<?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="00039440_0001"/>
ounuinheAd<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
1 No. 16<lb/>
East Carolina University, p.p. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Nov. 4, 1969<lb/>
Disney's happiness<lb/>
inspires homecoming<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
on<lb/>
he<lb/>
id.<lb/>
ed<lb/>
iy.<lb/>
io<lb/>
WALT DISNEY'S MAKE BELIEVE WORLD- the places- will be the theme for this year's Homecoming<lb/>
world of Donand Duck, Mickey Mouse and far away "A Tribute to Walt Disney<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00039440_0002"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
.? ? .Mining iipii? ?<lb/>
Seventeen coeds<lb/>
serve as marshals<lb/>
concert of the irear - : ? <lb/>
Franc) W.ozs<lb/>
? sowers de :<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
- .<lb/>
Mallory denies plans<lb/>
for visitation periods<lb/>
British representative talks<lb/>
about study abroad aid<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
itfp<lb/>
International Studies  <lb/>
Abroad sponsors flights Spirit Committee to sell bells<lb/>
-??- in Union lobbyWednesday<lb/>
Folk Music Club discusses<lb/>
folk enferfainmenf<lb/>
H 5 MJ<lb/>
? ' :<lb/>
 - " -<lb/>
 ? "<lb/>
jn high th?<lb/>
i 5<lb/>
 by the Che<lb/>
and a rev <lb/>
man Don<lb/>
" i. schoc<lb/>
North Carolina Library Assn.<lb/>
names JoAnn Bell a director<lb/>
Sh ep par d<lb/>
- ' tjZ. <lb/>
members<lb/>
sc ence ;k$ artme <lb/>
Eucatior al E C L<lb/>
I Lar ei Lc s<lb/>
Em . S. Boyce<lb/>
DeBoard a-2<lb/>
t 5:<lb/>
 ; <lb/>
? a 0 .?,<lb/>
eat et :n s ear re<lb/>
5 - degree r -<lb/>
Jn . r's  and tf<lb/>
ibrary science<lb/>
r<lb/>
?H<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00039440_0003"/><lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau sponsors<lb/>
'Woman Haters Week'<lb/>
Tuesday, November 4, 1969, Fountamhead, Page 3<lb/>
a prelude to<lb/>
the Phi Kappa<lb/>
A s<lb/>
Homecoming,<lb/>
Tau fraternity is sponsoring<lb/>
Woman Hater's Week.<lb/>
The event started Sunday<lb/>
and will climax Friday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
During this week, the<lb/>
brothers and pledges will not<lb/>
date or talk to women. They<lb/>
will be known by their<lb/>
Blood drive<lb/>
collects<lb/>
1309 pints<lb/>
ECU An Force<lb/>
e Officer Training<lb/>
olle ted 309 pints of<lb/>
d foi donation to Red<lb/>
chapters in the<lb/>
itei area oi North<lb/>
and Virginia during<lb/>
. annual blood drive<lb/>
last Wednesday and<lb/>
:<lb/>
A county quota of 330<lb/>
had been se1 for the<lb/>
Ken Kelly, the cadet in<lb/>
ii i of the (ii ive said that,<lb/>
h the quota was<lb/>
the drive was "quite<lb/>
Wednesday I54 pints<lb/>
ere collected. On<lb/>
, !55 pints of blood<lb/>
i ited.<lb/>
addition, 57 person<lb/>
ffered to give blood but<lb/>
not able to donate for<lb/>
il ? jasons.<lb/>
ents at FCU were not<lb/>
, donors. One student<lb/>
Cornell U nivei sity<lb/>
blood. He had<lb/>
led down to East<lb/>
i to see a friend and<lb/>
sip donating a pint of<lb/>
1Griffin to<lb/>
speak here By KEITH PARRISH<lb/>
How.iid Griffin,<lb/>
 ' of "Black Like Me<lb/>
peal Thursday, Nov. 13 at<lb/>
5in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
1 iff in, internationally<lb/>
? eporter, humanitarian,<lb/>
1 ident of primitive<lb/>
will speak of his<lb/>
ences while posing as a man. He had a physician 11! his skin pigment and months in 1959 he " through five Southern<lb/>
<lb/>
. i??' ing to college<lb/>
ents for the last five years<lb/>
 ism in America, he<lb/>
-has repeatedly held the aud h , rl<lb/>
? i1 ?, i iu. Master of Ceremonies Yle University was quoted<lb/>
ling, "Superbheld<lb/>
hef o i two and<lb/>
 6u' hours of lecture<lb/>
HP(us questions and answers, n then, they lei him leave whe,i 1 insisted<lb/>
; m for students and tV will be by ID cards<lb/>
badges and unshaven faces.<lb/>
During the week, the<lb/>
fraternity expects raids on<lb/>
the house by sororities and<lb/>
dorm women.<lb/>
Girls raiding the house will<lb/>
do so at their own risk.<lb/>
All brothers and pledges<lb/>
violating the purpose of the<lb/>
week will be caged on the<lb/>
mall Friday afternoon. They<lb/>
will serve as targets for<lb/>
everybody interested.<lb/>
The fraternity asks that no<lb/>
eggs or paint be used in the<lb/>
house raids. They just<lb/>
completed painting the house.<lb/>
The sorority showing the<lb/>
most spirit during the week<lb/>
will win the Phi Tau pledge<lb/>
class for slaves for one<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
DELT<lb/>
n<lb/>
n imrwmMmm<lb/>
??WWP&amp; wifcMbpii<lb/>
EACH ENTRY in the Mini-Art show seemed to reflect the<lb/>
world in miniature.<lb/>
JOHN HOWARD GRIFFIN lived a black man's life once<lb/>
for two months and lived to tell about it. His lecture<lb/>
will be at 8 p.m. Thursday in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
One hour<lb/>
i<lb/>
$<lb/>
Bt <lb/>
i XA<lb/>
i<lb/>
i1<lb/>
iD<lb/>
? ?s-i<lb/>
Ig D'<lb/>
I.<lb/>
i. ?vi<lb/>
MIKE WINSLOW'S winning lithograph caught the eyes<lb/>
of many students at the first annual Mini-Art show last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Winslow wins grand<lb/>
prize in mini-art show<lb/>
The idea was unique and<lb/>
the result was enchanting.<lb/>
That was the way it was<lb/>
at the first annual Mini-Art<lb/>
Show. There were 75<lb/>
entries, each reflecting the<lb/>
world in miniature.<lb/>
The winners in each<lb/>
category were: Annette<lb/>
Williams painting; Sissy<lb/>
Price, d rawing; Mike<lb/>
Winslow, printmaking; Roy<lb/>
Brophy, photography;<lb/>
Belinda Godwin, sculpture;<lb/>
D.D. Stark, jewlery; and<lb/>
Anna Murdock, crafts.<lb/>
The grand prize winner<lb/>
was Winslow. His winning<lb/>
entry was a lithograph with<lb/>
the inscription, "and some<lb/>
men die knowing less than<lb/>
when they were born<lb/>
Homecoming Parade<lb/>
will be largest ever<lb/>
The Homecoming Parade<lb/>
will begin at 10 a.m.<lb/>
Saturday morning.<lb/>
The theme of this years<lb/>
parade is "Disneyland: A<lb/>
Tribue to Walt Disney<lb/>
"This is expected to be<lb/>
the best parade of any we<lb/>
have ever had according to<lb/>
Dan Summers, SGA Press<lb/>
Secretary.<lb/>
Summers said that this<lb/>
will be the largest<lb/>
Homecoming Parade ever<lb/>
held here. He said more<lb/>
floats than ever before will<lb/>
help comprise the 105 units<lb/>
of the parade.<lb/>
The parade will follow a<lb/>
two and a half mile route.<lb/>
Summers said that<lb/>
i n v i tations have been<lb/>
extended to everyone in the<lb/>
surrounding area to attend.<lb/>
Exclusive Apparel for Women<lb/>
Hollywood<lb/>
Vassarette<lb/>
Vanity Fair Lingerie<lb/>
phone PI 23468<lb/>
tnmiMM<lb/>
CMTtFtes<lb/>
THE MOST IN<lb/>
DRY CLEANING<lb/>
I ; E Tenth St. 1401 D.ck.nson Ave. C HERBER FORBES<lb/>
Buy<lb/>
Your<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
Fashions<lb/>
From<lb/>
<pb facs="00039440_0004"/><lb/>
Disney-a creator or oyca,<lb/>
 m  - we  : start .?, - . <lb/>
THE ENCHANTMENT OF Disneyland inspired Te<lb/>
th p me for Homecorr no '96<lb/>
o<lb/>
if<lb/>
4i<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
BE A WINNER<lb/>
? not let The Campus Corner bring<lb/>
 back nto the gae with a double<lb/>
? suit. Look for waist<lb/>
pression jeep side or center ents,<lb/>
s anted flapped pockets and wider<lb/>
sps r'ou II be sure to win. Your<lb/>
favor te will be priced frorr S90 to<lb/>
S1 05<lb/>
 i f let m f - tu de n <lb/>
Student charge accounts invited,<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
?X"<lb/>
tfl<lb/>
iJ<lb/>
andneed Ar d the need<lb/>
ar matedjsl for curing the  - i<lb/>
rr:r " - ?? the mj<lb/>
gr ? i ; 's ?  ri  j  . a <lb/>
e  : -   and and - <lb/>
 -??. a sc<lb/>
presenta prototype for the ; r <lb/>
- r: H e begar   ?<lb/>
?i , ? -?'? hole .s D r  and<lb/>
Florida whicri ,?<lb/>
Z 5 r I c -a n e ??. amusemeni parV<lb/>
jucedmote hote reson  <lb/>
 - H(OOcenters, an n dustr-a<lb/>
?  j ?comple ar airpon  ?<lb/>
L ives 3 ' r 1 ttl?Tomorro <lb/>
arvH mrxlHp  v  . <lb/>
; : . additions<lb/>
recreat na "<lb/>
ia- shrnent -<lb/>
-i' tute ;? the <lb/>
-<lb/>
3 h "i t C<lb/>
- e : provide a p'ace t:<lb/>
Jeveloi the taleni .? the<lb/>
iomethmq<lb/>
Walt Disney ? fe :s a true<lb/>
success  the   " ever<lb/>
he .vas se sketches tc<lb/>
x s. and<lb/>
-<lb/>
the reatest<lb/>
- p - -  -? . X<lb/>
? n gdorr<lb/>
imai ?' <lb/>
?' r K<lb/>
J ot<lb/>
: ?<lb/>
xvered : sterr tc<lb/>
.?.  Disnev artoons<lb/>
he set    ?<lb/>
1923 he had nothing but a<lb/>
: - S4C and a<lb/>
  I ; nate fairy tale<lb/>
?ubject S th he has<lb/>
eceived ' E . <lb/>
the world nc I<lb/>
ees frorr a?<lb/>
the P res lentia  ' ?<lb/>
P reed rr - tners<lb/>
Walt D<lb/>
his  ' ' ?<lb/>
? ?- at is<lb/>
t tc ?<lb/>
f i nd i no h e<lb/>
where '<lb/>
? si<lb/>
 as a<lb/>
? ? ? ?  the<lb/>
   f and<lb/>
ess thai -   tc<lb/>
-<lb/>
Shoney's<lb/>
Coffee -9hi<lb/>
Be<lb/>
By T<lb/>
Bennet<lb/>
with you<lb/>
think wl<lb/>
name? If<lb/>
people,<lb/>
some su<lb/>
was on<lb/>
fifteen<lb/>
some of<lb/>
and puns<lb/>
possible i<lb/>
human in<lb/>
All m<lb/>
just no<lb/>
individual<lb/>
on youi<lb/>
Meet" 11!<lb/>
much of<lb/>
until L la<lb/>
facts spea<lb/>
As I h<lb/>
is a r i<lb/>
chap, ha<lb/>
Columbia<lb/>
also a<lb/>
Kappa i<lb/>
straight a:<lb/>
be on<lb/>
certainly<lb/>
bi an<lb/>
s u p p o<lb/>
Bstablishn<lb/>
SURP<lb/>
n t<lb/>
A<lb/>
m<lb/>
disci<lb/>
Last<lb/>
group of<lb/>
"An Ever<lb/>
discuss t<lb/>
festival ;<lb/>
winning i<lb/>
or$50pri<lb/>
Dulbei<lb/>
inizat<lb/>
and a cai<lb/>
no mon<lb/>
prompt in<lb/>
others to<lb/>
consisting<lb/>
(double (<lb/>
etc.). <lb/>
explained<lb/>
f,f cinema<lb/>
If the<lb/>
Arts<lb/>
much im<lb/>
c u a r t e r<lb/>
it's th<lb/>
the tit<lb/>
Colleg<lb/>
that's<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
r?-rnMTT? ' I I'ni a-lT<lb/>
<pb facs="00039440_0005"/><lb/>
Bennet Cerf lauds students,<lb/>
calls censorship un-American<lb/>
Tuesday, November 4, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 5<lb/>
By TAYLOR GREEN<lb/>
honest<lb/>
hear that<lb/>
you're like most<lb/>
think about<lb/>
Bennett Cerf. Be<lb/>
with yourself; what do you<lb/>
think when you<lb/>
name? If<lb/>
people, you<lb/>
some super square guy that<lb/>
was on "What's My Line" for<lb/>
fifteen years while telling<lb/>
some of the corniest jokes<lb/>
and puns you've ever believed<lb/>
possible 10 be created in the<lb/>
human mind.<lb/>
All in ali, Bennett Gen is<lb/>
just not one of those<lb/>
individuals you'd like to put<lb/>
on your "People I'd Like to<lb/>
Meet" list. This writer was<lb/>
much of the same opinion<lb/>
until L last night. But let the<lb/>
facts w?'ak out.<lb/>
As I had guessed, Mr. Cerf<lb/>
is a rather well educated<lb/>
chap, having graduated from<lb/>
Columbia University, and is<lb/>
ilso a lifetime Phi Beta<lb/>
Kappa member. As super<lb/>
ht as the guy appears to<lb/>
be on TV, you would<lb/>
certainly think that he would<lb/>
be in equally staunch<lb/>
s u p p o r t e i of the<lb/>
Establishment.<lb/>
SURPRISE To quote<lb/>
as possible, "You (the<lb/>
nts) are right and they<lb/>
rongand if they don't<lb/>
listen to you, they are<lb/>
blind<lb/>
For the remainder of the<lb/>
evening he had the students<lb/>
in the palm of his hand. It<lb/>
was also interesting to note<lb/>
the change of attitude most<lb/>
of the adults took after that<lb/>
low blow. Sitting up in the<lb/>
balcony I could see many a<lb/>
nasty frown from many an<lb/>
appalled adult.<lb/>
Come to think of it, I<lb/>
really don't think Mr. Cerf<lb/>
had one thing to say in favor<lb/>
of our elders. He also<lb/>
indicated strong approval of<lb/>
the Youths' work with the<lb/>
Moratorium and said he<lb/>
would like to see a quick<lb/>
end to the war.<lb/>
Censorship condemned<lb/>
Mr. Cerf turned to that<lb/>
old bugaboo in the publishing<lb/>
world known as<lb/>
CENSORSHIP he's against it.<lb/>
He called it "un-American"<lb/>
and self defeating.<lb/>
He is very much disturbed<lb/>
with those "well intentioned"<lb/>
ladies and citizens who try to<lb/>
say what others shall and<lb/>
shall not read, see, hear, and<lb/>
eventually think.<lb/>
By pointing out that a<lb/>
particular work is "dirty<lb/>
many people who might<lb/>
never otherwise have heard of<lb/>
it are suddenly aware of it<lb/>
Amateur film directors<lb/>
discuss spring film fest<lb/>
Last Wednesday night a<lb/>
group of 20 film lovers met for<lb/>
"An Evening with Dulberg to<lb/>
discuss tin; first campus film<lb/>
festival and their chances of<lb/>
winning a possible $150, $100,<lb/>
or $50 prize in the spring.<lb/>
Dulberg is a two year-old<lb/>
organization of five or six actors<lb/>
and a cameraman. They make<lb/>
no money but believe in<lb/>
promoting?thuuiiims and<lb/>
others to the world. Using films<lb/>
consisting of special effects<lb/>
(double exposures, animation,<lb/>
etc.), Dulberg Productions<lb/>
explained some basic mechanics<lb/>
of cinematography.<lb/>
If the SGA gives the Fine<lb/>
Arts Committee its<lb/>
much-needed money next<lb/>
quarter, East Carolina<lb/>
University will be on its way to<lb/>
cultivating the art of cinema.<lb/>
The film festival committee<lb/>
has put out some basic<lb/>
explanations of filmmakingand<lb/>
some restrictions on the type of<lb/>
films to be entered.<lb/>
The rules are as follows:<lb/>
length is to be anywhere from<lb/>
one minute to 30 minutes; there<lb/>
is no limit on subject matter;<lb/>
there will be one dollar entry fee<lb/>
"ToTeach' f rtm-f&amp;-mm-ef14j-mm)<lb/>
and there is no limit to the<lb/>
number of entries, finally, the<lb/>
sound for 8 mm films is to be<lb/>
recorded on tapes or record disc<lb/>
unless one has a personal<lb/>
orchestra, 8 mm sound<lb/>
projector, or no sound at all.<lb/>
and run right out to read it,<lb/>
see it, hear it, and naturally<lb/>
think about it for years to<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Sick puns<lb/>
Bennett Cerf wouldn't be<lb/>
Bennett Cerf if he didn't<lb/>
include a pun or two during<lb/>
the course of his talk, which<lb/>
he did at the conclusion of<lb/>
his lecture. Great as he is on<lb/>
everything else, Bennett Cerf<lb/>
still tells the corniest puns<lb/>
ever conceived by the human<lb/>
mind. One of the sickest<lb/>
ones had to do with Arthur<lb/>
Rubenstein. It seems Mr.<lb/>
Rubenstein was rehearsing on<lb/>
a piano that needed tuning<lb/>
very badly. A Mr.<lb/>
Opornokity was called in to<lb/>
fix the piano which he<lb/>
proceeded to do for the next<lb/>
three hours. Upon completion<lb/>
of his task he left, whereby<lb/>
Mr. Rubenstein started<lb/>
practicing once more. Still<lb/>
not satisfied with what he<lb/>
heard, he instructed that Mr.<lb/>
Opornokity be summoned<lb/>
once again for further<lb/>
retiming.<lb/>
Change of opinions<lb/>
Upon hearing that his<lb/>
services were required a<lb/>
second time, he replied, "I'm<lb/>
sorry but Opornokity only<lb/>
tunes once That's<lb/>
something only Bennett Cerf<lb/>
could get away with and live<lb/>
to re-tell it.<lb/>
Those of us who<lb/>
previously thought cryptic<lb/>
and cynical thoughts of<lb/>
Bennett Cerf have now<lb/>
altered their opinions by at<lb/>
least 160 degrees. If he<lb/>
didn't tell those God awful<lb/>
puns, he might well have<lb/>
captured the other 20<lb/>
degrees.<lb/>
Hats off to Bennett Cerf<lb/>
he certainly is one for the<lb/>
books. Upun my word!<lb/>
MRS. RUTH PAULK, acting President,<lb/>
prepares material for the League of Women<lb/>
Woman Voters meet<lb/>
next Tuesday nig,it<lb/>
A pre-organizational<lb/>
meeting for a Greenville-Pitt<lb/>
County League of Women<lb/>
Voters will be held at 8 p.m.<lb/>
on Nov. 11 at St. Paul's<lb/>
Episcopal Church.<lb/>
The League of Women<lb/>
Voters is a nonpartisan<lb/>
organization open to<lb/>
women citizens of voting<lb/>
age to encourage the<lb/>
informed and active<lb/>
participation of ail citizens<lb/>
in government and politics.<lb/>
Mrs. Betty Casey, acting<lb/>
publicity director for the<lb/>
League, invited anyone<lb/>
interested in responsible<lb/>
action on community affairs<lb/>
and those who would like to<lb/>
be better informed from a<lb/>
nonpartisan standpoint on<lb/>
political issues to attend the<lb/>
meeting next Tuesday.<lb/>
The League of Women<lb/>
Voters functions on three<lb/>
levels: local, state, and<lb/>
national. When a women<lb/>
joins the League in her own<lb/>
community, she also<lb/>
becomes a member of her<lb/>
state League and of the<lb/>
League of Women Voters of<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
Wherever she lives, she<lb/>
works with other members<lb/>
of her local League on issues<lb/>
important to her own<lb/>
community, to her state,<lb/>
and to her country.<lb/>
The League of Women<lb/>
Voters of the United States<lb/>
has 150,000 members in<lb/>
more than 1,250 local<lb/>
Leagues in all 50 states, the<lb/>
District of Columbia and<lb/>
the Commonwealth of<lb/>
Puerto Rico.<lb/>
Representatives from the<lb/>
State League will be present<lb/>
at the local meeting to<lb/>
answer questions and to<lb/>
guide the group in setting<lb/>
up necessary procedures<lb/>
required for becoming<lb/>
organized.<lb/>
AVNAWWWWVwvVVVVWWWW<lb/>
<pb facs="00039440_0006"/><lb/>
.0,HWMM?<lb/>
Paqe 6, Fou , Tuesday, November 4. 196S<lb/>
Marcuse retires to background<lb/>
ByJIMHECK<lb/>
-<lb/>
SAN DIEGO, Cal - (CPS) -<lb/>
There is a story that during the<lb/>
May 1968, Sorbonne uprising,<lb/>
militants earned about placards<lb/>
that expressed solidarity with<lb/>
"Marx?Marcuse<lb/>
When American radicals saw<lb/>
the photos and recalled that<lb/>
Marcuse taught in the United<lb/>
States, the story goes, they<lb/>
hastily read his literature in the<lb/>
hope of deifying a national<lb/>
radical hero around whose<lb/>
Geology the Movement could<lb/>
be based. With the execution of<lb/>
Cohn-Bendit. Marcuse is the<lb/>
only not-young radical who has<lb/>
written as extensively as Marx<lb/>
and who advocates revolution.<lb/>
Marcuse the only one left<lb/>
But Cohn-Bendit fell into<lb/>
disrepute with French<lb/>
insurgents after his dubious role<lb/>
in the Sorbonne-worker riots.<lb/>
And so, only Herbert Marcuse<lb/>
was left with the potential for<lb/>
becoming the spokesman and<lb/>
perhaps precursor of a national<lb/>
Movement that drastically<lb/>
needed direction.<lb/>
But either Marcuse was too<lb/>
unradical or the radicals v.ere<lb/>
too irrational, and never the<lb/>
twam shaii ev I<lb/>
After a good yeai of<lb/>
significant exposure Herbert<lb/>
Marcuse is a red is i fl<lb/>
gruff, but really sensitive old<lb/>
man with flov ing white<lb/>
Marcuse spends his<lb/>
comfortably in a small off<lb/>
overlooking a peaceful<lb/>
University of California campus<lb/>
at San Diego. He is busy, but<lb/>
always seems available, an I<lb/>
speaks with a tired, thick<lb/>
accented German grow !<lb/>
No more book projects<lb/>
After producing numerous<lb/>
books and articlesand his n<lb/>
recent and perhaps too hast; .<lb/>
compiled 'Essay on<lb/>
Liberation which speculators<lb/>
believe was a quid, attempt to<lb/>
hit aware radicals m the<lb/>
community v. it- a concise<lb/>
explanation of a: his dogma,<lb/>
Marcuse conceden, No I h3-<lb/>
no more book projects in the<lb/>
working. I've written enough in<lb/>
my life<lb/>
It is not that Marcuse has<lb/>
written off the students, but<lb/>
rather the reverse, that seems<lb/>
true. Few radical groups really<lb/>
quote Marcuse and hesitate to<lb/>
allude to rather romantic<lb/>
conception of possible Utopia.<lb/>
The Progressive Labor Party has<lb/>
ish attacked the<lb/>
old professoi with such<lb/>
ip 01<lb/>
H. T. HODGES &amp; CO Inc.<lb/>
Students Sports Headquarters<lb/>
Dial PL 2-4156<lb/>
out<lb/>
"I don't take that criticism<lb/>
seriously<lb/>
1st ? ractically all stu<lb/>
ology in th her's<lb/>
eyes. He claims students act for<lb/>
actions sake and have<lb/>
completely distorted the<lb/>
? f rev dution.<lb/>
They are not really<lb/>
? onaries, he says, but in<lb/>
part onl. ' ials divorced<lb/>
form society as a v. hole.<lb/>
His mam criticism ' the<lb/>
?; emenl is the totally<lb/>
outdated notions of the<lb/>
working classes as a<lb/>
revolutionary force in<lb/>
United States<lb/>
The Ivan ? i italistic<lb/>
system, Marcuse explains, is<lb/>
more and more dependent<lb/>
on codegr it ? tuals<lb/>
without whom the ?, I<lb/>
cannot possibly gc i<lb/>
Looks for revolution<lb/>
 3rcuse looks tc th<lb/>
future for re. tion and<lb/>
sees almost I iispr s<lb/>
a ith radica' resurgenc ?<lb/>
today as the s n p .<lb/>
frustrat e ? ? cies f a<lb/>
repressed culture.<lb/>
"I have never contended<lb/>
the student movement is a<lb/>
i evolutionary force. I have<lb/>
ays insisted that we do<lb/>
net live in a revolutionary<lb/>
situation. That it will take a<lb/>
long time to get there and<lb/>
that all their actions<lb/>
WON'T YOU COME<lb/>
TO OUR SS-1SH-<lb/>
it s a ce'ebraticn ? cf<lb/>
precis on tailoring, wh d1<lb/>
 : s the sx-button<lb/>
jacket to give the proper<lb/>
ivardrobe .vtu;ut extreme<lb/>
appearance T-e suit is<lb/>
one z' zi.r l- ghly recom-<lb/>
mended candidates for the<lb/>
seas: n the suave<lb/>
sr ce I ustrated, or other<lb/>
patterns just as d st r-c .e<lb/>
Won , du come try-on?<lb/>
Styled especially for<lb/>
Homecoming Weekend by<lb/>
College Hall Fashions to<lb/>
the order of<lb/>
oPfimani<lb/>
yMgiNS WfAf<lb/>
 this present fact "<lb/>
ih an a Imost<lb/>
,  jsposed position,<lb/>
ireusi points to whal he<lb/>
calls the greal defeatism on<lb/>
,rt of students today<lb/>
jn(i th Is1 t(l engage<lb/>
IIU<lb/>
He talks about the<lb/>
unstudent student leaders<lb/>
like Rudd, Ayers, Davis,<lb/>
Hoffman, etc. all of<lb/>
them he says: "If they are<lb/>
0d, if they really know<lb/>
what they are doing, if then<lb/>
actions and then strategy<lb/>
ised on a realistic<lb/>
ilysis, then they can play<lb/>
rtant parts in<lb/>
guiding the Movement<lb/>
But, he co n c I u d ed ,<lb/>
dejectedly, in most<lb/>
? ? ms this just isn't the<lb/>
case.<lb/>
T h e gi andfather<lb/>
Uosopher is on a<lb/>
completely different wave<lb/>
lenqht than Movement<lb/>
leaders who speak<lb/>
vamgloriously of the merit<lb/>
of spontaneous disruption<lb/>
"For revolution Marcuse<lb/>
says, "There is no such<lb/>
thing as spontaneity per se "<lb/>
He has never said it<lb/>
precisely,but this seems to<lb/>
be the center of his thinking<lb/>
about Lenin's democratic<lb/>
centralism, of the need for a<lb/>
revolution to be guided by a<lb/>
close knit critical thinking<lb/>
revolutionary elite. This<lb/>
naturally, alienates the<lb/>
youthful espousers of<lb/>
spontaneous and extensive<lb/>
democracy. This is only<lb/>
organized spontaneity, and<lb/>
only t h i o u f h such<lb/>
analytically organized<lb/>
spontaneity can revolution<lb/>
and his vague, Utopian New<lb/>
Form come about.<lb/>
Marine's body exhumed<lb/>
after investigation<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) The<lb/>
body of a 19-year-old Marine<lb/>
who died at the Parns Island,<lb/>
S. C, training base last July<lb/>
will be exhumed in Brooklyn<lb/>
today, Rep Mano Biaggi,<lb/>
D Conservative, the Bronx<lb/>
said Tuesday.<lb/>
Biaggi op e n e d a n<lb/>
investigation into the li ith<lb/>
of Pvt. Jose T. Conception of<lb/>
the Bronx a f t ei the<lb/>
serviceman's widow said her<lb/>
husband had complained of<lb/>
being mistreated by<lb/>
instructors at the base<lb/>
Conception was buried in<lb/>
E v er g reen Cemel ery in<lb/>
Brooklyn.<lb/>
MONOGRAM NECKLACE<lb/>
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15, 16, 27, i- 18 inch chahu<lb/>
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ests<lb/>
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Note: Orders for Christmas Delivery must be<lb/>
placed by November 22.<lb/>
?M<lb/>
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J<lb/>
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XC<lb/>
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?(<lb/>
!<lb/>
?k<lb/>
?4<lb/>
?VL<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00039440_0007"/><lb/>
d<lb/>
ith<lb/>
of<lb/>
he<lb/>
hei<lb/>
of<lb/>
by<lb/>
in<lb/>
in<lb/>
!?'<lb/>
tack of understanding<lb/>
cause of student crime<lb/>
a c k of<lb/>
many<lb/>
that several<lb/>
before the<lb/>
in which the<lb/>
The<lb/>
understanding<lb/>
students seemingly have of<lb/>
the consequences mvolved<lb/>
in committeing an illegal act<lb/>
here is one of the factors<lb/>
contributing to student<lb/>
misconduct, according to<lb/>
Stecle Trail, recording<lb/>
chairman of the Men's<lb/>
Honor Council<lb/>
Trail said<lb/>
cases came<lb/>
Honoi Counci<lb/>
accused student did not<lb/>
consider the penalty of the<lb/>
lction before he did it. He<lb/>
attributed this to the fact<lb/>
that the action the<lb/>
University takes against law<lb/>
breakers is not highly<lb/>
publicized.<lb/>
The Men's and Women's<lb/>
Honor Councils hear the<lb/>
cases for those students who<lb/>
have committed an Honor<lb/>
Code offense.<lb/>
The code is stated in the<lb/>
Key as "you are on your<lb/>
honor not to cheat, steal or<lb/>
lie<lb/>
In one case this quarter,<lb/>
two freshmen men were<lb/>
charged with illegal entry of<lb/>
a university building and<lb/>
stealing.<lb/>
During their hearing the<lb/>
en said they knew they<lb/>
ere breaking the law but<lb/>
not think about the<lb/>
possibility of being caught<lb/>
and what would follow.<lb/>
Trail said that this is a<lb/>
common response He said<lb/>
many students here attempt<lb/>
things that are very difficult<lb/>
"to get away with" because<lb/>
they believe the<lb/>
enforcement of campus<lb/>
rules is lax.<lb/>
T h e two men were<lb/>
p laced on conduct<lb/>
probation for fall quarter<lb/>
and given suspended<lb/>
suspension for the<lb/>
remaining academic year.<lb/>
Trail said in a book theft<lb/>
case this quarter the student<lb/>
did not know that the book<lb/>
could be traced so easily.<lb/>
T<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Registered<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
1<lb/>
t Certified<lb/>
Gemologist<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
?<lb/>
Lautares<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
The student said he sold the<lb/>
book because he needed the<lb/>
money and was unaware<lb/>
that the students could get<lb/>
temporary loans through<lb/>
theSGA.<lb/>
In other cases, Trail said<lb/>
that the student did not<lb/>
follow a rule because he felt<lb/>
it was insignificant and he<lb/>
would not do any harm by<lb/>
ignoring it.<lb/>
This was a case when a<lb/>
sophomore man failed to<lb/>
pick up his activity card and<lb/>
then claimed that he had<lb/>
puked one up and it had<lb/>
been stolen.<lb/>
He said he had lied<lb/>
because it seemed practical.<lb/>
He thought it would cut<lb/>
some of the red tape<lb/>
involved in geiting his card,<lb/>
Trail said.<lb/>
He was placed on<lb/>
conduct probation through<lb/>
winter quarter.<lb/>
Trail said that this is an<lb/>
instance where the student<lb/>
abandoned a standard set-up<lb/>
for the group because he<lb/>
felt it did not serve the<lb/>
individual.<lb/>
The honor councils are<lb/>
composed of nine members<lb/>
each. All members are<lb/>
students. They are<lb/>
appointed by the SGA<lb/>
president and approved by<lb/>
the legislature.<lb/>
Black teachers officials lose<lb/>
jobs because of integration<lb/>
WASHINGTON (CPS)<lb/>
The black principal and the<lb/>
black school teacher may be<lb/>
a vanishing breed in the<lb/>
South and the cause is the<lb/>
Civil Rights Act of I964.<lb/>
The act requires Southern<lb/>
school districts to desegregate<lb/>
their classrooms.<lb/>
Desegregation frequently<lb/>
means closing down formerly<lb/>
black schools. And school<lb/>
closings are just the excuse<lb/>
that many districts need to<lb/>
fire their Negro<lb/>
personnel - rather than<lb/>
transfer them to "white" or<lb/>
integrated schools.<lb/>
Thousands have lost their<lb/>
jobs through this<lb/>
"displacement according to<lb/>
the National Education<lb/>
Association (NEA.) The<lb/>
practice doesn't always end<lb/>
in firing, NEA says;<lb/>
sometimes school staffs are<lb/>
simply demoted-given lower<lb/>
pay, less satisfactory<lb/>
assignments. Sometimes, for<lb/>
example, principals of black<lb/>
schools are reassigned as<lb/>
assistants to white supervisors<lb/>
in central offices.<lb/>
"Then as an NEA<lb/>
spokesman put it, "they'd<lb/>
better not let their cars break<lb/>
down, because they would<lb/>
miss their most important<lb/>
assignment-driving the<lb/>
supervisor to lunch<lb/>
The pattern-pupil<lb/>
integration and black staff<lb/>
displacement-was evident as<lb/>
early as I954 after the border<lb/>
states began compliance with<lb/>
the Supreme Court decision<lb/>
(Brown vs. B oard of<lb/>
Education) which ruled that<lb/>
racial segregation could no<lb/>
longer be tolerated in the<lb/>
schools of the nation. It<lb/>
picked up steam and moved<lb/>
south after I965 when the<lb/>
implimentation of the civil<lb/>
rights act penetrated into the<lb/>
southern states.<lb/>
According to an NEA task<lb/>
force on the subject, "In<lb/>
I965, implementation of that<lb/>
act accelerated the pace of<lb/>
integration and increased the<lb/>
number of children attending<lb/>
integrated classroomsIn<lb/>
general, the more extensive<lb/>
the desegregation of students,<lb/>
the greater the chance that<lb/>
Negro teachers will be<lb/>
adversely affected by<lb/>
demotion, displacement, or<lb/>
dismissal<lb/>
The techniques employed<lb/>
by school districts in the<lb/>
South to displace their<lb/>
teachers and principals are<lb/>
many. They include:<lb/>
wholesale dismissal, failure to<lb/>
renew contracts, using other<lb/>
"reasons" to justify firing on<lb/>
an individual basis, and<lb/>
requiring certain scores on<lb/>
the National Teachers<lb/>
Examination (run by the<lb/>
Educational Testing Service)<lb/>
before certification is granted.<lb/>
An additional device<lb/>
recently uncovered is:<lb/>
reclassifying geral teaching<lb/>
positions under such special<lb/>
federally aided categories as<lb/>
(Continued on page 9)<lb/>
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FLASH<lb/>
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$4.98 LP's at<lb/>
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"pagVbi-ountainhead.l uesday, "November 4, T9S?<lb/>
Lower voting age<lb/>
Ijy BILL SIEVERT<lb/>
College Press Service<lb/>
WASHINGTON - (CPS -<lb/>
Hopes for lowering the voting<lb/>
age nationally may hinge<lb/>
upon the outcome of two<lb/>
hotly contested referendums<lb/>
Nov. 4 in Ohio and New<lb/>
Jersey.<lb/>
The two states are the<lb/>
first to put the issue before<lb/>
the people, and the results<lb/>
are expected to give a strong<lb/>
indication as to how voters<lb/>
in other states will react, says<lb/>
Youth Franchise Coalition<lb/>
Coordinator Ian MacGowan.<lb/>
Thirteen states have approved<lb/>
public referendums on the<lb/>
issue so far.<lb/>
New Jersey ahead<lb/>
The New Jersey campaign<lb/>
hopes to lower the voting age<lb/>
to 18, while the Ohio contest<lb/>
is over the 19-year old vote.<lb/>
"It looks very, very<lb/>
according to Stewart<lb/>
Rothskin, executive director<lb/>
Mew Jersey Voting<lb/>
Age Coalition. "We may be a<lb/>
tiny bit ahead, but on .<lb/>
few percentage points<lb/>
The Ohio campaign is<lb/>
somewhat less vocal and<lb/>
dramatic than the New Jersey<lb/>
effort, due in part to "the<lb/>
more conservative nature" of<lb/>
Ohio voters, Rothskin<lb/>
maintains.<lb/>
Statewide referendum<lb/>
While in Ohio rallies have<lb/>
Deen used only to encourage<lb/>
volunteers to canvass, a<lb/>
massive public rally was<lb/>
organized for Trenton, New<lb/>
Jersey's capital, to excite the<lb/>
state's voters.<lb/>
There is no organized<lb/>
opposition to the referendum,<lb/>
he said, just a "quiet<lb/>
problem with the image of<lb/>
youth<lb/>
Pat Keefer, assistant<lb/>
executive director of Ohio<lb/>
Volunteers for Vote 19, said<lb/>
the turning point in the Ohio<lb/>
campaign w as Vietnam<lb/>
Moratorium Day, Oct. 15,<lb/>
? i<lb/>
JSI<lb/>
t<lb/>
Wort. Qodl (tea. toi<lb/>
4v<lb/>
WKW<lb/>
1<lb/>
, hich was<lb/>
sful" in the state<lb/>
jt been disruptive things<lb/>
might look a lot worse for us<lb/>
today<lb/>
Only two states, Kentucky<lb/>
and Georgia, presently grant<lb/>
the vote to persons under 21.<lb/>
Both have the 18-year old<lb/>
vote. But every state except<lb/>
Mississippi (and the federally<lb/>
dominated District of<lb/>
Columbia) has devoted study<lb/>
to the voting age issue since<lb/>
June, '968. In the entire six<lb/>
years before only 27 states<lb/>
considered the issue.<lb/>
Twenty states this yeai<lb/>
have defeated bill which<lb/>
would have put the issue<lb/>
before statewide referendums.<lb/>
Three other state legislatures<lb/>
have killed bills without ver<lb/>
oting on them.<lb/>
Approved referendums<lb/>
Of the state legislatures<lb/>
which have approved<lb/>
referendums to consider<lb/>
lowering the voting age, seven<lb/>
have set the minimum age at<lb/>
19, five at 18, and one at 20.<lb/>
States which havd approved<lb/>
referendums on the issue are:<lb/>
Alaska (18 years old),<lb/>
Connecticut (18), Delaware<lb/>
(19) Hawaii (18),<lb/>
Massachusetts (19), Minnesota<lb/>
(19), Montana (19), Nebraska<lb/>
(20), Nevada (18), New Jersey<lb/>
(18), Ohio (19), Oregon (19),<lb/>
and Wyoming (19. These<lb/>
st js, except for Qhi and<lb/>
New Jersey, have set<lb/>
referendums for 1970.<lb/>
HATH 'i<lb/>
SPOKI N<lb/>
II R!<lb/>
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25 Delicious Flavors<lb/>
of lea Crean;<lb/>
Try a delicious Banana<lb/>
Split or Sundae<lb/>
264 By Pass, Greenville<lb/>
"BiKtanm?(Bovtth<lb/>
Board of Trustees<lb/>
endorses policy<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL (AP)<lb/>
The University of North<lb/>
iltna's board of tiustees<lb/>
endorsed a policy<lb/>
adopted a few months ago<lb/>
by the executive committee<lb/>
f0, dealing with campus<lb/>
disruptions<lb/>
The board took its action<lb/>
Monday despite last minute<lb/>
efforts to change the policy.<lb/>
There was no discussion.<lb/>
Student and faculty<lb/>
leaders had recommended<lb/>
alterations in the policy "The<lb/>
i eco m m e n da 11 ons wei e<lb/>
presented to the board's<lb/>
executive committee at a<lb/>
special 'I Sunday by<lb/>
Alan Albright of Gastonia,<lb/>
student body president at the<lb/>
Chapel hill campus, and<lb/>
Ity representatives from<lb/>
the i onsolidated universities<lb/>
units at Chapel Hill, Raleigh,<lb/>
Charlotti d Greensboro<lb/>
Archie K . Davis of<lb/>
Wmston Salem, head of a<lb/>
trustees committee which<lb/>
drafted the policy, said his<lb/>
committee's policy had<lb/>
already been put into effect<lb/>
and would nol be hanged<lb/>
He s nd the goals of his<lb/>
committee and Albright's<lb/>
group appeared to be the<lb/>
same avoid campus<lb/>
disruptions<lb/>
The policy provides f0r<lb/>
the suspension, expulsion<lb/>
discharge or dismissal of any<lb/>
student, staff or faculty<lb/>
member who wilfully disrupts<lb/>
normal campus operations<lb/>
The policy sets up a board<lb/>
of inquiry and a hearing<lb/>
committee to h indie the<lb/>
cases of alleged disrupters<lb/>
The chancellor appoints the<lb/>
members of the two boards<lb/>
and he may or may not<lb/>
convene them to hear a case<lb/>
dun pass judgment.<lb/>
Albright's group proposed<lb/>
that not o lly the chancellor,<lb/>
but also the chairman of the<lb/>
faculty and the student body<lb/>
president have authority to<lb/>
convene the committees.<lb/>
Rep Ik e Andrews,<lb/>
D Chatham, and former state<lb/>
Sen. Roy Rowe of Burgaw<lb/>
were elected to the board's<lb/>
15 member executive<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
Former Sen. Tom White<lb/>
of Kinston, a member of the<lb/>
executive committee, asked<lb/>
the trustees to determine if:<lb/>
(I) There was "any value" in<lb/>
p e emitting stud e n t<lb/>
publications to use obscene<lb/>
oi vulgai language, and (2)<lb/>
the university can require<lb/>
students to pay fees toward<lb/>
t h e s u p poi t of these<lb/>
publications.<lb/>
Moscow says that US<lb/>
must get out of Vietnam<lb/>
0 SCOW A P )<lb/>
Pravda, marking the fust<lb/>
? ' ii . if the U.S.<lb/>
? ng halt ovei North<lb/>
id today the<lb/>
Si<lb/>
?<lb/>
is must soonei<lb/>
?' ognize that it<lb/>
ut of Vietnam<lb/>
mmunist party<lb/>
peated the<lb/>
nmunisl oh, e<lb/>
sh i n gt o n is<lb/>
responsible for the failure of<lb/>
Newly Decorated<lb/>
Approved ECU Housing<lb/>
Women Students<lb/>
for<lb/>
Refrigerator and Light Cooking<lb/>
in each Suite<lb/>
tt i<lb/>
e tyttimate in off Vnamfiub 9?iwino<lb/>
tenth and heath street<lb/>
resident manager 758-2867<lb/>
<lb/>
the Pans peace talks so fai<lb/>
"The serious lessons of<lb/>
the failure of the military<lb/>
venture against North<lb/>
Vietnam convincingly sh<lb/>
that soonei oi latei the<lb/>
United States will have to<lb/>
recognize the impossibility<lb/>
of solving the Vietnam<lb/>
question by military means,<lb/>
to agree to a political<lb/>
settlement and gel out of<lb/>
Vitnam the paper added.<lb/>
?rri;i: Hp,ahrs Sncia Shnn X Rrr,iii t<lb/>
Now Serving Meals,<lb/>
Dinner-<lb/>
970<lb/>
Drink Included<lb/>
2711 E 10th St. 752-6778<lb/>
Attention: Students<lb/>
and Faculty<lb/>
CITY LAUNDERETTE<lb/>
Leave your laundry, we do it for you.<lb/>
' Hr. Fluff Dried Laundry Service<lb/>
Includes soap arid bleach<lb/>
Laundry 9?2 lbs. 83c, Folded 93c<lb/>
Din CLEANING and SHTRTS<lb/>
813 Evans Street<lb/>
Down from Burger Chef<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00039440_0009"/><lb/>
Red Cross urges public<lb/>
to write North Vietnam<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C.<lb/>
The American Red Cross<lb/>
has urged a massive<lb/>
expression of indignation<lb/>
over the treatment of U.S.<lb/>
prisoners held by the North<lb/>
Vietnamese. It called on the<lb/>
American people to write<lb/>
direct to the president of<lb/>
the Democratic Republic of<lb/>
North Vietnam to express<lb/>
concern about Hanoi's<lb/>
failure to give captured U.S.<lb/>
military personnel the<lb/>
benefits of the Geneva<lb/>
Conventions.<lb/>
Write the president<lb/>
According to latest<lb/>
Department of Defense<lb/>
figures, 413 Americans are<lb/>
known to be prisoners ot<lb/>
 and 918 others are<lb/>
missing and believed<lb/>
captured.<lb/>
Pointing out that the<lb/>
North Vietnamese are<lb/>
signatory to the Geneva<lb/>
Conventions, Red Cross<lb/>
national headquarters here<lb/>
said such a public outcr<lb/>
might do much to ensure<lb/>
that American prisoners will<lb/>
receive the humane<lb/>
treatment called for in the<lb/>
Conventions. It urged that<lb/>
appeals be addressed to:<lb/>
Office of the President<lb/>
Democratic Republic of<lb/>
North Vietnam Hanoi,<lb/>
North Vietnam<lb/>
An airmail letter<lb/>
weighing less than one half<lb/>
ounce takes 25 cents in<lb/>
postage, the Red Cross said.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the American<lb/>
Red Cross is continuing to<lb/>
urge Red Cross societies in<lb/>
all parts of the world to<lb/>
intercede in behalf of the<lb/>
U.S. prisoners with the Red<lb/>
Cross Society of North<lb/>
Vietnam and to ask that<lb/>
their respective governments<lb/>
take similar action with the<lb/>
North Vietnamese<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Geneva benefits<lb/>
In an American Red<lb/>
Cross sponsored resolution<lb/>
passed without a dissenting<lb/>
vote by 77 governments and<lb/>
91 national Red Crosss<lb/>
societies, the International<lb/>
Conference of the Red<lb/>
Cross in Istanbul last month<lb/>
urged that all<lb/>
prisoners-of-war be given<lb/>
the benefits and protection<lb/>
of the Geneva Conventions.<lb/>
The C ?neva Conventions<lb/>
Biology students visit<lb/>
Marine Studies Station<lb/>
Fif.uen biology and<lb/>
geology students will visit the<lb/>
r i s t Carolina University<lb/>
Marine Studies Station at<lb/>
an<lb/>
tco on Nov. 1 and 2.<lb/>
The group, which includes<lb/>
both under grarluate and<lb/>
tour<lb/>
the<lb/>
now<lb/>
give<lb/>
graduate students will<lb/>
the facilities and hear<lb/>
ilty ind students<lb/>
si itioned at Manteo<lb/>
reports on the current status<lb/>
of then tesearch projects.<lb/>
Arranges trip<lb/>
ot the<lb/>
Dr. Vicent J.<lb/>
Belli:<lb/>
Department of Biology, is<lb/>
arranging the trip. Dr.<lb/>
Michael O'Connor and Dr.<lb/>
Stanley Riggs, of the<lb/>
Department of Geology, and<lb/>
Francis Belcik, of the<lb/>
Department of Biology, are<lb/>
Fall Quarter staff members at<lb/>
the Station.<lb/>
The students enrolled at<lb/>
the Laboratory during the<lb/>
Fall Quarter are monitoring a<lb/>
variety of physical and<lb/>
biological factors at 12<lb/>
stations that have been set<lb/>
up in the area. The stations<lb/>
are located in fresh, brackish.<lb/>
and salt water on the<lb/>
Alligator River, the Sound,<lb/>
and the coast.<lb/>
No course work will be<lb/>
offered at the Manteo<lb/>
Laboratory duringQuarter.<lb/>
The Station will reopen for<lb/>
the Spring Quarter with<lb/>
course and research offerings<lb/>
at the junior senioi and<lb/>
graduate levels. Offerings will<lb/>
depend, in part, on demand,<lb/>
and any interested students<lb/>
should make their preferences<lb/>
known at the Geology and<lb/>
?offices-<lb/>
Biology departmental<lb/>
before Spring Quarter couse<lb/>
offerings are scheduled.<lb/>
call for all prisoners to be<lb/>
pr?omptly identified;<lb/>
afforded an adequate diet<lb/>
and medical care; permitted<lb/>
to communicate with other<lb/>
prisoners and the<lb/>
"exterior promptly<lb/>
repatriated if seriously sick<lb/>
or wounded; and at all times<lb/>
be protected from abuse or<lb/>
r:l.<lb/>
The Conventions also<lb/>
state that a neutral<lb/>
intermediary, such as the<lb/>
all-Swiss International<lb/>
Committee of the Red<lb/>
Cross, be given free access<lb/>
to prisoners and their places<lb/>
of detention.<lb/>
Job losses<lb/>
attributed to<lb/>
integration<lb/>
(Continued from page 7)<lb/>
Title I (poverty aid under the<lb/>
Elementary and Secondary<lb/>
Education Act), then failing<lb/>
to comply with federal civil<lb/>
rights requirements. When<lb/>
federal funds are cut off (as<lb/>
a result of noncompliance),<lb/>
the teachers are told simply<lb/>
that their jobs have been<lb/>
abolished.<lb/>
A precedent-setting ruling<lb/>
l  fj?i I Ana ; lulu ir<lb/>
uy d icuciai juugc in Juiy lfi<lb/>
a Mississippi case) held that<lb/>
the wholesale dismissal of 71<lb/>
black teachers and teacher<lb/>
aids was illegal discrimination<lb/>
on the grounds of race. In<lb/>
this instance, the largest mass<lb/>
firing to date, the board of<lb/>
education followed the<lb/>
reclassif ication technique<lb/>
mentioned earlier.<lb/>
In a second case, which<lb/>
went to the Supreme Court,<lb/>
the court ruled in favor of<lb/>
an "above-average" teacher<lb/>
dismissed because of her<lb/>
voting-registration and other<lb/>
political activities. The<lb/>
decision established the right<lb/>
oialltftsrhprs-nn matter<lb/>
what their race-to exercise<lb/>
their political rights without<lb/>
reprisals.<lb/>
Join The jJJJ Crowd<lb/>
Pizza tan<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
i 264 By-Pass)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 756-9991<lb/>
things gO<lb/>
better<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Tuesday, November 4, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 9<lb/>
Peace Corps Director notes<lb/>
department is lily-white<lb/>
"The Peace Corps is<lb/>
lily-white and we've got to<lb/>
change that Peace Corps<lb/>
Director Joe Blatchford said<lb/>
this week in an interview on<lb/>
Boston's "soul station WILD.<lb/>
Blatchford said that upon<lb/>
being appointed Director of<lb/>
the Peace Corps he discovered<lb/>
that the Peace Corps selection<lb/>
process has been<lb/>
unintentionally discouraging<lb/>
app'ications from members of<lb/>
minority arouDS.<lb/>
Frightening application<lb/>
"To begin with, a 16-page<lb/>
application would frighten<lb/>
anyone, but particularly those<lb/>
who haven't made a career of<lb/>
filling out forms as have most<lb/>
middle-class Americans he<lb/>
pointed out.<lb/>
"Then there is the reference<lb/>
system. The Peace Corps<lb/>
requires a large number of<lb/>
written references and<lb/>
members of minority groups<lb/>
are often from backgrounds in<lb/>
which their friends and<lb/>
associates are unfamiliar with<lb/>
or reticent about filling out<lb/>
government forms.<lb/>
Consequently, many<lb/>
applications from members of<lb/>
minority groups never get<lb/>
processed. They lack the<lb/>
proper number of references<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Simplify Applications<lb/>
Blatchford noted that the<lb/>
result of this system has been<lb/>
that black Americans who<lb/>
applied for the Peace Corps<lb/>
were three times less likely to<lb/>
be selected. He also said that in<lb/>
the past training has not been<lb/>
geared to the needs of minority<lb/>
group members.<lb/>
He s t a ted that the<lb/>
application form will be<lb/>
simplified and reduced in size,<lb/>
and references obtained either<lb/>
in person or by phone where<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
"We are not looking toward<lb/>
a quota system of anykind. We<lb/>
don't even keep records<lb/>
according to racial background,<lb/>
although everyone who has<lb/>
traveled overseas knows that<lb/>
the face of a black,<lb/>
Mexican-American or Puerto<lb/>
Rican is very rare in the Peace<lb/>
Corps. We are seeking<lb/>
minorities because we want the<lb/>
Peace Corps overseas to be<lb/>
truly representative of this<lb/>
country, and because these<lb/>
people have a special<lb/>
contribution to make. I suggest<lb/>
the Peace Corps has an<lb/>
obligation to remove barriers<lb/>
which presently prevent all but<lb/>
a small and largely<lb/>
homogeneous group of<lb/>
Americans from serving<lb/>
overseas Blatchford said.<lb/>
NSA endorses<lb/>
Moratorium<lb/>
WASHINGTON - (CPS) -<lb/>
National Student Association<lb/>
President Charles Palmer has<lb/>
endorsed the Nov. 14 and 15<lb/>
anti-war demonstrations in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. and San<lb/>
Francisco.<lb/>
Palmer, in a press<lb/>
conference, called for a<lb/>
"united front" against the<lb/>
war and reminded students of<lb/>
their "right" to demonstrate<lb/>
freely and peacefully. The<lb/>
mid-November protests are<lb/>
sponsored by the new<lb/>
Mobilization Committee to<lb/>
End the War in Vietnam.<lb/>
Stadium<lb/>
Drive-In<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
1 Hr Cleaning 3 Hr Shirt Service<lb/>
W<lb/>
GIRLS<lb/>
i<lb/>
( WE HAVE DECIDED TO HELP! )<lb/>
THE MOST EXCITING CHRISTMAS GIFT<lb/>
FOR YOl R GUY THIS YE. i R IS AN<lb/>
8-Track or Cassette<lb/>
Tape Players<lb/>
We will be glad to help you make<lb/>
the selection and arrange Lay-Away<lb/>
and time payments for YOU!<lb/>
Come in and ask for Bronson Matney Jr<lb/>
Tape Town &amp;<lb/>
Harmony House South<lb/>
<pb facs="00039440_0010"/><lb/>
iMw Mi jr'to ?!<lb/>
Page 10, Fountainhead, Tuesday, Novembei 4, 1969<lb/>
p aye . w, . ?? ?<lb/>
Pirates win over Paladins<lb/>
Maybe one of these days the<lb/>
populace will realize that the<lb/>
Furman-East Carolina football<lb/>
series offers more in the way of<lb/>
excitement than anything else<lb/>
on the Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
The conditions weren't the<lb/>
best, but the weather didn't<lb/>
bother the script at all<lb/>
Saturday night as the Pirates<lb/>
won 24-21 over the Paladins<lb/>
before a crowd qenerously<lb/>
estimated at 2,000 which<lb/>
included Gov. Bob Scott.<lb/>
The long play was the order<lb/>
of the night. Of the six<lb/>
touchdowns scored, three by<lb/>
the Pirates and three by<lb/>
Furman, only one came on a<lb/>
play oft less than 39 yards.<lb/>
There was one of 94 yards and<lb/>
one of 85 yards by Furman,<lb/>
and two by East Carolina's<lb/>
Billy Wightman on runs of 77<lb/>
and 53 yards.<lb/>
Furman's two big ones were<lb/>
on kickoff returns right after<lb/>
Wightman got off his big plays<lb/>
and the other Paladin score<lb/>
came on a three yard pass to<lb/>
give them a somewhat<lb/>
short lived lead.<lb/>
In the end, the difference<lb/>
was a 34-yard field goal by<lb/>
Steve Davis, who picked up a<lb/>
total of six points for the night<lb/>
kicking the ball.<lb/>
And typically enough, the<lb/>
game wasn't over when it was<lb/>
supposed to be according to<lb/>
the clock. As official time ran<lb/>
out, East Carolina was<lb/>
penalized and the Paladins got<lb/>
a chance at a field goal that<lb/>
would have tied it had they<lb/>
not come up with a bad snap.<lb/>
The Pirates put on a good rush.<lb/>
A little background might<lb/>
led at this pont. The<lb/>
Pirate-Paladin series is i<lb/>
seven games old and Fun<lb/>
When you know<lb/>
it's for keeps<lb/>
All your sharing, all your<lb/>
special memories have<lb/>
grown into a precious and<lb/>
enduring love. Happily, these<lb/>
cherished moments will be<lb/>
forever symbolized by your<lb/>
diamond engagement ring.<lb/>
If the name. Keepsake is in<lb/>
the ring and on the tag. you<lb/>
are assured of fine quality<lb/>
and lasting satisfaction The<lb/>
ngagement diamond is<lb/>
' iwless, of superb color, and<lb/>
precise modern cut. Your<lb/>
Keepsake J- - has a<lb/>
choice selection of many<lb/>
love ' es He's I'Sted in<lb/>
the ? v pages inder<lb/>
"Jewelers "<lb/>
has averaged just under 20<lb/>
points a game joi thePiratesa<lb/>
little less than 21.<lb/>
East Carolina leads in the<lb/>
series by 5 2, but il hasn't been<lb/>
easy just like it wasn't ?<lb/>
Saturday night.<lb/>
In the last three games<lb/>
alone, these teams have come<lb/>
up with games no Holly<lb/>
screenwritei would iLv<lb/>
present as a possibility, much<lb/>
less an actuality. Three games<lb/>
ago, the Pirates bolted oul<lb/>
front 27 7. Then, bless youi<lb/>
sideline markets, Furman came<lb/>
back to lead 28-27.<lb/>
But with the clock's tn<lb/>
fleeing like a shadow from the<lb/>
sun, Neal Hi I and Butch<lb/>
Colson worked up ,m SOyaid<lb/>
touchdown drive tha the<lb/>
Pirates a 34 28 lead<lb/>
Last year in Furman's home<lb/>
base, the Pirates again gol off<lb/>
to a quick lead and was<lb/>
enjoying a 17 0 advantage<lb/>
len Furman suddenly came<lb/>
up with the excitement<lb/>
combination and cu1 it do i<lb/>
to 17 13. The final margin of<lb/>
24-13 was achieved on the last<lb/>
play of the game.<lb/>
Saturday night n was<lb/>
F ui man's turn again to<lb/>
overcome an early East<lb/>
Carolina lead- Aftei Billy<lb/>
Wightman uncorked his<lb/>
53 yardei with one second<lb/>
short of three minutes gone in<lb/>
the fust quarter, Dick Immell<lb/>
came romping back on an<lb/>
85 yaul ktckofi return that just<lb/>
took the wind right out of the<lb/>
Pirate sails.<lb/>
And then, through the<lb/>
,urtesy of a tumble, the<lb/>
Paladins worked themselves<lb/>
down to the FAst Carolina<lb/>
three where Cleve Hightowei<lb/>
threw a three yard pass to<lb/>
, Vaughn and fin man<lb/>
baiL- out fiout<lb/>
mat e things even more<lb/>
frustrating foi the Pirates v. as<lb/>
the fad thev rei i -? ? red a<lb/>
Fuimii fumble, a gift of Mim<lb/>
Gud iei l( fensive unit,<lb/>
? oi topped .it the one<lb/>
yard line<lb/>
Steve Davis had already<lb/>
k icked - s fieli; g tal when the<lb/>
Paladin defense held u) in the<lb/>
grime and the slush and<lb/>
F in man's 14 10 lead was<lb/>
indeed imposing<lb/>
But thm Jack Patterson, a<lb/>
sophomi ire tailba h i ha<lb/>
hopes of suci eeding the<lb/>
veteran Billy Wightman next<lb/>
year, connected with Dwiqh,<lb/>
Flanagan on a 39 y.rd pass for<lb/>
a score and the P?ates <lb/>
trailed.<lb/>
The first two quarters had<lb/>
produced enough excitement<lb/>
and nail chewing for one night<lb/>
but the pulse rates rain,cold<lb/>
wind and other weatherly<lb/>
misery not withstanding - got<lb/>
jacked up again early m the<lb/>
thud quarter when Wightman<lb/>
went bouncing, skinnma anH<lb/>
1 ' ? i alto<lb/>
dancing through the puddles<lb/>
on a 77 yard run.<lb/>
Before the Pirate following<lb/>
could sigh with relief, Evans<lb/>
Mai tin came bad" with a<lb/>
94 yard run that looked like he<lb/>
was taking part in a nO-contack<lb/>
kick return workout on Friday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Aftei that, things sort of<lb/>
settled down to a routine of<lb/>
nobody doing much to<lb/>
anybody, that is until the<lb/>
Paladins came up with that last<lb/>
fumble with less than a minute<lb/>
to play.<lb/>
Everybody was ringing<lb/>
wet at the n(, but i am oi not,<lb/>
everybody would have been<lb/>
w rung out emot tonally<lb/>
anyway. It was jusl that kind<lb/>
of a a ie.<lb/>
Ke<lb/>
Players of the week<lb/>
named by Bill Cain<lb/>
Freshman Coach Bill Cam<lb/>
has named foul Bucs as his<lb/>
olayers of the week foi then<lb/>
performance against Cho<lb/>
College weekend before last<lb/>
The players given credit for<lb/>
leading the Baby Bucs to<lb/>
victoiy are: Rick Page,<lb/>
blocking back. Bob Johnson,<lb/>
guard; Ron Konrady, defensive<lb/>
back; and Ron Reynolds,<lb/>
tackle.<lb/>
Coach Cain Ih d the game<lb/>
a gi eat team ef f j ever, ai<lb/>
tney pulled off a 33 27<lb/>
triumph ovei a I nigh Chi iv an<lb/>
junior college who del ted the<lb/>
Bucs last yeai<lb/>
"Rick Page called an<lb/>
I lent game and as<lb/>
prominent in setting up the<lb/>
winning touchdowns with<lb/>
pitchouts and option plays<lb/>
h Can commented. "Bob<lb/>
Johnson did a fine job of<lb/>
blocking on offense, which led<lb/>
our team to gain som i 300<lb/>
yard; rushing. I e pei : him to<lb/>
continue to improve steadily<lb/>
and make a bid for<lb/>
considerable playing time on<lb/>
the varsity next eai '<lb/>
Of Konrady, a co-captain<lb/>
from Egg Harbor, N.J Cam<lb/>
improvement in his play<lb/>
The Baby Bucs will play at<lb/>
home foi the fust time Friday<lb/>
afternoon when they take on<lb/>
the Richmond freshmen.<lb/>
said "He is the ti<lb/>
am s leading<lb/>
RICK PAGE<lb/>
.pacer freshman<lb/>
' ll ' ; ' a ml shows<lb/>
improvement daily. He is an<lb/>
outstanding candidate foi the<lb/>
varsity next year<lb/>
Reynolds, a Greensboro<lb/>
Produci was the anchorman in<lb/>
the defensive line againsl<lb/>
Chowan. "He has the size and<lb/>
sPd to be an outstanding<lb/>
performer Cain said, "and <lb/>
look f ;<lb/>
ve<lb/>
n t inu ed<lb/>
RON KONRADY<lb/>
outstanding defense<lb/>
player<lb/>
Union<lb/>
promotes<lb/>
chess<lb/>
Any persons interested n<lb/>
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playing Chess are<lb/>
stop by the unior<lb/>
invitee<lb/>
i o<lb/>
The<lb/>
give name rind n'<lb/>
Union would like to help<lb/>
players to get togethei<lb/>
p o ss i b I y p r omoti<lb/>
tournament, if i n t e r e<lb/>
warrants it.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
Onyx ring with Diamond<lb/>
In<lb/>
quite <lb/>
eat 419Cotto<lb/>
il l<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00039440_0011"/><lb/>
A casual observer<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
m<lb/>
House investigates) from the Bema<lb/>
SDS Weathermen)<lb/>
ByBILLCONNELLY<lb/>
Washington Correspondent<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
The House Internal Security Committee (a new, sanitized name<lb/>
the old House Unamencan Activities Committee) has now<lb/>
. seveial months investigating the much-publicized<lb/>
itherman" faction of the Students for a Democratic Society<lb/>
(SDS)<lb/>
The committee's tenacious investigators have sniffed around<lb/>
is college campuses, inquiring about last year's disorders<lb/>
.Meeting the literature of both the Left and the Radical Left.<lb/>
And HISC (not HU AC, remember) has held some rather dull and<lb/>
onclusive hearings on SDS activities at Georgetown, George<lb/>
Washington, American and Kent State universities.<lb/>
HISC members disagree on what their inquiry has proved. Some<lb/>
scv they found Communists there, sure enough, just as they<lb/>
cted. But some of the more moderate members, such as Rep.<lb/>
Richardson Preyer of North Carolina's 6th District, have a different<lb/>
impression.<lb/>
Weathermen "juvenile and disorganized"<lb/>
As Preyer reads the evidence, the SDS Weathermen have been a<lb/>
pathetic failure on most campuses, and in any case, are much too<lb/>
juvenile and disorganized to be part of anybody's conspiracy.<lb/>
"The evidence so far indicates to me that they are remarkably<lb/>
ineffective Preyer said in an interview. "They are a bunch of<lb/>
pampered brats out to make a lot of noise. They have no apparent<lb/>
intellectual content to anything they do. They express themselves<lb/>
at the level of a 10 year-old's temper tantrum.<lb/>
They are for change, but they have no conception of what kind<lb/>
of change they want. They just want discourse in four-letter<lb/>
wordsI think we'd be spooking ourselves to believe these people<lb/>
area threat to our country<lb/>
il illt'Y WeiK Weil UUjcinizeu and aiUciIHiy lotyC ylltJ .<lb/>
students, they would be extremely dangerous. But the evidence<lb/>
shows that this is not the case at all<lb/>
The Weathermen, the loud, unkempt wing of the SDS, advocate<lb/>
violent forms of protest. Because of their flamboyance, many<lb/>
iressmen regard them with a mixture of fear and indignation.<lb/>
Thru recent clashes with Chicago police received national<lb/>
attention.<lb/>
The other wing of SDS, the Progressive Labor Party, is quiet and<lb/>
has low visibility. "This is the group that is more liable to be<lb/>
dangerous, if any of them are Preyer said, "but they don't draw<lb/>
h attention. We haven't investigated them yet, and I don't<lb/>
much about them<lb/>
Preyei said the HISC investigation clearly shows, however, that<lb/>
eathermen have been ignored on most campuses, laughed off<lb/>
le others, and physically evicted from at least one (American<lb/>
eisity in Washington).<lb/>
Harsh treatment gets sympathy<lb/>
Their only success, he said, has been on campuses where<lb/>
administrators treated them harshly or repressively, thereby<lb/>
making moderate students sympathetic to their causes.<lb/>
In some places, the SDS has received undeserved credit for<lb/>
retorm. At American and George Washington universities, For<lb/>
example, the organization included in its list of demands several<lb/>
policy changes that the administration was known to be preparing<lb/>
toannounce.<lb/>
When the announcements came, the SDS took credit, and the<lb/>
administration was promptly denounced by its critics for<lb/>
capitulating to SDS.<lb/>
Preyer, a former state and federal judge from Greensboro, is one<lb/>
of four congressmen placed on the reorganized HISC early this year<lb/>
by the House leadership in an effort to make the nine-member<lb/>
committee more moderate.<lb/>
Name change changes image?<lb/>
He did not seek the assignment (which he holds in addition to a<lb/>
seat on the Commerce Committee), but was drafted into it because<lb/>
of his judicial background and his reputation as a political<lb/>
moderate. House leaders were hopeful that by changing the<lb/>
committee's name and membership it could be made more<lb/>
restrained and less controversial. The old HUAC's reputation for<lb/>
witch-hunting (not to mention headline-hunting) had become an<lb/>
embarrassment.<lb/>
There still is much debate, of course, whether there should be<lb/>
such a committee. Many think the nation's internal security is<lb/>
hetter left to the traditional institutions of law, the FBI, the courts.<lb/>
Preyer himself is troubled by the question.<lb/>
But the sanitized HISC has, at least, conducted its recent SDS<lb/>
hearings in an atmosphere more like a courtroom than like a circus.<lb/>
t has also shown more sensitivity to the individual liberties of the<lb/>
People it investigates.<lb/>
Don Osborne's well written<lb/>
comments in his "On My<lb/>
Mind" column in this<lb/>
newspaper demonstrate more<lb/>
clearly than any mass meeting<lb/>
or vote the utter bankruptcy of<lb/>
conservative thinking in the<lb/>
United States. His chief sources<lb/>
are 1. Eric Hoffer and 2. an<lb/>
amateurish pseudo psychology.<lb/>
Hoffer has become the very<lb/>
intelligent spokesman for<lb/>
middlebrow anti-<lb/>
-intellectualism in America.<lb/>
Hoffer rose to fame when<lb/>
touched by the golden wand of<lb/>
LBJ after blessing Johnson<lb/>
over a California TV show as<lb/>
the greatest U.S. President in<lb/>
this century. An often<lb/>
mistaken idea is that<lb/>
anti intellectuals are stupid and<lb/>
that intellectuals are by<lb/>
definition, bright.<lb/>
Harry Truman, Richard<lb/>
Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev<lb/>
are all men of great intelligence<lb/>
yet dedicated anti intellectuals.<lb/>
The sad aspect of Osborne's<lb/>
approach is its frightening<lb/>
naivete. The real reason for<lb/>
Hitler and his views was the<lb/>
rejection of the vision of<lb/>
Woodrow Wilson's intellectual<lb/>
concept of the road to<lb/>
European peace by a lot of<lb/>
anti intellectual isolationists<lb/>
both abroad and in the U.S.<lb/>
In effect the emotional<lb/>
appeal of pseudo-patriotism<lb/>
which beat post WWI Germany<lb/>
to the ground caused both<lb/>
4<lb/>
Hitler and his success. Karl<lb/>
Marx saw the utter horror of<lb/>
life in a state rulee by<lb/>
advocates of social-Darwinism,<lb/>
stotes such as Germany and<lb/>
England where child labor and<lb/>
the 18 hour shift were<lb/>
commonplace after the<lb/>
Industrial Revolution. Marx<lb/>
had an answer. We sincerely<lb/>
believe now it was the wrong<lb/>
answer but an answer it was.<lb/>
Marx did not fit into the<lb/>
social patterns of the time<lb/>
because he could foresee that<lb/>
the mixed oligarchy of ancient<lb/>
royalties plus economic cartels<lb/>
was doomed and his vision was<lb/>
proven true by World War I<lb/>
which saw the collapse of<lb/>
European monarchy.<lb/>
Malcolm X again<lb/>
represented a certain foresight.<lb/>
He clearly understood that<lb/>
political-economic equality for<lb/>
the black man would never<lb/>
come through mere laws but<lb/>
through a society governed by<lb/>
pressure groups, trade unions,<lb/>
political parties, military<lb/>
contractors, farmers'<lb/>
associations and other lobbies.<lb/>
The only out was to form a<lb/>
militant lobby of their own.<lb/>
but let us now take a look<lb/>
at other maladjusted persons.<lb/>
Benjamin Franklin, let us<lb/>
assume, was the father of an<lb/>
illegitimate son while still a<lb/>
teenager, a run-away, upstart,<lb/>
radical, subversive, scheming,<lb/>
rreligious, treasonable qoack.<lb/>
Or take Albert Einstein, a<lb/>
peculiar, eccentric,<lb/>
anti -establishment,<lb/>
pseudo-intellectual rejected by<lb/>
his homeland, conside-ed a<lb/>
dangerous radical by his<lb/>
government, excluded from his<lb/>
profession, unkempt, sloppy,<lb/>
maladjusted and irreverent<lb/>
I am sorry but the<lb/>
comfortable platitudes about<lb/>
peaceful change that Osborne<lb/>
espouses are non-historical,<lb/>
inaccurate and dangerous. And<lb/>
I for one am thankful that<lb/>
ECU has a president that<lb/>
would participate in the Oct.<lb/>
15 Moratorium -to state his<lb/>
opinions in a market-place of<lb/>
free speech and a Board of<lb/>
Trustees that would invite<lb/>
direct student participation<lb/>
rather than wait for the gradual<lb/>
change which would condemn<lb/>
us to obsolete modes and<lb/>
ultimate collapse before some<lb/>
irresistable social revolutionary<lb/>
forces of either the right of the<lb/>
left.<lb/>
Let us observe then the<lb/>
conservatives on campus. What<lb/>
do they espouse, these apostles<lb/>
of the past, these fossils for the<lb/>
status quo? Do they fit? And<lb/>
who on earth wants to fit in a<lb/>
society unable to criticise<lb/>
itself, unable to change.<lb/>
Socialism or liberalism?<lb/>
By WILLIAM F. HARRELL<lb/>
Today it is the "in thing"<lb/>
to be a liberal. Ask any<lb/>
college student today whether<lb/>
he is a liberal or a<lb/>
conservative and nine times<lb/>
out of ten his answer will be<lb/>
"liberalAsking him to<lb/>
define the two terms is like<lb/>
asking an aardvark to stop<lb/>
eating ants. He can't.<lb/>
Young people of today<lb/>
are being systematically<lb/>
conditioned to believe that<lb/>
conservatism is synonymous<lb/>
with bigotry and<lb/>
narrow-mindedness. Not too<lb/>
many years ayu peuple weie<lb/>
told and believed that the<lb/>
earth was flat. I guess that<lb/>
was the "in thing" back<lb/>
then.<lb/>
Let's take a look at the<lb/>
conservative and what he<lb/>
believes. Most conservatives<lb/>
are not opposed to change or<lb/>
reform. They are, however,<lb/>
opposed to change merely for<lb/>
the sake of change.<lb/>
Some things we can and<lb/>
should change, and some we<lb/>
can't and shouldn't. You can<lb/>
raise a cow in your house,<lb/>
but it won't change the cow<lb/>
? only your house.<lb/>
Most conservatives agree<lb/>
that there has been too much<lb/>
(pardon the term) "liberal"<lb/>
interpretation of our<lb/>
Constitution merely for the<lb/>
sake of change.<lb/>
The Constitution is an<lb/>
inviolable contract which<lb/>
clearly specifies the limit of<lb/>
Federal power. Nowhere in<lb/>
the Constitution is the<lb/>
federal government granted<lb/>
the authority to operate a<lb/>
mandatory social security<lb/>
system, give aid to foreign or<lb/>
domertic governments, or<lb/>
dispense welfare.<lb/>
It is unconstitutional for<lb/>
the federal government to<lb/>
produce and distribute goods<lb/>
and services in competition<lb/>
with private enterprise, or to<lb/>
dictate to property owners<lb/>
how their property will be<lb/>
used.<lb/>
It is not only<lb/>
unconstitutional but<lb/>
treasonous to weaken our<lb/>
national defenses to a point<lb/>
where we can no longer<lb/>
"proTecT"6ursinveslind "at the<lb/>
same time to give aid and<lb/>
comfort to our enemies. Yet<lb/>
why have all these things<lb/>
come about<lb/>
The liberals call it<lb/>
"progress I have another<lb/>
word tor it.<lb/>
Liberals and conservatives<lb/>
alike, realize that our country<lb/>
is being transformed repidly<lb/>
into a socialist state. The<lb/>
only difference is the liberals<lb/>
welcome this "progress" with<lb/>
open arms. The conservative<lb/>
realizes that it is not<lb/>
progress.<lb/>
It is amusing that<lb/>
America's starry-eyed liberals<lb/>
not only propound socialist<lb/>
ideology, but also join hands<lb/>
with their comrades in<lb/>
advancing their mutual cause. .<lb/>
Yet the liberals refuse to call<lb/>
themselves socialists.<lb/>
To me, if one waddles like<lb/>
a duck, quacks like a duck,<lb/>
and keeps company with a<lb/>
flock of ducks - he is inded<lb/>
a duck<lb/>
And now the ecu marching, pirated<lb/>
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