East Carolinian, February 15, 1963


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





Easttarolinian
Volume XXXVIII
East Car olin a College
GREENVILLE, N. C FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1963
Number 30
3E
Senate Appro ves Rule Traffic Committee
Changes For Wmrin Stresses Car Rules
ViAMllVV A VJL ff Jf JrK&mmM The Traffic Committee has be- j ly for a leng:h of time b
fho student seriate, at its M on-
to evening meeting, approved ap-
pra rs of $S00 for the En-
tertainment tunmittee, $60 for
I. p. Card Committee, $530
1ST CAROLINIAN, and
j35fl for the College Choir; au-
Kntertainment Com-
pjfttee ite up to 60 per
t year's anticipated en-
tertamn budget; accepted the
inttneiit of a new Elections
airman; and ap-
a resolution to he sent to
ration calling: for
in restriction rales of
Hfcs. ,
chairman of the En-
?rr. rv.it tee submitted
r an additional $800
? for the remaind-
year. SGA Treasurer,
ffered an amend-
would have required
to use marshals at
Arts Programs instead
$72 for ushers. This
. s defeated. After
ssion of the Enter-
i tree's expenses,
ap :vved the $800 re-
. rd Committee re-
received $60 to hire
be I. D. cards
trstaon. The com-
: that it has had
help during
ing hours of regis-
tration day.
Editor June Grimes, after study-
ing the organizational structure
of the EAST CAROLINIAN for
several weeks, requested and re-
ceived $530 for staff salary in-
creases during the next two quart-
ers.
The College Choir was granted
$350 to be added to its regular
budget appropriation for the pur-
pose of representing the college
at the Music Educators National
Convention in Charleston, West
Virginia.
The seante voted to give to the
Entertainment Comanittee of any
year the authority to obligate up
to 60 (percent of the following
year's anticipated budget.
The senate also approved a reso-
lution which would permit women
students who are on restriction to
have friends in their rooms, and to
talk with men students while walk-
ing on campus. A copy of the reso-
lution will be sent to the admin-
istration.
Productions Commdttee chairman
Ed Smith requested $250 to cover
the cost of a party for the cast
of this year's musical. The senate
passed a substitute motion which
provided for the reallocation of
funds in the musical budget, but
not exceeding $225, for the party.
In other action, the senate ap-
proved the appointment of Berk
Stephens as chairman of the Elec-
tions Comanittee, accepted nomi-
nations for the Queen's Court of
the Azalea Festival, and conducted
swearing-in ceremonies for Bob
Nelson from New Dorm.
Duke To Install Local
Colony Of Pi Kappa Phi
Kappa Phi fraternity, Beta Phi
Colony of Pi Kappa Phi, national
social fraternity, will seek na-
tional affiliation today. Mu Chap-
ter of Duke University will initiate
the East Carolina colony.
Kappa Phi was founded locally
on February 15, 1961, by Pi Kap-
pa Phi traveling counselor Jim
EC Hosts WC Choir
For Sunday Concert
N
15.
r Woman's College
1 be guests on the
ge Campus
T e East Carolina
? e Club will join
'a .re Choir in pre-
ncert in Wright
. V br tary 17,
I the Wom-
up is Rich-
r of the East
la Charles
I be guest, solo-
Alto Rhapsody, and
1 be guest solo-
fs Coronation
Boris (fOdounov. Miss
Le Assistant in
1 at East Caro-
g is a member
Music of Wom-
lan's College Choir will
onga from the
arranged by Beeth-
numbers by Gustav
til Thompson. The
aa Men's Glee Club
by Brahms and
mpson as well as two
'Shcnandoah and
'nv Ye Winds
i 100 voices of the
ra groups will join for the
"Ho- ters ? tne Pr??Tam'
Pl, L"v iv is Thy Dwelling-
fr
We
?n Brahms' German Re-
d :he "Coronation Scene"
foissourgsky,s Boris God-
ounoT.
Sunday's concert will climax two
weekends of music by the choral
groups from Greensboro and Green-
ville. This past Saturday, the
croups met in Greensboro for re-
hearsals as well as social events
and on Sunday gave the first pro-
gram of the series.
Accompanists for Sunday's pro-
gram will be Mary Ida Hodge,
Terry Coley and Ted Gossett,
pianists, Henrietta Nance, vio-
linist, and Marcia Fountain, cell-
ist.
Arrangements for lodging for
Woman's College girls are being
made by members of the East
Carolina Women's Glee Club.
Lloyd, and Wayne Scott. Scott
received his undergraduate degree
at UNC, where he was president
of his fraternity. He attended East
Carolina's Business Graduate
School on a scholarship (provided
by the National Organization of
Pi Kappa Phi. It was during his
course of study here that he or-
ganized the colony.
Saturday, newly?initiated Beta
Phi Chapter will host a three-
state conclave. Chapters from
Sou.th Carolina, North Carolina,
and Virginia "will be in attendance.
All officers of the National Coun-
cil will be present.
Pi Kappa Phi will have a tea
Sunday afternoon from 2:00 until
4:00 in the CU. Students, faculty,
and friends are invited to attend.
gun a thorough investigation of
all cars being operated by col-
lege students on the campus of
East Carolina College and in the
Greenville area in order to ascer-
tain that each student who is
operating a car is eligible to do
so according to the College regu-
lation which reads:
"It is to be noted by all that
no freshman (including Summer
School) student at East Caro-
lina College is permitted to have
and or to operate a motor vehicle
on the East Carolina College cam-
pus or in the Greenville area.
"In addition, no student having
le?s than a "C" average or on dis-
ciplinary probation at East Coro-
lina College is permitted to have
andor operate an automobile on
the East Caroliaia College campus
or in the Greenville area
This rule was established by
the Student Government Associa-
tion and the Administration was
asked to enforce it.
During the past week, two stu-
dents have been suspended for the
remainder of Winter Quarter when
it was discovered that they were
operating cars on the East Caro-
lina College campus illegally.
There is a strong possibility that
several more students will be sus-
pended before the present phase
of our investigation is complete.
The Traffic Committee would
like to urge all students to comply
with the rules regulating the pos-
session of cars on campus or in
the Greenville area. It is not our
desire to suspend students from
school but when we have violators,
we have no choice but to resort to
this type of disciplinary action.
All students should be aware
of the fact that we continously
check on the cars being operated
by college students on or near the
campus. It is possible that a stu-
dent may operate a vehicle illegal-
length of time before it
is discovered by the Traffic Com-
mittee but upon the Committee's
learning of such a violation, action
will be taken.
Alabama Quartet
Renders Chamber
Music Sunday
Tile Alabama Quartet, one of
the outstanding Chamiber Music
organizations in the United States,
will appear in a concert here Sun-
day, February 17, at 8:00 p.m. in
the McGinnis Auditorium.
This program is sponsored by
the School of Music of the col-
lege and made possible by a grant
from the Sarah Sprague Coolidge
Foundation. The public as invited
to attend.
Of special interest among the
selections will be the premiere
performance of "Quartet in One
Movement" by Dr. Martin Mail-
man, composer-in-residence a t
East Carolina Collge. Dr. Mail-
man's riece will be first on the
program. Other pieces to be per-
formed by the Quartet will be
"Quartet in G Major, Op. 54, No.
1 by Haydn, and "Quartet in C
Sharp Minor, Op. 131 by Beeth-
oven.
An ensemble-in-residence at the
University of Alabama, the Quar-
tet is composed of Emil Raab,
first violinist; Frank Spinosa,
second violinist; Henry Barrett,
violist; and Margaret Christy,
cellist. All are expert musicians
with a wide and varied experience.
They will give some forty per-
formances this year throughout
Alabama, North Carolina. Flori-
da, Mississippi and Illinois.
Bleeding Campus
Notices
Will anyone having any
copies of the Fall issue of
the REBEL please send or
bring them to the EAST
CAROLINIAN office at their
earliest convenience. They are
needed for the men coming
to EC in March U evaluate
the college.
There are two male roles
still open i? "The Faithful
Lightening" by Kermit Hunt-
er, author ?f "Horn In the
West If interested, contact
Edgar Loessin, Playhouse Di-
rector.
The Bloodmobile, which visited this campus, February 13-14, fell short of its hoped-for 500 pints of
blood. The final counting revealed that EC students and faculty had donated only 374 pints to th?
Bloodmobile.





M
Friday, February l5
PaKe 2 EAST CAROLINIJANgCg ft
POSTERITY PraiST
When the first "man" swung- down from the branches
and ambled around, stoop-shouldered and bent-spined,
one of the first places he ambled was to a wall. He went
to a wall, found vsonvething- that would mark the wall,
and proceeded to inscribe for posterity. These earliest
inscriptions were little more than crude, linear etchings.
But the art of inscribing walls progressed rapidly, and
the etchings assumed definite shapes. They represented,
not so much an attempt at prehistoric creativity, as a
manifstation of man's desires and practices. Etchings
of animals are believed by modem archaeology to have
been created just before each hunt as magic charms.
The hunters, by etching a hunt scene on a wall, assured
themselves a successful hunt. Other pictures are be-
lieved to be primitive enchantments to assure fertility
and continueed duration of the species.
Later, more civilized men continued the practice.
The Egyptians painted detailed scenes on the walls of
their tombs. These paintings also portrayed the customs
and beliefs of the era. No Pharoah worth his mummy
would have dreamed of meeting Osiris without first
preparing by having scenes of a successful journey
painted on the walls of his tomb.
Thus men have committed themselves for pos-
terity. The scratches and paintings on the walls of
caves and tombs have been almost like inscriptions on
the walls of time. Through a study of them archae-
ologists have discerned many of the habits and beliefs
of prehistoric and early historic man. Without these
inscriptions the knowledge of early man would be al-
most non-existent. They remain as a touchstone for
historians.
Today man continues to inscribe and etch on walls.
Actually, modern man will etch anywhere?on walls,
on furniture, in concrete, in toilets (especially). He
aridly carries on the grand tradition; and when all
else fails, when life as we know it perishes, when the
books decay, when the great monuments man has erected
to himself tumble, there will yet be a still, small voice
of America carrying out amidst the rubble and ruin.
Some future intelligence, excavating the ruins of
a long-extinct American civilization, will discover our
walls and interpret the etchings and inscriptions. And
America will squat happily in the annals of history?
a civilization of pimps, homosexuals, satyrs, and other
assorted perverts and sex-maniacs.
CAMPUS BULLETIN
Fri. 15?Movie: "Satan Never Sleeps" with William Holden.
Austin, 7:00 p.m.
?Pitt Theatre: "West Side Story
?State Theatre: "The Hook
??Freshman Class Dance, Wright, 8:15 p.m.
Sat. 16?Movie: "Satan Never Sleeps" with William Holden,
Austin, 7:00 pjn.
?National Teacher's Exam, Rawl, Flanagran, Library, all day.
?Eastern North Carolina Choral Clinic.
Sun. 17?Joint Concert by East Carolina Men's Glee Club and
Woman's College Choir, Wright, 3:00 p.m.
Mon. 18?CU Bowling League, Hillcrest Lanes, 4:00 pjn.
?Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament, Wright Social Room,
7:00 pjn.
Tues. 19?Beginners' Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 p.m.
Thurs. 21?Beginners' Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 pjn.
-Chpel Services, "Y" Hut, 6:30 p.m.
State Theatre: "A Girl Named Tamiko
Fri. 22?Movie: "Lisa" with Stephen Boyd, 7KK) pjm Austin.
?-Pitt Theatre: "Legend of the Lobo
EDITOR'S NOTE
The EAST CAROLINIAN welcomes letters from its readers.
The briefer they are, the better is the prospect of publication.
Letters should he kept to a maximum of 250 words. They should
also be of general interest. All are subject to condensation and
should conform to the standards of decency and good taste. We
assume no responsibility tfor statements made. All letters to the
EAST CAROLINIAN must be signed. Names will be withheld on
request if the Editor can be shown sufficient reason for doing so.
Easttarolinian
Published semi-weekly by the students of East Carolina College,
Greenville, North Carolina
Member
Carolines Collegiate Press Association
Associated Collegiate Press
By CATHERINE LEBAUME
editor
business manager
junius d. grimes in
keith hobbs
??
A student newspaper iroight not
be the place for a political con-
troversy, but as the only French
native on this campus, I must
Answer the very provocative ar-
ticle on "De Gaulle?Friend or
Foe?"
The reactions to de Gaulle's
European decisions have been more
bitter m the USA than anywhere
eNe in Europe (England excepted,
of course). The USA complains
of these decisions because their
ir-i1' arv and commercial interests
in Furore have received a blow.
The bitterness of the American
complaints is in itself a proof of
how deep the USA is involved in
Europe and therefore how right
and appropriate are de Gaulle's
decisions to restore Europe's au-
tonomy, and not French domina-
tion over Europe.
This does not mean that de
Gaulle wants to 'break the Atlan-
tic Alliance. He is a great enough
politician to see that the Free
World could not survive without
an Alliance of all Occidental
countries. The building-up of an
-autonomous French nuclear de-
fense, even much smaller than the
American defense, is not incomq-
atible with the Atlantic Alliance;
but rather than an integration of
Atlantic forces, France prefers a
co-operation of allied forces. This
means that she wants to have the
control of her own weapons, and
the possibility to decide their im-
mediate use in case of emergency.
As far as the Common Market is
concerned, the door is certainly
not closed definitely to England.
The American public should realize
that England was twice invited
to join the Common Market: once
in 1950 when the Coal and Steel
Comnminity was founded, a second
time in 1955 before the signature
of the Rome Treaty creating the
Common Market. England refused
twice, and even more, tried hard
to wreck the Common Market, by
creating a competitive European
Free Trade Area (with the Scan-
dinavian countries). This E. F. T.
A. remained stagnant, while the
'Gammon Market was rocketing
towards prosperity. England will
be allowed to join it as soon as
she conforms to the "club regu-
lations the rules of the Rome
Troaty-conformity she has not
Z realized, especially regardm
he relations with the Common-
11. ??nries and the agricul-
wealth coun.nts ?
tural structure of her economy. An
evolution is on the way, however,
and M s&(n as England com-
plete it, the door will be wide
ooen into Europe. Enough com-
mon suffering and memories have
united France and England for
the whole 20th century to make
France strongly wish Britain's
entrance in Europe.
To conclude this short restate-
ment of a misunderstood problem,
let me briefly answer the ridicu-
ouseven shocking for any in-
telligent person?comparison be-
tween Hitler and de Gaulle. First
of all, how could de Gaulle at the
same time grant independence to
twenty African nations and think
of a Napoleonic domination over
Europe? Secondly, de Gaulle ac-
quired his prestige and fame for
devoting five years of his life to
fight Naziism; he exiled himself
in England and got sentenced to
death by his own countrymen for
this?could Churchill and Roose-
velt have said the same thing?
Third and last, de Gaulle has
proved in the recent crises (Berlin,
Cuba) that he was firmly backing
Kennedy's decisions; he certain-
ly would have supported the USA
in case of war because he is a
man of honor (could the same
thing be said of Eisenhower when
he (promised help to the Hungar-
ian rebels in 1956 and then let
them be crushed by the Russians?).
This should take care of the hints
of a possible Moscow-Paris axis.
Yes, de Gaulle wishes, as much
as the USA, a "modus vivendi"
with the USSR, but only when
there will be no threat against
peace.
De Gaulle wants a powerful self-
governing Europe, allied to the
USA, and all Europeans want it
with him. He knows that the
European peoples would not bend
under a fascist domination?they
experienced the evils of such a
regime!
And I wish people in this Col-
lege would read and learn some-
thing, and stop rwriting about
things they do not know. All opin-
ions are good to hear, if they are
based on facts, and not on imagi-
nation.
GIANT STEPS IN REVERSE
Offices on second floor of Wright Building
Mailing Address: Box 1063, East Carolina College, Greenville, North Carolina
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-5716 or PL 2-6161, extension 264
Subscription rate: $2.50 per year
Take a giant step (backward. And
so goes education in the public
schools of North Carolina for
another year.
In 1961, the (State Legislature
adopted Governor Sanford's $100
imdllion school enrichment pflo-
gram. The result was a jump from
39th in average teacher pay to
33rd. Overall, the average teach-
er pay went up more than 18 per
cent.
That was fine for 1961, but it
seems that 1962 was, for all prac-
tical purposes, practically left out
of the calendar. The National Ed-
ucation Association, in a recent
report, says that North Caro-
lina has fallen from its previous
33rd lowest position to an even
imiore lowly 35th among the states
(hi average pay for teachers. Not
only that, but the gap between
North Carolina teachers' average
pay and the national average has
widened from $628 to $760. In a
nation that spends more money on
liquor and gambling than on the
education of its children, our
State has an average $297 per-
pupil expenditure, 44th in the
en
disclose
nation, compared to a $432 nation-
al average.
N. E. A. reports that the
State's $4,975 average pay re-
flected an increase of less than
2 per cent over last year, com-
pared to a 4 per cent national in-
crease. If this shows nothing else,
it shows a lack of intelligence or
gross apathy on the (part erf the
State toward its children and their
teachers.
The 1961 school enrichment pro-
gram, on the surface, seemed like
f large amount of money; but,
it was obsolete before it ever got
off the ground. In the first place,
help much because
teachers' salaries had been hr-
wT1 Th a lon ?? &?
U remember that even after
W reonall ?
iy, reasonable plans were not made
for future improvements. If North
adopt stLZ L Zhm ih dti??
"r" that 6tre suitable
twenty yearsZ
Jua forsyth
Washington is
iniT inside with charge, aruj
er-charges over all.
ministnntion concern and
ledge about the sttunti ,n in'
Just what the ncto
are m Oufca ls not goiru
known by the
v time soon, perhaps nvjjj
historians analyze the
some years hence (
will never obtain a ful
from extemporary sounf
issue is too full of polity ?
narrate for a disclosure to
pedient for the administration
the Democratic Party, awj
if information advjurwed jjv d
publican Par . an(j
go verrnnemt-in -exile itHMu.
correct, it would be disnejjt
:ho prfxlic. Ihroanaaeannafc .
vocal groups are looked Upon wft
suspicion. The ad -m (
save their political skint), tnia.
military (to avoid eritk
whatever negligence or comply
ency existed). gav- rise fe fa
vulnerable position in the fiat
place. One might conclude, the
fore, that the only way that Aa?.
icans are going- to epara the
soup from the frott
cal cauldron will he to weigh nV
derue. charg-e. rumors, and i
i.ot. pick out the plausr
the absurd, and draw
judgements.
Tax Cuts:
Terry Sanford has follow
lead of Kennedy & Co. arvi
ing this year's North
legislature (meeting, by the on,
for the first time in the newT
house of the Carolina N4
a reduction in state taxes: a eat
of nearly eignt million dollars. Tk
Governor's proposal reduces pena
al tate income taxes by 7
ion dollars, by raising indhrifa
exemptions from 300 to 500 dol-
lars. An additional 500.0M &
lars would be r by dwliinn
the ,V sales on prepared mrf-
cine, the so-caPed "news bey laf
which is levied on newspaper ??
riers, and taxes that were at
just two years ago along with fr
controversial food sale tax. Tff
principle motivation for the
reduction ostensibly Iprhtgl fn?
the Sanford administration's
ity education" Hinge. The word s
Rjileig-h is that the ?rer 3J?
dollar dependent exemption is ?
hJg-h enough to take into tcco
the increased cost of educa
children.
Consider the facts: erg:
dollars a year amounts to a ss
of less than two dollars a ye&: P
person: therefore, the rec
could be considered neglipkk ?
the average person, hut the j?"
gTegte of eight million 4
sounds spectacular, and Terry s
ford needs something spertac
to son ash the pro wine n
of his administration. A ?
of serious thought on this ?
seems to indicate that the Go
nor is playing political haJ
panky A??in. this time ustf v
pie statistical deception tc
mote hi? future.
Bei
LAwre
NOTICE
All Secondary Mijo?
plan to do student ????
mtxt fall qoorter. should
tact their department! ?
kge Npervisor at onet
pick up application blanks ??
proceed forthwith to ?
tae physical eM?lilt? (?
quired). According to eatiW
requirements, these
returned to yo?r soper'
with the sijrnatiire of ? ?
?fciaa on the h?lth
cate, net later than ?
?- April 1.





,iav.
February 16, 1968
EAST CAROLINIAN
Page 3
Maintenance Department
Repairs, Remodels, Cleans;
Receives Little Recognition
? S "gyMa
S&&TC
SB?
?;pilliPP
4
?
?' ' iT-Zv

:??:?:

Tpg
i:?w?:?; ????vx :?
m
ill
i

( rH?m has beds and mattresses available for present and
bi stories.
, atioi r an institution ed into two sections. These are
Oarolina College headed by Mr. J. N. Capreli of
f time, money, Buildings and Grounds and Mr. H.
t the Main- P. Markham, who is the Engineer.
. ? UTider Mr. Caprell's supervision
? is divid- there are approximately seventy-
Mr. Capreli, head of the Maintenance Department, discusses ?ne ?
his many problems over the telephone.
Expecting a flat tire soon?
storage room is prepared.
The
five people. Included in this group
are the carpenters, painters, maids
janitors and ,the yard crew.
The work of this department
consists of repairing, remodeling,
cleaning, and, in general, keeping
everything in working order. On
days when weather conditions will
not allow outside work, the men of
Uiis department are. working in-
side washing windows, cleaning
rooms and other janitorial work.
Mr. Markham has thirteen men
working with him. His department
takes care of the plumbing, foeat-
Copy by
DAVE ENTZMINGER
Photography by
BILL WEIDENBACHER
?? ???? ?
en have to be cartful around these hot pipes in
A member of the Maintenance Department works on a typewriter
desk for the administration building.
A
workman ftt. pipes in Wahl-Cotes Elementary School.
An electrician works in Wahl-
Coates Elementary School.
in-g, refrigeration, air conditioning,
and all electrical appliances. This
department handles the installation
and upkeep of all plumbing, heat,
and electricity.
There are thirty-seven buildings '
which this department has to keep
in good working order. The cost
of upkeep on these buildings and
on our grounds is approximately
$700,000 a year. This is not very
much considering it includes both
salaries and expenses.
Although we often overlook this
department, the benefits we re-
ceive from it are always evident.
To the men of the Maintenance
Depatrment we owe a debt of grat- Bill Whichard, in charge of the ninety-odd maids and janitors, pre-
itude for their fine work. P?es materials for their use.





Page 4
EAST CAROLINIA
N
Friday, p
?kTl
Indiana Univ. Praises
Former EC Students
Director Explair
Nat'l Teacher E
Two former students of music
at East Carolina College, both
North Carolinians, have enviable
records as students in the School
of Music at Indiana University,
according to information received
at the college from Joseph Battis-
ta, artist-rSn-reeidence there. They
are Carolyn Hinton of Zebulon and
Richard Tamiinsan of Franklinton.
Both studied piano with Dr. Rob-
ert Carter of the School of Music
before beginning graduate work.
Miss Hinton completed work for
the master's degree at the end of
the fall semester at Indiana Uni-
versity this academic year. She re-
ceived their the highest award of-
fered by the School of Music at the
university, the Performer's Certifi-
cate, which Mr. Battista describes
as "a very distinguished accom-
plishment and honor
Mr. ToanJinsosn Is now working
toward the (master's degree and
as a student is designated by Mr.
Battista as "gifted" and "reward-
ing
At East Carolina, Miss Hinton
was a memeber of the college chap-
ter of Sigma Alpiha lota, national
music organization, and in 1961
was selected as one of the student
leaders to represent the college in
the national yearbook "Who's Who
Among Students in American Col-
leges and Universities
As a student at Bast Carolina
Mr. Tomlinson appeared in a piano
recital before the State Federation
of Music Clubs in 'Raleigh and also
gave a series of programs before
audiences in six towns in Eastern
North Carolina.
Tisdale Represents EC Union
At Regional ACU Meeting
Noel Tisdale is attending a meet-
ing this weekend in Tampa, Flori-
da, representing East Carolina
College Union as a member of the
Steering Committee of (Region IV
of the Association of College Un-
ions. This committee is planning
the annual fall meeting to be held
next fall at the University of South
Florida in Tampa.
Member schools in Region IV,
including Virginia, Kentucky,
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, and
Florida, send delegates to the
Steering Committee meeting; and
this group, along with the host
school, plans the conference theme,
guest speakers, discussion group
topics, and the date of the subse-
quent conference.
East Carolina College Union
has been a member of the Associa-
tion for the past eight years and
its students have taken an active
role in regional meetings. Tisdale,
a CU Committee member for the
past two years, serves as the
chairman of the Social Committee.
Approximately 860 teachers and
prospective teachers will take the
National Teacher Examination
here tomorrow. E. M. Nicholson,
Director of Testing has announc-
ed.
Each of the candidate for the
examinations has received a ticket
of admission advising him of the
address to which he should report
to take the examinations. All can-
didates for the Common Examina-
tions will report to the center in-
dicated on their tickets of admis-
sion at 8:30 a.m Saturday morn-
ing and will complete tfiese exam-
inations at approximately 12:30
p.m. Mr. Nicholson will supervise
the administration of the tests
which are prepared annually by
Educational Testing Service of
Princeton, New Jersey.
Candidates for Optional Exami-
nations will return to the exami-
nation center at 1:30 p.m. Satur-
day. Those taking only one Optional
Examination will comrpiete their
testing at about 3:15 p.m. and
those taking two Optional Exami-
natioTte will fmiifc .
p.m.
Most of those tafo fa? v
Teacher Examination.
seniors preprin v te
cm applying for poshjonj'
.systems which encour
applicants to submit tiT T
on the National Teacher F
tkns along wit their ?J7
dential. Mr. Niefe?
He pointed out, hcv
?ome candidate? nay y
examinations because of ??'
terest in discorenig tu"1
stresngths and weakJ
I )??; to such teacker
as are RMHKtTed by the tt
The Common Embmj
elude tests m Prof?a
mat ion, (General Culture
Expression, and NoiYerba:
ing. Each of the thineec
examinations offered ig
to demonstrate mastery of
matter in the field of t:?&Z
education or in tl cccaJ
taught in the bigk &
country.
Hogan Presents
List Of Summer
Camp Openings
Miss Gay Hogan, Camp Place-
ment Director, has announced
that there are many summer job
opportunities for college men and
women, married or single. She has
a list of camps from all over the
country which have openings for
summer counselors.
"February Is the month when
most of the jobs are coming in
stated Miss Hogan. "A camping
course, PE 265, will be taught
Spring Quarter, Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 8:00 a.m. for two
hours' credit
Miss Hogan is in her office,
room 2-04 in the Gym, 9:00-10:00
a.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays, and
Fridays, and at 8:30-9:00 a.m. and
2:00-3:00 pn. on Mondays and
Wednesdays.
Faculty Members
Attend Home Eo
Education Bonf.
Miss Alice Strawn and Mrs. Ma-
bel Hall, home economics faculty
members here and state honorary
members of Future Homemakers
of America, attended last Monday
through today the Southern Re-
gional Home Economics Education
Conference in Washington, D. C
Mrs. Hall also serves as assis-
tant supervisor of the northeastern
area of Home Economics Education
and Miss Strawn also works with
home economics student teachers
in eastern North Carolina areas.
Robert A. Luke, Director of Adult
Education, National Education As-
sociation, will be among the key-
note speakers in his presentation
of "What Next in Education for
Adults?"
State reports on strengthening
certain aTeas of home economics
and reports on experimental pro-
grams and research in higher insti-
tutions will be given during the
conference. Other events of the
agenda are panel discussions and
group work om research.
Play "Crazy Questions"
Baried on ?f? hilanaut hank 7h?? C ?Ai U
50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW:
First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with
a nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a
"Crazy Question It's the easy new way for students to
make loot. Study the examples below, then do your own.
Send them, with your name, address, college and class,
to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winning
entries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub-
mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a
$25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now!
RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries en the has cf
humor (up to V3). clarity and freshness (up to l) and appropnat
to V3), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be mwM
in the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the ts aod
must be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 sv:
every month, October through April. Entries received durw.g mxw
will be considered for that month's awards. Any entry rec . Ft?r Apr'
30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property cf 7
Tobacco Company. Any college student may enter the conte-
ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising . . sand
Reuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees
notified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local rcf
THE ANSWER:
FREUDIAN
UP
n ui9se3up0N 'ep33 Xoy
ijo jaAoodis ueipnajj e
asn noX pinoM ieijM :NOIJ.S3n6 3H1
THE ANSWER:
A Stones
Throw
AjUfl UOSOQ 'ziiAes OOf
?meioo ujojj puejs
PIABQ pip jbi moh :NOIlS3n5 3H1 ,
THE ANSWER IS:
THE ANSWER:
?Aiun AJOU13 'spiouCau Pieuorj
c90, eiu jo no ajiM
siq q2 ajjb, ubo moh :NOIlS3fl6 3H1
THE ANSWErT
Otinsteiit
o8eo!MO ;o Ajun 'ssow maqesoy
. , iSnuj jaaq
auo eo no op je4M :NOuS3nO 3HJL
THE ANSWER:
'1
A FAREWELL
10 &SHB
"lrC0 cjjsjoh "uosjaof a PJf
iuoij eq; o sjnuead paj Xoq a4!l
uoum pauaddeij leijM :NOIlS3flu 3H!
THE ANSWER:
NOEL
i
H ttJ?JS?MqviON qsnjg suf
ioSeoiqo u; aus uouejjodsueJl
jo jjnsaj am s.mm :NOUS3nO 3H1 J
the taste to start with the taste to stay with
THE QUESTION IS: WHAT CIGARETTE SLOGAN hac tuc lk,m? ,
tttsw? No question about it, the taste of a uX c?7 NJTIALS GL msw ? ? ?
This taste is the best reason to"start$u?E? 8ffiou f?r er cigarettes,
stay Lucky smokers. And UiclaS Se tto V ?g Wason Lucky smokers
am'ong college students. iSTftSfi Se?Lud?y '
C I G A ft
e t r e s
?4. r. e
ts





. ry 15. 1W3
Buc Beauty
EAST CAROLINIAN
Page 5
v
Students Go Greek
Following Rush Week
?n-hairtd, green-eyed La Rue Lockerman is this week's Buc Beauty.
I . a sophomore education major who enjoys dancing, horseback
jnd playing the piano in her leisure time.
Student Artist, Burns
Exhibits Work In Rawl
Kn Bums is now ex-
I r s rk as a student art-
lekr, Johnston
Eeceive Offices
i I ollege
tns were elected
n the annual
Nor1 I Carolina
? ration held
?ruary v and
ere ! tee Behr to
of the North
.and Bobb
i wiy created
? Area Liason Of-
? dIs Johnny Moore
?liege. He is also
of the ECC
g Republicans.
of twelve EC
- ? ieans represented
?invention.
tst in the Kate W. Lewis Gallery
at East Carolina College. She is
one of a number of talented seniors
who are giving one-man shows this
academic year under the sponsor-
ship of the college School of Art.
The show will be open to the public
through Feb. 17.
Included in Mrs. Burris's exhibi-
tion are oil paintings, watercolors,
drawings, pottery, and an etching.
The show was hung under the sup-
ervision of Wesley Crawley and
M. Tran Gordley of the faculty.
Mrs. Burri's began the study of
art at Wingate Junior College and
since 1961 has been a student here.
A candidate for the bachelor of
science in art education, she is
scheduled for graduation during
the present school year.
At East Carolina she is a mem-
ber of the Art Club and the Alpha
Xi Delta social sorority.
She is married to Richard Donald
'Burria of Mount Pleasant, also a
senior at East Carolina.
Each quarter the social sorori-
ties and fraternities of EC ob-
serve rush weeks.
Two weeks ago during rush
these students pledged the follow-
ing Greeks: ALPHA DELTA PI;
Mary Jane Conn, Mariam Cox, Gigi
Guice, Virginia Lewis, Selba Mor-
ris, Ira Layne Shaw, Etmagene
Williams, Louise Womible, Mary
R. Tankard, June Tolson; ALPHA
OMICRON PI: Frances Lee Bass,
Vickie Brodburry, Judy Ritchie;
ALPHA PHI: Jean Allen, Caro-
lyn Harris, Annita Randall, Ms-
iinda Wall, Sandy Black, Ann
?Crenshaw, Pat Moore, Frances
Gupton; ALPHA XI DELTA:
Reba Batten, Sandra Dial, Carolyn
Todd; CHI OMEGA: Nancy Alli-
son, Kathy Cauible, Joyce Oliver,
Melissa Root, Doris Watkins, Jane
Mewborn, Nell Bowen, Sarah
Baldwin, Peggy Honeycutt, Lesley
Marine, Carolyn Goker; DELTA
ZETA: Carol Ann Combs, Terrie
Frittsi Nancy Garner 4 Eleanor
Hant, Sarah Peterson, Elizabeth
Phelps, Kathryn Sue Sawyer,
Billi Stewart, Nancy Jo Tedder,
Linda Warren; KAPPA DELTA:
Pat Davis, Lynne Howell, Lib
Piner, Doris Poole, iGarolyn Tuck-
er, Joy Johnson; SIGMA SIGMA
SIGMA: Patricia Chapman, Jac-
queline Harrington, Joyce Sigmon,
Carol Waring, Kathryn Wesson,
Sandra Woodfin, Donna Markum,
Bibbie Riddick, Martha Thompson.
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA: Mor-
rell Simpson, Dennis Lamibert,
Jerry McGalliard, tRonny Goforth,
John Behr, Perry Barnes, Martin
Linker, Benjamine Sutton, Carl
Carlberg, Wrilliam Spence, Law-
rence Keith, Michael Lambert,
Corie McRae; SIGMA NU: James
Weaver, Jerry Rice, James Apple,
Francis O'Briant, Stewart Simith,
Johnny Jones, Richard Collier,
Jim Michegam Steve Leonard;
ALPHA EPSILON PI: Mark Melt-
zer; PHI KAPPA TAU: Bob
Washko, Jim Kimsey, Wayne Clane,
Danny Euliss; THETA CHI: Larry
Boyte, Bill Clark, Mark Flannagan,
Dave Alexander, Tom Scott, Tim
Bagwell, Jim Rogers, Jerry Ains-
field, Pat Lloyd, Eddie Harrington,
Bill Norman, Bill Torres;
PI KAPPA ALPHA: Buddy
Goodwin, Hal Lanning, Bill Cop-1
ley, Wayne Tragdon, Robert Wall,
Steve Westfall, Rusty Sherril, Jim
Coates, Beverly Sawyer, Bill Brew-
er, Charlie Stancil, Brian Gilliam,
John Stonestreet, Richard Thomas,
Robert Dowd, Guy Hagerty, Jim
Galloway, Fred Williams; PI
KAPPA PHI: Tommy Bridges,)
Everett Cameron, Ken Martin,
Walt Jacobs, Bill Cooper, Bobby
Childress, Ollie Jarvis, Carter
Murphy, Reginald Mulle; DELTA
SIGMA PHI: Jeff Marley; SIG-
MA PHI EPSHLON: Frederick
Zebley; KAPPA ALPHA: Jerry
Wallace, Linford Harrell, Eddie
Barnes, Basil Tippette, Bill Lacy.
Campuses Become Centers
Of Emotional Stress, Pressure
. f ,i.p.)Onee
? campuses, like their
y are becoming
? ?? emotional stress
according to John
Director of Stanford
V C.
enber.
Counseling and Test-
tudent, the pressure
? tectually Ls the
K of the stress he has
elementary school
(htain admission states
o is also an associate
professor of psychology.
; a?t numbers (e. g over
'f 0r male students), the
" rrt simply to obtain
B' hut to qualify for grad-
uT0r Pwfearfcmal school.
a
Mh
school, or to flunk
no longer reasonable op-
We the' were when most of
?wahim colle?e: they are ull
rr? e as a aisn?norable dis-
rom th? service or a felony
?n- Twenty years ago,
those who cared, studied, and got
good grades; those who didn't
played. Today or tomorrow, every-
body cares, everybody studies, but
the old grading curve hasn't
changed much. The result can only
be more intense, self-serving com-
, etitiom and. more temptation to
succeed by hook or crook, more
hostility and anxiety.
"For the faculty, the pressures
are equally great. They are faced
wrth more and more brighter stu-
dents. Up to a point, brighter stu-
dents are a blessing; beyond that
point, they can be a challenge and
a threat.
"In our universities, faculties
are under great compulsion to do
research and to publish. More and
more administrative work is re-
ouired of them, managing research
contracts, supervising graduate
programs; for many men ofschol-
arly temperament mdministratave
work is unusually stressful.
"The appalling problems of
those charged with managing col-
lege plants, budgets, fund raising
faculty recruitment and the like
are too obvious to require elab-
oration. What is imiportant is that
the more harried the faculty and
administration, the more serious
and concerned the students, the
greater the (potentiality for un-
healthy conflicts, both covert and
overt, between them.
"When obviously bright students
critize the teaching, champion a
professor whose contract isn't be-
ing renewed, complain about the
'sick call' aspect of the health
service, demand membership on
university committees?these po-
tentially constructive expressions
of adolescent energy tread on
sensitive toes. To handle such
problems constructively requires
a respect for students, an under-
standing of them, and a maturity
and patience that the administra-
tor who already feels pressured
may not be able to display
?N'
On Campus
with
-
Author of "J Was a Teen-age Dwarf, "The Many
Loves of Dcbie Gillis etc.)
GLAD RAGS
The hounds of spring are on winter's traces. Soon buds the
crocus, soon trills the giant condor, soon come the new spring
fashions to adorn our lissome limbs.
And what will the American college student wear this spring?
Gather round, you rascals, and light a Marlboro Cigarette and
enjoy that fine mellow tobacco, that pure wrhite filter, and
possess your souls in sweet content, and listen.
As everyone knows, campus fashions have always been casual.
This spring, however, they have gone beyond being merely
casual: they have become makeshift.
The object is to look madly improvised, gaily spur-of-the-
moment! For example, why don't you girls try wearing a
peasant skirt with a dinner jacket? Or matador pants with a
bridal veil? Or Bermuda shorts with bronze breastplates? Be
rakish! Be impromptu! Be devil-take-the-hindmost!
And, men, you be the same. Try an opera cape with sweat
pants. Or a letter-sweater with kilts. Or a strait jacket with
hip boots. Be bold! Be daring! Be a tourist attraction!
'?ft rdkiil IfymptomMl
But all is not innovation in college fashions this spring. In
fact, one of the highlights of the season turns time backward in
its flight. I refer, of course, to the comeback of the powdered
wiff.
This charming accoutrement, too long neglected, has already
caught on with in undergrade everywhere. On hundreds of
campuses the bossa nova is giving way to the minuet, and
patriotic undergraduates are dumping British tea into the
nearest harbor. This, as you may imagine, does not sit well with
King George III who, according to reliable reports, has been
stamping his foot and uttering curses not fit to reproduce in
this family newspaper. For that matter, a lot of our own people
are steamed up too, and there has even been some talk about the
American colonies declaring their independence of England.
But I hardly think it will come to that. I mean, how can we
break with the mother country when we are dependent on her
for so many things?linsey-woolsey, Minie" balls, taper snuffers,
and like that? She, on the other hand, relies on us for turkeys,
Marlboro Cigarettes, and Route 66. So I say, if Molly Pitcher
and those other Radcliffe hotheads will calm down, and if
gentlemen will cry "Peace 1 Peace we may yet find an
amicable solution to our differences. But let not our British
cousins mistake this willingness to negotiate for weakness. If
fight we must, then fight we will! Paul Revere is saddled up.
the rude bridge arches the flood, and the ROTC is armed!
But I digress. We were smoking Marlboro Cigarettes?O,
splendid cigarette! O, good golden tobaccos! 0, pristine pure
white filter! 0, fresh! 0, tasty! 0, soft pack! 0, flip top boxl
O, get some!?we were, I say, smoking Marlboros and talking
about spring fashions.
Let us turn now to the season's most striking new feature-
pneumatic underdrawers. These inflatable garments make every
chair an easy chair. Think how welcome they will be when you
sit through a long lecture! They are not, however, without
certain dangers. Last week, for example, Rimbaud Sigafoos, a
sophomore at the University of Pittsburgh, fell out of a 96th
story window in the Tower of Learning. Thanks to his pneu-
matic underdrawers, he suffered no injury when he struck the
sidewalk, but the poor fellow is still bouncing?his seventh
consecutive day?and it is feared that he will starve to death.
? 1963
Fashions come, fashions go, but year after year Marlboro
Cigarettes, sponsors of this column, bring you the tastiest
tobaccos and m pure white filter too. Try Marlboro soon.





Page 6
E
AST C A R 0 LINIAN
Friday,


SPORTS REVIEW
By LLOYD "STACK" LANE
It is interesting to note the growth in sports in the
Carolinas, especially North Carolina, in the last decade.
Most of the larger cities and towns in N. C. have profess-
ional baseball teams. Two of them, Charlotte and Greens-
boro, now have professional ice hockey teams. The Greens-
boro team leads the Southern Division of the Eastern
Hockey League. (Can you imagine what a North Caro-
linian's reply would have been if you would halve suggested
even the remostest possibility of professional ice hockey
in the South ten years ago?)
Now to increase a furthering of sports in N. C, Char-
lotte has been mentioned as a possible new home for the
Chicago Zephyrs of the National Basketball Association.
Charlotte is an ideal sight for such an athletic business ven-
ture because of the extreme interest that Mecklenburg
County and the surrounding area follows this sport. This
region gave heavy support to the NCAA Regional Tour-
nament that took place there two consecutive years and to
the Dixie Classic which was originated from Charlotte.
Charlotteans pack nine high school gyms to watch the local
competition. Sell-out crowds attend the District 4-A con-
ference tournament which is held in Park Center. The
area has two basketball teams which draw crowds at their
local gyms?Davidson and Belmont Abbey. At the Duke-
Davidson game last year, in which the Wildcats upset the
Blue Devils, a sell-out crowd was on hand. An NBA franch-
ise is almost a guaranteed profit maker in Charlotte.

Duke continues to lead the Atlantic Coast Conference
in almost every statistic. The Blue Devils lead the con-
ference with a 10-0 mark and 17-2 overall record. The
Duke team leads the ACC in total offense, rebounding, and
field goal percentages. Clemson's resurgent Tigers lead in
one statistic?defense, and the Tigers are pushing Duke
for the rebounding lead. Duke is averaging 51.7 and Clemson
is at 48.1.
Baby Bucs Beat Indians
In Two Overtimes 96-92
EC's frosh went into two over-
times before emerging the victor
in a contest with the William and
Mary freshmen 96-92 in a pre-
liminary to the varsity game last
Saturday night in Williamsburg,
Virginia,
The Baby Bucs staged a four
point comeback with a little over
a minute left to (play in the regu-
lation period to send the game into
overtime with both teams tied at
77 apiece. Neil Hodges evened the
regulation game up with two free
throws made in the final 20 sec-
onds.
The Pirate and Indian frosh
both scored eight points in the
first overtime period to leave the
game tied op at 85-85 going into
the second overtime period. Grady
Williamson and Larry Philips
scored all of he Bug's points in
the final overtime period.
EC Jumped off to a quick lead
in the second overtime period to
lead by eight points 96-88. The In-
dians made a comebock but found
time to be their greatest enemy
as their rally was caught short
after they had scored two quick
baskets to make the score 96-92.
The gun sounded as the Indians
were trying to work the ball down-
court for a final shot.
Jerry Woodside was high man
for both teams with 28 points.
Neil Hodges and Jack Yoder hit
IS apiece for the the Pirates.
The Pirates led in rebounding
and shooting (percentages over
William and Mary. EC out-re-
bounded the Indians 65-55. The
Pirates had a hot hand from the
floor in hitting 39 of 82 attempts
for 47.5 shooting percentage while
the Indians hit 38-91 attempt for
a 40.7 average.
Intramural Dept. Announces
Men's Basketball Standings
William And Mary Indi,
Defeat EC Pirates 81-66
William and Mary's Indians
handed the Pirates their second
straight loss on EC's current road
trip by a score of 81-66 in Will-
iamsburg, Va. Monday night.
The Indians, fresh from their
Saturday night victory over West
Virginia, took the lead from the
evening horn and never were
caught again by the Pirates. The
closest that the Pirates could get
was 9-8 with six minutes gone in
the first half. William and Mary
pulled way out in front of the
cold shooting Bucs a few minutes
later. W & M kept increasing this
lead until half-time when they left
the floor leading 39-22.
The Indian coach started subs-
tituting freely after 13 minutes
had gone by in the second half.
William and Mary had their larg-
est lead of the evening at this point
67-43.
EC managed to cut this 24 point
margin down to the final 15 point
edge, but was uneffective in mak-
ing any serious comeback. After
,he opening ten ??? ?
second half, there could be little
doubt as to the outcome.
The only statistics in which the
Pirates were even close to the In-
dians was rebounding. Both teams
were about equal in that depart-
ment.
The floor shooting of both teams
showed William and Mary to be
the more accurate. The Indians
hit 30 of 62 for a 49 percentage
mark. The Bucs connected on 23
of 77 attempts or an average of
slightly over 30 percent. The In-
dians hit 21-22 free throw at-
tempts while the Bucs hit 20 of
29 charity tosses.
Bill Otte and Lacy West led
the Pirates in scoring with 20 and
19 points respectively.
Roger Bergey was high man for
the home team with 20 points. Bob
Harris was the only other In-
dian in double figures with 16.
The foai was the second in a
row for the traveling Pirates
whose record now stands at 10-8.
The EC record
stands at 3 and 2.
The victory Wag
?straight fr Wilham )
! The Indian now hav , 7,
BC G
WTest
Kncrwles
Parker
Otte
Williams
Brofrden
Duke
Totals
W & M
Bergey
11 uifter
Ckodi ng
Harris
Morris
Cowley
Roy
Dickerson
Younkin
A rv 1 ri aJ is
Corley
Totals
I
1
0
7
1
6
2
23
(,
8
9
?
3
5
3
3
4
2
0
0
0
30
F
u
M
F
M
24
u
M
M
-
&4
Four different ways to make goir,u
more fun than getting there
You can see why ont of America's
favorite outdoor sports is driving
Chevrolets, with four entirely different
kinds of cars to choose from. There's
the Jet-smooth Chevrolet, about as luxu-
rious as you can go without going over-
board in price; the low-cost
i rhevy II, a good-looking car
t hat would send any family
acking; another family
vorite, the sporty Corvair,
CHEVROLET
will make you think that ice and snow
are kid stuff; and for pure adventure,
America's only sports car, ConttU-
now in two all-new versions with looks
that can stop traffic like a rush-hour
blizzard. Picked your favorite already?
The next thing is to take
the wheel at your Chevrolet
dealer's. If that doesn't have
you thinking of places to
?0, maybe you'd rather.
. a
ose rear-engine traction lieeps bOing WCBl have a ball around town!
According to the latest official
release from the Men's Intra-
mural Basketball department, the
early leaders in the competition
are Lambda Chi and Sigma Nu in
the Fraternity League. Neither
of these teams has lost a game
thus far. The Silver Eagles lead
in the Independent League with r
5-1 record. Aycock Dormitory ha?
two teams vying for first place
in the Dormitory League. First
floor West and third floor East
are both undefeated. The follow-
ing are the team standings:
Dormitor League
W L Ft
Aycock 1st Floor West 5 0 0
Aycock 3rd Floor East 4 0 0
New Dorm 3rd Fl. N. 3 1 0
New Dorm 3rd Fl. S. S 2 0
Aycock 1st Floor East 2 2 0
(Aycock 4th Floor West 2 2 0
Aycock 3rd Floor West 2 8 0
Jones 2nd Floor East 13 0
Jones 4th Floor East 13 0
Jones 3rd Floor West 0 4
Jones 2nd Floor Wes?t 0 3
Fraternity League
W L
Lambda Chi 7 0
Sigma Nu 5 0
Theta Chi 8 1
Kappa Alpha 3 2
Delta Sigma Phi 2 2
Alpha Phi Omega 3 4
Phi Kappa Tau 2 3
Kappa Phi 2 3
Pi Kappa Alpha 2 5
Sigma Phi Epsilon 1 3
Alpha Epsilon Pi 1 4
Independent League
W L
Silver Eagles 6
Country Gents 4
Rinky Dinks 3
Tranfers 2
Rejects 2
Fearsone 5 2
Magnificent 7 3
Drill Team Cadets 1
Sleepers q
Foo Foos o
1
1
2
2
2
2
1
3
4
4
0
1
Ft.
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
1
Ft.
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
JET-SM00TH CHEVROLET 1MPALA SPORT COUPE
CHEVY II NOVA 400 SPORT COUPE
CORVAIR M0NZA CLUB COUPE
s;
-CRVETTE STiia MT SPORT COUPE
Bonanza Bsnfo
your
Chevrolet dd'
II





Title
East Carolinian, February 15, 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
February 15, 1963
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.269
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/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/38798
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