i 261 Ry-Pass)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 756-9991<lb/>
Colonial Heights Soda Jhop &amp; Restaurant<lb/>
Now Serving Meals<lb/>
Breakfast- 550 Dinner- 970<lb/>
Drink Included<lb/>
2711 E 10th St. 752-6778<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0012"/><lb/>
fa.pBHWW- ????<lb/>
Pirates expect tough foe<lb/>
in game against Furman<lb/>
He leads offense<lb/>
Colson tops in three fields<lb/>
7<lb/>
has<lb/>
ail<lb/>
 the East<lb/>
 has ja<lb/>
r r3 "<lb/>
East "<lb/>
5  ' r-<lb/>
. - - ;<lb/>
f i v ? ja m es<lb/>
 353<lb/>
- - ? - .<lb/>
? 21E<lb/>
to Colson's thr<lb/>
Sophorr ? ngb<lb/>
William Mitchell !S stj th<lb/>
pass catching leace- th )<lb/>
for 113 aMs. but Billy<lb/>
irV ghtman ana Richard<lb/>
Corrada are close<lb/>
Corrada, who<lb/>
first<lb/>
teams<lb/>
behind.<lb/>
?"9ht the<lb/>
oass for a<lb/>
r ? ?? last Saturday, h<lb/>
ed m eight for 92 yards.<lb/>
-htmar has ca ght - e for<lb/>
69<lb/>
In the defense department<lb/>
Stu Garrett Mike E<lb/>
M s and Rust ;<lb/>
the ti<lb/>
with 137 ? ?<lb/>
the<lb/>
' 29<lb/>
s to<lb/>
APO defeats Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
in intramural football action<lb/>
e with i 31-4<lb/>
AI p h a A11<lb/>
:? i n fourth<lb/>
El" a  3 ret<lb/>
c . - '<lb/>
Ta K APPA Eps ' 134<lb/>
z ? i Alpha with<lb/>
3-4-2<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ?- 2 4 : ?-? ?<lb/>
f . jn P ? ' th z<lb/>
7 rec - :<lb/>
Thei with an 0 7<lb/>
next 1 ?? ? ' ?<lb/>
Delta Sigma Pr v.i : E<lb/>
? - arj fol   .<lb/>
Kappa Sgma eases ahead<lb/>
in close volleyball race<lb/>
Alpha z  9,<lb/>
 :  K appa<lb/>
?' S "t<lb/>
 ?-a<lb/>
! ? . 5 to 7, 18 to II ? '<lb/>
Xlly mat<lb/>
 -<lb/>
th i ice with a 6-2 r<lb/>
? .<lb/>
- 5 6 to 14, 15 t<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi 12 to 15 6 I - 5<lb/>
-to-9-dtH4?g rhp ?.?. pp?<lb/>
buccaneer Courts<lb/>
Newly Decorated<lb/>
Approved ECU Housing<lb/>
Women Students<lb/>
for<lb/>
Kerrieerator<lb/>
i:<lb/>
nrl<lb/>
Light Cooking<lb/>
in each S<lb/>
uite<lb/>
-? Wfmae in off ?amfiui 3iino "<lb/>
tenth and heath street<lb/>
resident manager 758-2867<lb/>
? 6<lb/>
ted Alpha Ph<lb/>
Pi Kapoa Phi is i<lb/>
 th a 6-3 mar aft I<lb/>
er Lambda C tofi<lb/>
15 to 3 ? ? ? over Pf ?<lb/>
Ta<lb/>
r<lb/>
Stacluau<lb/>
IT<lb/>
Drive-In<lb/>
Geaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts Greenville, N C<lb/>
3 H' Shirt Service<lb/>
HATHAWAY<lb/>
SPOKEN<lb/>
HERE<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0013"/><lb/>
Thursday, October 30, 1969, Fountainhead, Paqe 13<lb/>
SOUNDS UNLIM<lb/>
SAYS GOODBYE RECORDS,<lb/>
TAPES AND PLAYERS<lb/>
FINAL WEEK<lb/>
THIS SALE POSITIVELY ENDS<lb/>
SATURDAY NIGHT,<lb/>
NOVEMBER 1st 6 P.M.<lb/>
DIG' These Unheard Of Low Pricesnever BeforeJlever Again-<lb/>
ALL PLAYERS, CLOCK RADIOS, TAPE MACHINES, REDUCED 40.<lb/>
ALL $4.98 STEREO LP'S2-95<lb/>
ALL $4.98 MONO LP'S1-77<lb/>
ALL $5.98 STEREO LP'S3-88<lb/>
ALL 45 RPM RECORDS . . . LATEST RELEASES AND "OLDIES" . . . 0.55<lb/>
CLOSE OUT<lb/>
RPA 70-RECORD PLAYER WITH RADIO29.95 . . . .17.75<lb/>
AR 825-RADIO14-95 ? ? ? ? 795<lb/>
FCR 1265-CLOCK RADIO37-98 ? ? ? -21-95<lb/>
A 909-RADIO36-95 ' ' ' -20-45<lb/>
LT 44- TAPE RECORDER 19-95 ? ? ? ? 995<lb/>
FCR 1265-CLOCK RADIO36-95 ? ? ? -20-45<lb/>
FR 1245-RADIO2495 ? ' ' -13'75<lb/>
eTPQ76-CASSETTES STEREO PLAYER69.95 . . . .39.95<lb/>
HOLDERS995 45<lb/>
ALBUM<lb/>
ALL REELS OF BLANK TAPE AND CASSETTES 54 PRICE.<lb/>
e want to titanic cut friend and cuUcmeU fci tkeh letat<lb/>
?ar en lecetA filafeU, tafe, etc. We mill lee?in to denote oui<lb/>
full time leyinniny mondaf, Mem4ei Sid to installation of inteiccmb,<lb/>
muuc SfdemO, and vacuum cleaning inltallalicns.<lb/>
tinned:<lb/>
$aclc Jmitli $immtf Wynne<lb/>
tfoundb Unlimited<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0014"/><lb/>
w ?"<lb/>
l"MIWHtWWtl?J.<lb/>
Page 14 Fountainhead, Thursdav Dctober 30 96<lb/>
 . amid the slapping waves.<lb/>
Sat the lone singer wonderful<lb/>
ByDIANA CONNELLY<lb/>
,ASH NGTOf<lb/>
e a meD arett. daddy can have"1 A whole<lb/>
?<lb/>
The I ? sf -<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE Diana Connellv wife of 3.11 Connellv<lb/>
Founta.nhead's Washmaton Correspondent, was among the 50 000<lb/>
people at the Moratorium Day rallv in Washington This is her<lb/>
first-person account.<lb/>
Gee, uh, thanks. Uh, I'm thirsty<lb/>
Pepper " One was passed up.<lb/>
N ?  et( e ator <lb/>
As ??? e mea the hill tc r .<lb/>
? awav n the crowd to e<lb/>
?ers dp Df that tearf Did la<lb/>
f this f na t  Morator jt <lb/>
so newhat<lb/>
- ? rst rfvasa oungci 3wd her ,vhi<lb/>
at 5:30, thi   ?-<lb/>
' hey c<lb/>
-  - -  ,pr<lb/>
r a -<lb/>
with ' ves<lb/>
these' ? ?' ? E ? ? ? r  "<lb/>
- -  ? ' .   S the<lb/>
er see p eked :<lb/>
A . ng,ng, all the Golden Oldies, relics of a<lb/>
?  Shall Overcome "The<lb/>
Bat1 . -  Republic "This Little Light of Mine "We<lb/>
: ? ,01   ?? ,e All the Flowers Gone<lb/>
B heard the s " n someone's portable<lb/>
The announcei menl ed sma groups singing protest<lb/>
vqs Tl<lb/>
?  r ment qrounds, the first of the<lb/>
f el - r ??  - te House, a long slow-moving<lb/>
?h ;<lb/>
? ?- ? - jht from the Monument to<lb/>
ks t " ; ??utive Office Building,<lb/>
js ii 'ably thinned out.<lb/>
: by marshals, students<lb/>
-  vhite armbands. "Keep<lb/>
t bea ' ' ? "Link arms, people<lb/>
 -   ?'? e<lb/>
- -<lb/>
ackets the sor<lb/>
-<lb/>
Je <lb/>
Tne ; - treet wen slippery with wax drippings from<lb/>
the II DOC :andles. A fon ice Corps member handed hers to<lb/>
plewhol tantly ci sed i police blockade to join<lb/>
- <lb/>
a n 11 c t h <lb/>
? ttons iVe had ours A'e offered t ihare fc I Hi she -<lb/>
l,srr ng.andt - his lips,<lb/>
vn hurr ation jnt . . have ffered fi<lb/>
? ir to a at,nc n<lb/>
B v now the Monument Qrou nds vvere a ?. ? ien 11 indu - <lb/>
3es je the orcorar Gallerv )f Art was a "love bus a<lb/>
 kswager bus lecc te flowi s and slogans A bearded<lb/>
 mar stood motionless on top, holding two flares in<lb/>
rst etched arms Bes l( h m Bach chorales issued from a<lb/>
i-  t there wi ? . ?? een the marshals on both<lb/>
; ces. ; tanding by ir ttl( . more m sq tad<lb/>
5 mi tly blact n adi V signs surreptitious .<lb/>
: - - - had ciroppeci out. sitting on cars to - ' ;ore<lb/>
tne ne Afe had been standing for six hours<lb/>
Past the : " '  Off - building. The pavemei " vere even<lb/>
t! kei tl" ax, dangerously slick, but the ii l istothe<lb/>
ng ha n ar es ; n any girls. Thei ? ven ev i I fii es, a<lb/>
faint f burnt haii<lb/>
;t t '?'? ? te House Somi peculated i<lb/>
 hat th? r ? t Fa . nr jl I ng Ai rreverentv ci i ered<lb/>
  the) . ? fii ?? ivling, ar ' the - vatchinga<lb/>
isic and ai emen<lb/>
j? A . ? tet '<lb/>
 - nd the staqe E ecti Dntc<lb/>
there <lb/>
te H<lb/>
 ? .<lb/>
I wanting out, made V signs<lb/>
? ? here behind the iron<lb/>
? ?  ? ' 1 e porch,<lb/>
the Trea ry 8 ling, a breathtaking<lb/>
)n - fei ? ill the wa iround,<lb/>
four tiers by now andles<lb/>
-<lb/>
e marchers st<lb/>
Aa iss the.stree;<lb/>
 - .  - - <lb/>
?<lb/>
- <lb/>
<lb/>
r: j jers<lb/>
the Treasui.<lb/>
si . tired, I suppose,<lb/>
It as coming to<lb/>
? ; ? and Chartres<lb/>
ids of candles. Some of<lb/>
??-r?ral hundred bo-ys-<lb/>
iting antiphonally<lb/>
av ng then fists Vhen<lb/>
Pea ? Now" sound<lb/>
rts, i saw nothing<lb/>
i had waited a very<lb/>
you set such glory.<lb/>
RICH CO<lb/>
Hi! MY mAm? is<lb/>
JoE" CoulEGC. I<lb/>
CF STUn?NT fi-L<lb/>
X OO eveTHlMt<lb/>
To OO.<lb/>
7f<lb/>
J'oST SNA THOSt<lb/>
FINGERS Mt<lb/>
PsioeNTi<lb/>
Omg: thimg<lb/>
??3<lb/>
-?0<lb/>
2<lb/>
Through<lb/>
my<lb/>
eye<lb/>
By CHARLES GRFFN<lb/>
? The World is a<lb/>
yellow. The color of <lb/>
manure. The taste 0f the<lb/>
world isn't too good, either<lb/>
since it comes with a mi'<lb/>
of salt. Why 9ain<lb/>
Well, you take all the<lb/>
people that had something t0<lb/>
say on Oct. 15 Exclude the<lb/>
ones that ranted about Marx<lb/>
and the ones that raveri<lb/>
about God. Ignore the ones<lb/>
that wear the uniform<lb/>
because their mommies and<lb/>
daddies don't like it. Forget<lb/>
the freaks because they don't<lb/>
really give a sht anyway.<lb/>
Check out your news<lb/>
magazines, find out who it<lb/>
was stirring jp the straights.<lb/>
Surprised7<lb/>
Yeah, their han is a little<lb/>
long, but not too long. After<lb/>
all, clean Gene was their man<lb/>
once. Only now it's Dickie<lb/>
boy, in reverse They are<lb/>
party regulars performing m<lb/>
an irregulai a a,  th a little<lb/>
help from then friends, some<lb/>
ver y c lev ei establishment<lb/>
Democrats, thv, ire in f-irtg<lb/>
on queniHa warfare against<lb/>
the GOP<lb/>
All of on folks who<lb/>
shouted about a Communist<lb/>
conspiracy, stand up! As a<lb/>
special pi ie ou e1 - ,<lb/>
grade A horse la ugh<lb/>
Everybody that ed on<lb/>
about the pooi Vietnamese<lb/>
and the pooi American<lb/>
soldiers killing each other in<lb/>
a needless ? vr,<lb/>
hereby initiated r the<lb/>
Order of the Royal S ?<lb/>
Youi ? lub iymb ? the<lb/>
ia vn Your mo that<lb/>
clear, grand phrase, "Bettei<lb/>
blind than look foi a catch"<lb/>
Before you' veins burst,<lb/>
you aren't alone The boys<lb/>
and qirls running the show<lb/>
die only playing i ame and<lb/>
fooling themselves too. The<lb/>
man sitting in the White<lb/>
House ain't facing the truth<lb/>
?either Ihfe-quiPt truth is that<lb/>
with reduced draft calls and<lb/>
an announced policy of troop<lb/>
cutbacks, Hanoi knows it is<lb/>
winning Oct. 15 didn't mean<lb/>
a cl'mn to the communists,<lb/>
n American<lb/>
it was only an<lb/>
exercise in politics<lb/>
1'<lb/>
H<lb/>
rA NOT<lb/>
OMAN I<lb/>
OO<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0015"/><lb/>
Thursday, October 30, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 15<lb/>
N<lb/>
The Column, an action line, helps solve problems and<lb/>
mswers questions. For help, call 758 6367 or write The<lb/>
Column, c b Fountainhead, Box 2516, ECU Station,<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
What has been the cause of the delay in processing<lb/>
financial aid applications? - F.B.<lb/>
We contacted Robert M. Boudreaux at the financial aid<lb/>
office Boudreaux said that all funds had been committed<lb/>
is (?f June List year. The office is also 30 pel cent<lb/>
ovei committed on the work study program, he said.<lb/>
However, the office is in the process of compiling<lb/>
inventory of ill available funds from cancellations. An<lb/>
additional 530,000 will beallotted to the office for winter<lb/>
and spi ing quarters.<lb/>
One of the unneeded delays during general college<lb/>
pre registrations was due to a lack of catalogs. How many<lb/>
students now get new catalogs? - G.R.<lb/>
Students may pick up new catalogs in 108 Whichaid<lb/>
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Will the ECU Library change from the Dewey to the<lb/>
Library of Congress system of classification before the<lb/>
proposed expansion? Isn't L.C conside-ed to be superior,<lb/>
and haven't quite a few libraries of large size switched<lb/>
from Dewey? Just for the record, how many have<lb/>
switched from L.C. to Dewey? D.H.<lb/>
Mi. Wendell W. Smiley said that it would takeover a<lb/>
million dollars to change from the Dewey system to the<lb/>
Library of Congress method. "It look the University of<lb/>
Michigan 25 years while still continuing to function as a<lb/>
hl)i ,n y to change when it had the same amount of books<lb/>
that we now have he said. He feels that the present<lb/>
system is adeqt.ate. And, "only several libraries have<lb/>
changed<lb/>
Residents of Belk Dormitory have absolutely no space<lb/>
available where a standard 28" by 36" poster can be hung.<lb/>
Is it not possible that the housing office would rescind the<lb/>
ruling against posters, etc. being taped (not pinned,<lb/>
tacked, or stapled) to rhe closet doors or some other<lb/>
"tape resistant" surface?<lb/>
Before the housing office gives a cursory "impossible<lb/>
I ask only that they personally inspect bulletin board<lb/>
space in Belk rooms. - J.G.F.<lb/>
Dan K. Wooten, Housing Director, said that the<lb/>
question of a regulation change is being discussed by the<lb/>
business office and housing officials. He said, "We hope to<lb/>
ieach a decision shortly<lb/>
When are they going to turn on the heat in the new men's<lb/>
dorm? -PC.<lb/>
The forum<lb/>
Uan Wooten contacted the heating plant Tuesday. The<lb/>
lack of heat seems to be caused by a deficiency in the<lb/>
heating set up in the new dorm.<lb/>
Do you get the quality points back that are taken away as<lb/>
overcuts when you graduate for your final average? -<lb/>
D.M.<lb/>
No. Only tin; teachers or department chairmen, the<lb/>
Registrar's office said, may give back quality points when<lb/>
justifiable.<lb/>
How much money was turned into the scholarship fund<lb/>
last year by the bookstore?<lb/>
S45.000<lb/>
Who chooses Who's Who? P.C.<lb/>
Di. James Tucker, Dean of Student Affairs, said that<lb/>
because of the nature and task of the committee, the<lb/>
members are not made public. However, the committee is<lb/>
composed of administrative officials, faculty, and<lb/>
students. Dean Tucket suggested that a different method<lb/>
would be far more suitable. He said, "It is hard for this<lb/>
committee to know everybody that well<lb/>
"The Student Government Association he said, "has<lb/>
not seen fit to change the present method of selection<lb/>
He added, "I have talked to John Schofield about it and<lb/>
we may be able to work something out<lb/>
?y<lb/>
Deat Editor:<lb/>
A chirping gale of avian<lb/>
creatures, your wings aspread<lb/>
and recognition colors glowing,<lb/>
you fluttei into my classroom<lb/>
The liquid redhead with blue<lb/>
eyes who displays on the front<lb/>
row, the guy with metal frame<lb/>
glasses readme) a few more<lb/>
paragraphs of "Walden" so he'll<lb/>
be ready for Lit next hour Prof<lb/>
stands up front, impatience in<lb/>
his muscles, nerves, and<lb/>
intestines safely hidden<lb/>
behind a bored expression. The<lb/>
bell, a signal, and all reverses.<lb/>
Foi Prof's muscles and nerves<lb/>
come alive, while you sit like so<lb/>
many cloaked monks<lb/>
illuminating in such rich detail<lb/>
manuscripts which you do not<lb/>
understand and which you will<lb/>
someday repeat like parrots to a<lb/>
new generation.<lb/>
Where is there light? Where<lb/>
pleasure at discovery? Did you<lb/>
come here to discover reality, or<lb/>
escape it? Does "the system"<lb/>
confront reality or diffuse it in a<lb/>
confusion of facts? In my desire<lb/>
to provide you with the<lb/>
"essentials" of my field have I<lb/>
been guilty of overkill? Do I<lb/>
expect you to grasp in a quarter<lb/>
understanding what it took me<lb/>
two graduate degrees and<lb/>
post-graduate teaching<lb/>
experience to master? By<lb/>
presenting still more examples<lb/>
requiring knowledge of still<lb/>
more "fundamental language<lb/>
and facts" will I be able to<lb/>
communicate to you the rather<lb/>
simple underlying concepts at<lb/>
my discipline? Frustration at<lb/>
your failure to see through the<lb/>
facts to the concepts and<lb/>
beautiful inner workings behind<lb/>
data matrices causes me to<lb/>
pump out further examples and<lb/>
analogies. Are we not now<lb/>
dividing the numerator by<lb/>
zero?<lb/>
Facts are of the greatest<lb/>
utility in solving<lb/>
problemsonce you have a<lb/>
conceptual .model with which to<lb/>
manipulate them. The model is<lb/>
so simple, once that it is seen.<lb/>
Where in my course do I make<lb/>
you think, give you conceptual<lb/>
models to play with on your<lb/>
own, oi excite you to question?<lb/>
Is it even possible for these<lb/>
things to occur in the absence of<lb/>
feedback from the class? Each<lb/>
man must ultimately make his<lb/>
own discoveries. How firm a<lb/>
foundation of fact is necessary<lb/>
for understanding of concepts?<lb/>
Is my function as a teacher to<lb/>
manufacture monks who<lb/>
inscribe intellectual truth in<lb/>
handsome scrolls?<lb/>
V. Bellis<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Of late, there has been an<lb/>
alarming increase in stealing here<lb/>
at ECU. We are all aware of this<lb/>
It seems we take a risk of<lb/>
"losing" our books when we<lb/>
leave them in the CU for a<lb/>
period of time. Why is this so?<lb/>
No one can come up with a<lb/>
legitimate answer.<lb/>
Some cay that they steal in<lb/>
order to get needed money by<lb/>
reselling the stolen object. Most<lb/>
students don't realize the fact<lb/>
that there are vario<lb/>
emergency loan funds available<lb/>
to the student<lb/>
These interest free loan<lb/>
funds, MRC.WRC.andSGAare<lb/>
obtained in the Dean of Men's<lb/>
office and Dean of Women's<lb/>
office and should deter anyone<lb/>
from having to resort to any<lb/>
deleterious conduct.<lb/>
Others say that their actions<lb/>
are totally impulsive,<lb/>
involuntary, and not<lb/>
premeditated. This, of course, is<lb/>
a possibility. When a person gets<lb/>
caught, his answer is "I just<lb/>
didn't think1 I should have<lb/>
realized what I was doing<lb/>
before I did it But, of course<lb/>
it's too late. Most people get<lb/>
caught stealing, and the chances<lb/>
of getting away with it are very<lb/>
slim.<lb/>
Why take the risk? If guilt is<lb/>
proven, both stealing and<lb/>
cheating lead to an automatic<lb/>
recommendation to the<lb/>
President for suspension from<lb/>
school. Is it worth the chance of<lb/>
upsetting your college career<lb/>
and facing the draft and<lb/>
countless unforeseen<lb/>
consequences because of a few<lb/>
minutes of "not thinking?"<lb/>
Think about it. Is it worth it to<lb/>
you? Think about it.<lb/>
Members of:<lb/>
oui rr.???,4? Cof<lb/>
Attorney General's Staff<lb/>
Men's Honor Council<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
It would seem in reflecting<lb/>
upon articles involving<lb/>
campus protest that one<lb/>
point is brought home.<lb/>
Namely, that students seek<lb/>
changes in the university<lb/>
structure that will allow them<lb/>
more voice in its operation.<lb/>
This idea of change runs the<lb/>
gamut from a loosening of<lb/>
campus rules to a desire for<lb/>
a sea on the board of<lb/>
trustees Student initiated<lb/>
changes are being realized.<lb/>
Wit-h - one p o s s i b I e<lb/>
exception it would appear<lb/>
that ECU has been left far<lb/>
behind in the international<lb/>
drive for more "student<lb/>
power The exception I<lb/>
refei to is the East Carolina<lb/>
University Union.<lb/>
After reading about their<lb/>
avowed plans and hopes to<lb/>
assume the responsibility for<lb/>
on campus entertainment, by<lb/>
challenging that godly group<lb/>
SGA, I most heartily<lb/>
encourage them in this<lb/>
endeavor and hope that they<lb/>
will not stop here.<lb/>
If the Fountainhead would<lb/>
support this endeavor it<lb/>
would bolster the students<lb/>
sagging opinion of our<lb/>
campus paper and possibly<lb/>
give impetus to more groups<lb/>
to make themselves felt.<lb/>
Sam Adams<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
In reference to recent<lb/>
articles concerning the<lb/>
question of the<lb/>
Entertainment Series, the<lb/>
East Carolina Union<lb/>
Committee's purpose is not<lb/>
to question the quality of<lb/>
entertainment presented by<lb/>
the SGA, but rather, to gain<lb/>
for more students the<lb/>
responsibility of choosing<lb/>
their entertainment. In our<lb/>
plan we hope to give the<lb/>
students a greater voice and a<lb/>
more active part in selecting<lb/>
the talent presented on this<lb/>
campus. In brief, we hope to<lb/>
achieve this, first of all, by<lb/>
not limiting the size of each<lb/>
of the entertainment<lb/>
committees.<lb/>
We also plan to make<lb/>
ourselves open to complaint<lb/>
(or praise) after each<lb/>
performance by allowing<lb/>
students to express<lb/>
themselves through a poll and<lb/>
through write in complaints<lb/>
in the Union Committee<lb/>
office.<lb/>
Another plan of the<lb/>
Committee is to involve the<lb/>
students in the negotiating of<lb/>
contracts for the prupose of<lb/>
the student' experience and<lb/>
responsibility.<lb/>
We may remind the<lb/>
student body that the<lb/>
prupose of the Union is to<lb/>
provide recreation and<lb/>
entertainment for the<lb/>
students, faculty, and<lb/>
administration. Help your<lb/>
Student. Union fulfill its<lb/>
purpose by supporting our<lb/>
effort.<lb/>
I urge you to respond to<lb/>
this issue not only through<lb/>
the Fountainhead, but also<lb/>
verbally or in writing to the<lb/>
Student Board office, room<lb/>
Conwell Worthington<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Please notice the smudge<lb/>
marks on this letter. They came<lb/>
from my hands that had just<lb/>
recently been holding an issue<lb/>
of the Fountainhead. What type<lb/>
of printing dye do you use -<lb/>
beetle juice?<lb/>
Please try to do something<lb/>
about your type. I have to wash<lb/>
my hands after reading your<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
HalJ. Daniel, III<lb/>
Si j. z<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
is not a college<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
is not a weekly reader<lb/>
join the revolution!<lb/>
T Call 758 6366 L<lb/>
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Paul F Cf p C : a  ?<lb/>
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Phyllis Br.dgeman <lb/>
Robert Thonen B ??.<lb/>
David Dalton  Assoc ate ; j t( -<lb/>
Keith Parrrsti Feature? Ed tor<lb/>
Patienc Collie  Productior Manager<lb/>
Jim Teal  Ad Mar jger<lb/>
Gail Burton New? Ed'or<lb/>
cnny Lea Sports Editc<lb/>
Dnllie Carter  Wire Editor<lb/>
Charles Griffin   T,r<lb/>
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Which of them are adjusted<lb/>
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and what kind of friends do<lb/>
they have' Which of them<lb/>
"fit" in society today'<lb/>
ii mmmmi mmmamt<lb/>
jJJJWgilMM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039439_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>