East Carolinian, April 10, 1962


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





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Easttarolini
XXXVII
East Carolina College
GENVILLE, N.C" TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1962
Polls Open 9:Q0 to 4:00
Cl
Scheduled
Class officer elections will be.rad; Women Senators ? Cornelia
held in the CU Thursday, Ajpril 12, Folt, Carol Dougherty, Julia Cra-
votta; Day Student Senators -Ed
Lee, Dottie Farmer.
BE WON TOMORROW NIGHT . . . Mrs. Scarlet Miller and Noel Tisdale ready the CU prizes to be
?rded at the Annual Spring Carnival tomorrow night in the CU. Prizes range from stuffed animals
-ueat shirts.
Test Borings
Made For New
Women's Dorm
Raw Building will
Bed by summer, the
linistration reports.
Sunday the contractors
ful trial run on the
rojeet which will be fi- ters
I by state appropriations.
Raw! First Choice
? end there are no plans
lir condition any of the other
n buildings. Rawl build-
ed extensively for summer
asses, was the first choice
service to both students
;hy since it is the most
f ECs classroom build-
Campus Dorms Install
Presidents, Officials
The woment students who will direct activities of the
nine dormitories on campus were announced last week after
campus elections.
The president of each dormitory
0-4:00 p.m. Activity cards must
be punched to receive ballots.
Candidates seeking- election m
Thursdays vote are:
SENIOR CLASS ? President-
Merle Summers, Giles Hopkins;
Vice President ? Ronnie McCrea,
Jackie Polk, Matilda West, Buddy
Wyatt; Secretary-Anne Frances
Allen, Katherine Raynor, Tweetie
Land, Barbara Ann Ellis; Treasur-
er?Diana Foster; Men Senators?
James Temme, John T. Waters;
Women Senators?Vickie Odom,
Kathryn E. Oakes, Barbara Ryan,
"Tootsie" Bedsole, B r e n d a
Vaughan, Jo Nell Kerley.
JUNIOR CLASS?President-
Bryan Bennett; Vice President?
Adelia Dee Smith, Mack Wortihing-
ton, Julia McLarty; Secretary?
Nancy Gilbert, Nancy Roberts,
Gayle Clarke; Treasurer?Bobbie
A. Sumrell, Anne Greenwell; Male
Senators?Jerry Fulford, Gary
Idol; Women Senators?Patsy Ken-
nedy, Marsha Whitworth, Mary A. ,
Smitherman, Diane Burroughs, The Student Government Execu-
Llnda Minton, Judy Doyle, Joan j tive Council recently met to rule
Woody Shepherd, Electioi
Chairman, commented, 'We hope
that everybody participates since
those elected will represent the
students in the coming year
Jimmy Chesnutt, acting as
spokesman for the Student Govern-
ment Association, stated, "I think
we can have a successful SGA if
the students elect qualified offic-
ers and these officers represnt the
views of the students. The voters
must remember this isn't a popu-
larity poll and everyone should be
aware of the candidates' qualifi-
cations
Executive Council
Rules On Election
will serve on the Student Senate
representing the women living in
the dorms on campus political mat-
The officers of each dorm will
serve on the House Committee of
the respective dormitories, making
rulings on house policies and en-
forcing the rules and regulations
of the college for women dormi-
tory students.
Linia Slaughter will serve as
President of Jarvis Hall. Working
with Linda will be Matilda West,
vice president; Jeanette Harris,
secretary; Julia Payne, treasurer;
Ann Conder, social chairman.
Officers for Slay Hall will be
president, Tommie Suggs; vice
president, Bobbie Ann Sumrell;
secretary, Janice Boyette, and
treasurer, Kay Epton.
Fleming Hall has elected Judy
Winnie Odom as treasurer.
Other dormitories will hold elec-
tions next fall. Freshman dorms,
Umstead, Cotton, Ragsdale, and
Woman's Hall elect officers near
the end of Fall Quarter.
Zachary, Peggy Davis, Marie Brew
er, Brenda Reges.
SOPHOMORE CLASS?Presi-
dent?Mary Lloyd Temple, Gill
Ruderman; Vice President?Judd
Gray, Berk Stephens, Whitty Bass;
Secretary Ellen Glenn Wood,
on a statement of protest concern-
ing the extension of the deadline
date for the filing of names for
class offices.
The deadline for filing names
for class offices was set for March
21. Later, the date was extended
Gregory Michael; Treasurer-San- by the Elections Committee oe-
dee Denton, Lynda Hunning; Male
Senators?Burke Stancill, Ken Con-
? ? borings for quicksand are
made on the site where a
dorm will be erected
f are available. The pro-
? n is on the hill next
? ?? Hall.
W right Extension
rig and Grounds di-
f the college also reports
Hu neoesarv funds are
xt,n,ion wiH Pa-lfom as president, Peggy Dav.s.
Wririn BaiWing ami vice president. Elaine Brewer, sec-
. ?t airU and Pricell. Lynch, treas-
! iicr.
, ???, Mum on ? Vow J ? phones may be installed. The extra
Z Flanagan Building, officers ff? fidency rt ?? d b e ?
n work will he complete ! was elected to the vice presidency, students will occupy eacl
? i an ws Jackie Hendricks, secretary; and
imately 60 nays.
No Corridors
Derm Nears Completion
The new four-story men's dormitory which will house
500 students will be completed around August 25 if present
plans materialize.
The dorm will be unique in that
it will not have corridors. Instead, I ?"?" f E'AST CAROLIN-
. , IAN next week,
entrances to suites will be gained
through outside balconies, which
,ct4,en into a small hall with two
rooms on each side and a bath in
! the back of the hall.
Each worn will be furnished
similar to Aycock Dorm with built-
in bunk bed, desk, chair, chest of
drawers, and sliding-door closets.
Rooms will be wired, and tele-
cause they felt (that this was the
best interests of the student body
isince four offices were unopposed
when the deadline came. By ex-
tending the deadline, four persons
filed to run for previously unop-
posed offices.
The Executive Council upheld
the decision of the Elections Com-
mittee, fbut stipulated that the
ruling referred to the one specific
case since under the circumstances
it was in the best interest of the
students that the deadline was ex-
tended.
Shakespeare's Henry V Here
For Two j Performances
The Foreign Film Connie will ??- ?0 showing ??
? On "Henry V tomorrow, Apnl 11 at 3.30 and T.uu P
in Auditorium. , d amone Ae ten best
This Shakespearian drama hasoeen H and directs
- ever produced. Sir LaurenceOhvr portray Hemy
?"? production which brought world attention to me
I Shakespearian actor. showings nave been
The Film Committee ?J?Li of viewing the film as
'Tanged to provide everyone the'JVgJ tte 3 Qwwval the
Two students will occupy each
room, with four rooms constituting
a suite. A lounge for receiving
guests will be located on tihe first
floor. The basement will house
vending machines, ping pong
tables, a TV room, and facilities
for card games.
Total cost of the dorm is $1,200,
000, financed equally by Federal
and State loan.
The EC Housing Director an-
nounced tihat applications for rooms
in the new dorm wall be received
beginning the week of April 23.
S Indents will foe admitted accord-
ing to classification with seniors
having first preference, A schedule
WE'VE JUST GOT TO HAVE MORE ROOM FOR MY GOWN . .
. EVo 4 olaa Foefival nritipaa flat sk leaVf" th? pihihm fm





Page 2
E
AST CAROLINIAN
Traada
y m in
Fewer Letters Home;
No College Union
Just because this is National Library Week, let's not
rush over to the library and cause a book shortage or over-
Cr?u Zuthftstudy room' but we should reacquaint ourselves
with the library and the purpose it serves on a college cam-
pus.
We could hold classes in most any spot. We could eat
sandwiches on the mall or drive out to Hardee's, if there
were no cafeteria. We could write fewer letters home if there
were no post office. We could camp on the lawn, if there
were no dormitories. We could socialize at Wright Circle
if there were no college union. We could refill the aboretum
and make use of it as a pool for the scuba divers if there
were no gym. We're lost . . . there's just no replacement for
the library.
And speaking of travel . . . since this is National Li-
brary Week we always have the "magic carpet of books"
to thrust us across the world to mystical places. What would
?Gk rV f"? p!a,ces as the Amazon, the Antarctic, or
Tibet without the aid of books?
HirJ0 d,? "0t J'mit ,US t0 traveL We meet Pe?P!e who had
direct effects on our lives and learn why thev were in-
fluential in forming 'the civilization we now have.
iv,?bB??kf hav; as, many classifications as people. Some
books make us laugh; some make us wonder. Others make
us understand. Some give us strength. Others make us hate
tl-AmiE n0t T the ,reference book, which is much like
eiiucTtiof Pr0fe8SOr Wh0 Presents us with information for
jeWjs assay? Li-
Overseas Travel Requires Money,
Time: Offers Informal Education
The EAST CAROLINIAN runs the news of studv
?'wS??? ?PPunitieS in ?-t everyStisSt
o e seW nfl ma1mm0th.1IlCrease in the number of
we Sd n?ftemi C-?Heile students, it is evident that
we should carefully examine the pros and cons of such travel
Often in order to participate in a tour, it is necessirv
to miss an entire year of study and gain five or "en hours
SESTaSSr. ?f f0rty W m?re K The laple
whVnetutrnfAod, T ? t0 make adJ"stments
co&oftoelSonGwfrS SSJfi ?? g
sss: ffssssssis difficuit ps?aft
On the other hand, if the opportunity came to fcravol
overseas we could broaden our entire view of kIrninJ- and
begin to understand why we an- arnrimf. 1? Jeaim!?ff an(J
graduation has been .ftfcJir&SS
? e employed and forget fanciful ideas of fS
acquired and provide the basis for future Ttudy J
Wrtanre of the year-long tours is to proS the etJSS
mer affords us ' ' e an Just one sum-
for travel without cutting fiftSLfASf18
cation and our employment date wouffS be ShTdlhd
? .tJ?ultetSitenLt0 US and has "ot been explored
iw luiiest potential on our campus Perharw in o Z
TTLE MAN
I Beginners' liride r?
(Mon TV Room tA
10 Bachelor of Mi gj P
otat: Tern- c
Aud 3:00 pjr

ijNOTUN& AOfNT YOU F&&OtlUXt CtfPekXLTtiY-V5 JUS1
THAT W? FBBL YOUYB NOT TAKING ACVAlsTTA OF AU-
Fountain Reduces Laundry Bills
Sun Followers Return Home;
Stadium Donations Continue
By MONTY MILLS
EC's beach frequenters are back At The Laundry
Tom the annual flower show in
in the weekly expenditures, but
M ??? ?vTjn.i cA.jn-iHjii.ure dux
Wilmington, Carolina Beach, and with the pickup and delivery agree-
Kure Beach. A few, with their
avid interest in azaleas acquired
not only "green thumbs" but a mul-
titude of sprains, and broken bones.
Quiet On The Homefront
Things on the home front were
calm and peaceful over the week-
end awaiting the return of the
beach revelers. And Monday things
were still calm and peaceful as
they straggled t0 class, the ones
who managed to shake the azalea
dust off their clothes and find a
decent outfit salvaged from the
hazardous weekend. A standing
ovation is in order for the brave
and courageous who managed to
survive.
Sheepskin Hopefuls
Realizing that the quarter is
half over, students hoping to get
the sheepskin in May have reluc-
tantly settled down to the books.
The hopeful aspirants have en-
shrouded themselves in scholarly
seriousness in hopes that they can
reserve a place in the long line of
dark gowned graduates.
The recently drained fountain in
Wrigfot Circle still has traces of
last weeks Duz suds. Granted
laundry bills do take a sizeable cut
nient with the college laundry,
wouldn't it be much easier to jusi '
send soiled clothes over to the ex-
perienced help at the laundry
rather than go through the trouble-
of carting them over to the foun-
tain. Why not Leave the fountain
to the ones who appreciate its;
beauty?
From Dreams To Reality
EC stadium fund is gradually
forging ahead. The seniors at J.
H. Rose high school have contri-
buted a nather sizeable amount to
the fund. With loyal Greenville
and Pitt County supporters, our
dream of an ultra modern stadium
ay come true when the appointed
tenure of occapancy draws near.
Pirate fans will be able to witness
athletics in a truely fine sports
arena.
?Baseball Gssae: ?qq
'Christian. Coll, $
?College
Hillcreet Lanes, 4:J
?Chapel Servi v?
6:30 p. m.
11?College I r?c
Celtofa Union, 6:3Mfc
? Internationa! Fh. -n
Austin, r.00 pjn '
12 Bachelor o! ,
cital: Linda I A
3:00 pm ?
?Table Teni
Chainion ,i ? ?
C30 p.m.
1 1? Tennis M .
fr College, 2:00 :
?Movie: "P , -
a
pany . Rr-jj
Tab 11 nv. r
?J inior .
Aud 8:00 pat
15?Senior Honor . r
ery, 9opi . - A.
Beginners'
Union TV Roo
?"Seven Last Wo
Dobois, d
Austin, .o ?
I 7 - Rachel ? .
Recital: I
3:00 p.m.
?Collee-e Unio
Hillcrest I;in
?4 'hai el S '
6:30 p.m.
i
ed b
of i "omn ?
7:30 p.m.
U
v '
i -
e would have the chteiSIefaCZ' a"d
once wished to casually tour. P where we
Wake Forest
Offers Summer
Trip To Mexico
A Simimer trip to Mexico to be-
come asquainted with the people
and to study at the national uni-
versity has been announced by
Professor Jack FitZfrerala, Span-
?h instructor at Wake Forest Col-
lege for all college students.
"What a weird idea Courses in the fields of language.
Outcries like this have greeted SEinS " "
an amazing number of the ideas be Uken f? h?"r ???t can
and mentions we take for grant ZJrZ? ?d transfed to EC
upon college approval. The classes
Outcries Challenge
Radical New Devices
Christian Groups
Observe Lent
Stackcloth .
v. ay the fi
e Lenten season Thai
most 16 centur ring ' '
time of Sain: A
troducod this a
"Oriirinally. ?
' 1 only forty hours " ? ?
the Rev. "Robert Waft
Rhyne chaplain. "B n
extended to f - JX
eluded
Ash Wednesday recen
Horn the burnir:
nd sprinkling ashes
(ACP)
"ImpossiWe
"Can't be done
Eastti
ed today?and can still frequent-
ly be heard, even fa this age of
technology, when a radical new
device makes its appearance.
v.Ul convene one hour a day, five
days a week, with a compulsory at-
tendance rule.
Pushed weekly by ? students of East Carolina College,
Greenville, North Carolina.
Member
Carolfrias Collegiate Press Association lAssociater! rii. i ? Va?nation'? that would f
jMy ptxaS2socteted Collegiate Press a mild form of the disease!
Moral: if you thinfe you have a
?o J.US appearance. -Tn ?
Crazy mathematician" was the L JV, l reside in Private
el pinned on I?, wJV6 homes will allow thL !T
label pinned on Isaac Newton when
be announced his discovery of the
laws of gravity. Louis Pasteur was
challenged to a duel when he ex-
pressed his belief that a person
could be amimuniized against the
violent form of a disease by a
"Vaccination" that would (produce
Jean Peace
E2DITOR
Keith Ho&bs
BUSINESS MANAGER
Offices on second floor of Wright Building
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264
SubscriPion rate: $2.50 per year
really sharp idea, ,pay no attention
to cutting remarks. Remind your-
self how many oonianonly accepted
inventions won acceptance by only
a whisker?or by a stretch of the
imagination.
allow the stu-
I'm h Idmeni'ber ?f a Mexi
El use " ' PUt SPani5h ?? P?c-
PP?Xhnat? ??st of e tour is
om $419 to $639, depending upon
the number of field trips and ch0ke
of hving accomodations
'Hie tour
from WinstonSalerTand ZnT
cludp ?TnA t'm an(1 will con-
ciuae around August 12
For further information
jested student are S3 eon-
Jaok L. Fitzgerald D?t
R?n?ujce Languages, BoTJmL
Reynolds Station w. v ?
Collft nr Wake Forest
-??ege, Winston-Salem, N C
ana spnn
I'e. This day
Wednesday morning, M
In their own ways i
tian group will be a
;e meaning that ?
death and ? of
Lord.
"This is a time
time of recognizing
rn Calvary. We should
Wvidiy why our sis ? l
to the cross Rev. Robert ke:
of Lenoir Rhyne explained.
He continued, "Students will
obserine Tent in a nu?nber v
ways, but we are hopeful tha: ???
will take time to realize what
time of penitence really means ?
them.
(Editor's Note: Article from ??
Lenoir Rhyne College newspaper
in-
One hot afternoon in the Disn
land parking lot, an exhaust;
looking woman was coming to1
us with a young boy in to?w. s
they passed, we heard her mutttf
"The next time you come to D?iJ
land, you brimj your own ??
M





??H
10.
19
r, April 10, 1962
EAST CAROLINIAN
Page t
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nryv?f
? Re.
Offc,
Pfeif.
Com-
fj' P-m.
P"nht
ra
AuA,

agae,
loei
And.
PS
I
the
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I
ting
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ex-
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meo-
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the
the
llieir
a
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ker
be
of
all
fell
to
Ithe
r.)
Annual Encampment For Citizenship
To Hold Democracy Workshop
???'
I
I Man
?
PARADE
. . A cotton cocktail dress is modeled by
Helen Muniford in Kappa Delta's fashion show last Thursday
I nsembles for the show were donated by Brody's.
Fraternity Work On Display
Art Center Exhibits
Young Artist's Work
Art Center held
House Sunday, April
M o'clock. There were
exhibitions. Both
be on display
ril 27th.
th Galleries will dis-
School Arts For the
ril months Mrs. Well-
on B. dray, Art Super-
n the (Jreenville Public
s, has been collecting
iirm art work done by
Mudents.
bae taught school art
twelve years and in the
ille schools for the past
r ; received her Masters of
in Ait from East Caro-
le under the direction
tsband Dr. Wellington B.
ui of the ECC School of
Gray was recently elect-
. ? President of Art at the
arolina Education Associa-
'g-
A juried Member's Exhibi-
of Delta Phi Delta Fra-
t3 ?ill be on display in
North Gallery. A variety
?f media, paintings, prints, pot-
and sculpture will be
n n.
telta Phi Delta Fraternity
? n is made up of Faculty,
and Alumni of EC's
4 An.
In recent years EC's School
of Art has developed into one
of the most important Art
Schools of the South. A juried
Exhibition of work by this
fraternity promises to be out-
standing comments Marporie
Jackson, Director of the Center.
The Art Center is open daily
from 10-5 except Sunday and Mon-
day.
A unique summer experience for
college students, 18 to 23, is of-
fered by the 17th annual Encamp-
ment for Citizenship?a six week
"workshop in democracy"? to be
held in New York, California and
Puerto Rico from July 1 to Au-
gust 11, 1962.
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Honorary Chairman of the En-
campment for Citizenship, has
described the program as "one
of the best ways that I have
seen to bring before youag
people in a vital and interest-
ing way the dynamics of de-
mocracy
Conducted on the camjpoises of
ithe University of California in
Berkeley, the Fieldstom School in
Now York City, and at Camp Tort-
irguero in Puerto Rico, the En-
campment provides an opportunity
for students to live, study and
play wi'toh alert young people from;
around the world, as well as from
11 sections of the United States?
representing diverse racial, relig-
ious, ethnic, and economic back-
grounds.
Major areas of study in-
clude government, civil rights
and civil liberties, inter-nation-
al affairs, economics and prac-
tical techniques for civic ana
Student Teachers
Instruct Classes
EC's student teaching program
for 'the spring quarter includes
226 seniors who are conducting
classes in more than thirty public
schools in Eastern North Carolina.
Eighty-five are doing work in the
primary and grammar grades, 122
in high schools, and nineteen are
teaching either art or music at
all grade levels.
Of the total number of students
participating in the program 220
are from North Carolina, and six
arc from other states.
(Assignments of seniors at the
college who are now gaining ex-
perience as classroom instructors
have been announced by Dr. J. L.
Oppelt, director of student teach-
J ing at East Carolina.
community action. Field trips
to government, labor, manage-
ment, farm, industry and com-
munity organizations located
in New York, San Francisco
and San Juan supplement the
lectures, workshops and dis-
cussion groups.
A varied recreation program
makes use of fane rich cultural and
recreational resources of these
areas, and daily on-campus activi-
ties include all suawmer siports,
folk and square dances, communi-
ty sings, etc.
The New York Encampment
can accommodate 100 students.
Units in California and
Puerto Rico accomodate 80
each. The fee for tuition, room
and board is $350. Some fi-
nancial assistance is available
to students unable to meet the
costs.
Saal D. Lesser is Executive Di-
rector, and Algernon D. Black is
Education Director of the Encamp-
ment. Madeline Stephenson is the
Executive Secretary of the Cali-
fornia office. Information and ap-
plications may be obtained by writ-
ing to ENCAMPMENT FOR CIT
CLASSIFIED
LOST
PRESCRIPTION SUNGLASSES,
brown frames with green lenses on
Monday, April 2, second floor of
Rawl. Return to Rawl 115 or Col-
lege Union.
FOUND
FOUND. Devotional Book, "My
Daily Bread Owner contact East
Carolinian office.
1 FOUNTAIN PEN belonging to
girl, in the Recreational Reading
Room of the Library. Contact Fal-
len Melvin at Jones Cafeteria
Monday thru Thursday from 2-4:00
ir.m.
IZENSHIP, 2 West 64th Street,
New Cork 23, N. Y or 2209 Van
Ness Avenue, San Francisco, Cali-
fornia.
Volunteers Aid
Incapacitated UC
Student Skiers
(ACP) ? Handicapped students
at the University of California,
Berkeley, get a helping hand
tlirough the rigors of registration
and pre-registration.
Arietta House, graduate student
in social welfare, provides a reg-
ular service permitting those who
can't go through the registration
lines to register from her office
in the Alumni House.
"It's not only the permanently
lu.ndi capped students that we
help explains Miss House. "This
time of year we get several stu-
dents incapacitated by skiing ac-
cidents
YMOA volunteers aid in the pro-
gram by helping handicapped stu-
dents buy books, acquainting them
with the oamjpus, helping blind stu-
dents register, and pushing those
in wheel chairs. Handicapped stu-
dents are also referred to various
social agencies in Berkeley, says
the DAILY CALIFORNIA.
EMPLOYMENT
CAMP COUNSELORS skilled in
aits and crafts to work at a North
Carolina coastal camp. Write: Don
Cheek, 1601 Hillsboro Street, Ra-
leigh, N. C. or call TE 2-0949 in
Raleigh.
SI KTS WEDNESDAY
At The
STATE Theatre
"DONT KNOCK
THE TWIST
Starring
CHUBBY CHECKER
99
"He has your ears, Bernie
IGAMjTTES
LKMf rr t, tmM TMACS0 CO.
21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!
AGED MILD. BLENDED MILD-NOT FILTERED MILD-THEY SATISFY
fr-
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perfect detailing,
perfect ease . . . the
wrap skirt with the
smoothly effortless air.
Patient tailoring
constructs it from
Dacron polyester and
cotton, in a particularly
sleek finish that never
loses its poise. Only
deep curving pockets
trim its balanced
implicity. Tan, Olive,
Navy, Charcoal.
$12.95
222 E. 5th STREET
:





Pag? 4
EAST CAROLINIAN
Tue?d
y, Apr
Shown above are four of EC's trackmen who participated in the meet with AC. Left to right?Leroy
Spivey, Earl Jackson, Don Haynes, and Jerry Tolley. The next meet is with William and Mary there
Wednesday.
EC Downed By AC In Close
Meet By Margin Of One Point
East Carolina's cindermen lost
their first meet of tihe year April 4,
against Atlantic Chrdistian College
by the slim margin of 1 point, 65
to 64.
The Bues won six of the fifteen
events and the Bulldogs of Wil-
son won the other nine. EC "won
nine second places.
The men pacing- the wins for the
Pirates were Wihdtty Bass in the
440 Walters in the javelin, and
Poole in tihe shot put. McCants won
the pole vault. Richard Stevens in
the broad jumip and the mile relay
conististing of the team of Brinson,
Bucs Scorch V&L
With Power Hitting
The Pirate baseballers unleashed
their battery power here Friday
afternoon in defeating the Wash-
ington and Lee Generals 14-2.
The Pirate hitting, somewhat
lacking m tihe last two games with
Delaware, reminded the fans of
opening day when the Pirates were
alble to come through with the
needed runs and tiimely extra base
hits to drive in the winning tallies.
The EC attack was led by Lacey
West, 3 for 3, and Carl ton Barnes
who went 4 for 4 and got thing
started in the third, when he blasted
a bases loaded double. His drive
to left-center after Buddy Wyatt
had walked, and Bo'biby Joyce and
West had singled, drove in three
runs.
Junior Green followed Barnes'
blow with a single to score him.
Merill Bynum then walked, and
Tomimy Kidd drove a 2-2 pitch
into the road over left field fence
for 3 more runs.
The Pirates added three more
runs in the fourth on 3 singles and
tlhird baseman's Junior Green's
triple.
Charlie Johnson's solo homer and
Bobby Joyce's two-run blow gave
the Bucs three more duns in the
fifth to end their display of hit-
ting.
Lacy West was the winning pit-
cher. He gave up one run on three
hits, while walking seven and fan-
ning one. Phil Sharpe, curve balling
righthander for ?he Generals, suf-
fered the loss.
Tne Bucs now stand 3-3 and host
Atlantic Christian here today in
our first conference game.
East Carolina AB R
Gaylord, 2fo 3
Barnes, srs 4
Joyce, cf 4
West, p, If 3
Green, N p 1
Barnes, p 1
Resfcess, If 1
Henrietta, ?f 1
Robinson, c 0
Stevens, lib 1
Forwards, rtf ? 1
Scott, ss 1
Draper, 2b 0
Norman, p
0
Totals 37
Washington and Lee AB
Gilmore, 2b 3
Wood, cf 3
Lane, 3 b 3
Hobbs, ss 1
Williams, If 2
Rose, rf 2
Martin, lb . . 3
Sharpe, p 1
Faiterno, p 2
Lackey, p 1
Camber, p o
Taylor, lb 1
Canderly, If 2
Flanagan, 3b 1
23
01
00
00
00
00
10
00
00
0e
00
1415
RH
01
11
00
?0
01
11
00
00
00
00
00
01
00
00
Totals
25
Earl Jackson, Jerry Tolley and
Bass.
Those placing first for ACC
were Daly in the 100 and 200 yard
events, Tharton running the 880
and mile, Eskew in the low and
l.igh hurdles. Tharton also won tihe
two mile event, while Webb took
the discus event, leaving Eskew
to the nigh jump honors.
The events went as follows:
1W) yard: 1. Daly (AC), 2. Rich-
ard Jackson (EC), 3. Tom Michel
(EC); 10.1.
220 -ard: 1. Daly (AC), 2. Parker
(lAC), 3. Hanes (EC); 22.7
440 yard: 1. Whitty Bass (EC), 2.
Parker (AC), 3. Richard Stevens
(EC); 54.3.
880 yard: 1. Tharton (AC), 2.
Dinky Mills (EC), 3. Evans
(EC); 2:10.2.
Mile: 1. Tharton (AC), 2. Roisters
(AiC); 5:28.3.
Low Hurdles: 1. Eskew (AC), 2.
Tom Michel (EC), 3. Daly (AC);
26.5.
High Hurdles: 1. Eskew (AC), 2.
Maurice Allen (EC), 3. Jones
(EC); 16.1.
Javelin: 1. Walters (EC), 2. Tom
Michel (EC), 3. Webb (AC);
1624
Shot Put: 1. Poole CEC), 2, Bar-
lord (AC), 3. Elliott (AC); 42,4
Discus: 1. Webb (AC), 2. Ains-
field (EC), 3. Zdziarski (EC)-
104'1'
Pole Vault: 1. McCants (EC), 2.
Bacon (EC), 3. Giger (AC); 106
High Jump: Eskew (AC), and
McCants (EC) tie at 5'8
Broad Jump: 1. Richard Stevens
(EC), 2. Jones (EC), 3. Harris
(AC); 19'4
Mile Relay: Won by team otf EC.
Brinson, Earl Jackson, Jerry
Tolly and Wfhitty Bass; 3:43.3. '
Green, J 3b
Bynum, rf
Kidd, lb
Johnson, c
Wyatt, If
5
2
4
4
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
H
1
4
2
0
1
1
0
DELICIOUS FOOD
SERVED 24 HOURS
Air Conditioned
Carolina Grill
Corner W. 9th & Dickinson
Tournament Of Champs
Scheduled For Tonight
The CU Tournament of Cham- Mai! n, I ??
?? ? ? ?
'
pions will bein tonight at 6:30 in Lille, M
the College Union. This special najT-
event consists of round-robin play
between the tcp six table tennis
players who have qualified to enter
this event as result of
season's record.
This year the following players j &? wrpriac of
have qualified to compete for the ' He recentK ??. N
school's top six positions in table , (hanyion. :ie of B-
tennis: Nelson Turwell. Bowie ton.
Ti! two of
Nelson Tta
aie again in t ? ?ar
well is aliehtl
their j number Of ,
' Frehmar. fifl
On Carafe
(Author of "Roll Hound 7
Many Lor ? of I ?? ? I
with

CRAM COURSE No. 3: ENGLISH POETRY
Final exams will soon be upon us. Tl
games. Let us instead study hard, eram fiei
ously.
In this column today let us make ;i quick
poetry- When we sjeak of English XK'trv, v
speaking of Byron, Shelley, and K -
three, Keats was the most talented. It is tru?- I
his gifts earlier than the other While still a s
Swithin's he wrote his epic lines:
am good, 1 get an apple,
So I dont whistle in the chapel.
From this distinguished bc;rinnmLr, he went on 1
other 40.0(H) joems in his lifetime which is
remarkable when yon consider that lie was onh
I mention this fact only to show that physical pi
keep the true artist from creating. By:
lame. Shelley had an ingrown hair Nonethe
titans of literature turned out a veritable tt t of i
poetry.
Nor did they neglect their personal lives. . .
with the ladies, was exjelled from Oxf ard I ; .
Barrett's pigtails in an inkwell. He thereupon l
fight in the Greek war of independence, lb ight
well, but women were never far from his mind,
this immortal poem:
How splendid it is to fight for th Greek,
Bid I don't ax joy it half as much as dancii .
While Byron fought in Greece, Shelley remained u
where he became court oet to the Duke of M
is interesting to note in passing that Mariborouf
nal spelling of Marlboro Cigarettes, but the mab rs
to get the entire word on the package. With i
genuity they cleverly lopped off the final "gh This,
left them with a "gh lying around the factory. Tl ey looted
for some place to put it and finally decided to give it to the
Director of Sales. Mr. Vincent Van Go. This had a r i urious
result. As plain Van Go, he had been a crackerjack lirector of
sales, but once he became Van Gogh, he felt a mysteriom
irresistible urge to paint. He resigned from the Company and
became an artist. It did not work out too well. When Van Gojfi
learned what a great success Marlboro Cigarettes quickly be-
came?as, of course, they had to with such a flavorful flavor,
such a filterful filter, such a flip-top box, such a soft pack-he
was so upset about leaving the firm that he cut off his ear in a
fit of chagrin.)
But I digress. Byron, I say, was in Italy and Shelley in
fc ifahihim&ka
England. Meanwhile Keats went to Rome to trv to grow. Wh?
does not remember his wistful lyric:
Although I am only five feet high,
bom day I will look in an elephant's eye.
But Keate did not grow. His friends, Shelley and Byron,
touched to the heart, rushed to Rome to stretch him. IhB ??
tailed. Then Byron, ever the ladies' man, took up with Lucre
Borgia Catherine of Aragon, and Annie Oakley. Shelley, a more
domestic type, stayed home with his wife Marv. and wrote his
iamous poem:
I love to stay home with the missus and write,
And hug her and hiss her and give her a bite. , ,
Mary- Shelley finally got so tired of being bitten that she went
into another room and wrote Frankenstein. Upon reading the
manuscript, Shelley and Byron got so scared thev immediate
booked passage home to England. Keats tried to go too but
he was so small that the clerk at the steamship office couidnt
EdnV7 of the ter. So Keats remained in Rome
and died of a broken heart. ?
thS3 aild. Sh?ll?y crie a t and then together tat
tins immortal epitaph
Good oid Keats, he might have been short,
bui ne was a great American and a heck of a good sport.
ZZ'SeTJi,1? f '? ?ines of the Marlboro ?
betteV?U ?ul that ?u cant find a better tM
oetter smoking cigarette than todays Marlboro.
II





Title
East Carolinian, April 10, 1962
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 10, 1962
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.222
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/38751
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