East Carolinian, January 26, 1961


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





Pirates Host
li Carolina Pirates play
Western Carolina Friday night
27 and to Appalachian Monday
Jan M at Mnrial Gymnasiu
olume XXXVI
strtaroH
E. C. C
LIBRA I
East Carolina College
JAN 27r;ul Glanjour Contest
All girls who would like to compete
in Glamour Magazine's 10 beat dressed
girls contest are urged to submit their
names to the editor of the East
Carolinian.
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1961
Number 16
u ny
-ize (John (Juinn) questions Mrs. Bramson (Doming
aoug Mitrhell) abort A MURDER.
Next Production Illustrates
three Unusual Case Histories
I want to be loved .
. . So go the lyrics of a
g and, for that matter,
.if a hundred agonized
: to music and wailed by
l at any hour of the
night. If the sentiments of
liar song are symtoma:ic of
m's emotional health and
. do they capture the na-
y 1 it is indeed a sad
f affairs.
v serious can be the con-
- of being shut out of love
lifectioa is illustrated in a con-
more adult fashion in the
melodrama called "Night
r which comes to the Mc-
Auditorium February 9
gh February 11, .as the third
i n of the Playhouse.
oly trio whose psyches are
are in this Emlyn Williams
.1 whose erratic conduct pro-
illa and shivers for audience,
that way because they were
rind, ultimately, became in-
loving.
st virulent of the three
ries detailed in "Night
is that of the central
a young man who can
one emotion for other peo-
- red to the point of kill-
them. On the surface he is an
young man of such charm
fly attracts his lady vic-
iraself. The playwright, ob-
well up on modern psy-
gy, indicates that this charac-
a hotel bellboy named Dan
? thus warped because he had
-inied the affection he should
had when he was a child. As a
he has become such a hope-
exhibitkmiatk egomaniac, that I abrnarj14.
achievs a profound relation-
-ih other human beings only
irdering them.
Olivia, the love-starved niece of
of Dan's intended victims, is
hing of a female counterpart
of the play's cutthroat. A plain,
acie-wearing girl, she if un-
ight by any suitor except a sipW
bore. She never arrives at the point
linde. though it is possible she
might She is morbidly fascinated by
e killer and his brutal deeds,
gh she tells herself that she
really hates him. The only one in the
I crave lonely cottage in the woods who
Knows that Dan is the fiend at large
for whom the police are searching,
she hides the evidence that would
ndemn him.
Finally, there is the old lady
Bramson, Olivia's aunt. So long de-
nied real affection, she is all too
eager to listen to the palaver of the
young silky-mannered Dan. .His flat-
tering attentions make of her a
fluttering, giddy woman, totally un-
suspecting that her "boyfriend" is
craftily plotting to murder her for
her money.
The strange characters depicted in
'Night Must Fall" are extreme and
dramatically intensified examples of
the hideous conduct that can result
from a lack of affection, usually
stemming from a loveless childhood.
Psychologists insist that the respon-
sibility for seeing that a child
reaches normal, happy, emotionally-
round maturity rests solely with the
I arents, and is dependent upon their
giving the child the love and affection
be needs in his crucial formative
years.
In the Playhouse's presentation of
"Night Must Fall these key roles
will be played by Doug Mitchell as
the homicidal Dan, Karen Best as the
frustrated Olivia, and Doming Jen-
kins as the elderly Mrs. Bramson.
Groups To Conduct
Workshop, Concert
Here This Weekend
Th All-State Orchestra and the
All-State Orchestra Workshop will be
n campus this weekend, January
27-29, to rehearse and then to present
a concert on Sunday.
Frederick J. MttSer, educational
director for Scherl and Roth Inc
( leveland, Ohio, will rehearse and
conduct the orchestra at the concert,
which will be at 2.30 ,p.m. Sunday in
Wright Auditorium.
Nicholas Erneston, from Appala-
chian State Teachers College, will be
in charge of the Workshop, which
will present a concert on Sunday also.
The purpose of the All-State Or-
chestra and Workshop is to give tal-
ented high school musicians an oppor-
tunity to get together and rehearse
under a different and well qualified
director, and to iplay with the better
young musicians in the state. Here,
they are able to perform more diffi-
cult music than they are accustomed
to playing in their high school or-
ganizations. They also have an op-
portunity to meet people, and they
u'et a taste of college life.
The All-State Orchestra is held at
a different school each year. The last
time it came to EC was in 1956.
The students who are included in
the orchestras are chosen through
auditions. Those towns which are rep-
resented are: Greenville, Charolette,
Chapel Hill, Greensboro, High Point,
Kinston, Raleigh, Sniithfield, Blade,
boro, and Burlington.
The All-State Orchestra will (per-
form: "Firebird Suite by Stravin-
sky; Brandenburg Concerto Bach;
'Scherzo from "Midsummer Night's
Dream by Mendelsshon; and "Sym-
phony No. 6 second movement, by
Tschaikwsky. They will also perform:
"Ballet Music from "Prince IgoT by
Borodin; and "Violin Concerto by
Vivaldi-Muller. Muller is directing his
own transcription. This orchestra will
also perform at the Southern Division
of MENC at Asheville, in the spring,
under the same conductor.
The Workshop will perform: Pre-
lude on the Welsh Hymn "Rhosy-
roedre by R. V. Williams-Foster;
"Symphony No. 2 by Haydn; "Ron-
do Expressivo by Beethovan; and
highlights from "South Pacific by
Rodgers.
Dr. Malvin Artley, President of the
State High School Orchestra, from
Burlington will be in charge of ar-
rangements for the weekend event.
He will be assisted by Mr. Kimble
Harrimen, of Greensboro; Miss Mar-
tha Leonard, Greensboro and Donald
Hayes, Louis Danfelt, and James Par-
nell all of the EC Music Faculty.
Sororities Pledge Fifty-One
Panhellenic Formal Rush Concluded;
Anticipation, Expectancy Prominant
Sorority formal rush concluded
January 21 at 1:00 p.m. when rushees
l.icked up their final bids in the Pan-
hellenic room.
As the rushees assembled outside
the Panhellenic room, a noticeable
air of expectancy was present. An-
ticipation was evident as the rushees
entered the room to collect their bids.
iAs soon as the bids were received
there was mixed emotion through-
out the room; girls were laughing
and crying, some from pleasure, some
from disappointment.
The eight sororities and the number
of pledges they received in formal
rush aje: Alpha Delta Pi, 10; Alpha
0micron Pi, 2; Alpha Xi Delta, 5;
Alpha Phi, 3; Delta Zeta, 7; Kappa
Delta, 4; Sigma Sigma Sigma, 10;
and Chi Omega, 10.
Eighty girls signed up for rush;
and fifty-one of these were pledged.
Fourteen rushees dropped out of
rush before the final parties, nine
went to the last parties and did not
not sign a preferential sheet. Twelve
signed preferential sheets, but re-
ceived no bids of their choice.
Due to the fact that some girls only
stated one preference they did not
receive a bid, as there was limita-
tion to quota. Rushees who received
bids but declined them will be in-
eligible to participate in rush again
for one calendar year.
The mechanics of rush this
were quite successful, and the
hellenic Council was pleased
the results.
There were some sororities
did not pledge as many girls as they
had hoped to tpledge, but much
valuable experience was gained. The
sororities worked together harmo-
niously throughout the planning of
rush and rush week.
year
Pan-
with
who
Student Discovers
Cheaper Carvacrol
Purification Means
Ralph E. Mayo, while working un-
der the direction of Dr. Joseph Le-
Conte, discovered a new and cheaper
method for the purification of car-
vacrol. His achievement marks the
first major break-through in this
area in over two years of experimen-
tation.
Carvacrol is an intermediate com-
pound from which the parent sub-
stance (5-aminoearvacrol) for a series
of substituted thioureas of therapeu-
tic value can be composed. The dis-
covery of this new purification meth-
od is the key to the composition of
N,Ndiarylthioureas (substituted thi-
oureas). Prior to Mayo's work N,N-
diarylthioureas were composed only
at such expense that experimentation
with them was impractical.
Presently, Ralph is working under
a National Research Foundation
Grant and is now doing work which
will lead to preparation of the actual
N,Ndiarythiourea compounds.
Ralph, a Greenville native, is a
junior here. He is a chemistry ma-
jor and is a member of Phi Sigma
Pi, National Honorary Fraternity foT j Donald Prince, Agnes Rhue and Sue
1 Men in Education. Smith.
Science Class Attempts
New Electronics Project
Armed with high hopes and much
enthusiasm, Dr. R. M. Helm's ad-
vanced electronics class is experi-
menting with the construction of
radio tubes. This is the first time
such a project has been attempted
here at ECC.
The project is under the leader-
ship of Dr. Helms, who has been at
ECC for nearly 13 years. He received
a Masters from Duke in 1928 and an-
other from Columbia in 1940. At
New York University he was award-
ed his Doctorate. Dr. Helms aids the
students in every possible way and
is genuinely interested in the prog-
ress. Said Dr. Helms, "I am very
pleased with the experiment. It seems
each time we become hopeful some-
thing disastrous happens which lets
our feathers down
Work began as a class lab assign-
ment, but was continued as a private
project for weeks. The students have
devoted much time and study to this
fxperiment. It was necessary to build
the equipment for the project. The
ovens for baking the tubes were
made with tin cans, asbestos, a heat-
ing element and great imagination.
Tube after tube was broken in its
final stages, but patience and in-
terest were too strong for the idea
to be abandoned.
Finally success came. Two tabes
have been completed. Working on the
triode amplifying tube were Amy
Sue Gwaltney, Jack H. Riddick, and
David L. Persinger. The diode recti-
fying tube, which changes current
from AC to DC, was constructed by
Anxious girls gather at Panhellenic office to check sorority bids.
Brinson Exhibits Graphics
At Show In Rawl Building
ROTC Breaks Marchathon Record
CU Completes
Hardi Gras Plans
Plans for the College Union Mardi
Carnival to be held on Tuesday.
in the College Union
re almost complete.
An organizational meeting held
hursday, January 12 showed a great
umber of campus organizations and
Cadets of the Air Force ROTC
Honorary Drill Team, staging a
Marchathon in Greenville Jan. 21, foT
the local March of Dimes drive, broke
their last year's record in both time
and money.
Braving snow and freezing tem-
! peratures, 21 cadets executed pre-
j cision drill movements for twelve
1 hours and five minutes. Collections
totaled $628.12. Last year the March-
athon, first to be staged by the EC
Air Force ROTC, lasted exactly twelve i march.
commanded the Honorary drill team.
Members of the unit marched in full
uniform and carried M-l rifles. Cadet
Captain Frank E. Grayiel solicited
contributions over a public address
system during the day.
Members of Angel Flight, auxili-
ary of the Arnold Air Society, under
the command of Major Mary Eliza-
beth Powell served marching cadets
with coffee and refreshments and
collected donations during the long
hours and netted a little less than
$500.
As the cadets marched an esti-
mated 60 miles during the day, tele-
i rams of congratulation came to
them from Senator Sam J. Ervin,
Jr Jack McGee, state representa-
tive of the March of Dimes; Con-
gressman Herbert C. Ronner; and
Senator B. Everett Jordan.
Cadet Major Walter Worthington
Job Interviews
A representative from Metropolitan
Life Insurance Company will be on
campus soon to interview graduates
interested in life insurance sales.
Three - oritions are available: Aho-
skie, Kinston, and Wilmington. Salary
for the first year is $5,200 with two
weeks paid vacation, a training pro-
gram, and fringe benefits. If in-
terested, sign up at 293, Administra-
tion by 4:30 pju. Monday, Jan. 30.
Family Life Specialist
Conducts Conference
Mrs. Ethel Nash, family life special-
ist in the Department of Preventative
Medicine, Bowman Gray School of
Medicine, Winston-Salem, was the
prirripal speaker at a conference here
January 23, 24.
The conference on Dating, Engage-
ment, and Marriage was developed
around the theme "Marriage for Bet-
ter or Worse" in a series of four
major meetings and a number of dis-
cussion groups.
During the conference, the major
topics of discussion were "Persinality
Assets and Liabilities for Marriage
"Are You Ready to Go Steady? "Sex
Cadets, all volunteers for the
Marchathon, participating in Satur-
day's March of Dimes project in-
cluded, in addition to Worthington
and Grayiel: Donald M. Orawley,
James W. Temme, Douglas C. Robin-
son, Jimmy W. Rowe, David L.
Tucker, AUen M. Adams, Bryan L.
Bennett, Wayne C. Brown, Robert
C. Christesen, Edwin S. Hall, Bruce
S. Hart, Jr Martin R. Helms, Bobby
R. Herring, Roger A. Hollingsworth,
Allen G. Lassiter, Jr Joseph B.
Leggett, Robert A. Nelson, Eddie P.
Pearce, Larry L. Phillips, William iR.
Thompson, Jr William W. Trower,
and Hardy B. Taylor.
c' b? interested in sec iring booth
pace. As a result, all booth spaces
have been taken with 25 different or-
ganizations and clubs participating
in various types of activities.
As in years past, a sub-committee
of the Special Projects Committee of
the College Union Student Board is
buying the prizes for the event. In
addition to the stuffed animals, ten-
nis alls, doubledeck playing cards,
tible tennis rackets, golf balls, clock,
and Shaffer pen and pencil sets al-
ready bought, long play and 45 RPM
records, Pitt Theater pass books,
East Carolina souveniers, cigarette
lighters and numerous other prizes
are still to be purchased.
Other plans already completed for
the Carnival incude a 1st and 2nd
prixe of $10 and $5 respective for
tht winners in the "best booth" con-
test, with $5 and $2.50 as the prizes
for the winners of the moat carnival-
like costume contest. A door prize for
adults and children and children's Ignorance of College Students i
costume prizes are also being planned. "For Engaged and Planed Only.
Mrs. Rose Gornto Brinson of Wil-
mington, student of art at East Caro-
lina, is now exhibiting her work in
graphics in the Kate Lewis Gallery
of the Rawl building.
The show is one of a series of
exhibitions by talented seniors spon-
sored during the school year by the
department of art. Mrs. Brinson's
work will be on display through
January 28.
The exhibition includes woodcuts,
etchings, lithographs, and drawings.
In addition to her finished art work,
Mrs. Brinson has included the plates
and woodlocks used in the execution
of her woodcut prints and etchings.
The blocks and prints are arranged
artistically on a screen divider in the
art gallery and contribute interest and
information to the exhibition.
Here at East Carolina Mrs. Brin-
son has participated in student ac-
tivities in art, music, and drama.
She is president of the college chap-
ter of Delta Phi Delta, national
honorary art fraternity.
Her interest in music is indicated
by her membership in the EC March-
ing, Concert, and Varsity bands and
in the East Carolina Orchestra.
In the East Carolina Playhouse,
college dramatics club, she n a s
served as technical director for a
number of major productions of the
organizatin. She also is a member of
the Productions Committee of the
Student Government Association, a
major project of which is the pres-
entation each spring of a musical
omedy.
In the 1961 edition of "Who's Who
Summer Jobs Open In
US Civil Service
The following article is taken from
the January 30 issue of' U.S. News
and World Report:
This year thousands of summer
jobs for students will be available
throughout the U.S. Civil Service
Con:mission, ranging in pay from
$291 to $336 a month.
A wide variety of jobs will be open,
including such fields as engineering,
forestry, chemistry, biology, history,
accounting, mathematics, metallurgy.
These jobs are scattered across the
nation; the one you want may be in
or near your home town.
In locating a job check with your
coMege placement office, visit per-
(raod offices of federal agencies or
write to Civil Service Commission,
Washington 25, D. C, fox a free
copy of, "Opportunities for Student
Trainees" or (at a price of 15 cents)
"Summer Employment in Federal
Agencies The deadline for many of
the jobs is only weeks away so it will
be necessary to apply as soon as
possible.
Among Students in American Uni-
versities and Colleges she is one of
38 students who will represent EC
ir. the national yearbook.
EC Students Visit
Dept. Of Interior
Gamma Theta Up6ilon Fraternity,
professional geography fraternity, is
sponsoring a trip to Washington.
D. C. January 26th and 27th for 18
k-eography majors. This i3 the 4th
annual trip the Fraternity has spon-
sored to Washington. The purpose of
the trip is twofold: 1st, to observe
the type of work performed in gov-
ernment and private agencies, and
2nd, to talk with personnel officers
concerning employment in those
agencies.
Today the group will visit in the
Office of Geography, Department of
Interior, where decisions are made
as to the spelling of domestic and
foreign geographic names. Many
geography students find employment
in this agency. Later a visit will be
made to the National Park Service
office. Here the chief of the person-
nel office and the former supt. of
the Cape Hatteras National Seashore
Recreational Area will meet with
them. In the afternoon a visit will be
made to the Office of Area Develop-
ment in the Dept. of Commerce.
Here many geographers are employed
in the study of problem areas and
in assisting industries in the selection
of good industrial sites. A final visit
today will be to the Maryland-Nation-
al Capital Park and Planning Com-
mission which is one of the largest
regional planning offices in the
nation.
On Friday an all-day visit is
planned at Army Map Service, an
agency of the Corps of Engineers.
This large organization employs
about 5000 men and women in the
compilation and printing of maps.
Several recent graduates of the local
Geography Department are now em-
ployed in this agency.
Dr. R. E. Cramer, faculty advisor
to the fraternity and Professor of
Geography will accompany the group.
Those making the trip are Coy Til-
lett, Mearl Meekins, Gary Dowdy,
Ralph Jones, Jeffery Midgett, Gary
Meakins, Sydney Beacham, Neel Line-
back, Franklin White, Spottswood
Johnson, William T. Rodgers, Albert
R. Webb, Ronald Hickman, Carl
Dixon, Joseph Hollingsworth, Dennis
Lynch, Carlton Beamon and Michael
Jones.
Representatives To Interview Seniors Here
AFROTC marches in front of courthouse for the March of Dimes drive
Representatives will be on campus
soon from school systems and business
orgsnzations to interview Seniors for
positions. Those registered with the
Placement Service who are interested
in talking to these representatives
should sign up for interviews in Ad-
ministration 208 during regular hours.
Schools to be represented are Anne
Arundel County, Maryland; Arling-
ton County, Virginia; Harford Comi-
ty, Maryland; Roanoke, Virginia, City
Schools; Forsyth County, North
Carolina; Newport News, Virginia;
and Montgomery County, Maryland.
Representatives from Fieldcrest
Mills and the Public Housing Ad-
ministration may also be engaged for
interviews. Fieldcrest Mills will in-
terview majors in any fMd, while
the Public Housing Administration is
interested only in accounting majors.





PAGE TWO
THURSDAY, JANUARY 2fi i
EAST CAROLINIAN
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Discipline Committee
Handles Major Problems;
Judiciary Gives Demerits
Presently East Carolina has three stu-
dent c ntrolled judicial bodys. These are The
House Committees, The Women's Judiciary,
and the .Men's Judiciary. The house Com-
mittees give demerits for minor offenses that
occur in the women's dormitories. The Men's
and Women's Judiciaries deal with more seri-
ous offenses. Yet for any major disciplinary
action t be taken and for decisions in all
really serious cases the college relies on a Dis-
cipline Committee made up of five faeulty
and three student members.
This Discipline Committee is not an or-
gan i( the S.G.A but is an appointive com-
mittee set up by the President of the college.
This group operates on a kind of common
law plan and as far as we can determine has
no codified set of laws and penalties. This,
in some aspects, is good since there are ex-
ceptions to all rules and particular circum-
stances related to many violations. Any rule
or penalty should be flexible to some degree.
On the other hand, some aspects of this sys-
tem are not so good. In this country many
of our laws have evolved from the common
law system. Yet today we have codified
these decisions and now depend primarily on
statuatory law with offences and penalties
specified and written down. This assures uni-
form decisions.
There is an even further side one should
consider when viewing our campus judicial
procedures. We feel in most cases students
should govern students. In this way we think
a greater sense of responsibility will be in-
stilled in the student body. Yet under the
present system most serious cases (includ-
ing all cases involving suspension) are han-
dled by a faculty controlled committee.
In the past this committee has demon-
strated a great deal of responsibility and wis-
dom in dealing with these serious cases, still
it is not student government it is faculty
g vernment.
Another point of consideration is the time
element in some casses. The Discipline com-
mittee members serve without pay, and must
contribute their spare time to convene for
a case. This is never convenient to all mem-
bers concerned.
Thus by acting as a first court from
which there is no appeal (except a personal
one t the college president), by having to
assume responsibilities which are not theirs,
and by having no codified system of law the
Discipline Committee becomes unwieldly as
a judicial body.
We propose the following revisions to
the judicial system here.
First: make the Men's and Women's Ju-
diciaries stronger. Give these courts as much
p 8 is needed to handle any situation
they will meet. This includes the power to
suspend or expell students from school.
cond; initiate an Honor Council which
will handle all cases involving honor viola-
tions such as cheating or stealing. To this
body also give the needed powers.
Third; give each student, no mattter how
minor or how serious the violation, the right
of appeal to a higher court when he feels
he has not received justice.
Four; utilize the Discipline Committee
as an appeals court only. This will elimi-
nate many of its cases and cut down on the
number of times it is required to meet.
Fifth: codify all rules and regulations
of the college and of the Student Government
Association, setting up maximum and mini-
mum penalties for the 'violation of each rule.
This will assure uniform decision regardless
f the views of committee members at the
time, but will allow for flexibility in indi-
vidual cases.
We feel these five proposals will make
our judicial system more efficient, more ef-
fective, and more reasonable.
East Carolinian
Published by the students of East Carolina College,
Greenville, North Carolina
Member
North State Conference Press Association
Associated Collegiate Press
EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER
Tom J.ackson JoAnne Parks
Managing Editor Pat Harvey
Associate Editor Patsy Elliott
Sports Editor Richard Boyd
Feature Editor Marcelle Vogel
Assistant Sports Editor B. D. Mills
Photographers Grover Smithwick, Jim Kirkland
Photographer Assistant George Hathaway
Cartoonist Gale Hammond, Jay Arledge
Subscription Director Melba Rhue
Exchange Manager Selha Morris
Proofreading Director Jane Ipock
Columnists Marcelle Vogel, Patsy Elliott, Pat
Farmer, Pat Harvey, Roy Martin, Jasper Jones
Jim Stingley, Kay McLawhon, J. Mathers
Reporters Marcelle Vogel, Patsy
Elliott, Jasper Jones, Sue Sparkman, Jim Stingley,
Jane Kivett, Mollie Lewis, Lewis Latham, Merle
Summers, Ruth Johnson, Sylvia Vick, Dee Smith
Women's Circulation Manager Freddie Skinner
Men's Circulation Manager Gariyle Humphrey
Make-up Tom JJackson, Patsy Elliott, Pat
Harvey, Marcelle Vogel, Montie Mills
Typist Glenda Farrell
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Building.
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264.
From the "Rubayait of Omar Khayam
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wit,
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Una.
Nor all your tears wash out a word of it
translated by E. Fitzgerald.
'It's Over
What Happened To
The 80 Who Began?
By SUE SPARKMAN
The aftermath of Panhellenic's for-
mal rush week was filled with smiles,
tears, tiny colored ribbons pinned
ever proud hearts, and in some cases
. . . emptiness. Under the Quota-
Limitation system of Panhellenic, the
eighty girls who began rush were di-
vided by eight leaving a quotient of
ten girls for each sorority.
Rush ended . . . bids were matched
Recording to the preference listed by
girls and sororities (stopped, of
course, when a sorority reached its
quota of ten). Some sororities filled
their quota . . . others did not. They
were limited from the beginning by
having a first preference list of only
ten girls.
What about the rushees? They are
getting smarter every year. They in-
vestigated sororities before rush be-
gan . . . their minds were all but
made up. Rush probably served only
to strengthen these tentative decisions
and, as a result, many girls placed
only one Greek name on their prefer-
ence sheets. Alas! in too many cases
these groups had already reached
their quota no more room.
Our hats are off to these girls who
made a definite choice and who would
rather have nothing than not to have
their chosen group. These girls were
denied the enjoyment of Greek fel-
lowship . . . the sorority was denied
the chance of having them because
of a system designed to keep eight
groups equal.
Hurray for equality! We're all for
it! Let's keep these girls out of sor-
orities until all eight groups fall be-
low a membership of forty-five. While
this might seem to be equality, is it
really what it seems? Does it make
individual rushees equal? Is it equal-
ity to penalize a girl because the
group that she chooses happens to
have a long list of preferences? Or
. . . should 'he be forced into a group
not of her choice in order to become
a sorority girl?
In order to become a member of
her (preferred group, many of these
girls will have to wait until fall or
until the group membership drops
below the magic number . . . forty-five.
Maybe these determined young ladies
Cod bless 'em) will form a sorority
of their own. In this case, look out
. . . they'll go places until they, too,
are handicapped by an equalizer.
Students Observed
In Different Light
Dear Editor:
I think it's about time someone in-
formed the students here at East
Carolina that "they" chose the
school, and the school did not choose
them.
There is someone constantly de-
grading this institution for every-
thing imaginable such as the
school spirit, lack of leadership, poor
administration, poor professors, etc.
It is taken for granted that we can
do nothing about the administration
or the faculty of professors, but we
can do something about the "sore
spots
It's time for us to take some pride
in our school and be proud of its
position. For those who wish they
were going to receive a diploma from
UNC, Duke, or WF, then there is an
open door.
If we, as students, have no interest,
spirit, or pride in our school, then
how can we expect anyone else to
have or do that which we ourselves
will not.
Michael L. Bunting
. And In Weaving A Basket
" l.i.lMD! jI.WJjWW1AW'I11"
A Mass Of Dirt
Trials Ahead, But Confident
It seems that the inauguration of
a new president necessitates the mak-
ing of predictions. Since John F.
Kennedy is the youngest, richest, and
first Roman Catholic to have risen
to our country's highest elected of-
fice, the predictions of the "Holier
than Thous the "Mystic Prophets
the self-stylo. "Conservatives and
the "We're Going to Watch Every
Move with Caution'ites are filling the
pages of the nation's newspapers and
magazines with signs, pleas, and the
various other types of prophecy one
inevitably associates with these
"Don't Show the Truth" groups. The
actions and views of many of these
reqple are such because of ignorance;
ignorance (some are going to be
greatly disappointed) is not going to
bt accepted as an excuse in the com-
ing days. Ignorance, incompetence,
and excuses were given notice in Presi-
dent Kt-niiedy's inaugural address.
Tiic office of the new president will
be filled daily with some of the best
authorities on national and interna-
tional problems. Mix up's, insincerity,
and "Father-type" images are a
In Appreciation
Dear editor,
I would like to express deepest
.appreciation to the Faculty, Staff,
and Students of East Carolina Col-
lege for the beautiful flowers and
many personal kindness so thought-
fully extended at the recent passing
of my father.
Keith D. Holmes
For the family
By DAVID HOUSE
gradation of our nation and its gov-
n'ghtmare of the ipast. The altruists
and secorul-handers (Left and Right)
are going to find rough sledding in
Washington for the next (at least)
four years. These men of the new ad-
ministration are going to act with
dignity, forcefulness, and TRUTH as
their guides. Most of the cabinet
have taken financial losses (the sal-
aries of most were above the new
level). These men see the state of de-
Information Center
"The trouble with being a bachelor
is that by the time you've played the
field you're too old to make a pitch
Harold L. Taylor.
Know how the word "news" origi-
nated? Popular etymology derives
rews from the initial letters of the
names of the four cardinal points of
the compass North, East, West
and outh. But the theory lacks
fourfation. News is nerely the
.plural of new.
"One of the troubles with parents
who bring up children these days is
they don't hit bottom often enough
-O. A. Battista.
"The one thing that consoles me
about being a woman is the fact that
now I won't have to marry oneUr-
sula Herking.
Hoi polli (pronounced hoi po-loi in
English) is a Greek phrase in Latin
letters. It literally means "the many"
applied to the masses, the multitude
the great majority.
Bearded Wonder Changes Tune;
ig Three Refuse Conference
Big newsThe Bearded Wonder
from the isle of Cuba has changed
his tune. Was it because he likes
Democrats, or was his relations with
the Fat Man from Moscow becom-
ing a bit strained? At any rate, he
i.c no longer hurling threats of death
By JIM STINGLEY, JR.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
'All ft6HTf m im -tf WAtgg QjKftoto is TrfSflfCiMft TAHN3
and destruction at the U.S.
The Associated Press came out
with this little item last week. "The
U. S. has joined Britain and France
ir. politely turning aside a Cambo-
dian proposal for a 14 nation East-
West conference to try to halt the
war in Laos.
A formal reply sent to Prince
Norodom Sihanouk earlier last week
was understood to have thanked the
Cambodian neutralist leader for a
sincere effort to solve a situation
with dangerous implications for his
own country
Welk now. Just who does that
little Cambodian upstart think he
is? Why, He actually tried to tell
three great big bad countries like the
U. S Great Britain, and France, to
have a peace conference. He can't do
that! We'll have a conference when
we feel like having one, and not be-
fore! If somebody gets killed while
we are thinking about it tough
luck!
John F. Kennedy is now the Presi-
dent of the United States of Ameri-
ca. The youngest man ever to come
to office and the only Catholic to
hold this office. President Kennedy
has stepped into a hornets neat of the
worst nature, and, as someone once
said, "He will be the loneliest man
in the world for the next four years
He will be confronted with decisions
such that this country has never seen
before. Let us pledge our support to
him, and may God give him the wis-
dom and the faith to guide us to
peace.
ernment. Personal dignity and integ-
rity are maximums with the new
president and his associates.
There will be many trials ahead
for President Kennedy and the ad-
ministration. We are confident that
he and his cabinet will act in the
best interests of the United State.
To be able to say this is a relief in-
deed, for it has been eight years since
last we could truthfully feel such con-
fidence. The glorified images, false
impressions), 'beyond criticism and
"What's Good for General Motors
isma" are off to Gettysburg and the
Bahamas. Senator McCarthy has
: assed on.
Half-truth propagandists, LOOK
OUT
The Rushing Stops;
Many Stopped At
Halftime
By PAT HARVEY
After seeing Bob Newhart's mono-
logue on Dina Shore's fashion hour,
we now know that griper's associa-
tion was not instigated at East Caro-
lina. It seems that it all started dur-
ing George's era when "the fool
stood up in that boat charging across
the Delaware and, if this wasn
iuliculous enough, that other idiot
was in the other boat painting his
pitcher
picture
While plodding through 803 books
(not including the pamphlet by Ivy
League professors) and preparing
the term paper of the year, a state-
ment hit hard and made a dent:
is better to be well-informed
si nd inactive than to be highly ac-
tive but badly informed (John La-
Farge, author of The Catholic View-
point on Race Relations.) Perhaps
all of us should take note, especially
some of our active organisations.
The Party's over . . the rushing
season has slowed down. It seems that
many of the participants rushed in
the wrong direction or forgot the
right signals: many were disap-
pointed in the results . . . some of the
signals were just a little misleading
Unfortunately, this sisterhood jazr
ooesn't exist in sororities as a
whole; only in the segregated groups.
Last week several events took
precedence over Joanne Tate's "Search
for . . . Tomorrow?" and Vanessa
Sterling's "Love of . . . Life? (i)
John Kennedy took the oath (2) Bob-
by's ego and feet swelled as he stood
throughout the parade (3 Jackie's
ego and music appreciation dwindled
as she listened to HER song, and
(4) Abraham Lincoln was revived
again.
All Doris Day fans who wish to
continue living with this attitude are
urged to dismiss all ideas about see-
ing Midnight Lace tomorrow night
Not even technicolor could compen-
sate for this ridiculous hour and St
minutes of hysteria, Tomboyiah Doris
loped around in sexy costumes; John
Gavm looked as though he was won-
dering what town he was in; and
Rex Harrison looked as though he
was making love to Marjorie Main
Verdict: A technicolor nightmnw.
Don't forget to use Ad for a bet-
ter '
The Gourgeous Earth Tom
To Shreds For What?
By HOY MART IS
The other day I was down in the vicin
ity of Wright Circle, and the sight which I
saw brought tears to my eyes. There it
a dragline, with the yawning rnouth sj
its scoop ripping the earth to shi-
"Why?" I asked as I watched the dc
tat ion, would man create such a machine to
destroy one f the beautiful landmark? 0f
this campus. What possible reason could there
be for such action as this?
As I stood there, I remembered as -t
cb.lu, playing hide and seek amid the shrub.
bery with the companions f mj jth. Tho3e
were happy days. We used to use hedge clip.
pers cutting out passageways through the
intertwining branches of the bushes. These
passageways led to a central point in the
bush which was our stronghold, ur f
for protection against Indians and othei
aginary enemies.
During my years as a student a: East
Carolina, I have passed those bus!
times. On occasions, I have stooped d
see if our passages were still there. Some of
them had been closed as the branches had
grown back into place. Others, however were
just as we had left them. But now they are
gone . . . swept away by an awesome machine
of man's creation.
The pond in the center of Wright pro-
vided particular fascination for my compan-
ions and me. Many were the times, that we
used to try to catch the goldfish as they
flitted back and forth before our eyes. Yes,
sir, we would be there on our knee
with a stick to slap the water, when old P
Williams would ome along, and a
scurrying to the protection of our fort.
As I stood before the scene, watc
the scoop reach down and gobble the earth,
and the workmen with shovels and
tearing nature's works to piece I
emptiness within me, for 1 saw no
for such as this. Then I turned to a student
who was standing beside me and sobbed,
Why?" My friend turned to me, dropped his
head a bit, and with a heartrending sigh.
mumbled, "Charlie Munn lost a dime
And Everyone Cheered
Viewer Witnesses Unusual
Events During 'Big Day'
By PAT FARMER
Americans saw John F. Kennedy take
the oath of office. Standing coatless in 22
degree weather, Kennedy repeated the solemn
path in a clear, matter of fact voice His
inaugural address was full of promise for a
greater and a better America, and he told
the world that he would protect our precious
heritage liberty . . .
Eisenhower, who sat with a dazed look
on his face during the ceremony, invoked
sorrow from the viewing audience A
man who had dedicated his life to protect
tne principles and ideals of America, was
retiring. . . .
Jackie smiled warmly at her husband
auring the entire inaugural proceedings . . .
riowever, females were astounded at the non-
cnaiant manner in which the newly sworn-in
president politely ignored her. That inatten-
tion should cause criticism to be leveled
hSt Ja After all-remem-
Dering Bess and Harry and the "fabulous
Mamie and Ike?
0u ?evv,Attorney-General, Robert Ken-
r' fe tlLe show in the inaugural pa-
rade . . . Perched on the top of the back seat
J2S Par?de comrertible, Bobby smiled and
tiit ,t a5d wasFeeted enthusiastically by
on?v LZdSu ' ' While brother ck stood up
?niyE!n h 1S8aed the Presidential review-
shoWand ?ther Joe PerhaPs Bobb'
At rt kin Sat and Jack should have stood.
are hProi ' i: 50se (both of my children
KennPdv th B?bhy and wbo else . . .)
comSSrJU show with her impromptu
Kfkfii0 the nation Jackie in her
ested i.? it 8rWn' aPPead rather uninter-
honor u? written and sg in her
Birdflno J111 the other hand, Lady
StfwdH LRJ de,hted With hcr s0ng-
auirumVeri?)rHodges was seen at the in-
aSsand i withut hjs fanious
of Commit V PtrhaPs our new Secretary
he SfSBS c"olinl0me. mre 8ttaW
Carolina1 Orfc1 We did not him East
feelm k eee was represented (ably we
fareT?HbL?U; own Commissioner of Wei-
SSSi f. Allotment, and Mulea, Mr. Glenn
HBHHWnHNMWMHi





THHRPPAY- JANUARY 26, 1961
Gritzner Discusses
Penal Colonies
fharles K. CJritzner, Jr of the
department of greoraphy was the
speaker at the College Lecture Club,
inlpUS organization of faculty mem-
jrs, January 23 in the Joyner
Library
M, (hitzner, whose work as a
rapher deals mainly with Latin
Ka. discussed "French Penal
M to Cuiana
Before, joining the East Carolina
,3v i attended Arizona State
University at Tempe, from which he
. bachelor of arts degree,
ia State University at
B -
Sorority, Fraternity News
Rush Week Brings In New
Pledges, APOPlans White Ball
The Rho Zeta Chapter of Chi servation of friendship week in the
umega Sorority initiated six women . sorority,
students January 21 at the Saint'
EAST CAROLINIAN
College Welcomes
SGA Accountant
PAGE THREfc.
a-irf !
flgaram
Student Assembly Aids
Needy County Families
v amounting to $201.70 was
at the Past Christmas Aa-
u ram in order that some
be families in the Pitt County
might have a more enjoyable
as.
Greenville Salvation Army re-
ceived $101.70 of this amount, while
other $100.00 was given to a
family. This family's father
been ill and unable to work for
two years, thus making it
er hard on the mother who, be-
rkinjf, has to take care of
all children.
James Methodist" Church.
The Rho Zeta Chapter of Chi
Omega was pledged November 12,
1969. The purposes of Chi Omega
are the attainment of superior
scholarship, the development of
womanly character, and participation
in social and civic services.
New members of the sorority are:
Nancy Coggins, Peggy DanielB, Celia
May, Sallie Mewborn, Dawn Reaves,
and Judy Smith.
In ceremonies performed at the
chapter house, Paul Clifton Hemby
HI became the latest brother of
After the initation the new sisters
were entertained at a slumber party
at the cabin of Judy Jolly of Green-
ville.
New members of the sorority are
Judi Cullifer, Agnes Lawler, Tennys
Bowers, Virginia Fowle, Jenny Lynn
Walston, Betty Sue Carson, and Diane
MeCulley.
The Alpha .Phi Omega fraternity
wishes to announce their (A.P.O. White
Ball, which will be held February 17,
in Wright Auditorium. The E.C.C.
Collegiates will be furnishing the
music and they will be featuring Miss
Betty Lane Evans.
The admission fee tor the Ball
will be $1.50, stag or drag. The pro-
ceeds will be given to the crippled ,
childrens fund, as has been done in
the previous years.
The Ball will begin at 8:00 p.m.
tnd will last until 11:16 p.m. It will
A iiarkling personality and an
eagerness to help, describes Mrs. T.
H. Henderson who now occupies a
newly created office of Student
Fund Accountant.
She was pleased when she found
her new position would involve
working directly with the students
of the SGA. "I have always loved
working with young people. You see
I have a special interest in college
students since I have two ia college
and one who is' soon to enter ahe
eaid.
Mrs. Henderson's main interest is
Beauty Pageant Officials Urge Southern Coeds
To Participate In Annual Fiesta Of Five Flags
The Fiesta of Five Flags in Pensa- 3.r, with not more than one from a
cola, Fla is looking for a coed from l campus.
Theta Chi Fraternity. The initiation
took place January 10.
Paul, age 20, a native of Kins-
ton, and a sophomore student ma-
joring in accounting. He is a mem-
ber of the Eta pledge class.
On Tuesday night, January 24,
Alnha Delta Pi Sorority climaxed a
successful rush week when they in-1 be a semi-formal affair
cluced ten new pledges.
Those pledging the sororities are:
Marsha Whitworth Kathryn Oakes.
Becky Basnight; Olivia Hammond;
Ada Jane Kivett; Barbara Rose;
j Donna Ann Parker; Linda Keffer;
was the first such collection Vicki Odom; and Mary Anne Pen-
nington.
Delta Omicron Chapter of Alpha j "At the end of the Civil War
Delta Pi S'orority initiated seven' James H. Bearden of the business
the Christmas assembly and
topic had not come prepared.
i cause of the good that was
by the amount that was re-
this collection may well be-
i h tradition for the Christmas
ssembly a spokesman said.
Bearden Delivers
Convivium Address
women students January 13, at the j faculty told members of Kappa Order
i Southern campus to bear the title
"Miss Golden Anniversary of Naval
Aviation
Prizes totaling $6,500, including a
Hollywood vacation, awaits winners
in the 1961 Fiesta Beauty Pageant,
to be held June 6-11 in conjunction
with a mammoth celebration of the
50th Anniversary of Naval (Aviation.
More than 70,000 naval aviators
who have received flight training in
Pensacola during the last 60 years
ihave been invited to a gala home-
cuming celebration, which coincides
with Pensacola's annual Fiesta of
Five Flaigs.
To be eligible for competition in
the Fiesfci Beauty Pageant, entrants
must be sponsored by a recognized
institution such as a college or uni-
versity or by an accredited sorority,
fraternity, or other college-connected
society. Applicants must be from 18
to 25 years of age and have never
been married. Final screening will
limit the number of contestants to
Participants will compete In three
preliminary events, including formal
evening attire, swim suit, and talent
competitions, with prizes for winners
in each category. The grand winner
will be selected from a group of five
finalists, all of whom will receive
trophies and awards.
The first prize will be $2,600 in
savings bonds plus an expense-paid
trip to Hollywood, Cal visits to mo-
vie and television studios and an ap-
j.f.irance in a television performance.
Winner in the 1960 competition was
Miss Scottie McCormick, a Univer-
sity of Florida coed. During her
Fiesta-sponsored trip to Hollywood
she appeared in the Hennesey tele-
vision series with Jackie Cooper.
The first and second runner-up
will receive savings bonds of $1,000
and $500 respectively. Additional
awards of $250 each will be presented
to the most talented non-finalist and
to the young woman chosen by fel
luv
ity
Contestants will provide their own
transportation to and from Pensacola.
During their stay in Pensacola as
participants in the beauty pageant,
their expenses will be paid by the
Fiesta of Five Flags, who will pro-
vide chaperones for all occasions.
Inter-Religious Council
Stimulates Interest
Religious interest among students
"at East Carolina are furthered by
the inter-religious Council com-
posed of eleven student members ren-
r senting the campus YMCA and
YWCA and various denominational
groups with which students are af-
filiated.
Council members work with the
Rev. U. D. Gross, director of re-
ligious activities; the GreenviF.e
Ministerial Associaiton, directors of
Webcor Sponsors Literature
Interpretation Competion
home of Mrs. Lee Folger in Green
ville.
The initiation climaxed the ob-
QaCanqns
with
M&Shulroan
(Author of "I Wa a Teen-age DwarfThe Many
Loves of Dobie Gillie etc.)
HOW SMALL CAN YOU GET?
Today let us address ourselves to a question that has long rocked
and roiled the academic world: Is a student better off at a
small college than at a large college?
To answer this question it is necessary first to define terms.
What, exactly, do we mean by a small college? Well sir, some say
that in order to be called truly small, a college should have an
enrollment of not more than four students.
I certainly have no quarrel with this statement; a four-
student college must unquestionably be called small. Indeed,
one could even call it intime if one knew what intime meant.
But I submit there is such a thing as being too small. Take, for
instance, a recent unfortunate occurrence at Crimscott A and M.
Crimscott A and M, situated in a pleasant valley nestled
between Denver and Baltimore, was founded by A. and M.
Crimscott, two brothers who left Ireland in 1706 to escape the
potato famine of 1841. As a result of their foresight, the Crim-
scott brothers never went without potatoes for one single day of
their lives-and mighty grateful they were! One night, full of
gratitude after a hearty meal of French fries, cottage fries, hash
browns, and au gratin, they decided to show their appreciation
to this bountiful land of potatoes by endowing a college. They
stipulated that enrollment should never exceed four students
because they felt that only by keeping the college this small
mvf&&
fyfallbM M dmfy&
could each student be assured of the personalized attention the
camaraderie, the feeling of belonging, that is all too often lacking
in higher education. ,
Well sir, things went along swimmingly until one Saturday a
few years ago. On this day Crimscott had a football game
cLyuT2agLStMinnesota,itstraditionalri
of course, something of a problem at Crimscott, what with only
tour student enrolled in the entire college. It was easy enough
to muster a backfield, but finding a good -
line-baffled the most resourceful coachmg minds inthe country.
Well sir, on the morning of the big game against Minnesota
ite ional rival, a capricious destiny dealt CrunscoUcruel
blow-m fact, four cruel blows. Sigafoos, J
woke up that doming with the breakbone
slotback, was unable to start his "f1
the wingback-tailback, got his necktie J
machine Langerhans, the fullback, was stolen by
Consequently, alas none of the Crimscott team showed up at
thand Minnesota, its traditional r
almost at will. Crimscott was so out of sorts that they immed.
atTbrl ofi football relations with MU-J
v.l This biter became known as the Urea scow "
t-Z "7 four etudeo might
JXnt. Th. numb I 3'
come? B.u. when you turn, twenty -
them ope. . of M.ho Z 5
nwult vou have a student boay ma.
rteTand'Lity and harmony and ooncori and together-
and soft pack and flip-top bo. r . -
That's how oome. . .
,m m P"i!im srssss.
Thursday night, "the North had vie
tory, but the South had Robert E.
Lee
Bearden was principal speaker at
the annual convivium of the fraternity
held in honor of the founding of the
Kappa (Alpha Order and of Robert
E. Lee, regarded by members of the
organization as their "spiritual
founder
Approximately sixty members,
pledges, and guests were present at
the dinner meeting. Miss Mary Eliza-
beth Gardner, the Kappa Alpha Rose,
was an honored guest at the conven-
tion.
In commenting on Lee as a Chris-
tian soldier and gentleman, Bearden
pointed out aspects of Lee's charac-
ter and conduct which cause mem-
bers of Kappa Alpha to regard him as
a guide and model. "Devotion to duty,
conscientiousness, tenderness toward
others, strength, and faith in God
are he said, "among Lee's outstand-
ing traits which members of the fra-
ternity honor and emulate.
Fred Daniel, president of Gamma
Rho chapter of Kappa Alpha, presided
at the dinner meeting. The Rev. John
Drake, rector of St. Paul's Episcopal
Church, and an advisor of the chap-
ter, gave the invocation.
As part of the convivium program,
three students at East Carolina be-
came pledges of the fraternity. They
were D. B. Mills, Charles L. Howie,
and James C. Blanton.
Mrs. T. H. Henderson
church work. She is a member of
Immanuel Baptist Church here in
Greenville and is active in the Inter
Se Book Club. Working with groups
such as the YWA's, the WMU, and
the BSU occupies her time not filled
by her family. Before coming here,
Mrs. Henderson worked with the
ASC Office,
With the newness of the office
there comes also a vagueness of the
responsibilities, but the need for such
a iposition has been evident for
several years. It became necessary
since the college has grown and the
duties of the treasurer have become
too numerous for the students to
handle alone. Mrs. Henderson will
aid the students in setting up a new
bookkeeping system, writing checks
and issuing purchase orders. She
will keep regular office hours in the
room across from the SGA office in
Wright.
10.
Cigarettes containing menthol ac-
counted for about 14 per cent of the
total cigarette market in 1960, com-
pared with three per cent four years
ago.
Delicious Food
Served 24 Hours
Air Conditioned
CAROLINA
GRILL
Corner W. 9th & Dickinson
In one second the sun sends out a
million times more energy than is
stored in all the earth's coal, petro-
leum anl natural gas fields.
i 01 is. Contest Director
Initially, two recordings will be
selected from colleges and universi-
ties in each of the fifty States. The
one hundred best tapes will then be
reviewed by the Competition Com-
mittee selected from the Speech staff
of Southern Illinois University, and
the winning selection will be de-
termined.
The winner of the Webcor, Inc
Award of five hundred dollars in
cash will he notified not Later than
May 15, 1961, and the award will be
presented at an Award Convocation
or on some other suitable occasion
sponsoring De-
The readings will be judged on the
basis of the best modern standards
in the techniques of the Oral In-
terpretation of Literature.
All pertinent information concern-
ing the Competition the Award
winner, the best Readers by indi-
vidual States, etc. will be pub-
TOD A Y.SATURDAY
"WIZARD OF
BAGDAD
(In Color)
Starring
DICK SHAW
SUN MON and TUES.
ALEN LADD
in
frt,
ALL THE YOUNG
MEN"
STATE Theatre
Everyone is wearing
The 1960 national inter-collegiate
competition in oral interpretation of
literature, sponsored by Webcor, Inc
manufacturers of tape recorders and
recording tape, is underway.
The task: recording your interpre-
tation of Edna St. Vincent Millary's
poem "Renascence The award: five
hundred dollars in cash for the first
place winner.
The contest rules .are as follows.
1. The Competition is open to all
college and university students
in the United States with the
exception of extension and jun-
ior college students and students
attending Southern Illinois Uni-
versity at Carbondale, Illinois.
Participants may be of gradu-1 suggested by the
ate or undergraduate standing, artment Chairman,
either full or part-time.
2. The selection to be taped is Edna
St. Vincent Millay's "Rena-
scence in its unabridged form.
(Should be available in any li-
brary.) Permission to use the
poem has been graciously grant-
ed by Mrs. Norma Millay Ellis.
3. Competitors must be .approved
and sponsored by the Chair-
man of the Speech (or alied)
Department.
4. Not more than four (4) record-
ings may be submitted from
any one institution.
5. The sex of the participants in
the Competition will not be a
matter of consideration.
6. The taped selection must be re-
corded at fast speed (7.5) on a
5 in. reel. No identification
should appear on the box. (The
package, of course, may carry
a return address Although it
is not a rule of the Contest, and
will have no bearing on the
award, it is suggested that as
a matter of courtesy Webcor
tape recorders and recording
tape be used.
7. No original introduction to the
selection should be made. After
the conclusion, however, the fol-
lowing pertinent indentification
should be read: "This recording
has been made by Mr. (Miss, or
Mrs.) I am a student at
East Carolina College, Green-
ville, North Cai-olina
8. All tapes will become the prop-
erty of the Speech Department,
Southern Illinois University,
Carbondale, Illinois. One hun-
dred of the best recordings will
be kept in repository at the
University and at a later date
will become available for Study
and analysis by any school par-
ticipating in the Contest.
9. Tapes may be submitted at any
student centers maintained bv Green-
, . , ivi'le churches, and counselors of re-
contestants as "Miss Congenial- .
lgious groups on the campus.
According to "The Key the Coun-
cil "serves to co-ordinate all student
religious activities . . . and sponsor
new approaches to religious em-
phasis
The Council helps in arranging the
weekly chapter program on campus
March 1, 1961.
Address tapes to: Mr. Lou Si- and sponsors the annually observed
Religious Emphasis Week.
Now representing various churches
the religious organizations on the
Inter-religious Council are the fol-
lowing students: Mary Lee Nicholson,
Baptist; L. Marie Moore, Christian;
Edith L. Baker, Episcopal; Carolyn
Pate, Free Will Baptist; Neil A.
Seid, Hebrew; Ann Adkins. Lutheran;
George McD. Wilson, Presbyterian;
Louis 'A Bimonte, Roman Catholic;
Anne Campbell, YWCA; Robert Par-
sons, YMCA; and James A. Lanier,
Methodist.
Table Tennis Tourney
Assistant Games Committee Chair-
man, Fleetwood Lilly, has announced
that the Men's Doubles and Wom-
en's Singles Table Tennis event for
the Winter Quarter will be held
Wednesday. Feb. 1, in the CU Recre-
ation Area.
The Men's Doubles event will start
at 6:30 p.m. and is open to all EC
lished in an early 1961 issue of one j players. It is requested that all
of the journals of the Speech Asso
ciation of America, if possible. All
of the other speech journals may be
carrying this information.
All interested students are urged
to enter the competition. If further
information is desired, please write
to the Contest Director.
teams sign up prior to starting time
at the Table Tennis Room. Players
who do not have doubles partners will
be paired up before starting time.
The Women's Singles Tournament
will start at 7:30 p.m. It is requested
that all interested players sign up
prior to 6:30.
EC Sees First Snow Of Year
ij v .







$&
. . 's;i
time prior to but not later than campus.
Three students laugh for joy as they walk thriugh the beautiful whit
GIVE HER A
"Star" for Any Occasion
ALL SIZES (Brown and Black)
Men's $15.95
Girls $11.95
22 E. FIFTH STREET
"Student Charge Accounts
Invited"
DORIS DAY
REX HARRISON - JOHN GAVIN
in
"MIDNIGHT
LACE"
Color By Technicolor
Starts
FRIDAY
JAN. 27th
Pin Theatre
belling Miir
DIAMOND PENDANT
by
Artcarved
Any girl- of any . wH go starry-eyed at this new Evening
Star pendant by Artcarved. Oazzttngly dlfferent-the perfect
gift for sweetheart, wife or daughter. Priced from $125. up.
Om pm & ax nf a ft. Tt onwqpa m o.
Lautares Bros. Jewelers
Evans Street
Registered Jewelers
Valentine Dance
Wright Auditorium
Saturday, Feb. 11
8:00-11:45 P. M.
"Come and vote for the Valentine
Queen of 1061"
Music by the
Collegians Combo
Dress will be Serai-Formal
Admission $1.00 Per
Couple
Tickets are on sale by members of
the F.B.L.A. and will be sold at
the door.
SPONSORED BY
Phi Beta Lambda
Chapter of the Future
Business Leaders of
America
:





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PAGE FOUR
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EAST CAROLINIAN
THURSDAY, JANUARY 26.
WCC Five Here Tomorrow
SPORTS
REVIEW
By RICHARD BOYD
With a winning basketball season in prospect, and a 7-3 record
accomplished on the gridiron it looks like another fine season for East
Carolina in the field of sports. The baseball team which will be presented
this Spring under the direction of Eean Mallory is expected to have an-
other championship team to make 1960-61 an all winning season for the
Bast Carolina athletic program in major sports.
Some of the Great Teams of Yesterday
During the past decade the Burs have also been holding their
own m various major sports. Going back to 1952 we find that the Pirates
had a great year on the gridiron. The Pirates besides being North State
Champions, wore also a participant in the first Elk's Bowl.
hi 1968 the baseball nine managed to win the regular season cham-
. and went on to greater accomplishments that same year as a
. M in the NAIA Tournament in Kansas City, Missouri. The year
aw another championship team come to Greenville. This season
was an unusual one for the Bucs in sports as the Pirate baseball team
-cd to be champions of the North State loop.
In 1950 East Carolina repeated as league champions on the diamond,
and during the past several seasons Coach Jim Mallory's nine has proven
e most feared team in the league and a match for Atlantic Coast
e representatives.
swimming and golf teams have certainly made their presence
local, state and national circles. The 1957 swimming team proved
XAIA champs, and the 11M.0 golf crew won the North State League
mpionship.
The student body should be proud of the remarkable progress the
tk program has made. Dr. Jourgenson is a most capable athletic
who has been phomoting an outstanding sports program for Buc
ch lack Koone, did a brilliant job with the football squad this
ft, and Coach Earl Smith is doing a tremendous amount of work
i aid the Buc hardwood quint. Swimming Coach Eh Ray Martinez will
face some strong competition in swimming, but thus fiar the ECC swim-
mers have shown good progress.
The Officials Are Having It Rough
Basketball officials make their presence known on the hardwood
similaa to what baseball umpires manage to give the sports fans then-
contributions on the diamond. The first cry of the "typical" ffcn in either
is two blind mice But the fan should remember that these pro-
fessionals have a "bird's eye" view of almost every possible play, and that
they are doing their occupation for financial reasons, and not for preju-
dice ones.
But even the officials and umpires have been known to miss them.
No one is perfect, these men are no exception. A good example of the
hardwood officials having a rough time can be due to two recent incidents
in state college basketball games.
It was Carolina ?s. Notre Dame at Charlotte. The Tar Heels were
rite to defeat the Irish without too much trouble. However, it appeared
ly the Carolina five would taste defeat in that encounter as the
pressed. With the Ta- Heels trailing by three in the closing
S, York Lari se the Carolina high scoring guard was fouled by an
Irish player. The Notre Dame play, r made a remark to the official as if
as giving the game to the powerful Tar Heels. Immediately. a techni-
cs called and Larese, a dead eve from the foul line was gifted with
e free throws. The -AlHA-merk-an candidate netted the foul shot, and
the technical ruling the Chapel Hill school had ball possession at
-court. With only seconds remaining, the well-coached Tar Heels
naturally froze the ball with the lead being in their favor.
Thus the incident between the official and the player led to defeat
for the upset minded South Bend, Indiana crew.
If the fan thinks that was robbery by Carolina, he is entitled to do
so. However, the referee could have done the same thing to a Carolina
player. Naturally, the Irish were upset because they felt that they were
literally robbed of the contest. Perhaps they were, but the moral ofl this
incident was that the official is the boss, and not the player, coach, or
anybody else connected with the basketball game. Once that whistle is
blotm, the players are on the stage, and the officials are the directors.
Another case which was not similar in the respect that it was an
tire y different incident, occurred during the recent Lenoir Rhyne-Bel-
V'boy contest held in Hickory, North Carolina team in the country
Bear h d 10 home game streak jroing prior to the contest.
i g the fina' seconds of this encounter it appeared that the Belmont
Abbey team had victory within their reach with the score 63-60 with less
hili a minute left on the home scoreboard clock. The ball was in the pos-
siOIJ of the home team and a 20 foot set shot was netted by Bear guard
Burton. This made the score 63-02 with only seconds remaining. A
blown possibly by either the officials or someone up in the
At any rate. A Belmount Abbey player dropped the ball on the
vjrt. thinking it was time out, but officially time had not been called.
o LR guard Mr. Burton picked up the ball and raced in flor an easy
put the home team ahead for keeps.
The question was who blew the whistle, or was there a whistle
Mown T.e officials claim they did not blow the whistle, but someone up
n the stands could have.
Tfcli was very mid that something like this had to occur, eventually
Belmount Abbey the game. Maybe the college students and basket-
ball fans everywhere can see where the officials really have it rough to
a certain degree.
Winter Practice Sessions Begin
By JIM STINGLEY. JR.
During the winter months, most of evry meal-book.
ur attention to sports goes to the
1 etball team and the swimming
team This is true of almost every
college in the C.S. After these sports,
basftbttt, track, tennis, and golf take
over the headlines. Have you ever
v nn hied what the football team
lots during this time"
Some afternoon, when you have
nothing urgent to do and you feel
like taking stroll, why don't you
walk over to the football field and
take a view of the crew. They'll be
doing little things like running wind-
sprints, hundred yard dashes, kick-
ing field-troals and extra points, hav-
ing pass receiving practice, and later
fl in the yar they will be in full
gpnr butting heads together.
Now this may not seem especially
ortant to you. You may My, "So
' they're getting paid for it "
We'l. its true that a lot of them are
on scholarships. But don't itart feeL
Ing envy for them, cause believe
me. they earn every ponny they gat.
Penny, did I say T Pardon me. I meant
every textbook,
and every class. They are working
for their education just like the
Walter and the hall-procters. Their
work takes a lot more time and a
lot more energy, but because they
want an education, and because they
love the game, they are doing it.
Now you're probably saying,
"Those poorboys, I feel sure sorry
for them Well don't. They're not
after anybody's sympathy. But they
do deserve respect, and a lot of it.
Contrary to popular belief, they
aren't a bunch of dumb-bunnies who
are being given a free diploma. In-
stead, they are the best group of
men on campus. Hard working, hard
players, they are to be respected!
The first regularly issued daily
newspaper in North America was
published by John Dunlop In Phila-
delphia in 1784. It wag called the
Pennsylvania Jacket and Daily Ad-
vertiser.
The Western Carolina Catamount's
tangle with EC's Pirates this coming
Friday night could prove to be a very
exciting contest.
In the last encounter between the
two clubs this year, EC took a 35-72
win. The game followed Lenoir
Rhyne's victory over the Bucs, and
showed an ability the Pirates have
for coming hack after a sound beat-
ing. The Cats from Cullowhee have
a relatively inexperienced basketball
team, as evidenced by the fact that
there are only freshmen and sopho-
mores on the team.
Two sophomores and three fresh-
men regularly compose their start-
ing lineup, and the first two re-
serves iare one fresh and one sopho-
more. However, the main strength
of the WC club stems from its tre-
irendous height. The starters run 6
ft. 8 in 6 ft. I in, 6 ft. 3 in, and
6 ft. 1 in. All reserves who play are
over 6 ft. 5 in.
This could result in trouble for
the Pirates, who are not as tall as
their opponents.
Western Carolina is in the second
half of conference standing, and this
two-game road trip could bolster the
Cats standing. The offense em-
ployed by Coach Jim Gudger is one
that sets the tempo of the game. WC
normally fast-breaks when the op-
portunity arrives, but on normal
situations, Coach Gudger iprefers his
dub to set up and look for a short
ir. close by one of his big men. Dar-
rell Murray is a top scorer, as well
as a coming letterman, Mel Gibson.
Coach Earl Smith reports that his
club is in sound shape physically for
the WC game, and he is expecting
even more improved play from his
starting five. The reserve strength
ir developing into sometihng valu-
able, thinks mentor Smith.
Danny Bowen, Floyd Wicker, and
Jim Fornes have all come around
nicely thinks Smith and assistant
Wendell Carr. This game will be the
second of a four game homestand,
during which the Pirates are look-
ing to iplay giant-killer and take all
four. A main reason for such opti-
ffiisim is that Charley Lewis, Lacy
West, and Bill Otte are scoring more
than they were earlier in the season
nnd this added scoring punch should
help in this second half drive to coip-
conferene laurels. Don Smith is cur-
rently the leading Buc scorer, and is
followed by Cotton Cayton.
The hoopsters are leading the
North State conference in points per
crame, and they could possibly need
to maintain the average Friday
night. Defensively, Smith is looking
for his quint to improve, rising from
their 5th sipot in points allowed per
game.
Over-all, the contest appears to he
one worth watching, and perhaps the
crowds will grow as EC continues to
win at home. The Catamounts are
looking ijor another win, even at
EC's expense.
Bucs Defeat Falcons
East Carolina opened a four lll I hin. b
tand Sato, nht anat U- Ana. a
Falson's from Pfieffer, and de-
feated the visitors 79-54 before an
estimated 1800 fans. Five Pirates
managed to hit in double figures as
the home team poured in on after
being held to a three point lead at
intermission by the pesky visitors.
Dependable Charles Lewis and rug-
red Bill Otte led the Buc Barrage
mth 1 points each. Billy Crypolle,
Buc mentor w
and Otte stored 25 pa,
them during the encounter.
The victory MM the Bu'
in 11 conference eame TV dC
. , iiate,
iost The l
the sea
m ifi
Co)!
Mmth wno ha tk 7a
learn ha Ptral agai
the reply from the I ach
' Rhyne. "T , Beat
horn
itariel the nisrht ti
a lot of Wi tm
section ' "
As of Monday moi
an led the North State raeaaj
a mm I af 8-1, I
LR with a 0-2 aat
ton held down third place with
-I mark. T
bm : High pomt Urr-
RUyue ssmtsnssn . tssi - Westo
alma , I
action

Clayton in action against Falcons.
Photo by J. Kirkland
ECC Swimmers Win Two Meets
On-the-job accidents in the steel
industry declined 33 iper cent during
:be 1960's.
Coach Ray Martinez's East Caro-
lina's swimming team won two out
of three meets with impressive
showings during their four day tour.
The Bucs lost on exciting meet to
V.P.I, at Blacksburg, Virginia !on
Thursday, but slipped passed Appa-
lachian and Georgia over the week-
end.
Against Virginia Tech Loren Sul-
vn. Ed Zschau, and Tom Carroll
raced the ECC swimmers against
trong opposition. Sullivan, a deter-
mined diver won the freestyle event,
and Ed Zschau captured second
lace in the same event. Co-Captain
Tommy Carroll placed first in the
20 for the Bucs.
The Pirates traveled to Boon, N.C.
with an engagement against the
Apps and defeated the mountain
school by the margin of 57-35. John
Baxton a sophomore transfer stu-
oent from UNC was outstanding for
ECC as he swam the best times in
the 100 and 50 yard freestyle races.
Every event that the swimmers won
was a record as the pool is a new
one at Appalachian.
The Pirates invaded Athens, Geor-
gia with a meet with the Bulldogs
and won in that meet. Tommy Car-
roll, Tommy Tucker, and John Bax-
ter were outstanding in that meet.
Tucker, who is the other Buc Co-
Captain captured the 200 yard
i reaststroke.
The trip was valuable to the Pi-
rates in that it iravo them experience
.i gainst rugged competition. The
Hue swimmers showed tremendous
progress during the trip under Dr.
Martinez. The other Pirate loss be-
sides the Virginia Tech contest was
to North Carolina.
Pfeiffer's star forward hit for -& tough n that i
oints to lead the night scores. I Smith. They would have
Beandaa the scoring of Lewis and
Otte, Cotton Clayton and Lacy West
were two individuals who teamed up
to cause the visitors nothing but
trouble throughout the night. Both
nlayers hit for 12 a piece and the
former was nothing short of spec-
tacular with his floor game.
t'antain Don Smith was the fifth
irate to hit in double figures with
10. The MD tenter also contributed
2 rebounds for his night's work. Re-
ement Ben Bowes barely missed
e double figure mark as he tallied
nine points for the Bucs.
A fast break was the key to the
roeeess of the Buc victory drive dur-
ing the second half of play after
poor ipassing was a leading factor in
their unsuccessful first half action.
ach Earl Smith employed a tight
zone during the early stages of the
contest, and switched to man to man
a; the tense first half progressed.
With Bobby Frank, 6 ft. 9 in. hit-
ir g consistently under the basket.
ii appeared as though ECC might
have been in for a long night.
Bill C'aypoole. a sharp shooting
;id aided Frank in the initial
' scoring for the Falcons, but
llied the majority of hia 28 paints
ourim the final half.
l'fieffer was red hot during the
ti: -t half, but Cotton Clayton counter-
acted the Falcon attack by tallying
the first 7 points for the Bucs dur-
ing the contest. A 3 point play
started the ball rolling for the de-
tei mined ECC quint. However, the V " BILL OTTB mnm "
visitors were not to be denied as ' advanta n m Saturday
they stormed back to take a com
manding lead of 7 points at one
stage
night's contest h Pf iff, r . Faktat
Photo by G. .Smunvnck
with otte hitting on his hooks. North State Conference
and Lewis excelling in the lay up
de artment it was all ECC during
t latter stages of the initial stanza. Aopahci ian
An uncomfortable 32-29 Buc lead Le .ne
prevailed during intermission, but East Carolina
' aa to be increased during the High Point
! nad stages of the game to a mar- j Elon
Conference
I i n that the visitors could never
reach
Coach Earl Smith substituted free-
Catawba
West. Car.
tlantic Chri
W
I
5
4
a
All Games
M L
1
6
10
Hungarians like to tell about two'
friends who met in Budapest just af-
ter the Russians' first success in space.
"Have you heard asked one. "The
Russians have invented a device to
take them to the moon
"What exclaimed the other en-
thusia-i. aiy. -Al! ei them?"
The Reader's Disest
!y during the final few moments of Pfeiffer
The greatest 24-hour snow fall
known in the United States dumped
7G inches on Silver Lake, Colorado,
in April, 1921.
p!a. The Pirate mentor praised the
play of several Bucs for their out-
standing play during the night. "That
Cotton Clayton played a great game
-night the Buc Mentor mentioned. ' achian.
3
5
6 4 :
2 5 5
I 10
1 10 : ;
Hames This Week
MondayWestern Care: - Tr.y
State. Atlantic Christian a Arr-a-
Guilford
Lacy West is coming along in ine
fashion, and Charlie Lewis gives you
as rape as any basketball player
could give a coach
'SgKW
WednesdayPfeiffer at A: afatft-
ian.
ThursdayPembroke at
AtL: ti Chri. ir at B "
I am proud of the way Ben Bowes F
epWed Biil OtU. H. fa STS cS.
?ixth man in this leairue" coach c. j
Smith mentioned. Smith Zl nothW P ay-C a-
but praise for big Bob mTS SLT T
said "that he hP w t Hl?h Pomfc at Le"01
that he bet that hia centers Abbey at ApPa!ac.
x.
AST CAROLINA COLLE&E1
REeivit., nmm caucus
CAMP US

INSTRUCT iOHAl
8tliL0ifGS
OCRMfTORtes
tttt.
can Pa as well
all
A campus map has been compiled in the Geography Department. The map shows all the buildings on th
future. Campus organizations interested in distribution to visitors may obtain maps from the Adminstrsttoa BulUlL"
The map ares compiled and drafted by Wesley Mearl Meekins, a senior geography major from Maateo. N r
employment as a cartographer at Amy Map Service, Washington, D. C. Mr N
- ,


Title
East Carolinian, January 26, 1961
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
January 26, 1961
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.636
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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