East Carolinian, January 22, 1963


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





Easttarolinian
e XXXVIII
East Caroli n a College
GREENVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1963
Number 24
Brubeck Plays Thursday
1 I jrt I oJ? vs "Y "tf, " v VN;Y?Y$:i& ?? jfc
Jenkins Presents
Annual Awards
For 'Down Beat'
A ?Dave Brubeck Quar-
.sday night, the
'witness more than
unparalleled mus-
the yearly Readers'
'by -Down Beat
fur ine, first place
pesiti )iisgora to Dave Bru-
'?est combo, Paul Des-
the best alto sax
v rello for being
aer. President Leo
nbehalf of "Down
t the awards to
irho represent the
ence in their field.
the arrangements
R i ("hard Norm an,
Buddy Murray,
'the show through
tters and long-dis-
alls to Don Demi-
the bi-weekly
:?: Joe Glaser, Pres-
1 Booking Com-
? ? r consent, the
1 be impos-
awards here
? ?? r BC. This is
sident of a
? ese awards.
?eck Quartet
e summer of
' ime bassist
played a con-
.? visit, they
? ? ? '???t-sell-
? Out" which was
? next day at
ckeys' I kmven-
Dave Brubeck Quartet
IDC Creates Co-ed Visitation
In Ay
coc
k,N
ew
M
D
en s uorms
Starting Wednesday, January 23,
women students will be allowed in
the recreation rooms of New Dorm
and Aycock Dorm. To initiate this
prog-ram. the IDC has scheduled
a Coke Party for all women stu-
dents tomorrow night, from 7:00
p.m. until 10:00 p.m. in the recre-
ation room of Aycock Dorm. All
men dormitory students also are
invited. It is the wish of the IDC
that women students attend this
event in support of the visitation
program. This step toward foster-
ing a wholesome program of social
Women's Residence Hall
To House 432 Students
ith wing
year can
tth the women
who will have to
State Museum
Purchases Prints
If M Students
Museum of Art in
? purchased prints
ira and Peggy Ca-
in the perma-
?? of contempory art.
ora'a "Composition
a color woodcut,
u
??
'nine's "Abstraction,
color (print, were en-
19?2 N. C. State Art
? were then selected by
fo the permanent
? Rth students are pu-
Donald Se
Pr
xaurer.
an:re ard Miss Tnmura
?a 0f the looa chapter
pT. ?n?rary art fraternity Del-
? Delta.
become accustomed to awakening
eery morning to the sounds of
heavy machinery But noise is
more easily tolerated when it is
for the eventual good of the stu-
dents.
Our rar idly expanding college
i having a new women's dormi-
tory built to try to keep up with
the demand for living quarters.
The new dorm, a modern seven-
sbosy structure, will be completed
a year from this month if plans go
as scheduled. When it is completed,
the $1,087,062 building- will be the
tallest building in Greenvile.
The new residence hall designed
by Jesse Page and Associates of
Raleigh will house 432 women stu-
dents. With the entrance leading
into a one-floor reception room
and foyer, it will have rooms for
students which will measure 15'4"
x 12'9 There will be two elevat-
ors located centrally between the
wings, and a basement for a rec-
reation lounge and storage space.
Financing the new building is
the U. SL Housing and Home Fi-
nance Agency. They will be paid
back with the money collected for
rental fees.
activities for men donroitory resi-
dents was made possible by the In-
terdormitory Council and the Ad-
ministration.
Co-ed Visitation means that
women students will be able to
visit the men's dormitories on
Wednesday and Friday nights from
7:00 p.m. until 10:00 p.m. and on
Sunday afternoons from 12:00 ip.m.
until 6:00 p.m. A jukebox is being
installed in the recreation room
of New Dorm, and dancing will be
permitted in this area. In Aycock
Dorm ping-pong tables have been
set up, and televisions are avail-
able.
A set of rules has been drawn
up which everyone must obey if
this Co-ed Visitation program is
to be successful. These rules are
as follows:
1. Women students will be al-
lowed in the men's dormitories on
Wednesday and Friday nights from
7:00 p.m. until 10:00 p.m. and on
Sunday afternoons from 12:00 p.m.
until 6:00 p.m.
2. Women students will only
be allowed downstairs in the rec-
reation rooms of New Dorm and
Aycock Dormitory.
3. Men should dress in school
clothes if they plan to be in either
of these areas at times when women
students are visiting.
4. Men should remember that
women students may be present
at any of these times and should
conduct themselves accordingly.
5. Dormitory counselors, floor
proctors, and IDC chaperones will
be present whenever women stu-
dents are visiting the dormitories.
6. Chaperones will have the
authority to ask anyone to leave
at any time they deem it necessary.
EC Initiates 2-Year Program
For Psychology M. A. Degree
East Carolina College will initi-
ate at the beginning of the spring
quarter a two-year program lead-
ing to the degree of master of arts
in clincal psychology.
Dr. Clinton Prewettt, Director of
the Psychology Department, an-
nounces that the N. C. State Board
of Health has provided a sum of
$3,600 to be used for the develop-
ment of this program.
According to an agreement with
the State Board of Health, EC will
develop a curriculum appropriate
for such a degree, and include as
rarlt of the two-year program a
six-months clinical internship.
The Pitt County Mental Health
Clinic will iptrovide opportunity for
the students in the program to gain
experience as interns. Dr. Thomas
Long, Clinical Psychologist at the
clinic will direct the work of in-
terns.
The program is being established
to meet the need of a greater num-
ber of clinical psychologists in
North Carolina and to increase the
clinical psychological services
available in the state. Dr. Prewett
will direct the new program with
the assistance of Dr. John Clarke
and Dr. Albert V. Griffith.
Notices
Walter Faulkner, Editor of
the BUCCANEER requests
that all honorary fraternities
turn in to him by Friday an al-
phabetical list of their mem-
bers if they wish to have the
pictures in the yearbook.
The Freshman Dance, form-
erly scheduled for this week
has been postponed until next
month.
Famous Group
Receives Title
Of 'Elite In Jazz9
This Thursday night EC stu-
dents, faculty, and a few off-cam-
pus people who were lucky enough
to obtain tickets will be enter-
tained by the music of the world-
renowned Dave Brubeck Quartet.
This amazing group evolved from
the Dave Brubeck Trio in 1951 to
take high, higher, and then high-
est honors in jazz polls such as the
recent ones in "Down Beat" and
"Playboy Those are just two or-
ganizations whose readers have
elected them the elite in the jazz
world. In recent years, they have
corned practically every award
given to men in their field, as a
group and as individuals.
Of the many Brubeck albums,
one seems to have appeared by ac-
cident. On a trip through Disney-
land, Dave discovered that many
of the Disney themes were ones
which had been in his repertoire
for quite some time. Several long-
distant telephone calls later, and
an album was in the making. The
end result was an album appro-
priately entitled "Dave Digs Dis-
ney" which opens with a Brubeck
version of "Alice in Wonderland"
and closes with"One Song
Paul Desmond, composer of
"Take Five came to the Dave
Brubeck Trio and added his alto
sax in 1951. Thus, the Dave Bru-
beck Quartet was born. Desmond's
first meeting with Brubeck was
when they were in the Army. "I
remember the first tune we play-
ed was Rosetta says Paul. "I
was really dazzled by his (Bru-
beck's) harmonic approach Aside
from his numerous albums with
Brubeck, Desmond has a new one
out with Gerry Mulligan entitled
"Two of a Kind.
?
Joe Morello, one of the greatest
drummers of all time, joined the
Brubeck organization in 1956. Joe
has brought more than one audience
to its feet in wild enthusiasm,
paying tribute to his amazing speed
and musical ability. Critics and
audiences agree that he is perhaps
the most exciting drummer in the
country, with a pair of the fast-
est hands ever to hold drum sticks.
In "Take Five" it is interesting to
note how Morello creates intricate
and often startling counter-pat-
terns over the rigid 5-4 pulse.
The most recent figure to record
with Bruibeck, Gene Wright joined
as bass player in 1958 just prior
to their history-making tour of
Eurasia under the sponsorship of
tlie IT. S. State Department. An
outstanding player, the Chicago-
born Wright has been featured
with Count Basic, Cal Tjader, and
Red Norvo before his association
with Brubeck.
No jazz group has ihad a more
distinguished career than the Dave
Brubeck Quartet. The audience
response wherever they play easily
explains their reputation and
unique position in the musical
world.





Page 2
EAST
1
Tuesday, Jar
LABOR
Irresponsible, Unrealistic
Kennedy's outburst last year when "big steel" tried
to raise prices by pennies to meet modernizatron costs
caused even avowed liberals to shiver at the powers the
man wielded. One of the coercive weapons he employed
to enforce his demands was the threat of investigation
and prosecution for possible violation of the Sherman
Antitrust Act. If business can be prosecuted for banding
together to accomplish something it wants (and accord-
ing to many economists needs), why should not some
similar law be passed to restrict the activities of ir-
responsible labor coalitions? Or in such rare cases where
laws do exist, why are they not invoked?
Consideration of a case in point, the long-run New
York newspaper strike, demonstrates the relevancy of
this question. On December 8 the leaders of typographi-
cal Union Local 6 initiated a strike that through union
cooperation has idled 20,000 people. The true basis of
the dispute is the refusal of union leaders to discuss what
they call two "retrogressive" proposals of the pub-
lishers. The publishers seek the use of teletypesetter
tape to set stock tables and they seek to dispense with
some of the "bogus" work now being done. The first of
these proposals would eliminate a few typesetters; the
second would eliminate needless featherbedding. Both
seem to the layman to correspond to sound business
principles.
But apparently sound business principles no longer
exist as adequate motives for even moderate proposals
by an employer. He must be ruled by the irrational
caprice of the union. An irrational caprice which, in this
case, will certainly force at least one of the less affluent
New York papers to fold, and has already been respon-
sible for paper mills in the Scandinavian countries shut-
ting down.
Yet the government does nothing, and their lack of
action in such cases where the national economy is not
directly threatened seems almost to sanction caprice
and inefficiency. But business cannot continue to skip
merily along under the rigors of inefficiency. This is
already evident in the case of railroads, and it will be-
come evident in more businesses as the specter of auto-
mation drives more and more unions to strike. The
possible results are appalling, because only one or-
ganization exists that can afford to pay men to do work
made unnecessary by an ever improving technology?
the U. S. government.
Where will it all end? Will the government event-
ually take over the press as it will probably take over the
railroads. Or will the inefficiency-loving unions drive
smaller newspapers out of business until the complete
concentration of the free press makes it no longer a free
press? Neither possibility is inviting. Unions were orig-
inally formed to protect employees from the exploita-
tion of employers. It seems now that we need to pro-
tect the employers from the exploitation of the unions.
If these unions irresponsibly refuse to be realistic, and
no law exists to force them to be realistic, then we sug-
gest that such a law should be passed and enforced.
Easttarolinian
Published semi-weekly by the students of East Carolina College,
Greenville, North Carolina
Member
Carolinas Collegiate Press Association
Associated Collegiate Press
x:W:W: ???
editor
business manager
junius d. grimes m
keith hobbs
Offices on second floor of Wright Building
Mailing Address: Box 1063, East Carolina College, Greenville, North Carolina
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-5716 or PL 2-6101, extension 264
Subscription rate: $2.50 per year
CAMPUS BULLETIN
Tues. 22?Physical Education Club, GYM, 6:30 pjn.
?Mardd Gras Entry Deadline Meeting, CU TV Room, 7:00
pjQft.
Pitt Theatre: 'Doctors in Love
?State Theatre: "Jumbo
Wed. 23?Duplicate Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 pjn.
?EAST CAROLINIAN reorganizational staff meeting, 4:00
p.m third floor Wright Building, all interested persons
invited.
?Science Club, Flanagan 317, 7:30 p.m "Student Activities
at the Marine Biology Lab, Cape Cod, Mass
?Basketball Game: EC Frosh vs. Wilmington! Junior College,
8:00 p.m Gym.
?Math Departmental Meeting, Austin, 6:30 pirn.
Thur. 24?Beginners' Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 pjm.
?Chapel Services, Y Hut, 6:30 p.m.
?Dave Brubeck Concert, SGA Enteirtainsnent Series, "Down-
beat" Awards, Gym, 8:15 p.m.
State Theatre: "Carry On Teacher
?Pitt Theatre: "Boccaccio 70
jYi. 25?Movie: "State Fair" with Pat Boone, Austin, 7:00 pjn.
gat. 26?Basketball Game: EC vs. Oglethorp, 7:30 pjn Gym.
Sun. 27?State Theatre: "White Slave Ship
Mon. 28?CU Bowling League, Hillcrest Lanes, 4:00 pjn.
Tues. 29?Carnival Eentry Meeting, CU Office, 7:00 pjn.
?Pitt Theatre: "Gune of Navarone
?

mm
t ? '? ??-??"? ?- - ' "issSS
Globe Trotting
??????it
Say Pepsi Please



hummmmm with Tabibzadeh and Bede
Not too long before I left the
land of my fathers in order to ob-
tain a worthy education in the
U. S introduction of a new pro-
duct had aroused the curosity and
expectations of the people. One
day I observed a fellow citizen
and an American placing hand-
somely pi-epared posters in a deli-
catessen. The poster showed a beau-
tiful girly, properly exhibiting her
curves, drinking Pepsi Cola. In the
lower part of the poster, a few
words urg-ed the imediate consump-
tion of Pepsi Cola.
This poster, along with many
more varied ones, appeared in all
public places, as well as daily and
weekly publications. The local ra-
dio network announced the coming
of this refreshment and that served
as a great introducer, or inducer.
The method of advertisement was
unique and its effects were great.
Peope could hardly wait any longer
for this well publicized drink.
The man who was to bring the
product to the markest was a very
wealthy man; we will refer to him
as the Tycoon. He had little trouble
in transacting the contracts abroad
since he was a sound creditor in
the U. S. as well as at home. His
problems at home were even less
minute. He had friends who were
always influential, although some-
times needy, and he seemed willing
to give for a good cause. His own
construction company built the bot-
tling plant, his Studebaker dealer-
ship (the only one in the country).
pTovdded the trucks for distribu-
tion, and his other enterprises
coupled together to make his task
an easy one.
The hot June day that the pro-
duct was brought to the market
was unique in the city's business
history. That is, of course, how a
group of ignoramouses had been
so induced to go out of their way
to purchase a product totally un-
necessary. A refreshing drink
which was still hot since they were
being sold as rapidly as they could
be unloaded from the trucks. The
long line of people could have ob-
(tained a much more refreshing
drink for exactly the same price
?cold beer.
?Sales rocketed to new heights.
Everybody wanted to taste Pepsi.
It became fashionable to drink it.
People of means ordered Pepsi by
the case and drank it in the pri-
vacy of their homes. Those less
fortunate bought it from the vend-
or on the sidewalk. They all said
"Pepsi and only a few said "Pep-
si .please Everyone gave his opin-
ion after a drink. They musi have
all said good things, since they
continued to drink it.
The spirit of private enterprise
was at work. The rich were getting
richer and poor kept on drinking
Pepsi. Other soft drink producers
who were doing rather well before
Pe.tsi could not take the competi-
tion anymore. IS i nee they knew
little economics and little about the
science of advertising, they were
easily eliminated from the marked
One producer whose plant was in
the basement of his home got a
job at the Pepsi Cola bottling
plant after his business folded.
Others had more fighting blood in
them and fought back. One of them
hired a chemist to imitate the form-
ula, but the influential friends of
the Tycoon easily discovered and
annihilated the threat. A more
imaginative and desperate com-
petitor went to great expense to
horde Pepsi bottles in order to re-
duce production. Pepsi Cola bottles
were ordered by long distance tele-
phone and flown in immediately
from the U. S. Another competitor,
who must have indeed possessed a
wicked mind, bribed a few religious
leaders to attack the product. These
men of God informed their congre-
gations that the Pepsi f ormoila was
originally put together by Chris-
tians and another religious minor-
ity was distributing it in a Moslem
country; henceforth, drinking Pep-
si was declared an unforgivable
sin for a good Moslem. This at-
tempt was also a failure, since
the religious leaders had earlier
themselves and needed exe-
sold
cutive assistance to enforce their
declaration. The Influential friends
of the Tycoon were indeed a great
help in this instance. Some dreamed
of proper legislation or indirect
governmental asistance to help
them compete with the giant. Ty-
coon's influential friends had long
turned thfe possibility into an im-
possibility.
All these small competitors fail-
ed in this miracle of free enter-
prise. The Tycoon, on the other
hand, expanded his enterprises. He
is the sole importer of fine Euro-
Library Dispk
"President Lincoln JI
preliminary Bmancip?wT 1
nation Sept. 2, 1862. Qa '
L86S, he followed viriUj h
ration declaring that aij
areas still in rebellion we v
thenceforth, and forever f J
2n k

Thus reads the card
I ibrary dispay cai
Periodically tb :ry j
lively displays
events or person f hist
rificanoe. The one rn 1
play tells of tl ?? J
in the freeing of the siav?7j
this, the 100th an viry0y
freedom.
Along with a boo .
rnai illustrating e , aRn J
trade, there is a p hiionl
Lincoln from h r"
?-enville, Kentu kj Peerm
1800 until the i rf the
cipation Proclamation.
Also on display are 8CTttllj
lustrations from recent peri
with fpicuires of Uaeoh
about emancipation, and detA
observance of the vahvtm
Aupmrwntinfc tho a photo
ropy of two etoriea abovt th??
which appeared in the Jama
1863 Issue of Th New YorkT;
Indoctrinated
With Hippies
(ACP) THE DA
LE, Louisiana S
Baton Rouge, !???
mimber of etadi
Most smoke1 -icere, ori-
ented people v.
want and bow
Some smok-
some before and. for n I
ing: IS their N re affl
ted to being a
they felt they
sure to amoke ar. I
strictly voluntary
Since bis first
school, the
plagued with i:
him by hi gre '
non-smoker. F
but a small m I 'y and ?
threat to the advancement ??
irrg
The number of pers ns ?
cigarettes today is impart) I
history; their number are ?
less, and the result of it all i
to perdict: Eve: ' :
will be a smoker.
Children will be in k-ctrinatfi
birth by replacing fitoen f
rettes with rabies. N I
signs will be replaced by "
smoldnfr sijerns. Univen w
other social organizntion ??
it a prerequisite that all their
dents smoke, and will be w1
until they do. Fraternities ?
rorities will ban from nx&fc
any pledge whose fingers are
nicotine-atained.
pean and American automotf
a host of various goods, both
essary and Tory unnecessary
to his efforts and the ?
others like him, many infan:
have ceased to exist. His cottf
balance of trade is a sad joke-
United States is pourin? in
eigrn aM to balance the ?
and prevent Soveit domin
His influential friends an?
toff their accounts with this
thy source of hard currency
it to remain Influential, h
neantkne, everybody continJ
drink Pepei and wonder "hy"
We setting scarce.
East Carolinian organizational Staff HeoHi"
May, 4:00 p.m Third Floor Wright NMi





V January 22 1963
EAST CAROLINIAN
Pa?e I
Quiet, Refined Tradition
:m of Rathskeller is done in rustic German style with exposed beams and wooden tables com-
a b chairs of the same period. Criss-crossed boards on wall are offset by heraldic crests.
Rathskeller Opens Thursday;
Copies Original German Design
Rathskeller
I for a iae
officials. The new
Greenville
ed in i mi-
ni Rath-
Li1 n St in son
Gr lie Rath
I tradi-
implies. The
11:00 am
I will
dating
? in
bsic and
provided
the
promote and maintain an estab-
lishment of dignity, dress, and en-
joyment Mr. Stinson hopes through
the idealization of these ambitions
to gve to EC and Greenville an
asset it has long- needed.
Music School Members
Perform In New Bern
Faculty members and students
of the School of Music at East
Carolina College, representing the
Greenville Music Club, gave a pro-
gram before the St. Cecilia Music
Club in New Bern Monday in the
Maola Company auditorium at 8:30
p.m. Bdbh vocal and instrumental
music was featured.
The recital was an exchange pro-
gram between the Greenville and
the New Bern music clubs. Last
November musicians from New
Bern performed for the group here.
Monday's program included two
Schubert impromptus played by
Elizabeth Drake, pianist; and a
concertino for trumpet by Kenneth
Garris, accompanied oy Sandra
Willoughby, pianist.
Dr. Carl T. Hjortsvang, tenor,
and Jane Murray, contralto, each
presented a group of songs. Mrs.
Eleanor Toll accompanied Dr.
Hjortsvang.
School Official Attend
Jan. Superintendent Seminar
.
? agement ra-
th the college
an attempt to J
5 Credit Union
'ays Dividend
lend of five per
has been de-
-ts of the Credit
?nt came at the
of Credit Union
I in the Library,
It was made by
" W. Williams of the
? ailment, 1962
" e organization.
ceed Dr. Williams
te Dr. Charles Price,
of the Social Stud-
and Secretary of
1962. New Sec-
?5 tlter Talhoun and Vice-
Ralrh Brimley.
?" Saturday marks the
ond full year of
" the Credit Union, in
Hip is open to all
loyeeB of the College.
not eligible for mem-
Last Thursday more than 25
school officials from eastern count-
ies of the state gathered on our
tipns to participate in the Jan-
uary Seminar for School Superin-
tendents.
One of a series of monthly study
programs on school problems held
mder the direction of Dr. Ral;tfi
Brimley of the Department of Edu-
cation, Thursday's seminar included
discussions of programmed learn-
ing, world affairs, and planning
and maintenance of school build-
ings.
As the seminar opened in the
Raul building Thursday morning,
Dr. Douglas Jones, Director of the
Department of Education, present-
ed a discussion of programmed
learning, a type of study which
allows the student to proceed at
his own pace of learning. Dr.
Charles Price, speaker at a lunch-
eon meeting, directed attention to
world problems, with emphasis on
the split between Russia and Red
China.
The afternoon program was de-
voted to (problems of building and
maintenance. Dr. Brimley discus-
sing "Unusual Maintenance Prob-
lems delt with boilers, water
tanks, and other school equipment.
Assistant Superintendent Paul
Tyndall of Onslow County Schools
presented plans of the new admini-
stration building for Onslow Coun-
ty schools. Superintendent H. S.
Browning of Wilson County Schools
showed and discussed a scale model
of a new school bus garage for
his area.
Delta Sigma Pi
Pledges Eleven
Business Majors
Delta Sigma Pi, international
'business fraternity, initiated eleven
new pledges Thursday night, Jan-
uary 17. These pledges were select-
ed from the male business majors.
They are as follows: Jerry Fowler,
Joe Johnson, Delano Long, Dick
Holbert, Bob Edwards, Wayne
Cook, Jim Rabon, Daniel Griffin,
Dan Guy, Bill Dean, and Steve
Frazier.
The purpose of this fraternity
is to encourage scholarship, to en-
courage social activities, and to en-
courage the association of students
for their mutual advancement by
research and practice.
m tn paying interest to
"n money invested, the
purpose of the Union is
Credit available to rte mem-
reasonable terms. In-
kntfita on deposits and
abo provided.
rf the Credit Union nre
J8 &e Mathematics De-
M
tn,
erit
Treasurer and in
the operations of the
Nation.
DIAMONDS WHOLESALE?
Yes our diamond prices are below the wholesale price
you'would pay if you bought your diamond from a
wholesale catalog or any wholesale source.
We buy our diamonds direct from a diamond cutter,
and because we have our own grading facilities, our
quality is usually better that that of stones from the
above sources.
We have special credit terms available for ECC stu-
dents.
Lautares Bros.
414 Evans Street
Registered Jewelers AGS
George Lautares, E. C. C, Class '41
MX
On Campus
with
MaxQhuIman
w (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf, "The Many
Loves of Dobie GUlis etc.)
CALPURNIA, HERE I COME
Now, as the college year approaches its mid-point, one fact
emerges clearly: you are all going to flunk everything.
There are two things you can do about it. First, you can
marry money. (I don't mean you marry the money itself; I
mean you marry a person who has money. Weddings between
people and currency have not been legal anywhere in the United
States since the Smoot-Hawley Act. Marlboro Cigarettes, on
the other hand, are legal everywhere and are, indeed, smoked
with great pleasure and enthusiasm in all fifty states of the
Union. I bring up Marlboro Cigarettes because this column is
sponsored by the makers of Marlboro, and they are inclined to
brood if I omit to mention their product.)
But I digress. I was saying you can marry money but, of
course, you will not because you are a high-minded, clean-
living, pure-hearted, freckle-faced American kid. Therefore, to
keep from flunking, you must try the second method: you must
learn how to take lecture notes.
According to a recent survey, 123.6 of American uader-
graduates do not know the proper way to take lecture notes. To
illustrate this shocking statistic, let us suppose you are taking
a course in history. Let us further suppose the lecturer is lec-
turing on the ruling houses of England. You listen intently. You
write diligently in your notebook, making a topic outline as you
have been taught. Like this:
I. House of Plantagenet.
II. House of Lancaster.
III. House of York.
Then you stop. You put aside your pen. You blink back a
tear, for you cannot go on. Oh, yes, you know very well that the
next ruling house is the House of Tudor. The trouble is you
don't know the Roman numeral that comes after III.
(It may, incidentally, be of some historical interest to point
out that Americans are not the only people who don't know
Roman numerals. The Romans didn't know them themselves.
I suppose they could tell you how much V or X were or like
that, but when it came to real euties like LXI or MMC, they
just flang away their styluses and went downtown to have a
bath and take in a circus and maybe stab Caesar a few times.
(You may wonder why Rome stuck with these ridiculous
numerals when the Arabs had such a nice, simple system. Well
sir, the fact is that the Emperor Vespasian tried like crazy to
buy the Arabic numerals from Suleiman the Magnificent, but
Suleiman wouldn't do business?not even when Vespasian
raised his bid to 100,000 gold piastres, plus he offered to throw
in the Colosseum, the Appian Way, and Charlton Heston.
(So Rome stuck with Roman numerals?to its sorrow, as it
turned out. One day in the Forum, Cicero and Pliny got to
arguing about how much is CDL times MVIX. Well sir, pretty
soon everyone in town came around to join the hassle. In all
the excitement, nobody remembered to lock the north gate and
?wham!?before you could say pecca fortiter, in rushed the
Goths, the Visigoths, and the Green Bay Packers!)
Well sir, that's the way the empire crumbles, and I digress.
Let's get back to lecture notes. Let's also say a word about
Marlboro Cigarettes. The makers would be so pleased! And is
it not fitting that we should please these honest tobacconists?
these fine men, fond of square dancing, water sports, protein,
and tattoos?these tireless perfectionists who spend all of their
days trying to please us?searching everywhere for the best of
all possible tobaccos, aging them with patience, blending them
witn tender, loving care? Marlboros are available in soft pack
and flip top box. You will find XX cigarettes in each package.
m mm mm ??

Marlborum onto, Tom Marlborum amat, Dick Marlborum
amat, Harry Marlborum amat, June Marlborum amat,
Joan Marlborum amat, Jean Marlborum amat, Jane Marl-
borum amat, quiqu Marlborum amant?et Marlborum
quoque amabituu





Pae 4
AST CAROLINI A N
Tuesday, J
ORTS REVIEW
By LLOYD "STACK" LANE
Over 350 people attended the 1962 Pirate Football Ban-
quet at the South Cafeteria. Some of the interesting words
spoken can give a person something- to think about.
It was interesting to hear a winning coach talk about
loosing. John McKenna, head football coach at VMI, said
that the coach is similar to any other teacher in college.
The only difference is he teaches on the football field in-
stead of the classroom. His subject is football. What he
hopes to communicate to his "class" is the fundamentals of
the game. With this will also come a development of the
characteristics that are essential in the world today?mental
adjustment, emotional stability, physical conditioning, and
spirit and desire.
We believe that these attributes are wli worth having
on any campus in the country. This is something practical
that can be used when a person gets out of college, and as
a whole can contribute more than most of the courses that
a student takes during the period where he gets his degree.
An interesting note: When General McArthur was
made head of West Point, he instituted the rule that each
cadet had to compete in athletics during his four years at
the Academy. This has paid dividends, not only to the school,
but to the country as a whole.

At this banquet. Coach Stasavich stressed the fact
that although he was looking: forward to the game with
Wake Forest next fall, the major aim of the Pirates will be
the University of Richmond. Richmond beat the Pirates
last year by one point 27-26. A victory over Richmond would
mean a great deal to the Pirates chances for entrance in the
Southern Conference. A victory over Wake Forest would
just be a prestige victory. It would show that the Pirates
are ready to play a major college schedule. The victory
over Richmond might enable us to play a "big-league"
schedule, and be associated with a major conference.
Martinez Rates Pirate Swimmers
Best Team In School's History
"Finest team we've had by far separated at the finish line by only
AJVVy ???? V
West, Brogden Spark Pirat
Victory Over Richmond 62
VI
f c shots for a 33.6 per , Parker
The Pirates recorded their third with ?! of d did a Uttle Know.
cent mark I 20 of 56 Otte
KT?rtol?? On fc-IWJIta-
shots or 6b.( P?r
shoot, the Pirates hit 18 of 22
?d the Spiders hit 10 of 14.
.Richmond held an ?T
Pirates in rebooting. 6-6 Tom
?Twick pulled in 16 of the Spider h
ctory in four Southern Confer-
ence games as they defeated Rich-
mond 61-50 at Richmond Satur-
day might. The victory gave the
Pirates a 9-4 record.
Lacy West was high man for
both teams as he hit the hoop f or j 46 reboUnds. West grabbed U
22 points. Bill Brogden and Bill the pirates total-
Coach Ray Martinez described this
season's swimming team in a re-
cent interview. Indeed, Coach Mar-
tinez does have reason to be proud
of this team, which he readily des-
ignates, "hardest working group
since I've been in school here
Coach Martinez, who has been at
EC for nine years, added, "Every
day these boys are swimming bet-
ter than they ever have before
Coach Martinez is a pleasant,
quiet, easy-going person. He is
quick to praise his swimmers for
their accomplishments, and is al-
ways willing' to help his players in
any way.
"This is the most grueling sport
in terms of conditioning Coach
Martinez elaborated. He further
explained that most of the swim-
mers work out twice daily, 7:00 to
8:00 A.M. and 3:00 to 5:00 P.M.
The swimming season lasts from
September through March.
This year's roster of Varsity and
Freshman teams includes 22 boys.
Captain of the team is Ed Zaohau,
a senior. Other members are Bob
Kingrey, senior; Miles Barefoot,
Jim (Roberts and Robert Federici,
Juniors; Harry Sober, Jim Somma,
Ed Harrington, Douglas Sutton,
Bob Bennett, Chuck Norwood, and
George Ressegue, sophomores; and
Jim Morasco, Paul Donohue, Larry
Hewes, John Gaffney, Howard
Purser, Dan Vanuk, Neil Satter-
white, George Cuanminigs, Clement
Templeton, Larry Hewes, and Gary
Henson, freshmen. Tom Cox, a
sophomore is manager of the team.
Full of enthusiasm and hopeful-
ness, Tom explains that the 1-2
won-lost record EC now holds is
not a good indicabor of the type of
competition EC has been. EC has
won one meet from Davidson, 59-
33, and has lost to UNC 58-37, and
NC State 58-37. These three teams
are rated very highly.
NC State counts four All-lAimer-
icans and the world's record holder
for the butterfly stroke among its
players. Many of the races in these
first three meets had close finishes
or "hand touches In one of the
races, all four participants were
seconds. The EC team, led by Kin-
grey and Morasco, broke State's
individual winning streak of 37
events in a row.
The Varsity meets NC State on
January 30 for a rematch. EC's
next Varsity game is Thursday,
January 17, when the team travels
to UNC for what should result in
a most competitive meet. The next
Freshman game is also at UNC
on the preceding evening.
The EC swimming team is not
in a conference this year. However,
since EC does belong to the Nat-
ional Collegiate Athletics Associ-
ation, EC will be eligible to com-
pete in this associaton meets to
be held in the NC State pool.
To spotlight the most promising
members of this team is most dif-
ficult. Captain Ed Zachau, who
holds the individual Best Medley
Relay record, is a very good swim-
mei??one who, it might be added,
exhibits consuming team spirit and
drive. Morasco, a freshman, prom-
ises to be good, especially on the
breastt stroke. Kingrey, a senior,
holds the National Athletic In-
tercollegiate Aissociation Diving
Championship. Donohue, a fresh-
man, promises to be a good diver
also. Noted for excellence in the
freestyle competition are Sober and
Hewes. Purser, also a freshman, is
steadily improving.
PITT THEATRE
Starts THURSDAY, Jan. 24
Otte iboth reached the 10-plus
mark. Brogden and Otte scored 16
and 13 respectively for the Pi-
rates, who never tailed after the
early minutes of the contest.
After regaining an early 4-2
lead from Richmond, the Pirates
dominated play unJtdl the final
horn. The Spiders kept interest
alive as they rallied to eut the
Pirate lead to two points at various
times throughout the game. The
Pirates managed to keep the lead
with several quick bursts of points
to hold the Spiders in check.
The Pirates came back from the
dressing room at halftime lead-
ing 31-23 only to have the vic-
tory-hungry Spiders start cutting
away at this margin until the Bucs
were ahead 38-36. EC put this
threat down by gunning in nine
straight points in two minutes to
build their lead up to 47-36. West
scored five points in this scoring
outburst.
With 11 minutes left in the
game, the Pirates started playing
control ball. They froze the ball
one one occasion for 4 minutes be-
fore West connected on a field
goal. The Pirates went on to score
a 62-50 win.
Neither team had a good night
from the floor as far as shooting
percentages go. The Bucs connected
In the prelim, the Baby Bucs
beat the Richmond Frosh 82-71.
Neil Hodges led the Baby Buc
scoring with 19 points.
FC G F T
fc q 4-4 22
West 9 4 '
Brogden
Duke
Totals
Richmond
Telepo
Burton
Grods'ki
Tenwick
Ench
Hunt
Totals
3-D
M
M
M
U
F
0.2

3-5
EC Loses Swim Meet
To Caroli
arolina learn 61-3.
The Pirate swimmers walked tfce
plank at UNC last Thursday as
they suffered their second loss of
the season 61-34.
EC won three firsts in the eleven
event match. Bob Kinery's diving
form gave the Pirates a first in
the diving competition. EC took
first place finishes in the 200 But-
terfly and the 200 Breast stroke.
Bob Federici won the Butterfly in
2:12.2, and Jim Maroso took a
lirst in the breaststroke at 2:27.4.
The UNC tankmen set a new
record in the 400 medley as, Mann,
Swift, Merrill, and Roberts better-
ed the old mark by four-tenths of
a second. The winning time was
3:51.0.
400 medley relay ? UNC (Mann.
Swift Merrill, and Roberts) 3:51.0.
200 freestyle?1. Adams (UNC);
2. Soben (EC); S'chiffnmn (UNC)
159.8
50 freestyle ? 1. Wood row
(UNC); 2
vn (EC) 22i
200 !?
(UNC); 2. Z
(EC) 5
Diving
Donahue I E(
24r point
200 B
(ECU; 2. I
not (EC) 2:12.2
100 f r. ? '
(UNC; 2. Mam LT! ?
(EC) 4&A
200
(UNC: 2. Za .
(BC) I4i
500 free
2. B ell (UN
5.42A
200
(EC); 2. S ft
(EC) 2:27,4.
400 fre I
Adams, K:
(UNC) 3:28.7.
Intramural Dept.
Sets Deadline
Intramural Bowling- will begin
Tuesday, January 29. The deadline
for entering teams in the Intra-
moiral Bowling league has been set
for Monday, Jan. 28 at 1:00. For
one dollar, each person will receive
shoes, three games, and transpor-
tation to and from Hillcrest Lanes.
The games will be bowled every
Tuesday afternoon. Participation
points for the Intramural Trophy
will total 10 per team.
m
1
SEM
ANNUAL
A Bold Lool at Love . . .
Italian Style
In Technicolor
Starring
SOPHIA LOREN
ANITA EKBERG
ROMY SCHNEIDER
January
Clearance Sale
In Progress
MENS and LADIES
Fall and Winter
Merchandise
REDUCTIONS
Up To
w
2
222 East Fifth Street
CLEARANCE
All Ladies SPORT SHIRTS
1-2 Price
A Selected Group of SUITS
25 Per Cent Off
A Selected Group of SPORT C0A1
25 Per Cent Off
? A Group of JACKETS
1-3 Off
? A Group of PANTS
25 Per Cent Off
m m
offifii cm&
MBNS W
-???'?lt?tTr





Title
East Carolinian, January 22, 1963
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
January 22, 1963
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.03.263
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/38792
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