East Carolinian, April 17, 1962


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Easttarolinian
Name XXXVII
EC Collegians?
E a s? Carolina Coll ege
GREENVILLE, N. cTtUESDAY. APRTT. 17 iqao
Number 39
Greenville Selects
Beauty Here Tonight
Students Elect
Class Officers;
Plan Run-Offs
The SGA class elections held last
Thursday yielded the new officers
for the 1962-63 school year. Those jcomniriTkarfw
East Carolina Coeds
Complete For Crown
By KATHRYN E. JOHNSON
"Here she comes, . . . " When heard tonight in Wright
Auditorium, these words will hail the new Miss Greenville
Beginning at 7:30 p.m the Miss$??-
Greenville Pageant is sponsored by
the Greenville Junior Chamber of
iC? adult costume prize was presented to Hazel Worthington
one place to Don Strickland in the Annual College Union Carni-
I ast Wednesday night in the Union Lounge to benefit
thi
stadium fund.
Promotes Marriage Education
Popenoe Lectures On
Family Interrelationship
r. Paul Popenoe, noted authority on family relations
riage counseling, will give a series of four lectures
lay and Thursday, April 25 and 26, under the spon-
of the Family Life Committee of the college.
-? ?e Douglas committee I?
has announced the sched-
taHos by Dr. Popenoe and
an invitation to attend to
are interested.
Ml meetings will take place
the Austin Auditorium,
cs to be discussed and the
?- of meeting are as fol-
lows: The Psychology of Sex
Differences, 9 a. m. Wednes-
: "How Do You Know
Vou're In Love 7:30 p.m.
v?'ln.sday; "Is There a New
Morality?" 10 a.m Thurs-
aj : and "Marriage Is What
14 ??u Make It 7:30 p.m. Thurs-
day.
at EC, Dr. Poyenoe will
d a number of conferences
students and others.
?ope Dr. Popenoe's coming
be a real service to all stu-
n& interested individuals'
Douglas stated m announcing
' :ures. "He is a world au-
? ity and a muoh sought-after
.ker
Dr. Popenoe has had a long
a n d distinguished career.
Among other posts, he has
served as editor of the Journal
of Heredity; executive secre-
cy of the American Social
Hvgine Association in New
Wk; secretary and director
of research of the Human Bet-
terment Foundation of Pasa-
dena, California; and lecturer
in biology at the University
of Southern California.
iA widely read author, he has
ritften more than a dozen books
and numerous articles in the field
of social biology.
During recent years he has de-
voted much of his time to the pro-
motion of education for marriage
and family life in schools and col-
legos in the United States. Accom-
panied by Mi's. Popenoe, he is now
on a lecture tour of a month and
a half. He will come to Greenville
from Florida and after has East
Carolina engagement will go to
Jacksonville. N. C.
elected were:
Senior Class: Giles Hopkins,
president; Diana Foster, treasurer;
James Temme and John Waters,
male senators; and Barbara Ryan,
woman senator. There will be a
run-oflf between Ronnie McCrea
and Buddy Wyatt for vice presi-
dent; Katherine Raynor and Bar-
bara Ann Ellis for secretary, and
Brenda Vaughan and Jo Nell Ker-
ley for woman -senator. The sen-
ions voting in the election number-
ed 238.
Junior Class: Bryan Bennett,
president; Anne Greenwell, treas-
urer; Gary Idol and Jerry Fulford,
male senators. There will be a run-
off between Dee Smith and Mack
Worthington for vice president;
Nancy Gilbert and Nancy Roberts
for secretary; and Linda Minton
and Marie Brewer for female
senator. Only 185 juniors voted in
the election.
Sophomore Class: Gill IRiuder-
man, president; Gregory Michael,
secretary; Sandee Denton, treas-
urer; and Burke Stancil, male
.senator. There will be a run-off
between Judd Gray and Berk Ste-
phens for vice president; Cornelia
Holt and Carol Daugherty, fe-
rn-ale senator. There were 270 soph-
omores participating in the voting.
Ed Lee and Dottie Farmer were
elected male and female senators,
respectively, representing Day
Students.
Run-off elections will be held to-
morrow, April 18, from 12 to 4
, p.m. in the College Union, Wright
Building.
adults is $2.00; for students it is
$1.50.
Eleven Contestants
Eleven contestants will appear
in evening gown, bathing suit, and
talent competition.
Donna lAinn Bingham, a 19-year-
old freshman from Raleigh, is be-
ing sonsored by Chi Omega Sorori-
ty. She will present a dramatic
interpretation.
From Zebulon, Carolyn Virginia
Beck is a 19-year-old sophomore.
Sponsored by Alpha Omicron Pi,
she will ,pJay the piano.
Sponsored by Kappa Delta, San-
era Louise Fitzgibbon will present
a dance skit. A 19-year-old sopho-
more, she hails from Southern
Pines.
With dancing and singing as
her talent, Polly Linda Bunting
from Wi'lliamston, is sponsored by
Sigma, Sigma, Sigma. Nineteen
years old, she is a sophomore.
Patricia Ann Hugigins is Jarvis
Hall's entry. A 19-year-old sopho-
more from Fort Barnwell, she will
present a dramatic skit.
Appearing in a dance niuimber,
Outstanding PHT
Awards Available
Any senior whose wife did not
receive her PHT award at the ban-
quet on (April 3 may pick it upi ih,
(the SGA office any time this week.
Outstanding scholarship awards
may also be picked up in the SGA
office.
Anyone unable to find his award
tray leave a note for Ken Trogden
to get it for him.
Playhouse Holds
Outdoor Show
Shakespeare's "The Merchant of
Venice" will be presented May 9,
10, and 11 as a special attraction
of the 1962 Greenville Fine Arts
Festival.
Cast Of Twenty-five
Produced by the EC Playhouse
under the direction of Dr. J. A.
Withey, the comedy will have a
cast of twenty-five students and
faculty members and' a technical
and production staff of approxi-
mately twenty people.
Mrs. Lois Garren and Larry
Griffin will appear in the leading
roles of Portia and Shylock.
Fifth Outdoor Production
"The Merchant of Venice" is the
fifth outdoor Shakespearean pro-
duction to be staged at the college
by the EC Playhouse in recent
years?"Macbeth" in 1966, "As
You Like It" in 1957, "Romeo and
Juliet" in 1959, and "Midsummer
Night's Dream m 1960.
Choir Performs
Easter Oratorio;
Soloists Sing
In observance of the Easter Sea-
son, "The Seven Last Words of
Christ oratorio by the French
composer Dubois, was presented
Monday night, by the East Caro-
lina College Ohapel Choir, at 8 p.m.
in Austin Auditorium.
Since it was composed in 1867,
the oratorio has been popular
with audiences and has been
performed frequently at Easter
time because of the beauty
and effectiveness of the music.
A short work, "The Seven Last
Words of Christ" was performed
by soprano, tenor, and baritone
soloists and a chorus. The soloists
ang and .spoke the words of
Christ; and ithe chorus represented
the multitude, either those who
were railing at Him or His griev-
ing friends.
Dr. Carl Hjortsvang of the
Music Department directed the
oratorio. Soloists were Mrs.
JoAnn Sparks Jernigan, so-
prano; John Berry, tenor; and
Robert Tilley and Jerry Ely,
baritones. Ted Gossett was the
organist.
The group is scheduled to be
heard over WRAL-TV, Channel 5,
in "The ISIeven Last Words of
Christ" Alpril 22 at 2 p.m. on the
Burness Ann Mclrwean is a 20-
year-old sojphomore from New
Bern and is sponsored by Alpha
Phi.
Judith Gale Murphy, Ragsdale
Hall's entry, is a freshman from
Youngsville. Nineteen years old,
she will sing in the talent competi-
tion.
A violin number will be the pre-
sentation of Alpha Delta Pi's 19-
year-old Kay Battle Yerby. A
freshman, she calls Raleigh "home
From Oxford, Bonnie Currin is
20 years of age. Sponsored by Wil-
son Hall, this sophomore will sing.
Presenting a dramatic interpre-
tation, Doming Jenkins is sponsor-
ed by Delta Zeta. She is a 23-year-
old senior from Greenville.
Freshman Linda Faye Evans is
Alpha Xi Delta's 19-year-old entry.
A comedy skit will be presented
by this Fayetteville girl.
The president of the Jay Cees,
Mr. Leon Mooie will present a wel-
coming address and will introduce
the Master of Ceremonies, Jim
Capps, the judges, and the contest-
ants.
Five Judges
The five judges are as follows:
Mr. Jim Reid, a well-known fig-
ure in radio and a judge in several
fast beauty pageants for the title
of Miss Greenville as well as Miss
North Carolina;
Mr. Ned P. Everette, Assistant
Legal Counsel to the House Merch-
ant Marine and Fisheries Com-
mittee of the House of Represen-
tatives;
Mr. and Mrs. Bugs Barringer,
eminent husband-and-wife team of
Professional (photographers;
Mrs. Ted Bissette, the former
Betty Lane Evans, Miss Greenville,
Miss North lOaroliha, and fourth
runner-up for Miss America of
1959.
Attending the pageant as a
special guest will be Miss .America
of 1962, Miss Maria Beale Fletcher.
Registration Set
For Men's Dorm
Preregi'stration for rooms in the
men's dormitories will be held the
eek of Alpril 23 following the
Easter holidays.
Applications for room assign-
ment will be accepted from rising
.seniors and graduate student on
Tuesday, April 24. Applications
will be accepted from rising jun-
iors on !April 2S and from soph-
omores on Thursday, April 26, and
?Friday, April 27.
Applications for dormitory as-
signments can be obtained from the
dormitory counselors in Aycock
Jormitory and Jones Hall or from
the Housing Office, Room 214, Ad-
ministration Building
A $10.00 deposit must be paid
weekly "Vignettes in Sound" series ttr' " ?
- .t? ! ?P?ieation can be received by the
Housing Office.
I of the EC Music Department.





s
I
?ge 2
EAST CAROLINIAN
y, April
?
What Is A Weil-Educated Man?
Seeking Knowledge
Becomes Way Of Life
We are spending four years of our lives here at EC to
become educated. When it's over how will we know we are
educated? What is a well-educated man?
As educated people we will be confronted with the same
problems that every man faces; however, the educated man
is one who has learned where to find the answers to the
problems. Formal education teaches us to think and to
reason.
If educated, we are at home with new ideas. Our mind
is questioning and seeking- knowledge and truth. Our minds
are open and spirits free. Through education we gain a
sense of relationship between the real and the ideal and the
possible to the actual.
As educated individuals we know that the right way
is not always the easiest way nor is it the one that is easiest
to defend. Mr. Label A. Katz expressed the idea, "It seems
to me that the well-educated man fears he isn't Educa-
tion and becoming educated is not a goal that we can speak
ot as "I have attained my goal; I am educated Education
is a way of life and a life-long process of pursuing truths.
If well-educated, we will turn our knowledge into wis-
dom and a rewarding life. We will know how to make daily
tasks meaningful. We will be alert for fresh ideas and new
adventures in the field of learning.
We will use the past and present to find meaning in
the future and wish to leave some accomplishment of ours
to future generations . . . whether it be a building or a
recipe. 6
We have seen what being well-educated will mean to
us and the people around us, but how do we become educated v
h. h !rufPS the best "ay t0 answer this question would
be by askxng more questions. Can we be well educated if we
have not learned enough about history and techniaues tf
art. music, architecture, and dance t7 give uTtlmflxtra
dimension of awareness which only trained senses can Po
v ide. Can we be educated without knowledge of a f oreism
language? We need to learn to think and feel as aliens
ediJSw theld ?f fTnds and relatives becoming
educated. e need to sound-off our ideas . . sillv thoujrh
they may be. Our education must have breadth and deptti
It mus be an education of high quality. "Once upon a time
an ancient monarch inquired as to whether or not there ?s
some comparatively easy and quick method by wWch he
could acquire the basic principles of geometry. He va told
Sire, here is no royal road to geometry " Just as there
is no "royal road" to geometry, neither is (there one to any
ffTist ber ? W? mUSt 6iS 3nd Seek f0r k-dge
We realize that we do not know everything but keer,
m Syjwj A 7? d0 2? know- Eductiogn K?8
w? t of knowledge we become less inhibited
W e are now m the process of becoming well-educated
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
no couvee?&'?
Kissing Booth
Makes Fortune
AT Ctl Carnival
c.
h@Sxof qup- h&n amrWUHffAQfiSPBmo policy
WMYOU X?AUYAfUSr FULlFULLTUe MINIMUM
COUZ5B Zf&UillZmBNTS o& YOU FLUNK
Peace Corps Offers Positions
In Africa, Asia, Latin America
-v, serve in the
round of tests has j Peace Corps. While some projects
call for technical skills, many others
require men and women without
Mich formal or specialized training.
Among these are liberal arts
graduates for community develop-
ment projects and people with
general fanning backgrounds for
agricultural projects.
EastCi
Published semi-weekly by the students of East Carolina College
Greenville, North Carolina.
Member
Caroling Collegiate Press Association Associated Collegiate Press
Jean Peace
EDITOR
Managing: Editor
Assistant Managing Editor .
Associate Editor
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Assistant Business Manager
Proofreading- Director
Photographer
Cartoonists
Sports Writers
Keith Hobbs
BUSINESS MANAGER
Monty Mills
Kaye Burgess
Bill Griffin
Dan Ray
? Helen Kallio
? Bill Sullivan
Tom McAlister
Joe Brannon
Peace Corps Placement Tests
will be given Saturday, April 21,
in Civil Service Commission test-
ing- centers throughout the country.
The tests will be administered
at the following Peace Corps test
centers in North Carolina: Ash-
ville, Charlotte, Durham, Fayette-
I ville, and Goldsboro. All tests will
begin at 8:30 a.m.
This new
special significance: Applicants
are now being invited to train for
30 new Peace Corps projects in
Africa, Asia and Latin America.
Training will begin this summer
on college campuses throughout
the United States.
Many who take the tests will be
applicants who have sent in a
Peace Corps questionnaire avail-
able at Post Offices since the last
round of testing.
Interested persons wh0 have not
yet filled out a questionnaire will
also be .permitted to take the tests.
They will be accommodated on a
"space available" basis at the cen-
ters.
Peace Corps opportunities abroad
cover many fields?teaching nurs-
ing, engineering, plumbing, car-
L entry, agriculture, medicine, home
economics, architecture, city plan-
ning, geology, physical education.
Applicants must be American
citizens and at least 18 years of
age. (There is no upper age limit;
persons 60 and older are per-
forming key Peace Corps jobs
overseas). Married couples with-
out dependents children may apply,
providing both qualify
At the testing centers, each per-
on will be given his choice between
two types of Placement Tests. One
for men and women who would
s
IS
The
???? ' I ? '
. - .
echoing .
all these were a
of
I "nion caa ?
r:ight.
Twenty-seven ,
organisation
booth in th-
Masqueraders, cowl -
beat costume a
tley of sink
tfite, meander.
md. The well ?. - .
clown on the mai b
attracted much .
Geography ?
owing pies
Mr. Gritaner a
hate are off
who
We hear
made a fortune
: rhey had no ov
rt hot lips.
Freshman -
? "T
boys' kissing booth
Linda D
know what to thin
tng b ? ? . ?
' a: everybody was !
it was nfee to
, rofessors attendu
e. I r
like to be considered for positions
as teachers. For this, a bachelor's Financial Aid For
degree is required, but you do not! OnnimA1, ? U l
need to be an accredited teacher. UITtmer ISChOOl
The other test is for everyone
else who wants to
A limited n
scholarships f ?
summer school onl
tu students who h
tory academic rec
substantiate fin
Tuition for i
?25.
Application can ?
the Office of the I'?
Affairs, Room 221,

sate
???
Helpful Hints Offered
For College Dorm Coeds
?.
Larry Blizzard, Jay Arledge
Morrie Simpson, Tom James,
Tony Katsiae, Fred Webster
C?IUS?t nx GrkneS' Mony Mills Bil1 Griffin, Kaye
Burgess, Dan Ray, Donna Bingham, Helen Kallio, Carol Euler
Subscription and Exchange Director q' n !
bandee Fitabbon, Bowie Martin '
kBillPrSrTfr n- p n Jk? KiTkland Kaye Buress' M?y Mills,
Bill Griffin, Dan Ray, Carol Euler, Helen Kallio
Proofreaders Elaine Ginelson, freddie Skinner, Tom Jones,
?mi? rtntre11, C Cayton' Helen Kailio' ?
Typists py Rge, Tetta Simmon
"Never forget the 'everyman
for it is he, the man who does not
have a formalized education who
will teach you more than anyone
else. One of the things he'll teach
you is never to guess what people
are thinking in the recesses of
their minds. When you write, or
report, remember this 'everyman
He's the guy who will remember
you. And his remembrance will
spell the difference between your
failure and your success
(ACP) - Gleaned from
country's magazines for young
women- are the six most frequent-
ly-appearing helpful hints for pass-
ing an exam successfully
The FOURNIER NEWS, Chest-
nut Hill College, warns: "If fol-
lowed carefully, they will lead to
truly successful nervous break-
downs Here are the hints with the
paper's comments:
1- "Get a good night's sleep
Now, you couldn't even begin to
explain the absurdities contained
in his cheerful suggestion. Its
creator is completely out of con-
tact with reality.
2. "Eat a hearty breakfast A
reasonable demand, you say to
yourself - until you have concoct-
ed it. To make matters worse if
matters can get much worse, there
Offices on second floor of Wright Building.
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264
Subscription rate; $2.50 per year.
To those (people wishing to earn
their livelihood by pervnuvr and
penciling, Dorothy Kilgallen says
in April Campus Illustrated,
?Write! Don't talk about ft Don't
frlan it. Don't (think about it. Do It!
Close your door. Throw your
friends out. Become a hermit if
I necessary. But write
s usually an enormous picture, in
living color, 0f the aforementioned
breakfast. Invariably it will con-
tain several straggly bundles of
Parsley, a soft-boiled egg, a blob
of strawberry jam, a ?
jutee, and an ill-smelling, shape-
"Fi miilti-colored object titled
Early Morning Surprise Defin-
itely the work of a sadist
fuf" 7aT Somthinir cheer-
?. (a) you cannot see clearly
enough, to know what you are pZ
tmg on (b) you do not own any-
(c) the very thought of -some-
know what your friends would do
eaTr? y?? fm&9i ?P that
exam room at 9 a.m. with "some-
thing cheerful" on.
"Bring freshly
:ih Apparently
of a pointy pencil tip will brife"
your spirits and sei
to your gray, gray matter. If J
a re not permitted to write in V'
cil, freshly sharpened pen pon-
are highly recommended.
5. "Have confidence in your?e:t
Keep saying over and over. "I will
d fine Just in case this ritual
does not pull you through, yo
better have, in addition to confi-
ince. a one-way train ticket, a
supply of note paper, several hand-
kerchiefs, four peanut butter sand-
wiches, and a copy of "Catcher is
the Rye
6. "Relax Ha, ha, ha!
Iuring an intermission of The
kin of Our Teeth, Thornton Win-
er's symbolic and frequently PuZ
zling play, a woman was heard to
ask her husband what it was a11
about. "It's about the troubles i
the human race since time began.
he told her.
"Oh she said, "there must be
more to it than that"
(ACP) ? A senior who sj
"just out chasing girls" was fin
$20 in police court for displaying a
ied light on tofc of a vehicle, re-
ports the UNIVERSITY DAfl
KANSAS. He entered a pl? of
guilty, bat asked the court to
conaflder the fact ih&t he was using
a small flashlight and was W
girl-chasing
i





?
today, April 17, 1962
EAST CAROLINIAN
Page 8
?he
? a
?
5
ee& &we
Alpha OmicrOll Pi Ju,ia Comer, reporter.
New members are Julia Comer,
Rebecca Lupton, Nancy Ridenhour,
Doris Willetts, Joyce Dove, Geral-
dine Kennedy, and Dorothy Mills.
Zeta Fsi chapter of (Alpha
P recently pledged seven
during informal rush.
3 and the offices they were
ed to as members of their
class are as follows: Kay
resident; Alvane Bass, vice
Donna Liverman, secre-
Linda Slaughter, treasurer;
Melton, project chairman;
phens, Assistant project
an; Iee Ann Combs, party
in.
ig the Zeta Psi chapter for
i-63 school year will be:
t. Barbara Barco;
Anne Frances Allen;
secretary, Carolyn Beck;
nding secretary. Phoebe
social rush chairman, Ub
: treasurer. Sandy Thomp-
ant treasurer, Ellen Joy-
orter to the sorority mag-
.1 historian, Lou Rogers.
? from the first vice presi-
? A 0 Pi National Execu-
ittee, Mrs. Mahlon P.
er, from Toledo. Ohio,
7. will highlight the in-
n of officers. During that
is will also be made for
District Day at the Uni-
?; Maryland on April 28.
Phi Kappa Tau
? members of the Phi Kappa
social fraternity attended,
the Domain Confer-
Phi Kappa Tau fra-
e College of William
v. Williamsburgr, Va.
? a of the William and
:er included members of
nal Phi Kappa Tau fra-
ted in the Southeastern
the United States.
f the EC Gamma Eta
achieved the highest
average during the 1961-
term of any other chap-
e Domain and also of any
ternity at EC. Because
I Sykes, re-
Phi Kap. a Tau from
the convention body
Ideals of Scholarship
embers of the East Oaro-
ternity attending the con-
in addition to Michael were
Durham, Ronald Schwentorus.
Marion Ckxlbold.
Phi Omicron
Delta Zeta
The Delta Zeta pledges elected
pledge class officers at their first
meeting. They are Peggy Davis,
president; Nan May, vice presi-
dent; and Llew Jean Maynard,
treasurer.
Comfmittees and committee chair-
men were appointed. They are as
follows: Project Committee, Helen
Carter; Party Committee, Martha
Rawls; and Gift Committee, Caro-
vice iyn Tayloe.
The pledge class made coloring
books for the School for Mentally
Retarded Children in Greenville as
its civics project. ,
The recently elected EC Math Club Officers were installed at the Annual Math Club Banquet last week.
Leading the club for the new year are (left to right) Sue Worthington, social chairman; Faye Brown,
social chairman; Melba Rhue, secretary- treasurer; Ann Green, co-vice president; Mack Worthington,
co-vice president; Moye Waters, president; and not pictured Lavonne Vinson, reporter.
p ?
Delta Sigma Pi
The International Fratemitv of
Delta Sigma Pi recently installed
nine business majors as the Spring
pledge class at its Spring "smok-
er.
?
Speight's Exhibit In Hallway
Gallery Attracts Many Visitors

Roger Brookshire was elected
pledge class president. Other
pledges are Roger Register, Roger
Nixon, Raymond Mancini, Linwood
Robinson, George Whitman, Jim
Poole, and George Rhodes.
Aft the Fraternity's regular
monthly dinner meet April 17 at
the iSrilo Restaurant, Miss Gwen
Potter, Certified Public Accountant
and member of the faculty of the
School of Business, will speak on
"Business Ethics
Lambda Chi Alpha
Iota Upsilon chapter of Lambda
Chi Alpha installed the following
boys into its sip ring pledge class
of 1962 at its weekly meeting April
10: Butch Cawman, Jimmy Rig-
gins, Ronnie Hutchinson, and Bud-
dy Daniels.
Jimmy Ray Floyd, a fall-quarter
pledge, was initiated into the
brotherhood of Lambda Chi March
25 during ceremonies conducted at
the Alumni Building.
Pi Kappa Phi
During the recent Spring In-
formal Rush, Pi Kappa Phi pledged
Dan Bowers, Allen Jones, Chuck
Lancaster, Charles Martin, and
rreo Webster.
The formal ceremony was held in
the Methodist Student Center.
Omicron, honorary Home
aka fraternity elected of-
iring their monthly meet-
' I last week. The officers
- installed April 18, in the
?' on room of the Flanagan
- on the cam-pus and will
for the 1962-1963 school term.
sbecca Parker of Benson, chair-
f the membership committee,
n on need that seven new
- -r- were installed as new
beans of the fraternity.
Annie Marie Riddick, elected as
int, is a junior student at
college specializing in home
i k
er officers elected to serve
President Riddick are Carol
vice president; Rebecca
-i. secretary-treasurer; and
Frances Speight's paintings, now
on exhibition, are attracting visi-
tors from many parts of the state
to the Hallway Gallery, Rawl Build-
ing, on the camipus here. The art
show, open to the public through
April, is presented by the college
Department of Art as a major
event in its cultural program for
the year.
A North Carolinian and an
internationally famous painter,
now artist-in-residence at EC,
Mr. Speight returned to his na-
tive state after a long absence,
when he joined the faculty of
the college last September.
Comer Presents
Piano Recital Tonight
Linda Ann Comer, pianist, will
be presented by the Department of
Music in her senior recital tonight
at 8:15 p.m. in the McGinnis Au-
ditorium. The public is cordially
invited to attend.
Miss Comer, piano student of
Dr. Carter of the college music
faculty, transferred to EC her jun-
ior year from Shenandoah College
and Conservatory of Music in Day-
ton, Va. The recital, part of the
requirements for the Bachelor of
Music degree at E?, is the first
one in which Miss Comer has ap-
peared at the college.
(As a distinguished professor of
art for thirty years at the noted
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine
Arts and as a painter whose works
are displayed in more than four-
teen galleries and museums in the
United States and Canada and in
White Addresses
Virginia FBLA
Dr. James L. White, of the School
of Business here, was the 'princi-
pal speaker at two business con-
ferences conducted Saturday, April
14, at West Virginia Institute of
Technology, Montgomery, W. Va.
Addressing the West Virginia
State Chapter of the Future Busi-
ness Leaders of America at a gen-
eral session Saturday morning, Dr.
White discussed with student mem-
bers of the organization ways of
huilding a better FBLA chapter.
For the past eight years Dr. White
has acted as state advisor of the
North Carolina FBLA.
? 4MMMHHHMMMM

K
flP-VjJ
Cor. Fifth and CoUndw
'Dedicated To . . .
A Young Man's Tmst"
????ft
a number of private collections
throughout the country, he has re-
ceived a warm welcome here from
"home folks" and from students and
art lovers.
In 1960, the Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts granted
Mr. Speight its highest award,
the Academy Gold Medal of
Honor. Among prizes presented
to him in national exhibitions
of painting, in addition to the
Sosnan medal, are the First
Altman Prize, the First Hall-
garten Prize, the Kohnstamm
Prize, and the Obrig Prize.
He is listed in Who's Who in
America and in the Encyclopedia
Britannica, in which one of his
works is reproduced.
Scholarship Awarded
The Mary Morrow Scholarship
Committee, at a meeting on April
7, selected Judith Godwin recipient
of a $200 scholarship award of-
fered by the Classroom Teachers
Division of the North Carolina Ed-
ucation Association.
The scholarsihip will become ef-
fective in September.
Erik the Red had no choice-btit Vitalis with V-7
will keep your hair neat all day without grease, l Vigi,
Naturally.V-7 is the greaseless grooming discovery. Vitalis? J8-1
with V-7? fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness,
keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try Vitalis today I
ummer
Employment
COLLEGE MEN
EARN $80.00 PER WEEK
Plus
CASH SCHOLARSHIP
Guaranteed
S780.00
Minimum For 13 Weeks
For 10 Min. Introductory Interview
Come To 105 Raw!
12:00 to 5:00 P. M.
April 17th or 18th
Tuesday or Wednesday
?





Pag 4
EAST CAROLINIAN
Bucs Downed By
William & Mary
In Track Meet
EC lost to Williajm and Mary
last Wednesday by a score of 86
to 4:2 Vz, Although it was a defeat,
the margin of defeat was not as
Kit at as it has been in past years.
William and Mary has 4 track
coaches, and offers scholarships
as an incentive for their impress-
ive interest and participation in
this sport.
This in itself revealed to the
EGC Track Team and should re-
veal to any interested college sup-
porters, that ECC has a long way
to go before she can expect to pro-
vide the consistent comipetition ex-
pected of a Southern Conference
part.icipant.
The events wore as follows: EC
won first, second, and third in the
100 yd. dash. First and second in
the 220. Second and third in the
440. They didn't place in the 880,
the mile, and the two mile.
We placed second in the broad
jumjp, and tied for third place in
the pole vault. McOants, who pole
vaults far EC, broke the school
record here at EC by 6" when he
vaulted 12
We won the shot put. placed
second in the discus and javelin,
and third in the high hurdles. EC
didn't place in the low hurdles but
placed third in the high jump and
won the mile relay.
2'Aw
I)
Cuda's Of Carolina
Blood
mo
b
Campus T
y
A
lass ai order
Mangum Places
In Lift Meet
The Red Cross bioodmobile will
be on camspus, at Wright Auditor-
ium, Wednesday, April 25, 1962,
and will operate between the hours
of 9:30 and .3:30. The bioodmobile
is sponsored by the Circle K Club
in cooperation with the American
Red Cross.
It is necessary that each blood-
mobile achieve a certain quota of
blood. The quota for this year's
visit of the bioodmobile is 125
pints.
Any person in good health may
live blood provided he or she is
between the ages of 18 through 59 rated,
years, weighs approximately 110 Mango i
pounds or more, has not donated ght heavywi
blood within the previous 8 weeks, total f 720
ias not had malaria within the
past two years, and does not have
history of vital hepatitis (jaun-
l:ce). Do Tiers will need the written
?onsent of a .parent if they are be-
.ween the ages of 18 and 21.
?
The EC Wei,
represented bg J
recently-held A,
Open Weight L fi
I! eensooro. f. ft
North and So
M
v
pic lifts. Tin
c the military
and the c,
rtaled 225 :?,
press, snai
a 285 lh ch an
?
V-
-
SHIRTMAKERS
Two members of the locally formed skindiving club, Jim Milbv and Bol
Shaw, are busily adjusting the various equipment before they practice
ne members in the proper techniques involved in this
fast mowing sport. Meetings are
101 in the Gymnasium at 8:30.
eld every Wednesday night in Room
muslin 3xford
Count.
reply to a sa-
lts Oxford
transpa-
neal
Abt ? $.
EC Golf Team Sports Scheduled
Tops Tri-Meet; For This Week
Record?5 Wins
1 Tie, No Losses
FX's golf team won both matches
last Friday to top the tri-meet
with ACC and Pfeiffer. Tne two
victories brought the team record
to five wins, one tie, and no losses.
Tho Bucs dropped their o?tfon-
er, in fine style, defeating Pfeiffer
1 4. and .Atlantic Christian 12Vo-
52. Billy Brogden, with a 76, and
C hairles Rose who carded a 83, were
the low medalists for- the Pirates
The low man for AC was Sid
Denny with a total of 81. Pfeiffer's
low mam was Bill Richards who hot
an 82.
EC'S next golf match will be
Ti.esday, April 24, against Guilford
and Atlantic Christian in another
Mi-meet. The Pirates play Saint
Andrews College in Lanrinburg to-
day.
Sports for this week include:
Baseball?Tuesday, Pfeiffer, there;
Track?Tuesday, N. C. State and
Campbell, to be in Raleigh, 3:30
P m Golf?Tuesday, St. Andrews
College, Laurinburg; and Tennis-
Tuesday, Wake Forest College,
there.
A

V
?
A
i
C196Gaol UurtM?
i0
iif?$ '?
mm
Floyd MeCants, shown above, broke
the previous EC Pole Vault record
of 116" by 6" when he vaulted
12' even in the track meet against
William & Mary. MeCants is a
sophomore from Wyoming. Dela-
ware.
Notice
To all organizations, spon-
ored and approved by SGA,
please submit budgets by April
25.
Jim Chesnutt
Treasurer
Dreamland Roller Skating Arena
Located on Pactolus Highway
OPEN
MonFri.?7:30-10:30 p. m.
Sat.?7:30-11:00 p.m.
Sat and Sun. Evenings?2:30-5:00 p. m.
ve you seen Sero?
Case in point: Sero's Madras
Stripes. Muted stripings of
maroon, blue or slate set off a
plaquet-front pullover classic.
This la shirtmanshlp. $0.00
222 E. 5th STREET
i
$
i
k?l cool and .227.5? fibre ? "??? wrf ?
oPPnian
MEMS
,





Title
East Carolinian, April 17, 1962
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
April 17, 1962
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.224
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/38753
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