Departmental Meetings Quarterly departmental meetings will be conducted tonight in various buildings according to your major. Page 2*for news on the Letter ime XXXVI Sorority Rush Begin East Carolina Last €arolinia College GREENVILLE, N. C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1961 $ Monday ; EntertainmentPlanned ForRushees By PATSY ELLIOTT for the eight sorori-;Group B will stage its parties on will get underway y 16. Partici- week will be Alpha Xi , Zeta, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Kappa « Phi, and Sigma Sigma sororities have been di- Tuesday and Thursday nights; both groups entertain Friday night. Schedules for the rush parties and the procedure for rushing and bid- ding have been distributed to the various groups and rushees. The eight sororities have grouped for parties as follows: Group A Xi Delta: Monday, Wednesday, Social been Alpha Parlor; Cotton Room— LENIC OFFICERS: (pictured left to right) Ann Sugg, vice- Carol Rankin, rush chairman; and Jaye Finnegan, president, plan weedings. Wright, and Friday, Cafeteria (East). Delta Zeta: Monday, Social Room Wright; Wednesday, Cafeteria (Bast); Friday, Garrett Base- ment. Alpha Delta Pi: Monday, Cafeteria (East); Wednesday, Garrett Base- ment; and Friday, Alumni Bldg. Chi Omega: Monday, Garrett Base- ment; Wednesday, Alumni Bldg.; and Friday, Y Hut. Group B \Alpha Omicron Pi: Tuesday, Cot- ton Parlor; Thursday, Social Room (Wright); and ‘Friday, Cafeteria. Kappa Delta: Tuesday, Room (Wright); Thursday, Cafeteria (East); and Friday, Garrett Base- ment. Alpha Phi: Tuesday, Cafeteria (East); Thursday, Garrett Base- nent. and Friday, Alumni Bldg. Sigma Sigma Sigma: Twesday, Garrett Basement; Thursday, Alumni Bldg.; and Friday, Y Hut. On Friday, January 20, following the last rush parties, rushees will go to the Panhellenic Room to sign preferences. From the time of the last rush party until Saturday at 1:00 p.m., rushees and sorority wom- er will observe a period of silence. Rushees will and hellenic Room. Carol Rankin, Panhellenic rush stated earlier this week, “After many hours of planning and meeting with various rash commit- chairman, we are tees, looking forward to a successful formal rush week.” ‘Rahal’ ‘Sponsors _ Jenkins Addresses State Groups; Writing Contest; To Offer Prize eceive honorable g selections will ring issue of ntest was held last ne by “The Rebel” jerable interest reth Alexan- ow a secretary ident Leo W. Jen- was first published the spring quarter nee then, has been is- r of the regular r the sponsorship of Government Association. i as one of the outstanding rary magazines in colleges t of the state, “The jes in its contents short , poems, book reviews, ther creative work by stu- a) attraction of the maga- exelusive interviews ted North Carolina authors and Harry Golden and Viereck, Pulitzer Prize mas been Urges Responsibility, Interest President Leo W. Jenkins, address- ing members of the Tau Beta Pi As- ciation, national engineering honor iety, at N.C. State College, Raleigh, Friday night, Jan. 6, challenged his udience of engineers and student .|engineers not only to use their tal- ents and training in the technical as- |pects of modern life but also to con- cern themselves more actively than t present with such problems of so- education, health and politics. iddressed the Tau Beta Pi As- sociation at a banquet at the State College Union. “You have contributed,” Dr. Jenkins told the engineers, “to freeing a considerable proportion of man’s ble energies previously concen- tnated on providing the barest nec- essities of existence; but you have ione mighty little in assisting him his attempt to live in this new en- vironment. “You must help us from unconsci- ously becoming the servant of your technical progress. You realize, of course, that technical progress may not be identical with the progress of man. We may well witness through your efforts progress in the machines you make, but jittle progress in man himself.” Dr. Jenkins urged Tau Beta Pi BEACH GETS POST Prof. Earl E. Beach, director of the department of music, has been elected as a member of the Board of Directors of the American Associa- tion of College and University Con- cert Managers. He will serve for a three-year term. Mg PO Sig Ep fembers of the Sigma Epsilot ¢ Sigma Phi Epsilon, latest 1 fraternity at East Carolina ge to acquire a house, are sub- former Pi Kappa Alpha house at 526 Cotanche Greenville. llege chapter of Pi Kappa recently purchased, @ brick George J. Coltrane, JT. ille, vice president and house mane- xer of Sigma Phi Epsilon, has an- need that repairs and redecora- tion of the house are in progress. The Sigma Epsilon Colony of Sig- na Phi Epsilon was founded et Carolina in February, 1960, and is #0 associate member of tis Inter-frater” nity Council. The colony is expected to become a chapter of the National Sigma Phi Epsilon in April of this year. East | agan, Colony Acquires House Fifteen of the members are now living there. Members are planning an open house for their parents and friends when work on the house is completed. Notice Effective as of Monday, January 9, announcements will no longer be read in class. Bulletin boards have been placed at various areas on cam- pus to eliminate this time consuming task. The location of these bulletin boards are in the music building, the gym, the library, \Austin, Rawl, Flan- van, Graham, and the College Union. The administration would like to stress that each student is held re- sponsible for checking these ee boards each day and no excuses be accepted for not attending an an- nounced meeting or test. members to exert efforts to end the present looseness with which the term “engineers” is used to designate people in many trades and callings. A loss of status results, he said, from misuse of the word. Discussing the engineer’s “apparent inferiority complex in the area of cul- ture,” Dr. Jenkins state that the im- age of the engineer as a “rough and tough,” uncultured character has be- come traditional and that the enginer- er’s preoccupation with technical to the exclusion of other activities prob- ably is a result of pioneer-frontier distrust of the specialist. Engineers are unfair to themselves, he said, in al- lowing these impressions to persist. Since engineers “have been re- sponsible for changing our world,” Dr. Jenkins said it seems only right that they should “assume an equal responsibility in helping us run this new world.” He urged a more active interest and participation by engineers in po- litieal affairs, in edueation, in health and sanitation problems, in cultural activities, and in other areas affecting man’s welfare and progress. Reception Honors Business Head The Silver Anniversary of the found- ing of the department of business edu- cation here and its growth into the present School of Business was cele- brated by a reception honoring Dr. Elmer R. Browning, director of the Scheol of Business, and Mrs. Brown- ing, January 2, in Rawl building. The reception was given by Misses Lena Ellis and Velma Lowe, and Dr. Audrey Dempsey. Tt marked the completion of twenty- five years of work and of growth in the department, which was established on the campus January 1, 1936, under the direction of Dr. Browning assisted by Miss Maude Adams, now a retired associate of Woman’s College, Greens- boro. Around 120 guests were invited for the occasion, including officers of the administration at the college, direct- ors of departments on the campus, retired faculty members, and form- er members of the college who were teaching here at the time the depart- ment was established. A teacher training school in the field of business, the department was located for five years in Austin build- ing on the third floor and for several years in the Flanagan building. Later new courses were added in manage- ment, business administretion, mar- keting, and accounting. Social , pick up their bids} Saturday at 1:00 p.m. in the Pan-| Three East Carolina students were { dismissed «and two more were “per- mitted to withdraw” in action taken by college authorities resulting from | a Dee. 15 incident allegedly organ- ized as a panty raid. Names of the five students, desig- nated as the “ringleaders” in organ- izing the wpre-holiday disturbance were not released. Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, EC president, stated that he acted to dismiss the ‘trio in accordance with a recom- rendation from Dean James B. Mal- office following conferences with students there. In addition to the five organizers, Dr. Jenkins said, 12 more men stu- dents, all residents of Jones Hall, were handed “various types of dis- ciplinary action,” but were allowed to remain at the college. Dr. Jenkins said all 17 students involved the action claimed the December incident was nothing more than a Christmas carol serenade at Umstead Hall. He added “the people involved were also required to make payment for damage to two windows and one door,” damaged in the “serenade”. F. D. Dunean, vice-president and business manager of the college said the damage was done to Umstead Hall and amounted to about $100. A heavy, cold nain the night of the |attempted raid, authorities felt, helped thwart the effort that at- tracted students in numbers esti- mated by various officials from 25 to 200. Most authorities, Dr. Jenkins roted seemed convinced a panty raid had been planned. Greenville and ECC police officers converged on the scene and took six of the students into custody. They taken to Greenville Police Headquarters and released in Theatre Presents Menotti’s Opera The College Opera Theatre, organi- zation of student vocalists, will pre-| sent as their second production for} the 1960-1961 term Gian-Carlo Men- | otti’s “The Old Maid and the Thief,” director Paul Hickfang has announced. The opera will be presented in two performances on Jan. 20 and Jan. 21 at 8:15 p.m. in the McGinnis audi- torium. The double cast, which provides a different group of singers for each performance, is made up of Alison Moss and Betsy Hancock, portraying Leatitia; Martha Bradner and Jessa- mine Hiatt playing the part of Miss Todd, the old maid; and Peter Johl and Jerry Teachey portraying Bob. The part of Miss Pinkerson will be slayed by Ann Darden and Patricia Roberts. “The Old Maid and the Thief,” Mr. Hickfang stated, “is a light-textured comic opera, with a clever plot, and the music is delightful.” The opena will be directed by Dr. Robert Rickert of the English depart- ment, acting director of the Play- house. Mr. Hickfang will be the mus- sical director. lory’s in boisterous were Wicca Action Taken, Resulting From Pre-Christmas Incident the morning hours Dec. 16. No charges were ledged against the students at the local police depart- ment. Mallory and ECC Police Chief | Johnnie Harrell effected the student’s release and escorted them back to the campus. The day following the incident, Dr. Jenkins reported he had gone to the campus about 12:30 a.m. and re- mained for about one hour. “While 1 was there,” he said, “nothing really developed.” He added that he sub- sequently went to Jones Hall and found no evidence of “any organized effort.” “The boys over at Jones were ap- parently quite surprised by my visit,” he noted at that time. Mitchell Stars In Playhouse’s 3 ulianne Cannon Current Play, ‘Night Must Fall’ Doug Mitchell will play the wading; that she saves him from being ap- role of Dan, the ingratiating person- ality-lad with the secret passion for killing women, in the Playhouse’s pre- sentation of the famous melodrama, ‘Night Must Fall,” which will be presented February 9-11. This character of the debonair bell- hop with a psychopathic penchant for murder, was acted in both the New York and London productions by Em- lyn Williams, author of the hit melo- drama. Both of these productions, and also the movie version in which Robert Montgomery was the homicidally- inclined young man, established this play as one of the most unforgettable melodramas of modern times. As the elderly Mrs. Bramson, one of the killer’s intended and unsuspect- iug victims, Dorning Jenkins will be seen in a role played on beth stage and screen by the late Dame May Whitty. It is the character of the cranky Mrs. Bramson who, charmed y the guileful Dan, takes him in to her Essex bungalow to work for and flatter her. Karen Best will be seen as Olivia, the old woman’s niece who, guessing Dan’s connections with sudden death, is nevertheless so fascinated by him Civil Service Exam Scheduled For Feb. 1 A (Civil Service Examination will be given on campus Saturday, Feb- ruary 11, in the North Dining Hall. The deadline for Juniors and Seniors te file applications to take this ex- amination is January 26. Forms for making application may be secured at the Placement Office, room 203 in the Administration Build- ing, any day during the regular hours. Students taking and passing the examination are not obligated, but qualified for government work. The Civil Service Examination is given regularly six times a year at places designated by the government. “Greenville is not one of the regular locations for the test, but should enough students turn out to take this test, in the future, Greenville could be a regular location for the exami- nation,” according to Jack Edwards, Director of Placements. i Mr. Harry Rainey (left) presents trophy to for the student who has contributed most to mately 100 students attended the annual Christmas Party dent Stores employees. all the Ste- prehended. The play is as much a study of Olivia’s terror-struck mind as it is of the criminal’s. Like a bird hypnotized by a snake that intends death, Olivia is caught in a net that is partly repulsion, partly attraction toward the murderer. Not intended as a mystery play, Jight Must Fall” is as replete with ivers, shudders and suspense as any “who-done-it?,” having been de scribed by one New York critic as “a shocker, wholesale in its horrors, and a blood-curdler for fair.’ Though the audience knows the killer’s iden- tity from the start, the play’s sus- pense is in the fascination of watch- ing the other characters as they re- act to the gradual realization that a monster at large is living with them under their very roof; the fascina- tion of seeing gradually revealed the killer’s inability to feel anything for people except a lust to destroy them. One of the impressive facets of the play is the egomaniac’s dilemma of wanting to boast of the cleverness of his homicides, without being caught. Paintings Exhibit Tradition Theme Lucille Coulbourn, a senior here, is presently exhibiting her paintings in the Kate Lewis Gallery in Raw] build- ing. The art show is sponsored by the East Carolina art department as one of a 1960-1961 series of exhibitions by talented seniors. It will be open to the public through January 14. Miss Coulbourn’s work indicates her interest in traditional painting. Most of it is slanted toward realism or impressions of the visual world. Included among paintings on dis- play are two realistic still lifes, an impressionistic still life done in gold- en tones, two compositional studies. Miss Coulbourn, who is majoring in art and minoring in English, is presi- dent of the Alpha Xi Delta social sor- ority and a staff member of the col- lege radio station WWWS. A: he Editér'Contest. y L ‘Buccaneer’ Announveg/Queen Cannon Selected By Kingston Trio Julaine Cannon, sponsored by Sig- ma Phi Epsilon, has been chosen as the 1961 Buccaneer Queen, announced Buceaneer Editor Buddy Kilpatrick this week. Miss Cannon, one of five finalists, twas chosen by the popular vocal group, The Kingston Trio. “By ask- ing the Kingston Trio to select the Queen,” said Buddy, “we hope that it will create more student interest in the queen and in the yearbook.” “This is the second year that a Buccaneer Queen has been selected,” continued Buddy, “and we hope to continue having this as an annual event.” The other finalists were: Jay Moore Soles, Delta Sigma Pi; Betty Lane Evans, Pi Kappa Alpha; Mary Elizabeth Gardner, Kappa Alpha. and Barbara Ann Ellis, Theta Chi. Julaine, a junior from Ayden, is «a primary education major. She is also a member of the Delta Zeta sor- ority. The queen will be presented a tro- phy at the annual spring banquet of the Buccaneer staff, and her picture wil! appear in the yearbook. SCA Announces Final Plans For Amendment Vote it’s repular weekly meeting night the Student Govern- Association Monday ment plans amendment tion. The proposed amendment, which will be voted on by the student body January 26 provides, “The accused may appeal any decision of the stu- dent judiciary to a Discipline Com- mittee composed of both faculty and students.” The polls will be open to vote on the amendment from 9:00 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. Another amendment to the con- stitution was voted down in the pre- liminary stages by the student sen- ate. If passed, it would have been included in the January 26 vote by the student body, and would have rovided a SGA constitutional terpretive committee representatives from body and the faculty. In other business, SGA President, Jim Speight, appointed two new com- mittees. One will investigate the po» sibility of athletic cards for EC stu- dents. The other new committee is designated to coordinate and stimu- late cultural entertainment on cam- pus. SGA Treasurer, Charlie Munn, an- rounced a meeting of the Budget Committee January 16 at 6:16 in the Library Auditorium. The student senate is scheduled to take a test on Parliamentary pro- cedure January 16. Members of the senate received study guides to use in jprepanation for this test. announced final for a vote on a proposed to the S.G.A. constitu- in- made up of the student Luther Gillon To Present Clarinet Recital Sunday Music for the clarinet will be fea- tured Sunday, Jan. 15, in a recital here by Luther Gillon, a pupil of Vferbert L. Carter of the college mu- sie department. He is one of a small group of students selected by faculty mem- bers of the department to appear during 1960-61 in a series of “honors” recitals by talented seniors. The program will take place at 3:30 p.m. in the McGinnis auditorium on the campus and will be open to the public. Carolyn Hinton, pianist, will ac- eompany Mr. Gillon. Mrs. Alison Hearne Moss, soprano, will appear with the clarinetist in Schubert’s “Der Hirt auf dem Felsen.” While at East Carolina, Mr. Gillon has been a member of both the March- ing and the Concert Bands. He is past president of the College Orches- tra, and leader of the college dance band, The Collegians. He is also a member of Phi Mu Alpha, profes- ‘sional music fraternity for men. | Upon graduation he plang to teach band in the Charlotte area. ECC Students Enter Teaching Program The College student teaching pro- gram for the winter quarter includes 233 seniors who are conducting classes in more than thirty-three public schools in Eastern North Care- lina. Eighty are doing work in the pri- mary and grammar grades, 140 in high schools, and thirteen are teach- ing either art or music at all grade levels. Of the total number of students participating in the program 220 are from North Carolina, and thirteen are from other states. Assignments of seniors at the col- lege who are now gaining experi- eace as classroom instructors have be.~ announeed by Dr. J. L. Oppeld, director of student teaching. PAGE FOUR = S ualiil Jane Chance ing in 190% ford eludes 40, thers’ Clu the United Delta Ze ensther in to promote tur * Ohio. PAGE TWO Campus Phenomenon Receives Poor Treatment Recently East Carolina witnessed an age old campus phenomenon made famous across the state a few years ago by North Carolina State College. The act to which we refer is the panty raid that occurred just be- fore the Christmas holidays. Since the beginning of co-educational in- stitutions (perhaps even before this) panty raids have occurred from. time to time with varing degrees of suecess. They never start out to be harmful or destructive, but occasion- ally they get out of hand. This happened at East Carolina. According to our reports some of the spirited group became a little too spirited. fhe result was a few extremely dangerous minutes for some of the girls in the dormi- and considerable damage to the build- ng. Those responsible (according to college authorities) were caught and punished. Some ere even asked to leave school. Now we understand the damage to the yuilding was not extensive . . . nevertheless t damage. Any student who thoughtlessly any of the facilities on campus, es- in a case like this, should have to r them in one way or another. Obvious- sannot have students tearing the place en they feel so inclined. We have heard, also, that a couple of ‘ous situations developed during the For example, reports say a brick ks) was thrown through one of the lows into a dormitory room. Now even freshman should be able to see the foolish- ess and danger in that. Someone could have seriously hurt. Those responsible for ) an act should be dealt with accordingly and they were (according to college au- apart tement t t any have expressed dissatisfaction with isions of the authorities in this case. r, the facts are: some students were sd, some damage was done, and some were punished. nly one question in our minds erning this case. The question is one of edure. In the past it has been customary for ju- ocedure to be carried out by an or- duly constituted body such as the Judiciary, the Women’s Judiciary, or Discipline Committee. In this case, how- no such procedure was followed. We nder why \ll of us realize the absolute authority he college president. We realize he may te this power to meet any whim as long loesn’t overstep these whims exercised the Board of Trustees and the people of th Carolina. We realize the Discipline Committee ex- ecause he wants it to. We also realize lecision made by the Student Government ation or any of its branches, such as Judiciaries, may be overruled by him. In his power concerning matters of the s practically absolute. In this case the president apparently ted to let his administrators (Deans, etc.) s investigating police officers, accusers, iry, and judge. None of the usual college bodies were employed (according to an ad- ministration spokesman). One administrator said this was due to the time element. According to him there was not enough time to call a meeting of these official judicial bodies before the holidays. So it was handled very efficiently by members of the administration. Presently there are other governments n the world (and East Carolina may be con- dered a little government in a sense) who s in the same way. However, this con- s not widely aecepted by those of us who eve in a democratic society. We do not condemn the president or the iministration for punishing those students vho deserved it. However, we do question their procedure. We do feel the student body nd the college would have benefited from sion made by an organized judicial body > a complete investigation. We have heard sometimes hard to determine exactly who s responsible for damage when only a few members of a mob commit an unbecoming act There is nerate Justice has probably been served, but de- mocracy has not. 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 Jackson JoAnne Parks Managing Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor Feature Editor Pat Harvey Patsy Elliott Richard Boyd Marcelle Vogel Assistant Sports Editor B. D. Mills Photographers Grover Smithwick, Jim Kirkland Phetographer Assistant George Hathaway Cartoonist Gale Hammond, Jay Arledge Subseription Director Melba Rhue Exchange Manager Selba Morris Proofreading Director Jane Ipock Columnists Marcelle Vogel, Patsy Elliott, Pat Farmer, Pat Harvey, Roy Martin, Jasper Jones, Jim Stingley, Kay MeLawhon, 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 en's Circulation Manager Carlyle Humphrey ZCES on the second floor of Wright Building. all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 964. EAST CAROLINIA a Aged Creep Away World Threatened Old Year Sees Expansion On EC Campus By Iil-Mannered In the midst of confusion, gaiety, and singers of Auld Lang Syne, the aged and mam bearing the name of 1960 crept away almost two weeks ago. He stole away under the black rain. But he lingered just long enough to talk with us a while and tell us that he’d seen many things happen to us. We'd grown! Expanded. And then he began to recount the things he remembered so well, as if they all happened in a single day. “You started big in January,” he “elected a new president, Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, to replace Dr. John D. Messick who had served you loyally and well. “After a fall colonization period, the eight local sororities were induct- ed into national organization in February. “About the same time ‘frat house fever’ caught on among the fraterni Purchase of the Lambda Chi Alpha house led the way for other purchases during the year “Oh, in March,” he chuckled,” a columnist’s attack on disturbances in Austin Building brought about a rul ing from the president that the mon- strous organ located in the auditor ium would be played using only 1 string or 1 flute stop through periods worn said, ties. IFC-Panhel lity and a success. ril and May were too and Jamborees for oecurrences than the inauguration of your This attracted many visi- VIPs to the campus and wed the result of much prepara Nations To Trade Teenage Citizens ou can't notable impressive president other tors and realize how wrong you re about other people until you see statement by a German ex in the United States one of the student guiding prin- 1 January Read “one of the vehind what rticle calls cable educational exper launched.” program or, more cor f prognams—this coun- rut 1300 teen-ager var. Similarly 50 nations will some ters from These “friendship am will spend some ten ay from home, studying in foreign iving in learning foreign customs and finding for schools foreign mes, ign friends. If past experience holds true, they vill return home with many of their preconceptions dnastieally altered and with appreciation of the prob lems of international misunderstand- ing and the rewards of international friendship. new The exchange programs are in the five private Field hands of agencies: the Americar Service, American Service Committee, Inter- national Christian Youth Exchange, National Catholie Welfare Confer- and the Michigan (Council of hes. These groups help screen I its, trying to select students who are intelligent, outgoing and adaptable—sin short, potential lea- ders. As far as possible, student tem- peraments are matched to those of the families who'll be their hosts dur- ing their Friends ence abroad, the program vary, but $1000 for the ten months For U.S. students going abroad grants are available; often they cover the entire cost. Job Opportunities Three representatives from the the Federal Government will be available Monday, January 16, from 1:00-5:00 in the afternoon in the Wright Auditorium to discuss with any interested student career op- portunities in the federal govern- ment. Mr. N. A. Avera, District Man- ager of Social Security Adminis- tration in Rocky Mount, and his as- sistants recruit not only for their division but for all divisions of the federal government. Avera will welcome the oppor- tunity to discuss government ca- reers with any student. “B. C.” Goes To College! THE FIRST CaMPus By PATSY ELLIOTT tion by the Inauguration Committee. “September brought you all to- gether again, even in greater num- ber. You experienced a record-break- ing enrollment with 554 students over last years total. Donna and Ken- nedy, both took the campus by storm, becoming experiences to remember. “In September, Katherine Salle became the first student to be en- rolled in EC’s newly established nursing program. Students noted a change from the registrar’s office in the gading system, from numerals to letters. “A great month for seniors with a 2 average . .. October was the when the Policies Committee granted these chosen ones unlimited cuts. n this time season the campus was adorned with the ‘black LITTLE MAN intly nude’ who graced the entrance of Rawl building. And sad it was to see her leave. : “Women students progressed in their desire for more freedom when in November, the requirement for women to have their date cards ap- proved was lifted. : “Registnation changes occurred in December when students began to register alphabetically. December was the month when an important step was taken by Sigma Sigma sorority with the purchase of the first soror- ity house at EC.” That’s all he had time to tell us for the new year anxiously hurried him on his journey. Hating to leave old friends and familiar places, and with a sad look of departure on his face he left to join his elders in the place that old years stay. ON CAMPUS © 3% A72 4B WAY, FREDA, YOU DIDN'T TELL ME YOU HAD A PATE WITH A FRATERNITY MANS“ Equality Efforts Mount (UPS) Efforts to end local discri- practices are mounting at mina colleges and universities across the country and new civil rights action roups continue to form. University of ‘Vexas students held demonstrations before five restaurants and the heater last week. More than e and Negro students dem- nstrated at the theater Friday and Saturday evening (Dec. 2 & 8). The students passed out cards prepared by the University Religious Council tating “I will continue to patronize this establishment if it is imtegrated,” in an effort to convince owners that they would not be economically hurt by integrating. Wilson College (Chambersburg, Pa.) student council approved a policy to boyeott the Penn-Wilson, a loaal restaurant as long as it practices ra- cial discrimination, and the faculty has authorized the appointment of a faculty committee on civil rights to work with the student government. Roosevelt University (Chicago) student senate voted last month to send letters protesting their civil rights policies to Governor Ernest Vandiver of Georgia and Mayor Wil- liam Hartsfield of Atlanta. Colleges United for Racial Equality (CURE) was formed in late October to coordinate New York area campus civil rights activities. Participating are students from Barnard, Colum- bia, New York University, Queens and City College of New York. Proj- eects include picketing at Woolworths and publishing a civil rights news- letter. The recently reactivated Human Relations Commission of the Univer- sity of Minnesota Student Associa- tion is studying University policies in various areas including admissions, scholarships, employment and hous- ing. The Commission also plans a campaign to bring campus discrimin- ation problems to the attention of the entire student body. The University of Wisconsin Stu- dent Council on Civil Rights and the Wisconsin Student Association Hu- peaceful non-integrated man Relations Commission are in- vestigating discriminatory problems in Madison. Over 70 students attended a con- ference in Ithaca, New York last week end (Dec. 2 & 3) sponsored by the Cornell Committee Against Segrega- tion designed to “educate, direct and strengthen students in the fight against segregation.” The Chicago Youth Committee on Civil Rights is planning a series of demonstrations to protest what they consider the Board of Education’s lack of concern over segregation in Chicago. In addition, the committee plans to testify at the board’s budget hearing. Notices Qualified persons interested in running for the editorship of the East Carolinian (term to begin spring quarter 1961) should sub- mit a letter of application to Dr. James H. Tucker, Chairman of the Publications board. The Huebner Foundation has re- cently announced a Program of fel- lowship and scholarship grants which are being made available to qualified college students this year. The grants are being made for advanced study in an insurance teaching career at the collegiate level. Interested students are asked to contact Dr. James H. Tucker. the Old Tumer @ “There’s nothing wrong with the younger generation that the older generation didn’t eutgrow.” Communist Leader By JIM STINGLEY, JR. . Twenty some years ago a pa man with an odd-looking mustache and a high, fanatic voice stood — a meeting place and screamed to his people and this troops, “Tonight we epnquer Poland! Tomorrow the “ rid!” a a short, fat, and ‘ill-man- nered little man may be saying, To- night we conquer Laos! Toes the World.” This man is Nikita Khra- chehev, leader of the communistic and undemocratic U.S.S.R. He’s the man who came to America with false emiles and scheming plans. He’s the cne who made a mockery of the high- important Summit Conference. _ if the course of events doesn’t ige quickly, he will be the one who leads the world into a war that can have only one end, that being almost total world destruction. One might say that this has no- thing to do with this college’s activities and that it is merely wasted space in this paper. If this were true, this writer would certainly dwell on an- other subject. The sad thing about it is that it is mot true. This campus has many students who are in the AFPROTC, the Marine Corps Reserve, The PLC, The National Guard, and the Army reserve. These students would be the first to go im case of an emergency. Those men eligible for the draft would follow in close suc- cession. These are al] students of ECC. They are concerned. What can we do to protect our na- tion from war? Perhaps pray, per- haps nothing, all we can do is wait, and hope, and pray. Wait, and hope, and pray that there won’t be another Pear! Harbor, another Hiroshima, or another Bataan. Do you know the cruelness and coldness of war? I don’t, but this campus’s library has some material that might help one to learn. Go there and check out the Marine Corps’ ac- counts of the Second World War in the Pacific. You'll see pictures of bodies, rea] bedies, American bodies, lying face down in the sand. There are pictures of hundreds of dead ci- vilians piled in ditches, of two-month- old babies left to die, and many more vivid and gruesome accounts of what happen there and what could hap- pen here in America. Soon our country will have a new man as its leader. May God guide and direct his may he be granted the necessary wisdom to help keep this world from war, and may he always find America supporting him. These are truly the times that try men’s souls. moves, Professor Cites “Art As Experience’ In Art Publication The December issue of the quarter- ly “Journal of Aesthetics and Art ‘Criticism” contains an article by Dr. Leon Jacobson, assistant professor of art here. The article is entitled, “Art as Experience and American Visual Art Today.” Dr. Jacobson contrasts John Dew- ey’s philosophy of art in his “Art as Experience,” published in 1984, with the nature of American visual art production in the post-war period, 1945-1952, The article demonstrates that the practical meaning of Dewey’s “Art as Experience” lies in its requirement that artists produce visual works of art containing at least some object depiction. Dr. Jacobson says that this msistence runs counter to the phil- osophy of art of American visual ar- tists, as revealed in the Massive non- objective art practice of that period, a pnactice which is still the dominant one in the United States. Because “Ant as Experience” is, by Dewey’s own avowal, the heart of his Philosophy, the article concludes with observations regarding Dewey’s phil- osophic point of view. College Commended Editor East Caroinian East Carolina College Greenville, North Carolina Dear Sir: May I use this medium to express qur sincere appreciation to those students and faculty members of East Carolina College who gave so gen- erously of their time and money in cooperating with our agency to help insure a happier Holiday Season for many persons who otherwise id have had a bi Such a spirit makes ‘our work much more pleasant throughout the re- mainder of the year, We wish all of you success and happiness in the future, Sincerely yours, J. 8. THURSDAY, JANUARY 12 yp Oddball Unappreciated Contentment Wins Out By ROY MARTIN During the holidays we were an alumnus of East Carolina, course of the conversation we lear teresting fact. According to this gentleman 1930’s there existed here on the cieties, devoted to thought. 1 were composed of students the names for these groups c of thought, such as Emerson, Much has been said ual life here. That subject time after time. However, sions end it is always upon a s body cares. We are cor little glass houses, liv wail at exam time, and grab our diplomas and ru in a majority of instances ig leaning more and more This campus needs to rey as the societies which existed But they cannot be be a service project for s¢ sorority, mor can th competitive basis. T formed by people who ar thing besides what t} their coming exam. Whe groups should shut out th campus life. They should con with their own thoughts, a of those around them, having : about their subjects of discussi Education does not come s printed pages of a textbook. education. We cannot says in a book as fact, We must question his ri Somebody hz 5 can be done about a phere for learning here. some of the finest your within its confines. T} be allowed to be stereoty society. East Carolina could as we have mentioned. for such activity as this, s is none here now. But - .. how many people wou because they were afraid might laugh at them and call t Joy’s The Word ‘An Afternoon In May’ By PAT FARMER After four years of frustrati aches, hangevers, and moments pleasure, there are those in our proudly wear the title of “college But, as with other rewards society being a senior carries a certain rest and privileges. Being a senior is restrictive in that one has to concentrate the major por f time on his studies—which he did n to do the preceding three years. Th air youth has to forfeit pleasurable act for interviews with his advisors, prospecti employers, and his roommate. But then with these restrictions comes the knowledge that he has reached a pi- nacle in his scholastic battle. He feels satis faction in the realization that he is i ly better equipped for the future friends who fell by the wayside. Joy grips him by the shoulder as he dreams of that afternoon in May when he will receive his diploma. And on certain afternoons in the late fall and early winter he is saddened by the thought of leaving the familiar, homey, sut- roundings of hig college campus and dormi- tory room. The youth is burdened by the unbearable knowledge that he wil] not only leave “his home away from home,” but wil also leave those tuwers of overwhelming in- tellect—his instructors. But then the world is bathed in the light of his golden smile 38 he realizes that these men have given him deeper insight into the problems of the world. And on life goes for the college senior. Saddened, with stooped shoulders, the youth resolves to spend the remaining months of his senior year in the company of his conl- rates—desperately seeking the last remaib- ing moments of collegiate brotherhood. Unmatched Generosity From the Nashville Banner Did you realize? The Federal Govern- ment’s cash intake since 1927 has multiplied 27 times and the public’s spendable income (after taxes) is only four times as great 08 it was 83 years ago. And while Washington was getting more and mare, state and local revenue—on 8 national basis— has risen but five times the Rvel of 1927, -_ —-, = page (B~ acon we “govern ourselves,” it is appallingly apparent we feel that the Federal Government cad spend our money more effectively than we can ourselves. FAST CAROLINIAN PAGE THREB Sa a Se ee 60 Witnesses Changing F ace Le t ary en’s dorms are built rhis was the » we We g range ex added Graham Building More classrooms One of two » dorms housing 520 male students lew South campus experienced architects The Infirmary Annex ... With room Mowe upace, witli modern facilities. North Cafeteria Setter equipped, comfortable, and a pleasing atmosphere. for 30 more sick students. Delta Zetas to sisters a Jane Chand Zeta Delta Zet established pus in Febr ority, Lamt Lambda Ch The Zeta of 129 colle mnae chapt tablished si ing in 1902 ford, Ohio. cludes 40,6 thers’ Clut the United Delta Ze another in to promote ture of its plans for } tion. High « IL lh Bo aie Ei os PAGE FOUR Teacher Addresses Browning Society Dr. Louise Greer, English professor here has accepted an invitation to ap- speaker April 8, before the Boston, Ma: Browning Society. She will dis s the story behind her book “Browning and America.” The Boston Browning Society was organized December 8, 1885, by a group of admirers of Robert Brown- ing and has met regularly since that time for study and discussion of the poet’s works. For 1960-1961, seventy-fifth anni- versary of the founding of the g0- ciety, programs have been scheduled, including addresses by such Brown- ing scholars as Dr. Greer and Dr. William C. DeVane, dean and pro- fessor of English at Yale University. Dr. Greer’s book “Browning and ’ published by the University th Carolina Press in 1952, has ed international recognition as contribution to Browning ip. It deals with the poet’s ips with many noted Amer- . the publication of his works America, his literary reputation country, and the influence of wning upon \American culture. TV Manager Urges New Ideas, Plans A. Hartwell Campbell, general man- r of television station WNCT, was the featured speaker t the December meeting of the East a Chapter of the Society for neement of Management. SAM is the recognized national onal organization of manage- ) industry, commerce, govern- nd education and the pioneer n nagement philosophy. The basis for a successful promo- Campbell said, is a seedbed s. These ideas come from dif- nt sourees, he explained, by en- ement in mental thought and by g together the obvious. Ideas, he continued, are like icebergs; they re larger than they appear and all ts cannot be seen. To be suc- cessful, he said, ideas must fill a need and stand the test of knowledge udgment. the ideas, a plan is the next promotion, he stated. A plan » put into operation takes time, e sold to all people concerned, es capital and organization, he pear eenville, e a successful promotion, Mr. concluded, the promoter t be concerned with its benefits s. A successful promoter can- » an individual who is primarily mnecerned only for himself. Campbell EAST CAROLINIAN —— a Ohio State Teacher) Executive Discuss Europe Offers Summer Courses To U. S. Students Four British and two Austrian sum- mer schools are offering special six- week courses to American undergrad- uate and graduate students in July and August, 1961, it was announced | by the Institute of International Edu- cation. Under the British University Sum- mer Schools program students can ap- ‘ply for study at one of four schools, each concentrating on a. particular subject and period. At Stratford- on-Avon ithe subject will be Eliza- bethan drama; at the University of London the course will be the study of English literature, art and music of the 17th and 18th centuries, using materials preserved in London’s buildings, galleries and records; at Oxford the subject will be English history, literature and the arts from 1870 to the present. The theme of the Edinburgh School will be the politi- eal and economic history, philosophy and literature of Britain from 1559 to 1789. Although the courses are designed for graduate students, un- dergraduates in their last two years at a university will be considered. The inclusive charge for board, resi- dence and tuition for six-weeks. at each of the four British summer} schools is L90 (approximately $254). A limited number of full and half scholarships are available to under-| graduates and graduates in this pro-| gram. | Both Austrian summer schools in-| clude in their program the opportun- | ity to attend performances at Salz- burg’s famed music festival. The Salzburg Summer School stresses the German language and requires that all students enroll in a language course. Other courses— foreign pol- icy, Austrian Literature, European music and history of Austrian art— will be taught in English. The fee for the entire six-week program, which includes registration fee, room, board, tuition, examination fees, several conducted tours, and three Salzburg Festival tickets, $225. A few full scholarships are available and a half- term program is offered for a fee of $135. Applicants for the Salzburg Summer School may be 18-40 years of Rev. Ottaway Plans Confirmation Classes Reverend Richard N. Ottaway,| Rector of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church and college chaplain, announced today | that a series of confirmation classes | ’* will soon begin. ‘Any student interested in being | confirmed or attending the classes, should contact Reverend Ottaway as soon as possible. A meeting time suitable te all par- ticipants will be arranged. | Collegiate Groups To Compete In 1961 Jazz Festival In April Two years ago jazz enthusiasts at Notre Dame initiated Collegiate Jazz Festival because they wanted to give college jazz a chance to be heard. It rose quickly from a regional Mid- Western jazz meet to a nation-wide flestival. CJF received enthusiastic response from college jazz musicians and fans, as well as the music indus- try as a whole. Now, as Collegiate Jazz Festival enters its third year, reports have it that it will be even bigger and better than in the past. Collegiate Jazz Festival 1961 will encompass a “New Dimension in College Jazz.” Notre Dame’s Jazz Festival Committee reports that next spring on the weekend of April 21- 22 fans will be treated to a “brand rew edition of competitive college jazz at Notre Dame.” Plans include more prizes, wider publicity, bigger audiences, and a new concept in pro- duction. Between 25 and 30 college groups trom all over the nation will compete for top honors and prizes in the Notre Dame fieldhouse. Instruments will be awarded to the winning soloists, with the best over-all soloist receiving a scholarship to the Berklee School of Music in Boston. The top big band and combo, in addition to special ar- rangements by the Berklee School faculty, will receive scholarships to the Stan Kenton Clinics of the Na- tional Stage Band Camp. The over-all champion group of the festival will take back to their campus for one year a huge loving cup donated by Associated Booking Corporation. Following CJF 1961 Capitol Rec- ords will release an LP recorded dur- ing the finals. Judges will be three renowned jazz musicians and two men closely associated with jazz. A chance to meet the judges will be given the musicians at one ofl the informal get-togethers during the festival. To further guarantee the success of ‘Collegiate Jasz Festival, such men as Stan Kenton, Duke Ellington, Steve Allen and Herman Kenin, plus many other notables, have agreed to act in an advisory capacity for CIF 1961. ag The deadline for applying to CJF 1961 is February 10, 1961. Groups wishing to apply should write for) application blanks and information to: Collegiate Jazz Festival 1961, Box 636, University of Notre Dame, No- tre Dame, Indiana. CJF gives college jazz musicians a unique opportunity to achieve pub- licity for themselves and their group. Last year the festival was covered by Time, Down Beat, Saturday Eve- ning Post, and Jazz Review. NBC’s Monitor broadcast portions of CJF nationwide. Plans this year promise to surpass even this, it is reported. The festival promises to be a worth- while undertaking for jazz musicians and fans alike. Already this year it has received enthuiastic response. ‘All in all Collegiate Jazz Festival, should be a great swing into spring. When washing windows, a little vinegar added to the water will give! them a brilliant polish. Interest on the national debt costs $1,084,400 an hour. Valentine Dance Wright Auditorium Saturday, Feb. 11 8:00-11:45 P. M. “Come and vote for the Valentine Queen of 1961” Music by the Collegians Combo Dress will be Semi-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 age and must have completed at least one year of college by June, 1961. The University of Vienna, offering summer courses at its St. Wolfgang Campus near Salzburg, combines study with outdoor life at a mountain | lake. Its aim is to enable English- speaking students to become acquaint- ed with Austrian educational and so- cial values. Courses being offered in- clude German language, liberal arts, law and political science, and physical education. General eligibility for ei- ther a three or six-week program is determined by at least two years of college study, but applicants for cer- tain courses must meet other specific prerequisites, The fee for the full six-week pro- gram, including tuition, maintenance, tours and excursions, and attendance ut the Salzburg Festival is $250, with an optional four-day trip to Vienna costing $30. A few scholarships cov- ering partial or full fees are avail- able. Applications for both the British and Austrian programs may be ob- tained from the Information and Counseling Division, Institute of In- ternational Education, 1 East 67th St., New York 21, New York, or from one of the Institute’s regional offices. British summer schogl scholarship ap- plications must be received before March 1, 1961, and admission appli- cations before March 31. Scholarship applications ‘for Austrian schools nust be returned by March 1, and admission applications by May 1. Jan. 12: Departmental Meetings Jan. 1 Movie: “House of Usher,” Vincent Price, Austin Aud., 7:00. Jan. 15: Senior Honor Recital: Luther Gillon, Clarinet, MeGinnis, 3:30. 16: Duplicate Bridge, College Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m. 19: College Union Meeting, 3rd floor room, Wright, Beginner’s Bridge Class, College Union TV Room, 7:00 p. m. Chess Tournament Play, Col- lege Union TV Room, 8:00 p.m. . 20: Movie: “Samson and Delilah,” Jan. Jan. soc p.m. Victor Mature, Austin Aud., 7:00 | p.m. Opera Workshop Perform- ance: “The Old Maid and The Thief,” McGinnis Aud., 8:15 p.m. APO White Ball, Wright Aud., 8:00 p.m. . 21: Basketball Game: ECC Pfieffer, Gym. 8:00 p.m. Opera Workshop Performance: “The Old Maid and The Thief,” Mc- Ginnis Aud., 3:15 p.m. 23: College Lecture Club, Lib. Aud., 4:00 p.m. College Fami Life Discussion Groups—Theme: “Marriage for Better or Worse”. Duplicate Bridge, College Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m. 24: College Family Life Discus- sion Groups--Theme: “Marriage for Better or Worse.” 25: Brass Choir Concert, Me- innis Aud., 8:00 p.m. » 2 College Union Student Board Meeting, 3rd floor social room, Wright, 6:30 p.m. Beginner's Bridge Class, College Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m. Chess Tourna- ment Play, College Union TV Room, 8:00 p.m. Delta Initiates Twelve E.C. girls were recently initiated into East Carolina’s Gamma Sigma Chapter of Kappa Delta Sor- rity, in ceremonies held at the first Presbyterian Church of Greenville. . A banquet honoring the initiates took place in the East Dining Ha!l on the college campus. Of special inter- est at the social event was the pres- entation to Sallie Ann Wallace, of a gift of silver recognizing her as the “Outstanding Pledge” of the group. Katherine Raynor of Greenville acted as president of the pledge class. Other new members of the Gamma Sigma Chapter of Kappa Delta are Mildred Elizabeth Derrick, Sylvia Kay Dawkins, Susan Roberts, Re- becea Narron, Dorothy Spence, Mary Hazel Moore, Elizabeth Rich, Judith Lambert, Frances Foster, and Mitzi K. Oden. Delicious Food Served 24 Hours Air Conditioned CAROLINA GRILL Corner W. 9th & Dickinson vs | Sketches Imaginary} E+ sncial Support College Professor From the Ohio State Lantern (Editors Note: This editorial was written by Charles Wheeler, assist- ant professor of English at Ohio State). Wynken, Blynken and Nod are the names I shall give to the three pro- fessors on this campus whose. por- tnaits are briefly sketched here. The men are fictitious but not imaginary. By a long-standing tacit agreement, every student who enrolls in one of Professor Wynken’s courses is spot- ted a “C” to begin with, and only in cases of flagrant absence or failure to turn in assigned written work is there any danger of a lower grade. “A's” and “B’s” are common. Pro- fessor Wynken is not a fool: he knows that his students, by and large, are nothing to get excited about, but he is a kindly man who believes in live- and-let-live. He is also a great sports fan and is unsparing in his criticism ; of sloppy playing on the football) field. Luckily for his peace of mind, our athletic department enforces the highest standards of performance. ‘Professor Blynken is not the drool- ing petty sadist portrayed in “Little Man on Campus,” but he manages to harass his students quite effectively by simply being obtuse to their feel- ings. He never stops to make sure that his assignments have been un- | derstood after he gives them. When| he lectures, he goes so rapidly that note-takers are left hopelessly be- hind, and when he holds a class dis- | cussion it usually turns out to be a} tete-+a-tete between himself and some favored student. He adheres to his} | office hours so literally that he is | | almost inaccessible. Though he in- ‘sists that papers be turned in on| {time, he never returns them when he| j;promised. He habitually comes into | class late and then holds it with his | glittering eye until 30 seconds before e final bell for the next hour. He a very prominent man in his field. Professor Nod is not a boring lec- | turer, droning over dog-eared lecture | notes compiled twenty years ago. His | method is entirely different. It may be called “teaching the text,” that is| sitting in front of the class and re-| | citing the text out loud, with interpo- | | lated comments, while the students slump, numb and disgusted, working | n their arithmetic under pretense of | reading the Lantern. He never as- signs papers that require more than | a sentence or two of consecutive ori- | ginal writing, and the papers are re- {turned bearing gnades but no marks | or comments on their faults. He will pass illiterate writing if the techni- cal content is satisfactory. He is very | fond of multiple choice tests, though | now and then he will extend himself |by giving a short-answer test to see how well the students have memor- |ized “facts” (a word that he would never dream of putting in quotation | marks). He believes that his courses are intellectually demanding. These men are faculty failures. | They are not localized in any one de- partment or college—they can be | found all over the campus. Perhaps we faculty members might turn, for ja change, from criticizing the short- |comings of our students to consider- ing how far short we fall of meet- ing the challenge that they present. This challenge is not only in their numbers: it is in their seriousness, their receptivity, their candor, it is in their woeful inexperience, their confused aims, their clumsiness at abstract best in us. We cannot suc- ceed with less. | To see how paint will look when on, brush a stroke or two on a white |tutions to junior and senior students, ink blotter. Some women never give a name... just a phone number! BUtterfield 8 M-G-M Presents John O'Hara's Best-Seller “The support of higher education | by business and industry is no longer an option but a necessity,” accord- ing to the chief executive of the na- tion’s largest textile company. : Spencer Love, Chairman and Presi- dent of Burlington Industries, makes the statement in his foreward to a new brochure, “A Program for Aid to Education,” just published by the Burlington Industries Foundation. The booklet outlines a comprehensive | program for financial support of higher education sponsored by the Foundation. : “The direction our civilization will | take is dependent upon the ability of | our educational institutions to train young men and women for their re- sponsibilities as tomorrow’s leaders,” | Mr. Love states. “If we are to con-; tinue to press the attack on poverty, | ignorance and disease, we must use all available means to improve our! educational processes.” The Burlington Industries Founda- tion, established in 1948, set forth a formal Aid to Education program in| 1955. It has now been expanded to inelude eight major phases: 1. Matched Employee Giving—Gifts of employees nd directors to educa- tional institutions are matched up to $2,500 per person per year. 2. Educational Loans—Over 1,000 burlington employees and their chil- dren have received Foundation loans to assist them in obtaining a higher education. 3. Matched Tuitiom—Unirestricted grants are made each year to the schools selected by Burlington Educa- | tional Loan Fund students. These grants are equal to the tuition fees, but do not exceed $500 per student. 4. Scholarships — Scholarships of $1,000 each are awarded by 16 insti- payable $500 annually. The 16 col-j leges and universities are located in eight states: North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Geor- gia, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Alabama. Other scholarships are SMITHS MOTEL 45 Air Conditioned Rooms Room Phones - T. V. SWIMMING POOL Phone PLaza 8-1126 Parents and Guest of College Students Weleome Starts Friday JERRY LEWIS ‘CINDERFELLA’ (IN TECHNICOLOR) Co-Starring Anna Maria Alberghetti ADMISSION Adults High School and College Students eben aay 60¢ Children under 12 20¢ STATE Theatre Phone PL 2-7649 (Watch For Big Con- test To Start Soon) See in CinemaScope and METROCOLOR - Watch for itt Starring : ELIZABETH TAYLOR Eddie Fisher - Laurence Harvey Starts FRIDAY Jan. 13 At The PITT Theatre | ticipate in the carnival which is spon- | |Commission In i including i jalized fields, inciue’ eS ae istration and nursing. Scholarship Grante— rd unrest i identical scholarships also receive an ide amount to use a8 they wish. — 6. Fellowships — J- See . Fellowships are made ae ge .* the Harvard Graduate School o: ~~ ness Administration to ee Boe from Southeastern educational i tutions. a! Professorships—Several Burling- | THURSDAY, JANUARY 1 yp es Program For Of Education ton professorships lished ministration, textiles anc in the field romics. 8. Direct Grants— to assist to f a field of s Burlingt neled m educ WSS egty) lished. CU Begins Work On MardiG The College Union’s Annual Spring Carnival is being changed this — to the Mardi Gras Carnival and will be held on Thursday, February 14, 1961 in the College Union Lounge. ee Ag in past years, all campus clubs | and organizations are invited to par-) sored by the Special Projects Com- mittee of the C.U. Student Board. The carnival is planned to provide entertainment for the students, fac- ulty, staff and families, and to help organizations on campus earn some extra money and good publicity. Organizations which are interested in \participating in the carnival, are asked to send a representative to the | general organizational meeting Thurs- day, January 12, in the ‘College Union TV Room at 8:30 p.m. At this time, instructions, entry fees and regula- tions will be discussed, and organi- zations may apply for booth space. Since booth space is limited, it will) not be reserved unti] the entry fee of! (Author of “I Was — ras Carnival $3.00 for ize-giving activities paid. ties reserve s fee. Spaces v t come first |Graduate Receives Marine Haywood T. Pa Sealine udent, w Second upon gf Officers ( rine Corps ginia. He tricia Washington, N( a Teen-age Du Loves of Dobie Gillis”, Well sir, here we are in 1961, which quite a distinguished year. First off, 1951 which begins and ends with the I it comes to Figure 1’s, 1961, though compare with 1911, which, most people : but three Figure 1’s! This, I'll wager, is a recorc for at least two hundred years! 1911 was, incidentally, notal was, for example, the year in whi the Philadelphia Athleties in the World Series. A. le for many other thing h the New York Gia we ¢ the New York Giants have since moved to Ss the Philadelphia Athletics to Kansas City. There afoot at present to move Chicago to Phoenix—the baseball team. Phoenix, in turn, would of course Chicago. It is felt that the change would be broa: residents of both cities. Many Chicago folks, for examy le, have never seen an iguana. Many Phoenix folks, on the other hand have never a frostbite. There are, of course, certain difficulties : shift of this size. For instance, to move C tending a ago you s to move Lake Michigan. This, in itself, presents no gre lem, what with modern scientific advances like electron the French cuff. But if you will look at your map, you ' that Lake Michigan is connected to all the other Gr y which in turn are connected to the St. Lawrence Seaway, wiuch 3 3 ak Fe Pn : = WHOUE TOY ALE sn : y at Brighton Brighton Beach there wasn’t snner tube and snorkel and Walk. ! Vy any ocean? There you'd be ith yo a nothing to do all day but dance the This, you may be sure, would not make you Chicagoans, Phoenicians —is it too big a price to pay the unity of the hearts you free world? I am sure that if THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1963 ee Stages Party EC Organizations Complete Projects For Needy Children Rast Carolina’s social sororities have car- past month aking Christmas needy children and the Nu the Welfare De- ected about 300 bution to needy nity joined staging children. gma 1 with r distr ate also Army in privileged project | ranged to provide food, clothing, and sorority and the fraternity n’s pe Grad To Address Club ne economist ic and Power will speak at nomics students will her in discuss offered home eco- nities f service te together bers of t. It Home Eco- economics and other Young Dem’s Plan Dance, Reception For Inauguration ecial pa- e been nged dur- eriod for Democratic ond arra Jacob- Democrats nce from 9 . to ary 18 in the Grand Mayflower hotel in rogram is] z quartet. President- fon nd Mrs. Ken-| t-elect Lyndon Johnson to at- preceded by a reception in tke f the Mayflower ho- to 9 p.m. being ocrats mailed to throughout ing tickets to the and special Young or the Inaugural y 20 for $10 per per- ] tickets to the dance n will go on public sale. EC Students Hear State Professor Kelman, professor of gy at North Carolina Raleigh, was guest » yesterday for a series ectures. ss to the Student Science on “The In- Disease on Human was McGinnis auditorium at man will speak to the nartmental Meeting on of Chance in Biological urticipant in the visiting program of the American f Biological Sciences, Dr. visiting East Carolina sonsorship of the Student ub. While on the campus, t several biology classes it informal talks. Kelman received his B. S. de- the University of Rhode 1941. At North Carolina ate College, Raleigh, he received M.S. degree in 1946, and the Ph.D degree in 1949. His major field f research is bacterial diseases of lants A member of the Sigma Xi, Phi a Phi, and the Phi Sigma fra- ternities, he is also a member of the Society of (American Bacteriologists, the Society for General Micro-biology and the American Phytopathological at Grover Smithwick, president of = Student Seience Chub, extends cece vitation to any interested pers who wish to attend tonight's m' ‘A fraternity, | clothing, and 2 al also en-| benefi ty. Jean | project at a party. | June c Lasater, Betty H. Lane, and Sue C Sparkman were in charge of pur- chasing presents for guests. Members of the Delta Zeta so- rority carried out for the third con- secutive year a project providing food, : ifts for a needy family in Greenville. Julia A. Moser, chair- man, Sallie A, and Sylvia Ar Hoyle composed the committee *n arrangements for the sorority. Instead of exchanging gifts with each other, Alpha Phi Morris, sisters ar- children’s toys for a family of five in Greenville and to entertain the jaries of their Christmas Nu Fraternity Displays Gifts. Opportunities Open For Summer Jobs lable for stu- Jents who want to be of service dur- ing the coming summer months are numerous, according to Dwight Ficklin, Director ef the Baptist Stu- dent Union. Most jobs are truly service ones; ut a few pay enough to enable stu- nts to save for next Opportunities a some money plained. Listen, the North Caro- Student Union Mission one student, preferably a be sent to Alaska to work 10-August 20. Another student be sent to Illinois to work un- ter the direction of the Home Mis- Board. A man student will be to participate in a European work camp, and, if this student can find other than Listen funds, a student r e will also be sent to Ghana, West Africa. There will be no remuneration for any of these jobs. Applications must be in by January 25. 800 student summer missionaries will be appointed by the Home Mis- sion Board to serve for ten weeks. They will serve in various areas of the United States, working with dif- ferent language and macial groups. Remuneration for this work is $250 for the ten week period, and, in most exses, room and board. Applications must be in by February 1. In this state students may serve on one of the Youth Evangelism Teams. Lach team is composed of four mem- bers. and girls may fill any of the positions except that of preacher. Teams, which may work a week in one church, four days in another, a weekend in a third, or help still an- other with a youth retreat over a weekend, are composed of a preacher, a music director, a coordinator, and a recreation leader. Applications for this work must be in by March 20. Also in this state, students may work with a local church, in Vacation Rible School, and as @ ants to Associational missionaries. Applica- tions for these, accompanied by a 2 in. No. 2 gloss print, must reach the Student Department office in Raleigh by February 20. They will be featured in an issue of the Bibli- cal Recorder so that interested pas- tors may contact the students. Those students desiring to work on the staff of the assemblies at Ridgecrest at Glorieta, Caswell or Fruitland, or with the Sunday School or Training Union Departments should write di- rectly to the person in charge. rough Baptist gram, an, will sion sent Club Elects Officers James Ballance was recently elected president of the E/C. English Club, an organization of students who are majors or minors in English. ; Mr. Ballance is an English major and a social studies minor. He is a member of Phi Sigma Pi, honorary fraternity for men in education, and on the staff of WWWS, campus radio. His name has appeared a number of times on tie Dean’s List of Superior ents. ye officers elected are: Cherry Futreal, _ vice president; Jeannette New, secretary-treasurer; and Sylvia voice EAST CAROLINIAN Soprano Performs | In Recital Here Mary soprano garded by top critics and managers as one of the brightest discoveries of the decade, appeared in a recital here, Monday night in the Wright audi- torium. The program was ineluded on the 1960-61 College Entertainment Series. Triumphs in London and with the San Francisco Opera during the past two seasons led to Miss Costa’s sign- ing to a $250,000 contract by im- presario S. Hurok and to appearances lust Spring on such top television programs as Dinah Shore Chevy Show and the Frank Sinatra Show. This fall Miss Costa returned to the San Francisco Opera to sing such roles as. Violetta in “La Tra- viata,” Micaela in “Carmen” and Despina in “Cosi Fan Tutte. In Lon- jon her performances in Leonard Bernstein’s “Candide” and with the Glyndebourne Opera Festival ated a sensation. Born in Knoxville, Tennessee, and educated in Southern California, Miss Costa is married to Hollywood pro- Costa, artist re- cre- f] ducer-writer Frank Tashlin. She first Won prominence when she was chosen by Walt Disney to sing and speak the of ‘The Sleeping Beauty” in recent f'eaturedength cartoon. Jack Benny encouraged her to study seriously for opera singer to an aria the introduced television audi- from “Madame and her as a ences in Butterfly.” IIE Offers Graduate Study | Awards In Poland, Rumania Fellowships for graduate study in Rumanian and Polish universities are being offered to American students for the aaademic year 1961-62, it was announced by the Institute of Inter- national Edueation. Applications must be filed by January 15, 1961. The Rumanian and Polish govern- ments have offered the fellowships part of exchange arrangements with the United States, and included are tuition and monthly stipends for living expenses. The Polish govern- ment will also offer living aceommo- dations on the university campuses and medical care to those who are eranted scholarships for study in that country. The U.S.—Rumania arrangement supplements the awards with tnavel vrants, offered by the U.S. Govern- ment, and covering the costs of round travel, 25 lbs. excess baggage and an allowance for several days of pre-departure orientation activities in, Washington, D.C. Similar grants will be made for several recipients of Polish fellowships who have at least a Master’s degree. Administered by the IIE, the a- wards are open to both men and wom- en, in any field of study. Candidates must be at least 21 years old, U.S. citizens, and must have the necessary knowledge of the country’s language. While married persons may apply, no funds will be available for depend- ents’ support. Applicants for the Rumanian schol- Students Release Science Journal The first issue of “The East Caro- lina College Science Journal” for the current school year has just appear- ed as trip The publication, sponsored by the student Science Club and the college chapter of Chi Beta Phi, national hon- orary science fraternity, is now being distributed to students, faculty mem- bers, and alumni of the science de- partment, and to other interested peo- ple. Barbara Manning acted as chair- man of the committee in charge of preparing the journal for publication. Nine other students who worked with Miss Manning and Dr. Robert Haubrich, faculty representative, on the committee are Dirk S. Dixon, president of Chi Beta Phi; Grover Smithwick, president of the Science Club; {Rebecca Hill; Phyllis Dudley; JoAnn Parks; Carolyn Pierce; Mari- lyn Buck; Donald Wilson; and Fred Johns. The current issue of the journal is a 19-page mimeographed publica- tion. Contents include materials by both students and faeulty members arranged under the headings Scien- tific Thought, The Science Depart- ment, Research, and Book Reviews. News of activities of the Science Club and Chi Beta Phi and of alumni mem- bers of the science department is also among contents of the publication. New York plants preduce 92 per cent of all the fur costs made in the US. “Living in the past has one thing in its favor. It's cheaper.”—Grit, Public Schools Receive Benefit Campus Testing Center Expands Service The Testing Center at East Carolina , College is being expanded and serv-| ices to Eastern North Carolina are being improved. Dr. Frank A. Scott, director of the Testing Center, states that by next year students from the eastern part of the state will no longer have to travel as far as Raleigh or Chapel Hill to take special examinations required for graduate studies and fellowship grants. Public schools will be benefited, he stated, as they will now be able to obtain scoring services from the col- lege for those tests using IBM ma- ehine scoring answer sheets. The testing services performed by the testing center are varied. The center will administer the college en- EC Band Participates The East Carolina Marching Band represented the college on Thursday | in the Inaugural Parade in Raleigh. The parade, in honor of the new governor of N.C., was 92 units long. There were 29 high school and col- lege bands in the parade, and 63 military units. Said Herbert Carter, director of bands at EC, “This is one of: the most successful parades we have ever \played.. We received many fine com- ments and appreciate every one of them.” He added, “We are certainly proud of the band.” arships should have at least one year Bavhe- lor’s degree is required of candidates of graduate training, and a for the Polish awards. Application forms may be obtained | from the Iuastitute of International Education, 1 East 67 St., New York 21, N.Y., or from one of the Insti- tute’s Regional Offices. U.S. student exchange programs with Rumania and Poland opened with the current academic year. Young people from both countries | are now studying in the United States | and American students are in Ru-| | officers: manian universities for the first time. trance examinations of the Education- al Testing Service and those of the American College Testing Program. The Graduate Record Eramination and the Miller Analogy Test, which are required for admission to many graduate schools and for fellowship grants, will also be administered at the center. Until the present time eastern North Carolina college stu- dents had to travel to Raleigh, Chapel Hill or Richmond, Va., in order to take these tests. ‘Also the high schoo] equivalent examination and the merit examina- tions of neighboring states are given at the center on request as an added function of the center. Public Schools will be benefited by the test scoring services, Dr. Scott said. The sehools in eastern North ‘Carolina now have to send their test answer sheets to Chapel Hill or out of the State in order for them to be machine scored. Through a local serv- ice of this type, it is hoped that the schools will be benefited in terms of time and economy. Committee Sets Conference For ‘Dating, Engagement, Marriage’ The East Carolina administration and the Faculty Committee on Family Life will sponsor a college conference of “Dating, Engagement and Mar- wiage” here January 23 and 24. The two day conference has as its theme Marriage ... for better or Worse and will include speeches and informal talks by Mrs. Ethel Nash, Family Life Specialist from the De- partment of Preventative Medicine Bl field. Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity selects Sherrill Norman (pictured above), President; Jerry Wilkins, Vice-President; Keith Hobbs, Secre- tary; James Loftin, House Manager; Aan } thusiastic at Bowman Gray School of Medicine. Also on the agenda for the con- ference are individual consultations and conferences as well as programs held in conjunction with campus re- ligious organizations. Plans for the conference are not complete this week, but Publicity Di- rector, Mr. Francis Pyne, announced earlier this week that a complete schedule should be ready in a few He commented, “Mrs. Nash is outstanding \personality in her We are looking forward to en- support and representa- tion. It will be a good opportunity for the students to meet with her in- formally to diseuss their individual problems. That will be one of the important parts of the pro- gram.” days. most Two Coeds Attend Business Convention Two EC students, Mary Elizabeth Massad and Betty Ann Brown, rep- resented the Beta Kappa Chapter of Pi Omega Pi at the national conven- tion in Chicago, December 27-29. Pi Omega Pi is a national honor- iry business education fraternity for those are outstanding scholarship and leadership. While in Chicago, the two coeds attended the National Business Tea- chers convention, where they had op- students who Bobby Edwards, Treasurer; John Cut-} portunities to talk with leading edu- ler, Sergeant-at-Arms; Tanner, Historian. and Blarney!cators and authors in the field of business education. PAGE FIVE Magazine Features Former Student On Recent Cover Nancy Harris, EC student who is studying this year in France on g Rotary International scholarship is cover girl on the current issue of “The ‘Adelphean,” quarterly publica- tion of the Alpha Delta Pi social sorority. She is a member of the | Delta Omicron chapter of the national | organiation. Miss Harris, according to an arti- {cle in the magazine on her back- ground and program abroad, “this year has the challenging task of ex- plaining the United States to the French — in French.” She is now studying at the Uni- versity of Grenoble in the foothills of the Alps in Southern France. Her chief areas of study, “The Adelphean” states, are French and European civilization. “She will net take examinations, nor be a degree student,” the article continues. “Chief purpose of her $2700 grant is to gain understanding of the social and eco- roemie way of living in France, and demonstrate the American way of life to the people in the Grenoble area.” At Grenoble Miss Harris is living in the home of a French family and is making frequent appearances as speaker at Rotary Club meetings. She received the master’s degree last May at East Carolina. During her college years here she acted as religious education director for the Eighth Street Christian Church. Last year she represented the college at the National Y.W.CiA. Conference at Urbana, Ill. Initiates Honored The Delta Alpha Chapter of Alpha Phi Sorority initiated thirteen women students Saturday, at the Memorial Baptist Church in Greenville. After the initiation a banquet honoring the new members was given at the Cinderella Restaurant. The Delta Alpha Chapter was pledged at East Carolina November 21, 1959. The oldest covered bridge still standing is at Lucerne, Switzerland Jt was built in 1838. ‘Dr: FRooD 'S SPEECHIESS! MAKE MONEY! Dr. Frood is unable to answer letter from perplexed student. Your help needed. Lucky Strike will pay $200 for best reply to this letter: Dear Dr. Frood: How can a man such as yourself be so wrong so often, so stupid so consistently and yet,at the same time, have the intelligence, good sense and outstanding good taste to smoke, enjoy and recommend the world's finest cigarette--Lucky Strike? Perplexed “CIGARETTE If you were Dr. Frood, how would you answer this letter? Send us your answer in 50 words or leas, Try to think as Frood thinks, feel as Frood feels. For instance, his answer might be “HAVEN’T YOU EVER HEARD OF SCHIZOPHRENIA?” You can do better. All entries will be judged on the basis of humor, originality and style (it should be Froodian). Lucky Strike, the regular cigarette college students prefer, will pay $200 to the student who, in the opinion of our judges, sends the best answer to the letter above. All entries must be post- s address, college or university and class. marked no later than March 1, 1961. Lean back, light up a Lucky and THINK FROOD. Mail your letter to Lucky Strike, P.O. Box 15F, Mount Vernon 10, New York. Enclose name, Zetas isters a le Chand United Delta Ze ther in promote le of its Ins for . High hip, pt tie el PAGE FOUR SPUR. TA REVIEW By RICHARD BOYD OOS 1S SS 1 a pecan en eee enema Cage Pirates Have Peculiar Past Now that the holidays are behind us we can look in to the past which seemed to be a peculiar one for East Carolina’s Pirates. The Bue five showed outstanding capabilities during the pre-Christmas campaign on some occasions, but the talented crew were as cold as the December weather during several of these contests. The narrow escape at Pfeiffer and the ragged play during the High Point contest were indications that the Pirates needed improvement on their floor game. on the optimistic side of the fence, the Lenoir Rhyne t was an example of a championship team being processed by coach Smith. Brilliant shooting, marvelous passing, excellent teamwork, eat determination aided the thumping of a favored Bear quint he contest. Don Smith poured 33 points through the hoops during However, Earl and prior the Lenoir Rhyne Could Be Tough Next Time These games have been an indication of the type of team most ob- rs feel that the Pirates will have during future contests. The team should be a problem for the Bues. Lenoir Rhyne’s Bears will invaded by East Carolina five night, and the Pirates will be seeking to repeat their previous showing against the Hickory school. However, on the other hand the home team should really be “up” e league encounter. Lenoir Rhyne is a team capable of beating some > teams in the “big time” bracket on a given night, although the Bears failed to impress even the narrow-minded observer during the Greenville encounter with the Buc five. next Saturday the Pirates Come Home The Pirates return next Saturday night against troublesome Pfeif- youngest entry in North State However, the Bucs can emember how the home team almost upset the highly touted Pinates during engagement. Pfeiffer upset Atlantic Christian on the latter's last week so Coach Earl Smith will net be taking the game fer, the circles. North Carolina Demonstrates Powerful Basketball Teams Switching to statewide basketball, we find some of the better teams country here in the state of North Carolina. The Big Four con- tinues year after year to give national recognition to this state on the Winter court. Probably the top small college in the state is Belmount Abbey a team who lost to third ranked St. Bonaventure of New York by only three points last week. The New York college is ranked above Carolina and Duke, and lost only by one point to Ohio State in their holiday tour- lament at Madison Square Garden by a margin. This is an indication xf the Belmount Abbey potential. The North Carolina school is th Jast Carolina schedule, but would it not be nice to see this small state not on wer in action in Greenville? The Citadel On The Move Speaking of strong teams, the same Citadel team who trimmed the ites 99-83 in Charleston during December are one of the teams to beat South Conference competition. A victory over West Virginia has the many accomplishments that has been flulfilled by Coach Mel. Thompson’s Cadets. Speight and Bass Honored the scene at this late date. Two great tars have been honored lately. Glenn Bass the 1960 star the outstanding small college back during the December Bowl at Tuesor Arizona. Second Lieutenant James eat star for the Pirates through 1959 was recently honored n, D.C. as the outstanding service football player of 1960. been one of Football is still on sports Carolin 1onored All-American Innemural Mishappening fortunate accident recently occurred in an intramural volleyball} Smith, a Sophomore physical education crutches due to falling and suffering torn ligaments hope that Charley’s leg heals and he returns to activity in} competition. have been very flew accidents of this nature during year, and a well-rounded prognam continues to exist under ction of faculty director Wendell Car and student director Ray Mozingo. major is now in his the INDEPENDENT BAS! DOUBLE STBALL ELIMINATION SCHEDULE Country Gentlemen vs. Goof Offs—Jan. 4—8:00 P. M. 2—Seotts vs. Winner Game No, 1—Jan. 11--7:00 P. M. Game Wyatt Earps vs. Raiders—Jan. 11—7:00 P. Game 4—Penn-Del-Mars vs. Day Student Five—Jan. 11—8:00 P. M. ROTC ve Almost Stars—Jan. 16—9:00 P. M. Loser Game No. 1 vs. Loser Game No. 3—Jan. 16—10:00 P. M. 7—Loser Game No. 4 vs. Loser Game No. 5—Jan. 18—9:00 P. M. » 8—Winner Game No. 6 vs. Loser Game No. 2—Jan. 18—9:00 P. M. >» 9—Winner Game No. 2 vs. Winner Game No. 3—Jan. 28—8:00 P. M. > 10--Winner Game No. 4 vs. Winner Game No. 5—Jan. 23—8:00 P. M. 11—Winner Game No. 7 vs. Loser Game No. 9—Jan. 25—9:00 P. M. e 12—Winner Game No. 8 vs. Loser Game No. 10—Jan. 25—9:00 P. M. Game 13—-Winner Game No. 9 vs. Winner Game No. 10—Feb. 1—7:00 P.M. Game 14—Winner Game No. 11 vs. Winner Game No. 12—Feb. 1—7:00 P.M. | Game 15-4Winner Game No. 14 vs. Loser Game No. 13—Feb. 1—9:00 P. M. e 16—{Winner Game No. 15 vs. Winner Game No. 18—Feb. 6—7:00 P.M. » 17—-Winner Game 16 vs. Loser Game No. 16—Feb. 6—9:00 P. M. would oceur only if the winner of game No. 15 should win game No. 16 The first and second place teams in this league will participate in the ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENT starting Feb. 8, 1961. LEAGUE TOURNAMENT Game 1 Game 5- Game 6 JONES DORM BASKETBALL LEAGUE DOUBLE ELIMINATION TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE 3rd Fl. West Wing vs. 1st Fl. East Wing—Jan. 4—9:00 P. 2nd Fl. West Wing vs. 3rd Fl. East Wing—Jan. 11—8:00 P. 2nd Fl. East Wing vs. Winner Game No. 1—Jan. 11—9:00 44th Fl. West Wing vs. Winner Game No. 2—Jan. 16—9:20 5-Loser Game No. 1 vs. Loser Game No. 4—Jan. 18—7:00 P. 6—Loser Game No. 2 vs. Loser Game No. 3—Jan 18.—10:00 M 7—Winner Game No. 3 vs. Winner Game No. 4—Jan. 23—7:00 M M M Game 1- . Game 2 + Game 3 .M . M M. lg 2. Game Game Game Game Game 8—Loser Game No. 5 vs. Loser Game No. 6—Jan. 26—7:00 P. M. 9—Loser Game No. 7 vs. Winner Game No. 8—Feb. 1—10:00 10—iWinner Game No. 7 vs. Winner Game No. 9—Feb. 6—8:00 “Game 11—Winner Game 10 vs. Loser Game No. 10—Feb. 6—10:00 P. M. *This would occur only if the winner of game No. 7 should lose game No. 10 The first and second place teams in this league will participate in the ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENT starting Feb. 8, 1961 Game De PR. Game NEW DORM BASKETBALL LEAGUE DOUBLE ELIMINATION TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE 1—1st Fl. East Wing vs. 4th Fl. East Wing—Jan. 4—B8:00 P. M. 2—2nd Fl. East Wing vs. 4th Fl. West Wing—Jan. 4—9:00 P. M. 3—2nd Fl. West Wing vs. Winner Game No. 1—Jan. 11—10:00 P.M. 4—Srd Fl. West Wing vs. Winner Game No. 2—Jan. 16—7:00 P. M. 5— Loser Game No. 1 vs. Loser Game No. 4—Jan 16—8:00 P. M. 6—Loser Game No. 2 vs. Loser Game No. 3—Jan. 18—7:00 P. M. 7—Winner Game No. 8 vs. Winner Game No. 4—Jan. 23—7:00 P. M. Game 8—Winner Game No. 5 vs. Winner Ganie No. 6—Jan. 23—10:00 P. M. Game 9—Loser Game No. 7 vs. Winner Game No. 8—Jan. 25—7:00 P. M. Game 10—Winner Game No. 7 vs. Winner Game No. 9—Feb. 1—8:00 P.M. *“Game 11—Winner Game No. 10 vs. Loser Game No. 10—Feb. 6—8:00 P.M. Game Game Game Game Game Game Game *This would occur only if the winner of game No. 7 should lose game No. 10 The first and second place teams in this league will participate in the ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENT starting Feb. 8, 1961 E AST Pirates Travel To LR Saturday Coach Earl Smith’s talented Pirate crew has five home games, and five away contest left during the regu- lar 1960-61 campaign. Led by Cap- tain Don Smith and Cotton Clayton the Bucs take to the road Saturday night. Lenior Rhyne’s pesky Bears should offer the Pirates stiff opposition in the .Hickory battle. fast reuted the hot and during their last meeting in Green- ville. However, will be “up” for this encounter and possess a powerful five on a given night. High scoring Don Smith and Lacy West will probably start at their for- for the Bucs, either vangy Ben Bowers or huskie Bill Otte will get the call from Coach Earl Smith at the pivot slot, while men Cotton Clayton and Lewis will be likely starters the Bears ward positions outside Charley at the two guard post WC Maybe Rough Western opposes the Pi- rates in the former’s gym on Janu- 16. The not as ayed the Catamounts this Coach Earl Smith is expected to ave his hands full. Four Game Homestand ECC returns home next Saturday night with engagement with Pfeiffer College. This open a four game homestand the Bue five. The Pfeiffer contest will be fol- luwed by Western Carolina’s Cata- mounts, Appa i At- lantic Christian. Pfeiffer Stronger Earl Smith’s charges squeezed out a victory over Pfeiffer on the December. Carolina Bues have yet season, an will for » and Coach court early in The latter team has been getting stronger as the season prog- and could give Don Smith, Cotton Clayton and Company a run for their money. Large Crowd Anticipated Three tough contests follow the Pfeiffer encounter. Atlantic Chris- tian is the traditional which lly brings the largest crowd to Buc 1. The Wilson school strong outfit this sea- should be an interesting losers home resses, game possesses son, and it contest. Pirates Out For Revenge Of course, the Pirates will be out for revenge in the Appalachain con- t The Apps d ated the Bucs at the foul circle in the Boone contest. the Pirate five story when the However, expects a ferent opposition talented Ea january poses Carolina five on 30 in Memorial Gym- nasium Elon Last Home Game the final game aga Atlantic fans will only the Bucs one more Following of this Chris- get a in action contest. Elon on February 11, real thriller. Pre- the meet 1omestand tian Pirate chance to see for comes to Greenville in what should be « the Christian invasion, Pirates travel to Salisbury to at home vious to the Indians of Cawtaba, and follow-{ ing the Elon contest end the regular 1960-61 with engagements at High Atlantic Chris- tian. campaign Point and Table Tennis The Carolina College Union is one of the few college unions that operates its table tennis facilities without addition- al charge to the players. Many similar organizations on college campuses charge a fee for the use of the tables and sell the balls. East Recently an alarming number of rackets have been broken by players. In addition to the cost of rackets to replace these brok- en ones, the very expensive tables are being ruined by players whe insist on making a publie display of being unable to control them- selves and beat the racket on the table, causing gashes in the tables. This damage cannot be repaired. The College Union is asking the cooperation of all table ten- nis players to eliminate this type of behavior. Please do not abuse the equipment. A_ disciplinary rule will be forced into effect, if the current condition is not improved. COLLEGE UNION GAMES COMMITTEE “They certainly de get healthy in there, don’t they pardnec?” Carolina cold LR quint CAPTAIN DON SMITH is currently the leading Pirate scorer and re- bounder through the Guilford contest. Don is a three year letterman from Portsmouth,-Virginia, and has been one of the leading factors in the Buc’s strong bid for the North State crown. Bucs Nip Elon On Otte’s Basket ahaa = SEINE THURSDAY, JANUARY CAROLINIAN ee "Glenn Bass Outstanding In Bow! Ga, star half-back Glenn * 4 Carolina East the watchful eyes arred over abundance Bass st of an Small the All-Stars, Was defeated by College All-Stars in the | can Bow! played at Tuscon, but his team, All-Ameri Arizona. 1 —— draft | al s Cardinal! Glenn, St. Loui Cardi set up one touchaown with a] gi ‘ caught five aerial tos- he leading rusher on with 45 yards net standout perform- the Wilson, North Carolina na- named as the most out- back of the smaller schools. itself a marvelous the Pirate star. teams are interested in it appears as though he first to make the grade as The larger schools spanked the echoo's 24-12, but failed to speedy East Carolina back. ction of outstanding “big avers could not stop Glenn, he professionals may yard dash, nd was sser’s side this e was nling This was in -hievement for pro yn, and a ha tie ve the +} he rouble. 14,000 non-partisan leoked on as Dick Norman of | ford exhibited a tremendous ality of passing exhibition, while the |