East Carolinian, February 11, 1960


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Job Opportunities
Dr. Jam H. Tucker, Director of
SunK-nt PersonI and Placement, nan
released information rnncarnjan jobs
available to graduating nation and
job for summer employment. See
.tors page tare.
Volume XXXV
Eastearolinlan
Official Praises
Sorority Support
By East Carolina
it national officers were
praised by the response
n Iministratorn, faculty, staff,
. Mt ltives of campus or-
? the tea given Sunday
newt) installed sororities.
is atendanee indicated, I
s I have ever seen a more
. campus stated the Na-
nhellenic Council area ad-
. Kuo.ua Ober.
1 , tea, which was the culmina-
.stallation weekend, waa
he City Panhellenic Council
e in honor of the mem-
the newly installed eight
hmnaara on campus.
organization began on
us during fall of 1958 when
groups petitioned the Board
for permission to nation-
i Iard granted the groups
ary period until the De-
school year 1969-60.
- . inning of the school year
and successfully served
stionary period, and then
procedures for national
During the waiting period,
fftcara from many of the
National Panhellenic
and visited the campus,
the different groups. At
. time the local groups were
national sororities in
to decide which group they
iki to join.
. September and October of
each of the local sororities
.t era of petition to the
. gross, and by the end of
tarter each one had become a
a national sorority. Due to
fact that most of the sororities
reed along at the same rate
itun, the administration
the national officers felt
-et a date for mass in-
The date, February 6-7,
t "aer part of October.
h administration was not
all of the groups would
' ii installation by this date,
agreed to set another date in
to accommodate any
shook! require longer for
. anization. "It should be
it that the administration
ttc for installation in order
at the school year was not
ted for eight different week-
the purpose of installation
Ruth White, Dean of Women.
1 the pledge period of each
. all sorority members
dated with all facets of
ritf as well as general in-
r of the Greek world. The
. . of pledge training in-
. examination on all inform-
tained in the sorority hand-
rination of all of attempt
lty organisation on campus
this past weekend when the
nties became national
East Carolina College
Campus Calendar
See the campus calendar on page
three for a schedule of future events
in this quarter. The calendar waa
compiled by the College Union.


;

y




jSl
' r

GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1960
Number 16
Council Votes Support
F
or Intellectual Plan
Members of the Dean's Advisory
Council, meeting Monday afternoon,
voted approval of the plan submitted
by John Dobson of Phi Sigma Pi
Fraternity, which calls fr the es-
tablishment of intermural intellect-
ual activities on the East Carolina
College campus.
The council, composed of presi-
dents of all campus organizations,
nd SCiA standing committee chair-
men, were the second body to endorse
Dobson's plan. The Student Senate
approved the plan at their last meet-
ing in the month of January.
Dobson's plan, to be designed in
a similar manner as the "G. E. Col-
lege Bowl televised on the CBS
Television Network, embodies the
division of campus organizations in-
to six leagues, fraternities, sororities,
male dormitory students, female
dormitory students, male day stu-
dents, and female day students.
According to Dobson, after the
Aforementioned leagues are subdivid-
ed into teams, the members of the
respective teams will be chosen by
the students they are to represent,
or in a manner detailed by the presi-
dents of the respective organizations.
Each team is to be composed of three
members, all three of whieh must be
in different classes.
The actual contests are to be par-
ticipated in by two teams only. A
master of Ceremonies will be in
charge of the proceedings. The MC
will begin the match by asking a
"toss-up" question, which can be ans-
wered by either team. If a team
member feels he can answer the
question, he will signal the MC, be
recognized, and must answer within
By ROY MARTIN
five seconds of his recognition, or
he forfeits his team's chance at the
question, and the points receivable
for the correct answer.
If the "toss-up" question is ans-
wered correctly by a team member,
then his team will be asked"bonus"
questions, which they must answer
quickly, but may work as a team to
arrive at a correct answer. For each
correct answer, a certain number of
points is given, and the team accumu-
lating the highest number of points
at the end of the allotted time peri-
od is declared the winner of the
match.
The questions used in the matches
will be of a quick-recall, short-answer
type. These questions will cover sub-
jects taught at East Carolina. Ac-
cording to plan, the questions, are to
he written, the correct answers ac-
certained, and submitted from each
major department of the college.
Student Government President
speaking in relation to Dobson's plan,
stated, "A lot of people have been
yelling about the intellectual climate
at Est Carolina, therefore Dobson
should really be congratulated for his
fine efforts to remedy the situation
Wells concluded his remarks by point-
ing out. "He (Dobson) has put a lot
of time into his plan, it just wasn't
something he developed in one night
The next move Dobson will make
to further his plan will be mimeo-
graphing of his ideas, and distribut-
ing them to the various organiza-
tions on campus, in an effort to help
everyone to become better acquainted
with it, and thereby enlist support
i s eventual success.
Lambda Chi Buys
Greenville Home
Tambda Cfci Alpha social fraternity
has purchased the W. H. Woolard
home at 552 Cotanche Street in
Greenville. Members are now making
plans to occupy the residence by
March 1. The property is the first to
be purchased by an East Carolina
fraternity.
Since the installation of frater-
nities on the campus in 1958, Lambda
Chi Alpha has had the aim of ac-
quiring property suitable as head-
quarters for activities of the organ-
ization and as a home for some mem-
bers.
John J. West of Durham, president
of the fraternity, and Carlos Burt of
Enfield, chairman of the housing
committee, and other members of
the group, have conducted investiga-
tions of various properties in the
city and of practices of operation
in fraternity houses on other cam-
pus in the state.
In order to purchase the residence
on Cotanche Street, the fraternity
was organized into the Iota Upsilon
Zeta House Corporation of Lambda
Chi Alpha. Prominent alumni mem-
bers in Greenville who are serving
as officers are Alton Barrett, presi-
dent; John G. Lautares, vice presi-
dent; Robert E. Windle, secretary;
and Mahlon Coles, who is advisor
of the campus chapter, treasurer.
Arrangements for the purchase were
completed through J. H. Harrell, at-
torney.
Fraterni y members are now com-
pleting plans for furnishing the
EC Professors Discuss
Cheating At Meeting
"We have taken cheating
for
Geography Department To Offer
Aerial Photo Course In Spring
The Geography Department will j photographs and to revise printed
lightly; we have refused to recognize
the problem as the serious thing it
really is
This was one of the opinions ex-
pressed on cheating by a panel mem-
ber at an open meeting of the A.A.
U.P. late last week at Joyner Library
Auditorium. The program consisted
of a panel discussion in which each
member was given five minutes to
express his opinion, followed by a
panel-audience discussion.
Members of the panel were feliss
Ruby Edens of the Business Depart-
ment, Dr. James Tucker, Director of
Student Personnel; and Barney West,
Junior Senator to the S.G.A. Dr.
Wellington Gray, head of the Art
Department, moderated the panel,
and Dr. Bessie McNeil, head of the
Home Economics Department, was
in charge of the program.
Dr. Gray explained the campus call
for action on the matter of cheating
and praised those of the student body
who have led the protest to lax re-
gulations on cheating.
Barney West emphasized the im-
portance of the student's having a
good idea of what the courses he is
taking are about. He said that if the
s udent could see no value in a course,
he could see no harm in cheating to
make the necessary quality points.
"Morality, unless supported by prac-
ticality, is useless addedWest.
Miss Edens warned against for-
By JASPER JONES
too j handling cases of cheating "because j in character. It is our responsibility
if it goes before a committee, 90 to either correct this deficiency in
house for use by twenty resident i setting the real dishonesty and un
members, securing the services of a fairness of cheating. She sympathiz-
uffer this spring for the first time
a 3 hour course on aerial photograph-
ic interpretation and their applica-
tion. This course is one of the sev-
eral applied geography courses that
are being offered each quarter by
the department. Here the students
will have .an opportunity to learn
how to read and interpret aerial
photographs taken from the height
of 10,000 feet.
The department has a large collec-
tion of 3,000 photographs, which
have accumulated through gifts and
purchases. These photographs, with
the aid of stereoscopes, will permit
students to study many features of
the landscape which are visible only
from the air. In addition to the lec-
maps from recent photegraphy of
the area.
The ECC Geography Department
maintains contact with private and
government agencies employing grad-
uates with trainin in aerial photo
interpretation. One such organiza-
tion is a top secret naval command
in Washington: US Naval Photo-
graphic Interpretation Center.
The course will be taught by Dr.
R. E. Cramer who has worked with
several government agencies utiliz-
ing maps and aerial photographs.
His interest originated during World
War II with his two years of mili-
tary duty as photographic interpreter
with the Sixth Photograpic Squad-
house mother, and redecorating the
home and landscaping the grounds.
The property is described by Lamb-
da Chi Alpha members as "ideal for
use by a fraternity Central location
beween the college campus and the
business district of the city, ample
space for future additions to the
house, and a large area for parking
:ire among advantages.
Lambda CM Alpha at present has
40 members and 10 pledges at East
Carolina.
tures on the subject, students will on stationed at Peterson Air Base,
be required to make maps from these Colorado Springs.
Application Deadline
An application deadline for qualfi-
ivation for the August Coast Guard
Officer Candidate Class has been set,
local Coast Guard officials revealed
today.
A cut-off date of April 20 was
established to enahle selection and
notification ef college applicants
prior to the June graduations.
Additional information may be ob-
tained by contacting the Director of
Reserve, Fifth Coast Guard District,
P.O. Box 640, Norfolk 1, Va.
ed with the honest student, who is
cheated out of his grade by a dis-
honest person who thinks only of
himself. "The students who do not
cheat must condemn it; we, the
faculty, must condemn it; and there
should be serious consideration of
strict penalties for cheating she
asserted. Miss Edens also explained
the importance of the teacher's
the student or remove him from the
college community.
"I frankly feel the problem is
somewhat overrated on this campus
and many other campuses. The over-
whelming majority of students do not
have to cheat to succeed in college.
The problem can be solved in short
order by a determined effort on the
part of the faculty and the student
body.
"I am very much in favor of our
considering more essay examina-
tions. Most experienced teachers
know that it is quite difficult to
cheat on this type of exam he
concluded.
Jerkins announced last week the
formation of a Faculty Advisory
Council to the President.
According to Dr. Jenkins, the
council will be made up of faculty
members elected from their respec-
tive departments to advise the presi-
dent and to offer suggestions from
the faculty.
Dr. Jenkins commented that he felt
this council would make it easier for
suggestions and feelings of the fa-
of the time it will do nothing.
Dr. Tucker assured everyone that
the administration would back action
against cheating but added that "we
should not imply that we are the
only ones that have this problem
Dr. Tucker said that many rumors of
wholesale cheating are "pure sensa-
tionalism "Barney West here gave
as an example the rumors concern-
ing exams that 'get out' when actu-
ally they have not been printed he
commented.
Dr. Tucker continued by saying
that most cheating la of the cribbing
varietynotes in phoney fountain
pens, looking on other papers, etc
and that cases of well planned cheat-
ing schemes are seldom encountered.
In the following panel-audience
discussion, a number of faculty mem-
bers said that they felt that cheat-
ing on creative work outside of class
'as of journalism) is most serious.
T would estimate that 50 of the
themes and papers handed in is
copied stated Barney West.
Dr. Gray expressed dissatisfaction
with examination methods on this
campus and other campuses and sug-
gested doing away with "exams
('ays He advocated the method used
by the University of Chicagolet-
ting the student take the examina-
tion "when he feels he is ready
Many people were surprised at the
me hods that students have used to
steal exams. Dr. Tucker described
several in details such as having keys
to offices and stealing exam copies
from cars.
When asked to comment on the
problem, Dr. Leo Jenkins, President
of the College, who was not at the
discussion, said, "I feel that there is advised that if the Student Govern-
no place on this campus or any cam- i ment wanted a stop-light in the in-
pus in America for any dishonest I tersection, they would have to pur-
chase it themselves, at a cost of $500-
C50. The senate committee will meet
with Greenville officials and attempt
to work out arrangements for the
erection of the light.
In another action, President Wells
stated that the "Bohunk" trophy, a
bucket, long a symbol of rivalry be-
tween East Carolina and Atlantic
Christian College athletic teams,
would be presented to the SGtA next
week by Sigma Phi Epsilon Frater-
nity.
Wells pointed out that the trophy
was almost the source of a riot at
the recent ACC-ECC game played
in Wilson last week. Wells stated
:hat he would collaborate with the
Student Government president at AC,
and decide upon measures to be taken
which will avert such occasions in
the future.
S6A Seeks Stop
Light; Discusses
'Bohunk' Trophy
At their initial meeting of the
month of February, the Student Sen-
ators carried on regular business,
with the exception of several items
submitted for their attention from
SGA President Dallas Wells.
In their first action of the night,
the senators voted to set up a com-
mittee to investigate the possibilities
of erecting a stop-light at the main
Fifth Street campus entrance. The
senators action was taken in the
wake of President Wells's reporting
that he had looked into the matter
on his own, and upon meeting with
the City Manager of Greenville, was
person. A person who cheats on an
exam is a person definitely lacking
Jenkins Announces Formation
Of Faculty Advisory Council
East Carolina's President Leo W. I culty to be made known. In addition,
'Medium' Rehearsals Continue As Production Takes Shape
FBLA To
Valentine Dance
The Future Business Leaders of
: i again sponsoring the
tine Dance to be present
lay. February 13, at 8:00 p.m.
Wright Auditorium. Music will be
i by Um "Off-Beats" from
an College.
Previously, the Valentine Queen
te,i by the Business Depart-
this yar the business lead-
;ive invited the entire campus to
ate in her selection.
men participating in the
are Joanne Smith, NEA;
Lae Edwards, Chi Omega; Pat
Mdm Economics Club; Jerry
. Phi Omicron; Peggy Dixon, Pi
?a Pi; Barbara Pleasants, Alpha
Omicron Pi; Kitty Thurman, ACE;
(apps, Alpha Delta Pi; Joyce
rrin, Delta Zeta.
X lao vying for honors are Betsy
. Theta Chi; Patsy Maynard,
Sigma; Miy Eliiabeth Gardner,
Alpha; Marvel Dixon, Phi
Beta Lambda; and Sallie CaTden,
Library Club.
The candidates will be presented at
ir. after which the ticket holder
!iay vote for his choice on the back
! he dance ticket. The votings ends
I N p.m.
The Queen for 1960 will be crown-
ed by Mr. Norman Cameron of tha
Business Department.
Rehearsals continue as the produc-
tion of Gian-Carlo Menotti's The
Medium takes shefe for this year's
opera. The Opera heater's director
Paul Hickfang say, "the production
is taking shape nicely now. We are
looking forward for this show to be
the most outstanding one this school
has ever produced. The music is elec-
trofying and powerful, very explosive
and beautiful, and is all packed into
an hour's performance. This is a pro-
duction that will be enjoyed by the
average lay-music lover as well as
the opera-lover
"The orchestra is doing a fine job
under the experienced baton of Don
Hayes, East Carolina Orchestra
direc or. It's accompaniment to the
opera will virtually 'make' this pro-
duction added Mr. Hickfang.
The Medium, to be presented in
McGfanis Auditorium on February
20 and Sunday, Feb. 21 spins its web
around a gypsy '" and her
daughter "Monica" and adopted son
"Toby Baba desperately tries tolfmd
solution to a deep and penetrating
problem which she cannot understand,
while Toby seems to hide withm his
silence the answers to her question.
"Baba" is portrayed by James Mur-
ray of Roxboro, and Martha Brad-
ner of Greenville. They both appear-
ed as "Hata" in the Opera Theaters
production of The Bartered Bride last
year.
Jim Gillikin of Greenville plays the
part of Toby, and Monica is portray-
ed by Alison Moss of Greenville, and
Ann Darden of Wllliamston.
Miss Darden appeared last year as
"Marie" in the opeim theater produc-
tion of The Bartered Bride. She also
sang in Carousel. Miss Darden is also
a member of the College Choir, and
Sigma Alpha Iota, the professional
honorary music fraternity. She is
also president of the Opera Theatre.
While an undergraduate Mrs. Moss
had the lead part in the operetta
"Down in the Valley She had also
soloed in the annual production of
Handel's "Messiah Mrs. Moss has
taught voice, piano, and organ, and
is soloist at the First Presbyterian
Church in Greenville.
Minor parts in The Medium are
filled by Ronnie Knouse, Winston-
Salem; Jeanne Peterson, Greenville;
Carolyn Elam, 'Roxboro; and Jessa-
mine Hiatt, Clinton.
Mr. Hickfang is music director of
The Medium, and Robert Richert of
the English Department is the dra-
matic director. Sets are being de-
signed by John Gordon of the Art
department faculty.
Donald Hayes, director of the Col-
lege Orchestra, will conduct the opera
orchestra. This is the first year the
orches ra will accompany the opera
theatre and its production.
the members of the council can carry
back to the faculty the results of the
meetings, thus allowing a free flow
of communications between the fa-
culty and the president's office. No
departmental heads are on the new
council.
Dr. Jenkins said, "I formed this
council to assist me in any way pos-
sible in enabling the college to serve
in an increasingly more effective
manner. It's a device to enable us to
corral faculty thought regarding
suggestions for the betterment of all
concerned
He added, "Its counterpart is the
Student Advisory Council which func-
tions under the Dean and is made
up of the presidents of all the or-
ganizations on campus. There also
exisis an Alumni Council. We hope
in the future to have these three
meet together periodically.
(Elected to serve on the council
from the respective departments are:
arts, Dr. Bruce Carter; business edu-
cation, Dr. Tora M. Larsen; education,
Dr. Douglas R. Jones; English, Dr.
James Poindexter; foreign language,
Dr. J. Roy Prince; geography, Dr.
Robert E. Cramer; and health and
physical education, Nell Stallings.
Also elected to the council were:
home economics, Ruth Lambie; in-
dustrial arts, Dr. Thomas J. Haig-
wood; library science, Dr. Mildred
Southwick; mathematics, Dr. John
O. Reynolds; music, Dr. Edmund
Durham; psychology, Dr. Frank A.
Scott; science, J. G. Boyette; and
social studies, Dr. Charles L. Price.
SCENE FROM . . . "The Medium
Jessamian Hiatt and Ronnie Knouse
shows Martha Bradner with a surprised expression on her
holding hmnda. In the background is Ann Darden.
she views
Jenkins Accepts Bid
To Join Social Frat
President Leo W. Jenkins has ac-
cepted an invitation to become a
member of the campus chapter of
lambda Chi Alpha, social fraternity.
Initiation ceremonies are scheduled
for March 19.
Plans are now being made by mem-
bers of Lambda Chi Alpha at the
college for the initiation of Dr. Jen-
kins, of undergraduate members, and
of several faculty members. A ban-
quet in honor of the Eaat Carolina
President and other new members is
being arranged.
Play Tryouts Set
For February 13
Auditions for actors, singers and
dancers needed for parts in the play,
The Third Frontier, which will play
in New Bern on June 11th through
the 25th are scheduled for Saturday,
February 13 in Wright Auditorium.
Tryouts will take place at 1:30 p.m.
and at 7:00 p.m.
The parts for which auditions will
be held are paid parts but many
volunteers will also be needed. Paid
members of the company must be
available in the afternoons and eve-
nings during the rehearsal period
which win begin approximately May
21st. All persons engaged for the
play will be expected to have dual
capacities such as assisting with
scenery or sewing costumes. A mini-
mum of eight hours work will be
customary during the rehearsal
period.
The auditions will consist of read-
ings for parts, tryouts for singers
and dancers. The script of the play
will not be used for auditions. Those
persons interested in a speaking part
should memorize a selection from
some play or speech such selection to
last between two and two and a half
minutes.
Those auditioning for singing for
singing roles should prepare a song;
preferably a hymn, and bring the
music with them. The dancers should
bring dance togs, prepared to demon-
strate their skill in either ballet or
modern. In order to acquaint those
persons interested with the.type of
play to be given, toe director. Dr.
J. A. Withey will





FAOBTWO
'
Students Must Fight
To Assert Integrity
In Other Localities
Students in the Dominican Republic are
being jailed, tortured, assassinated, or forced
to disappear because they dared to fight
against the tvrannv of tinhorn dictator Ra-
fael Trujillo
Now the example set by these students
has spread to all social levels of the entire
country. Signs of discontent and opposition
to the dictatorship because of its corruption,
ruthlessness, and nepotism are mounting
daily. The Dominican students are deter-
mined to tight against the tyranny of Tru-
jillo, who has ri J the country with an iron
hand for thirty years.
Last year a movement which had its
start among Cuban students culminated in
the ousting of the hated dictator Fulgencio
Batista. The "President" tortured students
daily, but could never stamp out the 26 de
Julio movement for freedom.
In Greensboro, N. C. last week, white
students joined fellow Negro students in a
quiet, orderly, but affective protest against
racial discrimination. Negro college students
protested that although they could buy food
at lunch counters at two variety stores, they
could not sit down to order or eat.
And we cannot forget the students in
Budapest
Here at East Carolina, we do not have
to fight for our rights. We are free and
White. We are also complacent and blase.
And to use again a. well worn term, we are
apathetic.
Build Strong Bodies;
Allow Minds To Fall
So the decade of the Sixties is to be an
Era of Greatness in North Carolina.
an era of great fliptop caverns of
concerete and steel for revivals and race
tracks, polo and rodeo, circuses and civic
assemblies, exhibitions, expositions, and
playing fields where our youth will come to
distort themselves and flex their rippling
muscles. What we build in Raleigh will be
emulated in Charlotte and Greensboro and
elsewhereas fhe past does prove.
an era of indoor and outdoor arenae,
stadia, and colisea, gently and glamorously
described for public intake as multi-purpose
structures bursting at the seams with mani-
fold purposes and multitudinous functions
too numerous to enumerate. Here, too, our
youth will come (contrary protests notwith-
standing!) to disport themselves and flex
their rippling muscles. What we construct
at Chapel Hill, having already done so at
Raleigh, we shall likewise do at Greenville,
at Boone, at Cullowhee, and wherever else
there be a state-supported college which
wishes "to be able to house its students oc-
casionally under one roofwherever there
be an imagined need that youth must come
to disport themselves and flex their rippling
muscles!
For such edifices, then, shall we spend
our many millions in this decade of the six-
ties, this Era of Greatness! Well, so be it,
for if we continue to dole out decimal-point
percentage salary increases and contin-
gency bonuses as a hoped-for means of get-
ting and keeping good public school teachers:
If we continue to make each teacher pay $8
for each day she is sick; if we continue to
crowd more pupils in the classrooms than
almost any other American state; if we con-
tinue to deprive our children of urgently-
needed guidance personnel and special serv-
ice teachers; if now we fail to give priority
to the cause of public schools, the time will
soon come when the only thing left for our
youth to flex will be their rippling muscles!
Their other talentsmental, moral, and
spiritualnever having been discovered and
hence never having been developedwill
waste away and slowly disappear in the em-
erging morass of respectable American me-
diocrity!
So let's fetch forth our architects of
fliptops, arenae. stadia, colisea! Let's set up
our drawing boards! Let's pour our concrete!
Let's rivet our steel girders! Let's erect edi-
fices for tomorrow which will truly stand
as monuments to our Era of Greatness to-
daythe Dynamic Decade of the Sixties!
(NEA News Bulletin)
East Carolinian
Published by the students of East Carolina College,
Greenville, North Carolina
Member
Columbia Scholastic Press Association
Associated Collegiate Press
Intercollegiate Press
North State Conference Press Association
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925 at
the U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under
the act of March 3, 1879.
EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER
Kathryn JohnsonJoAnne Parks
Managing Editor Pat Harvey
Associate Editor Tom Jackson
News Editor Roy Martin
Feature Editor Betty Maynor
Sports Editor Johnny Hudson
Assistant Sports Editor Leonard Lao
Sports Staff Merle Summers, Norman Kilpatrick
Reporters Evelyn Crutchfield, Marcel Vogel,
Charlotte Donat, Jim Trice, Gwen Johnson, Patsy
Elliott, Lucille Coulbourn, Judy Stott, Jasper
Jones, Anne Francis Allen
TICES on the second floor of Wright Building
jhone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264
THURSDAY, FEBRrj
. . . And The Night Proved Interesting
n -vr tf !! .T a . .1 fl.t!iU ,. . CiVlA il't
By ROY MARTIN
Picture this: The gym is crowded to
overflowing as you enter. The re-
spective teams have just completed
their preliminary warm-ups, and the
game is about to begin.
You take your seat in the blea-
chers among the fans, who are now
becoming restless with anticipation
of the action which is about to begin.
The two tallest boys on each team
move into the center circle, glancing
apprehensively at one another. The
referee throws the ball into the air,
and just about that time the man on
your left jumps frantically to his
feet, and clips you in the ribs with
his elbow.
He begs your pardon, and you ac-
knowledge, unable to speak because
you have had the wind knocked out
of you. You sit now just a little fur-
ther away from the gentleman,
watching every move he makes.
Somehow, you manage to keep
yourself out of the reach of his wild-
ly moving arms, and settle down to
watch the game. This, however,
seems to be a figment of your im-
agination, because there is some kid
pouring his drink dawn your back
cverytime his team scores.
Silently vowing if that joker spills
just one more drop on you. . . just
one more, you will surely bludgeon
him to death, not caring about the
consequences following the act.
You watch the game as best you
can, and then it comes. . . . Pepsi
Cola right down the 'ol back. You
turn, preparing to shake his teeth
out, and then you are knocked sense-
less.
Clawing your way to daylight
through the confused mass of human
bodies, you realize that some of the
basketball players must have tried
to take a short cut through the blea-
chers, and over your head in the pro-
cess, or someone left the door open
and a locomotive ran over you. Your
first thought was correct.
You move yourself at the half,
oown to the row where the cheer-
leaders are sitting. This, you mumble
lo yourself is the safest place in the
whole gym. But, as previously, you
were only mistaken in your thinking,
because the cheerleader by whom
you're sitting, when her team scores
jumps straight up carrying part of
your nose with her as she travels up-
ward.
"Oh, somewhere there's a valley
but I ask you . . . WHERE?
Georgia Review' Publishes
Article By History Teacher
James Calvin Hemphfll, one of the
outstanding journalists in the nation
in the late Nineteenth and early
Twentieth centuries, and his efforts
to defeat Woodrow Wilson's bid for
the presidency are discussed by Dr.
Willard B. Gatewood, Jr of the So-
cial Studies Department, in the cur-
rent, winter, 1959, edition of "The
Georgia Review a quarterly.
The article covers the years 1911-
1912, when the Southern editor dir-
ected barbed criticism at Wilson.
Hemphill, editor of the Charleston,
S.C News and Courier, the Rich-
mond Times-Dispatch, and the Char-
lotte Observer, wielded a consider-
able political influence through these
papers. He was, in addition, vice
president of the Associated Press,
Bromley, Lecturer in Journalism at
Carolina Press Association.
Along with George Harvey, editor
or the "North American Review" and
"Harper's Weekly and Henry Wat-
terson, editor of the Louisville Cour-
ier-Journal, Hemphill, according to
Dr. Gatewood's article, was one of
the "discoverers" of Woodrow Wil-
son, whose political fortunes he
championed for several years.
After Wilson became increasingly
progressive and liberal in his polit-
ical views, Dr. Gatewood says, Hemp-
hill joined other conservative South-
erners in an effort to defeat him a
the Democratic nominee.
As a participant in the celebrated
"Manhattan Club Affair Dr. Gate-
wood states, Hemphill, then editor
of the Charlotte Observer, joined
Harvey and Watterson in an effort
to deflate the Wilson Presidential
boom. In January 1912 Hemphill pub-
lished in the Charlotte newspaper the
Yale, a "roving reporter on the New
York Times, and Founder of the South
now famous story of Wilson's break
with Harvey. During this period, Dr.
Gatewood says, no other Southern
Democratic editor surpassed Hemp-
hill as a caustic critic of Woodrow
Wilson.
Despite his past activities as an
editor, Hemphill was a good enough
Democrat, according to Dr. Gatewood,
to accept Wilson as the nominee of
l.is party in 1912 and to work through
his editorial columns to secure his
election. In 1914, President Wilson
p.nd the Southern editor were recon-
ciled and became political allies.
Dr. Gatewood, assistant professor
of history at East Carolina College,
is a native of Pelham, N.C. He is a
graduate of Duke University and has
previously published articles in the
"North Carolina Historical Review"
and the "South Atlantic Quarterly
Prexy Commends
College Spirit
Dear Editor:
should like to take this opportu-
nity to ? my appreciation for
the excellent school spirit displayed
by the students of East Carolina at
recent baskeball games. I'm sure it
has served as an inspiration to the
team and to the coaching staff.
East Carolina's Pirates have done
a marvelous job during the entire
season especially in the last few
Kames. The students are proud of
the team effort that has been shown
and have given the players their un-
divided support. The players, in turn,
have co-operated with the coaching
staff to develop into an exceedingly
sharp squad.
Our thanks go to the cheerleaders
who have led the students in cheer-
ing the team on. They have unfail-
ingly been an asset to the school
and to the phyers, I'm sure.
Good luck for the remainder of
the season we're behind you all the
way!
Sincerely,
Dallas Wells,
S.G.A. President
Do Our Students Have Loyalty?
Recently the sophomore's conducted a class meeting, and three out
of 1500 of the sophomore class were present.
Is this showing school spirit, and loyality? Perhaps there wer
other things going on, but is thirty minutes too longr to sacrifice for an
important business meeting? Surely the whole sophomore class wasn't
tied down with club meetings or other more important meetings.
From reports, the sophomore class meetings aren't the only ones
that haven't been well attended, ind its been said that if attendance
isn' improved next year class meetings will be made compulsory.
Do we want to be treated like children? Do we want to feel as if
we have to do something, when we now have a choice in the matter? We
come to college with a feeling of independence, but if we don't face re-
sponsibili.ies and act like adults, can we expect to be treated otherwise,
Les get behind our class and see if we can't boost the attendance
at the class meetings.
Another sophomore class meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, Feb-
ruary 16, at 7:00 p.m. in Flanagan auditorium. Why not give your class
a figh ing chance, and attend this next meeting.
Committee Picks N. C. Natives As Mr. And Miss Student Teacher
By PAT HARVEY
Highlighting the college careers of
two of East Carolina's seniors was
their recent selection as Mr. and Miss
Future Teacher. Joanne Smith and
Clinton Davis, North Carolina na-
tives, as recipients of this annual
honor, were chosen from a group of
S udent National Education Associa-
tion club members.
Invitations were sent to all SNEA
seniors to attend a tea conducted by
the-club. All attending were asked to
fill out an application including a
brief autobiographical sketch and his
college activities, if they were in-
terested in becoming Mr. and Miss
Future Teacher. All applications and
academic records were used in select-
ing the winners. The nominating
committee was composed of the
SNEA sponsors, head of the Educa-
tion Department, two members of the
SNEA and two representatives from
the Student Government Association.
Hard Work, No Play 7
"Many of you have heard it said
that teaching is just the same as any
other profession a great deal of
hard work and no play stated Miss
Smith of Deep Run, "but this, I
have found, is not at all true "A
teacher Joanne continued, "is a
guide and a molder of character.
She has a profound influence on .the
child she teaches.
"There is no greater joy in this
profession than the feel of accom-
pJishment at the efcd of a class
period
(As an English major Joanne did
her student teaching fall quarter at
Greenville High School. "Having
graduated from a small school an-
nounced Joanne, "it took me several
days to familiarise myself with the
routine of a somewhat larger school.
After teaching in a large school, I
'believe it has more opportunity for
learning and a wider selection of
subjects as compared to a small
school
When asked about her opinions
as to what constituted a good teach-
er, Joanne said, "She should know
her subject thoroughly and have con-
fidence in herself and her students
One of the many amusing incidents
that occurred in her classroom was
told by Joanne in the following man-
ner: "We were studying the well-
known short story, The Lady and The
Tiger. As the story goes, the young
man is to ohoose which door he will
open. He knows that behind one door
is a beautiful young lady and behind
the other, a ferocious tiger waiting
to tear him to shreds. He chose the
door on the right. Thus the story ends.
"I asked my students what they
thought was on the other side and
one quiet, meek little fellow said very
seriously. 'I think it rained and they
both called off the whole thing "
Friendly Atmosphere
"I shall always remember the
friendly atmosphere on the EC cam-
pus stated Joanne when asked what
she would miss about ECC.
During her four years as a student,
Joanne has found time for many
extra-curricular activities such as the
SNEA, Sigma Phi Alpha, the Eng-
lish Club and Alpha Xi Delta social
sorority of which she is secretary.
She has been a Sweetheart Ball
sponsor for two years and a college
marshal.
After graduating this spring, Jo-
anne hopes to teach out-of-state
(Maryland or Virginia) and aftei
working a year, go back to college
and ob.ain her Masters degree.
Life Time Career
"I plan to make teaching a life
time career stated Clinton Davis of
Edenton, president of the SNEA. "In
the seventh grade I wanted to teach
math and I haven't changed my mind
since then
Clinton also did his student teach-
ing at Greenville high school and,
"the only difference between Eden-
ton high and Greenville high were
the modern facilities and the fact
that Greenville is larger, having twice
as many students stated Clinton.
Pet peeves are always among a
student teacher's remembrances and
Clinton felt that he disliked lesson
plans more than anything during his
three month teaching experience.
"Actually Clinton said, "I, like so
many other teachers, enjoy teaching
more than giving and grading tests
Both Ma and Miss Future Teacher
felt that a teacher should be "fair,
friendly and firm Clinton also said,
"A teacher should always treat the
students equally and help them with
all their problems
One of the methods Clinton used
in his algebra classes was having his
students act out a Perry Mason
sketch in solving equations.
'Who's Who' Student
Clinton has been a member of the
NBA for four years. Last year he
served as vice president and was
elected president this year. He was
recently named as one of the "Who's
Who" students and is also the state
vice president of the Division of
Future Teachers of the NCEA. This
year Clinton is the co-vice president
of the Math Club and daring his
junior year was the chairman of
Maria D. Graham Math Club Award.
Much of his time has been spent
as .a committee member of SNEA.
He has served on the finance, con-
stitution, homecoming and nominat-
ing committees. He has attended both
the fall conventions of the Division of
Future Teachers of the NCEA and
the spring conventions of the NCEA
for the past three years.
"I will remember ECC as a won-
derful college for teachers-to-be. It
has a friendly and pleasant atmos-
phere and a very wide subject curri-
culum Clinton contended.
Sororities lay h
Competition Threat
To ECC Fraternities
By TOM JACK SOS
With a wrath of handshaking
fusion of smiles the sororities final)10'
national this weekend. A tea in Carrm uBt
brought the weekend to a close SunH '
the girls rallied enough strength f0r ! Ias
spasm of socializing. d m
Even with that exhausted, "thank
ness it's o.er" look on their face3 c
it was easy to tell they mean buamesV J?
iFC and the fraternity on campus i
ing to be in for some toutf competition n
If one woman can outwit tn men (a
firmlv believe), think what a horde of ,
will do. th
We have just finished reading for
second time a book which, in our opir
looks : I daep into human nature and Z
as true a picture of people gj anv on theLJ
ket. Most of you are probably familiar
Spoon River Anthology by Edgar Lee
er.s, and perhaps some of you remember ti
following passage from it.
SETH COMPTON
Whom I died, the ' ito'lntintj library
Which I built up for Spoon River,
And managed for the good of inquirinp
minds,
Was sold at auction on th public mmi
as if to destroy the last vestige
Of my memory and influence.
For those of you who could not gee tfc
virtue
Of knowing Vohnejfi "Ruins" as mv
Butler's "Analogy"
And "Faust" as well as "Ecangeline
Were really the power in the tillage'
And often you asked me,
"What is the use of knowing the evAm
the world?"
I am out of your way now, Spoon River,
Choose your own aood and call it mi.
For I could never make you
That no one knows what ri
Who knows not what .? ecu;
And no one known what is trut
Who knows not what is false.
High School 'Cuties'
Have Heyday At Game
By PAT HARVEY
Our usually deserted campus was
fortunate this past weekend in having a
number of new faces touring the campus.
Possibly if sororities went national more
often, this unusual school would look like a
college campus all the time instead of I
shifts. . . Wras quite surprised to hear that
Billy May would visit us for our junior-?
ior prom. Thia terrific orchestra is the best
entertainment group we've had since Bra-
beck's crew.
Don't care what any reviewer says.
Moochi, the talented cat, was definitely the
outstanding player in Diary of Anne Frank.
She remained cool and unnerved throughout
the performance and managed to steal scenes
easily with one meow. Some of our aspiring
actors and actresses should take lessons from
thia ball of fur. . . .
Some of our brilliant professors and
students feel that endless talk about our
cheating problem is a waste of time. Could
be. But do these students with the halos and
profs with the Ph.Ds have any other sug-
gestions besides ignoring the facts?
Note to committee heads: If vou haven't
be sure to read Max Shulman's "On Campus
in last week's paper. Then strain your brains
and find the moral to the story. . . First
was money, next clothes, and now paintings
are disappearing. The only items we dont
have to worry about is books. . . Anyone who
missed The Wreck of the Mary Dean (
ship not a woman) missed an exciting eve-
ning of evenful, realistic entertainment.
Most of the action took place on the ocean
and it was so realistic that the audience
complained about the salt water sprays
blearing their vision.
The Pirates continue surprising their
victims with terrific shots and unusual de-
fense tactics. With such a superb team to
support, several people were fairly disgusted
with the unsportsmanlike tricks of damag-
ing community center property and stealing
team nuggets at the ACC contesttut, tut
such high school cuties we do have. . The
most interesting and eye-catching news on
the front page these days is the dime store
trouble in Greensboro. Seems rather useless
to sit that long and not even get one scrawny
hot dog. But at least the newspapers are
lapping up the gYavy. (A newspapers
dream: To have a lively story every day for
weeksah!).
Don't forget to see the Elon-ECC gin
tomorrow night. . finish your last term
paper of this quarter. . . start sweating y?ur
next quarter's classes. . . resort to studying
after you've tried every other available metn-
od for passing. . . Reregister in pencil
writing in ink is like counting your votes
before you run for janitor. . . check the clos-
ets and under the beds for this quarter
class notes. . . I5ok up the word, Gazebo. .
renew your subscription to all the unreal
magazines piled on your dusty bookcase. .
read the next chapter of the classic you re-
ported on last week. . . .
MMfeti
MRI
mmmmmm





LrKSDAV.
FEBRUARY 11, I960
Director Says Europe
Tour To Be Beneficial
EAST CAKOEINIAN
PAGE THREE
laiolina-sponsored Grand
p0UJ of Europe promises to
itional and thrilling,
its director, Myrtle B.
u
beautifully planned
, 1 has already been
Mrs i laik says. 1ur-
time we will be ac-
who speaks
.1
I S a courier
, imjuafe
a Scotland they will be
ch will take them
Scotland and England.
, North Sea by boat
v , the will be picked
bus at The Hook, and
.ii European coun-
, of the tiip includes
Ma km Oak, Robin
Forest, and through
Uso, a look at the
Avon of William Shake-
e, the tourists will
, performance. Then,
London, the capital
! hngland, for a full day
and another of lei-
I - and a day will be spent
gau, the famous Pas-
Vtllags m the German
for the Passion Play
for the East Carolina
in the fall. Perform-
I von once every dec-
players are trained
anee to the next,
the world over come to
M presentation.
the agenda is a stop in
Switzerland at Lucern, famous holi-
day resort. The group also Will.
view Rome, the "Eternal City the)
lo.nine Quo Vad.s Church, and the I
historical arena. While here, they j
may take an optional two days excur
sion to Naples and Capri.
The East Carolinians will see Ven-
ice, romantic city of the lagoons,
Florence, "Cnadle of the Renaissance"
and birthplace of Dante. They will
travel to Nice. "Queen of the Medi-
terranean to Monte Carlo, to Gras-
se. the world's capital of the per-
fume industry, to Fontainebleau, the
preferred residence of Napoleon, and
to Versailles, the exquisite palace
of iA)uis XIV.
Three days will be spent in Paris,
vith visits to Notre Dame. La Chap-
tlle, Sacra Coeur, Luxembourg Car-
dens, Eiffel Tower, Arch of Triumph,
(lamps Elysees, Invaldies, and on
and on, the famous landmarks of the
City of Lights
Nine quarter hours credit will be
given for graduate or undergraduate
work, or for renewing a teacher's
ce ificate, at a cost of $28 more
than the $999 required for the trip it-
self.
The maximum number that will be
allowed to take the trip is thirty.
Students who wish to apply should
contact Mrs. Clark as soon as possi-
ble. She may be reached at the Whal-
Coates school on campus.
Things are pretty well evened up
in this world. Other people's troubles
are not so bad as yours, but their
children are a lot worse.
with
Hr MaShukan
Ik-
Author of "I Was a Teen-age DuvrfTht Many
Loves of Dobie GiUis etc)
THREE WHO PASSED IN THE NIGHT
Ltfll year, as everyone knows, 1,210,614 undergraduates dropped
out of college. 256,080 flunked; 309,656 got married; 375,621
ran out of money; and 309,254 found jobs, As you have, of
course, observed, this accounts for only 1,210,611 out of
1,210,614. What happened to the other three?
Well sir, to find the answer, I recently completed a tour of
American campuses where I interviewed 40 million students
sold several subscriptions to The Open Road for Boys, and
it platan me to report that I can now account for those three
elusive undergraduates.
The first was an LSU junior named Fred Gaugin. He was
extremely popular, always ready with a smile, fond of folk
dancing and pralines, and last semester his Chi Psi brothers
unanimously elected him treasurer of the fraternity. This proved
an error. Gaugin, alas, promptly absconded with the money
and went to Tahiti to paint. The fraternity is bending every
effort to extradite Gaugin, but Tahiti, alas, is currently observ-
ing the feast of Dipthong, the Sun-God, a five-year ceremony
during which all the islanders wear masks, so nobody, alas, can
say for certain which one is Gaugin.
!&&?
ftkxIfM&forortimldttd attstetat.
The second missing undergraduate is William CuUen Sigafoos,
Oregon State freshman, who went one day last fall to a dis-
reputable vendor named A. M. Sashweight to buy a pack of
Marlboro Mr. Sashweight did not have any Marlboros be-
cause Marlboro are only sold by reputable vendors. However,
he told S.gafoos that he had another brand which was just as
Rood, and Sigafoos, being but an innocent freshman, beheved
Well sir, vou and I know there is no other brand as good as
M,rlUm, That fine filter, that flavorful flavor that pleasure,
that joy, that fulfillment-are Marlboro's and Marlboro 8 .tone.
All of this was quickly apparent to young os and he
flew into a terrible rage. "As good as Marlboros indeed b.
shrieked, kicking his roommate furiously. "I "
back to that mendacious Mr. Sashweight and givehim athrash-
in he wont soon forget With that he seised his lacrosse bat
and rushed out. , vrnw
Mr Sashweight heard him coming and ? J
Mr Sa,hweight, before he became a Jto.j.lilt .
taken numerous pri.es as a cross-countryrunner, altottoKt
he would soon outdistance young Sigafoos. But he reckoned
wittort Sigafooss stick-to-itiveness. At last report the two
of them had passed Cleveland. When they $C
oard, bad Mr. Sashweight will get his lumps from Sigafoos,
vou may be sure, and I, for one, am glad.
The third missing undergraduate, also JL
Benmngton sophomore named W-yj
she never intended to leave college at alb She was merely P
home for Christmas on the
road, and during the jSSZ not wish to
on her. Being a kept silent. The next
make an unseemly outcry,!? Miss Sigafoos
morning, alas, the railroad went J"V . Indiana.
today is lying forgotten on a hng near J'
Fortunately she to. plenty of Marlboros with her.

And how obout thm r-tof u' n't Ukm
Marlboro? Or it ou TTZ-e
m.rs.oUHawotrhmp" BmmT ltefP
Fiats Solve Parking Problem
Extention Service Carries
Mobile Education7 To Many
The owners of these two Fiats have found an ans v cr to ECC's acute parking problem. The two small cars
park in one space in front of the library. (Photo by Tom Jackson,
Opening Abroad
Placement Bureau Offers Varied Positions
The American Student Information. ters is located at Jahnstrasse 56-a interview
Service, a non-profit aeency that
a non-profit agency
locates summer jobs in Europe for
American college students, is looking
for students to fill such summer jobs
as lifeguard on the French Riviera,
construction engineer in French
Equatorial Africa, jazz musician,
gun-maker in Spain, water ski in-
structor in Switzerland and private
sec re ary in Germany. The Service,
which has been placing American
ollege students in Europe for two
yea is, now has over 3,000 positions,
in all fields, open to US students.
ASIS also has arranged a special
student "summer package costing
$329.00, for members of the organ-
ization. Included in the three hun-
dred twen:y-nine dollar package is
the round-trip air fare to Europe,
thiee hour orientation course upon
arrival, free first night accommoda-
tions, a summer job. complete health
and accident insurance for 95 days
and the use of the many ASIS fa-
cilities which include free postal
service, social receptions, etc.
The non-profit agency headquar-
yours:
P
This is the B-52. Advanced as it
may be, this airplane has one thing
in common with the first war-
galleys ot ancient Egypt and
with the air and space vehicles of
the future. Someone must chart its
course. Someone must navigate it.
For certain young men this pre-
sents a career of real executive
opportunity. Here, perhaps you
will have the chance to master a
profession full of meaning, excite-
ment and rewards .as a Naviga-
tor in the U. S. Air Force.
To qualify for Navigator train-
ing as an Aviation Cadet you must
be an American citizen between 19
and 2b) 2single, healthy and in-
telligent. A high school diploma is
required, but some college is highly
desirable. Successful completion of
the training program leads to a
Commission as a Second Lieuten-
ant and your Navigator wings.
If you think you have what it
takes to measure up to the Avia-
tion Cadet Program for Naviga-
tor training, see your local Air
Force Recruiter. Or clip and mail
this coupon.
There's a place for tomorrow's
leaders on the - y -
Aerospace Team.
Air boYcc
MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY
AVIATION CADET INFORMATION
DEPT. SCL02
OX 7SM, WASHINGTON 4, B.C.
I am between 19 and 26Va, a citizen
of the U.S. and a high school graduate
withyear of college. Pleast
send me detailed information on the
Aviation Cadet program.
NAMf 1
Frankfurt-Main, Germany, and they
have a branch office at the Univer-
sity of Bridgeport, Bridgeport, Con-
necticut. However, students inter-
ested in summer jobs are requested
to write directly to the European of-
fice.
MEN WITH CHEMISTRY AND
BIOLOCICAL SCIENCE
BACKGROUNDS
A representative of the Upjohn
Company (an old established phar-
maceutical firm) will be on campus
Thursday, February 18, to talk with
young men.
Interested students may attend a
meeting at 3 p.m in Room 202 of
the Administration Building. In-
dividual conferences will be arranged
by the representative.
Descriptive literature is on file in
the Placement Bureau for students
who wish to ev.imine it.
TEACHING OPPORTUNITIES
Representatives from the school
systems listed below will be on cam-
pus before examinations to interview
interested students. Sign up for in-
terviews at the Placement Bureau be-
fore noon, Saturday, February 13.
East Orange, New JerseyWish
to interview only people in upper
half of their class. Especially inter-
ested in primary and grammar grade
majors, but will talk with others.
West Covina, California -Want
teachers in following fields: primary
and grammar grades, English, Span-
ish, French, mathematics, social stud-
ies, chemistry and physics, business
education, girls physical education,
industrial arts.
Hal'imore County, VirginiaWant
teachers in following fields: art, busi-
ness, dramatics, English, French,
Spanish, home economics, industrial
arts, mathematics, girls physical ed-
ucation, science, social studies.
Office hours of the Placement Bu-
reau: Monday through Friday S:30
a.m. to 12 -1:80 p.m. to 4:30 p.m
Saturday 8:30 a.m. to 12.
YOUNG MEN
Representatives from the compan-
ies listed below will be on campus ia
the next few days to interview in-
terested young men. Students who
would like to talk with one or both
of these representatives, go to the
Placement Bureau and sign up for an
by noon, Saturday, Feb-
ruary 13.
Lever Brothers CompanyInter-
ested in young men for management,
personal work, and selling.
W. T. Grant CompanyInterested
in young men for management, sell-
ing, merchandising. Descriptive lit-
erature is available in Placement Bu-
reau.
News In Brief
ARTICLES ON DISPLAY
On display in the lobby of
Joyner Library at East Carolina
College is a display of articles
from Venezula, contributed by
Betty Huffman, a foreign lan-
guage major who graduated in
1954. The display, prepared by
members of the Department of
Foreign Languages, ranges from
a large hammock to a child's
bracelet.
-Educating some three thousand
people and expecting over five thou-
sand for the year of 1960-1961, the
Extension Service at East Carolina
College is carrying out its policy of
"mobile education
Few people at East Carolina are
aware of the importance of this
group and the endeavor it makes to
provide for those not affiliated with
a college, education either for self-
satisaction or for use toward a col-
lege degree.
The Extension Service at East
Carotins College is under the super-
vision of Dr. Ralph Brimly. This pro-
gram began six years ago under the
sponsorship of Dr. Howard J. Mc-
(iinnis who passed the work on to
Dr. Orville Phillips. Dr. Ed. J. Car-
tel ucceeded Phillips. Dr. Brimly,
w ho has been in charge of the plan
for the past two years, took over
the job after Carter.
Enrollment has risen from 749
students of six years ago to over
:()() today. Courses are taught in
Manteo, Elizabeth City, Raleigh,
Wilmington, and in North Hampton,
Harnett, Onslow, Beaufort, Bruns-
wick, and Cumberland counties. It
covers to its best ability the whole
of Eastern North Carolina.
Seymour Johnson Air Base in
Goldsboro, Cherry Point Marine Base
at Cherry Point, and Camp Lejeune
at Jacksonville require over fifty of
the sixty-some classes already being
taught. There are seventy-five class-
es scheduled fo- the Spring with the
armed-forces participating in over
hree-fouiths of them.
K. ( extension classes are taught
ninci pally at night and vary from
business courses to courses in social
studies, mathematics, English, Rus-
sian, German, Spanish, and French.
"It is the area of course planning
that provides the most trouble
says Dr. Brimly. "After prelimin-
ary surveys have been taken, teach-
( is selected, and tests given to select
interesting courses, we have little
trouble acquiring more students.
There are some adults who will drive
fifty or sixty miles to attend classes.
When the initiative and the want of
education is that great, we do all
we (an to provide the best education
possible.
"The Extension Service at East
Carolina is bringing E. C. to the
doorsteps of this area of the state.
Our motto is: 'We Serve This is
one example of that dedication
Brimly commented.
To provide education on a more
international basis, tours to various
parts of the globe are offered each
summer. These tours cost the partic-
ipants a little over one thousand dol-
lars and if designated can provide
nine quarter hours of college credit
in the field which the tour stresses.
Last year a group of people under
the direction of Dr. Robert Cramer,
who is a member of the Geography
Department, toured Canada taking
in the countryside, its topography,
and other such details.
This summer there will be two
trips offered. One will be to Europe
under the direction of Myrtle Clark
in the field of Education and the
other trip will be to Mexico. Fran-
cis Neale of the Art Department will
direct the latter trip.
"There are many big plans and
ideas waiting to be devoured by this
Extension Service. Today, it is the
largest off-campus program in North
Carolina Brimly said.
"Young adults and also older peo-
ple are entering this program of
education. This whole trend is going
to continue and expansion is one of
our main objectives he concluded.
I
STREET-
CITY
COUNTY.
.STATI
Tim:
Christiw Si 11.mi.
Monitor
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D College Student Q Faculty Member
Name
Address
CU SPONSORS CARNIVAL
All organizations and clubs on the
campus are invited by the College Un-
ion to participate in the "1960 Spring
Carnival" that is being sponsored by
he Special Projects Committee of the
IT Student Board.
The purpose of the Carnival is to
provide entertainment for the stu-
licnts, faculty, staff and families, and
Lo help organizations on campus earn
some extra money and good publicity.
The organizations that wish to par-
ticipate in the Carnival should send
a representative to a meeting on Wed-
nesday, February 17, 1960 at 8:00 p.m.
in the TV Room of the College Union.
At this time, instructions, fees, ex-
penses, and regulations for the Car-
nival will be discussed, and organiza-
tions may apply for booth space. Booth
pace is limited, so it is advisable
that organisations send a representa-
tive to this important first meeting
commented Cynthia Mendenhall, rec-
reational director of CU.
ATTENTION SENIORS
All students who plan to com-
plete their requirements for
graduation by August, 1960,
should make application in the
Registrar's Office immediately.
The catalogue states that a stu-
dent must make application for
graduation not later ttaan 2'i
quarters prior to the completion
of his requirements.
GEOCRAPHY FRAT TO MEET
The monthly dinner meeting of
Gamma Theta Upsilon will be held
Thursday night, February 11, at the
Silo Restaurant. The dinner will be
served at 6 p.m and afterwards Miss
Venetia Cox, of Greenville, will pre-
sent a series of colored slides, taken
during her stays in Hong Kong and
other areas of the Far East
Rawl Displays Art
Work By Lounsbury
An exhibition by Barbara Louns-
bury of Wilmington is now on dis-
play in the Kate W. Lewis Art Gal-
lery, Rawl building. It will be on view
until February 15 and is open to
the public.
A senior, Miss Lounsbury is spe-
cializing in commercial art. Included
in her exhibition are examples of
layout and lettering in this field.
In .academic work, Miss Lounsbury
is a candidate for the liberal ar.s
degree with a major in art and a
minor in business. Her name has fre-
quently appeared on the Dean's List
of superior students.
As a participant in student activ-
ities at East Carolina Miss Louns
bury has served on the staff of the
Buccaneer, student lyearbook, and
as a member of the Productions Com-
mittee of the annual musical staged
by the Student Government Associa-
tion. She belongs also to Sigma Pi
Alpha, national foreign languages
fraternity; the College Choir; the
East Carolina College Art Club; and
the TV Guild, student organization
on the campus.
City
2or State
This rol offer tvaiiablt ONLY to eolieg
tu5, faculty mmber and co'lcgt llferartas.
They're Having A Little
Trouble with Her Gazebo . .
But Doesn't
Everyone?
M-6-M presents
GLinn
FORD
DEBBIE
REVnOLDS
GAZEBO
CARL REINER ISms
.
PITT Theatre
Starts FRIDAY, Feb. 12
Campus Calendar
Feb. 11: Beginners' Bridge Class,
College Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m.
Feb. 12: Movie: "Blue Angel Au-
stin Aud 7:00 p.m. FBLA Val-
entine Dance, Wright Aud 8:00
p.m.
Feb. 13: Basketball Game: ECC vs
Elon, Gym 8:00 p.m.
Feb. 15: College Union Student Board
Meeting, TV Room, 6:?0 p.m. Dan-
forth Lecture: William R. Barn-
hardt, Lib. Aud 7:30 p.m.
Feb. 16: Intercollegiate Bridge Tour-
nament, College Union TV Room,
7:00 p.m. Danforth Lecture: Wil-
liam R. Barnhardt, Lib. Aud 7:30
p.m.
Feb. 17: Danforth Lecture: William
R. Barnhardt, Lib. Aud 7:30 p.m.
Feb. 18: Beginners' Bridge Class,
College Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m.
Feb. 19: Exam Hop, College Lounge,
8:30 p.m.
Feb. 20: Opera Workshop Perform-
ances: "The Medium McGinnis
Aud 8:00 p.m. Alumni Games
Tournament, Open to Public, South
Cafeteria, 7:30 p.m. Football Game:
Alumni vs Varsity, College Sta-
dium, 2:00 p.m. Basketball Game:
ECC vs Atlantic Christian, Gymn
8:00 p.m.
Feb. S)l: Opera Workshop .Perform-
ance: "The Medium McGinnis
I Aud 3:30 p.m
Merritt Welcomes
New Drill Team
Col. Norman F. Merritt, professor
of Air Science, welcomed the newly
formed Angel Flight into the Air
Force team at the Flight's February
3rd meeting.
Angel Flight, an outgrowth of a
girls' drill team which was started
lfst May, is sponsored by the Arnold
Air Society and is the coed auxiliary
to the A.F.R.O.TX at East Carolina.
Thfs arganiaation is a chapter of the
national Angel Flight.
In his welcoming speech, Col.
Merritt stated that the Angel Flight
is the "newest member of the Air
Force team Also he emphasized the
importance of keeping the objectives
of the organization in the foreground
at all times.
Already the Angel Flight has aid-
ed the A.FjR.O.T.C. by serving coffee
to the cadets during the "March-
athon" and by redecorating the cadet
lounge. In addition'Angel Flight re-
ceived a certificate of appreciation
from the Women of the Moose for
aiding in the WOOW "Announce-
athon" for the March of Dimes. At
the present the Flight is learning
arill procedures.
Cadet Major Robert L. Needs, liai-
son, stated, "I feel that the newly
formed Angel Flight will surge ahead
as an organization on campus
Major Dot Hayes, commander, ex-
pressed her pride in being affiliated
with the Angel Flight. Major Hayes
feels that "the determination the
girls possess will be a deciding fac-
tor in the success of the organiza-
tion
Officers of the Flight are Major
Dot Hayes, commander; Captain Mar-
vis Byrd, executive officer; 1st Lt.
Lib Powell, administrative services
officer; 1st Lt. Joan Phelps, comp-
troller; 1st Lt. Judy Stott, inform-
ation services officer; Master Sgt.
Joyce Meads, sergeant-at-arms; 2nd
Lt. Sue Davis, materials officer;
Master Sgt. Delores lAvery, assistant
to the A-S.O and Cadet Major Rob-
ert L. Needs, liaison officer. Captain
Vance Lockamey, Commandant of
Cadets, is the military advisor to An-
gel Flight.
At this time there are 19 chartered
members of Angel Flight. During
Spring Quarter the Flight will hold
a pledge period.
Art Students Display
Examples Of Sculpture
Eleven students in classes taught
by Wesley Crawley of the Depart-
ment of Art are displaying at the
college examples of their work in
sculpture.
The exhibition, sponsored by the
Department of Art, is on view in
display cases at the entrance of the
Rawl building. It is open to the
public and will be shown until the
end of February.
Included are works illustrating the
use of different materials and pro-
cesses. The sculptures are examples
of weldjngi carved concrete, cast
lead, direct and cast plaster, carved
marble, carved wood, and construc-
tions in more than one material.
Students whose work is being
shown are George B. Jolley, Anne
Rankin, John Merritt, James E.
Smith and Donald B. McAdams, Ed-
warT. Rogers, AHce Frost Smith,
Betty V. Gaskins, James B. Roper,
Nancy A. Thurmond, and Sue Litjtrell.

Si





qWJgSDAT, PEaRTTAUt
EAST CAROMNJAN
EAST U A tt U li t iv i n-saBssss -
PAGE FOUR H i xxazzz W
Pirate Cagers Seek Sixth Straight Home W
Sat
,
PIRATE'S
I) E N
By JOHNNY HUDSON
EC HM Tourney Problems
Locals Regain Bohunk
With Win Over ACs
Trophy
Bulldogs
dents will once again be handicapped when the
East Cat olina s udent
State tournament opens in two weeks. As in past years, the North
ers will be throwing round balls at the hoops at the same time EC
hovered ovei the books, making preparations for exams.
Pirate cagers will engage in their exams early and will be off to
ey ti,n and the wintor get-together with fingers crossed. Not only do
iv seven rival clubs to worry about but there is that left-over
n exams,
, doubt that BC is at a disadvantage tournament-wise.
I , western section of the state. ECC has few supporters unless
and i- able to gain a following. Few BOC teams have
ament but if a vote was cast now. on the pre-tourney
loubt the I960 troop of Pirates would get their share.
Grads Start Workouts
u , . leaked out that members of the Alumni group have started
thei. bout with the Varsity on February 20th. The trend
years has seen the grads lose their poise after a few minutes due-
ope t remedy this to a degree this spring.
According the East Carolina coaching staff, winter drills seem
moothly. Seventeen men were lost last season and the
, were numerous.
Quarterback will he the big vacant spot next season. Stuart Holland
be 1 e man to step into the s.gnal-callihg slot. Holland has been im-
sive in winter drills.
n Clayton, the high . touted freshman, has been the standout
writers predicted he would be. He has a keen shooting eye and
nj, piayri been something to watch.
One ,f his big assets has been rebounding. Standing at only 6-3,
aded freshman looks as if he has taken jumping lessons from
ited kangaroo somewhere along the way. He leads the ECC club
and can jump with the biggest in this conference.
Sinatra Choice of Survey
Vnd so goes the story of the East Carolina Physical Education major
tball coaching position. He visited a sports-
. immunity and was flabbergasted with the facih-
- r. er working conditions of the school.
He was readj to sit down and talk "turkey" with his board of em-
e phase caused a turn in his stream of thinking. It
he community was a so-called "Monday Morning Quarter-
h took an intensified interest in the football team. "We
tve a meeting every Monday with the coach and chat about
iy night game, offering any advice that we can one otffcw.
I the young coaching prospect turned down the job?0'
survey was taken of leading sport figures. The question:
ad youi choice of being anybody in the world other than yourself,
Id 'you rather be? Most popular among the sport celebraties was
Fi S d a. Others listed varu-i from Mickey Mantle. Ernest Hemming-
way Winstot i c ill, Tom Dooley (Dr.1, dim Bishop, Joe E. Brown,
Jackie U Jim Non-is. Some were contented and didn't want to
be anybody else.
The mnk bucket" almost started a riot at the recent East
Christian game in Wilson. East Carolina won in base-
. and could have rightfully been in possession of it prior
- ce the Pirates won the basketball game, the near-riot
prevented had blast Carolina been given the old token
ck is rapidly closing the gap in the individual scoring de-
Vit.h a 2-1.5 mark, he has moved into close range of weekly
ler Dannv Sewell.
Like .he Greeks in thou Trojan
orse a , Ca dina, basketball play-
ers and students alike, convei
on Wilson' C ounity Center s
Thud d completely
Christian ' a
Visiting Elon Ranked As
Underdogs In NS Battle
The Pi
Stat
oopmen
H UEONAW)
will be host
in
. 11
Atlantic
U action, which took
I
FORWARD IKE RIDDICK . . . i shown scoring two points in the above
picture. Riddick and teammates had a busy week, winning three games.
They defeated Appalachian, Atlantic Christian, and Pfeiffer.
ampt'd
respects.
n the ba ke ha
, backseat to the night's activ.ts
,eveml times, East Carolina contin-
, lts surge of late by mowing
the pesky archrivala from A -
lantk. Christian 70-67, before a pck-
ed house that didn't even p.esent
standing room.
A tremendous rebounding perform
ance l(, junior forward Don Smith
os the keen shooting eye of all five
Larters ,(i:lii the Bucs to thetr
th straight and seventh win in
ISI eigh games. It gave I
, . an 8-4 conference
mark. ,
Smitl . a Poi ' ' native, bao -
in ia rebounds in the rough-and-
. . , . ip saw tempers flare
v timeS. The rebounding oj
Smith hi be I this season dre
lauds from both coaching staffs.
Steady Ike Riddick was a wee-bi
. , his usual () .accuracy
from the floor b it was still the hot-
the- court, tallying 23
. ing honors.
e of freshmen, Lacy V.
ton, were right be-
: Riddick with 15 point
n showed most of hi rang
in the first half while West Miss
is points in the final twen-
i mites.
Two quick baskets by l itton I '-
a by Riddick a
. . Easl Carolina into i
s.j i, . . ; in ites had
s, ,i. Although unknown to the roar-
i mocke I
i tch the the Pirate"
, . t front 1
ead to as
12 - but the spunky
hack on the
Dick Kn c. A
Sal niKht
Conf battle.
are
a tOUgh
, imes in m
mo.
te already p
1
Charter Bus
Vn, Ht udent h interested i"
tak.n, the trip U & "
ur basketball gaate Febru
iry 17. should contact S(.
President Dallas Welia. If enough
students -how interest the S.
will charter i special bw f ,n
purpose, scys Welta.
KcDaniel Wins
Women's Winter
Tennis Tourney
M. Dai iel i I winnei
e Winter Q W
Tab - Tei i Tou
i h
2 i n
Mt-Danie
, . . red
go undefeated in her I
Ml'
Mi-
-

. K :
M Kil
h a
R
i i
e iialftime
es,
rhe est

,
I
CO-ATT AlNS . . . .limnu Meads (left) and Jake Smith (riht) talk aver
the swim situation for the Pirate. East Carolina is host to the I . of (.eorgia
Friday afternoon at 4:00.
; o i e as
. ised Build fere I
i . ek and West m
I . tit lead and af-
U'i Iden net ed a ba e1. Riddick it
ire quit
Ea i, averaging 81 poin's
er pjrme and hitting at a 17' ! accur-
v fri n the 1 r, ' U a little bit
night but
ed a re e mark. The chai .
' i , Rai Smith made good on
' C md -1
I mal Standings: Woaien's Singles
McDai .
J,

.i K
M-
I

T e
or a
the "
; h ended in a
hunk Trophy an
Vaseline
BODIES IN MOTION 219-220
Advanced Pursuit of Females
Professor Stalk
Time Motion Study. Study of time required
to set dates in motion. (1) with ordinary hair
tonics, (2) with "Vaseline" Hair Tonic. Con-
clusive proof that latter more effective on
men's hair and women's reactions. Special
emphasis on common use of water on hair.
Evaporation of same with dire consequences
noted. Proof that 'Vaseline1 Hair Tonic does
not evaporate but replaces oil that water re-
moves. Laboratory specimen: H. Ragmop, be-
fore and after 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic. Before,
a walking hayloft. After. B.M.O.C. This course
specially suited to Bachelors of Science, Bach-
elors of Art, and just plain bachelors.
Materials: one 4 oz. bottle 'Vaseline'Hair Tonic full)
one little black book (empty)
x. f?
Vaseline
m&iti
wmtiG
ootns and Conditions j
?he tfcWwl Way ! I
jv pw Seil an(
I jph idriiff
Gators Post Win
Over EC Swimmers
The undefeated University of Flor-
ida swimmers toon nine oat of elev-
en first places to defeat the East
Carolina tankmen 63-32.
The only high spots for the Pirate
mermen were the diving and 40
yard freestyle relay events. Bob Kin-
grey captured first place in the div-
ing and Tommy Carroll, Jim Meads,
Jake Smith, and Tummy Tucker
swept the 400 yard freestyle relay.
Illness and injury took their toll
on both squa Is. Richard Edwards,
Pirate freestyle artist, was confined
to the infirmary. Steve MeBride,
University of Florida diver, was in-
jured while doing a practice dive
several hours before the contest.
11,1
T
ovei
wooden-token bucket passed back
and between th ols, saw
tal of 29 called but officials.
Joe Mills and Lou Bello, bad their
hands full keeping the rough action
to a mini mam.
F.ast Carolina
Smith
West
Bowes
Riddick
I "layton
Lewis
Totals
Atlantic Christian
Shouldice
Dunn
Men .
Knox
Ward
Atkinson
Fill i game
Harris
Totals
East Carolina
Atlantic Christian
4 1-3
6 3-5
3 2-4
in aw
6 3-4
I) 0-0
4 9
3 15
3 8
y 23
2 15
0 0
29 12-19 15 70
3
2 6
2 5
0-1
1-3
1-1
2-4
0-0
5-7
0-0
2-2
23 11-18 14 57
34 3670
28 29 57
3
9
o
4
0
0
5 20
0 4
4 IS
1 I
0 2
F l is a
itched affa r, w bich Ra-
na and N K '
Kilpal K
.
Jei : SCcDan I Davis in
. 21-15. 17-21, 17-21.
Flinchuna then easily de-
M Daniel-Davis 21-18. 21-17,
hard hit forehad
drives - red consi I for I
ers. McDaniei-Davia had won a
. from the ie-
sive p!a, of -I ' Ballance-Jesse
ell, bj I 22-24. 21-12,
21-13.
Final Staadiitgs: Mixed Double-
1. R i Kilpatrick-Nonnan Ki1
woo1 lost (7
it)
2. ' S tn-RiLref F
.s I lost n) games won
2 lost)
IfcDaniel-Albert Dai
I . (6 g
-t i
1. Judy Ballance Jease Powt I
ttch won 3
! i iy M inshevi -Ti Lane
a w on 4
Swim eet
Here Friday
The hi
U am
rtiM'
for the h.nv '
t lid
( oath IC
w im m
hack in!
lie : i ' -
er-it ol 1
The d
hae !
ncbedule and "
i-n't tin row
Florida dri
days tor m-i
deep SOatll
ECC Lassies
Defeat Chowan
it's clear,
it's clean,
it's
Vaseline
HAIR TONIC
'ViMliM' is a refistBrtd tradmir)(
ot Chsthrufh Pond's Inc.
Delicious Food
Served 24 Hours
Air Conditioned
CAROLINA
GRILL
Corner W. 9th & Dickinson
VU SQUAD . . Pictured above is the East Carolina (rirla
two and lost one. They met Campbell here Wednesday night.
basketball team. The local dam haV


Title
East Carolinian, February 11, 1960
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
February 11, 1960
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.602
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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