<?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="00039443_0001"/>
ountainhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Vol. 1 No. 19<lb/>
East Carolina University, P n Box 251fi Greenville N C.<lb/>
Nov. 13, 1969<lb/>
Exams begin next week<lb/>
with first reading day<lb/>
 see page 2<lb/>
fcr<lb/>
Exams and trees<lb/>
Exams begin next week. There's no escaping<lb/>
it. Not even if you climb a tree with your<lb/>
psychology book like this freshman co-ed<lb/>
did. Fountainhead, with its last edition this<lb/>
quarter, wishes you good luck on exams. The<lb/>
exam schedule is printed on Page 3.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039443_0002"/><lb/>
Paae2 Founta nhea I N . ' 969<lb/>
Paae I, r ? ?- ' - ?<lb/>
Fall reading day may be last<lb/>
By TOMMY ROBINSON<lb/>
r st, has<lb/>
,  -<lb/>
The reading I v fa i ? ?was not feas<lb/>
? ' 'not ssibie tc<lb/>
The administral : n?<lb/>
- the readin3rtc " i:  ? - '<lb/>
md the facu ?-  ? -<lb/>
ir Comm tte? has r'ass<lb/>
-? - ?<lb/>
jays ' ? ?   ? - ? f :<lb/>
a t t" - f f ajse ts  eo " ? ? -<lb/>
- . -  the St dentSouths " - : ; "  ?" <lb/>
Govei ? ent Ass tion nade eges anc Sc" ooH<lb/>
arrange nents fc. ?" ;  c ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Th-  ' agreed tc<lb/>
t h pep i ? as 5" .  T<lb/>
havir - ? ? j ? - ' '<lb/>
? - ns : ? r ? - ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
The eir : -<lb/>
? ace betvi eer the er: . . ' -<lb/>
 the begr<lb/>
" ?  bt- TT  <lb/>
t; and fac ' ? tc esi i  r ? c ftee<lb/>
ai ? an je then thought"f;  T " - .<lb/>
-  Theult mate purpose  : f:  " : Z<lb/>
the - ? s to rnake the.  - : - -f - "  ? ; <lb/>
xi a ttle - st 31 n fc t 3th stude usto tne Fac  Ser ate and<lb/>
t.n ist ?' at i o n i no v a<lb/>
Michigan poet<lb/>
will read here<lb/>
?orr ? -<lb/>
? Dtedjoound r ser - ious aeta<lb/>
masc: M :fimuch of t raw anc<lb/>
 . il wortR hard H 30 has com m ente ?<lb/>
. 3 ud 11 rate poems kj with the<lb/>
a .  . 19h Dnest p: .?. t' : 3 : tr<lb/>
"55 t e ? .? ed around<lb/>
: the heodoree? pei ence : 1 ane ?. : has<lb/>
-  ? won and osl the thousar<lb/>
read ? -  .awfi batt r. we - ?  stay<lb/>
-<lb/>
. - - -?<lb/>
Faculty member is<lb/>
music guildpresident<lb/>
lys White 3 men<lb/>
-  s bee  -Nal- Music fac ilty - - the 197C 7 la na chapter of -  - i Assc :iatior <lb/>
5r"r . 31Theologians n pane tc ietei nine 1 plan meet<lb/>
-ners frc m F . ? la j.<lb/>
? jth Cai na, N th Ca<lb/>
Virgi - ar :  - ; . : <lb/>
194S<lb/>
She graduated I<lb/>
ed - st<lb/>
?<lb/>
The SGA ' " reading<lb/>
 ? pioposed to<lb/>
ies. but to give the<lb/>
   . . ? before exams<lb/>
. that if a student<lb/>
??- i fail chance to<lb/>
 ? - ts . evvs The Calend<lb/>
 . ? ? ? fore<lb/>
the SGA - ' ' Is0 tnat lT<lb/>
? ts ? ? ? " tive.<lb/>
cq . esentatives said The<lb/>
SGA s suppos to have<lb/>
ei esent ition on the<lb/>
Not until the final meeting of<lb/>
the committee was the SGA<lb/>
notified, the SGA says.<lb/>
President John Schofield<lb/>
sa,d- "I am extremely<lb/>
disappointed with the actions of<lb/>
Provost Williams in this matter<lb/>
I am especially disappointed<lb/>
with the committee for not<lb/>
notifying the SG? of its<lb/>
meetings. I feel that student<lb/>
representation on faculty<lb/>
committees is useless unless the<lb/>
students are notified so they can<lb/>
send their represen<lb/>
express their views<lb/>
Concert tickets sold early;<lb/>
many students disappointed<lb/>
e: - ? r.i ?: the :once I I<lb/>
an, :t? 3ents .vaited 1 he<lb/>
sst r r jte " buy tickets. As a<lb/>
?7. t  ' - : that tickets<lb/>
,ere sc I ' .? I they  ould<lb/>
nissth? - ts.<lb/>
R ud ih Alexander,<lb/>
ass st ?' :? an of Student<lb/>
said he could not<lb/>
Affa<lb/>
vje tan : why the students<lb/>
-ed They know that<lb/>
 nges Coliseum has a limited<lb/>
seating space he said<lb/>
The matter was left up to the<lb/>
SGA, who had set the ticket<lb/>
policy for the events.<lb/>
The SGA decided to extend<lb/>
ticket sales on a first come first<lb/>
served basis for a limited<lb/>
:  of tickets. Tickets for<lb/>
both concerts were made<lb/>
ere<lb/>
J. Howard Griffin<lb/>
speaks tonight<lb/>
John Howard Gi ff 1 became<lb/>
 mar to discove whai I<lb/>
was ? e He   d<lb/>
r writing nd lectur r<lb/>
sm ever since<lb/>
- :?   gmert darkened<lb/>
by a phys ar Gi f ir t aveled<lb/>
for two months nfivesc thi<lb/>
states - 1959 His travels<lb/>
rt . ted n thebest?<lb/>
? it- Like ? h tells<lb/>
hestc 1 ? ? - ? - er <lb/>
jnffinbi<lb/>
tonight as the I tl m<lb/>
? &amp; ? ? eries<lb/>
Jot alist ? - and TV<lb/>
? nentatoi and n?ernational<lb/>
ecturei 3riffm has I<lb/>
message tc ege<lb/>
camp isesac the nation<lb/>
Tickets fc the ecture mav<lb/>
? "<lb/>
-? 1<lb/>
Homecoming ticket<lb/>
report is discussed<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
Both concerts were soli:<lb/>
foi 7,500 seats said A . .<lb/>
These tickets included fai <lb/>
student, student guest,<lb/>
and public<lb/>
"One problem was<lb/>
that the student guest ticket<lb/>
? ?? sold rint v ithin 1 ? ?<lb/>
days, and the<lb/>
bought public ticket<lb/>
Alexander<lb/>
? : : - thi<lb/>
types " ' kets to try 1 -<lb/>
. . -<lb/>
? lent <lb/>
"If the fin had<lb/>
? e to the concei ts<lb/>
? . 1 .<lb/>
extra seal tl-<lb/>
Alexai :? ?<lb/>
 th thei ' ? '<lb/>
? nq this year, it is 1<lb/>
tet ticket early to a<lb/>
nissing the<lb/>
I for by thi -<lb/>
Alexai ? said.<lb/>
Baker<lb/>
to edit<lb/>
magazine<lb/>
By BENJAMIN BAILEY<lb/>
he di hp -<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
Kjisiat reMor ay night<lb/>
 th e r eo ues f<lb/>
ed a v j.<lb/>
Dear Alexai that<lb/>
s,r?c? 1 :  hence is an<lb/>
excepi<lb/>
 pt ?: es 3 flexil - -hat<lb/>
:<lb/>
. to the<lb/>
ten :<lb/>
f . r' .<lb/>
 ?? sts<lb/>
? t per'<lb/>
H<lb/>
-  es<lb/>
Checks here<lb/>
it M<lb/>
 P<lb/>
- . "<lb/>
1 a L Bjke1, assista<lb/>
professoi in tne Eng :r<lb/>
irtment has be 1<lb/>
editoi of th- Alpha Pt j<lb/>
The C'5rT :??<lb/>
Journalist.<lb/>
Bakei s the retii ing nat -<lb/>
? t of Alpha Phi Gamma<lb/>
the honorary ?<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
Bakei will begin his<lb/>
? ties next Septembe<lb/>
continue to teach<lb/>
House<lb/>
approves<lb/>
drug bill<lb/>
WASHINGTON r<lb/>
has<lb/>
thn ears tc hel ?<lb/>
ate students<lb/>
iers of d<lb/>
Ir p jshing h s ?<lb/>
' ,eeds1 D ? asri<lb/>
 te  as<lb/>
television pers : ?<lb/>
Linl ettei wh <lb/>
??? ?. - no LSD<lb/>
j a<lb/>
<pb facs="00039443_0003"/><lb/>
Exam Schedule<lb/>
Exams begin next week. Here is the schedule:<lb/>
8 a.m3-5 p.m. Friday, Nov. 21<lb/>
9 a.m8-10 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 26<lb/>
10 a.m1-3 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 26<lb/>
?j 1 a.m8-10 a.m. Monday, Nov. 24<lb/>
Noon3-5 p.m. Monday, Nov. 24<lb/>
1 p.m8-10 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 25<lb/>
2 p.m11 am. to 1 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 25<lb/>
3 p.m3-5 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 25<lb/>
4 p.m8-10 a.m. Friday, Nov. 21<lb/>
There will be no departure from this schedule.<lb/>
All examinations for one and two-hour courses will be held<lb/>
during the lajtregular meeting of the class.<lb/>
Final exams for three hour courses which meet less than three<lb/>
times per week will be held during the last regular meeting of the<lb/>
class.<lb/>
French, Spanish and German 1 exams will be from 5 to 7 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 20. French, Spanish and German 2 exams will be<lb/>
from 7:15 to 9:15 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 22.<lb/>
The exams for Chemistry 24, 25, 26, 34, 35, 36, 64,65, and 66<lb/>
will be from 8 to 10 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 22.<lb/>
Other exams will be on Friday, Nov. 21; Monday, Nov. 24;<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 25 and Wednesday, Nov. 26, as follows.<lb/>
Court upholds University police<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) The<lb/>
Supreme Court upheld today<lb/>
the power of university police<lb/>
to arrest stud ents for<lb/>
displaying "disruptive" antiwar<lb/>
signs dining silent protests of<lb/>
the Vietnam war.<lb/>
The court took tnis step by<lb/>
refusing to review the<lb/>
conviction of Robert K.<lb/>
Zwicker, a student at the<lb/>
University of Wisconsin who<lb/>
held up a picture of a<lb/>
napalmed boy outside a<lb/>
university placement office.<lb/>
The vote was 8 to 1.<lb/>
Zwicker was sentenced in<lb/>
1967 to a fine of $100 or 30<lb/>
days in jail. His appeal claimed<lb/>
the state's disorderly conduct<lb/>
law was too vague to be<lb/>
constitutional and that it had<lb/>
been used to suppress his<lb/>
freedom of speech.<lb/>
The State Supreme Court<lb/>
approved both the conviction<lb/>
and the law in a split decision<lb/>
last February.<lb/>
Zwicker was one of several<lb/>
students who stood outside the<lb/>
placement office in February<lb/>
1967 to protest in ;rviews<lb/>
being held within by tue Dow<lb/>
Chemical Co a manufacturer<lb/>
of napalm.<lb/>
University police told the<lb/>
students they could stage their<lb/>
demonstration but could not<lb/>
bring signs into the building.<lb/>
Morgan says officials<lb/>
should talk to activists<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) North<lb/>
Carolina Atty. Gen. Robert<lb/>
Morgan says the best way for<lb/>
school officials to deal with<lb/>
?atuUeni dciivlSls is to talk to<lb/>
them<lb/>
"I've found it'll knock them<lb/>
off their feet and will destroy<lb/>
then effectiveness if you listen<lb/>
! them Morgan said.<lb/>
"Although this won't get<lb/>
through to the hard core, it<lb/>
disarm most youngsters<lb/>
organ told a meeting of<lb/>
Heel high school student<lb/>
council advisors Monday,<lb/>
Ayntime you are presented a<lb/>
legitimate grievance, you<lb/>
should be quick to grant it,<lb/>
regardless of who asks for it<lb/>
Hie attorney general told<lb/>
idvisors that high schools<lb/>
in the state have not<lb/>
experienced widespread<lb/>
Students for a Democratic<lb/>
Society-inspired disruptions<lb/>
That were forecast last spring.<lb/>
Morgan said the influence of<lb/>
the SDS in "our high schools is<lb/>
very, very small<lb/>
He said the SDS tactics is to<lb/>
present a list of demands, most<lb/>
of which are legitimate, but<lb/>
o rre?ot?-two?of?which?are?<lb/>
designed to cause school<lb/>
administrators to balk and<lb/>
force a crisis.<lb/>
wi<lb/>
T<lb/>
di<lb/>
th(<lb/>
? 3-HOCK SHTRT 8EBV1CE<lb/>
 1-HOUR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DMVE-rN CURB SERVICE<lb/>
14th and Ch?rle? 8t Comer Aero From Harfee's<lb/>
Complete Laundry and Dry Ctoanter 8erV?<lb/>
Thursday, November 13, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 3<lb/>
Scott discusses<lb/>
non-involvement<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) Gov.<lb/>
Robert Scott said Monday<lb/>
night that "non involvement"<lb/>
has become an accepted way of<lb/>
life in America and many<lb/>
citizens are "practicing<lb/>
citizenship by remote control<lb/>
In a speech prepared for the<lb/>
Charlotte chapter of Executive<lb/>
Secretaries, Scott said the<lb/>
words "rebel" and "square"<lb/>
have become distasteful words.<lb/>
But, he said "This country<lb/>
was discovered, put together,<lb/>
fought for, and saved by<lb/>
'rebels' and 'squares' and for<lb/>
the lack of them, we may fall<lb/>
apart at the seams<lb/>
"There is a placefor<lb/>
healthy and helpful<lb/>
n r-n conformity in these<lb/>
Thieu:mo<lb/>
fewer de<lb/>
SAIGON (AP) President<lb/>
Nguyen Van Thieu said last<lb/>
week South Vietnam has "no<lb/>
right to demand more" of its<lb/>
allies and must be prepared to<lb/>
sacrifice more to "safeguard<lb/>
our independence and<lb/>
freedom<lb/>
In a national television<lb/>
address, he told the<lb/>
Vietnamese people they must<lb/>
accept more responsibilities on<lb/>
the military, economic and<lb/>
social fronts.<lb/>
"We can't depend entirely<lb/>
on the help of our allies he<lb/>
said. "We have no other choice<lb/>
than to continue to fight and<lb/>
to have the capability for<lb/>
prolonged fighting<lb/>
Thieu said the enemy knows<lb/>
he can attain neither a military<lb/>
times Scott said.<lb/>
"I am afraid we have<lb/>
become an importing people<lb/>
rather than an exporting<lb/>
people he said.<lb/>
"America was once the<lb/>
greatest exporter of ideas and<lb/>
ideals the world had ever<lb/>
known. We created and sold<lb/>
such ideas across the earth as<lb/>
individual dignity and the<lb/>
responsibility of the citizen,<lb/>
the freedom of every person,<lb/>
government of and by and for<lb/>
the people, freedom of worship<lb/>
and unfettered press<lb/>
"In the past 25 years,<lb/>
however, non-involvement has<lb/>
become an accepted way of<lb/>
our lives Scott said.<lb/>
re sacrifice,<lb/>
mands<lb/>
nor political victory in South<lb/>
Vietnam but he predicted a<lb/>
long struggle in both areas<lb/>
before peace is finally<lb/>
achieved.<lb/>
Guardsman<lb/>
opposes<lb/>
moratorium<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - The state<lb/>
adjutant genera! of the North<lb/>
Carolina National Guard has<lb/>
urged national guardsmen and<lb/>
others to counteract Vietnam<lb/>
moratorium activities by flying<lb/>
the American flag, driving with<lb/>
their headlight on and turning<lb/>
on their porch lights at night<lb/>
from Tuesday, Veterans Day,<lb/>
through Saturday.<lb/>
?<lb/>
The<lb/>
Mad<lb/>
Mad<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
 VjooJfck bfcu.U ofc<lb/>
Wor- qcc4 Wi? tor Ad-<lb/>
'tofc U0Mftc0K- eorqttaon Shojpp. ilflM- P.M.<lb/>
1 Hi<lb/>
Sfad<lb/>
Drive-In<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts Greenville, N.C<lb/>
Cleaning 3 Hr Shirt Service<lb/>
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.<lb/>
STUDENT DESK LAMPS ? GREETING CARDS<lb/>
Student Stationery ? Professional Filing Supplies<lb/>
Drafting and Art Supplies ? School Supplies<lb/>
Sasl 5th Street 75? 217;<lb/>
214 F<lb/>
FOR THOSE WHO CARE TO HELP SIMON DIXON<lb/>
BRING WHAT YOU CAN TO THE FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
<pb facs="00039443_0004"/><lb/>
?????'? ?<lb/>
Pjhc 4 Fountainhead, 1 . . No i<lb/>
"Medium Cool" is unconcerned<lb/>
By A.W.OLSON<lb/>
The most unfortunate aspect<lb/>
of Haskell Wexler's "Medium<lb/>
Cool" is the presentation of our<lb/>
American Way of Life. With less<lb/>
journalistic trickery than one<lb/>
might hope for. Wexler display s<lb/>
The little realized and lessei<lb/>
edmitted negative symbiosis of<lb/>
our human actuality and<lb/>
political despotism.<lb/>
The film deals with a TV<lb/>
news cameraman and a refugee<lb/>
mother and son f i<lb/>
Appalachia during the weeks<lb/>
prior to and including the 1968<lb/>
Democratic convention in<lb/>
Chicago.<lb/>
"Medium Cool' ses <lb/>
fictional storyline as a vehicle<lb/>
to hold the non-fiction portions<lb/>
of the work together in a<lb/>
coherent manner.<lb/>
See i sceneslams I<lb/>
jn the ce the reasons<lb/>
WH the BattN f Ch<lb/>
? cans oen era<lb/>
love violence the system<lb/>
promotes it and dupes the<lb/>
majoritv into accepting it as the<lb/>
way things are. Just to check. I<lb/>
tuned in the Roller Derby when<lb/>
I got home to see if those shots<lb/>
in the film were phony<lb/>
Thev weren t but then most<lb/>
people who v atch that crap<lb/>
ke the cameraman in Wexle s<lb/>
film, just don t see it as <lb/>
barbaric event ou might as<lb/>
well toss Christians to the io is<lb/>
The cameraman (Robert<lb/>
Forster) and the -othererna<lb/>
Bloom) and her son iHa<lb/>
Blankenship) are members oi<lb/>
America s vast siler' i rity.<lb/>
They are representative of all<lb/>
those hard working<lb/>
people ho never engage in<lb/>
confrontation Roller Derby<lb/>
politics and who seem<lb/>
?concerned with anth:nq<lb/>
outside their immediate net<lb/>
 exler has these fict ona<lb/>
characters I r hed in<lb/>
ery I ffe ? nt sicknesses at si<lb/>
by the same invisible agent<lb/>
Thev are unaware of the<lb/>
machinations of then<lb/>
government even though then<lb/>
s ancj . ihoods are<lb/>
dependent upon what the<lb/>
Rollef Derby ? system offers.<lb/>
Gradually the  nan,<lb/>
k the people A nerica,<lb/>
begins to use his ow - - ather<lb/>
? iis camera and the<lb/>
estab ishment n ass<lb/>
We ei knew a I I '? ? the<lb/>
street peop e n Ch cago He<lb/>
repeats the i chants and .<lb/>
foi sanity and tries n h <lb/>
fasc nat ng - n to get<lb/>
a -f :ans tc 'r ze the<lb/>
llessness of out "r ' ' ? ' ?<lb/>
 nan desti. :t . eness<lb/>
The scenes<lb/>
thent :<lb/>
nstructive tc<lb/>
and s sters h<lb/>
natior s Cac t.<lb/>
Ch ; '<lb/>
- -?<lb/>
AVSS WV? V WW.VWW.rN WAWr SSWAS VV.SV.SVSSVVSSVVVV<lb/>
????????????<lb/>
Buccaneer (Eourts<lb/>
Newly Decorated<lb/>
Approved ECU Housing for<lb/>
Easy Rider<lb/>
Without the absurdity of<lb/>
'Wild In The Streets" or the<lb/>
chaos of "You Are What You<lb/>
Eat Peter Fonda and Dennis<lb/>
Hopper have in a simple song of<lb/>
freedom called "Easy Rider"<lb/>
utilized The Movement' as a<lb/>
background and have produced<lb/>
a film of considerable power<lb/>
and poignancy.<lb/>
Time magazine, the national<lb/>
rag, put down "Easy Rider"for<lb/>
several reasons, one of which<lb/>
?Is a lack of understanding<lb/>
. - nt) about the flick<lb/>
it it really is telling its<lb/>
f erceptive (receptive?)<lb/>
ne's jn simply oversaw<lb/>
the m and, like previously<lb/>
shed American overseers,<lb/>
rejected the humanity and<lb/>
oeauty of the overseen. There<lb/>
are several visually calm and<lb/>
auditorily, through the use of<lb/>
well chosen Rock tunes, vivid<lb/>
moments during which the two<lb/>
grass blowing long haired bikers<lb/>
flow along through the rugged<lb/>
beauty of the uninhabited<lb/>
American desert beautiful<lb/>
because it is uninhibited and<lb/>
devoid of the entangling garbage<lb/>
material and otherwise) which<lb/>
our consumer society insists<lb/>
upon p i o d u i c n g an d<lb/>
simultaneously throwing away,<lb/>
where ever it groups itself.<lb/>
Wyatt or 'Captain America'<lb/>
as he labels himself and Billy are<lb/>
sensitive to the beauty of the<lb/>
uncluttered natural geography<lb/>
ot their homeland. They almo,<lb/>
worsh.p the 'emptiness' of the<lb/>
landscape and the viewer .<lb/>
treated to this beauty in what<lb/>
T.me calls "endless<lb/>
sequences. dnvam pnrii<lb/>
j ? ' enaless<lb/>
roads.<lb/>
Perhaps only heads weren't<lb/>
bored with this, I don't know<lb/>
But, for Wyatt and Billy, this<lb/>
joy inducing expanse is release<lb/>
from a banal, plastic life style<lb/>
and a union with what is<lb/>
important to them.<lb/>
That simple (some say<lb/>
simplistic) message will,<lb/>
however, be overshadowed by a<lb/>
more obvious and 'realistic'<lb/>
attitude towards life: Don't<lb/>
make waves. The tragedy of<lb/>
Wyatt and Billy is caused by<lb/>
their display of freedom in a<lb/>
putridly un-free society.<lb/>
"Easy Rider" can raise<lb/>
upsetting chills for those people<lb/>
in the hopefull crowded theater<lb/>
who've worn their long hair and<lb/>
bells into Tinytown, USA. Long<lb/>
hairs (the NOW term for<lb/>
hippies, heads, peace queers,<lb/>
commvnists, etc) have become<lb/>
the new niggers to midale<lb/>
American and this polarization<lb/>
of concepts 'US' .s THE<lb/>
- as portrayed in the film is no<lb/>
myth; it is everywhere and as<lb/>
"Easy Rider" tells us. leads to<lb/>
meaningless death.<lb/>
The plot is simply a week in<lb/>
the life of a pair of chopper<lb/>
drivers and how they, as<lb/>
representatives of a peculiar<lb/>
subculture are treated by their<lb/>
fellow Americans,<lb/>
representative of other peculiar<lb/>
Women Students<lb/>
Rcfrig<lb/>
? . i<lb/>
m<lb/>
d<lb/>
Light Cooking<lb/>
in<lb/>
ech Suite<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/>
Includes soap and bleach<lb/>
Laundry 9V2 lbs. 83c, Folded 93c<lb/>
DRY CLEANING and SHTKTS<lb/>
813 Evans Street<lb/>
Down from Burger Chef<lb/>
<lb/>
e Wimae in off ? am fun giving<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039443_0005"/><lb/>
say<lb/>
in a<lb/>
but 'Easy Rider'<lb/>
is poignant<lb/>
segments in oui society, during<lb/>
a bike trip from Los Angeles to<lb/>
MardisGras.<lb/>
Om- outstanding aspect of<lb/>
film is the portraying of<lb/>
rage' Americans by<lb/>
non-actors (i.e. 'average'<lb/>
Americans.)<lb/>
The neck truckers, naive<lb/>
teeners, everyday bigots and the<lb/>
Ms in New Mexico were just<lb/>
that Hopper just happened to<lb/>
have his camera focused and<lb/>
running on their red, white, blue<lb/>
and free lives for a while.<lb/>
A volumn of praise goes to<lb/>
jack Nicholson who portrays a<lb/>
small town Establishment type<lb/>
Texan who joins the duo for a<lb/>
lai k.<lb/>
He spells out for straight and<lb/>
freak alike just what is goinijon<lb/>
and goes to his reward for the<lb/>
effort. Fonda still has trouble<lb/>
acting although his lines are as<lb/>
much to fault as is his attempt<lb/>
to be this generation's James<lb/>
Dean. Dennis Hopper is credibly<lb/>
strange.<lb/>
"Easy Rider" was produced<lb/>
by Peter Fonda, directed and<lb/>
co authored (with Terry<lb/>
Southern) by his on screen<lb/>
partner, Dennis Hopper, who<lb/>
won the Cannes Film Festival<lb/>
first prize for a new director.<lb/>
Help your head, then go see<lb/>
"Easy Rider<lb/>
Airlift to control<lb/>
violence is possible<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)<lb/>
Several thousand troops across<lb/>
the country have been alerted<lb/>
to he ready for possible<lb/>
air-lifting to Washington in case<lb/>
violence erupts during this<lb/>
week's scheduled Moratorium<lb/>
activities here.<lb/>
The Pentagon acknowledged<lb/>
that the work to be ready had<lb/>
qone out, but declined to say<lb/>
which units wouid be involved.<lb/>
Troops outside Washington<lb/>
could be made available in<lb/>
addition to a total of about<lb/>
28,000 military personnel<lb/>
stationed in the city's area.<lb/>
Jerry Friedheim, Peniagon<lb/>
spokesman, acknowledged that<lb/>
forces outside a 100 mile<lb/>
radius of Washington were<lb/>
informed that they might be<lb/>
summoned to Washinton.<lb/>
As a part of our<lb/>
precautionary measures certain<lb/>
commanders have been advised<lb/>
to insure that the<lb/>
responsiveness of their units is<lb/>
appropriate to meet possible<lb/>
needs should this be requested<lb/>
by the Justice Department<lb/>
Friedheim said.<lb/>
This meant that the units<lb/>
should be ready to move at a<lb/>
moment's notice.<lb/>
Long leads<lb/>
drug panel<lb/>
A panel discussion on "The<lb/>
Use and Misuse of Drugs<lb/>
sponsored by the Unitariar<lb/>
Universalist Fellowship here,<lb/>
will be at 8 p.m. Sunday, Nov.<lb/>
16, at the Y Hut.<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Long of the<lb/>
psychology department will be<lb/>
the moderator. The members of<lb/>
the panel will be John Kerr from<lb/>
the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department; the Rev. Graham<lb/>
Nahouse, pastor of the<lb/>
Lutheran Church; Jerry Paul, a<lb/>
Greenville lawyer; and Dr.<lb/>
Walter P. Savage.<lb/>
Colonial Heights Soda Shop &amp; Restaurant<lb/>
Now Serving Meals<lb/>
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2711 E 10th St. 752-6778<lb/>
fk?NCH 5?<lb/>
THE CHICAGO RIOTS in "Medium Cool<lb/>
Thursday, November 13, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 5<lb/>
W allace to go<lb/>
on fact-finding<lb/>
tour of East<lb/>
MONTGOMERY' Ala. (AP)<lb/>
Former Gov. George C.<lb/>
Wallace took off Thursday on<lb/>
the first leg of a<lb/>
military-political fact finding<lb/>
trip to Southeast Asia.<lb/>
Spokesman for the third<lb/>
party presidential candidate of<lb/>
I968 said the trip would<lb/>
include stops in Formosa,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039443_0008"/><lb/>
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PaqeS, Fountainhead, November 13, 1969, Thursday<lb/>
Wightman rushes 245 yards,<lb/>
sets new single game record<lb/>
Tailback Billy Wightman<lb/>
performed the unbelievable<lb/>
Saturday afternoon againsl<lb/>
Davidson's Wildcats. He topped<lb/>
his previous week's rushing<lb/>
performance against Furman of<lb/>
168 yards in 16 carries in fine<lb/>
fashion with a record setting<lb/>
performance of 245 yards in 37<lb/>
carries.<lb/>
Wightman's rushing total<lb/>
topped Richmond's Larry<lb/>
Zunich's performance of 239<lb/>
yards set against Davidson in<lb/>
1966 to set a new record,<lb/>
The Pirates now own<lb/>
conference records in both<lb/>
individual game rushing and<lb/>
season totals. Butch Colson set<lb/>
the conference season mark of<lb/>
1,135 yards in 1967.<lb/>
The slim senior from<lb/>
Burlington also took over the<lb/>
lead in the total offense<lb/>
department, passing Colson.<lb/>
For the season, Wightman<lb/>
has carried the ball 143 times<lb/>
for 765 yards and has passed 44<lb/>
times, completing 15 for 118<lb/>
yards and a total offense figure<lb/>
if 883 yards<lb/>
Colson, who standing<lb/>
blocking in the Davidson<lb/>
enabled Wightman to I<lb/>
loose s times has 514<lb/>
yards ?n the ground and 235<lb/>
igh the an<lb/>
Colson, who in head coai h<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich's eyes is<lb/>
having his best yeai here, has<lb/>
attempted 2 7 passes,<lb/>
completing 16 of those, and<lb/>
leads the team in passing<lb/>
Against Davidson, he threw<lb/>
but one pass for 13 yards and<lb/>
gained 48 on the ground, but he<lb/>
was more instrumental with his<lb/>
blocking.<lb/>
Split end Richard Conada<lb/>
still leads in pass receiving with<lb/>
14 catches for 167 yards and<lb/>
one touchdown. He caught four<lb/>
passes for 53 yards in the<lb/>
Pirates' 42 27 loss to Davidson.<lb/>
Wingback William Mitchell<lb/>
has caught 11 passes for 113<lb/>
yards. Wightman has caught<lb/>
nine passes for 69 yards, and<lb/>
tight end Fred Harris has caught<lb/>
seven passes for 84 yards.<lb/>
 ghtman also took a<lb/>
commanding thi<lb/>
I<lb/>
with his three touchd<lb/>
Ison<lb/>
He no<lb/>
touchdowns foi 42 points hile<lb/>
Colson has touchdowns and 24<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Placekickei Steve Davis is<lb/>
next in the scoring column with<lb/>
12 points.<lb/>
m ithh COLSON gets stopped.<lb/>
Bucs lose to Richmond<lb/>
but play good first half<lb/>
By SONNY LEA<lb/>
It takes two halves to win a<lb/>
football game and no one knows<lb/>
that any better than the football<lb/>
team after dropping then<lb/>
homecoming game to Davidson,<lb/>
42 27<lb/>
The Pirates were spectacular,<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
When you return from your Thanksgiving vacation, com j back<lb/>
prepared for the great hi-fi, stereo, and tape buys. ALL regular<lb/>
$4.98 L.P. Stereo Albums, $2.99; ALL regular $6.98 Cassette<lb/>
and 8-Track Tapes, $4.99. These prices are available only to<lb/>
ECU Students. This is Bronson Matney Jrs way of showing<lb/>
his appreciation to students for their business in his store.<lb/>
Tape Town and<lb/>
Harmony House South<lb/>
unbelievable, to say the least, in<lb/>
the fust half against the<lb/>
heralded Wildcats. The Wildcats<lb/>
won a tup to Florida over<lb/>
Christmas for the Tangerine<lb/>
Bowl before a crowd of 15,337<lb/>
in Ficklen Stadium Saturday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
The Bucs had an explosive<lb/>
offense that rolled up more<lb/>
yardage in the first half than it<lb/>
nas in most of its games this<lb/>
season and the defense was so<lb/>
air tight that it bottled up the<lb/>
nation's third leading passer<lb/>
until two minutes before the<lb/>
half ended.<lb/>
As the siren sounded to end<lb/>
the first half, most of the crowd<lb/>
was dumbfounded with the<lb/>
Pirates' performance.<lb/>
But, as the siren sounded to<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 Delicious Flavors<lb/>
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Try a delicious Banana<lb/>
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CASH!<lb/>
For your used Texts!<lb/>
We are in the market for most texts.<lb/>
Sorry, we're overstocked on paperbacks except those<lb/>
used as texts<lb/>
Unless you are going to keep a text permanently, it<lb/>
pays to sell it before the edition changes and it<lb/>
becomes completely unsalable.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY BOOK EXCHANGE<lb/>
528 S. COTANCHE ST.<lb/>
Check Cashing Servi<lb/>
ce<lb/>
end the game, the crowd was<lb/>
equally shocked at the Pirates'<lb/>
second half performance.<lb/>
The first half score was East<lb/>
Carolina 27, Davidson 7. The<lb/>
second half score was Davidson<lb/>
35, East Carolina 0.<lb/>
It was a complete turnabout<lb/>
in the second half and Davidson<lb/>
scored the first six times it got<lb/>
their hands on the ball. Gordon<lb/>
Slade showed Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
why he is indeed the nation's<lb/>
third leading passer.<lb/>
What he did was complete<lb/>
most of 20 of 28 passes in the<lb/>
second half for four of his five<lb/>
touchdown tosses for the<lb/>
afternoon and for nearly all of<lb/>
his 234 yards.<lb/>
His second half<lb/>
( continued on paqe 9 )<lb/>
Want to set a career<lb/>
objective of $25000 or<lb/>
more in annual income?<lb/>
This is a realistic goal<lb/>
for any man entering<lb/>
Grant's Management<lb/>
Training Program.<lb/>
Starting salaries from<lb/>
$47 Tto?$585 per<lb/>
month.<lb/>
We are a rapidly<lb/>
expanding billion<lb/>
dollar retail chain of<lb/>
over 1100 stores with<lb/>
a reputation for paying<lb/>
top incomes.<lb/>
Ask your Placement<lb/>
Director for a copy of<lb/>
our brochure and sign<lb/>
up for an interview.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Nov. 17, 1969<lb/>
See Elton Shoemaker<lb/>
from<lb/>
W. T Grant Company<lb/>
1441 Broadway, N.Y.C<lb/>
IIMIItltKtMMt'tll<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
aa<lb/>
IJ'MJIIilMl"<lb/>
<pb facs="00039443_0009"/><lb/>
Frosh defeat Richmond<lb/>
Thursday, November 13, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 9<lb/>
Colson, Wightman<lb/>
lead the way again<lb/>
Mark Hamilton, a 5-10.<lb/>
180-pound tailback from<lb/>
Enq,ewood, Colo rushed for a<lb/>
spectacular 304 yards m 28<lb/>
carries Friday afternoon as the<lb/>
freshman football team came<lb/>
from behind in the second half<lb/>
to defeat Richmond, 42-21.<lb/>
" Hamilton, who had seven<lb/>
runs of 20 yards or better,<lb/>
scored once on a 24-yard<lb/>
scamper and completed three of<lb/>
foUr passes for 44 yards,<lb/>
including a 17-yarder for a<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
The Pirates rolled up 468<lb/>
yards rushing. A 21-point<lb/>
explosion in the third quarter,<lb/>
after Richmond had gone ahead<lb/>
21 14 with five seconds left in<lb/>
the first half, sewed up the third<lb/>
straight wins for coach Bill<lb/>
Cain's squad.<lb/>
The Bucs got on the<lb/>
scoreboard early in the second<lb/>
quarter when Fred Benevento<lb/>
ran for two yards. Richmond<lb/>
came back to tie it up on a<lb/>
41-yard passf.om Mike Mitchell<lb/>
to Russ McCauliff.<lb/>
The Bucs went ahead again<lb/>
when Bert Showfety cracked<lb/>
over from the one.<lb/>
Mitchell, who completed 16<lb/>
of 39 passes for 250 yards for<lb/>
Richmond, tied the game for<lb/>
the Baby Spiders with a<lb/>
two-yard run and then put them<lb/>
ahead on a 57-yard screen pass<lb/>
play to Mike Ball just before the<lb/>
half ended.<lb/>
Then, as the third<lb/>
quarter began, the Baby Bucs<lb/>
exploded. Leslie Strayhorn<lb/>
cracked over from the three<lb/>
and minutes later Mark<lb/>
Hamilton scampered 24 yards<lb/>
for another score to put East<lb/>
Carolina ahead for good, 28-21.<lb/>
Fred Benevento then<lb/>
increased the margin to 35-21<lb/>
when he capped a 55-yards to<lb/>
Bebo Batts.<lb/>
Richmond's only scoring<lb/>
threat in the second half was<lb/>
stopped when defensive<lb/>
halfback Ron Konrady picked<lb/>
off a pass at the East Carolina<lb/>
three and returned it to the 29<lb/>
where the Baf Bucs ran the<lb/>
clock out.<lb/>
Kicking specialist Bill<lb/>
Daniels booted six of six extra<lb/>
points for the afternoon for<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
The Bucs end their season<lb/>
Friday afternoon with the<lb/>
freshman from The Citadel in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium. Game time is<lb/>
2 p.m.<lb/>
 continued from page 8 )<lb/>
overshadowed the fine<lb/>
performance of tailback Billy<lb/>
Withtman who broke both the<lb/>
school and the Southern<lb/>
Conference record for most<lb/>
yards rushing in a single game.<lb/>
The slim senior netted 245<lb/>
yards on the afternoon in 37<lb/>
carries.<lb/>
Our first score came in the<lb/>
first quarter when fullback<lb/>
Butch Colson pulled his way<lb/>
over from the eight. Earl Clary's<lb/>
extra point attempt was wide.<lb/>
Then, Wightman broke loose<lb/>
and picked up most of his 143<lb/>
yards gained in the first half.<lb/>
First in the second period, he<lb/>
scored on a 10 yard run, then he<lb/>
swept left end for one yard and<lb/>
'efc Tyfer<lb/>
CAN YOU BELEIVE HE SCORED? Tailback Billy<lb/>
Wightman breaks a tackle on his first scoring run of 10<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
in<lb/>
s<lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
Frida v Niah t<lb/>
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VARSITY GULF STATION<lb/>
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Convient for quick snakes<lb/>
Fresh sandwiches ? Potato chi.js<lb/>
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Price Reductions<lb/>
Effective 7 pm - 11 pm only!<lb/>
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cj Sportswear<lb/>
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another touchdown and capped<lb/>
around lett end to give the<lb/>
Pirates a 27-0 lead.<lb/>
Then, Slade got to work and<lb/>
connected on a 23-yard scoring<lb/>
pass just before the half ended.<lb/>
When the second half<lb/>
opened, Davidson quickly<lb/>
marched down field and scored<lb/>
when halfback Ken Hill bulled<lb/>
his way over from the two.<lb/>
Slade then threw four<lb/>
consecutive touchdown passes.<lb/>
His first went to Hill on a<lb/>
10-yard play. His second was a<lb/>
15-yarder to Kelly. His third<lb/>
was an eight-yarder to fullback<lb/>
Mike Mikolayunas and his final<lb/>
touchdown pass went to end<lb/>
George Hannen on a seven-yard<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039443_0010"/><lb/>
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By JAMES HORD<lb/>
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA.<lb/>
Change is in the air hero at the<lb/>
University of Virginia, long<lb/>
noted for its staid, historic<lb/>
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The conservative "coat and<lb/>
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power, dormitory rules and<lb/>
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Bv PETE ALEXANDER<lb/>
I h<lb/>
" ?. so imp<lb/>
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The Hiii. housing place<lb/>
n i ? students. To get to<lb/>
Jones, Ay cock, or Scott Halls<lb/>
a student must either go Lip<lb/>
the steps or walz around to<lb/>
? trance. Either<lb/>
e is dangerous. At the<lb/>
top of the steps are iarge<lb/>
: titles oT dirt and ? i<lb/>
11 : thei ;? t. ??' it rains,<lb/>
conglomeration becomes<lb/>
;lippery. Of course, men<lb/>
could hold onto the railing,<lb/>
but there isn't one. There is<lb/>
only one chain link handle<lb/>
hat can barely be used as it<lb/>
gives neither support or se<lb/>
curity. Traipsing up the steps<lb/>
late at night would be even<lb/>
safer if there was a light, and<lb/>
there isn't.<lb/>
I have found through ob<lb/>
servations that students who<lb/>
drive, at least a majority of<lb/>
the students who drive, don't<lb/>
know how to read. Cars ai s<lb/>
continually running the stop<lb/>
sign at the exit from the<lb/>
Jones side of the hill and the<lb/>
exit ti vard the football field.<lb/>
Everyone giggles about it, but<lb/>
there won't be anything to<lb/>
laugh at if someone got hit<lb/>
Aiso, many of these dri-<lb/>
vers don't know what brakes<lb/>
ae and don't know how to<lb/>
a on jjui<lb/>
1965 MG-B Gray Convertible! Wire wheels and radio,<lb/>
excellent condition. Call 756-3355, after 6 p m<lb/>
756-3883<lb/>
restrictions are tumbling-and<lb/>
students are demanding an end<lb/>
to the rule prohibiting female<lb/>
undergraduate students.<lb/>
Traditionally, the Student<lb/>
Council, campus publications<lb/>
the counseling system, and the<lb/>
University Union Were<lb/>
considered to be an<lb/>
establishment of the "fraternity<lb/>
system according to J0e<lb/>
Gardner, U.Va. student and<lb/>
writer for the Cavalier Daily.<lb/>
Gardner said this is changed,<lb/>
and a "new establishment" has<lb/>
now come to power,<lb/>
characterized by a<lb/>
"liberal-radical, anti traditional<lb/>
and generally anti-fraternity<lb/>
tinge.<lb/>
'Currently the new<lb/>
establishment is in control ov<lb/>
every major University<lb/>
publication the Student<lb/>
Council, and has its eyes set on<lb/>
the Honor Committee and the<lb/>
Judiciary Committee which<lb/>
are, according to Gardner, "the<lb/>
last bastions of the old<lb/>
establishment<lb/>
The age-old rule of<lb/>
p r o h i b i t i n g female<lb/>
undergraduate students is also<lb/>
coming under fire. Currently a<lb/>
suit is pending in court<lb/>
challenging this restriction.<lb/>
New dormitory rules ere<lb/>
approved Oct. 8, with over 95<lb/>
pet cent of the freshmen<lb/>
students in favor of them. This<lb/>
new rule would permit girls to<lb/>
visit in the "first-year" from 11<lb/>
a.m. Fridays until 8 p.m. on<lb/>
Sundays.<lb/>
ooo<lb/>
Vietnam Moratorium Day en<lb/>
Oct. 15 proceeded peacefully<lb/>
and enjoyed widespread<lb/>
support here.<lb/>
(One side light on the<lb/>
moratorium: There were very<lb/>
few police, SB I, or FBI agents<lb/>
monitoring the demonstration.<lb/>
One "M Day" supporter said<lb/>
that he only saw "one cop the<lb/>
entire day Compare this with<lb/>
the "throngs of men in blue"<lb/>
and the restrictions imposed on<lb/>
the Moratorium Day supporters<lb/>
at ECU.)<lb/>
Walking over the campus,<lb/>
one sees posters signs amr<lb/>
buttons advertising the Nov. 15<lb/>
march on Washington.<lb/>
Round-trip bus tickets are<lb/>
selling for $5.00<lb/>
Still, with all the elements of<lb/>
change noted at U.Va the<lb/>
linkage with the past and the<lb/>
days of Thomas Jefferson is<lb/>
strongly sensed. The stately<lb/>
Jeffersonian architectural<lb/>
design of many buildings on<lb/>
campus, today plastered with a<lb/>
"peace sticker seems to<lb/>
personify this change now going<lb/>
on at the University of Virginia.<lb/>
things go<lb/>
better<lb/>
with<lb/>
Loke<lb/>
mm<lb/>
A new i<lb/>
Southerner<lb/>
and social I<lb/>
If the si<lb/>
include lit<lb/>
businessrm<lb/>
activists.<lb/>
TheLar<lb/>
"It is tl<lb/>
some of tl"<lb/>
non politic<lb/>
native Soi<lb/>
solutions ti<lb/>
Thec(<lb/>
in nature,<lb/>
potential<lb/>
Two of<lb/>
native Mi<lb/>
University<lb/>
Both are 3:<lb/>
For mc<lb/>
South and<lb/>
have had<lb/>
young I<lb/>
meetings<lb/>
Durham<lb/>
symposiur<lb/>
About<lb/>
from indi<lb/>
Ch.iihis A.<lb/>
publisher.<lb/>
The soi<lb/>
bringing '<lb/>
leaders t<lb/>
Eventual!1<lb/>
In its p1<lb/>
"Dm in<lb/>
SO much<lb/>
federal gc<lb/>
ai tempts i<lb/>
"Amoi<lb/>
are: (1)1<lb/>
unemplov<lb/>
education<lb/>
among th<lb/>
planning I<lb/>
A dia<lb/>
organiat<lb/>
include H<lb/>
Moms, ai<lb/>
It is a<lb/>
fledgling<lb/>
quai lers<lb/>
politics i<lb/>
hanpener<lb/>
It the<lb/>
decisions<lb/>
controvei<lb/>
withwhii<lb/>
Naylo<lb/>
"com mo<lb/>
r h nani ?ai<lb/>
theregio<lb/>
Thai<lb/>
Cincinna<lb/>
theReco<lb/>
associate<lb/>
As a<lb/>
offender<lb/>
views wi<lb/>
him out i<lb/>
His ei<lb/>
the abol<lb/>
Mississip<lb/>
Likev<lb/>
woiking<lb/>
Hayes in<lb/>
Tilden.<lb/>
It tu<lb/>
withdraw<lb/>
Toda<lb/>
seems d<lb/>
;Jnd pra<lb/>
<pb facs="00039443_0011"/><lb/>
Thursday, November 13, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 11<lb/>
f Future leaders<lb/>
?3?;<lb/>
L for the South<lb/>
By BILL CONNELLY<lb/>
Washington Correspondent<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
a ,ew organization will be formed later this month for young<lb/>
mers who want to help their region overcome its economic<lb/>
h ial problems. It will be known as the L Q. C. Lamar Society.<lb/>
ifthe society's founders have then way, the membership will<lb/>
le liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans,<lb/>
"nessmen and professors, blacks and whites, Jaycees and social<lb/>
The Lamar Society's prospectus explains:<lb/>
It is the object of (the society) to capitalize on the talents of<lb/>
of the South's more promising future leaders by creating a<lb/>
political non partisan organization which can bring together<lb/>
10jVg Southerners who are committed to finding practical<lb/>
solutions to some of the South's problems<lb/>
"The common bond among its members shall not be ideological<lb/>
? ?,? hut rather a common desire to see the South fulfill its full<lb/>
?Two of the society's chief organizers are Thomas H. Naylor, a<lb/>
native Miss.ss.ppian who is professor of economics at Duke<lb/>
University, and W. J. Michael Cody, a Memphis. Tenn lawyer.<lb/>
Both die 33 years old.<lb/>
For months, these men and others have been traveling in the<lb/>
South and writing letters to stimulate interest in the society. They<lb/>
have had some success. Seventy-five leaders young and not so<lb/>
young from 11 states have agreed to attend the organizational<lb/>
meetings Nov. 21 23 at Quail Roost Conference Center near<lb/>
Durham. Next April, 300 participants are expected for a<lb/>
symposium in Memphis on "The Emerging South<lb/>
About 510,000 has been contributed to the society so far, half<lb/>
from individuals, the rest from the Stern Family Fund and from<lb/>
Charles A Womack, the Danville, Va businessman and newspaper<lb/>
publisher.<lb/>
The society plans to conduct workshops throughout the South,<lb/>
bnnging together public officials, businessmen and community<lb/>
leaders to study and exchange ideas on regional problems.<lb/>
Eventually, it will publish a journal.<lb/>
In its pi ospectus, the society outlines some of its objectives:<lb/>
"Dui ing the past 20 years public officials in the South have spent<lb/>
so much of their time and energy fighting integration and teh<lb/>
federal government that very little attention has been devoted to<lb/>
attempts to solve some of the South's many problems.<lb/>
"Among the more pressing problems that cont.nue to persist<lb/>
are: () low wages and per capita income, (2) rural poverty, (3)<lb/>
unemployment, (4) subltandard housing, (5) an inadequate<lb/>
educational system (6) and increasing rate of population growth<lb/>
among those families who can least afford it , and (7) inadequate<lb/>
planning by state and local governments<lb/>
A dialogue on some of these problems will begin at the<lb/>
organizational meeting at Quail Roost, where the speakers will<lb/>
include Hodding Carter III, the Greenville, Miss editor, and Willie<lb/>
Moi i is, another Mississippi native who edits Harper's magazine.<lb/>
It is a promising start for the society, by any measure. But the<lb/>
fledgling organization has been greeted with skepticism in some<lb/>
quarters by those who feel it is sure to wreck on the shoals of<lb/>
politics and ideology, regardless of its precautions. That has<lb/>
happened to many another venture in region?! uplift-<lb/>
o<lb/>
It the society asserts its views and seeks to influence political<lb/>
decisions as it must, to be effective it is certain to provoke<lb/>
controversy and, probably, to antagonize the conservative elements<lb/>
with which it hopes to work.<lb/>
Naylor and Cody seem to have confidence, however, that the<lb/>
"common bond" of regional pride and concern will bold the<lb/>
organization together and ultimately make it an influential force in<lb/>
the region.<lb/>
Thai brings us to the society's name. It honors Lucius Quintus<lb/>
Cincmnatus Lamai He was a U. S. senator from Mississippi during<lb/>
'he Reconstruction era, later Secretary of the Interior and finally an<lb/>
associate justice of the Supreme Court.<lb/>
As a senator, Lamar did not hesitate to take poistions that<lb/>
offended his constituents. Nor did he fail, apparently, to defend his<lb/>
views with great skill and persuasiveness. Mississipians never voted<lb/>
hnn out of office.<lb/>
His eulogy m the Senate for Charles Sumner of Massachusetts,<lb/>
the abolitionist, was widely praised in the north, but it infuriated<lb/>
Mississipians.<lb/>
Likewise, he took a grave political risk, as a Democrat, by<lb/>
working in Congress for the election of Republican Rutherford B.<lb/>
Hayes in the deadlocked 1867 pres'dential race against Gov. Samuel<lb/>
Tilden.<lb/>
It turned out that Lamar was assisting Hayes in return for a<lb/>
withdrawal of federal occupation troops from the south.<lb/>
Today, the new and hopeful organization that bears his name<lb/>
seems determined to have Lamar's blend of courage, imagination<lb/>
ar?d practicality.<lb/>
By DON OSBORNE<lb/>
This article was originally<lb/>
intended to be against the<lb/>
attitude of negativism. I then<lb/>
realized that that itself was a<lb/>
negative attitude so this article<lb/>
is, instead, one in favor of<lb/>
positivism.<lb/>
Gone are the days when<lb/>
going to a movie was a<lb/>
Saturday afternoon event<lb/>
where Jack Armstrong and the<lb/>
All American boys from<lb/>
Riverside High took their girls<lb/>
to see the good guys win.<lb/>
Today is the heyday of the<lb/>
anti hero and the anti cause.<lb/>
Our affections are now placed<lb/>
on the guy who is perhaps a<lb/>
little meaner than his rivals and<lb/>
succeeds because he is a dirtier<lb/>
fighter rather than because he<lb/>
is a nicer guy.<lb/>
I am fully an advocate of<lb/>
facing reality and remembering<lb/>
that guts more often win out<lb/>
over "goodness but the<lb/>
prevailing attitude in our<lb/>
society has gone a step further<lb/>
tahn realtiy and seems now to<lb/>
pursue the anti cause in the<lb/>
name of realtiy.<lb/>
By anti cause, I refer to the<lb/>
willingness of people today to<lb/>
tear down or criticize whatever<lb/>
they find fault in.<lb/>
Surely there are faults in<lb/>
everything that exists but why<lb/>
should we tear them down or<lb/>
scoff at them? Why can't we<lb/>
replace them with better<lb/>
things, or rebuild, improve and<lb/>
help situations rather than<lb/>
wiping them out?<lb/>
After all, in the ultimate<lb/>
analysis, the netative attitude<lb/>
must be found as unprogressive<lb/>
because of its very nature.<lb/>
Positivism, on the other<lb/>
hand, in which the attitude is<lb/>
to do things for one side rather<lb/>
than against the opposing side,<lb/>
is ultimately progressive. How<lb/>
then can we, as a society,<lb/>
progress with a negative<lb/>
attitude?<lb/>
Negativism has had its toll<lb/>
on us today. Through it there<lb/>
is now a lack of what I will call<lb/>
faith.<lb/>
I am not referring to a<lb/>
particular faith, especially not<lb/>
to a religious belief, but rather<lb/>
to the faith in a moral code,<lb/>
regardless of what morals, a<lb/>
Y<lb/>
I<lb/>
D<lb/>
faith in our country, faith in<lb/>
the wisdom gained by<lb/>
experience, faith in society<lb/>
and, in short, faith in any<lb/>
established system.<lb/>
Because of this lack in faith,<lb/>
we are more cynical and<lb/>
discontent today because there<lb/>
is nothing left to believe in and<lb/>
nothing to look forward to.<lb/>
Therefore, rather than<lb/>
protest against what we don't<lb/>
like, I urge us all to do<lb/>
something in favor of what we<lb/>
do like. We must find<lb/>
something in which to believe.<lb/>
We must have a realistic, but<lb/>
positive attitude or else we will<lb/>
"nejate" ourselves into<lb/>
nothingness.<lb/>
Litter and traffic cause<lb/>
campus safety problems<lb/>
( continued from page 10 )<lb/>
use them. More than often,<lb/>
students have crossed the Hill<lb/>
street to be almost hit by<lb/>
cars that don't slow down.<lb/>
Sometimes these students<lb/>
who cross over are in the<lb/>
right, other times they aren't.<lb/>
The majority of students<lb/>
who enter the campus<lb/>
through the School of Music<lb/>
rarely slow down to make<lb/>
the turn without hitting an-<lb/>
other car. Few cars stop at<lb/>
pedestrian crossings located<lb/>
around campus.<lb/>
Litter is also a safety pro-<lb/>
blem. Too much litter gather-<lb/>
ing on streets and sidewalks<lb/>
can cause serious accidents or<lb/>
injuries. But try to find a<lb/>
litter can to stow away this<lb/>
trash. It is almost impossible.<lb/>
If there is one on the Hill, it<lb/>
is very well disguised.<lb/>
Many of these offenses<lb/>
could be cured quite easily.<lb/>
Police on patrol could easily<lb/>
check down by the Music<lb/>
Building and the Hill, and by<lb/>
the road between the Pamlico<lb/>
Room and the Library.<lb/>
A work request order<lb/>
from the Dean of Housing's<lb/>
Office could easily take care<lb/>
of the steps. Students could<lb/>
stop breaking glass bottles on<lb/>
the street, against buildings,<lb/>
etc. They could also stop<lb/>
picking up manhole covers<lb/>
and putting them down the<lb/>
holes , and stop taking down<lb/>
barricades which are put up<lb/>
for safety reasons.<lb/>
Only idiots ignore precau-<lb/>
tion. Are you an idiot?<lb/>
!<lb/>
I<lb/>
c.<lb/>
- ;?<lb/>
WHITNEY, iF You've wRiHEN Dpwn THAT foe utA , WE v? boJ AW "A" F?P SUE<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00039443_0012"/><lb/>
Examination stealing<lb/>
must be squelched<lb/>
mough ns in th<lb/>
some studem<lb/>
n building; offices. Many<lb/>
:esks arid file cabinets. Others<lb/>
ough t sk and cabinet locks at<lb/>
?try into offices.<lb/>
ihen this editor published an editorial about<lb/>
ig, he got a note telling him that it would be<lb/>
irest to keep his "damn mouth shut" bet;<lb/>
told this edit<lb/>
re many students on ipus thai ild<lb/>
ares" to see that a test stealing expose was not<lb/>
newspaper becai we want to steal<lb/>
rown business<lb/>
must be d ialing.<lb/>
ruin th<lb/>
'St<lb/>
th little or<lb/>
ther th<lb/>
'ted to th ? official of tl<lb/>
ighed off this gross test stealing by saying<lb/>
?ould install stoplights in Rawl, New<lb/>
Erwin Hall to regulate the nocturlan traffic of<lb/>
i Something must be done<lb/>
It cannot, in an educational<lb/>
ved to ie.<lb/>
University ado<lb/>
for th<lb/>
thecla:<lb/>
all the buildings<lb/>
nent for test<lb/>
pulsion (this<lb/>
'casein The offence of test<lb/>
Iso be put on th lent's permanent<lb/>
ifessors sh stupid enough to<lb/>
' ? lepartmentshave<lb/>
-o carry tl s home, but many do<lb/>
linggoe i<lb/>
iducate men and<lb/>
on-the to thieves. The<lb/>
ity is to ti nsible and av<lb/>
I silem udents to ch<lb/>
?gree.<lb/>
A journalistic SOS<lb/>
Mext quarl<lb/>
Wll ' idditional help on the<lb/>
- -??tnrjsnr<lb/>
??? , .<lb/>
theti<lb/>
j<lb/>
(idle ol<lb/>
gro When a new<lb/>
'ff. This quarter we have<lb/>
: Associated P pcc iao ?.<lb/>
As ss. We now<lb/>
'respondent<lb/>
onder<lb/>
two-section newspaper the U<lb/>
Bi<lb/>
Wil ueeno<lb/>
 t ' wspape<lb/>
ry ,0r the sur opy and<lb/>
the staff for a bi-weekly. y<lb/>
If you would l.ke to see ECU have a newspaper<lb/>
everyone can be proud of, join us in what we think is a<lb/>
worthwhile and rewan ,ce<lb/>
We of the Fou<lb/>
luck on exams. We holiHax?<lb/>
. . fiuiiuay wi<lb/>
and relaxing. y M,e<lb/>
Wf<lb/>
Hon<lb/>
Homecoming pa<lb/>
that il v<lb/>
Thanl<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
built house da<lb/>
Toi<lb/>
event thai will h<lb/>
thi<lb/>
h<lb/>
hall <lb/>
spent many hours w<lb/>
H o m ec o m ing and his<lb/>
pei ience with p<lb/>
all of us.<lb/>
Congratulations to the<lb/>
lecipients of the awards and all<lb/>
the participants in Homecoming<lb/>
1969 for a job well done.<lb/>
BobWhitley<lb/>
Vice President, SGA<lb/>
ditoi<lb/>
0 youi<lb/>
i the Nov.<lb/>
4 is<lb/>
thai 60 Hon.<lb/>
ers are supporting a<lb/>
resolution "to end the<lb/>
i onstitutii mality of a: iuts<lb/>
praying in spa i<lb/>
They claim that, if<lb/>
roved, the resolution would<lb/>
ik e pi aying in<lb/>
ipatible with the First<lb/>
Amendment guarantee ol free<lb/>
and religion<lb/>
h ii :<lb/>
am, peopli i in<lb/>
lachia, ci<lb/>
ai I<lb/>
M the nal<lb/>
think th<lb/>
iuld fii<lb/>
bjl-<lb/>
e forum<lb/>
le I<lb/>
i fighl<lb/>
il this<lb/>
against<lb/>
make<lb/>
n loudly.<lb/>
turn into<lb/>
i pacifist,<lb/>
this ol<lb/>
! 11,11 v,ai is<lb/>
me to<lb/>
. through<lb/>
o1 the<lb/>
thai the<lb/>
ii I Nam<lb/>
? lall<lb/>
i, tl<lb/>
? ' some<lb/>
but I<lb/>
My<lb/>
that.<lb/>
I search<lb/>
you're<lb/>
that vhen<lb/>
lid, "Thou shall nol<lb/>
1 Ii lid not add "except<lb/>
Ii<lb/>
Sue Bowermaster<lb/>
Tad Wight<lb/>
I am ference<lb/>
the lettei in Thursday's<lb/>
lition (( 30) of the<lb/>
id from Dr<lb/>
Vim His.<lb/>
I must agree wholeheai tedly<lb/>
with his regard lot reality in<lb/>
the edui a I ional system.<lb/>
Pf-rhaps I can best explain my<lb/>
ith a revii w of the<lb/>
'? that Dr. Bellis taughl <lb/>
course in which I "took part"<lb/>
ng quan<lb/>
I stress the words "t<lb/>
?? thai is<lb/>
i what I and, I think, the<lb/>
:tudents in Di<lb/>
iatisfa tion<lb/>
m l! I opinion, at the<lb/>
time i His was<lb/>
trul did his<lb/>
Stu<lb/>
There have bei<lb/>
: ?ated<lb/>
in Congi<lb/>
Thomas I<lb/>
Prank Tursi<lb/>
Steve Cole<lb/>
David Roth Weiler<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
I n<lb/>
ted in n<lb/>
tnai ? his<lb/>
uic nim<lb/>
Di Bell<lb/>
11) m a n y<lb/>
Ptual models" which<lb/>
' y realisticall <lb/>
ted to the<lb/>
Hl ol not only<lb/>
feres,<lb/>
also<lb/>
useful<lb/>
exti acting<lb/>
from his stud,<lb/>
"f leaving thi<lb/>
something ol<lb/>
 their , ?J<lb/>
thT ;ii' hs lectures<lb/>
, , Ve " !l of the<lb/>
mOMk m Peihap<lb/>
anyone on thi usof(.p<lb/>
Carolina, but 0ne<lb/>
which laugh, m ,<lb/>
understand<lb/>
"tual<lb/>
in my<lb/>
"the<lb/>
with<lb/>
1 be up<lb/>
.<lb/>
"i their<lb/>
" dedness<lb/>
papers,<lb/>
? avian<lb/>
who<lb/>
truth" I<lb/>
"handsome sen<lb/>
The answe<lb/>
system's" confn<lb/>
reality seems<lb/>
to the individual<lb/>
professor,<lb/>
themselves<lb/>
beei (jutted nan<lb/>
and cobwebl<lb/>
respectively<lb/>
There is oni<lb/>
creature Dr<lb/>
"fluttered"<lb/>
classroom with h more<lb/>
than a new set o And<lb/>
this one is thanl- hjl that it has<lb/>
had the opportunity to learn<lb/>
and understand ? w<lb/>
those wings will ni i be<lb/>
vestigial.<lb/>
Marge Simpkin<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
In recognitio I the<lb/>
maximum leader's statement of<lb/>
Oct. 26, 1969, the Office of<lb/>
External Affairs I ports<lb/>
? n d r ec o m mends the<lb/>
postponement of itmas<lb/>
Day, Dec. 25, 1969 to a mo<lb/>
appropriate date pai<lb/>
development of ? logical<lb/>
iscientiousness<lb/>
of the enlightened i ti riry.<lb/>
John Dixon<lb/>
fForum policyf<lb/>
$ Students and emj f the <lb/>
 University are urged press l<lb/>
v their opinions in tl I lent v<lb/>
?a Forum. "?!<lb/>
v.<lb/>
Iji Letters shouid ise ?<lb/>
 and to the point <lb/>
;?? Letters must not exi ?? : 300 K<lb/>
I<lb/>
long ha<lb/>
thai tl<lb/>
the<lb/>
?wn t!<lb/>
 words. v<lb/>
Thn editors resrr th grit ;?!<lb/>
to edit all letters for style errors <lb/>
and length ;?!<lb/>
All letters musl be signed X<lb/>
with the name of the writer, v<lb/>
Upon the writer's personal 'A<lb/>
request, h:s name will bewitheld. ?<lb/>
Signed articles on this pag !J<lb/>
reflect the opinions of the writer, <lb/>
and not necessarily thi se of v<lb/>
Fountamhead or Easi Carolina X<lb/>
University. J<lb/>
?:? v.y .?.?.?.?.???.?.?? v.wy.w.y.v-XW'Mtf<lb/>
ountamheao<lb/>
Paul F. (Chip) Callaway<lb/>
Editor-in Chief<lb/>
Phyllis Bridgeman Managing Editor<lb/>
Robert Thonen Busines<lb/>
DadDa'ton Associate Editor<lb/>
Keith Parrish .  Features Editor<lb/>
Patience Collie  Production Manage!<lb/>
J'TV Tea' ? Advertising Manager<lb/>
Robert McDowell News E !?toi<lb/>
Sonny Lea Sports Editor<lb/>
Drill ie C<lb/>
 MM<lb/>
.w<lb/>
v i o r i<lb/>
; irbm<lb/>
il?L. Baker<lb/>
Photmj'<lb/>
.Advisor<lb/>
?.<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039443_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>