East Carolinian, July 11, 1963


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





Three In Concert' Performs In McGinnis An
Marimbist, Pianist And Dancer Appear
Throe in Concert' a trio combining in their perform-
3 marimba, piano, and dance, will appear at East
tonight as the second attraction of the Summer
Entertainment Series.
program, sponsored by
nt Go.ernment As-
is scheduled for
" p.m. in McGinnis Au-
The public is in-
attend without
hit" artists who compose
are Douglas Williams,
and .Sandra Volkart
Allen, dancers. The
serious music and
well as music and dance
? th atane.
tegan hds professional
as a dancer in the corps de
' t of the American Ballet
nd after a series of
ean tours and a successful
Russia in 1900 became
r. He has also been
tar with the Andre Eglev-
at Jacobs Pillow and
, .rts Festival, and has
in Broadway and tele-
luctions.
een on the con-
. for several years and
it and recitals in
. Puerto Rico, and
received high
, ritica for both his
a marimbist and for the
e of his stage
?
rt, a dancer since
nod, has been so-
ballet and theater
Her dancingr is de-
"exci ingr anl showing
chnique and artistry.
these artists are
Ring Sale
Th- College Ring Sale will
today at 4:00 p.m.
Him j he purchased until
K;u lime in the College D?-
n area from the L. G. Bal-
f,??r Company representative.
Union Parties
THege Union will sponsor
d Kingo-Ice Cream party Monday
f- ' 30 rm. in the College Union
unw. Free ke creftm will be
BrivAl a iij:
u
strong. Combined they are a force
ays one critic.
Greg Colson, pianist-comedian,
will be the third attraction of the
Summer Entertainment Series.
Appearing later this month, Colson
is a remarkable pianist with a
wide range of music from Bach
to Gtirshwin to Rogers. The Chad
Mitchell Trio is being sought as
another addition to the Summer
Entertainment Series.
Coeds Model
WXCT-TV viewers of the
Miss North Carolina Pag-
eant to be televised Saturday
nirht will see three East
Carolina coeds model fashions
from Sallie's of Goldsboro.
Appearing on behalf of the
bridal and formal shoppe will
be Cathy Shesso of Jackson-
ville, Buccaneer Queen, 1963;
Pat Drake of Williamston,
former Miss North Carolina
contestant; and Nancy Roberts
of Hillsboro, president of Chi
Omega Social Sorority. These
voung ladies will appear about
mid-way the State pageant
on Channel 9, Greenville.
vol. XXXVIII east Carolina college, greenville, n. c, thursday, July 11, 1963no.59
College Sponsors First Summer
Program In Asiatic Studies
Opening a series of lectures and
other prograans scheduled as spec-
ial events of East Carolina's first
Summer Program in Asian Stud-
ies, Zenzo Kato, Superintendeinit of
Schools in Nagoya, Japan, spoke
on education in his school system
Monday" morning in the Austin
Auditorium.
His talk was preceded by a dis-
cussion of "Japan Today" by Pro-
fessor George Fasti, Jr director
of the Summer Prograim, and a
film on "School Life in Japan
The Sumimer Program in Asian
Communique
MOSCOW?The ,giap between
Red China and the Soviet Union
grew still wider Tuesday when
the two leaders took turns de-
nouncing each other. The final out-
come of the Russia-China idea-
logical dispute is expected to alter
US foreign policy.
WASHINGTON?The U1S Gov-
ernment froze all Cuban assets in
this country, whether owned by
Castro's government or by Cuban
individuals. The new move was de-
signed to further isolate Red-
domi mated Cuba and to prevenit
US dollars from being used for
subversive activities throughout
the rest of Latin America. The new-
ly-issued order puts Cuba in the
same class with North Korea and
Red China.
WASHINGTON?The possibility
of a nationwide rail strike seems
certain unless union and railroad
officials can reach an agreement
soon. A strike deadline is set for
12:01 a.m. Thursday. The dispute
is over some 40,000 firemen who,
the railroad claims, are unnec-
essary and are "featherbedding
President Kennedy has exhausted
all presidential authority thus far
in preventing a walk-out. He has
seated that he would not "tolerate"
a nationwide rail strike. The strike,
if it occurs, will affect the move-
ment of US mails.
CAMBRIDGE?A group of eight
Negroes amd three whites resumed
aniti-segregation demonstrations
less than an hour after National
Guard troops were pulled out of
the city and martial law lifted.
RALEIGH ? The controversy
over the Anfti-Red law banning'
Communist speakers from campuses
still rages. The executive com-
mittee of the University of North
Carolina came out Monday againstt
the law and sftated that it will ask
the full Board of Trustees to seek
its repeal. Hope that the bill would
be repealed in a special session
has dimimn;he.l for it now appears
that the bill may not be considered
in the special session.
S;udies, extending through July
23. includes courses in Asian his-
tory and geography and the allied
courses, "Religions of (the World"
and 'World Masterpieces in Trans-
lations taught by faculty mem-
bers in the field of Humanities
atrd English.
Staff members of the program,
in addition to Dr. Pasti, are Dr.
O. P. Milstead and Dr. Andrew D.
Perejda of the College Depart-
ment of Geography.
Mr. Kaito is traveling and lec-
turing in this country from June
17 through August 17, and, while
here, is visiting public school sys-
tems bo confer with superinten-
dents and their staffs and to ob-
serve programs for citizenship ed-
ucation, programs and facilities in
the natural sciences, and counsel-
ing methods. He is also making a
study of the preparation of ele-
mentary and secondary teachers
in schools of education in this coun-
try.
At Nagoya City, Mr. Kato is
responsible for the administration
of 251 elementary and secondary
schools with an enrollment of more
Business School
Offers Workshop
The School of Business will con-
duct a two-day conference for
high school and college shorthand
teachers on July 16 and 17. Plans
for the conference have been an-
nounced by Dr. James L. White,
Professor of Business at the col-
lege, who is in charge of pro-
moting and directing the confer-
ence.
Guest lecturer will be Howard
Newhouse, Professional Specialist
of the Gregg Publishing Division,
McGraw-Hill Book 'Company, New
York. Mr. Newhouse will Bring to
the conference a wide and varied
background of speaking and writ-
ing experience. This will make his
third trip to the campus in the
past ten years. Newhouse was one
of several guest lectures in the
Gregg Methods Conference here in
1961. He is co-author of two text-
books and contributes magazine
articles frequently to professional
periodicals.
The conference is beine: offered
on a no-fee, no-credit basis and is
oen to all business education
teachers. All meetings will be held
in Rawl 130 on the campus. The
first session will be from one to
four o'cock on July 16; the second
meeting will be held from nine
to twelve o'clock on July 17. New-
house will discuss revisions of
Greoj Shorthand as the Diamond
Jubilee Series.
i
than 263,000 students.
Other sneakers who will appear
on the Program in Asian Studies
this summer and their topics have
been announced by Dr. Pasti.
Meetings, each covering: a fifty-
minute period, will be held in the
Austin Auditorium and are open
to the public.
The schedule of events includes
lectures by Professor Dison Poe,
nieng-ICni University, Taiwan,
July 12. "The Disintegration of
Traditional CorHfucianism 9 a.
m and "Western Impact and
r'hma's Response 12 noon; Dr.
Won-Kyong Cho, July 17, "Korean
Poetry 9 a.m and Professor
Burton Beers of N. C. State. UNC,
Raleigh, July 19, "Some Prob-
lems in Americani-Japainese Rela-
tions 9 a.m and "Red China
12 noon.
In addition. Dr. Won-Kyong
Cho, Korean classical dancer, will
appear in a prograim of Korean
dances and an illustrated lecture
' n "Comparison of Chinese, Korean
and Japanese Dance Movements"
at 8:15 p-m. July 17 in the Mc-
Cinnis Auditorium
Two films "Ja.ran in Summer"
and "Japan: 1962" will be shown
in the Austin Auditorium July 18
at 9 am.
Two exhibitions, currently being:
shown at East Carolina as part of
the Pros-ram of Asian Studies,
are "Contemporary Japanese
Prints sponsored bv the School
of Art, iRawl Building, and "Faces
of Asia an exhibition of photo-
graphs, Joyner Library. Both will
be on view through July 22.
SGA Sponsors Ball
For Summer Queen
Crowning of the Summer School
Queen and dancing to music by the
Collegians, local dance hand, will
highlight the annual Summer
School Ball scheduled for Satur-
day night, July 20. Sponsored by
the Student Government Associa-
tion, the semi-formal affair will
be held in Wright Auditorium from
8:00 to 11:30 n.m.
Doug Grumpier, SGA Special
Events Chairman, announced that
representatives from each of the
dormitories and a day student
candidate will be selected to vie
for the honor of succeeding Judy
Payne of Bassetit, Va as Queen
of the (Sumoner sessions. Crump-
ler has asked that each contest-
ant turn in her name, address, and
a black and white 8"xl0" photo-
graph bv 12:00 noon, Wednesday,
July 17, to him at the SGA office.
Judging will take place in the Col-
lege Union Friday, July 19, from
9 00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m with an-
nouncement of the winner made
during the Ball Saturday night.
'? r ree ice creaan ww ?
? to evervone attending, ano:
hiere will be many attractive
?:2ps giv?n. Everyone is cordially
d to come and join m ?ie
Weekly Watermelon Feast
??,
w.?nRlon eaters made a ad dash for the mall at 3:00 p.m. yester-
i A?T honored and twenty-five watermelons sliced into eighths were
ttaaSi by numerous EC sudenta. The battle lasted only 15 miutea,
leaving many disappointed re-enforeemenis with empty hands
growing sensations in their abdominal areas. Yesterday's event
the second such CU-sponsored event this Summer.





m
HI
2?east Carolinian?thursday, July 11, 1963
in order to know
The Cold War now taking place between the Com-
munist and free world nations is essentially a struggle be-
tween two dominant world systems for the minds of men.
The increasing realization of the true nature of this strug-
gle should cause all of us to conclude that it is vital and
necessary that we should learn the facts about Communism.
We should strive to build an academically sound under-
standing of Communism: its history, its ideology, its methods,
and its goals. The individual should be taught to draw his
own conclusions after carefully studying and evaluating
the differences existing between Communist and Demo-
cratic systems. The ability to read and comprehend more
fully current newspapers and periodicals within an individual
should be promoted by stimulating conversation on Com-
munist idealogy and terminology. Also, without deviation,
the individual should be prepared to read, think, listen, and
s
??' i
itli calm but accurate discrimination in order that he
may not fall prey to insidious propaganda.
Avoid emotionalism, propaganda, fear, and ignorance,
for these are ideal seedbeds for the growth of any totalitarian
system, An open mind, without vehement hatred, in ad-
dition to facts and understanding, is the only valid way to
create a well-founded appreciation of the challenge of Com-
munism to the American way of life.
Communism, Communist, Communistic are words you
hear and read often today. Some people use them to describe
almost anything or anybody they don't like. Others fear the
terms without knowing exactly what they mean. Everything
you don't know seems greater than it really is. The ordinary
man's fears and confusions in regard to Communism make
it hard for him to think clearly about this danger that faces
democracy.
Communism is not easy to define, for it is an old
v ord which has meant different things to people who lived
l;mg before the Soviet government was set up in Russia.
Sometimes Communism has stood for the dream of a para-
dise on earth and has summed up the hopes of idealists. Some-
timas it has meant revolution against poverty and misery
and has stood for violence and destruction. Today Com-
munism generally means the kind of government found in
Soviet Russia and Communist China. It means rule by a few
men who seized power through violent revolution.
They (the Communists) claim to govern in the name
of the working man, but they use force and deceit to keep
their power. Their government owns and controls all pro-
perty.
These dictators talk about an ideal society, but they
keep the workers from having any share in making decisions
that are supposed to produce the ideal society. Communist
dictators promise freedom, but they have destroyed freedom
of speech and of the press, and many other personal liber-
ties.
A basic belief of Communists is that property, land,
mines, factories, and shipyards should be owned and operated
by the government. Communism has meant drastic regula-
tions by the government of everyone's life, even to the ex-
tent of dictating how people should think, live, many, work,
and play.
Let us all then remember that there is no culture, re-
ligion, or government of any peoples in the world where
struggle was not necessary for progress. Within this strug-
gle may be found?hunger, poverty, and violence?as a re-
sult of negligence, coersion and exploitation. This should
always be true anywhere?even here?as long as ignorance
prevails. We have only to look at the physical imprint of
mankind which is a vivid implication that the histoiy of
the human being has been a race between Catastrophy and
Education blessed with Divine Wisdom.
Published weekly by the students of East Carolina College,
Greenville, North Carolina
Member
Carolina Col'egiate Press Association
Associated C"t?Pinate Press
editor
associate editor
business manager
tony r. bo wen
ay shearin
ohn m. macdiarmid
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 2-6101, extension 264
Subscription rate: $3.50 per year
campus bulletin
TONIGHT, July 11
9:00-4:00Class Ring Sale, Col-
lege Union
7:00 pm.?Austin: 'Sail a
Crooked Ship"
8:15 p.m.?"Three in Concert ,
Entertainment Series, Mc-
Ginnis Auditorium
State: "Mutiny on the Bounty"
Pitt: "Summer Magic"
Tice: "The Music Man"
Meadowbrook: "The Day of
the Triffids"
FRIDAY, July 12
State: "Mutiny on the Bounty
Pitt: "Summer Magic"
of
Tice: "The Music Man"
Meadowbrook: "The Day
rtihe Triffids"
SATURDAY, July 13
8:30 a. m.?Graduate Business
Test, Rawl 130
1:30 p.m.?OSU Psychological
Test, Rawl 130
State: "Mutiny on the Bounty"
Pitt: "Summer Magic"
Tice: "At Sunset" and "Beauty
and the Beast"
Meadowbrook: "Five Old Wom-
en" and "Where the Truth
Lies"
H
so others say
The Role of The Teach r
?by calvert r. dixon
EDITOR'S NOTE: Writer of the guest column this week is Mr.
Calvert R. I ix?n of the Department of Psychology. Mr. Dixon, it
is t ? he noted, is tb holder of the Education Specialist Deirree, an
advanced post-graduate degree held by few persons. He is a
member of Phi Delta Kappa, Kappa Phi Delta the Council for
Exceptional Children, and a former chairman of the Governor!
Children's Committee in Florida. Mr. Divon was recently tapped
for appearance in the publication "Who's Who in American Educa-
tion
If we are to preserve the men-
tal faculties of our students and
give them the rirht training in
the habits and healthful activi-
ties n essary for a progressive
soci the guide for our teaching
will need to follow the natural
labilities of the student. Unless
consideration be given these in-
dividual potentialities, frustration
leading to disintegration of the
mental life is likely to result.
No other institution has a bet-
ter opportunity for training for a
forceful society than our schools.
Teaching, more than any other pro-
fession, needs nothinrr so much as
training in imdersrtan-ding- how the
P rsonality develops, and how to
inculcate the attitudes that bring
sound knowledge to an objective
rwncl?a mind that ;? more con-
c ? ned with an impartial world
thn with the personal self. This
;s not an easy tasJv, for it requires
tha the teacher, rather than con-
fining the students to a teaching
situation, give them an opportuni-
ty to view reality with a healthy
mind and ipe rsonality. Further,
for a student bo be free from con-
fusion and abnormal attitudes and
to be able to recognize what is
essential for a citizen in an ideal
society, instruction must not be
toward learning rote detail and
trivialities, but concentration on
the essentials H:hat make life im-
portant. It is necessary not only to
learn to participate in a work-a-
day world, but also to learn the
importance of sincerity, loyalty,
and service: service that extends
beyond the todays of this genera-
tion and includes the plans of
those that will follow.
Teachers maist be free of educa-
tional pedantry and linguistic
formalism, and concerned more
with the motives and attitudes
lying behind the teaching- situa-
tion than with the task of im-
pressing the students with their
knowledge.
Clear and objective thinking
leads to the truth, and some stu-
dents will require more experience
than others to find it. This points
out the need for recognition Mid
acceptance of individual d wes
and placing the emphasis in jHsitive
activity rather than on negation
nd . :n. This also mean
developing j' freedom of self ex-
pression tlie expression of one
capabilities is the most potent of
all armaments. Fur"her. training
should lead toward the realisation
( f the importance of the sub-
' ? titude, where the emo-
tions are centered around others
and directed toward the external
world and the activities while con-
centrating on the self.
The teacher then, although ba-
sically concerned with the traini
of the mind, must also He con-
cerned with the development
a well-organizee and cc tenl in-
dividual who will be able to make
a sai isfactovy contribution to both
himself and his s n-iety. The mind
rarely comes to school alone but
is usually attached to the other
parts of the body that are also
in need of an education. Socrates
believed, for instance, that the
mind was the soul of man and that
the teacher's work was to be con-
cerned with the health of the soul.
Jesus also expressed the import-
ance of a healthv mind in his
statement: "What shall it profit
if he gain the whole world and
lose his own (mind) soul. Or what
shall a man give in exchange for
his mind?'
A final point mipht be gained
from Zimmer's book. The Redis-
covery of Jesus, where he points
oat that "the philosopher works
upon man in isolation, thouch he
may assemble his pupils in classes.
He also abstains carefully from
biasing his feelings by any personal
motives, and ad Hires the very
principle of authority, makine it
his objective to render his pupils
his own master, to put him in po-
ssession of a ride by which he may
guide his actions, and to relieve
him from the dene nde nee
any external guordianship
upon
EL TORo
by
Ron Gollobin
Th. Art Depn- ,
r11 m m$ nunv- .
phone calls and rv
the mieeen art j
one not sem, auth2
the Art Depaitm.w
( Red the campus polieVS !
wing week. Tb- n
the tculnturc pi, :LS Mf
side one of the humps
- m
?on, daij
a
went to work, a
two humps whei
(lever p
thai the note the
pome ty
The Chief claims he rej
when he -r
the note was i?
a ? J
Holmes" and
dent re; -ed
The chief and 1
I ? work foil
saying ?
hidden in tl
that
las
??? ft

and there is
; in fact, t
o them.
?
The Pol
nnmt in a
trike h
?
all ki own Co
pected C ?
ramp ? a
a- BCl
inics. Tl - ? 9f

, A-ho ;

T A rt ' ar1
? ??'? arl
" ad
tha
? tell '
? i Ras
- the
s job
i. ? ?
I
?vad:
)"?'? irs . ? ratei e a
required T- I
next
The Biology Di
investig b i
item of ? '
was f ? ? :
The i
.
VI
?rn
?
urier the c
in this colum
angary letter. T tier read
;????
? ?
,i
!
'
ur.n have
?V"
7m; ' Co T V,
etigated a lawsuit ?-rn-t ?
mipereonating a ? PleMa'j
them and tell f
To this lerter, Ramon sent'
:u. tnitofraphed rf
n an a that he wtf wrff
that they sen be'r.c ?ued f
fx?onatinc ? :I: "
should be aued for ;mp?ro?W
a bookstore.
The Stndem fv.J
took their i; Morr? inj
m on nap in Rawl JS
paeainar son- ?n
? . One of ' ? " ? ?
ures Dassed was a hill mak
a Judiciary of " ' rJh
autotnobile horn- ' Jm
apj ? "
ten SO SMOK1W
up no-ir Austin. R ' ,
mould 5
r?oaev for oi
NO SLEEPING. !
R imon that thi? n "
I anapewneirtal - p
hn to sv
renminjr up "
?IP
Juvenile Delinquency-A Growing Problem
akes the redevelontsent
Today, juvenile deliquency is a
national problem. In 1960, while
the number of young people 10 to
17 years of age yose 2 per cent
over 1959, deliquencies in this age
group increased six per cent. The
country is faced with a double trend
?our child population is increas-
ing, and at the same time, a larg-
er proportion of that population
is getting into trouble.
The relationship betrween dn-
adequate schooling, difficulty in
securing employment, and delin-
quency is obviously an important
one. It has been estimated that
95 per cent of the 17 year old de-
linquents are school dropouts, 85
per cent of the 16 year olds, and
50 per cent of the 15 year olds.
v?l? y and other
jouth problems are spreadinir
from the cities to the suburbs and
rural area But it is the shSn
areas of the large metropolitan
centers that still harbor the high"
nnlrCertra.ti0n of delinquency,
unemployment, school dropouts
dS?fr. fdes and cultura
deficits, it ,s here that converg-
ing social and economic pressures
are huildinsr up to what Dr. James
tion maKes tne iw"
slum areas in large cities a
-rcet for action.
In the last analysis, the ,
be done only by the states
di
communities. But there is -
an imrportant role for the IrT
Government to play- The c05J
probleme of youth in ?ur.
society today transcend g
eources of individual fa"T7
local community. Rv ?"11!L
gether, the Federal G?
and local commumty ca? r
more effeetrreiy iohn these r
ly pressing problems.
? i
A





f, (Greensboro
east Carolinian?thursday, July 11, 1963?3
Six ECC Beauties Compete
For Miss North Carolina Crown
Jr
Faye Cooley
Miss Randolph County

ill iiOlMt
Cornelia Holt
Miss Greenville
By Tony R. Bowen
The crown and title of Miss North
(Carolina might well go to an East
Carolina College coed Saturday
nSght as the State's new first lady
is selected. Six of the College's
lovelier and more talented young
ladies are in Greensibono this week
competing in the Miss America
j relimi nary pageant.
Winner of the competition for
North Carolina's queen will go to
Atlantic City on Labor Day this
ptesnber and vie for the coveted
title of Miss America. Eighty-four
of the State's beauty queens have
been in Greensboro since Tuesday,
rehearsing for and competing in
the four-night event which began
lt night and climaxes Saturday
with the naming of the new Miss
North Carolina.
Bringing fame to themselves and
East Carolina with their participa-
tion in the pageant are Cornelia
Holt of Troy, Kathy Wesson of
Gastonia, Brenda C rowel 1 of Spen-
(t r, Faye Oooley of Randleman,
Lennis Ferrell of Wei don, and
inrie Scarborough of Zebulon.
Cornelia Holt, representing the
city of Greenville, is a rising jun-
ior at the College. In the pageant,
the talented blonde will vocalize
for :he talent portion of the com-
petition.
The reigning Miss Gastonia,
Kathy Wesson, is a rising sopho-
more. A Buccaneer Queen fiinalist
and IDC Queen this past year,
pretty Miss Wesson shows much
promise as she vies for the coveted
crown.
Both Miss Holt and Miss Wesson
pre members of Sienna Sigma Sig-
n ia Sorority. Accompanying them
v-ill be Forority sister and former
Mir-? Greenville Polly Bunting,
rtwice a participant in the State
beauty pageant. Miss Bunting is
also an ECC student
Miss Rowan County in me com-
petition is none other than Chi
Omega's icnvn Brenda Crowell. A
rising junior at East Carolina,
Miss' Crowell will use her college
majorette experience when she
dances and twirls t0 "Night Train
Faye Cooley will take the spot-
light at the North Carolina Miss
America preliminary as Miss Ran-
dolph County. Miss Cooley, a ris-
ing sophomore at the College, will
display her talent as she sings
ind does a soft shoe to "Harvest
Maria Beale Fletcher
Miss America 1962
Moon" and "By the Light of the
Silvery Moon
Enrolled for Fall Quarter of the
coming year as freshmen are two
of the Miss North Carolina con-
testants. One, Lennis Ferrell, re-
presenting Roanoke Rapids, will
present a skit from "My Fair
Lady" as her talent. Miss Ferrell
is typed as a brunette with brown
eyes. She received her title from
another East Carolina student,
Joan W instead.
Miss Zebulon, Marie Scar-
borough, has an original skit
planned in which she displays her
talent?sewini and dress design-
ing. Miss Scarborough, brown-
haired, hazel-eyed beauty, is also
enrolled as a freshman for the
coming year.
Each night of the competition,
preliminary winners for the three
divisions ? swim suit, evening
gown, and talent?are to be an-
nounced. On Saturday, the ten con-
testants leading in total points ac-
cumulated during the competition
will be named semi-finalists. These
semi-finalists will then appear in
ach division again, this time live
before a state-wide television au-
dience.
From the ten, the judges will
iname the five finalists, keeping in
mind talent or potential talent
that might be developed, beauty,
poise, and personality. The new
Miss Carolina and her Court of
Honor will then be selected from
these five finalists. The 1964 Queen
will foe crowned by Janice Eliza-
beth Barren, retiring Miss North
Carolina from Morganton.
The Miss North Carolina Pag-
eant is the largest and oldest of all
Miss America preliminaries. In
1961, beautiful and talented Maria
Beale Fletcher of Asheville was
the recipient of the State title.
Miss Fletcher went to Atlantic
City and the finals and brought
honor to herself and the State of
North Carolina by winning and
becoming the State's first Miss
America.
Prior to her selection, several
Miss North Caroiinas had done
well in the Miss America finals.
Lu Long Ogburn was first runner-
itB in 1961. Betty Lane Evans took
the fourth runner-up post in 1958.
Am Farrington Herring was sec-
ond runner-up in 1960.
Since 1956, East Carolina has
been privileged to have two of
her students holding the coveted
crown of Miss North Carolina.
Joan Melton served as the State's
representaive in 1956-1957. Then,
in 1958, Betty Lane Evans won the
crown and a year's reign. Miss
Evans was a Greenville girl at the
time and attended classes at the
? allege both during and after her
icirn as Miss North Carolina.
In the 1962 state pageant held
in Charlotte last year, East Caro-
lina was well represented by Pat
Drake, Judy Wagstaff, Joan Win-
siead, and Polly Bunting.
A week of pageantry, excitement,
end once-in-a-lifetime experience
v.ill end at midnight Saturday as
a new Cinderella, quite possibly
:mi East Carolina beauty, will be
topped to reigm for the coming
vear as Miss North Carolina.
$w&;vv- - vf" v
?$;
:1

&
i
Kathy Wesson
Miss Gastonia
Lennis Ferrell
Miss Roanoke Rapids
Brenda Crowell
Miss Rowan County





4?east Carolinian?thursday. July 11, 1963
News Briefs
Adams
Mary Adams
Student Folksinger,
Entertains At Restaurant
By R. W. Gollobin
Pooular local folksinger Mary
Adams was featured at the Bo-
hemian restaurant last Friday
nipht. Accompanying herself on
guitar, Miss Adams gave a per-
formance that brought long ap-
plause at the end of each number.
Wearing a plain, green-checked
skirt, white blouse, and sandals,
Miss Adams filled the Bohemian
with her clear, rich voice. Her
soft notes projected well and were
clearly audible. She completely
tranversed the scale, going from
low to high notes without a break
in her voice.
Miss Adams relies primarily on
the story of the song and her voice.
as opposed to the technique used
so often by wisecracking "slick"
groups. Her presentation is sin-
cere and doAvnoearth. giving
the audience a feelinqr 0f the trag-
edy and humor in her songs.
During her performance. Miss
Adams sang many of the songs of
Joan Baez and Peter.
Mary. She also sanr a
Paul, and
few songs
that groups such as the Kingston
Trio and the Brothers Four have
made popular, although she has
adapted these songs to her own
particlar style. Included in her wide
repertoire, were folk songs siwig in
Portuguese and French.
Miss Adams, who is 22, has been
playing the guitar since last Sep-
tember and has been singing for
some 4ime. She once sang with
Joan Baez at a coffeehouse in El
Paso, Texas, after one of Miss
Paez's concerts.
Miss Adams will graduate at
the end of ithis summer session and
Ians to teach science and math to
junior high school students in Wil-
mington, her hometown.
The crowd on hand for Miss
Adams' performance was described
as "almost reverent by Bob
Faieed, owner of 'the Bohemian.
He considered the night a smash-
ing success, as a result of the
?appearance of Mary Adams. Due
to the wide response of her per-
rormamice she will again be featured
here on Friday, July 19.
Harville, Sanders To Cover
Football Games This Fall
Charlie Harville, one of the South's leading sportcasters,
will do the play by play on the East Carolina Football Net-
work next fall. In making- the announcement, College officials
cited that Harville has been associated with the Florida State
Network for the past four years.
He was announcer for the Uni-
versity of Virginia Net from 1951
through 1954 and was with the
Washington Redskins radio net-
work in 1957. Harville has been
Sports Director of WFMY-TV in
Greensboro since 1949 and is
associated with NBC's Jim
Simpson on the ACC basket-
ball telecasts during the 1957 sea-
son. The coveted Lee Kirby Siports-
caster Award was presented to
Harville in 1957.
The co1 or man for the East
Carolina Net will be Stan Sanders,
popular s northeaster from Green-
ville radio WGTC. Sanders, who
was the play by play voice of the
Dr. Williams Heads
Sociology Department
Dr. Ivlelvin J. Williams, now pro-
fessor of sociology at Stetson
University, Deland, Florida, will
join tl e faoulby in September as
director of the recently organized
Department of Sociology, Presi-
dent Leo W. Jenkins has announced.
The new department will include
in its curriculum courses formerly
taught in the Department of So
cial Studies, which diuring the
spring of 1963 was divided into
the departments of Political
Science, History, and Sociology.
Three faculty members, all of
whom have taught in the field of
sociology in the Social Studies De-
partment for a number of years,
will be associated with Dr. Will-
iams in the Department of So-
ciology. Thev are Dr. Paul A.
Toll, Ra'oh Napp, and Dr. George
A. Douglas.
Dr. Williams is a native of
North Carolina. He was born in
Stovall airrfi attended the Brag-
town High School, Durham, from
which he was graduated. He holds
the A. B B. D and Ph.D. de-
grees from Duke University.
Pirates last year, has a wide back-
ground in the sportscasting field
especially in the Greenville, Hick-
ory, iStaitesville and Ashevile
areas.
The Pirate Football Net will be
one of the largest in the Carolinas
with at least 14 affilating stations
covering an area as far west as
Durham and as far east as Wil-
mington. Mr. Wally Voigt of
Raleigh, an executive of the To-
bacco Network and station sales
representative for the East Caro-
lina Net, announced that several
additional stations as far west as
Greensboro and Winston-Salem
(may join the Net. He further
stated that the Wake Forest-East
Carolina game may go state wide
with as many as twenty stations.
A large NtoKh Carolina Oil
Corporation will sponsor the broad-
casts with announcement of this
concern to come within the next
week. ?
College Branches Announce Enrollment fy
Students desiring to enroll in
the Camp Lejeune Center or the
new Seymour Johnson-Wayne
County Center of East Carolina
.his fall should apply now for ad-
mission. The necessary forms for
admission and any further in-
formation needed may be obtained
bv contacting Dr. David J. Mid-
dleton, Director of the Extension
Division. The centers will offer
courses on the freshman and sopho-
more levels, which will be equiva-
lent to junior college work.

Dr. Frank W. Eller, Professor in
the Department of Science, at-
tended the TwemtySixth Annual
Meeting of the American Society
of Liminology and Oceanography,
Inc in conjunction with the Sixth
Conference on Great Lakes Re-
search, June 13 through 15. The
Conference, held at the Universi-
ty of Michigan, placed emphasis
on the aquatic environment.

Mr. Barl E. Beach, Dean of the
EC School of Music, is currently
a visiting professor on the music
faculfty of the University of Michi-
gan School of Music. He is instruct-
ing courses on tfhe philosophy ef
music education and trends in
American music education.
Patricia Weaver of Rocky
Mount, East Carolina junior, is
the first student from the East
Carolina School of Nursing to be
accepted into the U. S. Army Stu-
dent Nurse Procrraim.
She is now enlisted in the Wom-
en's Army Corps, U. S. Army Re-
serve, and is on active duty while
completing work for the B. S. de-
gree in Nursing during her junior
and senior years at East Caro-
Di Long Directs
Psychology Clinic
Dr. John Kozy, Jr at present
a faculty member at the Universi-
ty of Mississippi, will join the in-
structional staff bi September as
director of the new Department
of Philosophy, President Ieo W.
Jenkins has announced.
Courses in philosophy offered
are now listed in the catalog under
the humanities. Under Dr. Kozy's
direction, the new department will
be organized and the curriculum
expanded. Dr. Robert L. Holt. Dean
of the College, speculated that it
r?xhably will take a year for Dr.
Kozv to complete the organization
of tihe department, but by winter
Quarter students may be' able to
enroll in some of the new courses
to be offered. He went on to say
that, if the demand is sufficient,
a student may eventually be able
to maior in philosophy. Associated
with Dr. Kozy in thp department
will be Cleveland J. Brandner, Jr
and D. D. Gross, current faculty
members at East Carolina.
Dr. Kozy is a native of Barnes-
ville. Pa. He holds the B. A. and
tlie Ph. D. decrees from Penn-
sylvania Sate University and the
M. A. from Cornell University. As
an educator he has held graduate
Bssistantshios at Cornell and also
at Pennsylvania State University,
where on the Ogontz campus he
was an instructor in 1961. For the
past two years he has taught at
the University of Mississippi.
Dr. Kozv is also a musician and
has played with name bands and
?as trumpeter with the Pennsyl-
vania Satiate University symphony
orchestra.
He is a member of the South-
ern Society for Philosophy and
Psychology, the American Philo-
sophical Association, and the
American Association of Universi-
ty Professors.
Supebr Continous Sound
Dixiland Bosa No?va
Atmosphere
STEREOPHONIC
Modern Jazz
Mood Folk
Candelight
?
I

t pioljemian
NIGHTLY
?'?? wA
As a member of the program,
Iffes Weaver will receive basic pay;
a food allowance; funds to cover
tuition, books, and incidental col-
!ere fees; nvedical ami dental care;
aafd other benefits. When she is
within six months of graduation.
,he will be commissioned as a
second lieutenant in the Army
Nurse Corps.
After graduation and completion
of the State Board examination,
she will take an orientation eon
at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, a
will then be on active duty in h-
Army Nurse Corps for a pen
of three years.
At East Carolina she holds
offices of chairman of the Sd
Committee of the College Union
and secretary of the Nurses Club.
She is also a member of the N. C.
Student Nurses Association.

The Mathematics Department,
experiencing its largest summer
session enrollment, announces that
eight full time instructors are on
hand this term. Out of a total of
sixteen faculty members, six teach-
ers are away at National Merit
Science Foundation summer insti-
tutes at various universities and
Jenkins Appoints
Humanities Head
A six-months clinical intern-
ship program at the Pitt County
Mental Health Clinic in Greenville
is presently in effect to meet a
?i-qiremant of a recoiitly or-
ganized master's degree program
in clinical psychology at East
Carolina.
The main purposes of this pro-
pram are to meet the need of a
greater number of clinical psy-
chologists i:i North Carolina and
to increase the clinical psycholog-
ical services available in the state.
Dr. Thomas Long, director of this
program, is cooperating with the
College in providing opportunity
for students in the program to
gain exnerience.
Dr. Clinton Prewett, director of
the Psychology Department at
Past Carolina, coordinates the
?uo-vear graduate program.
Wilbur Saetellow of Windsor
and Richard Humph rev of Kinston.
two 1962 graduates of East Caro-
lina, are the first students to en-
ler the in-ternshin program. Their
work at the Clinic includes person-
al evaluation of patients, under
the supervision of Dr. Long, ami
participation in staff conferences.
Castellow. a magna cum laude
graduate, served duty with the
? Army in Fiance from 1956
to 1958. His name has been in-
cluded among student in educa-
tional in9titutions throughout the
ntoraI in the national publication
Vhos Who Among Students in
American Universities and Col-
leges
Humphrey has received official
recognition from the College for
his outstanding academic record.
She QtUfbilht
Presents
JAZZ NIGHT
Thurs. Night
8-11
p.m.
Featuring
"THE JAZZ
!
KAPELLA"
50c cover charge
Per person
alleges.
Mrs. Ant a ,
? m ?
Pitt, !
Counties. ,
h-
east Regional c
Kappa Gamma
1ml. ire 7
?.? -
Senat
e Appro?,
Summer Bi
4
Action
f the S
1
sc;
Mei
-
A

r -
i tovernment
appropriat
Committ ?
Movies, t
and THE KKj
a committee
muimeas nw
Treasurer
traduced a n
P?-iation of 21
ciirive Comr ttee
operations. F
bon on off e
x-s the budget
a decrease of ? .
w ppliea ace
Men's Intrai n
$840 for the Smiw,
?
"?vv
gram. The Cai
requested by C wiiTJ
Per in the amount affMgj
proved. ?
iE KJEY received ?.
of $800 to be .viM to
granted by the rruW tel J
for the
College
motion further rer
in future years, the
School SGA pay onh J
of the hwndboo fe
Plans for SGAj
mer School d
The body agreed hawSj
aJ forrr,a! 30
raoda Ba'
The Senate
President Georcre
nt a co ? ??
e
I'roval of the -? ?; t
whole over ? -? -?ari
barring
St?te-aonfx?rt
nunciation ??" ?
the biB was
A
SCOTCH
GRA1I
V K R
LO
.
Johns!
$17.95
i LSO
Bass Weejuns
Men's I15J6
812.95
Grain
tip
Ladies
Scotch
WING
Lace Up
$18.95 and $24$
Student Charge Ace
Invited

'
?HBMaatnmtf





Title
East Carolinian, July 11, 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
July 11, 1963
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.298
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/38827
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
Content Notice

Public access is provided to these resources to preserve the historical record. The content represents the opinions and actions of their creators and the culture in which they were produced. Therefore, some materials may contain language and imagery that is outdated, offensive and/or harmful. The content does not reflect the opinions, values, or beliefs of ECU Libraries.

Contact Digital Collections

If you know something about this item or would like to request additional information, click here.


Comment on This Item

Complete the fields below to post a public comment about the material featured on this page. The email address you submit will not be displayed and would only be used to contact you with additional questions or comments.


*
*
*
Comment Policy