East Carolinian, January 29, 1963


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





Easttarolinian
V'ol
XXXVIII
East Carolina Co liege
GREENVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY. JANUARY 29. 19K3
Gov. Presents
New Interning
Number 26
s
anford, Governor oi X. c. announced in a
Leo Jenkins President of EC, that the
will conduct a hummer Internship Program
?rnment in 196 from June 17 through August
X
Rainy Weather For Marchathon
w ill provide the
twenty outstand-
nts to work in
State Gov-
their work,
will have in-
I discussion on
related prob-
na in evening
twice a week,
le held once a
and luncheons
e supervision of a
and will have
? aders, and politi-
as guests and re-
i e ir ex perie nces
: fully on an in-
Lnterns will live
rmitories at North
'? loliege.
alify for the In-
n, an applicant
eted two years
ege work and
a resident of North
enrolled in a
educational insti-
and professional
eligible. A furth-
- application is the
will be paid
fact that interns
$75.00 per week.
Dr. .lames H. Tucker, Dean of
Student Affairs, said that appli-
cations are available at the Stu-
dent Affairs Office, the College
Placement Office, the Student
Government Office, and at the of-
fices of the Heads of the History,
Economics, Business Administra-
tion, and Education Departments.
All applications must be returned
to the (Governor's Office in Raleigh
by February 15, 1963, and appli-
cants will be notified of their ac-
ceptance or rejection by early
April. Selection is to be made by
a committee which includes promi-
nent political scientists teaching
in North Carolina.
In concluding his letter to Presi-
dent Jenkins, Governor Sanford
said that the 1962 Summer In-
ternship Program was highly suc-
cessful aiid that the program seem-
ed to him an excellent means of
attracting superior students to
careers in State Government as
well as a remarkable opportunity
for able students to learn some-
thing of the workings of State
Government.
Twenty-one members of the AFROTC Drill Team inarched through the streets" Greehf Satur-
day m their fourth annual Marchathon for the Pitt County March of Dimes. Although freezing rains
halted the march, $806 was collected?$194 short of their goal.
Drill Team Holds Marchathon;
Collects $806 In Dimes March
Freezing rain Saturday marred
the Fourth Annual March of Dimes
Marchathon of the East Carolina
AFROTC Drill Team. Despite a
Dr. Judd Announces Lecture Topic;
M
H. Judd, Republican
-man for twenty
ithority on U.S.
will speak in Aus-
tin Auditorium Thursday evening,
January 31, at 8:15 p.m. His topic
will be "The World Conflict Moves
to a climax The program will
Dr. Walter H. Judd
be open to the public. All faculty,
staff, and students are invited to
a Social Hour which will be held
in Or. Judd's honor at 4:00 p.m.
Thursday in the social rooms of
Flanagan Building.
As a Congressman, Dr. Judd has
served on the Committee on For-
eign Affairs, and has played an
important role in establishing our
relief recovery, re-armament, and
economic development programs
abroad. He was a delegate to the
U.N. General Assembly in 1957,
and a delegate to the World Health
Organization Assembly in 1950 and
1958. In a Congressional poll in
1962, he was voted one of the five
most influential members of the
House of Retresentatives, the only
one so named from the minority
party.
His lecture Thursday is sponsor-
ed by the Pitt County Executives
Club in conjunction with the Lec-
ture Committee. The program will
be the first of a series which will
include former President Harry S.
Truman; the noted author, Harry
Golden; and General Carlos Romu-
lo, soldier and diplomat. The pre-
ceding have acceipted invitations to
appear on the lecture series, but
no dates have been announced.
State Senator R. L. Huanber, Pres-
ident of the Executives Club, Dr.
John H. Howell, and Ruby E. Edens
of the college faculty have worked
together in planning the series.
Dr. James White chairs the com-
mittee in change of arrangements
for Dr. Judd's visit.
unanimous vote by the twenty-one
members of the team to keep on
marching the weather forced a
halt to the Marchathon.
The 1963 Marchathon began at
8 a.m. in front of the Pitt County
Courthouse, launching another con-
tinuous march. Hoping to break all
past records of money collected and
time marched, the Team was de-
termined not to stop because of the
rain which began about 1 p.m. Af-
:er the Drill Team was required to
leave, volunteer cadets, members
of the Angel Flight, and the Arnold
Air Society remained at their cor-
ners to collect money. A total of
$806 was collected.
In 3pite of the rain and cold
weather the spirits of the team
seemed high. Smiles were on many
of their faces as they marched in
formation carrying the nearly ten
pound M-l rifles.
The EC AFROTC Cadets held
their first Machathon in 1960.
During a continuous drill of ap-
proximately twelve hours, funds
for the county March of Dimes
were collected. The Marchathon
was successfully repeated in 1961
and 1962.
The Drill Team has been engag-
ed in various activities this year,
ranging from participating in the
Greenville and Bethel Christmas
parades, to marching in the EC
Homecoming Parade.
Traffic Committee Posts
Change Ins Regulations
The Traffic Committee wishes to
call to the attention of the faculty,
staff, and all students the follow-
ing changes in traffic regulation
effective Saturday, February 2,
1963:
1. Varsity street (between Rawl
Building and Wright Building) will
be one way going east to the in-
tersection of the street on the east
side of Rawl Building.
2. No traffic or parking will be
permitted on that part of North
State Avenue between the inter-
section of North State Avenue and
Student Avenue and the intersec-
tion of North State Avenue and
Faculty Circle. This is the area of
North State Avenue behind Austin
Building.
3. Parking on Carolina Avenue
from the vicinity of Austin Build-
ing to Campus Drive is reserved
for faculty and staff.
4. Parking on Faculty Crrcle
between intersections with North
State Avenue is reserved for fa-
culty and staff.
5. The parking lot across Tenth
Street from the Gymnasium is re-
served for Day Students only.
It is hoped that these changes
will aid in lessening the traffic
problem on campus.
Students Attend
Rehearsal
Of 'Mattress9
Ed Loessin, Director of
Once Upon A Mattress, has
announced that the first
three hundred students to
present their ID cards at
McGinnis Auditorium by
7:45 p.m Friday, Febru-
ary 1, will be privileged to
see a preview rehearsal of
Once Upon A Mattress,
The curtain rises at S:00
p.m.





Page 2
EAST
INITIATIVE
Many individuals foster loud complaints about the
mailed fist the administration supposedly holds over
almost all aspects of campus life. The control the admin-
istration exercises is hardly anything so cumbrous as
a mailed fist; it is exercised cautiously, quietly, and
subtley; it is always efficacious. The method most fre-
quently takes a form that closely resembles "moral
suasion to borrow a term from economics.
Close administration control on college campuses
is nothing new. It has lessened through the years, but
is still exercised on every campus, whether the school
is private or sicite supported. Students have agitated
for freed . : from this yoke for years, usually couching
their protests in the general milieu of the "fight for
student rights The majority of this "fight especially
a Ea . Carolina, has truly been a tale of sound and fury.
Its hollow ineffectiveness stems largely from a failure
to consider responsibilities when screaming about rights.
The first responsibility of anyone engaged in a
dispute should be to discover and interpret the consid-
erations that motivate his opponent. Through this
knowledge he should learn what to expect and when to
expect it. At East Carolina, the pressures of control in-
variably loom ominously whenever questions or events
arise that might somehow reflect on the good name
of the college. This should immediately lead us to con-
clude that the considerations of the administration are
ideally neither selfish nor petty. They are concerned
about the image of the college and its consequent repu-
tation, because its continued growth and prosperity de-
pend on that image.
Our students desire less restraint and more pro-
pitious rules on various aspects of campus life. They
cry vainly that "If students from Carolina and WC can
stay out until one o'clock and have reasonable drinking
privileges why can't we? Instead they could quietly
move to place East Carolina on a plane in the legislature
with other state supported colleges. Probably more than
half the present legislature graduated from some branch
of the greater university. They are not likely to cut
appropriations to their alma mater because of the oc-
casional peccadillo of some student. Conversely, many
interpret each unfavorable incident about East Caro-
lina as indicative of our lack of solidarity, and con-
sequently refuse to appropriate much needed money.
Legislators from west of Raleigh frequently do not be-
lieve that East Carolina exists as a major institution
of higher learning in North Carolina. To them we are
still a minor teachers college serving the backward
eastern areas.
What can the individual EC student do? Our parents
constitute a considerable portion of the North Caro-
lina electorate. Their influence would certainly be felt
if we urge them to exert it. We can exert our own in-
fluence through letters and personal contacts. We can
urge our graduates to support the school and the Alumni
Association. Equally important, we can conduct our-
selves educationally and socially in the public eye in
such fashion as to reflect credit on our school. When we
display enough energy and initiative to cement East
Carolina's reputation among the colleges of the state,
when we convince the public that we are intelligent, in-
dustrious students, then it will no longer be necessary
that the administration convince the public that we are
saints. Perhaps then, when we prove we are ready for
it, we can expect a lessening of administrative control.
CAMPUS BULLETIN
Tues. 20?Mental Health Association Meeting, 7:00-10:00 p.m
Austin.
?Wrestling Match, 7:00 p.m.
?Carnival Entry Meeting, CU Office, 7:00 p.m.
?Pitt Theatre: "Guns of Navarone
?State Theatre: "White Slave Ship
wed. 30? Duplicate Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 p.m.
?Faculty Meeting, 4:00 p.nu, Austin.
?Art School Sotpfaomore Meeting, 4:00 p.m.
?Rosemary, 7:30 p,m Austin.
Thurs. 31?Reception for Dr. Walter Judd, Flanagan Social Roams,
4:00 p.m.
?Chi Beta Phi, 317 Flanagan, 7:00 p-m.
?Dr. Walter Judd, 8:15 p.m Austin.
Fri. 1?Movie: "Madison Avenue Austin, 7:00 pjm.
?Pitt Theatre: "Gypsy" with Natalie Woodt
Sat. 2?Graduate Business Test, Rawl, 8:00-12:00 noon.
?"Once Upon a Mattress 8:16 pjn McGinnis.
?.Basketball Game, EC vs. Atlantic Christian, Froeh Game
starts at 6:15 p.m.
Sun. 3?"Once Upon a Mattress
Mon. 4?Nurses Club, Rawl, 6:30 pjm.
?Faculty Recital, Austin, 7:30 p-niw
?"Once Upon a Mattress
C ARO LI N IAJ
Tuesday, January &
?
Globe Trotting
I His Exhausted Majesty
with Tabibzadeh and Bede



M
????????????
Since time immemorial countries
have searched to discover methods
and means to improve the quali-
ties of their respective civil ser-
vants. Confucious wrote volumi-
nous dissertations regarding the
issue and Ottoman emperors own-
ed their civil and military service
personnel. In every country de-
sirable positions were restricted
to the unqualified aristocrats who
either inherited, bought, or re-
ceived them. It was about the late
IHh century that appointments be-
came based on merit as a solution.
Before that time, however, leaders
and thinkers alike perceived the
problem and sought a solution.
One thinker thought of a genu-
ine formula in the privacy of his
harem. The thinker ? his former
Majesty Fatali Shah; his domain
?Persia and part of today's Rus-
sia; and his discovery ? the con-
clusion of an idiot. His majesty
was not satisfied with his civil
and military servants; his aggra-
vation was not due to his corps'
inefficiency or poor qualifications
since his vocabulary and know-
ledge has no associations with
these problems. His dissatisfaction
laid with his employees' disloyalty
qnd lack of allegiance towards him-
self, his invulnerable majesty. The
sovereign conceived that if all the
governmental positions were oc-
cupied by his male offspring the
problems of allegiance would be
automatically solved.
After all, his majesty the igno-
ramus reasoned, "My sons will love
me and thenceforth will be loyal to
me In order to provide the na-
tion and her citizens with loyal
officials and administrators, his
majesty labored at the tiresome
task of producing sufficient
Perfection
He stepped meditatively along
the white sand, kicking occasional-
ly at the hillocks whipped Up by
the wind. The crests of the waves
tossed the sunlight in blue-green
directions and then surged for-
ward to crumble on the beach.
Clouds billowed overhead like giant
mushrooms in an azure garden and
gulls drifted among them. An oc-
casional large wave rolled in and
caressed his feet, and he stopped
and contemplated the backwash
as it eddyed around his feet and
sculptured tiny ridges at the ends
of his toes.
Once as he stopped to watch the
eddies, the sunlight glinted from
a shell ? red and gold and green.
He stooped and (plucked it from
the wet sand and rubbed it against
his shorts. When he held it out the
colors danced on the smooth surface
and he walked slowly on, twisting
the shell between his fingers and
regarding the changing colors. As
he turned the shell, he felt a chip
along one edge and, disappointed,
he sailed it high up on the dunes.
Later as the sun rested along the
ocean's edge, he returned along the
same beach. When he reached the
place where he had thrown the
shell he climbed up the dune, think,
ing to retrieve the shell and keep
it. He scrambled over the dune,
digging his ' toes into the sand
searching; but he could not find
it. As night descended, he clamber-
ed down the dune and wandered
back along the beach.
Classified Ad
Lost: Silver charm bracelet
with ten charma. Reward of-
fered. Contact Joyce Brown,
Fleming 282.
vow
ly
of
aided
vacancies.
took the
iual-
appHeante 1' th
Additional concubines
matrimony and eq
king m ns
harem served as
and the inatitu-
The
the
experiment. The
the producing arm
tn of future civil servants.
wivea were the I reducing
chinea and his majesty
t abort Deriod, thn ugn
erator. In a n(,t p? '
sovereign's diligence, some
the
The EC stu!
doraoa the jazz
we have a. p-a . ar
? tin ' ?
Each of the .
ived by
with Bl
a n?
the r ip ?11 ?
from
for tl ? last v
ei
In
undi
ilable
civil servants were maae avi
and fil'ed the vacancies as tl
reached puberty. The result: the
system was a fiasco and the citi-
zens received the burden of mi
ing and adulating 800 additional
inefficient, unqualified, and arro-
i ant parasites.
Quimmle;
This past summer the United
states National Student Associa-
tion held its loth National Stu-
dent Congress. The Confess met
on the campus of Ohio State Uni-
versity from August 19 until
August 30. Various subjects were
debated, and, in turn, condoned or
condemned. Among the items de-
bated was nuclear testing.
In the midst of serious and
lengthy debating which was aug-
mented by publications from
groups of various political stands,
someone inserted a bit of humor
into the formality with a sheet of
resolutions he had printed and dis-
tributed. The material distributed,
needless to say, does not neces-
sarily represent the views of the
USNSA. Part of it went as follows:
"It is suggested that, during
the nuclear testing debate, dele-
gates choose the resolution below
which most closely approximates
their own position.
"Lib: The USNSA condemns all
nuclear testing and regrets the
whole bloody mess.
"Webster Quimmley Society
(named in memory of the famous
middle of the roader who was
killed in an automobile while driv-
ing over the islands of the Santa
Ana freeway): The USNSA con-
demns the Soviet Union's resump-
tion of tests and deplores the
United States' earlier test series.
We regret the fact that we only
deplore the United States testing
and seem to be using a double
standard. It should be noted, how-
ever, that the Soviet Union vio-
lated the moratorium and hence is
more condemnable than the U. S.
On the other hand, it i3 arguable
that the Soviets were justified in
resuming testing after the French
explosions which we deplore. In
sum, we hope the Soviet Union will
note that we have deplored the
West twice while condemning the
Soviets only once and, therefore,
1
B
-
?
it the i
witho
araer8. Then
sons for thi
rmanci
playing rek
piano was bad I ?
not his usual
were ?
?
much long, i
and. hr.v. r ?
tenries w ? ?
?formers, but
horrible :t
t very bod
"VAF: The I
nihilistic i
that
e than ? .
are dirty. Kir tests a
is an American.
"Birch: The USNSU
condemns the S
lating the r.
poisoning th,
clear tests. We urgt
?et t pea '
t its na
with note with in1
enee of the
the t: ii
Red Chinese il
search, Wf
of nuclear weap
to resolve t ? ? d
thereby h
-afe for deuocrac
Seriously the USNSA ?
the attempts vf th : l
a nuciear test ban
attitude of the V S S
may recall, the S
Friday, September
a ;J4-month-old moral
testing of nuclear
While the USNSA
to take direct ac
ter, it is an impor-
ter student expres (tat
example is not la
stretch of the imeginal
general run of eamwert
fortunately, then is l ?
dent knowledge '? ning tfe
ganrzation. In the e
try to give the s I
idea of how the USNSA
and toward what
With proper surr -
can become a powerful vc?i?
s
student
JUB
Ml
Easttarolinian
Published aami-WMlrW k- m, . . -
?"??My by the students of East Caroline Co-
GreeATille, North
?MM? CoIhwiAte Preos
OoUariaw
juntos d.
Kssta
Uffiees on tamal floor of
Box latt, See Garotte
PL a-I7i?
Nort?
PL l-iioi.
????? ?"???? be k? uVSLS
?ho be of general tatereet. AH
-? ?"????? ?? tbe .tender
" DO "IHHwftUKy for
EAST CAROLINIAN antt k, -w.
They T
awaati ?
All Ww
will be witfiM
feraoiaf-





,c? iy
January -id, 1963
EAST CAROLINIAN
P?C? t
Grove Press Extends
Deadline For Contest
i
requests from
Grove Press has
Uine for entries
: until March
t. which fea-
Ls o on only to
?een schedal-
; -y 31, 1963.
will be awarded
t writing the
ation by K it -
bert (i rover's
One Hundred
,r Misunderstanding, for ad-
al southern uni-
One Hundred Dollar Mis-
? vel about the
J C, a wiute col-
and Kitten, a
1 Negro girl.
no more than
i
, i
? and must be
s own style, of
sam I taken from the
below:
ain his fault,
jes born dum.
? Whitefolks dum,
t'tihat big-word
? so's he kin
and fightin an
be oven kill some-
y human, but not so's he kin
lo nothin much else, like talk
weet and play nice
Tfie 100 runners-up in the eon-
a will receive a full year's sub-
scription to the bi-mont.hly maga-
zine, Evergreen Review.
Entries will be judged by a board
appointed by the publisher, and
entries will become the pro; er-
of the publisher. Entries should
K submitted to: Kitten Contest
Editor, Grove Press, Inc 64 Uni-
versity Place, New York 3, N. Y.
EC School Of Music
Stages Vocal Clinics
Two choral clinics to be staged
by the School of Music for high
school vocalists in Eastern North
Carolina will take place Feb. 2
and Feb. 16. Gordon Johnson, Di-
rector of the College Choir, will
direct the two meetings and will
be assisted in a series of auditions
and rehearsals by faculty members
of the School of Music.
The two meetings are a follow-up
less than half the students vote
in eamrois elections and though
some critics describe student gov-
ernment activities as "Mickey
Mouse the Students' Association
at the University of Texas dis-
charges definite responsibilities.
For instance, the Student As-
sembly approves the apportionment
SAM Stages Activities;
Students Insight
Gives
ers of the Society
snent of Manage-
? actively engaged
try, commerce,
Pli Kappa Tau
Is Four
(Pledges Jan. 8
. ' itM
were installed by
. social fraternity,
- The formal candle-
was conducted by
ttrick, fraternity chap-
m Tctigue, pledge
?r.
-
r era rothers are Donald
uglas Strickland,
irkson Cox, and Wil-
'?' er. They were se-
r - high scholastic
- lership, and their
an jntlemanliness.
initiation ceremony
" ra were honored at
rt the fraternity house
1 Ea t Third Street. An in-
- ? honoring new mem-
9, and guests was
"lay rnght, Jan. 19.
Texas Univ. Discharges
Definite SGA Duties
Austin, Texas (I. P.) Although . of each $17.57 student activity fee
("blanket tax") to eight different
?student activities. Such fees last
Fall amounted to more than $300,
000.
Committees maintained by stu-
dent government conduct opinion
surveys and referendums; hear
grievances about campus practices;
study ways to improve scholastic
integrity and enhance the educa-
tional atmosphere; provide leader-
ship for freshman orientation, the
Campus Chest fund drive, and the
flash card, Roundup and Cultural
Entertainment activities; supervise
elections and investigate problems
related to international students
and integration.
During the tpast year, the As-
sembly took action in a number of
areas including married students'
housing, student insurance and
wages, disciplinary regulations,
curfew hours, and tuition.
Chief student spokesman is Mar-
ion (Sandy) Sanford, Jr senior
government major, who as 1962
Students' Association president has
a private office, a secretary, and
$100 a month paycheck.
He ipresides over the Assembly,
serves on the important Texas
Union boards of directors, and is
one of five students composing Uni-
versity President Joseph R. Smi-
ley's advisory cabinet. Sanford also
makes key appointments, including
student representatives on the Ath-
letic Council and the Ex-Students'
Association executive council.
of a clinic at the college last year
which had an attendance of more
than 275 high school students and
choir directors. This enthusiastic
response encouraged the staging
of two clinics this year so that
more schools might have opportun-
ity to participate, Mr. Johnson
stated.
A s( ecial feature of the Febru-
ary clinics at EC will be auditions
held by teachers of voice in the
School of Music for promising high
school singers. These sessions of
Among major events at each of
the clinics will be a series of sec-
tional rehearsals. Personnel of the
School of Music who will direct
these groups will be Mr. Johnson;
Charles Stevens, director of the
Men's Glee Club; Beatrice Ohaun-
cey, director of the Women's Chor-
t s; and Dr. Hjortsvang, director
of the Chapel Choir.
Concluding events at each of the
clinics will be making a tape re-
cording by participants for broad-
casting on radio stations through-
fifteen minutes each will be sche- j out the state and a concert in hon-
pi Sigma Adds
r "ft Members
government, and education.
A national professional organi-
ation, the Society, known in the
Business School as SAM, stages
each year a series of monthly
meetings, conducts seminars and
round-table discussions, visits in-
dustrial plants for talks with exec-
utives, and participates in com-
munity services which give student
an insight into management.
The Society is open to business
majors of at least sophomore
standing who have maintained an
overall C scholastic average. The
local business group strives "to
develop human resources and to
provide business with a better pro-
duct to train, mold, and refine
Dr. James Stewart of the School
of Business faculty serves as ad-
visor to SAM.
Robert P. Miller has been named
by the members of the Society as
acting president.
Serving with Miller in executive
positions are Frederick Lorbach-
er, secretary; Richard H. Cash,
treasurer; and Howard Glenn Wil-
liams, reporter.
Other members of SAM include
Russell J. Finley; John J. Heery;
James F. Jackson; Linwood W.
Ro.ier; Mrs. Ruth B. Scott; Mar-
tin P. Steinberg; Gerald A. White;
and Julian Daniel Rhem.
duled on request by the individual
student and his director. Conduct-
ing the auditions will be Gene
Strassler, Dr. Carl T. Hjortsvang,
Dan Vornholt, and Mrs. Gladys
White.
II G
aa RPta chapter of Sig-
ra Sigrnm, social sorority
l announced that thirteen
skrtanti have completed
llwp reqrrirements and are
"??W of the local chapter.
np members are Melba A.
?? Ue Forbis, Carol Louise
- ?. Margaret Avera, Linda
L llT' Limia E- Killian,
jjj Skirmer, Owen E. Rouse,
Ve C Ward' Jacqueline Polk,
w'lA' Efiis?n, Travette Jennette
j0 Ai Mkigett.
aw ber maintained a C
lZ0n aI1 m,bects taken dur"
d Hre period in addition
s other pledge require-
of the chapter.
Representatives
Attend Council
Janice Hardison, Director of
Alumni Affairs and Foundations
and Dr. Robert W. Williams, Chair-
man of the Foundations Commit-
tee, represented EC at the South-
eastern District Convention of the
American Alumni Council in At-
lanta, Ga. January 27-28.
While there, they attended a
series of coherences and work-
tops relating to tMr work at EC.
Miss Hardison participated m pro-
grams of alumni publications and
annual giving programs. Dr. Wrt-
liams attended session on ap-
I proaches foundations.
Wilder Addresses
Library Club Meet
The Library Club held its first
meeting of the new year January
14, 1963, at 7:00 p.m. in Room 215
of Joyner Library. The guest speak-
er for the evening was Miss Vernie
Wilder, faculty member of the Li-
brary Science Department. Miss
Wilder's topic was "The Light-
house which was about H. W.
Wilson and the H. W. Wilson Com-
pany.
Mallory Proposes
To Bleed Campus
For 500 Pints
EC's goal for the bloodmobile,
which will be outside Wright
Building, February 13-14, is 500
pints.
At a recent Dean's Advisory
Council meeting, club representa-
tives and dorm presidents were
asked to call meetings and to ask
for donations.
Classes will be excused for do-
nors while they are at the blood-
mobile and refreshments will be
served to donors.
Students under twenty-one who
wish to contribute blood must go
to Dean Mallory's office and get
a Consent of Release card to be
signed by their parents.
or of visitors on the campus by the
College Choir under the direction
of Mr. Johnson.
Bates To Speak
To Health Assn.
Tonight At 7:45
Louise Bates, PhD ScD Direc-
tor of Research for the Gesell In-
stitute of Child Development, will
I speak at the annual meeting of the
Pitt County Mental Health Asso-
ciation in Austin Auditorium, Jan-
uary 29, at 7:45 pjm.
Dr. Frank Fuller, President of
the Pitt 'Ooumity Mental Health As-
sociation, will preside; Reverend
John Dralke, Jr will present the
invocation; and Dr. Leo Jenkins
will welcome the members. After
being introduced by Mrs. Ellen Gar-
roll, Vice-President of the Pitt
County Mental Health Association,
Dr. Ames will speak on "Child
Growth and Development
Phi Mu Alpha
Awards Tuition
Scholarship
The Zeta Psi Chapter of Phi Mu
Alpha, honorary-professional music
fraternity, has ap roved plans to
award a $240 tuition scholarship
this spring. The award will be
available to any student in the EC
School of Music next September.
Candidates wi!l audition at the
School of Music on Friday and
Saturday. May 11 and 12, and the
winner will be selected on the basis
of musicianship, financial need,
and character.
The scholarship will be financed
through the chapter Scholarship
Fund which has been established
for the purpose of attracting out-
standing music students to EC.
Chapter projects, general fund ap-
propriation's and donations from
alumni during the last two years,
have increased the size of the
Scholarship Fund.
The Scholarship Committee has
distributed information about the
award to prospective students,
music supervisors, and music teach-
ers throughout North Carolina,
South Carolina, and Virginia.
?v
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24 HOURS
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New Shipment of
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u
222 East Fifth Street





Page 4
EAST CAROLINIAN
Tuesday, j
fc
sac
SB
SPORTS REVIEW
By LLOYD "STACK" LANE
Jack McComas, coach at Atlantic Christian, came out
last Thursday and said what many coaches in the Carolina
Conference may have been thinking- this year. McComas
says that the CC has teams that could "play Carolina, or
Wake Forest and beat them He went on to state that "the
Southern Conference has teams that couldn't win in this
league (CC)
It seems that Mr. McComas' view has been well proved
by the Pirates this year. EC has knocked off three Southern
Conference schools ? VMI, The Citadel, and Richmond ??
and played one of their best games in a losing cause against
another Southern Conference school ? Davidson. The Pirates
on the other hand are only two and two against CC squads.
The Pirates have been beaten twice by Lenoir Rhyne and
have won games from High Point and Elon. The Pirates face
another CC team this Saturday night ? Atlantic Christian.

One of the doormats of the Carolina Conference has
started to pull the rug out from under its opponents. Atlantic
Christian is shedding its nickname of the high school" in
relation to sports. AC has started on the comeback trail and
they are taking pride in announcing it in the papers by the
scores that they have been piling up on their competition.
The Bulldogs have hit the century mark three times in as
many home games. The Atlantic five beat Guilford 103-83,
St. Andrews 104-56, and Old Dominion 105-95. These teams
are not powerhouses, but the Bulldogs 75-73 victory over
Appalachian proued something. The victory was even more
impressive because they beat the Mounties on their home
court. The Apps, as any coach in the CC can tell you, are no
pushovers in their den. The Saturday night encounter with
AC will be the last Pirate home game this season.
4:
Some Odds and Ends
Princeton isn't going to be a pushover if these Ivy
Leaguers get into the. NCAA playoffs this Spring. Princeton
is way out in front of all apposition, and the boy who is
keeping them on top is Bill Bradley. Bradley is averaging
29.6 per game and is ranked near the top in national scoring.
1 II I I I ??! Ill . ? ?
Baby Bucs Beat Seahawks,
Yoder, Kinnard Pace Attack
Th-e Pirate frosh took control of
the game from the qpening horn
and never relinquished control as
they shot down the Wilmington
Seahawks 88-69 Wednesday night
in the gym.
EC was paced by Jack Yoder.
Yoder ihit 25 in the Baby Bucs
sixth victory of the year against
six loses. Bobby Kinnard was also
up there in the point totals with
24. Kinnard connected on eleven
from the floor and two of four
from the foul line. Yoder was 12
for 20 from the floor and one for
one from the line.
The high man for the visitors
was hot from the floor. Gene Bo-
gash garnered 11 of 11 field goals
and 1 of 3 foul shots.
EC G F T
Yoder 12 1-1 25
Woodside 3 1-1 7
Straighten Up And Fly Rfrht
Hodges65-717
Williamson31-27
Phillips12-24
Kinnard112-424
Hoyle10-12
Ricks10-02
Laittimore00-10
Gilliam00-00
Totals3812-1888
WilmingtonGFT
Bogash111-323
Hoylan02-22
Hamilton52-312
Ware01-11
Shipp10-02
Barbour74-418
Cole41-19
Lichenstein10-02
Buzzell00-00
Bill Otte (left) loses his balance in last Saturday's same with Oftotfcorpc. Gerald P?rk? r
after the little spheroid.
Hot Petrel Shooting Percentaji
Burns Pirates In 63-58 Loss
Brogden Contributes 20 Point Effort
Totals
29 11-15 69
Oglethorpe College abandoned
their usual ball control tactics to
defeat the Pirates 63-58 in the
college gym Saturday night. The
win proved to be an act of re-
venge against the Pirates. EC
beat Oglethorpe .two weeks ago
to knock the Petrels out of the
top ten small college rankings.
The Atlanta school was hot
from the floor and the foul line.
Oglethorpe hit over 70 percent
of their field goal attempts and
had a perfect 15 of 15 from the
line.
The Petrels put on a fine ex-
hibition of floor shooting to gain
a 30-28 halftime edge. The Pi-
rates were not out of the game,
and came back after the inter-
mission to prove it. EC struck
for eight points to their oppon-
ents three to move into a 36-33
lead with 16:00 to go.
Oglethorpe rallied five minutes
later to make the score 49-43.
From this point to the final horn,
OC was to remain in control.
In the final minutes, EC pulled
within two points of the Petrels
at 58-56. Oglethorpe's center Mor-
ris Mitchell hit two from the floor
to move OC into a commanding
62-56 lead with less than a minute
remaining. EC got two on a goal
and Oglethorpe another foul shot
to round out the scoring.
Bill Brogden was hig-h man for
the Pirates with 20 points. Bill
Otte and Lacy West hit in double
figures for the Bucs. Otte had 18
and West, 13.
Bob Nance was the big man for
Oglethorpe with 20. Three other
starters for the Petrels were in
double figures?Mitchell 13, Sex-
ten 13, and Thomas 11.
Theft
9-5 seasontorn
ECGF
Weste0 A
Otte'
Parker1
Williams04
Brogden14-4
Knowlea0
Totals
Oglethorpe
Nance
Sexton
Whitford
Mitchell
Thomas
Totals
:o IM
G
9
6
1
4
4
F
?
A
4-4
24 15-15
Bil Conmff (pictured above kept hi. 4-0 string intacTng twG pins in the Pirate wrestlm
matches last weekend. EC still came oat on the short end in both meetings-H-ll with OW dI?i??f
(O.D.), and Douglass (Ft. Bragg). EC wrestles St. Andrews tonight at 7:00 in the gym.
Naturally.V-rj1L7LS aM without grease
W? firth ISSess grooming discovery WalS
keeps yotr Sr nS3SSing dandruff. prevents dryness.
y hair neat a" day Stooutgease Vitalis today!





Title
East Carolinian, January 29, 1963
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
January 29, 1963
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.265
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.
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/38794
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