East Carolinian, April 16, 1959


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IFC Blood Drive
Hill Wallace. IFC President, reports
that total of ,or' P,nt of blood were
j(.nail kj KCC students nd faculty
m,mi. re during the Interfrsternity
mmiihiI assad dne conducted yesterday.
viium xxxry
trtarolinian
EC Offers Many
Summer Session
Activities
u College will offer
1959 utmner session a
. tal events which ImVe
i to interest school ad-
teaehers, students, pa-
era,
institutes, made P0t
grants from the Na-
v Foundation, have been
the college ndministra-
irogram more than
school seiom e and
. . i" a ill take frad
trses 1 seminars at
June July IT J. O.
M true department
R Davis of the mathe-
si I nei w HI direct this in-
East Carolina College
Awards Day
The SGA Awards Day will be con-
ducted Tuesday afternoon in Austin
Auditorium at 4:00 o'clock. Chairman
Jane Staples urges student attendance
at this annual affair.
GREENVILLE. N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1959
Number 21
Miss Greenville
school students from
S rath Carolina, and
ttend June 7-27 an Ad-
ta School Science In-
B Will bt offered in
biology, and the
1m. Frank W Bltei
Department is diiec
stitute,
i Summer Music Camp
J iljr 10-August 1 under
I Earl B. Beach, head
t of Music. Work
ool musicians and music
: . ffered to meet the
t i eats of performers in
. straa, and choral groups,
brings and piano, poa-
ch urn majors, and of
. the fields of art and
i lag.
tour of the North-
States and eastern
ffered as a geography
. Directed by Dr. Robert
- Geography Depart-
r will extend from July
igusl 12.
imer for the first time the
lei : I Health and Physk 1
ffei a sports camp.
e open fca boy? ' IS to 1K
- aged 16 to IS. Students
in one or both of two ses
7-K5 and June 14-20.
will include baseball, bask-
ack and field, swimming,
ileyball. and other sports
rational activities. The in-
tioaal staff will include Dr. J. 0.
u-hes James Mallory and
Earl Smith, Mavis Mitchell, and other
j members of the department.
to these events, work-
- a lie offered in the fields and
dates indicated: Arts and
, June 9-19; Alcoholism in
Education, June 9-19; Int-
ent of Instruction in Type-
lune 2iJuly 10; Visual Aids,
II; Family Life Skills, July
TIVTTIES on page 3)
Pictured aboe an
runner-up Jam'
Mice Ann Home, recently chosen Miss Greenville, and
tarter.
Alice H
Miss G
orne Wins
reenville Title
Wells Appoints
New Chairmen
r Next Year
Dallas Wells, newly elected Stu-
dent Government Association presi-
dent, appointed committee chairmen
for the coming year at an SGA meet-
in g Monday night.
Appointed were Sarah Ewell, Hand-
book Committee; Jo Ann Bryan, ID
Card Committee; Jim Trice, Elec-
tions Committee; and Sybil Swindell,
Parliamentarian.
Budget Committee Cha i r m a n
Charles Dyson will be assisted by
Secretary Charlie Munn and com-
mittee members Jo iAnn Bryan, Glor-
ia Hofler, and Jim Trice. Advisors
are Denn James H. Tucker and Clin-
ton Pruitt.
At the meeting Dyson reported that
new appropriations allocated $150 to
THE REBEL, $250 to the Air Force
ROTC for a trip to Washington, D.C
and $433.75 to the Productions Com-
mittee for the spring musical "Kiss
Me Kate Three hundred dollars was
transferred to the May Day activities
from the amount left over from
Homecoming.
The Budget Committee has appro-
priated a total of $62,132.04 to all
organisations this year. The original
appropriation of $60,206 as supple-
mented in February and March by
additional grants of $1,192.3!) and
$833.75.
Later President Wells commented
on the absences of senators from
meetings. "Senators who accumulate
more than two unexeused absences
will have to forfeit their seats in the
Senate. This rule must he enforced
'Kiss Me Kate Opens
In McGinnis Tuesday
ift!
Concert Pianist
To Judge Contest
Madame Luisa Stojowska will act
as ajudieatet in the National Piano
Guild to be conducted on campus
April 27-May 1, Dr. Robert Carter
of the Music Department, chairman
e event, has announced. She is a
f ulty member at the Julliard School
i Music and is internationally known
t a teacher and a concert pianist.
Teachers of piano who wish to en-
ter their students in the tournament
are asked to inform Dr. Carter. Pi-
bl of all ages may take part,
from elementary pupils to profes-
li nals artists, he stated.
The National Piano Guild Tourna-
ents. started thirty years ago by
Ailison of Austin, Texas, are now
1 in 650 centers in this country.
ne 53,000 players are heard by
adjudicators.
The purposes of the tournaments
are to raise the standard of playing
and to encourage the amateur as well
as the career-minded. Van Cliburn
was entered by his mother, who was
his teacher, for many years in Na-
tional Guild auditions.
Local, district, state, and national
certificates; high school, collegiate,
and artists diplomas; the Paderewski
Medal; and scholarships are among
awards presented each year to parti-
cipants in the auditions.
Those who make creditable ratings
in the spring may he Guild's
Biennial Piano Recording Festival,
which offers aggregate cash awards
of $20,000. A composition teat held
h Biam offers prises and sneour
agea
last year became
Una, and phv
America cont
A bouquet
in Alice's si
Miss Green?
was ennounc
of the pageai
year's tuitioi
Carolina Coll
another colle
Following t
was given a
were donated
of Greenville
The Rotary
is the dang
T. S. Angle
Oiie-ns
'B
nl
The Green v
present Willi
here April 10
torinm at S-0
it's cast bail
from Fast C
by Claude Gn
partment.
All three
place in a str,
a small tow
of the resta
the local sh
the paaseng
tins.
There are
flicts in the
acters that s
well as conf
Included in
a cowboy w
rodeo with
night club
singer who i
on the trip.
Bob Whiti
recently ehos
the parts of
Will Mast
played by D
plays the pa
The restaura
trayed by F
Virgil Bles
bins, is Bo
plays his gu
on most poi
Carl, the b
Alice Anne Home, an East Caro- graduated from
Una senior, was named Miss G'r " ' ' ' e -
villa of I960 here last Thurs
fi7"Mr ciKwnfjenB a "rw-r
seven contestants.
Alice Anne, a veteran actress, did
as her talent a selection from "Mac-
beth
She was (low red by the 1959 Miss
Greenville, Betty Lane Evans, who
Tabor City High
is a senior at ECC.
fi5 Sponsors
a4 blond is five feet,
nti m hair Inohea tall, weighs
14o pounds and has hlue eyes.
In the past she has won the ECC
Playhouse award as most promising
newcomer in 1956, best actress in
1967, and the Phi Kappa Alpha tro-
Awards Mram
FLYINQ HITCHHIKER
Thinklish: THUMBINHH0
" TOHS1 DWCOLA. BAMUM 0.
HIP SINGING GROUP
kiish translation: These guys are so
ut, they wear space helmets. They
r ask, "How High the Moon?" They
When there were seven of them,
were a heptet. But since they've
a man, simple arithmetic makes
a rocktet! Naturally, when they take
they take Luckies. Like anyone else
are, round or what-have-you), they
all about the honest taste of fine
ceo. Consensus: flipsvillel
During the annual SGA Awards
Pay, various oi tranizations and de-
partments on campus will present
awards and trophies toi outstanding
individuals. The A?ral Day pro-
Ve April 21 at
i Auditorium.
be presented in-
ev&Rlf Executive Council,
English: FAT VEGETABfembers of the three
S: y-c As ls' sudents elected
utstanding students
department, and a
the swimming team,
AIA championship.
Chairman of the
nmittee commented,
o bnild the Awards
to an annual affair of
ferest, not only for
ieeeiving the awards,
'nmklish; PLUPKentire student body
, I
By PAT HARVEY
"I'm very pleasingly surprised with
the present shape of the play stated
Mr. Paul Hickfang, choral director
of "Kiss Me, Kate' popular operat-
ta hy Cole Porter. This play is to be
presented at East Carolina April 21,
22, and 23 as the annual spring mu-
sical.
"Kate" is being sponsored by the
Student Government Association with
the help of the Music Department and
the EC Playhouse.
A cast of fourteen students playing
major roles, a 35-piece orchestra, a
chorus composed of men and women,
and a corps of dancers will appear in
the production.
Rehearsals have been in progress
for several weeks; and, according to
Dave Doolittle, co-chairman of the
productions committee, rne cast is
doing a terrific job and they are de-
finite'v learning their lines better
than last year's cast
The cast of this Porter hit is head-
ed by Jerry Powell as Fred Graham
in the main plot and Petruchio in
the subject, which is based on Shakes-
peare'a "Taming of the Shrews
Powell, a music major, has had roles
in "Carousel" and "Connecticut Yan-
kee former EC musicals.
Hannah England as Lilli Vanessa
(Katherine) will appear opposite
Powell. Miss England also had a
minor role in "Carousel Recently
she placed third in the Miss Green-
ville pageant.
Killehrew, Dobson Also Star
The two latter leads are being
portrayed by Ken Killebrew and
T.eigh Dobson, who are cast in the
imnortJ?fJ?r" "
mrt iles ot
ota Lane, the
of the Shakespearean comedy. Kille-
brew last appeared in "Carousel" and
Miss Dobson had leading roles in
Admirable Crichton" and "Death of
A Salesman
Others in the cast include Dave
Doolittle, Jerry M. Liles, Rosemary
Swisher. John Filicky, Zuill Bailey,
Robert Holton, Larry Prescott, Jerry
Van Dyke, Robert Kornegay and Hu-
bert Shearon.
Directing this musical comedy are
Donald H. Hayes, music director; Dr.
Elizabeth Utterback. drama director;
and Paul Hickfang, choral director.
Holding down the remaining spec-
ialized positions are Don Griffin and
Jerrj ktnv.ill spanks Hannah England in a scene from Cule Porter's
Kiss Me Kate" as other members of the cast watch.
.ihftua-wd
rJiu aiSvi "Ve
Lucentio and Bianca
Doolittle, co-chairman of productions;
Pat Baker, assistant drama director,
and Jim Gillikin, Choreographer.
Directors Comment
"I think it's going wonderfully
exclaimed Dr. Utterback. "Mr. Gilli-
kin, who we are indeed fortunate to
have with us. is doing a splendid job.
He has already worked hard she
continued "and for that matter, so
has everyone involved
Concerning the outcome of these
combined talents Mr. Hayes said.
With th
.going to have a hit.
hard work arid ,w8tTi.oC"has gone
int this show, one can hardly expect
anything less
"I think it's going to be a fine
show exclaimed Mr. Hickfang, "the
kids are enjoying it. As in all shows,
we have our little ups and downs,
but the end product is what really
counts and it will be good
Kate' Makes TV
Rosalind Roulston of the English
Department and mistress of cere-
monies of a half-hour TV show on
Greenville will have as her guests
some of the 'Kate' performers, who
will enact some of the show's tunes.
The performance will be seen Sun-
day, April 19 at 1:30 on Channel JT
The performances are scheduled to
begin at 8:00 p.m. Students are ad-
vised to pick up their tickets at the
College Union for the night thej
plan to attend. ID cards are n
sarv to obtain tickets.
Society Honors
ItOTC Cadets
Elizabeth Bowman To R
Over May Day Festivii
OMBXTM. MULW
w
1
HOW TO MAKE 25
te a wordgarbage, for example. With it, you can make the content
auto junk yard carbage), Hollywood refuse (starbage), incinerator
irbage) or glass-factory rejects (jarbage). That's Thinklishand it's
r We're paying $25 for the Thinklish words judged bestyour chc
ing to go! Send your words to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon,
lose your name, address, university and class.
the genuine article
et the honest taste
of a LUCKY STRI
Product tf dm
um
Sixteen Air Force ROTC cadets at
East Carolina College have been
named charter members of a new
chapter of the Arnold Air Society,
an honorary professional service or-
ganization for advanced course
AFROTC students.
Cadet Kenneth E. Wilson of Rocky
Mount has been named commander
of the group, which will be known as
the "General Chennault Chapter
Capt. Vance M. Lockamy, an
AFROTC instructor at East Carolina,
is advisor.
Cadet Wilson and eight other
members were formally inducted into
the society at a conclave held re-
cently at the University of North
Carolina. In addition to Cadet Wilson,
members who were inducted include
Harrell E. Mabe? LinwoodC. John-
son. Thomas R. Gainer, WilBnrd K
Baker, Thomas T. Turner, MIb P.
Edwards, Franklin M. Johnson, and
Dennis M. Biggs.
Other ehsrter members of the
sntmp are Glenn C. yr, ery
Leeuwenberg, Jack Br Koehberling
William O. Meachum, 'Robert L.
Needs, Cariton G. Hall, m& Ewgwne
L. Whitfield. -
C&Jst Wilson and dt -liwwsos!
C. Johnson attended the tuHomi on-
claye of the Arnold Air SeeMy in
Pittsburg JPs daring the Easter
holidays.
Objectives :of the society
nromote American citise;
sir'ageto sAra
power j te teSi@r thr -
sion, tradfttoCT' and to
IL S. Air re
and' to ereat &
HUnt "Piste'
en lh fVS'
Reigning over the annual May Day
festivities will be another one of the
many Student Government activities
in which Elizabeth Ann Bowman has
participated. The student elected May
Queen will be the feature of the May
Day program, Saturday May 2, at
2 p.m.
Miss Bowman has quite a list of
activities to her credit, and they in-
clude more than one or two organi-
zations. Since her sophomore year,
she has served on the Y.W.C.A. ca-
binet.
During her junior year, she was
elected chief marshal, and served as
a member of the College Union Stu-
dent Board. As a senior, Miss Bow-
man serves as secretary of the se
class, and feature editor of the
nual.
She also serves as a member
Garrett Hall house committee,
tainment committee, budget
mittee, and the College
dent Board.
A senior science ma
from Liberty, North
Bowman is now
ology glasses at
Greenville. She plan
J year in the Creeash
The new May
and plans to m
occasion. Miss.
ixy
eludes gm
May 30,
Terry Hi
Carotin
iyiL- fa
rmtm
tepys
ffiettia and
tRi sr iavft
"P. Mills, sophomore, will
president of the East Caro-
iege Historical Society dwr-
the 1059-1960 term. Along with
other officers of the organisation,
she was chosen in a recant election
to direct activities of the organisa-
tion.
The East Carolina College Histori-
cal Society, a new organisation on the
e&mpw, was formed during the pre-
swi. fichool year by a group of itav
dents interested in study and re-
search. Dr. Herbert R. Paschal"0
Department of Social Studies f "
faculty advisor of Um group Aatt.
Ragan, senior, was first
the society.
Elected
Miss Mill
Jr vm
Mf





RMHMVMHRIMNMB
PAGE TWO
BAST CAROLINIAN
THURSDAY, APRIL 16, i69
Work Deserves Praise Editorially
Next Tuesday afternoon in Austin Audi-
torium, the annual Awards Day progTajn will
be conducted by the Student Government
Association.
Such a program is planned to honor
those students who have served the school
and the student body in the fields of student
government and publications, students who
are outstanding in organizations, and stu-
dents who are outstanding in their major
departments.
All of the students who receive these
awards deserve recognition. They have work-
ed hard and they should receive due applause
from the student body and the faculty.
Last year many award winners, evidently
not suspecting that they would be so honored,
were not present to receive their award. In
some cases there was no one present from a
department to make the departmental award.
This year we hope that Awards Day will
have more meaning, more significance. The
auditorium should be jam-packed for this
occasion. We urge you to attend.
Strong Support Needed
Reports from E.C.C. Developmental
Council Wade Bodenheimer indicate that
some progress has been made in contacting
senators and representatives and "talking up"
East Carolina College.
The Council would have a much stronger
voice if it had more student support. The
Council could really accomplish much if stu-
dents here would wake-up and become alarm-
ed tha-t the school they have chosen out of all
the colleges and universities in this state is
being short-changed
Students at the University of North
Carolina and Womans College are alarmed.
They are not only rallying support right on
their campuses from their alumni, but they
are going right to the state Legislature to
lobby.
A group of girls from Womans College
has visited every state senator and repre-
sentatives in an attempt to obtain more mon-
ey for their college. One of these visitors told
one of the senators that she visited that
W.C. needed more money in certain areas
than E.C.C. because W.C. was a much better
school. Only the fact that this senator was a
graduate of E.C.C. kept the girl from being
very impressive.
"News and Observer" editor Jonathon
Daniels warned a group of U.N.C. professors
that they better wake-up because "East Caro-
lina was running with the ball He may have
been right, but E.C.C. cannot run much far-
ther unless it receives some strong support
immediately.
One's degree is only as good as his col-
a-j. .p rcmsibility and help
E.C.C. become the top school mVorth Caro-
lina.
late Positions Open
Elections for senatorial positions will
place in the near future. So far the slate
lidates is empty.
Mir is the time for all students with
mind for the improvement of stu-
lment and student affairs to come
are the students with the vot-
ing power in the student legis-
the ones who can get things
ipus. They hold powerful
of those who do not like
in student government
like to see things im-
't gripe. Run for a posi-
Speaking
By KATHRYN JOHNSON
And here we go on NSA again. Del
Driver has commented that our edi-
torial last week may have led people
to believe that he had had part in
the action to drop East Carolina from
the National Student Association. To
clear up any misunderstandings, Mr.
Driver had no part in this pfot. He
was merely acting SGA president at
the time.
One student senator commented re-
cently that E.C.C. was the only white
school in North Carolina that was a
member of N.S.A. For the benefit of
him and all others who have been
misled, State College, Duke Univer-
sity (joined recently), University of
North Carolina, Womans College,
Greensboro College, and Queens Col-
lege are all members. And though I
stand corrected, I believe these col-
leges are attended by white students.
The whole trouble with the NSA
program here is that it has never
been run correctly. The senate and
the entire student body are ignorant
of NSA, its purpose, progarms, and
policies. Someone screamed commu-
nist, someone else integration, and
another expensive and there was a
mass exodus.
We cannot recall a student election
being conducted to select NSA re-
presentatives for regional and na-
tional congresses. Or do we recall any
representative's being required to re-
port to the Senate his activities at
one of the congresses. Surely when
money is invested in someone, that
person should be required to give an
account of what he got out of the
meetings.
Few of the people selected to re-
present us at NSA meetings have
ever been interested or capable. Mon-
ey has been squandered, meetings go
unattended, and the school pays for
the representative's vacation. We
know as we have attended several
meetings.
NSA benefits cannot be obtained
by merely paying for them. To gain
these opportunities students must
have interest. The person who helps
students on each campus to become
interested and informs the student
body of benefits and opportunities
nnder the NSA program is the NSA
Coordinator. Since we have been on
this campus there has never been a
food NSA Coordinator, one who was
well informed on NS4 and wnjltefij
others infr,Tifte"d.
One cannot ram something down
someone's throat no matter how he
rants and raves. We are not attempt-
ing- to ram NSA down the throats of
the Student Senators. We merely ask
that they investigate more thorough-
ly and reappraise.
Associated Collegiate Press recent-
ly did a feature on NSA and noted
that every year or so several schools
drop out. The cause seems to be that
the school differed with the policies
of the majority of the schools in
NSA. Instead of seceding it seems
that it would be more important to
stay in and voice opposing view-
points. Harvard was one of the
schools that dropped out some time
ago, but is expected to rejoin this
year. ,
'fife.
olinian
0 November 7, 1952.
Bast Carolina College,
Carolina
Association
i Fresa
pm& Association
MWsber 1926 at
lOta, W. C, ander
Hfi
A more pleasant noteIt is a
pleasure to welcome back Dr. Ho-
ward Clay of the History Department
who has been ill for some time.
The forthcoming Little Theater
production of "Bus Stop" promises to
be a most unusual (for Creenville)
and comical play. The stars are Bob
Whiting of the EAST CAROLINIAN
staff and E.C.C's own Alice Ann
Home, Miss Greenville.
Also on tap is the Student Govern-
ment Association production of "Kiss
Me Kate It - certainly will seem
strange not to see Dottie Jo James
and George Knight bouncing around
on the stage together after so many
years. New directors, new stars, and
a new choreographer make their ap-
pearance in this spring musical. It
promises to be great as usual.
Letters
Where's He From
Him? A Lover?
S


Halitosis Kid Holding
A Convertible, Camel
Feet He Swung Out
ByDERRY WALKER
"Selva
"Hah?"
"Telephone
"Thanks
Pitter-pat pitter-pat to the phone booth
"Hello
"Hi there, gal
"Oh. Hi
"Let's go out and shake a foot toni
"Oh, I want to, but I just can't
in.
; -
Can Students Govern Themselves? Freedom
Offered, But Responsibility Goes With It
RRIMMMHIHhRI
The BA8T CAROLINIAN wel-
comes letters to the editor. Let
ters should be typewritten and
not more than two pages In
length. An tetters mast he sign-
ed, bet the editor will wit hold
the name of the writer if he so
Letters mast conform to the
standards of decency and good
taste and mast Ret violate the
laws of libel. The editor reserve
the right to edit all totters.
Fob Applications
Seniors interested in admfnl-
strstiire positions m the Federal
m tkrnM fie appHentka is
tab ttte Federal Seffiee Ba-
mm Examination es r fesfsfs
1 Wm fattier isf email
; yr plainest ettssr et
Without a shot being firedwith
not so much as a firecracker or a
squealone suited lad turned the
government of 5,000 persons over to
another suited boy. Nineteen persons
were present: two administrators;
two girl friends; this writer; and
fourteen SG officials, past and pre-
sent.
During the past two years, I have
heard Dr. J. D. Messick offer stu-
dents more self-control, more free-
dom. In his address to the SG exe-
jcutives he suggested some goals to-
wanP" vioh the students should
strive. Included among a
tions was one for an honor sleteTi
Dr. Messick pointed out that Me iad
observed an honor system working
and had liked what -c saw. FurtheT,
he mentioned that inherent in any
acceptance of freedom is a corres-
ponding receipt of duty.
Self Government
The students' refusal to gr
themselves, leaves President If v
and his staff bogged down with y?
trivialities which any determined m,
lege student could administer. Pol
instance: If one stumps his toe and
misses four minutes of Mr. 'a
class, he must run to an administra-
tor and procure a written excuse in
quintuplicate before returning and
explaining that he was tardy because
he stumped his toe on the the door
knob.
At this point he has missed all the
class and must see the administrator
again. This progresses until he has
missed all his classessomeone has
spent the day signing his excuses
and the state has paid a highly train-
ed, non-medical, specialist a day's
salary for worrying about his foot.
You have been offered freedom if
you will take responsibility with it.
Will you? No, you will not! Because
you have three "squares a roof, a
girl, and your old man is buying you
a car this summer. What do you care
about EC? You don't owe this hole
anything, do you? Youll leave here
and become great, and explain to
your drinking acquaintances that you
went to UNC, right?
You owe EC everything; you can
never leave it, for wherever you go
EC will be written upon your fore-
head; you'll be a slob all your life,
just as you are now; each time yon
deny EC, you'll be denying yourself.
Honor System
Over the week end I was in contact
with three campuses having honor
systems. Campus Onetest stealing,
called "pooping is rampantocca-
sional fights between unarmed cops
and robber students (one account of
robber attacking robber)stolen test
salesone ease of a student grad-
uating with "A's" by pooping effec-
tively, -m
Campus two had no individual re-
cords available, but the student news-
paper has been criticising the pro-
gram recentlySeems all charges are
made by the faculty and none by
fellow compatriot.
Campus Threetest-w questions
leaked to a class by way of girl who
typed them. .Students neither tamed
themselves in, nor did they report
any fellow cheater.
It Is probftbly the same old
asebooIs boner sM "
earna fafts
By BOB JOHNSON
system suddenly. First a basis must
be built. At the moment I see three
steps which could be made toward an
honor system: (1) A revision of the
SG Constitution, with particular em-
phasis on the judicial system.
(Have you seen an original copy of
the existing one? Reports, reaching
this writer from reliable sources on
the inside, say it has been missing
for some years.) (2) A Campus Code,
which would establish definite rules
of conduct for EC students. This
would be a generalized honor code,
applicable to non-classroom, social
jm fc1 i ia -
taOie,
code would follow after a
lapse of some year or two. (3) A re-
consideration of our class a'serve
system, giving the control and au-
thority of enforcement to the indivi-
dual faculties. With a strong court
practical. Perhaps, to
wing, class cuts could
be tied in with such thing as grades!
Fraternities
The SGA is a political body acting
as a social one. And, our fraternities
are social groups forced to perform
services. Fraternities and sororities
are here, and here they shall stay.
We should let them operate as such
and not make them be slaves. Let
them be more sociable. How would it
look for the U.S. to pass a law re-
quiring businessmen to set up their
offices in the middle of church spon-
sored square dances? That's about
what our capons is requiring fra-
and Dannie
"Whoa. now. Why?"
"I gotta quiz tomorrow in World ii
and I haven't even looked at the stuff.
"Psychologists say a rest period
you study better
"I had my rest period all quarter "
"It'll be swingin
"I swung last night. Boy what a ' r"
"Hm?"
"I dated an all-American n last
night
"Oh?"
"Yeh. Bob something-or-other. T
feet like a camel
"Hmmm
"You know him? I can't think-
last name. Dances like he's wearing
Halitosis too. Got breath that c
Kaiser Aluminum
"I think I know him. Got a eonv-
"Yeh. That's his personality
"Nice looking car
"Yeh, when he ain't in it
"Was he a lover?"
"Ha. Like kissing a wall
"Sure you don't wanna go tonight.
"I want to really, but I just gotta
"By the way, who are you talk
"Why, nobody but you. Johnny. W
"Take another swing, hon. This is Bob
. . . and then there came an orr. .
silence broken only by the hemitbeal f
pay telephone.
Laugh A Little
Dogs? We Need Them;
Ridiculous Viewpoints
Saw HcPri.ii. J!i$iffr
this would be
please the left
gwnw wt iTf-ijr, wnen Liggett
counter drove one of Holiday's drives
from 12 feet back to take a 20-19
lead, and then forced Holiday to net
a defensive return.
In the semifinals Leggett's steady
forehand drives and backhand under
spins returns defeated Eddie Sinclair
21-19, 21-14, while Holliday's fore-
hand drives and smashes stopped the
blocking and counter driving of Eddie
Barclif, 21-18, 21-16.
Sinclair had suprised Wayne
Halsey in the best early round match,
19-21, 21-19, 21-5, with his accurate
backhand drives. Other early round
matches were Leggett's near loss to
Eugene Clayborn, Sinclair's close win
from Jerry Van Dyke, and Jack
Elliot's 20-22, 21-19, 21-19 victory
over Ted Lewis.
You lovw-dovies who like to park
will no longer use Green Springs
Park, for the city is closing it.
Thanks, for your honest efforts to
help the wonderful relations between
your fellow students and the towns-
people of Greenville.
P
Frnm
i nii
By TOM JACKSOS
Well, well, the SGA Senate has r
of the National Student
out
"It appears that the 19S9 cars will
be wider than this year's, which were
wider than last year's. It does not
appear, however, that any thought
was given to the number of people
who will be killed or injured as a
result of the extra four inches of
car space that will be occupied by
two passing cars
New York State Traffic Safety Policy
Coordination Committee, 1958 Report.
thev really do it to s
could cut a
Think of the
East Carolina
Association. Did
money? Maybe so. They
telephone wires on campus too.
money the school would save on el-
bills. Don't worry about communication -
the outside world, because apparently the
SGA doesn't think it is worth the mo
Our money must be conserved to spend R
ly for things like dogs and dance bar
It might be a good idea forthe a
and the ttttkfct body to. investigate
matter further and get a few more facts.
We realize that the NSA has mar,
ards and ideals with which we do not
but thev also do a few things that
do alone. Pulling out of I
of the worst things we
cant even voice
never
zation is one
do because now
opinion.
we
Poor Chief. He rode around all a I
through rain and snow 0Xf
cycle Now that the sun has come oux
-ITkL- i a little warmer the xa
Weath to an "bile. Heater
ell. I guess he can
w
use
Department
thev served
is really P
&' Pied the
an autol
the
finally gave
everything. Oh
next winter.
Our Police
gressing.
on a
mobile
a paddy wagon, inn. &r
own jail house and
even a police lab and a Je
East Carolina is really growing.
Many people hTvTjT
motorcycle, and now Jj b
tie. Next on the list, it eems.
l riot sqaad and
and - - wno kne
Al Wm$fem km bmm
past two eem i sal wta a hm :rinff(, ha
funny. Thing. WPP thought
we don t
but on
become funny also. con3ider J
rer soppedto con
Have we ev
how
lave e t . - , : we w
aabearabieMejfWJ
probably go
laugh-at things, es VJJJ f God, P
l u trulv the greatest rfL?L msd
come
at them.
vou f
couldn t
who sees
some
ever
er is truly
nut it most of BS we
rUt" of a few hour.
Think how frustrated
with some thmgs if
Still there are
have lost this gift. J . fuimiesi r
S T'aluple oi them ever;
of all. Snicker at a cony
really helps mora
Those of youo &
iiiest p
and Sat" in "the Court i
t WW' ahottJd be preWT "
"Bus Stop





fftrKSIVAY PRTT 16, 1K
German Discusses
Homeland Situations
EAST CAROLINIAN
PACT
It
p RFTTY MOTNOR
iff o 3
rial LJ Christiane
many, has re-
M secretary
pu Iepartment.
ir. Berlin, but
- p sstirl if her life in
r tether is an econo-
- a translater
v Pchange System,
tm VM service men.
s Weis studied for
- -vmercia' school
e staff of
ai a secretary.
n coming
merican con-
anj With Mr. and Mr.
I Jacksonville.
re, Miss Weis
r entrance into
- whose home was
was asked her
I the Berlin
ted, "I dont
a war. but
Vr.ion starts
SJ have to fight.
tin German
be reunified
it a war
r ar. American
Sorority Elects
New Officers
CHRISTINE WEIS
many.
from Ger-
organizatior. in Germany. I already
had a pretty good idea of what the
U.S.A. would be like explained Miss
- whia asked if her impression
thi U.S. had changed since her
arrival.
g ce her father is an economist,
Weil has some knowledge of
th German economy. "Germany has
a small source of raw ml-
toSrSsU and therefore it must import
much of the materials. Germany
manufactures cameras, optical goods,
watches and other jewelry which re-
quires detailed work she explained.
BSU Completes
Plans For Camp
Plans for the third North Carolina
Baptist Student Union Wot Camp
have been completed and applications
are now being received by the Rever-
end James O. Cansler, Baptist Stu-
dent Union Director at the Univer-
sity. The Work Camp will be held at
the North Carolina Baptist Assembly,
Southport, May 28 to June 5.
The number of students who can
participate in the project is limited
to thirty-five. Any college or univer-
sity student who will engage in man-
ual labor for five hours daily and
who will participate seriously in the
study groups is eligible to apply.
The primary purpose of the Work
Camp, according to State BSU Secre-
tary Harold Cole, is to provide a
setting of meaningful manual labor
in which students from all over the
state may live, study, worship and
play together for one week. The 1958
work camp contributed more than
600 man hours of labor to the Baptist
Assembly, of which Fred 6mith
is director.
The schedule for the event will
provide for work in the mornings,
recreation in the afternoons and
study in the evenings. Reverend
James Y. Greene, Appalachian State
Teachers College, Boone, will lead
a study group on "Baiiers to Belief
and the Reverend Cansler win lead
a Bible study.
Prospective work campers may se-
cure application blanks from East
Carolina College Baptist Student
Union director Dwight Fickling or
BSU president Carolyn Tripp.
Kappa Sigma Nu Officers
Recently Elected Marshals
Choose Harrelson As Chief
HIS
&
:ty had its
Lati 8 of sttftBSaa last
aner party at the
T be new officers
- reaMkeari; Mary
i : reeataat; Bobbie
ne, M . Nancy Kin-
. parlia-
Ei " hist riari.
v s: hi I
ges were install-1
ten They are: Madelyn
. Sylvia Gardner, and Betty
i
advisees and new
-ares at
- : j-y Holman
agaa will be the advisors
I year.
Election Dates
pril 21Sophomore Election
April 23Women's Recreation-
al Association.
pril 28Junior and Freshman
Elections.
April 30Day Student Elec-
tions.
All elections will be conducted
in Wright Lobby from 9:00-4:00
o'clock. The Women's Recreation-
al Association elections will be
held in all of the women's dormi-
tories and in Wright Lobby for
day girl student.
Outgoing President Lyle Cooper hands gavel to newly installed
kappa Sigma Nu President Pat Sawyer.
Sawyer Chosen As Commander
Of Kappa Sigma Nu Fraternity
Norma A. Harrelson of South-
port, junior, will serve as chief mar-
shal at the college during the Spring
Fall, and Winter quarters of 1959.
Miss Harrelson and fifteen other wo-
men students were chosen as mar-
shals in a campus-wide election con-
ducted by the Student Government
Association.
College marshals serve as ushers
at college entertainments and pro-
grams. At commencement exercises
lead sections of the academic pro-
cession and participate in other acti-
vities centering around the gradua-
tion of students from the college.
Serving: with Miss Harrelson as
marshals are Patsy Maynard, Made-
lyn Coleman. Nancy V. Brown, Faye
Rivenbark, Patsy Cameron, Rebekah
Crouch, and Judy Bledsoe.
Others are Jackie Crutchfield, Jimi
McDaniel, Jackie Byrd, Janet Han-is,
Jerry Mills, Sue Lassiter, Jean Capps,
and Marie Bryant.
Elected as alternates are Sarah
McRae, and Rose Lindsay.
Cynthia Anne Mendenhall, super-
visor of recreation at the College
Union, acts as advisor to the mar-
shals.
Junior-Senior Bids
Names turned in to the Stu-
dent Government Association of-
fice to be put on the list to get
bids to the Junior-Senior Ban-
quet have not been accepted by
the Bids Committee.
Junior Class President Wade
Seasons stated that the only way
for these people to get their
names on the list is to watch
for announcement of the date
they will be taken in the Student
Union by the committee. Wade
Sessoms may be contacted at
PL 2-9926 and Room MO, Urn-
stead Dormitory.
Kappa Sigma Nu fraternity elected
officers for the coming year last
Thursday night
Elected were Pat Sawyer, Eminent
Commander; Jake Smith, Lt. Com-
maniei; Laverne Christie, Recorder;
Glenn Dyer, Treasurer; and Mark
Gupton, Assistant Treasurer.
Jack Calhoun, Chaplain; Jack Mc-
Cann, Marshal; Craig Reid, Repor-
ter; Gene Wood and Kelvin Wood,
Social Chairmen; Tommy Calhoun,
Alumni Contact Officer; and Larry
Wynns, I PC Representative complete
the list.
The new officers were installed
April 12 in the Alumni Building.
Kappa Sigma Nu has also announc-
ed plans to be pledged to Sigma Nu,
national fraternity, on April 18.
According to Lyle Cooper, past
president of Kappa Sigma Nu, the
men will be formally installed as
pledges of Sigma Nu fraternity by
Psi chapter of Sigma Nu from U.N.C
Thirty-eigth brothers will be
pledged in the ceremony at Jarvis
Memorial Methodist Church at 4:00
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HOW TO MAKE 25
Take a wordgarbage, for example. With it, you can make the contents of
an auto junk yard (carbage), Hollywood refuse (starbage), incinerator dust
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of a LUCKY STRIKE
product of J&
p.m.
Many Sigma Nu alumni have been
invited to attend the pledging cere-
mony along with all the chapters of
Sigma Nu in division eight. This in-
cludes all chapters in North and
South Carolina.
The fraternity expects to receive its
charter on May 15, 16, and 17.
Cadets Accept
Jamboree Bid
Air Force ROTC cadets at E.C.C.
have accepted an invitation to dis-
play thirty small-scale models of air-
craft from the Wright brothers' first
plane to today's jets and experimen-
tal types at the 1959 Pirates' Jam-
boree at Nag's Head, April 24-26.
The models were constructed by
cadets of the college AFROTC en-
rolled during the 1958-1959 term in
Air Science II: Aircraft, a course
taught by Capt. Vance Lockamy of
the AFROTC staff at the college.
The model planes, on display dur-
ing March in the Joyner Memorial
Library at East Carolina, have at-
tracted the interest of many people
from the campus and elsewhere.
The invitation to display the exhi-
bition at the Pirates' Jamboree came
to Capt. Lockamy from Julian Oneto,
resident manager of the Carolinian
at Nag's Head.
Land Purchased
For Expansion
East Carolina recently purchased
44 additional acres of land near the
campus to be used for further ex-
pansion.
The tract, which cost $143,660, is
south of 14th street and beyond the
Norfolk and Southern Railroad and
is near the 35 acre lot which is the
site for the new men's dormitory.
Fitzhugh Duncan, Vice President in
charge of Business Affairs, said,
"This was the last possibility to get
land adjacent to the campus. If we
had not bought it we would have been
cut completely off from expansion
because we are already cut off on
three sides. This land was purchased
to be used in a long range expansion
program He added, however, that
there was a possibility we would
use some of it in the next five years.
Other future plans mentioned were
building another men's dormitory and
converting Slay and Umstead Halls
into girl's dormitories.
"The school has already asked the
legislature for $117,500 to convert
these two dormitories he said.
Home Ec Affair
Begins Tomorrow
April 17 and 18 will bring some-
thing new to the campus of East
Carolina Collegea Home Economics
Weekend. The home economics staff
of the college has invited high school
juniors and seniors, who are interest-
ed in home economics, to be guests
of the department for this time. In-
vitations have been extended to more
than 400 schools throughout the
state.
The student home economics club
will act as joint hostesses and will
provide the visiting students with
rooms for the occasion. The weekend
will get underway with registration
and an informal tea in the lobby of
Flanagan building from 4:00 to 6:00
P. M. Friday. The visitors will then
be taken to their rooms in the dormi-
tories. The next feature on the pro-
gram is a dinner prepared by the
ol!ege students in the home econo-
mics department. After this the visi-
tors will be free to visit the College
Union and attend the Water Show or
a play given by the Greenville Little
Theater.
On Saturday morning, after break-
fast in the college cafeteria, the girls
will meet in Flanagan Auditorium for
a talk by Dr. Bessie McNiel, head of
the Home Economics Department.
They will then be taken on guided
tour of the campus, the highlight of
which will be a coffee hour in the
Home Management House.
The week-end will be terminated
with a fashion show in Flanagan
Auditorium.
Frat Initiates
Honor Students
Because of their superior scho-
lastic records in the Department of
Business, fifteen students will be ini-
tiated into the Beta Kappa Chapter
of Pi Omega Pi in exercises conduct-
ed here April 28.
Pi Omega Pi is a national honor-
ary business education fraternity with
chapters in more than a hundred col-
leges and universities In the United
States.
The Beta Kappa Chapter on the
campus will hold a preliminary pledga
service for new members April 14,
Barbara Griffin of Ayden, vice pres-
ident, is in charge of arrangements.
Amelita Thompson, president of Rt.
1. Cerro Gordo, will preside. Students
who will be initiated into the honor-
ary fraternity April 28 are: Francs
Merle Aiken, Betty Ann Brown, Myra
DeAnne Coleman, Earl Weeks Deal,
Bettie Jean Harris, Neil T. HowalL
Mildred T. McGrath and Preston Can-
non.
Mary Elizabeth Massad, Doris Kay
Overton, Melbourne Henry Pridgsn,
Sylvia Marie Sampedro, Sylvis Lois
Czzell, Meldon Swane Austin, and
William Puckett.
isourmiddlt
Fleming Displays
Commercial Art
An exhibition of work in commer-
cial art by senior Betty Jean Fleming
of Greenville, is now on display in
Austin building and is open to the
public. Illustrations of clothing for
use in newspapers and magazines
make up the art show.
Miss Fleming has served this yeaT
as president of the College Union
Student Board. She has also held the
positions of art editor of the "BUC-
CANEER college yearbook; chair-
man of the Aquanymphs, women's
swimming team; and member of the
women's Day Student Council and the
Dean's Advisory Council.
She is one of the students chosen
to represent the college in the 1958-
1959 edition of "Who's Who Among
Students in American Universities
and Colleges
Miss Fleming is majoring in art
and is a candidate for the B.S. degree.
During the winter quarter she was
a student teacher in the .Rocky Mount
uiblic schools.
Activities
(Continued from page 1)
16-28; Family Problems, August 1-12;
and Music for Elementary Class-
room Teachers and Music Speoislists,
June 7-19. A Speech and Hearing
Clinic, sponsored by the college and
financed in part by the North Caro-
lina League for Crippled Children, is
scheduled for June 8-July 14. It will
be directed by Bernard R. Jackson,
teacher of special education at ths
college.
A clinic on football and baseball,
directed by Coaches Jack Boone and
Earl Smith is scheduled for June 11-
12. Alcoholism and the Home will be
discussed at a one-day conference
July 30.
Five one-week courses in Directed
Observation in the Kindergarten are
scheduled from June 8 through July
10. Those enrolled will be limited to
ten students each week.
Four classes in swimming, offered
by the department of Health and Phy-
sical Education, will be open to boys
and girls, aged 6 through 16. Two
are scheduled June 8-July 13 and two
July 15-Au;rut 19.
The Department of Industrial Arts
will present its annual summer sxhi-
bition of Industrial Arts in ths Public
School July 10 under the direction of
Dr. Kenneth Bing, head of the col-
lege department of Industrial Arts.
The summer session at East Caro-
lina will open June 8. Two terms will
be held, June 8-July 14 and July 15-
August 20.
;
wti "Wldraoj
at so tarn enamel
Hi
DELICIOUS
FOOD
24 HOURS
Lunch at 65c
CAROLINA
GRILL
9th & Dickinson


i
.
Phelps Secures
Sorority Award
Zeta Psi Alpha sorority recently
selected Joan Phelps as outstanding
pledge for the Winter Quarter. At
present they are having an informal
rush. The rushees sre: Sue Webb,
Sally Morris, Dsphne Little, Betty
Hockaday and LeAnn Newby.
Others are Mary Nell Shaw, Hilda
Wells, Patsy Strain, Janice Dobie and
Faye Hill.
Sally Morris is serving as presi-
dent of the pledge class with Mary
Nell Shaw, secretary-treasurer and
Le Ann Newby as social chairman.
Jerri Mills, president, has announc-
ed the list of officer candidates for
next year. These are Patricia Smith,
Gail Cohoon, and Judy Taylor, pres-
ident; Jerri Mills, Lee Lovette, and
Ann Sugg, vies president; Cell T-
son, and lady Bledsoe, recording se-
cretary; Annette Willoughfey sad
Mary Marahboorne,
secretary; and Marty
Marsha Evans, treasurer.
I
,j





PAOK FOUR
EAST CAROLINIAN
THURSDAY. APRIL 16, 185e
Play Atlantic Christian Here Friday
Buc Nine Now 3-0 In Conference
Play Win Over Catawba, WCC
Hart Pirate Third Sacker
East Carolina College Pirates set
their skills against Atlantic Christian
College here tomorrow with the Pi-
iatt- having a conference standing
of one win and no losses. Crayton is
the probable starting pitcher.
The Pirates week-end games were
rained out. but the games were re-
scheduled with two last Monday at
Western Carolina and two Tuesday
at Lenoir Rhyne.
Glenn Bass, Jerry Carpenter, Gary
Pierce and Bob Hart all racked up
two hits last week as the Pirates
brought seven men across the plate
as opposed to no runs for the Salis-
bury Indians. Johnny Ellen hurled a
two-hitter for E.C.C. going the full
nine innings.
Good weather and good hitting fi-
nally got together, along with the
Pirate's usual good pitching on Tues-
day as Jim Mallory's crew hopped team, was knocking out a home run,
on Western Carolina and copped both double and two singles, Martin found
ends of a twin bill by scores of 6-1
and 10-2.
Crayton and Baker Star
It was again the steady pitching
of East Carolina that highlighted the
two games at Cullowhee. Larry Cray-
ton gave up four hits in going the
route in the first contest while team-
mate Ben Baker, making his initial
start, spread six hits widely apart
to win. Baker has been suffering with
an injured leg and his first success-
ful start adds depth to the mound
starters Crayton and Ellen.
Centerfielder Jerry Carpenter and
first sacker Jim Martin combined
their hitting talents to supply most
of the offensive power. While Car-
penter, better known for his quarter-
backing ability on the varsity grid
the range for three singles
"Old reliable" Doug Watts worked
behind the plate in both games for
the Bucs with Burl Morris taking
over in the last inning of the second
contest.
Bob Ballance and Harris Pryor
hit homers for WC. The win now puts
Bast Carolina in the driver's seat as
far as NSC play goes. Catawba
knocked off unbeaten Elon on Tues-
day also and the Bucs now possess
a conference record of 3-0.
The pirates thus far this year show-
great strides towards becoming the
conference champs.
A short trip to Wilson on the 21st i
will call for a re-match between
AOC and EC. On the 25th the Pirates
journey to Elon College, North Caro-
lina for a game with Elon.
SPORTS
CHATTER
By BILL BOYD
Mas
After spending two years in the Army where he played extensive
service hardball. Boh Hart, freshman from Portsmouth, Va has already
nabbed the starting third base slot on the EC baseball nine. Hart, a right
handed hitter, rcently powered a home run in leading his club to its first
NSC win in the first conference game of '59 with Catawba.
ROTC Hurts League By Dropping Out
Da Students, KSN, LCA Are
Intramural Teams To Beat
Golf! Golf! Golf! That seems to be the current cry of the sports
World more so than anything else, including the present beginning of
American and National League baseball.
One week the Masters Tournament in Georgia is even a front page
story and the next its the Greensboro Open. A crowd of 25,000 were on
hand to see Art Wald Jr win the Masters Tournament and take home a
"pot full" of money. This is the highest realm of the professional side of
the sport but certainly not its broadest.
Many of us do not play the game of course. Possibly it's because the
game requires more skill than just about any other. And this skill is not
acquired overnight, in fact it is acquired in no less than two or three years
for most mild mannered spotting men.
Swine men play 10 and 12 years and still learn from week to week,
M srell as improve. Any amatuer or pro will tell you this!
Many Values
Perhaps this sport can instill more esthetic values into a person than
any other and perhaps not. but it certainly presents the opportunities for
such. It requires mental and physical ability for sure but then it offers
much as far as the social, cultural and personal values are concerned. In
no other sport does one get to spend- many hours walking and talking with ! tjents
the mayor of a town, the local minister, the football coach, a college presi-
dent or professor, the brick layer, the merchant and the actual golf pro.
This "mixing" and conversing not only educates a man as to how he can
improve his golfing game but many topics are talked about and actually
lesolved on the gulf course. In this game one is almost required to conduct
himself as a gentleman as he is constantly in the public eye of many people
of both sexes.
Bast Carolina is well represented in the golf world as far as con-
ference participation and faculty-student participation goes. Coach Howard
Porter linkmen. paced by Don Conley and Paul Goodwin, are one of the
top ranking squads in the North' State Conference. As far as the sport goes
among local students and faculty members who play the small-hall sport, to
it is even adequately represented would be putting it mildly.
The next time you non-golfers are wondering what an "eagle" is or
a "bogey words such as fade, par. pull, slice, hook, fore, etc just remem-
ber to ask one of the many mentioned below. All are good golfers in their
own right and find time to promote good clean competition among them-
selves and local Greenville City golfers.
Shoot In Seventies
Faculty members such as Dr. Doug Jones. Coach Jim Mallory, Howard
Porter, Paul Julian, Harry Rainey, Marion Coles, Dr. Hanes, Dr. N. M.
Jorgensen and Dr. Herbert Carter are all quite capable of breaking into
that coveted "70" circle and consistently stay in the low 80,s Dr. Jor-
gensen, director of the Department of Health and Physical Education, hit
a hole in one last summer and since that time another ECC golfer. Paul
Goodwin, has turned the million to one trick.
Supplementing Income
The game lias even allowed students such as Bob Lewis, Ben Kendall
and Don Harris to supplement their income by working at the Driving
Range on the Ayden Highway. Each gives free instruction to those desir-
ing it. Thus the game not only gives them enjoyment from the worthy
spending of leisure time, but aids them financially as well. All three are
excellent golfers and manage to stay in the "80's Some of the other East
Carolina hitting in the 75, 80 and 90 mark are Clint LeGette, George Gaddy,
and John Wyke. Lewis, a graduate student, is perhaps more apt to give
any of the group a very close match and has been known to low-point quite
a few of the faculty members.
Ken Clark, Jack Cox, Doug Watts, Bubba Matthews, Lynn Barnett.
Tom Parker and Joe Best all find time to get in a few rounds every now
and then and are consistently improving their game.
There is no denying it. It can be said without fear of sporting con-
tradiction that golf will soon he America's favorite pastime if the current
trend continues. It should continue too!
Sports Notes
Public ity is a funny thing. When the Atlantic Coast Conference All
Stars took n a group of North State Conference All Stars in Lexington,
N. C. in late February, the papers were quick to build up the game, stating
that the "first time" affair could lead to many years of good competitive
all star contests between the two conferences. But when the North Staters
stopped the ACC boys cold in their tracks and sent them reeling with a de-
feat it was different. With stars such as Lou Pucillo and John Richtner of
JM. C. State doing their level best the ACC team could not pull the game
.out of the fire. The local Raleigh papers did not care tp speculate on the
contest. The score and bare essentials appeared; that was all. Had the shoe
been on the other-foot I wonder what type of publicity would have been
released. Dick Herbert writes many great and speculating columns on our
nation's hardcourt sport but failed to highlight this game. Don't be sur-
prised if the intended all star game between the ACC-NSC teams fails to
mature next year. If you remember correctly, ECC's forward Nick Nichols
garnered eight big points in the win as a team representative.
Big Help To Coaches 4
The track team is a well coached team, there can be no doubt about
that. Football halfback and 440 track man Charlie Bishop is aiding Coach
Bill McDonald while the former works on his M. tA. Degree. Eddie Dennis,
who holds the javelin record in the North State Conference, is another grad-
uate student aiding McDonald and the team. On the tennis courts. Maurice
Everett, is still putting the EC netmen through their paces while helping
Coach Ray Martinez. Everett had the assignment of getting the team in
shape whiie Coach Martinez and company were out in Indiana winning first
place in the NAIA swim and dive championships.
There is no use to make predictions on the American and National
League pennant conte 'an. If you believe any team will win in place of
Milwaukee and New York, you had better be in the counterfeiting business.
The AP Sportswriters fail to se bow they can lose, the UPI can only see
the Giants shading Milwaukee and I can't even see that. Each should win
by It
Intramural softball entered its se-
cond week of play last week as ele-
ven big games were completed.
Thirteen were actually scheduled
but the Reserve Officer's Training
Corps representative team failed to
show up for two scheduled contests,
and dropped from league play. An
intramural rule states that a team
shall be dropped from play when it
forfeits as many as two contests.
! Thus with the ROTC team dropping
I out, the league now consists of six
teams in Independent play. The ROTC
team had already lost one played
game and since it lost two forfeits,
all games played by this club had to
be revoked in order to even the league
schedule so all teams will play the
same number of games.
Day Students Strong
In Independent play the Day Stu-
appear to be the team to beat.
Jesse Curry, an all around athlete
at East Carolina, manages and pitches
for the softball nine. Curry hurled a
(.t-5 win over the Esquires. Lee At-
kinson banged out two doubles to
pace the off campus student team.
In the contest Curry gave up three
hits. Two 'lays later th ame club
took on Ralph Zehring's Varsity Club
and emerged with a 15-0 win. Curry
again pitched superb hall and gave
up two scratch hits. Bill Boyd did
most of the damage in the win by
driving in seven runs, four of them
coming on a home run with the bases
loaded.
Lambda Chi Alpha and Kappa Sig-
ma Nu are definitely the teams to
beat in the Fraternity League. Both
identical 2-0 records. Cross,
Gillikin and Matthews all
ave
n
one,
hanged out home runs for LCA as the
earn stopped Delta Sigma Pi by
a 10 to 6 margin. In the other win
of the week for John Spoone's crew,
the LCA outfit nipped Pi Kappa Al-
pha 11 to 12.
Sigma Nu Nips KA
Dixie Hobgoocfs Kappa Sigma Nu
squad countered the hitting of Ed
tone's Kappa Alpha nine and won
cut 14 to 13 in KSNU's first game
of the week. Its second clash was
v. ith Theta Chi and again one run
proved to be the margin for victory.
Warren Gaines and first sacker Bob
James had three big hits apiece in
their team's 3 to 2 win.
Other frat play found Theta Chi
rolling over Sig Eps by 12 to 0, Kappa
Alpha outslugging Pi Kappa Alpha by
22 to 15. and the KA team ran rough-
over Sig Eps by 26 to 4 as Jim
Gordon, Homy Vansant, Ed Stone
and Ace Daniels all hit four baggers.
T remaining play found the Goo
( ats outhitting the Esquires by 13
to 12, and then the Cool Cats met the
Club and went down by a 13
to 12 score. Bobby Lilly, Lynn Bar-
:- Stuart Holland and Piland pro-
ed the batting power for the Var-
I Hub nine.
At the present time eleven games
Nine Students Enter
Race For President In
Women's Recreation
Nine candidates are running for
office in the Women's Recreation
Association. Elections will be con-
ducted April 23.
Candidates for president are Ann
Jessup, Peggy Davis, and Betty .Peele.
Vice presidential nominees are Jan-
ice Edwards and Syble Butler.
Vying for the office of secretary
are Phil Batten and Ann Craft. Ellen
Eason and Libby Cooke are running
treasurer,
The W.R.A. banquet will be held
May 6, at 6:30 p.m in the new cafe-
teria. Ti kets will be sold for $1.00
by W.R.A. members. Awards will be
presented for intramurals, to the
' ree outstanding seniors, and to the
outstanding dormitory and sorority
representative.
State Tops Buc
Trackmen 72-59
Despite Jeesel Curry's 14 and
James Speight's 13 points, East Caro-
lina's track team was turned back by
North Carolina State yesterday in
Raleigh by a score of 72 to 59.
Although Curry and Speight were
outstanding and the fact that Joe
Holmes took eight big points, F. O.
Nunn broke the pole vault record for
East Carolina College and took first
place in this event and had six points
in the meet. Dennis O'Brien held the
old mark of 11'6
Coach Bill MDonald was well im-
Bessed with the showing of his Pi-
rate tracksters and believes the meet
the team in top-notch shape for
a forthcoming affair in Greenville,
S. C.
Fnrman Relays Saturday
Coach McDonald announced that
Tvist Carolina College has been asked
to enter its trar-k team in the second
mnual Furmnn-Piedmont-News Re-
lays at Greenville, S. C. this coming
Saturday. The annual affair will in-
volve as many as 20 odd colleges
from the entire south.
In addition to senior colleges en-
tering, events will be held for high
shools and junior colleges as well.
Awards to be presented are team
awards for outstanding performance,
an individual award for the outstand-
ing athlete and individual event
awards in the different phases of the
meet.
Outstanding Buc trackmen who will
definitely make the trip are Jess
Curry, Joe Holmes, Dennis O'Brier:
P h Ruck. Lee Atkinson, Jim Speight,
tor Freeman and F. O. Nunn.
Thirteen Pirate cindermen will make
the long trip in all. with the group
leaving here Friday.
Three Matches Away
Bill Hollowell
Simmons Gets Ready
are being played this week and the
final round of regular play should
end next week. Upon completion of
the regular play for both leagues the
playoffs-will begin.
In the playoffs the top team in
each league will play each other in a
best 2 out of 3 game series. The
winner will hold the title of the col-
champion and the loser will be
second place champion. The se-
on i place teams in each league will
lay each other in the same manner,
the loser being the fourth place hold-
er in final college play and the winner
being the third place champ. The re-
maining teams in the two leagues
will play eftch other one game
for respective places in the final col-
lege standings. The incentive for this
type of playoff should be great as all
the Independent teams will be clash-
uie with Fraternity teams.
Standings in the two intramural
softball leagues at the end of last
week's play found Kappa Sigma Nu
and Lambda Chi Alpha tied for top
snot in the Fraternity League while
the Day Students are first place hold-
ers in the Independent League.
Standings are as follows:
Fraternity League
EC Tennis Team
Post Victories
Over Eustis, W &
East Carolina's tennis team had a
ecefuJ week-end, winning two
n.ore matches, but the netters of
Coach Ray Martinez have another
ard road trip ahead.
The Bucs meet N. C. State Friday
afternoon, Elon Saturday m.rnin
and Wake Forest Satuida after-
; o in. It will be the last bi road trip
season for the netters.
Joh: West, Durham junior, is mak-
ing s bid t (ward capturing the N
.State singles championship. V.
along fast this eab and
-tar 'is a good chance of keeping the
individual trophy at ECC. Maurice
Everette has won the singles the oast
. B.
Wt ' taken over Everette'i
slot ; t Dumber one man. H- -
lost only one match in eonfc
competition thus far. West reached
the N'ortn State semi-finals las: year.
Bili Hollowell and John Savage hr-e
a couple of other stars who give
the Pirates strength down the
Both moved up one position
second and third slot, respect.
Hollowell finished the season
fan A wins last season a.
htr fast start. The Kinstoa
thered with foot t: iK
the early part of the season n
: a couple of matches.
-ted to be one of I
for the single crou
Savage is a veteran who co I
to In the season progresses.
John Hollowell last sea-
to cop the North State d
vn.
Red Brown, Joe Holloway, and Jim
Daug complete the squad.
Brown and Daughtridge are veterans
while Holloway is the lone freshmar.
on the club.
Brown is termed by the net coache
as "the most improved man on the
club The lanky red-head has spent
of time working with Everette
the results have been favorable.
Brown has been termed as one o:
nen in helping to carry ECC to
its 11-1 record.
H a Durham native. M
improvement since reach-
ranks and is a fut
e star.
Daughtridge is a veteran but
been bothered in the past with in-
juries. Daughtridge is a senior.
The Hues copped their last two
outings with a 6-3 win over F rt
Eustus and a 3-2 rain-shortened win
vcr William and Mary.
This week-end the Bucs will be
favored ver Elon but their compet
lion asrainst the two Big Four teams
.ill be much tougher.
TeamWLPet.
Lambda Chi Alpha201.000
Kappa Sigma Nu201.000
Kappa Alpha21.667
Theta Chi11.600
Pi Kappa Alpha1 2.868
Sig Eps02.000
Delta Sigma Pi02.000
Independent League
Day Students201.000
Varsity Club11.500
Cool Cats11.500
Esquires12.333
Bombers02.000
Low Cuts01.000
ROTC03.000
Coach Ray Martinez and his net-
ters have a rugged week-end ahead.
Bill Hollowell, a Kinston native, will
be one of the Pirates slated for duty.
Hollowell is the number two man on
the team.
Kilpatrick And Bailey
Pace CU Tournament
The College Union Student Board
Games Committee conducted a
Doubles Table Tennis Tournament
April 7, under the direction of Nor-
man Kilpatrick, a member of the
Games Committee. Twelve East Caro-
lina College students entered the
tournament, the winner based on the
team which won the most games out
of a five game match.
The winners of the Doubles Table
Tennis Tournament are Zuill Bailey
and Norman Kilpatrick, 5-0.
ROTC dropped from league ac-
cording to league ruling due to two
forfeits by the ROTC team. All games
played by ROTC team are revoked
and do not count in standings.
Freshman Tommy Simmons shows his batting form while catcher
Perry Lane and umpire Joel Long observe. Simmons plays for Pi Kappa
Alpha, Lane for Kappa Alpha. These two clubs tangled last week as PKA
was outslugged by a 22 to 15 score.
Camp Counsellor Openings
for Faculty, Students and Graduates
THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS
. . . comprising 250 outstanding Boys, Girls, Brother-Sister and Co-Ed
Camps located throughout the New England, Middle Atlantic States
and Canada. ,
. . . INVITES YOUIR INQUIRIES concerning summer employment as
Counsellors, Instructors or Administrators.
. . . Positions in children's camps, in all areas of activities, are avail-
WRITE, OR CALL IN PERSON
Association of Private CampsDept C
55 West 42nd Street, Room 621 New York 86, N, Y.
THURSDAY ONLY
April 23rd
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Fine Meats and Groceries
buy GENERAL
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Title
East Carolinian, April 16, 1959
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
April 16, 1959
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.176
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/38627
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