East Carolinian, January 22, 1954


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Easttarolinian
Attend Chapel Services
Each Tuesday At Noon
In Austin Auditorium
VOLUME XXIX
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1954
Number 15
Visiting Team Participate in Spiritual Emphasis Week
Above are the participants in the Spiritual Emphasis Week program which ended here Thursday night,
visiting team of five were on campus Monday through Thursday addressing student assemblies, conducting
informal conversations in the dormitories, lecturing in the class rooms and giving personal guidance to a num-
of students. The theme of this year's program was "This Nation Under God?Our Moral and Spiritual
Heritage From left to right art W. Parker Marks, president of the Interreligious Council at the college; Jhe
William W. Finlator. pastor of the First Baptist Church of Elizabeth City; Dr. W. I. Wolverton, rector of
the Episcopal Church in Greenville; Rabbi Nathan Hershfield of Temple Emmanuel in G?.stonia; Dr. Gordon WT.
vejoy, educational consultant for the National Conference of Christians and Jews; Dr. Carl V. Harris, director
of religious activities at the college; Dr. James G. Hug-tin. pastor of Central Methodist Church in Shelby; the
Rei Harrj S. Jones, director of the Carolina Region of the National Conference of Christians and Jews; the
Rev. Leonard W. Topping pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Greenville; and Dr. J. D. Messick, presi-
dent of East Carolina College. (Photo by Tommie Lupton.)
ECC Vet Performs
As 'Great Tado'
M Thursday Meet
William Louis Tadlock, otherwise
known as the "Great Tado will
perform his feats of magic at the
next Veterans Club meeting which is
scheduled for Flanagan Auditorium
Thursday, January 28, at 7 pjn.
An important business session will
open the meeting and President Fred
Joseph urges all campus veterans to
;e present.
The "Great Tado who has given
performances for civic groups and
hools in the surrounding area, will
? rform various acts of magic in-
cluding disappearance and feats of
mental telepathy.
A native of Washington, the "Great
Tado" is a veteran of military service
during the Korean campaign and a
student at East Carolina.
All veterans who plan to attend
this meeting may bring guests.
Musical Entertainments On Tap
Featuring Guests, College Students
&
Ed Foundation Seeks Grants
For Scholarships, Projects
Messick Reviews College On Television
East Carolina College
a ed I y President J. D.
:k Sato rday on th weekly pro-
n, "To College over the Green-
statkm, WNCT.
Satur lay t le local TV channel
: gram from 2 to 2:30
nent will continue
. le future.
Sprinkle and Alice Mattox
atured on the program Sat-
ly, January 9. Appearing last
Dr. Messick was the Col-
eisisting of Marvin Brown
Starling, Douglas Brown,
. M hy, Ann- Butler, Myrl
. Frances Smith and Jeanne
c i i r "
Saturday (tomorrow) Dr.
? Cuthbert, who has charge
TV programs for the time
liscuse briefly the work
ask department, after which
id Keister, tenor and violin-
and Mrs Keister, pianist, will
give the program.
Cites History
Dr. Messick r viewed the activities
of the college, stating that the bach-
elor's degree was authorized No-
mtber 20, 1920; the master of arts,
August, 1933; and the bachelor's
degree, non-teaching, in 1941. In 1946.
he said, 123 were awarded the bach-
elor of science, or teaching degree,
and 27 the bachelor of arts, or non-
teaching degree, and only five were
graduates with the MA degree. Last
year, 1953, there were 22 graduates
with the bachelor of arts degree and
349 with the bachelor of science, while
the number receiving the master of
arts had increased to 118.
Increase in graduates of teachers
has I een phenomenal as has the in-
crease in enrollment from 1,049 in
1946 on the campus as compared to
2,342 in 1954 and no extension stu-
dents in 1P46 to 371 this year, giving
a total enrollmtnt increase of 1,664, or
Dr. Cuthbert Reveals Cast
For 'Blossom Time' Musical
Casting for the musical production, Schubert, features Vienna, Austria,
ssom Time is complete, an-
nounced Dr. Kenneth N. Cuthbert,
te music department and
lirector of the annual production
red by the SGA.
Working with Dr. Cuthbert in the
I reduction, which is scheduled for
? ?nation here April 27 and 28,
Dr. Elizabeth Utterback of the
English department who will direct
.? dramatic Carolyn Clapp of
ts Btudent director.
"Blossom Time which is based
the musical and love life of Franz
Dances Feature
Two Name Bands
To ftooear Here
Plans were made Wednesday for
two name bands to appear on campus
February and March.
Ralph Marterie and Orchestra will
furnish music for the Freshman-
Sophomore-Senior Dance, February
L5, Marterie has a 15-piece band and
plays the trumpet. He was billed
with Nat "King" Cole and Sarah
Vaughan in Raleigh in the "Greatest
Show of 1953
The Sauter-Finegan Orchestra will
be featured on the Entertainment
Series, March 16. The group will
give a concert and will be followed
by a dance. The orchestra, headed by
Ed Sauter and Bill Finegan, are
featured on Vaughn Monroe's "Camel
Caravan" radio program. They have
appeared recently at the University
of Notre Dame, University of In-
diana and Duquesne.
in 1826. All music in the production
is by Schubert and was arranged
and adapted by Sigmund Romberg,
composer of "Student Prince Dr.
Cuthbert says that the production
has light comedy characteristics.
Taking the lead roles are Gerald
Murphy of China Grove as Franz
Schubert; Frank Hammond, Wilming-
ton, as Baron Schober; Frances
Smith, Robersonville, as Mitzi; and
Patsy Pappendick, Elizabeth City,
as Bellabruna.
Other parts for the musical include
Vogl, portrayed by George Starling
of Rocky Mount; Kitzi, by Jeanne
Pritchard of Elizabeth City; Fritzi,
by Carolyn Clapp of Greenville;
Ercman, by Roy Askew of Elizabeth
City; Binder, by rving Ennis of
Goldsboro; Kupelweiser, by Frank
Bodkin of Greenville; Von Schwindt,
by Charles Starnes of Wilmington;
Greta, by Carolyn Willis of Mar-
shailburg; Mr. Kranz, by Ronnie Rose
of Goldsboro; Count Scharntoff, by
Carl Carter of Tarboro; and Mrs.
Coburg, by June Crews of Creedmoor.
The Men's Varsity Glee Club and
the Women's Chorus will combine to
form the chorus for the production.
Such familiar songs as "Ave Ma-
ria "Serenade" and "Song of Love"
will be featured.
The plot of the musical will be
centered on Schubert and Schober
who are rivals for Mitzi. Bellabruna,
which is one of the lead comedv
roles, carries a humorous love affair
with Schober, but she is continually
being followed by Count Schamtoff.
Also providing laughs is Mr. Kranz,
a serious minded father who is al-
ways perturbed about his unwed
daughters, Mitzi, Fritzi and Kitzi.
He is "suspicious" about his daugh-
ters' actions.
from 1,049 in 1946 to 2,713 in 1954.
Cost of College
President Messick stated that a
tu.i nt could attend East Carolina
"ollege for approximately $300 a
year not counting board. "We strive
'o give the most possible for the mini-
mum cost he said, "recognizing
that many of our students have
difficulty in attending college under
any con ideration
Five n illion, nine hundred twenty-
; ix thousand, and twelve dollars has
een appropriated by the General
Assembly from 1947 through 1953
for repairs, replacements, new equip-
ment, new buildings, athletic fields,
walks, drives and land. Even then, he
s;ud, the need is tremendous.
In continuing, he said the college
maintains a Placement Bureau and
al-o some follow-up service because
of its interest in the students not only
while they are on the campus but
after graduation. Of the 488 graduates
in 1953, there were 446 registered
with the Placement Bureau; 315 went
into public school work as teachers,
principals, supervisors or superinten-
dents. Others secured positions as
scientists, accountants, bank clerks,
secretaries, salesmen and many other
areas. A goodly number continued on
into graduate or professional schools,
while 29 received commissions as sec-
ond lieutenants in the Air Force and
went directly into service.
Regional College
Dr. M( ssick emphasized the idea
of this college's being recognized as
a regional college and of educating
its own people and, insofar as possible,
having these graduates remain in
their section of the state to help
build it up again to its relative posi-
tion in the state comparable to what
it once was.
Keister Team
Presents Recital
Tuesday Evening
Dr. Elwood Keister, tenor and vio-
linist and faculty member of the
East Carolina College department of
music, will be presented in a recital
Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Austin
auditorium. He will be accompanied
at the piano by his wife, Gloria.
The program will be sponsored by
the college department of music as
one of a series of recitals by faculty
members given during the present
school year. The poblic is invited to
attend.
The program Tuesday will include
a group of Brahms songs, "IS With
All Your Hearts" from Mendelssohn's
'Elijah tlie aria "E Lucevan Le
Stelle from "Tosca" by Puccini, and
everal contemporary songs. The last
portion of the evening will be devoted
to the "Sonata in A Major" for vio-
lin anl piano by Cesar Franck.
The Educational Foundation Com-
mittee has been established at East
Carolina College, according to an
mnouncement by Dr. Leo W. Jenkins,
Jean of the college and a member of
the committee.
Heading the committee is Dr. Keith
Holmes of the education department.
Working with Dr. Holme are Dr.
Jenkins, Dr. Elwood Keister, Dr.
J. K. Long, Dr. George Pasti, Dr.
James Poindexter, W. W. Smiley, Dr.
James White and Dr. J. A. Withey.
Dr. Jenkins states that the com-
mittee has a three-fold objective for
serving the students and the youth
in Eastern North Carolina.
College TV Channel?
First of these objectives is cata-
'oging and investigating sources for
foundation fund grants to the college
to do research and study projects.
For example, he added, the commit-
tee is now seeking funds to install a
television system here at the college.
Such grants would make possible
the originating of "live" broadcasts
in the Joyner Library (now under
construction). This project would call
for approximately $100,000.
Scholarships Available
The second objective is "to dis-
cover and to make known the fellow-
ships and scholarships for our own
students he said, "of which several
East Carolina students have already
api lied
Objective number three is to "dis-
cover and make known" to high
schools in Eastern North Carolina
scholarships, fellowships and loan
funds available for their students.
"Although the committee realizes
that many recipients of these will
of necessity go to other colleges, it
is keeping with the spirit of East
Carolina to encourage deserving fu-
ture citizens to attend college Dr.
Jenkins commented.
Approximately two and a naif bil-
lion dollars are available each year
in money for foundations offering
scholarship, fellowship and loan
funds, be further added.
Students who are interested in
obtaining scholarships may contact
Dr. Holmes or Dean Jenkins. "There
are a number of scholarshrps in
various fields available and often
some are never taken Dr. Jenkins
said. "We will be glad to help any
student to look them over
Canterbury Club
Hears Rev. Wright
The Right Rev. Thomas H. Wright,
tshop of the Diocese of East Caro-
lina or he Episcopal Church, will be
guest speaker at the regular Even-
song service of the Canterbury Club
Sunday at 5:30 p.m. at St. Paul's
Episcopal Church.
Following the service there will be
a reception in the Canterbury room.
All students are invited.
The Right Rev. Wright is the for-
mer director of college work of the
Episcopal Church in the United States
and a former chaplain at Washington
and Lee University, Va and the
University of North Carolina.
You can't kiss a girl unexpectedly
?only sooner than she thought you
would.
Sophomore: "What does 'homoge-
nized' mean?"
Professor: "That is when milk is
shaken so violently that the fat par-
ticles break into very small bits
scattered evenly throughout the
milk
Sophomore: "How in the world do
they ever get the cows to shimmy
that much?"
EC Scout Council
Meets On Campus
To Elect Officers
More than 350 Scouters, many of
them accompanied by their wives,
attended the annual Recognition
Night dinner of the East Carolina
Council, Boy Scouts of America, on
the campus of East Carolina College
last Friday afternoon and night.
President J. D. Messick of East
Carolina College was re-elected vice
president of the Boy Scout Council,
and was installed along with other
officers, including Penn T. Watson
of Wilson, president of the council.
Alumni Secretary James W. But-
ler was also named to another term
on the executive committee of the
Council and was appointed to the
three-man public relations committee.
The program following the dinner,
arranged by Business Manager F. D.
Duncan and Paul Julian, College
steward, included awarding of Silver
B avers to four outstanding adult
leaders of the Scouting program and
citing four men as members of the
Order of the Silver Compass for
distinctive service to the Council dur-
ing the past year.
The event drew an attendance from
20 eastern North Carolina counties.
Finlator Cites
Five Heritages
'Hot For Sale'
There are five heritages in human
lives that are "not for sale the Rev.
William W. Finlator, pastor of the
First Baptist Church in Elizabeth
City, said in his address to the mem-
bers of the Circle K Club Tuesday
evening.
The Rev. Finlator is a member of
the visiting team here for Spiritual
Emphasis Week. He is a member of
the Kiwanis International, a civic
group which the Circle K is affiliated.
As an example, the Rev. Finlator
referred to Bibical times when per-
sons did not sell their property which
was inherited from their fore fathers.
"Today there are several heritages
that we have that are 'not for sale "
he said.
These heritages were health, a good
name, freedom, marriage and relig-
ion. "If we lose any of these, the
price we paid was too high He also
pointed out that even though these
"articles" were inherited, it was up
to the individual to maintain and not
to "sell" them. A good motto, he
added, is "not for sale" to "our preci-
ous heritages
Charlie Bedford, president of YM
CA, introduced the Rev. Finlator.
Comedienne Russell,
'Carmen Recitals
Coming Events Here
East Carolina College includes in
its schedule for this month and next
a number of programs of music,
including performances by guest art-
ists on the campus. Both students
and faculty members will participate
in a series of recitals sponsored by
the college department of music.
Events expected to attract audi-
ences from localities throughout this
section of the state include a recital
February 2 by the internationally
known comedienne Anna Russell and
a performance of "Carmen" by the
Grass Roots Opera Company, Febr-
uary 16.
Miss Russell, described in the press
as a "hilarious artist" and "a schol-
ar, a wit and an actress will appear
in the Wright auditorium at 8 p.m.
under the sponsorship of the East
Carolina College Entertainment Com-
mittee. The Grass Roots artists will
present Bizet's opera under the aus-
pices of the Greenville Music Club at
S p.m. in the College Theatre.
A faculty recital by Dr. Elwood
Keister, tenor and violinist, Tuesday,
January 26, will be the first in a
series of programs by musicians from
the college. Dr. Kei3ter. who joined
the East Carolina faculty last fall,
is known to many concert goers as
director of the December, 1953, per-
formance at the college of Handel's
"The Messiah The vent was at-
tended by an audience of approxi-
mately 3,000 people from the eastern
pe-t of t' e ?-tate.
Two and concerts will be presented
on the campus during a two-day
session of the Eastern Division of
the All State Band Clinic. The East
Carolina College Concert Band will
play Friday, Febiuary 5, at 8 p.m.
'n the Col ege Theatre. The following
night a Clinic Band of more than a
hundred high school students will
present a program at the same hour
and place.
Two senior students in the depart-
ment of music will give their grad-
uating recitals in February. Dolores
Matthews of Henderson, pianist, will
appear Tuesday, February 9, at 8
p.m. in the Austin auditorium. Ruth
Little of Winterville, soprano, wiU
give a program of songs Sunday
afternoon, February 21, at 4 o'clock
in the Austin auditorium.
Oppelt Says 111 Seniors
Practice-Teach In Winter
New Joyner Library Modern In Every Respect
I by Anne George
It is a far cry from the old stuffy they are covered with formica tops
libraries of Grandma's day; in fact tnat won't be scratched, written or
every detail of the new $900,000
Joyner Library is modern.
With the help of Wendell W. Smi-
ley, Eric G. Flanagan, architect, drew
up the plans for the building. Most
of the color schemes were Mr. Smi-
ley's creations. The walls are to be a
soft green with the tile and marble
floors carrying out the color style.
The walls are all trimmed in maple,
with th 3 desks and chairs the same.
"Peculiar" Furniture
There is a certain peculiarity
about the 4,000 new chairs: they
won't tilt. The legs are so sloped
as to cause the chairs to slide, no
matter how badly you want to tilt
back in them. Although, if you do
want comfort, there is a reading
lounge that will be equipped with
soft, plush chairs for just that
purpose.
The tables also are unusual, as
carved on.
Many of the doors separating the
rooms, besides the main doors, are
in glass which add also to the modern
air that prevails throughout the
building. Throughout the entire li-
brary, there is fluorescent lighting.
Radio Room
Part of one wing on the second
floor is dedicated to audio-visual
education The radio studio is sound
proof with three inch doors, with
the walls in pale green and red.
There is also a projection room and
a curriculum lab in this particular
wing.
A balcony on the second floor
overlooks the reference room, which
f.$ 25 feet tall and 80 fast in width.
The books in the balcony will bt
restricted to subjects concerning
North Carolina.
In the room behind the main desk
is an elevator, which will enable the
workers in the library to obtain books
from the stacks more rapidly. Re-
turned books can be deposited in a
slot, on the side of the main desk,
and a truck will catch them there.
Why Joyner?
As the old library was named after
J. Y. Joyner, thsy decided to keep
his name for the new one. Mr. Joyner
was superintendent of public instruc-
tion in the state of North Carolina
from 1900-191?. Through bis help,
this college was created. He was also
the first ahaiwnmn of trustees at
East Carolina College.
The library was first started m
the Spring of 1962, and Mr. Smiley
says, "We hope to move in there
soon
But until then, why not go over
and wander through? It will be
breath-taking to visualise lbs nasr
library.
With 111 seniors already at work
in classrooms of public schools in
eastern North Carolina, East Caro-
lina College has begun its program
of student teaching for the winter
quarter. Those now receiving practi-
cal experience as teachers include 89
engaged in work in the primary and
the grammar grades.
Dr. J. L. Oppelt, director of stu-
dent teaching and placement at the
college, is coordinator of the pro-
gram. Supervising teachers from the
public schools and from the college
faculty direct the activities of the
seniors.
In the fall quarter 101 seniors
completed their work as student
teachers. The total for the firs two
quarters of the present school yT
is thus 212 men and women prsparlfeg
for careers hi education. A lafgjt
group of seniors is expected to enroll
in the student teaching progranv in
the spring.
Student teachers now a we& -t.
the public schools include SS man ad
76 women. Thirty-eight have MalWr
ments in the Laboratory S0-I t&
tfoe college and ar" teaebjteg- there
in grades one fcb?ufc ?$gSB Osms
senior is teaching sevaajl grd? a?h-
jects in the sdboot 1st the J &
Raleijrh.
SevsaHMMt. fssstoff ar
high school ?aib
High Seltosi ?f in
ondary j?h?ot? tt ??? North Car-
olhwu On aaaJat is teaefciftff ? in
the city high school tfte toge
parienet ea fl lew ?f psfclte aebool
instructs la taw fltW.
Suji be ?! ? ? ??
Carolina seniors working in
schools include art, business f
tion, English, home economics
trial arts, mathematics, ?Nb?
sical education, science, ieltigft
guages and the social sttt&ksv.
'In addition to the Grew?? 1
School, where S3 ?wakw saw 'tea
mg, centers of istttreei art It
tentnea, PariiTffl sttafttft, shfrw-
eonviile, Bebnfe, Wastta"
terville, Bs&et, $ifeof Wmmmk
Chkod, Bath, Ay den sffid Stoke.
Oit Tap ApriUO,
Tcutati plasis ware laid for tfcs
annual JunioTsSapr Dance at a
!ti?f of' the Jbmior Class officers
on January 11, recording to clan
fecaosat Bb !fiitoa.
The dwaerarfU be fecM on Saturday
nlfbt, Aril i0 to. Wright auditorium
and will be ieM oa for members
f tfc. Junior sntt Senior classes and
their islam astetts committee are
to be ,?Hwl8?l" by the president at
the usat meeting of the class on
Jmury 26.
mm Class Meets
Iaor Class President Bob
ftatiaast has called a class mat-
ing far January 2? at 9'M p.m.
in Aestia building, room W.
At tbia Um plans for the .Naior
Scalar Dance will be discaased.
President Neilson argea that aU
Member of the class be present
fee this very important meeting.





FAGB TWO
Easttarolinian
Published Weekly by the students of East Carolina
College, Greenville, N. C.
Phone 12. East Carolina College
For News and Advertising
Nam changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952.
Srjtered as second-class matter December 3, 1925 at the
U. S. Pot Office, Greenville, N. C, under the act of
March 3, 1879.
EAST CAROLINIAN
FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 19fc
iday.
Ye Editor s
by T.
Sa
Parker Maddrey
T
Who's Who Among Students At East Carolina
Vainwright Holds Numerous Campus Offices
Member
Associated Collegiate Press
Member
Teachers College Division Columbia Scholastic Press
First Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March, 1953
by Kay Johnston
A true example of citizenship as
well as scholarship is Julian Vain-
wright. Julian, a senior, is a business
education major from Greenville and
plan3 to graduate in May. He will
receive his AB degree. "Therefore
he says, "I won't be having to go
the editor written by a teen-ager, .through the trials and tribulations of
student teaching this year, anyway.
"One of the main reasons I chose
One of the professors here found
a clipping from "Ideas of Today" on
his desk which was probably left by
a student. The clipping was a letter
Sports Editor
Sport Asslstnats
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-chief - T. Parker Maddrey
Managing Editor Faye O'Neal
Assistant Editor Emily S. Boyce
Feature Editor Kay Johnston
Staff Assistants Anne George, Pat Humphrey,
Joyce Smith, Erolyn Blount, Faye Lanier, Jerry
Register, Valeria Shearon, Wiley Teal and Ed
UaVbews.
SGA Reporter Betty Salmons
Facuky Advisor Mary H. Greene
SPORTS STAFT
Eob Hilldrup
Bruce .Phillips, Answer Joseph and
David Evans
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager Ed? Massad
Assistant Business Manager Faye Jones
Business Assistants Edna Whitfield,
Mary Ellen Williams and Jean Godwin.
Sh-h-h! Future Genius At Work
Social life is a wonderful thing and no person
should be deprived of this enjoyable privilege.
Like other things, there is a time and a place for
socializing. The library doesn't seem to be the
proper place for it, however.
There is a constant hum of mumbling voices
in the Library at nights. A student may be found
wandering from one table to another talking in
loud whispers to other students who are busy at
work. It has been observed that a student entered
the library and yelled to a friend (in a whisper,
of course)' three or four tables down, "Hi ya kid V
We have in this country freedom of almost
everything as long as it doesn't infringe upon the
rights of others. Students have the right to social-
ize and students have the right to study. However,
the library was established for studying and not
bull sessions. Therefore, one who exercises loudly
his right to socialize in the library is infringing
n others who are trying to study.
If a student wants to study, for gosh sakes,
don't hinder him in any way. He may be behind in
quality points and every moment of study is
valuable.
- Take in consideration the other fellow before
whispering loudly to your friend that you made
a four on your history test. The other fellow
doesn't care to hear your troubles, he has probably
enough of his own.
We thought it was amusing and yet
brought out some good points. The
letter is as follows:
I can be taxed plenty for
my summer earnings, but I can't
vote: that's taxation without repre-
sentation. I can be drafted to kill
ihe enemy, but I cannot legally buy
bullets to hunt rabbits. I can drive
a tank, but I cannot legally buy a
car, in Massachusetts anyway. I can
earn my own money, but I cannot
buy my foreman a beer. My girl can
get married, but she hasn't yet
reached the age of consent.
"Those adults who insist on ob-
serving the uninhibited few who
drink themselves silly, dope them-
selves delerious, or sex themselves
indiscrim nately, might learn to put
soch things in their proper perspec-
tive. We might ask our sensation-wise
and smut-conscious supervisors if
teen-age statistics are any worse in
the over-all picture than those for
adults, who set our examples. Then
let's cut grass in our own backyard
East Carolina was because I lived
in Greenville. However, I'm sure now
that I certainly couldn't have made
a better choice
Played In Band
During his freshman year, Julian
played in tLe college band and went
out for baseball. He also joined the
Canterbury Club, a religious club for
Episcopalians on campus. Julian was
elected president of this club last
year.
A member of the Circle K Club,
he has done outstanding work and
is this year's secretary for the or-
ganization.
Two years a member of the Phi
Sigma Pi, Julian was elected vice
president this year, but had to
withdraw because of his many other
activities. This honorary fraternity
is composed of a select group of males
POT POURRI
by Emily S. Boyce
Julian Vainwright
with high scolastic averages and with
p "ties of leadership.
This year a new organization,
Future Business Leaders of America,
has been organized on campus, which
is for the advancement of students
interested in business education. Ju-
lian feels that this club will do
much for the betterment of East
.Carolina's business education majors.
) He was elected the first president
of the club which received its national
cha rter recently.
As a member of the Student Gov-
ernment Association for two years,
he has been quite active. He was
last year's chairman of the point
syotem In the Student Legislature.
Participates In Sporta
An active participant in sports,
he has played on the basketball and
soft all intramural teams. "I also
like hunting and any sport on and
in the water Julian says.
Among other organizations, Julian
was a member also of the Alpha Phi
Omega Upt year. Thus honorary fra-
ternity has as its purposes to de
velop friendship and service to hu-
manity, the student body, youth and
the community and members of the
fraternity.
"I finishd AFROTC at summer
camp at Moody Air Force Field near
Valdos-ta, Ga. this past summer
says Julian, "and I really miss play-
ing in the Drum and Bugle Corps
this year. I hope to get my commis- l
sion this spring, if they don't change
any more rules. And then?well, it's
up to Uncle Sam after that
The bus was scheduled to get to Manteo
sometime that afternoon. At every path and
road the big bus stopped to let passengers off
and take a lone traveler on. This stopping and
starting went on for many miles before the im-
patient woman sitting directly behind the driver
spoke up: "Driver, do you have to stop at every
telephone pole?" The driver turned slightly, and
with a slow grin announced: "Why, lady, this
happens to be a Greyhound bus
While writing the above, two girls here on
campus told this bus tale. They were riding the
bus home to spend the weekend. When the bus
stopped to open its door as it always does at a
railway crossing, one of the girls out of curiosity
asked the bus driver why this was don The
driver quickly replied, "Well, you see there are
a great many more passengers than there are
bus drivers; that open door is for me, girls
"Bus" tales might not be as humorous as travel-
ing salesman stories, but they are printable.
Know Your Campus Activities
A fellow just won't have the op-
portunity for relaxation anymore in
the library. Wendell W. Smiley, col-
lege librarian, informs that chairs
for the new library will be construct-
ed so that persons cannot "lean
back When the student tries to
. , . , . iirs who are winding up work On tne
attain his relaxed position on two of
Thirty Keep Busy To Produce
College Yearbook, 'Buccaneer'
by Valeria Shearon
There are 30 very busy staffers in
a certain Austin office these days.
We are referring to the staff mem-
the four legs of this piece of furni-
ture, he will be surprised to find
that the chair slides back and that
all four legs will stay put on the
floor.
Mr. Smiley says that the chairs
cost a little more than the regular
ones, but they will be a good invest-
ment in the long run for they are
more durable. "Leaning back" on
rwo legs lessens the life of a chair,
he adds, and also damages the floor.
It's Much Clearer Inside
by Jerry Register
Tell us, did any one pay any attention to
itual Emphasis Week? We know that some
but we mean the majority of you.
Dr. Richard Todd, a social studies instructor,
that he saw four students from his first
history class at assembly Monday night.
are 54 students in that class. That is just
54, good average, don't you think? May-
were holding the meetings at the wrong
'they probably should have held them in
soda shop, that is where a number of the
?its were.
Pi know, we just didn't need it?that's it.
fiae that we, the young people, the back-
lie nation, have all the spiritual guidance
, ? - I you don't think you need spiritual
Ml can just stop reading this article
we think all of us do need it!
; for the "Spiritual Emphasis Week"
fcion Under God we, as said before,
me of that nation, we are that
al our nation strong, we make it
sleally with our young man-power and,
should make it strong spiritually
v ?.?; Jk, That reminds us of the follow-
S nan m talking to a woman outside of
iday morning. He said, "This is
I have seen you here in a long
s s,M sn? mid, "and I imagine that it will
- ?l will see me here for a long
'??4fe?towfe?" ?$?"
WWm.m
Thursday night after the play,
"Fair Was the Morning (written
by Dr. Elizabeth Utterback of the
English department), Dr. Ted Eaton
gave an evaluation followed by com-
ments from the audience.
Dr. Eaton referred to the final
-scene where the sheriff tells the
widow mother that he does not love
her but her daughter instead and
they plan to marry. In rage the
mother grabs the shotgun from the
mantel in the Kentucky home as the
sheriff and the daughter make a
hurried exit followed by the mother's
idiot son. The mother fires away
(probably at the sheriff) and acci-
dentally shoots and kills her son.
Ft seems to me that the sheriff,
being an officer of the law, would
have returned to the scene of the
crime Dr. Eaton said.
Dr. H. A. Coleman then responded:
"As a reason for not returning,
maybe the sheriff thought the gun
was double-barrelled
m
Couple Of The Week
gagi, "every Sunday I come
lOple preach about not doing
it Just as soon as they get
they say shouldn't be done.
than them in that respect,
a Vm ??rf slough not to have to go to
turned toward a tinted glass
that the sun was shining
iMyou see that window?"
"What is the picture on
IiL "The sun is shining
"Maybe you can see
at the window.
Is shining through
It is a picture of
a flock of sheep
arms
can see it clearer
ihsA. the church is
rto see life
Hiding of
you can't do out-
by Erolyn Blount
This week's couple, Delia Dean
from Durham and Norwood Elliott
from Chapanoke, have been going
together since November, 1951. Nor-
wood had been dating a girl who
stayed right across the hall from
Delia. This girl made the fatal mis-
take of introducing Delia to him.
Right after their first date Delia
had the flu and was in the infirmary
for a week. Norwood tried to find
out where she was and nobody knew,
so when she did get out, he took no
chances on losing track of her again.
He asked her to go steady and this
:ast June 21, they decided to make
it a p rmanent relationship by be-
coming engaged. The wedding date
has been set for next Christmas.
Dlia and Norwood like dancing,
foot all, window shopping and, most
of all, basketball. Norwood loves pho-
tography and says Delia, "His en-
thusiasm has been catching. Now I
help him take and develop pictures
just like a regular professional
After finishing school in February,
"Norwood, who is majoring in science,
will enter flight training. He is plan-
ning to make the Air Force his ca-
reer. Delia, who will finish next
November, is majoring in grammar
grade education. Says she, "Sure
hope there's a big shortage of teach-
ers wherever Norwood is stationd,
so I won't have any trouble getting
a job
(Editor's note: By being named
Couple of the Week, Delia and Nor-
wood will each receive a gift from
Saslow's Jewelers and a ticket to the
Pitt Theatre.)
1954 "better than ever" Buccaneer.
The college annual is published by
a student staff supervised by faculty
and college staff members. The editor-
in-chief, or in this case, the co-editors,
Tommie Lupton and Mildred Rey-
nolds, are selected by the college Pub-
lications Board which is composed of
students, faculty and administrative
representative. Working in editorial
capacities with Tommie and Mildred
as Associate Editor is Jant Kanoy and
Business Manager is Evelyn Davis.
Because February 1, is the deadline
for copy to be in the hands of Las-
siter, Inc Charlotte printers, the
staff is proud of the fact that they
will have all copy ready to go by next
week. Pictures were sent to Charlotte
Engraving Co. January 1.
Each staff mmber has been respon-
sible for an essential portion of the
work. The work began last spring
with the photographing of baseball
pictures. In the fall football shots
were tackled. Next came the long
t"dious process of making individual
pictures and last, but far from least,
was the problem of group and feature
pictures. The photography has been
handled by Waller and Smith of Ra-
leigh and Bell Studio of Greenville.
The lone man with a camera on the
staff is Co-Editor Tommie, who snaps
pictures here and there to fill those
much enjoyed snapshot pages. All
the members help schedule the pic-
tures and do "write-ups Early in
the year the staff votes for the per-
sons to whom the yearbook will be
dedicated.
This year's staff have an efficient
manner in which finances have been
managed. Each year the Student
Legislature, acting upon the recom-
mendation of the Budget Committee,
sets aside a certain amount for the
annual. Last year the annual cost
$16,700. This year's cost will run
$1,500 less. "Yet assures Tommie,
"this year's book has as much color,
six or eight more pages of picturta
and we are having 100 more co-pies
printed
The staff meets every Monday
night, with usually about 25 present.
In the near future the co-editors will
sponsor the annual staff supper. The
'54 Buccaneer is due to arrive from
the press around May 1, and students
will receive them shortly afterwards.
Any student not staying in school
all three quarters this year may pay
$2.50 for each quarter they are not
here and rceive an annual, Tommie
said. But only as long as they last,
he added.
Food
For
Thought
Forgot to sign in?that'll be two demerits.
Locked out? Your box number please. . . . The
weekly House Committee meeting in Fleming
Hall is usually boring in a different sort of way.
However, whatever monotony is involved
certainly broken this past Monday night when
two delinquents broke out in a vast and ?
oughly complete state of the giggles. Before the
president could keep a straight face and sentence
the hysterical two, the whole meeting waa in
stitches. The committee agreed that they really
hated to give the girls demerits after such an
interesting laugh over nothing. Laughs over
nothing really are the funniest, aren't they?
by
This Week's Movie
by Faye O'Neal
"Dream Wife a sophisticated
farce with Cary Grant playing the
h ro's part, will be shown in Austin
auditorium at 7 p.m. Saturday night.
This film has been rated excellent
by several critics.
Grant portrays a young business
man who is completely willing to get
married, but can't decide which girl
to marry. He drops his devoted
fiance, because he fears she will
become a slave to a materialistic
world inasmuch as she is very seri-
ous about her job.
Deciding to pick a gal of the
opposite type in every way, Grant
offers his hand to a provocative Per-
sian princess. Typical of the situa-
tions that Cary Grant can get into
is the confusion that follows. Luckily
for him, enough time is necessary to
arrange for the former betrothal
arrangements of the princess to be
adjusted to allow Grant to change
his mind.
Since women are continuously ac-
cused of never being able to make a
decision and abide peacefully by it,
it might be interesting for the girla
here to watch a man in a dilemma.
The picture should be good enter-
tainment for everyone.
Wade Cooper, Dong King, Ed
Mathews, "Buzz" Y?unjj
An institution of East Carolina
College of which little is known to
most of us is the student supply
stores, including both the soda shop
and the stationery store. During the
past few years these stores have
seen a growth from a scanty begin-
ning to a state of profitable opera-
tion and serviceable existence that is
symbolic of the overall advancement
that has been so rapidly realized here
over the past few years. The stores
are of particular significance for
they not only provide the convenience
of on-campus places to buy various
necessary articles, but have also re-
alized their aim of aiding the school
in another direct way: scholarship
grants to deserving students.
Seven or eight years ago there
were no supply stores on the ECC
campus and the soda shop was a
soda fountain in the basement of
Austin Building. The need for a sup-
ply store was evident and in the
basement of Austin a small store
began its meager operations, with a
tiny stock and an eye on the future,
the soda shop being moved to its
present location (which was then
adequately spacious). According to
Lloyd Bray, manager, the store has
been steadily growing, with its prof-
its, through last year, being turned
back into the store to increase the
stock to the point that the original
.stock of approximately $7,000 in
value has climbed to a value of about
$40,000. Today the two stores do a
combined business of over $100,000
per year, providing everything from
text books to decals and chocolate
popsicles.
At the beginning of this year it
was found that it was not necessary
to turn all of last year's proceeds
back into the stores; they had made
a true profit to be put to use by the
school. Seventy-five per cent of this
money was set aside in a scholarship
fund to be given to deserving stu-
dents of any classification who ap-
plied for grants in aid at the dis-
cretion of the school's scholarship
committee of which Dean Clinton
Prewett is chairman. For the fall
quarter of this year approximately
50 grants were made from this fund,
mostly of about $100 each. In the
future the amount available for this
pupose should become larger. None
of these scholarships were made for
athletic purposes. The percentage of
profits used each year for student
aid is to remain constantly at 75
per cent.
A portion of the student body feels
that perhaps it would be fairer to
give all the students a share in the
supply store profits by cutting the
costs of books and supplies. For
example: If the profit was 20 per
cent on gross income during the
past year, costs could be cut 15 per
cent, thus leaving a five per cent
safety margin, should any unfore-
seen circumstances arise.
The situation today will improve
tomorrow. Already plans have been
made and work is being done on a
new store and soda shop to be lo-
cated in the new Student Union, The
change will bring a great improve-
ment. The spaciousness and added
facilities of the stores' future home
will be a credit to the campus, rep-
resentative of the general advance-
ment now being made at ECC.
The total eclipse of the moon on Monday
night attracted many of the students. Groups
were sitting in windows and standing m the cold
with their necks arched to the sky. The period
of totality was between 9:17 and 11:47 p.m. EST,
even then some light from the sun got through
to the moon. This is because the sun's rays art-
refracted around the intervening earth by the
earth's atmosphere?and the red rays reach the
moon. During totality this can give the moon a
reddish color.
Forum And Against'em
Sliding Parity
by Faye O'Neal
Parity is a standard for measuring farm
prices'declared by law to be fair to farmers in re-
lation to the prices they pay. The present natio
farm program features 90 per cent parity. US
Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson says
that this 90 per cent support is costing the tax-
payer too much. In the new farm bill proposed
by the Eisenhower administration, Benson has
advocated a flexible program of supports, rang-
ing from 75 to 90 per cent. According to a quiz
before the Senate last Monday, Benson believes
this flexible system of supports will prevent fu-
ture surpluses by lowering price incentives to
production in time of surpluses and by raising
them in time of scarcity.
How do the students here, where agricultural
prosperity is the security of financial backing f n
almost everyone of us, feel about these proposed
flexible farm supports?
Commodore Caswell, a Whiteville junior who
has spent the last six summers in active participa-
tion with the federal program of measurement
tobacco acreage and, working in warehouses in
Columbus County, does not want flexible price
supports. Caswell's family owns farm land and
after having had experience with tenants and
farmers in general, he believes that lowering the
support price on tobacco at any time will in-
evitably end in upping of production by the farm-
er who will maintain the view that he has to make
as much money as he can. "Most farmers will not
realize that upping production will only lower the
selling value even more says Caswell.
Vice-president of the campus Young Republi-
can Club, James L. Fish, has lived on a farm all
his life. Fish agrees with the Benson farm pro-
gram. "During the past and present "Regime
emphatic emphasis has been laid thickly on such
things as farm quota, acreage allotments, etc all
of which have led to greater production and the
origination of the problem of oversupply which
we are now being faced with. The farmer, along
with everybody else has been interested in getting
higher prices. The upper level has been reached,
and a stop will come, one way or another. What
Benson proposes will be a way of leveling the price
situation off, a gradual one but at least a step
down the path to cutting the high costs of living
that everyone is complaining about Fish admits
that there will necessarily be a few years of re-
cession to allow the plan to come to success.
Nancy Lou Kesler, a junior honor student,
lives in a small central North Carolina town
where her family runs a department store and
is completely dependent on the farmer's good
year for success, claims no political affiliations,
but thinks that Secretary Benson may be right.
Nancy says that the high parity rate has been
something of a crutch in the eyes of many farm-
ers. They have become too dependent on the gov-
ernment, assured that they will be rescued if a
bad year comes and, in many cases, failing to pre-
pare as well as they might for bad times, accord-
ing to Nancy. Realizing that there is often a
great difference in theory and practice, she
wishes to give the new program a trial and con-
demn it only after a fair period of unsuccessful
execution.
Bob Williams, a graduate student from
Thomasville, says that the farmer is deserving of
the assurance that he has a chance when a year
of bad weather threatens him and his family with
ruin. Williams states, "the world situation, with
hunger prevailing in so many places, is enough
initiative to urge protection to farmers, who fill
the world's breadbasket
s
The
1
by
Catamount
i look ?!
that
-or
gfej
awray
I
the
all alor
cerr
road gam
loo;
ani
?
I





FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1964
EAST CAROLINIAN
orivej
?'Very
? and
? this
-re on
the
le bus
at a
'lOsity
The
re are
k are
rirls
fravel.
The
Jming
way.
when
thor-
the
itence
I
Ireally
-h an
over
nday
froups
cold
friod
aST,
ough
i are
ly the
h the
)on a
SPORTS ECHO
by Bob Hilldrup
e Sues' undefeated record went
j tin boards Monday night, but
- f press time the Pirates still
first plate in the North State
erenee under wraps.
to W stern Carolina's
could cause trouble but
ok at last year's record shows
East Carolina came out even
? on their road trip to Lenoir
e and WOC and still wrapped
e regular season tit I
LOiv;
i mounts
PAGE THREE
Bucs Win, 74-64: Then Lose By 68-65
" 8 t?
t
farm
in ra-
tional
. US
says
tax-
?sec
has
rang-
quiz
lieves
it fu-
to
lising
Itural
for
osed
who
ici pa-
nt of
les in
price
and
and
(g the
11 in-
farm-
bnake
li not
r the
ubli-
mall
pro-
irne
such
, all
the
rhich
ilong
Itting
;hed
trhat
price
step
iving
Imits
i re-
nt,
town
and
Igood
lions,
ight.
I been
irm-
Igov-
if a
pre-
:ord-
m ?
she
Icon-
rful
? the only thine, there-
at the North State got out
Catamount triumph was the
vledge that the Bucs could be
s iu tiling local fans knew
ng.
lespite the loss, the Pirates
? considered over the hump
as th regular season is con-
It must be remembered that
games remain with three of the
- arch-rivals, High Point, Elon
an, but other contests
? ? als m Memorial Gym
Lace where no North State
school has ever defeated
I I o major steps taken at
Carolina in recent years has
ie formation of the Pirate
mermen have had rough
going so far this season in dropping
meets to the freshman teams of
Davidson, Carolina and State College.
But few schools have ever inaugu-
rated a new sport and come up with
a winner right from the start.
Without ,attempting to alibi the
Pirate losses, we'd like to point out
that both the Davidson and Carolina
frosh clubs have defeated the varsi-
ties of their respective schools in
going Jintra-squad meets. Freshmen or not,
it's tough opposition that the Bucs
are facing thus year and one thing
that always helps, whether winning
or losing, is student support.
The East Carolina pool is, by the
statement of State's frosh coach,
the second lest in the state (only
Carolina's is rated better) and the
spirit shown by the members of the
Pirate squad well matches the quality
of the pool.
By the time next winter rolls
around it is hoped that swimming at
East Carolina can be enlarged enough
so that the Buccaneers can have
winning teams in six varsity sports.
Buo if this is to be accomplished
then the student body must lend its
-up: ort. Clemson University will be
here in February to swim against the
locals and we believe that the cause
of swimming at East Carolina would
be furthered by a capacity turnout
oi spectators.
Guilford Team Plays Host
To Pirate Five Tomorrow
LARRY'S SHOE STORE
CAMPUS FOOTWEAR FOR ALL OCCASIONS
AT FIVE POINTS
MERLE NORMAN SHOP
(Thi Pink House On Evans St.)
COSMETICS - COSTUME JEWELRY
JEWELRY CASES
Use Our Lay-A-Way Plan
PERKINS-PROCTOR
"The House of Name Brands1'
"Your College Shop
201 E. Fifth Street
Greenville, N. C.
Pirate Swimmers
Drop Tw? Meets
East Carolina's newly formed swim-
ming team took it on the nose in two
successive meets last. Saturday and
Monday.
Tin- Pirate mermen dropped a 36-
30 decision to the University of North
Carolina frosh Saturday and followed
up by taking a 41-25 thrashing at the
hands of N. C. State's Wolfpack
Monday. Both meets were held in the
local pool.
Tn Saturday's outing the visiting
Tar Heels jumped away with a clean
sweep in the opening 150 Yard Relay
and were never headed. The Bucs took
only one first, that in the final event
of the day, when Bill Costner, Ronnie
Rose, Wade Cooper and Dickie Denton
umbin forces to capture the 200
Yard R lay Race.
In Monday's match the Pirates
Guilford's Quakers will furnish the
opposition tomorrow night when the
high-flying East Carolina Pirates
continue their drive for the North
State Conference crown.
The contest, which will be the sec-
ond of the year between the two clubs,
will be played on the Quaker's court.
Bobby Hodges, East Carolina's sen-
ior center, is expected to lead the
attack against the mediocre Guilford
club. So far this season Hodges is
averaging in the neighborhood of 25
points per contest. He collected 32
on December 5 when the Bucs lam-
basted the Quakes 92-58.
Monday night the Pirates tangle
with another of the North State Con-
ference's weaker ball clubs. Catawba's
Indians, who suffered an 83-42 set-
back at the hands of the Bucs, will
play host to the Pirates.
One more outing, this one scheduled
for Wednesday night, again finds the
Pirates playing on a foreign floor.
High Point's Panthers, a hot and
cold club no far this season will
in Mondays match the Pirates attempt to halt the high scoring East
rot off to a good start when Rose, Carolina attack. Kent Mosely, a dim-
Milton Foley and Costner swept the
opening lo0 Yard Medley Relay. Their
offorts weren't enough however as
the Wolf; ack swimmers captured
firsts in the remainder of the day's
?vt nts.
Saturday's results:
R suits of Saturday's meet: 150
Yd. Medley Relay, Smith, Dryer,
Hal (VXC); 200 Yd. Free Style,
Krepp (UNC), Henton (ECC), Heitle-
n: i (UNC); SO Yd. Free Style,
Brenner (UNC), Cortner (ECC),
Hunter (UNC); 150 Yd. Individual
Medley, Drake (UNC), Cooper and
Foley (ECC); 100 Yd. Free Style,
Marks (UNC). Denton (ECC),
. .Merlin (UNC); 100 Y? . Back
Stroke. (ECC), Smoot (UNC), Flo-
wers (ECC); 100 Yd. Brest Stroke,
Mclnnis (UNC), Fuller and Cooper
(ECC); 200 Yd. Relay, Cortner, Rose,
Cooper and Newton (ECC).
Monday's results: 150 Yd. Medley
Relay, Rose, Foley, Costner (ECC);
200 Yd. Free Style, Prodo (S), Denton
and Tuton (ECC); 50 Yd. Free Style,
Merche (S), Costner (ECC), Climo
(S); 150 Yd. Individual Medley,
Mclntyre (S), Verreault (S) and
Moore (ECC); 100 Yd. Free Style,
Prodo (S), Denton and Cooper (ECC);
100 Yd. Back Stroke, Merchel (S),
inutive guard who does his scoring on
long set shots, will be the Panthers'
answer to Hodges. Mosely, at press
time this week, was leading the North
State in scoring.
Prior to the Appalachian game
Thursday night the Bucs were still
holding on to the loop's top position.
In their six loop outings so far the
locals had compiled a 5-1 mark and,
should they cop all three contests
next week, would practically be con-
ceeded the regular season conference
crown.
The starting line-up for tomorrow's
battle at Guilford will probably find
Hodges at center, J. C. Thomas and
Cecil Heath at guards, and Charlie
Huffman and Paul Jones at forwards.
Don Harris, the Laurinburg fresh-
man, is slated to see plenty of action
in the week's contests as is Oak Ridge
transfer Waverly Akins. Both boys
turned in good games last week when
the Bucs faced Lenoir Rhyne and
Western Carolina.
Ross and Wallace (ECC); 100 Yd.
Brest Stroke, Mclntyre (S), Fuller
(ECC) and Moore (S); 200 Yd. Relay,
Prodo, Verreault, James and Climo,
(S).
Four great N
in Chevrol
U
Firsts
?
Western Carolina
Takes Win After
Bucs Defeat L-R
An undefeated season went by the
boards Monday night as the Western
Carolina College Catamounts upset
East Carolina 68-65 in the second
game of the Pirates' recent western
tour.
In a contest the previous Saturday
the Bucs turned back Lenoir Rhyne's
highly rated Bears 74-64 to run their
win skein to seven contests this year.
Monday's game found East Caro-
lina out in front 34-27 at halftime
but the determined cats whittled
away at the margin to come from
behind in tne final three minutes.
The contest was a rough one
throughout and was marred by spo-
radic officiating. Near the end of the
game an intentional foul by J. C.
Thomas in order to gain the ball for
the Bucs brought spectators onto the
floor but order was soon restored.
Despite the outcome of the contest
the Pirates' senior center and cap-
tain, Bobby Hodges, chalked up 26
points. Charlie Huffman and Cecil
Heath sank 16 and 14 respectively.
Jimmy Jordan's timely shots paced
the Catamounts but he played second
fiddle to Martin who was high for
the winners with 19 markers.
Lenoir Rhyne
The opening game of the two-
contests western swing was a differ-
ent story, however, as the Bucs
turned back Lenoir Rhyne 74-64. Bob-
by Hodges once more paced the Bucs
with 26 markers.
East Carolina jumped away to an
18-15 first period margin and length-
ened it to 40-28 at halftime. The
Bears rallied in the third period but
-ome timely foul shooting by forward
Paul Jones enabled the Bucs to pull
away in the final quarter.
Charlie Huffman contributed some
timely scoring to the Pirate attack
as he hit for 18 points. Huffman's
total marked the fifth time this year
that he has hit the 18 point figure.
The results of the road trip gave
East Carolina 5-1 conference record
and an overall mark of 7-1.
The boxes:
East Carolina (74) fg ft pf tp
Huffman, f 8 2 3 18
Akins, f 2 1
Harris, f
Jones, f
Hodges, c
Thomas, g
Heath, g
0 0
1 7
7 12
3 1
4 1
4 5
2 0
0 9
3 26
5 7
1 9
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Both of these great valve-in-head
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Optional at extra cost.
Totals
Lenoir Rhyne
Barker, f
Wells, f
Hassell, f .
Ortmeyer, c
Propst, g
Feltner, g -
Buff, g
25 24 18 74
fg ft pf tp
5 5 4 15
4
4
2
5
1
2
2
1
2
4
3
1
4 10
3 9
5 6
3 14
0 5
2 5
Totals ? 23 18 21 64
Score by quarters:
East Carolina 18 22 14 20?74
Lenoir Rhyne 15 13 22 13?64
Free throws missed: (East Caro-
lina) Akins 3, Jones i, Hodges 2,
and Heath 2; (Lenoir Rhyne) Barker
3, Wells 5, Ortmeyer 1, Propst 2,
Feltner 3, and Buff 3.
Officials: Bergman and Hollar.
fg ft pf tp
7 2 5 16
East Carolina (65)
Huffmani
Akins 10 0 2
Harris 112 3
Rice - 0 0 0 0
Hodges 8 11 5 26
Moye 0 0 0 0
Thomas 0 3 3 3
Heath 4 6 3 14
Totals ? 21 22 18 65
Western Carolina (68) fg ft pf tp
Ray
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4
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4
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7
1
0

5 7
3 10
5 4
4 16
3 19
1 1
5 8
1 3
Totals
25 18 26 68
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Formation Of Swimming Team
Adds New Sport To College
by Bruce Phillips
The winning ways, of East Carolina
College's teams in major intercolle-
giate sports have grown intensely
familiar in Southern circles in recent
yeans. Football, basketball and base-
ball achievements' have reached an
all-time high here and in response
to East Carolina's rise to a nationally
recognized level in its athletic pro-
gram, minor sports are being empha-
sized.
son freshman turned the locals back
in their opener. The Pirates certainly
gave a good account of themselves
against the Cats (who incidently
whipped the Davidson varsity by a
humiliating score) by pushing the
home team to the limit and taking
two first places.
In their first home meet, East
Carolina ran head-on into the skiewy
s ten-
High
North Carolina freshman swimmers
fel?68 the Pirate golf team strok- and had t0 fi ht hard k
ed H way to the North State Con- . margin of vicU) at M
championship, fee aftcrnoofl of week
charges of Coach De Shaw again
played host to one of the Souths most
renown swimming aggregation?
North Carolina State. The Wolfpack
emerged victorious by a 41-25 count,
ut all those who witnessed agreed
all the young Pirates need is a little
more experience &s a unit.
East Carolina meets Clemson here
in their next home go February 13.
Meet time 2 p. m. The locals will be
gunning to upset the Tigers and
prove that losing to such powerhouses
as UNC and State is nothing to be
ashamed of.
loop schedule undefeated. ECC
nis team finished second to
Point's .Panthers.
Now, in hopes of further equal-
izing its athletic status with its
ballooning enrollment, East Carolina
is fielding a swimming team?the
first in its history. Interest in form-
ing an aquatic swimming team began
in 1052, but the necessary enthusias-
tic leader that it takes to make su.
a hope a reality canu into focu
only this year. With Dr. Charles D
Shaw of the physical education de-
partment at the head and a few-
other enthusiastic individuals who
got the movement under way, plus
the completion of the new Memorial
pool. East Carolina hop s to get th
tpktshing Pirates securely established
In the water port that Ls so promi-
nent in East'Tn North Carolina.
Kins:on, Wilson, Goldsboro, Wil-
mington and Tarboro, to mention a
few, are towns that have had the
aquatic bug for years and b6at some
of the finest marine units in the
AAU.
Wade Cooper and Jim Lassiter,
who formerly swam with Raleigh
High School, a team that won the
?tate swimming title for five years in
a row, are the teams stalwarts. Mil-
ton Foley, a home grown Greenville
product, swam with the U. S. Military
Academy freshmen. Practically all
the members have had AAU exper-
ience.
The roster of the traveling squad
and the events they swim follows:
Sprinters?Milton Foley, Jerry Pow-
ell, Dick Denton and Bill Costner.
Breasttrokers?Frank Moore and
Bob Fuller. Backstrokers.?Ronnie
Rose and Hugh Flowers. Distance
Swimmers?Garland Tuton and Wade
Cooper. Individual Medley?Moore
and Cooper. Diver?Jim Lassiter.
The gym pool is completely equiped
and laid out for the home meets.
Under water lights have been in-
stalled for night contests. The gym
bleachers can be turned around to
seat about 700 observers.
The Pirates have had three in-
tercollegiate matches to date with
the top ranking swimming teams of
the nation. The highly touted David-
More Than 200 Take
Part In Intramural
Basketball League
Over 200 East Carolina students
are taking part in the men's intra-
mural basketball program here.
Twenty teams, comprising the
largest intramural session in the
history of the school, are divided
into two leagues with 10 teams to
each league.
In the "A" League, which is rated
the stronger of the two three teams?
EPO, Badgers and Johnnie Rebs?
are tied for first place. In the "B"
League the EPO, Jr. is pacing the
field with an undefeated record.
League play ends February 8 at
which time the tournaments will be-
gin. The program is under the spon-
sorship of the physical education
department and is directed by Bob
Williams.
League Schedule
Next week's schedule for Men's
Intramural Basketball is:
Monday
6 p.m.?EPO, Jr. vs Net Strippers
6 p.m.?Coolest Ones vs Red Skins
7 p.m.?Jocks vs Phantoms
7 p.m.?Cats vs Wolf Pack
8 p.m.?EPO vs Black Hawks
8 p.m.?Sheriffs vs Johnnie Rebs
Conscience: Something that feels
terrible when everything else feels
swell.
Leave Your khoes At COLLEGE VIEW CLEANERS
SUB-STATION For Prompt Shoe Repairs
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DIAL 2056
QUALITY JEWELRY
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Your Headquarters For
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STAUFFER'S JEWELERS
407 Evans Street Phone 2452
STATE
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Greenville
PITT PRICES THIS ATTRACTION





PAGB FOUR
?? ? ????? i -
EAST CAROLINIAN
FRIDAY, J.V-
a i.i-
Veterans Should Enroll Now
For Gl Educational Benefits
egin Gl
Th? spring school tei
erlv in 1954. mark the
ment i
Gl Bill for
v teran
tion sai
rhe reaso
the la-A
t Kore
:
t enroll- j crainn .
e Korean Un
t Korea i must
V
which to
aw, a veteran actually
in and begin" training
e w ants to
afterwards. The mere
a lication !? forehand,
of stait ng after-
I iugl . VA pointed
- ? veteran will be ox-
i ' m or at
. ? ' n his deadline
i . i tarted in
i rmitti .I to int r-
cause of the sinn-
er for other reasons
ir for any circum-
Write If You Like It
Students and others who
watch "To College" which fea-
tures student and faculty of East
Carolina College, should write
the Greenville TV channel, WN-
CT, if they like the program.
The local station will continue
this feature, which is presented
every Saturday from 2 to 2:30
p. in if enough enthusiasm is
show n.
mm News
Alumni Move To New
Location This Week
Y
; 11
e ex-
al these cut-off-
nly to veterans
Koreai Gl Bill.
thos i rolled
World War II
: (.ARRIS GROCERY
E'S FOOD CENTER

and Cotanche Streets
?
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE
BETTER SHOES REASONABLY PRICED
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
B?on Ave.
Greenville. N. C.
Opportunity
Knocks
SUMMER EUROPE TRIP
WITH EXPENSES PAID
A small number of students and
teachers can travel to and from Eu-
rope without cost by serving on the
educational and recreational staff of
the 1954 student sailings of thi firsi
class ship "Castel Felice according
to Anthony S. Pinter, president of
Study Abroad Inc in charge of those
;sailin.
Duties of the staff include assist-
ance with the program of lectures
.? discussions about the European
countries and problems of the edu-
? al tourist, language classes, the
newspaper and library; and super-
vision of the deck games, swimming,
talent shows, dances, moving pictures
and shipboard discipline.
These positions are open to Ameri-
c tns and to Europeans who have
been studying or teaching in the
United States, Mr. Pinter announced,
; ut only applicants with qualifica-
tions in the fields should write to
tl e Castel Felice Staff Council. Study
Abroad Inc 250 West 57th Street.
New York 19, N.Y.
FELLOWSHIPS OPEN
FOR SCIENCE GRADS
The Alumni office of East Caro-
lina College now is in its new home
on the college campus.
Moving was begun lat Motidaj
and Tuesda: building form r-
ly designated the Home Manage meat
House - - - and earlier known to
tudents of a form r g nt ration as
I ; ary - - and the staff in
the office is working overtime to
eomplel the ti ansi i n fr ni ? he one-
room ofii. e in Austin Building.
Alumni Secretarj James W. Butler,
Mrs. S i ie VV . Webb, ' imni of-
t ice secretary, and u ? ' k
Helen Bland and Frank Dees, have
een putting in long hour this week
to havi rei ord: files, desks and oth i
iff ice ii I pro erly.
The planning and ? ent oi
? 'pro o coin
into a modern and commodious
Alumni Faculty H e '?" ? :
given the ! ersonal attention ? I
dent J. D. Messick, Bush ? - Man
Alumni Secretary Butler, Dean of
Womi 'A . and Dt. Bes e
McNei i ad of th department
honii economics.
on to
i
i -sg i.
f, ,? the alumni aifaii then are ??
en's lounge, a n i ?' lounge, a
11
Cep1 ion room, a n pai loi. a
room en. i

as i '? ,lity are
the fun ? will b i
Campus Calendar
Saturday
Homo Ec Club Plans
Second Clothes Drive
,i
?
Iuesda)
1 i
ednesda
nun
M
late to obta
, . . ! ie facil ' i
iltj B i ?
i. , . . rov id
? Mi v i I . am
Speaks- To Metl
i r
. I
i 'oi ' e "r- ?? ' '
??i , Bul '
. r m '? ? ?? ' ' '?' ?
fice f0 the c Hegi fa- ultj
ments.
i ?
offici for
the b a. of Field Sen ic
. i v. 11
I also ? . ?
? ?'
D. Duncan, and en
the facuitj am, stafi including i ta d last falL
College Students
COME IN AND SEE
OUR FINK SELECTION OF SUITS and COATS
C. HEBER FORBES
FOR THE BE WEAR
M ERIT SHOES
?.
4
K)OT LONG HOTDOGS
25c
CHICKEN AND SHRIMP
IN-THE-BOX
WILL DELIVER ANY ORDER OF
$3.00 OR MORE
Just Dial 5741
GREENVIEW DRIVE-IN
West End Circle
I dlege seniors majoring in chem-
physics, engineering are
to a. ply tor Atomic Energy
i 'onimis ? onsored graduate 1 1-
lowshrpe ? radiological physics for
?' i 105 1-55 school year.
. doj - - L; i new and
ng field of scii nee. It is
cerned with health physics, radiation
ring and i ontrol, radio s? I
measurements, and similar activities
as; ociat d with the use of radioi
r the reh as of nuclear energy.
As many as 75 f ??? - maj
be awarded. with fully-accredited
luate study to
loca
? rate .
ler '?'
the A .
? Univi
N'atii :
Basic st
carr i d out in
I t : gram i
v rsit of Roches r
; a ratory,
University of Wa i-
Hai f r I Works of
e third I y Vander-
and e Oak Ridge

When You Shop at
JOHN LAI TARES
JEWELER
i can be sure of friendly, personal
?? bai ked by years uf invaluable
? . Iet us help you in (hints-
arved
DIAMOND RINGS
tip, for fellows is $1,60
er ? ? ar, with an allow ance
irried and $350 r i ach le-
nt child. 1' vi rsit y tuition and
r quin I fees will be paid by the Oak
Ridg In tit ute of NTuclear St i s,
adn nisters the program for
the AEC.
Add information concerning
the program may be obtained from
cience department heads or by writ-
ing the University Relations Division
of the ak Ridge Institute of Nu-
clear Studies, PO Box 117. oak
Ridge, Tenn.
TELEPHONE JOBS
OPEN TO GRADS
I M. Raby of the Carolina Tele-
? and Telegraph Company, Tar-
ro, has announced that the Traffic
Di partment of the company has sev-
eral vacancies which he would like
to fill with H'o-l graduates.
The ; roposed jobs would concern
working as or with operating per-
sonnel and as an ultimate to become
a part of sup' rvisory management
the Traffic Department. This
ork is highly specialized; therefore,
he employee must go through a
raining period.
Any 1954 graduate interested in
irk of this sun, should contact
'r. Raby and arrange for a personal
nterview.
A tcarved Diamond R ? been beloved by
for more than 100 years, rheii beauty, quality and
are unexcelled. Each rinj: is guaranteed and registei
us and I trtcart ed.
-
. ' ?. -
JOHN LAUTARES
JEWELER
Opposite Belk-Tyler
She was just the chimney sweep's
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Records and Sheet Music
45 RPM Accessories j
McCORMICK
MUSIC STORE
a uiTornad
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?!??! ??-
1
J. C. PENNEY CO.
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WE CARRY THE VERY
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recent "tobacco tests the six h ailing
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Chesterfield is highest in quality ?
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A group of C!1- st rfi Id
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Capfujbi 19V. Uactn ? Mrm Tcmx? Ca





Title
East Carolinian, January 22, 1954
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
January 22, 1954
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.35
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/38339
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