East Carolinian, May 7, 1963


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jar?"y
tasrCarolinian
Volume XXXVIII
East Carolina College
GREENVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1963
??b f jn umber 4b
PF9CLubl JrusteesAppointHolt
Men's Glee Cluib has an-
plans for three concerts to
n during the Spring Quart-
er e Club will do programs
tl - o Club No. 2 at Fort
on May 5. the Jacksonville,
lie Schools on May 10,
Greenvile on the EC campus
21 The Greenville Concert
21 will be the Annual Joint
i cert given by the Men's
Nine Boys, Girls
Wins Positions
As Cheerleaders
Glee Club and Women's Glee Club
Members Gf the Men's Glee Cub
come from nearly every department
on the campus and they are intro-
duced to choral music from all
periods. Also, many songs of a
night nature are used.
Musk to be used in concerts tufe
spring includes "Adoramus te" by
Palestrina, "Brothers, Sing On
by Grieg, "Te Deum" for Men's
Voices, organ, and 3 trumpets, by
Pmkham, and "Ode to Poetry" for
Men's voices and brasses, by Men-
delssohn.
Vice President, Dea
?Songs of a lighter vein will in-
clude "01' Arks A-MovenV "Col-
orado Trail and "The Pope Bon-
nie Ourrin, soprano from Oxford,
. N. C, will be soloist with the Men's
?n cheerleaders have been (Iee CJuD in "Wouldn't it be Lover-
the special rating com- j ,y from "My ir Lady
serve during the '6364 r? i
Charles Stevens of the School
of Music at EC is Director of the
Men'3 Glee Club. Ted Gossett, a
Senior Music Student from Rockv
Mount, is accompanist for the
Glee Club.
vear.
male and nine female
will be actively engaged in
school and team spirit
1 the vrar. Those serving
pacities are Mary Conn.
Hicks, Cornelia Holt, Don-
rnda Killian. Patsy
CM Circe. Nancy Sugg,
" Bsll Cunniff. BiTan
"S ?-?-?' Scott. Tom
- Taylor. Guy Ragerty,
Crarg Smith.
ratine committee in-
footbeil coach Clar-
head basketball
Carr, sports publici-
fken, cheerleader
Hogan, PE Depart-
r, Lorraine Grath,
SGA vice president
Wightman, and former
Kathe Salle.
EC's Board of Trustees, meeting
at the collage Friday, May 3, ap-
pointed Dean Robert L. Holt as
Vice President and Dean of the
College; authorized changes in the
organization of several depart-
ments oi instruction and appointed
directors of new departments, a
dean of the school of education, and
a Director of Athletics.
Dr. Holt has had a long associa-
tion with the college. He first joined
the staff in 1950 as Director of
Religious Activities and served un-
til 1953, when he resigned to be-
come Vice President of Mars Hill
College. In 1958 he returned to
East Carolina as Registrar and in
1960 was appointed Dean of In-
struction.
He is a graduate of Mars Hill
College, and holds the A.B. and
M.A. from Wake Forest, and the
Ph.D. from Duike University.
Authorized by the Board at their
meeting here Friday were creation
?of a new Department of Speech
Science Foundation Provides
For In-Service Institute
Teachers in grades 7 through 12
are now eligible to complete ap-
plication forms for enrollment in
the In-Service Institute of earth
science and mathematics at EC
during the 1963-1964 school year.
The Institute will be implemented
and financed through a grant from
the National Science Foundation,
Dr. Frank Eller, professor of
science, has announced.
The $8040 grant which is pro-
vided for 7th to 12th grade teach-
ately frfty persons ers will be used to pay teaching
the eheerleading posts, staff, pay tuition for particfpating
e i ihteen selected, the teachers, provide funds to aid the
1 -y will elect a head cheer- i participants in purchasing texts,
serve for the coming year. I and some reimbursement for travel-
ing expenses.
Classes will be held one night
per week beginning in September.
Three quarters of earth science
and three quarters of mathematics
will carry senior-graduate credit
with credit for both graduate and
undergraduate certificates renewal.
Application forms must be com-
pleted and returned to Dr. Eller
by Saturday, May 25. Teachers
may secure application forms for
enrollment by writing Dr. Eller at
Box 16, East Carolina College,
Greenville, or may pick up a form
from his office located in Flana-
gan Building, iRoom 321, on the
campus.
and Drama; designation of ihe
present Department of Science as
the Division of (Science with De-
partments of Chemistry, Biology,
and Science Education; division of
the present Department of Social
Studies into the new Departments
of History and Political Science;
change in the status of the Depart-
ment of Education to the School
of Education; and appoinibment of
a Director of Athletics for the col-
lege. These changes will go into ef-
fect at the beginning of the 1963
summer session.
Courses in speech and drama
formerly taught in the Department
of English and new courses in this
area will now constitute the curric-
ulum of the Department of Speech
and Drama. A major will be offer-
ed in these areas at the college.
Edgar R. Loessin, Professor of
Drama since last September will
head the new department. A grad-
uate of UNC and holder of the
Master of Fine Arts degree from
Yale, he has had extensive exper-
ience in the professional theatre
in New York City and elsewhere
in summer stock and outdoor
drama, and in radio and television.
Dr. Paul Murray, faculty mem-
ber since 1945 and Director of the
Department of Social Staidies since
1957, will at his own request
return to teaching as Professor of
History.
The Department of Social Stud-
ies will be reorganized into the
Departments of History and Politi-
cal Science with Drs. Herbert R.
Paschal and John M. Howell di-
recting them resipectiiVely.
Dr. Charles W. Reynolds will
head the new Division of Science
as Director. He has been here since
1938 and has been Director of the
Department of Science for 18
years.
Directors of the newly created
departments in the Division of
Science are Dr. Grover W. Everett,
Chemdisftry; Dr. Austin D. Bond,
Science Education; and Dr. Gra-
ham J. Davis, Biology.
Dr. Douglas Jones, Director of
the Department of Education, be-
came Deac of the School of Edu-
cation.
In the Department of Health and
Physical Education under the direc-
tion of Dr. M. N. Jorgensen, Clar-
ence Stasavich, head football coach
since January, 1962, has been ap-
pointed as EC's first Director of
Athletics.
Math Dept. Participate!
In Summer Conferences
Delta Zetas Preparing To Leave
s4
Eight members of the Depart-
ment of Mathematics at EC will
participate in conferences and ins-
titutes offered at colleges and uni-
versities from California to North
Carolina during the summer and
the 1963-1964 academic year, Di-
rector of the Department David R.
Davis has announced.
F. Miiam Johnson and Carroll A.
Webber, Jr will attend June 17-21
in Washington, D. C, an IBM
Training Center which will offer
a curriculum of programming
courses for the IBM 1620 Com-
puter. Mr. Johnson will also parti-
cipate in a Conference on Compu-
ter Science at the University of
Oklahoma at Norman, June 27-July
23.
Others from the EC Department
July 19.
Robert M. Woodside will attend
the Harvard Academic Year Ins-
titute, Cambridge Mass September
1963-August 1964.
Spring Graduates
To Take National
:xam Survey
All seniors graduating this
spring expecting to be certified for
teaching in North Carolina will re-
port to the testing centers in-
dicated below at 7:45 pjn on
, Tuesday, May 7, for a one hour
of Mathematics will attend sum- examination.
frP of iheTjetoTzeTa
A? Oeverton's cottage at Pamlico, N. C T!i?y met last weekend to make plans for next year.
mer conferences and institutes
sponsored by ne national Sci-
ence Foundation. They are Os-
car W. Brannan, Summer con-
ference for College Teachers
of Mathematics, Carleton Col-
lege, Northfield, Minn August
4-28; Mrs. Mildred H. Derrick,
NSF Institute, San Jose State Col-
lege in California, July 24-August
2; and Frank Townsend, NSF Ins-
titute, University of Kansas at
Lawrence, June 10-August 3.
Also participating in summer
programs in mathematics will be
John B. Davis, Jr Mathematics
Institute, Rutgers University, New
Brunswick, N. J June 23-Augnst
16; and Frank W. Saunders, South-
em Regional Graduate Summer
Session in Statistics and Mathe-
matical Methods in Biology, N. C.
State College. Raleigh, June 10-
Initial of Last Name Report to:
A through G Library Auditorium
H through Q Flanagan 317
R through Z Flanagan 209
?If you are currently enrolled
in Ed. 318s, meeting Tuesday at
5:30, May 7, report to this class as
usual and you will be excused by
the instructor at 7:30 p.m.
The test to be given is the
Teacher Examination Survey. It is
not connected in any way with the
National Teacher Examinations,
nor is it required for graduation or
certification. The purpose of the
test will be explained at the testing
room assigned.
If you are graduating in July
or August, you are not required
to take the test, but it will be to
your advantage to do so. M.A. cand-
idates are not expected to take the
test.
.





Page 8
EAST CAROLINIAN
Tuesday, My
1
"WHAT DO THEY WANT?"
They overflowed from the church like a swollen
stream of dark v ater and split, one stream to the left
and one to the rurht, not rushing and boiling like a tide
at flood crest but rather surging- quietly and powerfully
like a tidl wave in midsea, and occasionally spilling over
the curbF into the streets bordering the churchyard block.
A third stream split from the others and headed towards
the downtown districts and the courthouse square. And
then it happened. Firemen rushed forward and bran-
dished high pressure hoses and a lone policeman stepped
into the middle of the street holding a megaphone to his
mouth and ordered the wave to disperse, but the wave
came doggedly on until the firemen no longer brandished
the hoses but leveled their own streams into the darker
stream. The dark stream burst into small segments of
Negro teenagers. The segments held and then burst, them-
selves, into individuals. They cowered in the street, hands
over their heads, and then were forced to their knees
by the water from the hoses or were pushed along the
streets in front of the policemen.
Connor ordered the dogs brought in.
All you ot to do is tell them you're going to bring
the dogs he said. "Look at 'em run. Bring the dogs
anyway, captain And then he turned to the officers
holding back the crowds of white onlookers.
"Let those people come to the corner, sergeant. I
want them to see the dogs work And the crowd came to
the comer in time to see the segments that had been the
dark wave break completely and flee down the street
awav from the center of town, with the dogs snarling
and snapping at their heels and the police officers running
after them brandishing night sticks. The crowd cheered.
"Look at those niggers run Conner shouted. The
crowd cheeked.

But Conner is not a character from the pages of
William Faulkner, and the events, despite their bizarre
qualities, did not happen at some, imaginary lynching in
the dark recesses of an imaginary Yoknapatawpha Coun-
ty. Eugene Conner is the Police Commissioner in Birm-
ingham, Alabama and the events described took place
there last Friday.
"But what do they want?" a lady asked us Sunday.
"What do those Negroes want, rioting and raging in the
streets like that? Haven't they got everything?"
"Well, maybe they haive, at that we answered.
And with the forces of order and justice as represented
by Eugene Conner operating, they will surely keep it.
COLLEGE ATHLETICS
Friday, May 3, the Atlantic Coast Conference del-
egates at the conference meeting in College Park, Mary-
land, voted not to raise the minimum academic require-
ments for football and basketball players. Actually no
one should object to athletes being accepted at institu-
tions of higher learning on requirements beneath those
of other students. Nor should they object to athletes being
kept in school, both academically and otherwise, simply
because they are athletes. Recognize the professional
nature of college football and basketball, and also that
these professionals cannot be expected to maintain the
same study habits as the common students. After all,
their primary purpose at their institution is to play
their respective sport to the best of their ability and
this requires that their energies not be diverted too much
by studies.
Also, we must all recognize the tremendous benefits
garnered to the institutions from the subsidy of "big
time" athletics. There are some institutions which, if not
subsidized by football could not operate in the black.
There are even more institutions in which football sup-
ports the entire athletic program, both intramural and
professional. Additionally, few aspects of any school
can be expected to increase school spirit like a good
football or basketball team. High school scholars are
rare who do not first examine the athletic teams before
they choose a college or university at which to study.
For these reasons, we heartily approve of the ACC's
refusal to raise their minimum requirements for athletes
(which are very realistically, about half what they are
for common students). But we thought that perhaps,
since such policies are in effect, the institutions involved
might initiate a totally new concept in the area of educa-
tion. They could place a special little stamp on the di-
ploma of athletes?who graduate. This stamp would sig-
nify for everybody that this graduate had been an ath-
lete in college. You know, sort of like the way manufact-
urers stamp "Second" on some shirts.
Easttarolinian
Published semi-weekly by the students of East Carolina CoUese,
Greenville. North Carolina
Member
Carolines Collegiate Press Association
Associated Collegiate Press
editor
business manager
junius d. arri
tony r. bowen
m
Offices on second floor of Wright Building
Hailing Address: Box 1063. East Carolina College, Greenville. North Carolina
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-5716 or PL 2-6101, extension 264
Subscription rate: $2.60 per
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EL TORO
by
Ronald W. Gollobin
THE LIES IN, THIS COLUMN ARE THE AUTHOR'S AND NOT THOSE F THE EAST UtQLLSUN,
Ramon and I wondered yesterday
what the criteria for selecting
housemothers was. We wondered it
rudeness and lack of tact were pre-
requisites or if housemothers de-
veloped these traits: later with on-
the-job training. We decided to
find out.
After asking a maid at one of
the dorms where we might find the
house mother, we were informed
(with a shriek) that she was tne
housemother, and to not set foot
inside the parlor with those ber-
mudas on. Ramon quieted her fin-
ally and began the interview. He
asked if she thought housemothers
should be tolerant and adaptable to
the changitng times.
"Definitely she answered,
averting her eyes from the naked-
ness of Ramon's knees. Ramon ask-
ed if she thought that house-
mothers should be broadminded.
"Definitely she answered, af-
ter administering a smashing judo
blow to the poined hands of a pass-
ing couple.
She apoligized for cutting- the
interview short, but pointed out
that the sun (bad almost set and
that she had to lock up the dorm.
When asked if she were a prude,
she indignantly replied, "Sir, I re-
semble that remark

The Judiciary-Disciplinary Com-
mittees last week voted to abolish
capital punishment on campus. "In
keeping with imore modern trends
said a spokesman, "we have install-
ed stocks and a new whipping post,
and have expanded the capacity
of our dungeon.
to our instructors in the Erelish
department.
?
The newly elected president of
the Student Council Association
has beer, under heavy fire from
critics who s?ay he doesn't know
anything about par .
cedure, an I ean'1 -
He was asked at T
ing. "Mr. Preside
make a motion?"
"No he replied, "l
just sit right still
'Now For The Clincher
M
I
Mr. Jack Budd (Rosey) an-
nounced today that thumps would
isoon be put up on the sidewalks to
keep students from running be-
tween classes.

Ramon went over to the student
loan office the other day and asked
the secretary if the loan arranger
was in. "No she replied, "he's
out to lunch; would you care to
speak Ito Tonto?"
a a a a
An instructor in the English de-
partment said (to our faces) that
the hramor in "El Toro" is rather
high schoolish. Ramon and I agree
wholeheartedly. We give full
Dearest Darling Editor.
In answer to your idiotic Edi-
torial in Friday's EAST CARO-
LINIAN, I should like to say a
few choice words.
I can actual ly see the reasons
(sic) why FRESHMAN (sic) should
not have cars, you cannot say I
am predjudiee (sic) because I am a
Freshman myself. But when peo-
ple stall drawing the line on Sopho-
mores something has to be said.
You were right in saying not
having cars would be unpopular
with the underclassmen. It was
probably the understatement erf
the year, furthermore you did not
have a pertinent fact to present,
to make such a statement.
First of all you stated that in-
stitutions with high academic rat-
ings did not permit their under-
classmen to operate automobiles.
Since when is East Carolina Col-
lege an institution with the highest
academic standings (sic)? There
goes your first pertinent fact shot
to pieces. In the same paragraph
you foonto say that people who
have cars will not study. Who are
you to make such a rationilization
(sic)? Besides M the student rath-
er drive a car, who is to say he
is to study? It is his own business
if he rather drive and flunkout
(sic). To go beyond that a person
who attends college is supposed
to be mature enough to realize
that be is here for an education,
and not a joy ride. If tbe student
does not realize this from the be-
ginning, he should not be here in
the first place.
You then go on to point out that
East Carolina does not have the
space (sk) to provide for all the
cars on campus. If East Carolina
does not have the space to accomo-
date (sic) students and their cars
they should not admit so many new
Freshman (sic) each year until
the space problem is solved. Maybe
I
? inject a t gn
parking fiel L T
behind the new '
a parking spa
parking spa for D r
Now let's get to J W
about the 6 year ?
cause he has t
of the EAST (
mature
11 Ugh the ' ? '?
ment has ma
can you corns
a a liege student wh
home for the weeke ;
of these students
just to go home. Son
weekend so as they n
(sic) money to come to I
ing the weak, others -
see their wive, and future
Some have to go home I
parents and work tbe farm.
you that some go bana &r
of tho above reasons
(sic) is no one, a;
(sic) who can dictate to a 1
when he is to ?;o home- -A
loyalty to East Carolina
must be instilled by the J
himself, and cannot and shoulc
be forced upon him. lyyain
institution can neve- N ar
pushed in this mammer.
Now for the clincher &?
Una College is always trn.
make themselves (sic) f0
tionally and obtain out oi "
sfaidenu. 1 don't know many
donts who will want to come w
tfi
with the knowledge that they
not (sic) be able to have I
their Sophomore TT Ete
dents in this state will hesrt
apply to EC when presented
tfcis fact I know this hm
band experience, because 1 ?
out of state student m
Editor hang your head to I
for backs such an ?abkilUc
Joseph Ang
u
i a





I .?K
EAST CAROLINIAN
Music School Presents Opera
o Climax Tercentenary Comm.
Page 3
a ro
V
Strassler has announced.
? native of Latta, S. C,
tudy of music
m College in Spartan
He received both the
ani the master's de-
al Syracuse UnT-
hile there, he composed
one ad "Slow
a produced at Syra-
?" by a i umber of
?! i ?pera ork ?
? ifi of Florida
Tallahassee, in
"Fitrit ives" was
? re he
The work combines tons1 action,
romance, and humor, and, though
based on a fictitious situation, is
true to the spirit of the early h
tory of North Carolina.
The Opera Theater of the col-
lege, organized in 1956, lias su
cesslully presented operas by such
compo ers as Smetana, Puccini,
Gounod, and Menotti, A small
group of student members, or-
ganized as the Pirateers, toured
Iceland, Greenland, Labrador, and
Heads Professional
Vann
Business Organization
rerrence Richard Vann, junior t busines ?? fch a bettei pro
' rain, mold, and refine
student at EC, has been named
by the members of the Society
for the Advancement of Manage-
ment, a national professional oi
ganization of management in in-
dustry, commerce, government,
and education, to head he group
resident of the year 1963-1964.
Vann will begin his duties
president at ti e opening - ' tin
1 quai I er.
The kal or it ion, comp ?
ed approxLmalely 20 me
Van:i is a graduate of Eliza ? I
Cit) 11 ij-rh. He i: speciali in
e School of i business at th
lege and i loca
tion in February, lif
Elected to -rc witl Pn
Vann in executive
?y Loo Lan
nv ood Watlon '? ?per, I
'? . ndland last winter urtd r l
ip of the National
ie Council in association with
USO hows.
ear, v. unded b
of Business in 19! 9 Tl ,j
organization str - "to dc
iources and to provi
Op
ciputa-

j-
A I :
ademv Of Science
Sixtieth Annual Meet
?
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is Meet
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Page 4
EAST CAROLINIAN
Twwky, May 7
? t
i
SPORTS REVIEW
By RON DOWDY
The EC thin-clad meet, scheduled for last Saturday
against High Point, was canceled, causing the campus ath-
letics to be quite slack over the weekend. The track team
closed out their season yesterday in a match with AC.

The golf team hosted AC yesterday and are to be
hosted by Old Dominion on Thursday.

The tennis team hosted the Citadel Saturday and the
College of Charleston yesterday. On Friday they encounter
Pfeiffer, and on Saturday, Davidson. Both of these games
are away.

Lacy West increased his number of winning games
Friday as he hurled the Pirate diamond men over Elon, 13-1.
West "allowed just five hits in the nine innings, striking
out nine and walking none. West has won six and lost two.
The mainstay of Coach Smith's staff had a four-hit shutout
going for 8 23 innings until an unearned run was pushed
across in the last of the ninth.

Tommy Kidd has really been setting a hot pace during
the second half of this season. His batting hasn't increased
too rapidly, but his runs-batted-in have doubled. A tre-
mendous asset to the team, Kidd has now hit a home run in
four of the last six games. He has a total of 23 r.b.is.

Odds and Ends
The May 6 edition of Sports Illustrated has quite a
variety of articles on almost every sport.
One article of particular interest concerns the Los
Angeles Dodgers' outfielder, Frank Howard, and the Wash-
ington Senators' number one pitcher, Tom Cheney. Howard
finally decided to wear glasses and immediately whacked
three home runs in four games. Cheney has allowed just
one run in four nine-inning games. He has an unblemished
4-0 record, and after the first three games had an un-
blemished earaed-run average of 0.00.
Barnes, Hedgecock Lead EC
Pirates Over AC, 2-1
La WTshoWf'hUbatting power as heShacks out another base hit in the rXKlon arae?
hurled the game, giving up just five hits, as the Pirates won 13-7.

West Hurls Five-Hitter Over Elon,
Kidd Homers Again As Pirates Wi
Pete Barnes pitched the EC j
Pirates to a narrow 2-1 victory
over Atlantic Christian last
Wednesday. Barnes engaged with
AC hurler Charlie Lockamy in a
pitchers' doiel as Barnes came out
on top. Both pitchers went all nine
innings for their respective teams.
Barnes, a sophomiore from Wil-
son, showed his hometown friends
what an asset he is to the EC pitch-
ing staff by striking out 12 AC
batters while giving up just five
hits and walking none.
Lockamy allowed only three hits
scattered throughout the nine in-
incrs as he walked three and struck
out six.
The Pirates scored their two
rins on a pinch-hit by infielder
Roger Hedgecock. The seventh-
inning single came with two out
and with Buddy Bovender on third
case and Lacy West on second.
Both runners were knicked in by
Hedgecock's single.
The only AC run came off center-
fielder Fat Dixon's eighth inning
solo home run. Dixon also had a
single.
The Pirates are now 13-4-1 f?r
the season.
For the second time in six days
the hard-hitting Pirates showed the
Elon 'Christians little pity as they
whipped them again last Friday,
13-1. On Saturday, Apirl 27, Soph-
omore Mike Smith hurled the Pi-
rates over the Christians, 17-3. This
time it was Lacy West, the senior
ace-hurler of the squad, who pitch-
ed for the Pirates. West threw a
8 23 inning 4-hit shutout, while
striking out nine and walking none.
WTest, the control specialist, was
scored on in the last of the ninth
when an Elon batsman "was safe
on an error, went all the way to
third on another error and scored
on a single by shortstop Jim Shield.
The Pirates oipened their scoring
surge early in the game, scoring
two runs in the first inning on a
walk, a balk, a double by Junior
Green, and a single by West. They
went on to score two more in the
second on Fred Rodiriquez's double
and singles by Carlton Barnes and
Buddy Bovender.
Tommy Kidd proved that his
grand-slam home run in the first
Elon game was nothwrg hard to do
by slamming a three-run homer in
the seventh. Kidd now has four
home runs for the last six games.
The long-hall hitter had a total of
four runs-hatted-in for the day,
increasing his total to 23, tops on
the team.
The Pirates scored five more
runs in the eighth on three walks,
two sacrifice flies, and singles by
Barnes and Bovender.
Coach Earl Smith led his team
to their fourteenth triumph against
four losses. It was West's sixth
win for eight games.
in
EC's diamond men are idle
May 16 when they tTKvz
Camp Lejeune in n three gar
series to close out the season. IV
games begin May 24.
WANTED
CAMPUS PHOTOGRAPHERS
FAMILIAR WITH 4x5 GRAPHIC
CAMERAS. WONDERFUL OP-
PORTUNITY TO MAKE GOOD
MONEY NEXT SCHOOL YEAR
SEND QUALIFICATIONS AND
EXPERIENCE TO:
SMITH STUDIO
14 E. Hargett St
Raleigh, N. C.
?????????????????
mam
Blarnie Tanner, a graduating senior from near-by Rocky Mount, shows
his serving form in the recent EC-Citadel tennis match. The Pirate net-
ters, despite a determined squad, came up on the short end as the Cadets
won 8-1. The team closes out their season this weekend.








ANNOUNCING
A NEW DIMENSION IN DAY STUDENT LIVING
THE COLLEGE INN
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
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Swimming Pool
Kitchenettes
Air Conditioned
Launderette
Special Rates to
ECC Men Day Students
SEE OUR DEMONSTRATION APARTMENT
Phone PL 8-3162 s. Memorial Drive
Now Taking Reservations For Fall Quarter
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Title
East Carolinian, May 7, 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
May 07, 1963
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.287
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/38816
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