jlinian’s Special available to Day St Tuesday and W Edition for udents ednes- East GREENVILLE, N. Carolina Geza Anda . Presents KATHRYN timore, and at ¢ val. He also ap! phony orchestr.: Francisco, Cleve': Vancouver, Brit In 1956 he ™ ances with the © cisco orchestres «: soloist with the \ monic and the | « and Montreal © brought solo a Chicago and Ven well as with on Dallas and Bal: . In Europe, h: the major ofche den, Amsterdam i Winding rtain- guest le one wee $3.00 each. 11:00 an November 11, the Ka appear in con- | Auditorium at 8:1 arrangements the Josh White cor born nited States at s he grew up he learn- trombone. Now rated p jazz trombonists in has played with Stan and on as well as many iso been very success- erry Mulligan, ercial field. tickets for the are in Denmark, the EC Performance ELAINE JOHNSON Bulletin, ned up the apinion of At ©\ phia’s Evening seems wwe sum vhen he wrot »mplishec 1 | memorable | p-ittee. ita in B certo No.| ovsky’s Pi- jst at minor, ninor, By Ficklen Memorial Stad- of Tuesday is just $32,- the quarter million dollar oal for construction of the facility. A headed by W. M. has been contacting busi- James S im fur 000 shy o committee, Jr., firms for the past seven days. committee \ nes ‘Vm speaking for the n saying that it has been an inspira- to the entire ~ community icipat in the This is by far the great- this tion see campaign,” ales said. est thing the businessmen in done.” efforts generous town have ever The mittee the contribu- the Greenville businessmen tireless of com- and the yeen an inspiratiin to East Car- }clina ¢ ollege. the ieally Every person contact- committee has responded to the by community mmbined efforts of the com- roup has brought the the Tuesday. fet amount of Inciuded is approximately $18,500, of 5,000 the Carolina College. s 14,000 alumni have been con- tadium = fund | $218,000 to through quota, raised and fa college & students acted by mail through another com- Committees also con- behalf of Memorial are other sources on James S. Ficklen lium fund. EC president, Dr. Leo Jenkins, conjunction W ith } committe itude of the dents to the people of Greenville, who by their overwhelming contribu- Schweitz By iluation Week got Tuesday Oct college 11:00 at for aalled the Ronnie Cox led College :] Hjorts- Over Mendels- Hands” by ar. The y Dr. ¢ Watcl ah” by p Your Cousins. ng Yorks, science He ler in tor. Carl aid that ature life look for it. rm in you gods thinkers to the oncept of God Shweitzer out science pointed pioneer of tian. Tool In Our Hands ence is limited as it puts into our han w to for use slves our good and evil in our life. one has g religion jhimself completely. So many of yc | think that “Faith you know ain’t sé weitzer, aith was when d you w-Christian concept of faith so pointed out that the key aL ; world peace is Stall thy strength, and with might.” neighbor as thyself.” Seminar = Joyner Library Auditorium, student: and facult tian Tradition and the Origins Modern Science.” ROSALIE ber 24. was dis- | congrega- br. trans- pointed out put In order to dis- must The Greeks Hebrew-Christian | aus a God of action. that was but cannot tell them. We must find morals, , meaning, loyalty, and meas- Schweitzer stated that every- to which he gives believing what pointed out Dr. The Greeks thought that y asked ieved something. The He- e assurance enough to act.” He “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy soul, with all thy And “Thou shalt love thy At 2 p. m. of the same day in the Dr. Schweitzer led a seminar for honor niors, graduate students, y on “The Hebrew-Chrs- In his lecture, Dr. Schweitzer com- pared the Greeks with the Hebrew- Christians. He explained that cul- tural climate tells what men think. er Points Out Need For Science: Key To Peace VOGEL He showed that the Hebrew-Chris- tian traditions deal with reality as red with the nd \yeality. The Greek ed n-| Greeks un- that ratner com} reli but is and therefore knows all the _ The Hebrew-Christians be- that and mysterious, a the world is not divine man nswe lieve the world is divine must periment to find the answers. The therefore we ex- “why” something the the ‘how.” Greeks would ask happens Hebrew- Christiar eitzer finished by point- that the thought was made according to a with the each out Greeks everything compared set pattern Hebrew-Christian thoughts of as an individual. He stated that Greeks thought that “the World whereas the Hebrew- “God the one the so loved God” Christians say so loved world.” After held a the Dr: question and answer session. lecture Schweitzer in Wesleyan College Inaugurates Collins As New President President Leo W. Jenkins repre- sented East Carolina College at cere- monies marking the inauguration of Dr. Thomas A. Collins as president of N. C. Wesleyan College in Rocky Mount October 25. Other members. of the college staff also participated in the event. Carl E. Stout of th Department of Music acted as organist at the inaugural program. He is a member of the American Guild of Organists and dean of the Rocky Mount-Kin- ston Chapter of the organization, and organist and choir master of the Church of the Good Shepherd im Rocky Mount. As representatives of colleges and universities of which they are grad- uates, the following East Carolina College faculty members attended the inauguration: us is to of | industrial arts department, Nebraske Wesleyan; Dr. Bessie MeNiel, direc- tor of the home economics depart- ment, Iowa State; and Mrs. Margue- rite Perry of the foreign language department, Winthrop College. expressed the deep | , faculty and | Dr. Kenneth Bing, director of the! Continued Effort Makes Dream Become Reality MONTY MILLS have emitted their vote of confidence, te for the 16,000 seating ca- y stadium, is already being syaded west of Elmhurst School, The stadium, designed to seat approxi mately 50,000 persons, will for fur- ture need, be expanded to the de- sired capacity. College officials hope to obtain 450,000 from the November 7 bond © to add to the Tuesday total of $218,000 to defray a portion of the cost of the stadium. On behalf of the college faculty and the East Carolinian sincere appreciation um committee and W. M. Scales, Jr, , Wally Howard, How- Jr., J. Con Lanier, Sr., James T. Little, Dr. E. B. Aycock 1 David Whichard, And in appre- their t to the} and ions, tremen- dovs students, of fe a most to the local sta to its member Reynolds V ard Hodg ciation, } anks go out ulty of East Car also making james S. Ficklin Memorial a real- students College who are Williams’ Play Opens In McGinnis Mext Wednesda Williams’ Glass | Jong-run The will 3-performance engagement be- | | ma Menagerie, rinning next Wednesday in McGinnis Auditorium. Activity cards must be presented. Re: t tickets will be avail- in the College Union. orved s able Monday | their | Mu “The Glass Menagerie” tells the| story of a fading Southern mother, | j . | ving in an apartment facing a back uley in St Louis, trying to do the best she can for her two children but sueceeding only in destroying every vestige of hope, beauty and joy | in their lives. There is Tom, the dutiful Wingfield son who works in a warehouse, bears | | up under his mother’s early morning chouts of “rise and shine” spends a sood deal of time in the movies, and rather be sailing to far-off countries, Anr there is Laura, the cripple daughter, so sensitive and shy that > her collection of glass | imals for solace. Laughs Mr. Williams has put some laughs » “The Glass Menagerie, but they ks—they are laughs erowine out of the play’s essentially poignant situation. The characters are t trying to be funny; they are crea- caught in the most ordinary the most terrible of tragedy—that of trying to live when they have no sensible reason for living. Lucile Dew will be seen in the lead- ing role of the mother—Amanda, in this pYay which was described by the N. Y. Post critic, during the play’s 563-performance run on Broadway, as being “like life itself, deeply touch- ing very funy and desperately sad.” Fearful Tom As Tom, the stolid Wingfield bread- winner, who Amanda fears will emu- late his father and “fall in love with long distance” will be seen Ben. Avery, while Laura, the shrinking violet whose heart cries out for effection, will be played by Sue Taylor. As Laura’s Gentleman Caller, the ;um-chewinig philosopher whom Tom hrings to dinner, Tom Hull will com- plete the cast of this play which won the New York Critics’ Circle Awerd for 1945. vould » has on are wise-crac tures but Director = Ralph Hardee Rives, associate di- dector of the Playhouse is technical director. Working with him as crew heads are Bob Imamura, lights; Ern- estine Edwards, properties; Lois Gar- ren, costumes; Tom Hull sete; and Mike Lewis, sound, Other crew heads are Alice Coriolano, makeup; Ed Smith, house; and Howard Mallard, ipublicity. Casandra Drake is cerving as assistant director to J. A. With- ey, director of the production. C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1961 Students Rally To Bond Support ‘With Marathon By JEAN PEACE College students in North Carolina ore answering the call of the Stu- dent Committee for a Better N. C. Campus enthusiasm has been sparked | by rallies and news of the coming | “Torch Marathon.” | The marathon will begin October | “1 and run through November 3. Each | school has been allotted mileage and | a starting place. Runners will carry | a kerosene torch throughout, North | Carolina and meet in Raleigh for a} mass rally November 3. | The passage of the current Bond | ve is of great importance to every te supported college in North Caro- | The | portance and are anxious to show | i Student | letters have been written, speeches | given, and rallies staged. The “Torch | thon” and the lina students realize this im-} interest in the e. rally in Raleigh will climax student support of the Bond Issue. With the passage of the Bond Issue, tuxes will not be raised. The treas- urer of North Carolina feels the state | is in excellent financial condition and the needs of these bonds will not | Senior Class Dance “The Roaring — Ken Trogden, Billy 3a schell discuss plans for the Ste Jackson, and Miss 20's” Ray put a strain on the economy. The is-| — a valuable instrument for preventing or put- ting down aggression. It could not do so if the Assembly yields, as Ghana urges, to some ‘iation of the troika, or chooses some spine- less, compliant Secretary-General who would be a one-man troika in disguise. “Tt is the smaller, emergent nations, who need the U. N. most, on whom the decision for its survival chiefly rests. Suicide for the U. N. could well be their own. As if from the grave, Dag Hammarskjold’s own words come to tell them this: : “Tt is not the Soviet Union, or, indeed, any other big powers who need the United Nations. It is all the others.’ “He spoke this only a year ago, when the Soviets were screaming every conceivable in- sult to scare a brave man away from his duty. The quiet and dignified courage with which he met that challenge should inspire thé As- sembly to meet its own: ‘It is very easy to resign; it is not so easy to stay on. It is very easy to bow to the wish of a big power. It is another matter to resist’ “‘And so it is.” « ‘Darned College Growd’ Has No Place To Go By LARRY BLIZZARD In this day of the ultra-educated in- dividual, in which prevails a philosophy of “educate the whole man”—mentally, spiri- ually, and socially—many important and dis- turbing question have arisen concerning the quality of education being given to those chosen few known simply as “that darn col- lege crowd.” For instance, one of the most distressing questions raised by education authorities how does the college man (and girl) spend Saturday night? Now in some institutions, this question can be easily answered; for all the students will probably be gathered in one corner of the campus drinking expresso, listening to poetry readings, or just sitting around—in 4 fog. But at East Carolina, Saturday nights have, in addition to the fog, an aura of mys- tery, a peculiar quality of unrealness—of being “not there.” Why is this so? Perhaps it is due to the entertainment available to the student on Saturday night—and I’m including the surrounding community as well as the campus itself in this. “But what’s wrong with the free movie,” you ask. Well, nothing really. The great ma- jority of movies shown on campus are well worth attending. However, the one shown this past Saturday night had a distinct qual- ity about it. It was a “religious” movie—in the Hollywood sense—complete with bad guys (Romans) and good guys (Christians). One of the Romans (the hero) spies a girl (Chris- tian) and falls in love with her. He decided to become a Christian and eventually ends up with the girl, after rescuing all the other Christians from death at the hands of the bad guys (Romans). Although the acting was somewhat nebulous and the plot énough to cause heathen tendencies to arise among the viewers, the movie nevertheless passed as “entertainment.” What happens after the movie? Well, there is. of course, the college union. The col- lege man can go there with his date if he wants and dance and drink coffee. But he hung around there ail day and most of the night all during the week, he wants to go somewhere else. At that point, new horizons begin to open up for him and his date. He has his choice: he can either go to the place on this side of the road, sit in the car and drink beer. If he has botany notes with him, he can take his girl out to Greensprings and classify plants. If the date is a particularly important one, or if the girls comes from a wealthy family, he may even take her inside one of the “places.” There they may sit and swoon amid soft lights, listening to the juke box and the sound of switchblades opening and closing as the local color—the ducktail haircut in the next booth—decide who’s up for the next drag race. Those unfortunate souls who do not possess a car on campus are urged to pur- chase one immediately so that they, too, ean “make the scene.” 4 Thus, Wwe see that Saturday night at East Carolina has indeed an unreal quality to it. For, in fact, Saturday night does not fit in with the rest of the week, During the week, we scholars are exposed to the best in education—culture, arts, science, ete. Yet, on Saturday night, the bottom falls out and all the refinements vanish into thin air, and Se i an ee ae Tae ae night but to ange — Pe id a ust u > to. yside inn” and sit in his car and drink beer—while his date polishes her nails or reads or simply looks bored (as if it were possible to be bored). is: East Carolinian Published by the students of East Caroling College, Greenville, North Carolina ; Member North State Conference Prass Association Associated College Press Patsy Elliott “Keith Hobbs EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGBR Sealand AE th OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Buik , ding. Telephone, ali departments, PI, 2-4101, extension 264, BOA 2 “he. Religious Farce Insults Concerned Student Jazz Meditation--Blasphemous Paganistic Ritual? ‘To the Editor, “Clap hands with Charlie” This is the title of an album of popular music which is played only once in a preat while. The gentlemen who put this album out are of three religious groups, this is important but the names of the groups are secondary. Monday night, October 23, 1961 in Wright Auditorium, a “Religious” pro- gram was presented to the student body for “Evaluation”. It was a Jazz neditation. Jazz is a very fine instru- ment of music and is used in many churches to accent their services and one must remember that the negro liymn of a hundred years ago was the of Jazz. Using this argument, z is welcome in all scopes of all onments. We live in an individ- tic society in which each person has his choice of method for what- ever goals he might set up for him- self. This, I will defend to the death. Getting back to Monday night, a farce is to me blasphemous play on words, ideals, or any other topic one ual would like to attempt to present to the public. A religious farce is in my estimation the lowest form of farce, un, blasphemy, or presentation which might be presented before whatever group as might be interested. Religion is ideals and the use of them in one’s everyday life. When a man is insulted, he will retaliate in one manner or another, I have been insulted to the worst degree. I am a Christian and am proud of it. I am also a rebel and am equally proud of this, As a Christian. and not as a Rebel, I plea to the student body, the faculty, and friends of the college for one thing. This is discretion, I know this is so much to ask. If I am to Evaluate Religion, during this week which has been set aside by OUR college, how am I supposed to react when I go to a Campus Building for a RELIGIOUS assembly and find a PAGIAN ritual demanding that the world is going to HELL and that to Evaluate is to consecrate Religion. Now that I have stated this most in- Magnolia-Scented ‘Managerie’ Completes William's Triology Tennessee Williams’ tenderly poi- gnant ‘play, “The Glass Menagerie,” which opens a 3-performance engage- ment at McGinnis Auditorium starting Wednesday, November 1, is of course a dramatic entity complete in itself but it nevertheless might be said to supplv the third item in a notable trilogy. For, although the characters in the three plays are different, there is a considerable uniformity in the choice of characters, and in the at- titude toward life, in “The Glass Menagerie,” and in its trilagy compan ents, “A Streetcar Named Desire” and “Summer and Smoke.” Although “The Glass Menagerie” was first produced to the other two lays, in point of time it really is the trilogy’s climax. This is the story of a restless boy chained to a warehouse job, his sensitive sister as fragile as her collection of glass animals, and their faded frumpy mother, Amanda Wingfield. ‘Amamda is clinging fran- tically to another time and place when she had had as many as seventeen Gentleman Callers from the Mississ- sippi Delta on a Sunday afternoon ... but now she solicits magazine subs- criptions by telephone and is des- eprately afraid that her daughter will be an old maid. It is the frustrated Amanda, from a magnolia-scented past, who is, im many respects, an aging counterpart of Blanche in “A Streetcar Named Desire,” and Alma in “Summer and Smoke.” Blanche DuBoise, ir, “A Streetcar,” is a Mississippj school teacher who, like Amanda, hag had an unfortunate marriage. Unlike Amanda, she has been driven from town because of her moral turpitude, but she has the same endurance and a like kind of heroism, and she is clinging to the same illusions of refinement, And she is desperate in trying to find security in another marriage as Amanda is in trying to find 9 has- band for her daughter. There is no hope for either character, and it is for much the same reagone that we admire what is admirable in Amanda and Blanche, and love and pity what is lovable and pitable in them. Alma Winemiller, in “Summer and Smoke,” is also a Southern spinster, younger than Blanche, but no less frustrated. Alma is as confused as the heronines of the earlier plays, and we feel the same compassion for this minister’s daughter who makes a brittle stand against the carnal at- tractions of a young doctor she loves, only to find herself unwanted by him after she has “suffocated in smoke from something inside of her.” on fire Williams’ heroines are all victims of the same negation, and sustain themselves by the same illusions. If they lie to others their major lie is to themselves. In this way only can they hope to make their intolerable lives tolerable. Such beauty as they know exists in their dreams. “These are Mr. Williams’ goods, his specialty, his mark, these battered spinsters, these pearl-fleshed frustrates,” wrote Gilbert W. Gabriel in Theatre Arts magazine recently. “I, for one, am all the fonder of them for being each so like the other. His heroine of “Sum- mer and Smoke” is of the same pity and confusion made as she of “A Streetcar Named Desire” and of “The Glass Menagerie” as well. The author builds and rebuilds rare beauty in her person, and nobody—no Ameri- can Turgenevy, at least—has ever done it better.” Francis P. Gaines, recently retired president of Washington and Lee University, tells this one: “Some years ago, William and Mary, a fine co-ed- ucational college, gave us a bad de- feat in football, whereupon one of our students muttered, ‘Don’t want to play William anyway—just want to play Mary.” ” —Quoted in New York Herald Tribune If an executive says he positively must have a report before he departs @t 4 o’clock, the office will present the papers at 3:59, and not one minute before, SR ia if CON FRIBUTION NU STADIUM FUND, THURSDAY, OCTORER » A BS SS ea teresting point, I would appreciate student reaction so that in the future Sast Carolina College will not have to jergo the humility cf attending a RELIGIOUS FARCE! Yours most disturbed, William R. Wright 2306 E. 4th Street Greenville, N. C the students of Manager Appreciates Cultural Interpretation Dear Miss Elliott: I was most heartened and encour- aged to see by the letter appearing your Thursday, October 12, 1961 signed by Miss Camilla Men- of the students at Carolina understood and ac- cepted “LA DOLCE VITA” for what i ally was, instead of a dirty de- rrading film as some saw it. “LA DOLCE VITA” not only told a moving and powerful story told the touth. Ofiten truth is too bitter a swallow, some times the pill to than recognize something as the truth, it is much easier to condemn the pill than swallow it and accept it. For England, France and {taly have been known for their truth and realism in their films, while Hol- iywood has been known for sugar- coating and non-realistic films. In the last year, since we have been operating the State Theatre in Greenville, we have brought many films, “LA DOLCE VITA” was one, that are considered in the higher cui- tured classification. And unti] “LA DOLCE VITA” we felt these films were not appreciated or understood. But thanks to Miss Menzaco’s letter and Mr. Gardner’s column, we are en- couraged to try at least one more art film. On Thursday October 26, we will present the French film “BREATHLESS”, starring: Jean Sea- burg. We understand that this is also a most powerful film and should be well received by those who under- stood “LA DOLCE VITA.” Please let me take this opportunity to thank you, your staff and all the students at East Carolina who have supported these films in the past end I’m sure will in the future. Also, accept this as our pledge to continue to bring the best movie entertain- ment possible to Greenville in foreign as well as American films. Very truly yours, State Theatre Van Jones therefore, rather heing years Peeved Student Seeks Dear Editor: T am an uneducated bum because I have long hair? I am one of the limited few who degrade the rest- Tell me it isn’t true. T realize that even though I keep my clothes cleaned and pressed, my shoes polished and shined, and avoid clashing colors; I can never never hope to make up for having ‘long hair. I keep my hair neatly combed at all times, but still, I called a sinner because my is long. I am attending BOC for tion, not s haircut. Doea me a nonconformist? Sincerely, Joba B. Rett Fanatic Platitys Smirks Upon Cy) Indifference By GEORGE © A\RDNgp “Anyone who is against the pg ayainst the he means used ¢ meet I tanatics Aesthetic Jazz Hits Weak Peak By CAMILLA MENZAC Is a I t An tive attempt answer plexin Monday que nig jum by Mr. Wil Peter Joh! This mced by a of hopelessness out the procee Although t} h from the music sustained long en a truly meditative m« reached its peak dramatic reading the Word of Elijah peak. If the acoustics mental, the musica ed by about fifteer no interruption f. error, and a cor ground, a more mood would have had to develop. The jazz m presented in ga poratic stead of being continuovs would have had a more !8stté “ In this service, the musit © flow, the mood did “ chance to develop, and there message did not get across | In this writer's opinion the ° purpose of the program, wie to ascertain the necessity 4 was defeated. For this new form of ™™ perhaps one needs to be &? it by degrees before one # to understand the effect it * posed to achieve. manve s not CTOBER 26, 1961 PAGE THREE Former Alumnus Accepts U. S. Post In Tokyo, Japan EAST CAROLINIAN 7 oe eee Employees Work For Quality Meals i Cafeteria Serves Sunday Nights By HILDA LATON. Lonr before most students hear some time off each week. Many stu-| the cafeteria meats. Other perishables ‘heir alarm clocks, EC cafeteria em- dent employees and regular cafeteria | are bought twice weekly at the best Back In ’24 ployees them. Approximately seven thousand students are served in our cafeterias cach day, presenting many problems in s ing students “good food at a \inimum cost.” Many students com- they feel that the : fluctuate from day to day. They do not realize the problems of because tuying and preparing “, variety of rood food” to suit both taste and budget. New Hours Due to student request the cafeteria is open on Sunday night from 5:15 15 p.m. As a result, the hou of the employees have cen rescheduled so that they have p.m. 6 are preparing breakfast for | employees prep = 3 feel that this “works 2 herdship” on them, but they “realize it is necessary.” By buying a “special,” students may save from five to ten cents on each meal, A test is run on each ind:vidual item to determine its price. The cost of the item and the cost of preparing it are both taken into consideration before it is priced. All food is bought by the schoo] with no aid from the state government; therefore, the prices have to be high enough for the afeteria to break even. A change in the. rices is the result of food prices | fluctuating, Purchase Of Food The process of ordering food is available prices, cafeteria welcome student and faculty m since they are anxious to C., has been selected to represent the “prepare and serve a quality meal”. | U. S. Beach Attends |: Washington Meet Farl FE. Beach, director of the de-| Va. partment of Music at East Carolina,} Mr attended the meeting of the Council on Cooperation in Teacher Education of the American Council on Eduea- i Washington, D. C., October Jack S. Everton, Carolina of Columbia, N. East staff and its em- alumnus, formerly Genera] ‘Accounting Office in its Far East activities and will have his headquarters for the next two urs in Tokyo, Japan, according to information just received at the col- eve, Before his new assignment he was connected with the regional of- fice of the organization in Norfolk, Everton; his wife, the former Frances Ann Radcliffe of Pantego; and their two children went by air to San Francisco September 18 and from there, aboard the U. S. S. Presi- 971 -21. complicated and requires planning. | * dent Hoov Staple goods are bought four times . year. An estimate of what will be r, to Japan. “Competition is pretty keen on the foreign assignments,” Regional Mana- osed in three months is taken. Bids neators National repre-| fer C. E. Merrill of the Norfolk of- are then sent to different companies. | “© ed the conference in the series of | fice stated in a letter to Director E. The goods are bought from the com- meetings. He also attended meetings|R. Browning of the East Carolina pany offering the best bid. of the Music Edueators National Con-| School of Business, “and those who Meats are purchased in the same ference at the National Education| et the nod manner every two weeks. Since the Association Headquarters during his average person does ‘not like fat| Stay in Washington. Mr, Beach, past president of the Neuthern Division of the Musie Ed- Circle K Elects National Prexy; Aonounces Winner Conference, from Washington are considered tops in all respects.” rton was graduated from East John W. Melton, III, a junior at meat, only U. S. Good grade of meat | The new organization brought re- lina in 1951 with a B.S. degree presentatives of many professional groups and learned societies to ex- amine complex education. n English and the social studies and in 1958 with a master’s degree in ac- problems in teacher | counting. While a student at the col- is purchased. U. S. Choice grade con- she University of Southeastern Louis- a Bie Ry 18 tains from 10% to 15% more fat than ana, Lafayette, Louisiana, was elect- s 2 i ed president of Circle K International | -— and the Lady Principal’s hez nt the organization’s annual conven- Carter I ads Workshop lege he y basketball ; a star performer on the A panel discussion took place at team and was ihe opening gener tober 20 with Ole projects on inst: E includ oe - 2 tion at St. Petersburg, Florida August, included 23-25 Benny Bowes President of the] Herbert L. Carter, director of bands Circle K Club of East Carolina re-| st East Carolina, directed a workshop ported today. held at the University of North Cero- He went on to say that Melton is| lina, Tuesday, October 24 by the session as a student leader at East Carolina nd, director of|in the 1951 edition of the national tion of the Na-J oublication “Who’s Who Among Stu- Association, acting | dents in American Universi as mode yr. The Honorable Sterling | Colleges.” on Oc- ‘ales Of Time Gone B} tional Aducation M. MecMurrin, U. S. Commissioner ot} Wducation, was the keynote speaker gradu Mrs. Everton, an East Carolina B. : e the seventh president of the young North Carolina, South Carolina, and organization which became an official| Virginia Province of Phi Mu Alpha. part of Kiwanis International in 1956.| national honorary music fraternity. | for the iuncheon on October 21. the “Who’s Who” volume for 1954. ady By JEAN, PEACE space in Cotten Hall Parlor | Since all gentlemen call- | ¢2 signed up well in advance to ap until the late 1930’s. Chains were h evening. The campus police would tertained in Cotten ‘Hall | unlock the chains early the next morn- had to meet the counselor ad. rove brother came to visit and} plc fal take Principal space must have been \ ing. = , that the girls o walk in groups of five. | < were not used. For|to the dormitori ye sent directly to the iw? me for a booths in movie. Fach} movie. Fi nena restriction were removed to a great = looked forward| degree. In these first days of co- orium enter tion, there was only a women’s A and tudent Judiciary. ¢ and did not participate in ward that the young | a s activtiies. men in the lobby.| In sing the changes ladies must bid the rood-night before | convenience jn the Dean’s office was ation of public phones in tory | the the time of | the were a letter from | calls. It was nec in the Dean’s office while she listened. these conversations Tiow one-sided “When I a we alle wv must have been! Dean White continued, ment of full-time dormitory coun- ride. Per-| selors.” ited because the not believe that laced across the main gate and locked | in EC,} james S Dean White commented, “The greatest | College, to inform girls of! Mus ‘on, ary to make calls “Another uly’ with relatives.| creat aid to this office was the em- Times and rules may change, but people do not, “Human nature being Tn that short time Circle K has grown from a few scattered groups to 340 clubs with more than 6100 members on college campuses across the United States and Canada. Benny added that a major reason for this rapid growth Jhas been the constant goal of Circle When men began to enter EC after| K International to serve the college rules began to change. Dating | C2™pus in the same manner that its parent group, Kiwanis Intemational. serves the community. Also elected were two vice presi- dents: Perry G. Stover, Ryerson In- Men were day] ctitute of Technology, Toronto, On- tario, and Sammy Weems, University of Arkansas. Fayetteville, Arkansas. . Mathews, Randolph-Macon Ashland, elected secretary. The 500 college leaders at the con- Virginia, was mitories.” At first the only| vention also elected 12 international yne was in the Dean of Women’s ‘fice (Cotten Hall). Maids were sent trustees. They are: Brenton A. Blei- Community College, Michigan; Thomas M. Brown, Rio Grand College, Rio Grand, John L. Cromartie, Emory Uni- Atlanta, Georgia; William R. , University of Tennessee, Knox- Tennessee; Bradley J. Hughes, Quincy College, Quincy, Illinois; Jerry W. .Johnson, Buena Vista College, Storm Lake, Iowa; Mike McCormack, Bismarck Junior College, Bismarck, er, Muskegon North Dakota; Tim Potter, St. Peter- Dr. Earl Sloeum, faculty advisor, and Robert Doyle Greeson, Jr., of | Greensboro, president of the Alpha Rho Chapter at the University of | North Carolina acted as hosts of the workshop. | “The purpose of the workshop,“ Mr.) Carter stated, “is for all officers of | each chapter in the province to be-| come acquainted with the intricate workings of the fraternity, and to} plan the future in such a way as to} heh) each chapter reach its maximum | potential.” | Attending the event were officers of chapters at East Carolina College, | University of North Carolina, Fur- | man niversity, Davidson College, | University of South Carolina, and} William and Mary College. Officers of the East Carolina Chap- ter who attended the workshop were Dan Gold Smith, president; Zuill Bai- ley, vice president; Reginald Robin- son, secretary; Jesse Holton, treas- urer; Dale Blackwell, historian; R. Winston Morris, warden; Hubert R. Shearon, Jr., alumni secretary; and Julian Wagemaker, music director. who say (Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf’, “The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.) HUSBANDS, ANYONE It has been alleged that coeds go to college for the sole purpose of finding husbands. This i I give fair warning that, small and spongy as 1 am, anybody such a dastardly thing when I am around had better be prepared for a sound thrashing! Girls go to coliege for preci, to broaden their horizons, to lengthen their vistas, to drink at the fount of wisdom. But, if, by pure chance; while a girl is engaged in these meritorious pursuits, a likely looking husband should pop into view, why, what’s wrong with that? Eh? What’s wrong with that? - The question now arises, what should a girl look for in a husband. A great deal has been written on this subject. Some say character is most important, s say appearance, some say education. All are wrong. The most important thing —bar none—in a husband is health. Though he be handsome as Apollo and rich as Midas, what good is he if he just The very first thing to do upon meeting a man is to make sure he is sound of wind and limb. Before he has a chance to sweet-talk you, sla) 4 eyelids, yank out his tongue, rap his patella, palpate his thorax, of course, an infamous canard, and ly the same reasons as men. do: me say background, some around all day accumulating bedsores? a thermometer in his mouth, roll back his ioe with his teeth. If he fails ask him to straighten out a ho e was my brother!” Campus Gates Chained The campus was closed at 5:30 p.m. the same,” explained Dean White, “we have tl Our girls burg Junior College, St, Petersburg, ibulance and go on to the Florida; Lynn Kesler Powell, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah; Kent = M. Tucker, Phoenix College, Phoenix, eae eae : Arizona; Clyde Archer Wotton, Wake Air Force Detachment Ripples (i's Feira tene Muscles For ‘61 Achievements Carolina; and Ron Wright, Abilene With these simple tests, phone for next prospect. If, however, he turns out to be physically fit, proceed to the second most important requirement in a husband. I refer to a sense of humor. ‘A man who can’t take a joke is a man to be avoided. There are several simple tests to find out whether your prospect can take a joke or not. You can, for example, slash his tires. Or burn his “Mad” comics. Or steal his switchblade. Or turn loose his pet raceoon. Or shave his head. : After each of these good-natured pranks, laugh gaily and shout “April Fool! if he replies, “But this February nine- teenth,” or something equally churlish, cross him off your list d give thanks you found out in time. oe if he laughs silverly and calls you “Little Minx!” put him to the next test. Find out whether he is kindly. > same problems. no different.” today are ly Bars Fly two Christian College, Abilene, Texas. Winner of thé annual oratorical contest which embraced the conven- tion theme as its subject was Delaine Mountain, a student at Sneed College, z, Alabama. The subject of his was “Emphasize Active Cit- femren (Were commanded Angel Flight Major Brenda Nunn- z drive of a channel swim- periods like a sorority, anes mer, the 600th Air Force Detachment f AFROTC Cadets at East Carolina ; bending its back, and the muscles is sic the ie or Parties and hot dog roasts are aja Lady Principal constant part of the social activities which the Corps stages, and they pro- vide a feeling of close relationship among the entire group, who can cet to know their Cadet Officers and each other through the singing, skits, and plain fun which always make up the program in the evenings. The well-known and popular Annual Mili- tary Ball is scheduled for the month The collegians adopted the theme of March, and is looked forward to | ‘Develop Individual Excellence” for by all cadets and Cadet Officers with|the coming year. It is supplemented growing enthusiasm. by four definitive objectives; develop The Corps of East Carolina is| excellence im scholarship, in moral respected throughout the state of | and spiritual values, in club activities North Carolina for its outstanding | and relationships, and in citizenship. achievements. An entirely new life| The delegates voted to hold the re opens up to the cadet who is part of} 1962 Circle K Convention in San ae oo the hard-working Cadets on campus. ; Diego, California next August. $5.95 ree Se: ES a The quickest way to ascertain his kindliness is, of course, to 5 B A S S look at the cigarette he smokes. Is it mild? Is it clement? Is it DELICIOUS FOOD ; humane? Does it minister tenderly to the psyche? Does it WEEJUNS SERVED 24 HOURS 250 college men ripple tense under the load of With current world | state they are, en-| it are running high, are looking forward} ro a successful year. 6 note more t lected as the top two Circle K Clubs in the U. S. and Canada on the s of campus service and adminis- trative excellence were the Universi- ty of Southwestern Louisiana, La- fayette, first place; and the Cirele K club of Quincy College, Quincy Illinois, second place. and grow another year. and the cadets Among the organizations which are actively providing some recreation and instructive Cadet Rifle commanded by Cadet Captain ce Worrell; The Cadet newspaper, The Tiger,” published monthly under che leadership of Cadet 1/Lt. Carroll Norwood, and whose editor is Bliza- seth Powell of the Angel Flight; the Cadet Bowling Team, led by Cadet Captain Murray Hodges; the Honor Drili Team of East Carolina, com- manded by Cadet 1/Lt. Douglas Rob- inson; the Arnold Air Society, com- manded by Cadet Major Sanders Grady; and the Angel Flight, made up who go through pledge functioning and tings ipation are the yw exhibiting dent artist in A £ . in Rawl Build- dd To Your Villager Collection OXFORD CLOTH SHIRT bof a 1961-1962 yg talented sen- will continue is open to the ey’s exhibit- paintings and of her paint- human figure. es a student] — » in traveling] Dorm Elects Officers by the depart- in various from cockcrow till the heart of darkness? Is it, in short, Marlboro? : Tf Marlboro it be, then clasp the man to your bosom with hoops of steel, for you may be sure that he is kindly as a sum- mer breeze, kindly a8 & mother’s kiss, kindly to his very marrow. ‘And now, having found a man who is kindly and healthy and blessed with a sense of humor, the only thing that remains ja to make sure he will always earn 4 handsome living. That, fortunately, is easy. Just enroll him in engineering. Carolina Grill ! ete Joining Marlboro in you this column throughout the school year is another fine product from the same makere—the king-size, unfiltered Philip Morris Commander. Here is pure, clean smoking pleasure. Try « pack. You’u be welcome aboard! Z of co-eds i i i jal? Is dle the synapses? Is it a good companion? Is it genial parses and friendly and filtered ‘and full of dulcet: pleasure Ladies’ $11.95 Men’s Cotten Hall, women’s dormitory for freshmen, has elected officrs to Bart and social] serve for the 1961-62 school year. the B.S. de-| Molly Harrell has been elected to serve n work on the} 2S president. Her duties include pre- er graduation siding at the meetings of the house committee and attending meetings of pha Xi Delta} the Women’s Judiciary hi Delta art \Assisting Miss Herrell are Mar- his correspond- | tha Ann Lake, vice president; Sue student Art Little, secretary; and Veronica Gay, treasurer. Air Conditioned Corner W. Sth & Dickinson Student Cherge Accounts Invited. PAGE FOUR When Walter Carringer, hailed as outstanding among America’s young singers, appeared Wednesday, October 18, at 8:15 pm. in the Wright Au- ditorium, it was, as Paul Hume, the leading critic in the nation’s capital, declared, “a bright evening for aw The concert Was 1961-1962 Entertainment Series on the campus. Mr, Carringer, up in Murphy, N. C remarkable record of important Amer- dience and critic.” the first attraction of the who already & tenor grew , has ican premier performances ances on nation-wide radio and tel and concerts in for- and Europe. record as an vision network Canada enviable ty-seven states With an cratorio singer and recitalist, he was selected as tenor soloist for the prem- American performances of irst and last onatorios. He also sang the New York premier of Lucas Foss’ “A Parable of Death” in Town Hall, and the first American del’ per- for e of the ions of ae ” he distingu shed com- 1out America who sached the final competi- i-annually by the } f Music Clubs. 1 1957 he won ditions spon- National Artists Corpora- et the principals for New t the sored by t tion to sel ror Leigure-Hour Smart looking, smooth ting casuals for indoors or out. Finest quality leather, master-crafted in genuine moccasin construction, cradles your foot in comfort from heel to toe. *T.M. Reg. BASS OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR MEN OF MOBILITY CHOOSE English Leather" aftér showers = after hours The only” all-purpose raed’ lotlén. Frbm.$2.00. td $6.50. Traveling Ysa the vabreckable fosk. The funnel? Te ‘ofl the flask ‘without spilling « precious drop. $ oz. English Leather in crysial bott! i le. 4 or. English Leather in plastic tes 2 framed in handsome Redwood Chest. eee MENS Wear meee Han-| im-| S Just prior twelve Faces in Music. This toured years.” nationally in the 1957-58 season under- auspices of Civie Musie Associa- group artists among young ¥ 3 8 | the | tion | Mr. | recital debut in his New York recital debut in 1959. ‘rities were unanimous in declaring this “one of the most imipressive de- of America under the auspices of New Orleans Opera Company. When he is not concertizing, Carringer fills the post of Music rector of the Haitheock School Greenwich, Conn. made his European 1958 in London, and Carringer from throughout the world chosen to sing with the Experimental Opera Theatre EAST CAROLINIAN Foreign Countries Offer Fellowships Only a month remains to apply for over 200 fellowships offered by for- eign governments and universities for graduate study in 15 countries, the Institute of International Education announced today. Applications will be accepted until Nov ember 1. { The fellowships, which are for study in universities in Austria, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Ivan, Israel, Italy, Mexico, the Neth- erlands, Poland, Rumania, Sweden and the Mr. Di- in | but recitals in New York in many | i | Cadet Norwood Receives Grover Carroll Norwood has heen hometown newspapers of the Cad o the Group Staff of the! Carroll Detachment of AFROTC at] Carolina College and promoted | of Cadet 1/Lt. in the} oll has veen assigned du- E00th Kast | to the | Corps. Ca North Carolina State ere he was also in the ROTC w sed with the State Coll The Marching 4 rank ties Group Information Services team oft He is publisher of the Cadet news paper “The Tiger,” which |ed once a month as a service to the let Conps to promote harmony and | as pirit in the AFROTC. As ISO, he is| training for active duty. esponsible for all publicity on the \s00-man ROTC group at East Caro- directs the activities of ) who work with him in’ Next Teacher Ly jal, the cadet | spaper, and news releases for the | | men. Upon graduation in the ROTC ¥ publish-| gram, Cadet 1 Lt. Norwood will and ny cadets vdling publicity mate | nev ‘Book Collectors May | ! The National Teacher I |Win Library Award | The Amy Loveman National Award | on fof one thousand dolla under the | phe Gommon sponsorship of the Woman’s National | | Book Association, the Saturday Re-| view, and the Book-of-the-Month Club, | Ge 1eral Culture, English Express Non Ver and one library.| two of will be administered at East Caro Saturday, February 10, 1962. ests in Professional Informat Reasoning, Optional of the be taken is awarded to one college senior for the best personal been collecting rteen This honor the show taught, may established | tions to mastery | notable | ject to be award has memory of @ ing session. 1 one day \ Bulletin of Information (and y sociate editor of | » Woman’s National Book Associ -| a winner of its » Skinner Award. procedure may be 1e award will be made to a senior | lc officials, school superintende: has won the book col-jor from the National Teacher | Constance | «pplication) describing obtained from ent, who on his own local ¢am- | minations, Edue pus and who has been nominated for | ice, Princeton, } the national award by the local con-} The completed applic For further infor bulletin board outside | cepted by the ETS off and De. before uary 12, tion aw sw Jersery. on, with test chair n a (in yper examination fees, will be tion check the e during Dr. Tucker’s office in the stration Building. ary and in 1962. Admin- | vember nber P omotion a a junior at Past Caro- « in English. He attend- College, ceive a commission in the Air Force a lieutenant, and will begin flight | , Exam In February aminations| of age who have not had extensive xaminations, including , Examina- sub- registration tional Testing Ser- Jan- | Switzerland, cover tuition costs and varying amounts for living exipenses. Government Travel Grants to supplement maintenance and tuition | ets. | .cholarships are available to Ameri- | can students receiving, Austrian, Dan ish, French, German, Israeli, Italian, Netherlands, Polish or Rumanian £ov- ernment awards. An American foundation offers two study or re- search in any country in the Far South or Southeast Asia, and | ing | lege Air-| additional awards for yTro- ast, but my nose looks so big in this one! | Africa. General eligib: FAST DECISIONS .-- . 27 and 30, between 9:15 and 4:30.) requirements for fee Neen eee? ese programs are: (1) U. S. citizen- | : s “ ‘ i i | chip at the time of application; (2) a/ Career With Social « ecurity | bachelor’s degree or its equivalent be- sass if fore the beginning date of the award; (3) knowledge of the language of and (4) good health. | inde- Are academic | the host country | A demonstrated | pendent study and a good Preference is capacity for you interested — ir 2 here are over 600 ¢ others? In securing a position are expected. advancement, possibilities that lead as years | given to applicants under 35 Ss : |far as your ability take will | Consider a position with the Social While married for most of the] Security Administration. Major W Max rom | the needs of single grantees. | who are Claims Representatives "| Applicants will be required to sub- | GS-8, and Mrs. Bar 10,1 wit a pk roposed study that cz Meld | mit a plan of proposed study that can a F or|be carried out profitably within the| a rating of GS lina | experience abroad. | persons are eligible fellowships, the stipends are geared to | amson, Hollor rating of Garland who is year abroad. this pe of work to anyone who Students enrolled at hould consult the campus Adviser for in Others and | ply . for social | a college or) \ IN| university | Mulbright an} tormation Program and applications, may write to the Counseling Division, Institute of In- Education, 800 York 17, N. Y., or to} plain the law Information col- nts, Ex- em with ternational Second | s their Avenue, New : any of IE’s regional offices. | — | Competitions for the 1962-63 aca-| Mr, Willia: November 1, 1961.) } Go tion forms must before October 15. Comipleted applications must be sub- quirie \ Mi the femic r close lanc #C- | Reques No-| College e postmarked the So {tion soon | | mitted by Novem 1 lege degree Pat Weaver, National College Queen What makes Artcarved Diamonds the favorite of America’s College Queens? Actually there are many reasons. Artcarved diamond rings must meet traditionally high standards for color, cut ba and carat weight. Their award-winning styles are BS dscns to the eye. And, they take all of the guesswork out of buyin a diamond. Every Artearved ring carries a written pee for quality and permanent value that’s recognized and re- spected by fine jewelers from coast to coast. We think you'll agree with America’s lovely College ucens oa Stop in at your jeweler and be sure to see all the exquisite Artcarved diamond rings i E nd rings—the rings you buy with and wear with pride. : rei ial NATIONALLY ADVERTISED IN AMERICA'S LEADING MAGAZINES rtcarved DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS J. R. Wood & Sons, Inc., De; , Inc., Dept. CP-21 216 E. 45th St., New York 17, N.Y. Please send me more facts ab: P s e mo: ont di i Wedding Guide for Bride and Grosset ean of nearest (or hometown) Artcarved Jeweler. I am enclosing 10f to cover handling and postage. Name. Shs ae Pa Address, pce es re A oa kL Cy sels Codnty ozone ues one tate, ij Founded in 1919, the Institute of \ International Education fosters inter- national understanding through the exchange of ideas and knowledge all peoples. ITE administers | programs for pore than 5000 persons between the United States and over 80 foreign countries, and is an information cen- umong o-way scholarship | ‘ s Durham Convention | ter on all aspects of international ed- reation and exchange, r They s, Who are interestec recommend tha Job Interviews | Representatives the North | Carolina State Board of Health will] Secu: from be on campus soon to interview men interested in positions with the Ven- eral Disease Program, They are in- terested in any major, and will talk in college with men subject to military call into this work )ite in his work. Often If you would like to have an inter- view with se representatives, come | they to the Placement Servi i itions after| rcement oppor-| cially for 2 s Office, 203 | tunities good, es) | Administrati and sig 0 | wh il istration, and sign up for anj who can easily ippointment. relocate in another | city. “Gee, honey, you'll never pass your physics exam unless you learn to loosen up!” 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MA AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - a tte yd . a ona (Last days to select ial ete ng D.C. Schools X Administration Officers eines Depend On Ai From Govern HOW DO I GET THE JOB? YDC Members Attend yearbook Jones Ann Officers, Pr Notic The ¢ Service Novembe who are eXam m ment Offic Starts Tomorro*— PITT Theat ‘OBER 26, 1961 EAST CAROLINIAN PAGE FIVE Woman’s Club 9 .- 3 tats Peace Corp's Goals Discussed | E “The Peace Corp is composed of Being culturally emphatic is anoth-| ity to work with the equipment which | trained over an 8 week period, which 4 ereien U en S Americans who, through the develop-|er — important requirement. The] he is given. z i . Be 1! count as part of thei we T ‘5 : : ment of their special skills, go as | Peace Corp volunteer must be frank, Any American citizen over 18 is I 4 eir two . ast night sixteen foreign stu-|.o%unteers to Foreign Countries to|and honest, but at the same time| eligible for the Peace Corp. There | **#"S volunteer service. ents were honored at the United] help in world improvement,” said | not offending. This need can be bet-|is no upper age limit. A married » s will be given on November a ons Dinner sponsored by the] james Kweder, representative of|:er understood by remembering the| person with no children will be ae-|8 and 29 in Rocky reenville Woman’s Club. They at-] ihe : tended the dinner as the personal Mount and in Peace Corp who spoke on our| Nigerian situation which recently j « i if his spouse is also accepted | Goldsboro for those people who are cempus Monday. oceurred, over the misinterpretation | : Volunteer. a 4 explaining the Peace] of a post card. Pe Corp volunteers will be The dinner is given each year dur-| Corp, Mr. Kweder told the students | Amother requirement which Mr.|tyained by ex ing United Nations Week. This} who packed Austin Auditorium for| Kweder listed is the ability to ree- ure of Dr. Keener Frazier, of the Po- Science Department at the G ‘il ‘al ted in becoming a member of of Greenville residents. in famber Peace Corp. language} = F« further information on the Peace Cirp, students should see Dr. his Monday moming lecture, that | ognize the potential political situa-| the t nical fields the goals of the Peace Conp are the| tion as it and to be able toj will requ ind in the tradition, gov understanding and trust that arise handle it. Lastly, the Peace Corp vol- | ernment nd invitations of the Unit from common effort. = ——- Groups Announce Plans, Officers Cramer in the Geography De- ee : : t mpus Peace University of orth Carolina spoke ip: eac “The Crisis in the United Na- ions and our National Security.” liason officer. “You will receive the friendship of your hosts and the enrichment that arises from intimacy with another Dr. Frazier was inrtoduced by Mrs. J. B. Kittrell a member of the Poard of Trustees of the Woman's = ; 5 | Be oe of Trustees of the Woman's! culture. You will stand in the eyes | lege of the University of North) ,¢ the world as examples of the Organizational Happenings In Brief olina. moral purpose that established the| United States and now guides its} New Officers Elected «of BCC. was initiated as an alumni the course in world affairs,” explained] officers of the Zeta Psi member on October 8. He is currently ete ete Oey chapter oak ee. mnsisting of dishes from several! yy Kweder, a graduate student at doing radio an vision work in| ovntries, the menu was printed in! pyc f Alpha Omicron Pi, social sorority | 4. nere were 150 guests at the din- eville, North olina. ie te apaneee a Si “i Ganolina: have: been: en-| ven languages. The Peace Corp, which was organ- ast Carolina, have been an Mrs. Howard Mims, Chairman of) j76q on March 1, 1961, was pas inced ‘for the 1961-1962 term. saraj| KD Pledges Eleven the Dinner Committee, acted as Recen ile), and Carmen A. Verges Raynor (Puerto Rico) greet} M’stress of Ceremonies. Following fadents, staff. and Greenville citizens at the Foreign Students | the dinner, Catherine Labaume, the uest of State Senator and Mrs. Robert L. Humber, responded to the by a unanimous vote by the Senate] Louise Rogers will take over the du-| ently, Gamma Sigma Chapter of | Zeta. of the U. S. In explaining the Peace] ties of presidem from Jan Gurganus, | Kay | Corp President J. F. K ady sai i,{ former president of the sorority. fon McKean and Ma “Although this is an American Peace} A junior student at East Carolina,| ** pe pledg- | a cs ee as Pcie Corp, the problem of world develop-| Miss Rogers is specializing in prim : y Madge | ulty -Students Honored a Se USS Cae ad coy bee 8 - 2m ment is not just an American prob- > education. She served as Vice pres- President, Mrs. Dink soe After] tem. Let us hipe that other natiins} ident of the Alpha Omicron Pi so-| being presented by their hosts, each] ij) mobilize the spirit and energies| ial sorority in 1960-1961. Hart, Norma Carol |! the students told the guests land skill of their people in some Other officers elected to serve with | an NV c 3 am | z oe en Ss en Ca | ttle about his country. form of Peace Conps—making our| Miss Rogers are: \ff, and Nancy Gilbert. Peter Johl, East Carolina music BS ,,own effort only one step in a major Janice Sessoms, vice president and| yy ie A: number of colle: studi m| Ja M. Taylor, president of the student and 2 tar of last summer’s|: ternational effort to increase the] senior Panhellenic delege Carolyn New Rushees Named outside the contin 2d} Cl : Glenn Boyd, vice-president, “Lost Colony” production at Manteo,| velfare of all men and improve un-| Beck, recording secretary; “lk 1a Phi Chapter of A States and foer faculty members| Ar 3. Peaden, president of the for- entertained guests with a program) derstanding among the nations.” Lane, correspond retary; XG originally from foreseen ies}ieyn lar > fraternity, Sigma Pil) 2 Srallneleng sone. ns ce Some of the requirements of the} dra Thompson, treasurer. | Carolin were honor guests at © te x Ipha: Dr. James H. Tucker, Dean | @7&Ue°- He was accompanied by| peace Corp, stated Mr. Kweder, are} Martha Alice Allen, rush ¢ =i nf * the College Union S: ft of Affairs, and Mrs. Tue fp warry (Guilin) er student} (1) having a basic skill such as| Nancy Jane Collins, publicity chair-| wemen stud ill observe a pledge-| train Edith Ba wt 2:80. : Y Ann Mende 5 | eoakeat ce ae | teaching, inis ve talents, com-| man; and Elizabeth Rogers, junior period of approximately Students, fecubby and aff Fleming, Dir r era ee munity development workers, agri- Panhellenic delegate. - : : | i Sue J x 3 , re bers of the college, owr le-} th Por sanguage Department; cultural extension wo , librari- Mary Nell Shaw, a member of Al-| t on ent of the I } E ivited to meet | | n, Mrs. Margu-| i¢ é resen S ans, construction workers .. . and|< Omicron Pi, is serving as presi- | ¢/ass. Judy Berr and Mr. Robert R.| many more such talents. dent of the Panhellenic Council. y, | 5 5 : . is r t in-| : faculty members of the | Another requirement is generaliza- Other members of the sorority are} tude ; B Theta Ch uage Department; and | a en ow tion—having a broad field and being Barabara Bareo, Jan Carroll Morris, ‘the 4 ae. \ » Robin- Ww i ts, able to adapt to different cireum-| Joan Phelps, Lynn Slaughter, Brenda | son M Rhue; : East Carolina College’s chapter of a. Sutton, Gail Walser, and Adelia Smith. ; ) Ruth Joyce Harris, is a new pledge} and Linda Armstrong. of the sorority. | eRe = x ‘ ae held eshman Class will sponsor), e ae | Recent Initiations Tryouts for this show will - hel! dance after the Pi Kappa Alpha. Sig Ep Initiates Four | kece r stir toriu r 6, 3 : 1 Austin Auditorium November © Sigma Nu football game on October The North Carolina Kappa chapter | 100, | | + 3 > 1 Or U | oye eg 28, from 4:30 to 7:00 p. m. This dance| of Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity re-|ty were Fort | | According to Tom Royal, chairman y ‘ | Ril pha, Greel ‘ Circle K Club will present a ||. ape Variety Talent Show No-|Frosh Sponsor Dance | vember 8 and 9, in Austin Auditorium.) qj. p elected by . itt A , | 18 open to the entire student body. cently initiated four new brothers. and* Ronald E. of > -p r committee, “Any act mae 5 - oe inane sit ny | Admission will be one cent for each} The new rothers are: Ronald H.} * the service jazz bands, singers, piano players, ; vear of age. That is, if you are twen-| ochler, Walker P. Norford, Jimmy combos, baton twirlers, dancers or any others are welcome to participate” | | Pianist will be present to accompany We Kappa Aly Bon eae F ssion fee. The proceeds of this| the first initiation carried out by the dance will go to the stadium fund. Re-| brothers on N. C. Kappa since they Delta Zeta Pledges ; a ; , fyeshments will be sold. the proceeds] became a national chapter. The new | 7 , Chapter of Del fas ‘ : : : Plans for the social nt in the}Nu, « r ternity on the | ae ee er third-place “win= which will go to the Freshman] brothers were honored at a banquet rs i itiate four pled College Union ‘were ™: y Monty|campus, for the ben ne col-|_ fa Re ee ee Fin $10 ‘ass. Musie will be supplied by re-] chat evening at Respess-James. Jas si rivate ceremony Mills, Chairman of the < om-| lege’s new stadium fund. Highlight-| SCE Gy DE: + tind) sare llconds: Charles Robison, a 1960 graduate| ceding « r’s Day banquet of - mittee; members of the | In-| ir i Kappa Al social activ ion; and Cynthia Ann 1 p es are t Y 1 “concert by recreation supervisor of Hege | sea 1 Dream Girl Ball, both to) [eS See Union. Fi | the . | . ° Ada MEME Mrection of the af-| Officers of the fraternity are Jerry \Theta Chi Jubilee tternoon, the cu Mallet ea By sea ae ‘ e : Douglas Robinson, James Southall Pao ‘_ ol ay Sse a ee and Kenneth Trogdon, - represented of the m wh honor | 1 arter, treasurer; and Steve guests come. Mrs. “<<: t M y , conductor, member of the College Union staff,| 1 wing “ Week” held by the ities on the ¢ s of age, you will pay $.20] Jones, and Martin Davis. This was} however, they must provide ponsor on Oc- game with Sigma | respectively, Admission will be 50 cents per person and 75 cents per couple. Theta Chi fraternity at a committee neeting at Hampden-Sydney College, Hampden Sydney, Va., during the weekend of October 21. The committee made plans for the annual Mason-Dixon Jubilee spon- Kappa Alpha has announced s pledges for the fall quarter. They sored by the fraternity, which this year is to be held at the University of Richmond, Richmond, Va. March 16, eph Lea, Jr., Wilbur Poston, | Melvin Hooker, Weldon Wall, Ed- 1 Dixon Worley HI, Thomas Snotherly, Robert Taft, Robert Dodd, Coley Brown, John A. Farris, Jr., Lester Brown, John Taylor Barnhill, 17 and 18. A social function is sched- uled as well as business meetings for this region. All eleven chapters of Theta Chi n North Carolina and Virginia will Noe, Hunter Chadwick. Jr.,| represented at this Jubilee. Hunnicutt, Thomas Scott, Edward V. Pickford, srry Simpson, and Interviewers from the U. S. Coast Guard and Portsmouth, Virginig Schools will be on cam- 3 pus soon to interview interested e Pa DY seniors. Those registered with Business Frat Rush the Placement Bureau who wish The Del Zeta Chapter of Delta to talk with these representatives a Pi Carolina College should sign up for interviews by Sigma announced its pledges following November 1, at the Placement Of- sh of the} “all Quarter Rush- From October to fice in the Administration Build- House on Oc-|December, the “rushees” will go i and 17 persons]through a period of pledge and willl gggge¢ ° attended. in December 9 be formally initiated = i 6 f Soe ys THURSDAY Only at the ‘an Sigma and]into the professional busines: oY were presented | nity on campus. STATE Theatre kson. Dr, Jones, Delta Zeta’s five pledges include BREATHLESS ted an inspiring | William R. Thompson, Jr., Frank D. starring Gene Sibery ed the purposes >. Robert H. Lovie, Theodore] } FRIDAY & SATURDAY Show members of} Whitmyer, and William L. Hudson, “MAN IN THE MOON” should aid in en- All members of the fraternity re- A Comedy Takeoff on the ds ‘of East Caro-| cently attended the North Carolina Astronauts 7 'rrade Fair held in Charlotte. Starts SUNDAY LESSPLOSS ISLES SHS LHOPSSSE LO | P Jeffrey Hunter and David Jensen - ECC STUDENTS i in “MANTRAP” 4 A PARTY HOUSE. and POTEET EST ST OSTC TTT TEST TS ’ w Vi f foe ae etches, Basco Diner, Sy Its whats up front that counts i Zeverages Anytime. : : : Ben Purchases of “Meal Tickets” 1 ga gor Up front is [FILTER-BLEND) and only Winston has it! at All Times in a Non-Alcoholic Atmosphere Rich, golden tobaccos specially selected ee specially PLACE FOR NICE PEOPLE Cor, ith asda Cotanes processed for full flavor in filter smoking. Join Us At “Dedicated To... 1. J, Regholds Tebaseo Ca, Winston-Salem, NC. ond Floor (over Mary Ann Soda Shop) TLL GRIFFIN, Cpr. and Mgr. A Young Man’s Taste” ‘ LEPOCPOPOOSEL ELI OOO CISD HOST OO DOOM PIAA AAAAIAAAAAAAAAAAAIIN PAGE SIX Win Over Newberry, Moves Bucs On Top EC emerged to the top of the lad- der in the Carolinas Conference stand- ings with a thrilling 13-7 victory last Saturday night in Newberry, South Carolina. The loss removed the Indians from the top seeded spot in the loop, and gave the Bucs a 4-1 conference mark, and 5-1 overall. A tremendous team effort by Coach Jack Boone’s “fighting” Pirates spoil- ed the Newberry Homecoming. It ap- peared that the Bues would have to for a tie of following a goal line stand by hime team during the final moments of action. settle the The strong Indian defense s) a Buc drive at the one foot line. Qu terback Tom Gorman, one of the con s truly fine bac moved hi as the EC 16 with onl two minutes remaining on the score team as far board clock. Honeycutt Sets-up and Scores Clincher Gorman pitched back to Phil Or- sini, who tried a sweep to the left side. Pirate left end, Richard Honey- eutt, what proved to be of the year for EC. The 200 p the ball out of hind the line of s eeded to make e defensive pl: stole Orsini, immage, and car the opposi ider the arr of ried it down well inside zion’s 10 It did yr rd line. take the Bues w-Up the thriller with A Rouse to lisill handoff gained four, and age for Rou pass to utt and the touch- Bob Muldrov for ra point was wide. get off sev- lays t & seconds remaining. ‘set Honey down. nninig attempt but the Indians had | run out on them. Gorman including t. Big Fred Georgia caught s show er, the two fine teams dead- r a scoreless be-| but two] clutch | of Bob and lock. The defensive play | Bumgardner, Chuck Gordon, Clayton Piland stood out for East | Carolina. The fireworks started offensive- ly in the third stanza, EC received the Lickoff, but was stopped dead in their shoes. With penalties hurting Coach Boone’s eleven’s chances thriugh the night, it appeared that the Bues would never hit pay dirt. It took a Newberry score to bring the Pirates to demonstrate their best |“fighting” mood of the season. On th down Carl Harris crashed into the end zone the one, giving |+the home team a 6-0 lead. The con- sion made it 7-0 midway in the ind pericd. Coach Boone installed Vince Fiduke nto the game at the quarterback post for the Bucs, The Pennsylvania native | returned the kickoff to the 20. Ei- duke then took charge and marched his team 71 yards for a touchdown. Tom Matthews, the leading Pirate ground-grainer for the night with 52 yards jin 12 carries climaxed thé foree- ful drive with an eleven yard run off the right side to hit pay dirt. Muld- row converted to tie the game for EC. The Pirates, supported by only , few EC fans and cheerleaders, who were weary from the long day’s jour- would not settle for anything but all the marbles. Boone decided to give Eiduke a rest on an EC drive during the late stages of the last period. Dan from ney, Rouse and Bib Bumgardner executed q beautiful 20 yard pass into enemy territory. | Rouse then completed passes to Matt- hews and Strikland, only to see the | Bue drive end at the one foot line. | However, Honeyeutt put the ck into contention by stealing the ll. Afterwards the game was liter- | ally exterminated for the Indians on the pass (play from Rouse to Honey- down | Some of us complain, even when we get what we expected. EC Plays Apps [In Battle For Honor In Hickory EC’s top seeded Pirates ean cli h Conference grid crown cutive wins over Appalach- and Lenoir the follow- of Coach Jack a 7-6 loss, against WCC of a perfect six contests in the is week The ian th ing week men. Boone’ in the r way will be in operation at an at Boone, this Appalachian (3-1) what should be a real thriller. The fresh a convineing erence Win over Carson- The Mountaineers’ record the Bucs’ at 5-1 and it sur- Pirate defense with 44 to scored upon them. was unbeaten going into last contest at Boone, and the home m emerged victorious 21-17. Sweet is sought by Coach Jack Boone and Company at Hickory this weekend, The East Carolina attack is built around Tomr Matthews, a brilliant Senior halfback from Hert- ford. ainst xps are from non-con n. 55 po EC te revenge “The Scooter” has picked up 357 | yards in Matthews is also tied in the pass catching department with end Rich- | ard Honeyeutt. The former has six |fer 78 yards from the Bue quarter- vacks, Carolina Conference Standings conference overall Woh owW a a an East Carolina Lenoir Rhyne Appalachian Newberry Catawba } Elon wares Dre NOR PE West Carolina Guilford 0 East Carolina Team Scoring td’s pat fg Tom Michel 40 Tom Matthews 3 Bob Muldrow Bill Strickland Nick Hilgert Larry Rudisill John Anderson Richard Huneycutt Come ON Ww ecocoorHoN AP TR we coocoonose eoocecoooon 0 2 2 1 0 1 were sent into action, and immediate- | Bucs | carries for a 6.9 average. | tribute heavily to East Carolina’s suc- | This was the scene of action last Thu benefit contest for the new stadium. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9 : Uy Ast CAROLINIANS rsday night at College Stadium. The Purple edged the Gold 12 to 6, in a Purple Wins Freshman Game By PARKER CHESSON The Purple edged: the Gold, 12-6, in a freshman intersquad game held in College Stadium last Thursday night, Led by quarterback Bill Cline, who was directly responsible for both touchdowns. the Purple scored once in each of the second and third quarters. The Purple’s first touchdown was chalked up by Cline on a quarterback sneak from 3 yards out. The try for the extra point was unsuccessful. The other Purple score was the result of a 30 yard Sline to end Colon Quinn. Again, the try for the extra point failed Led by halfbacks Jerry Tolley and ‘Dinky” Mills, the Gold squad scored eir touchdown the third quarter as the result of 5} quarterback Ric The ai no good. Dave another from USS yard pass from Bass to Tolley. empt for the extra point we end, Gold squad Bumgardner, an of the iding bali. He made ches of pas ifie cimpetitor i member who played out several good ¢¢ was a ter Based upon the results of this in- tersquad contest, Coach Jack Boone should be able to count upon several | of this year’s freshman squad to con- | cess in the future years. EC Weight Club Organized of better health and physics 130 men and wo- men students at East Carolina Col- lege have organized a Weight Train- ing Club, The organization has been approved by the Stu Association. ent Government Smith, junior physical education major, heads the organiza- as president. Ray H. Martinez, swimming and tenni: ach at the col- 1 faculty advisor of the new tion lege, club. Other officers are Gordon Patrick, vice president; Peter F. Cash, treas- urer; John Maurice Allen, Jr., secre- y; and Anna L. Baldwin. chairman for women. is FACULTY GAME The Faculty members of the De- partment of Health and Physical Ed- ucation (Men) hereby challenge the remaining faculty of the College to a game of basketball to be held at the Memorial Gymnasium the night of November 27, 1961. The entire proceeds of this con- test will be contributed to the Stad- tum Project, (i.e. outside of the cost involved in purchasing rubbing al- cohol, analgesic balm, liniment, tape, and other materials required to patch- up the broken bones and aching mus- cles.) The Miracie- Comfort Watchband BRAZILIA $75 .T.1) Jeweler f Corrisable. We all make mistakes... ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE ON EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Touch-type, hunt-and-peck, type with one hand tied behind your back—it’s easy to turn out perfect papers on Corrasable. Because you can erase without a trace. Typing errors disappear like magic with just the flick of an ordinary pencil eraser.There’s never a telltale erasure mark on Corrasable’s special surface. Corrisable is available in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In convenient 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. Only Eaton makes A Berkshire Typewriter Paper | Kinston. Coley Brown, Pika Sigma Nu, In Saturday ‘Afternoon Grid Contest East Caroline’s Pirates hit the d again this weekend, but there will be plenty of action this Saturday afternoon at College Stadium. Pi Kap- pa Alpha and Sigma Nu, two fra- iernities will meet head on in what uld be a real thriller. The two teams have been holding workouts for the past couple of weeks and should be in fair condition for the daylight encounter. The kickoff time for the fraternity contest will be at 2:00 p.m. The game will be played or a fine cause. Proceeds will go to sh new football stadium being built; y next season, The Pika fraternity, coached by Ed Durham, field averaging close to 190 pounds, and backfield averaging 180. The two guns in the Pika attack are ex- I od to be Jerry Wilkins from Dunn and John Cutler, who is a native of a 200 pound ackle Jacksonville, Florida is expected to be the lineman for Pika eleven, ma Nu will be led by Co-Cap- um Hunt from Burlington and ames Stout, a rugged right halfback Mizell of will a line from top T the » weighs 1 1 from Beaufort is expected to help } Jones will play te Stout and is quite shifty. posi PiK LE LT LG = RT. RG RE QB UAB RHB FB Sigman LE Ler. LG fe RG RT R QB LHB 1B PB David Jones, a Fresh- cause considerably. the halfback slot op- Sigma Nu Starting Lineups Alpha Dalton Harold Carter Willie Godwin appa Sandy Carroll Loftin Brown Zucker Fa Tom Jim Coley Charle A.W. Steve Coc Jerry Wilkins Jonn Cutler Nu Stan Cagle Dixie Hobgood Bill Mery Steve Hockman Richard He Phil Butch as Sam Hunt James Stout David Jones Ralph Stone | Saturday Afternoon Football One of the most popular discussions 01 has been the possibility of Saturday afternoor ly, daylight encounters would be to the benefit : In order to have a successful operation tion on the gridiron, a change in the class necessary. Saturday classes would have to be er vent the college from keeping the name “‘suitcase Wouldn't it be nice to have a game in dance at night. If this year’s Homecoming game at night, certainly 16,000 fans would not have Gradium to watch the Pirates play Elon's ( People This Next season, the Bucs will try their « J. S Ficklen stadium. W hether or not any gan coming will be played in the afte present time. Of course, there will be some who work on Saturday, if the Pirates decide t noon. But, when the number of people who work 1: Greenville are compared with the size of the jeze Ayaimst noon, is ! | Carolina, we will have to go with the latte of a ple who like the idea Saturday classes weekend seems to take great deal out afzernoon games might keep more students on car Competition Geographically The Atlantic Coast Conference and the ence both draw successful crowds on Satu competition would not be great if the gan h in the afternoon because geographically, EC is position to have Saturday afternoon games. Witl Hill, Durham, and Winston-Salem well out would be no comeptition in our area and the traffi not be great. If the Pirates do get in the Southern Conf it is most likely that the majority of the games w the afternoon, since the conference does play the games in the day time. Good Coverage By Radio It is good to know that East Cz a’ been getting excellent coverage on radio at home is fine publicity, now many areas that have not fore have the opportunity to tune in on the I during the 1961 season. Transportation Of Cheerleaders There have been many people complair about the cheerleaders not going to Catawba ar half of the Guilford game. It is certainly not the z school did not provide transporation for them. The cheerleaders finally managed I Newberry game. But arrangements should be n vance for the away trips. It means a great deal 1 know that they at least have this much su; Therefore, it essential that permanent ides be made. is See eS SSS re SELES S TOSI E STE TES LOOSE SOIL DODO LIOE LODO PO ESOL OL LPI WOULD YOU LIKE TO BE ABLE TO DANCE THE CHA- CHA, TWIST, WALTZ, FOXTROT, MAMBO, TANGO, SAMBO, BOP, Etc. IF SO. WHY NOT VISIT AGNES and RONALD FINDLAY The Findlay’s Have Done Exhibition For The College and Also Did The Goreography For The School Play, South Pacific. . Agnes and Ronald Are Now Offering Classes In The Above Dances. These Lessons Will Be One Hour Long and The Cost Will Only Be 75¢ Per Person For Each Lesson. Don’t Miss Out On The Fun That Can Be Had Through Dancing! Sign Up Now! You'll Be Glad You Did! For Further Information Call PL 2-5610 Before 1:00 p. m