= Editor Announces New ff, Campus Services \ROLINIAN 1962 Ss ern & the & me Sta Kast C€arolinian XXXVI East lomore over Editor staff Kirk- Eng- for rked on ior Eng- | r will be| 1963 | the | Carolina of Sandee Dent major in charge Proofreading, and a freshman will handle and exchange CAROLINIAN. New Policies on, social subs- ons for the] | new policies have give the added been | 1 to and benefits of campus | nformation. iA students classi- | from ation Building, pub- ial announcements, | on and bulletins icies from the Editor’s new to be will | ocating lost . selling and pur- items, and in- | udents and faculty { annou policies, edition, help inl articles personal th tne next ncements from “Gervaise’ Plays | ere Thursday Mige He film ational Film hursday, current will be 1§ at The * is based of the rium, in of France. n hfully recreates the y of the indigent working s of Paris around the middle of last century. Brillian; photo- hy il inates the squalid, However. interjected filled tment. n Science Me EAST CAROLINIAN .___ == —— me ‘Wilson Ding > y Page What Makes A Leader? _ LITTLE Voting Poses Questions | [if Crs. ae a Bh L C I AN_ON CAMPUS 5 yf j i For Selective Voters . PE gs TAN CP aay | Student leadership ... What does it involve and what type of student makes a good leader. These are questions we might ask ourselves now since elections are scheduled for next week. Many of us are not leaders, but we can learn to look for the qualities that a good leader possesses. The political interests that are formed during college will remain with us throughout adult life. Just by looking for the leadership qualities and voting for the person possessing them, we are showing a definite political interest. We must help leaders assume their responsibilities by; showing them that they are responsible to us, the voters. All too often a leader is elected and his name soon forgotten. Who are our class senators? Student leadership is not to be entirely left in the hands of the individual who is elected. What is a good, student leader? First, he receives criti- cism from his voters and leads them in an executive manner, not dictatorially. His function is to initiate and stimulate projects. He possesses clarity of ideas and knows how to present them ‘to the students. He is self confident and an in- dividual in that he is an outstanding person in his organiza- ition. Most of all the leader is an administrator, which means ihat he knows how to organize and delegate. He knows where his group stands in relation to the college community. The real leader does not receive his votes: he earns his votes. GE OK, {4 Cosminss! - 2uT Wiy CAN'T YOU JUST BLOW YER HORN LIKE TH’ OTHER FELLOWS<" East-West Meets. oe Cultural Interchange Opens In Hawaii The East-West Center at the University of Hawaij is offering to pense paid 21-month scholarships for September, 1962, Two hundred forty-five scholar- New Service Merits Support The EAST CAROLINIAN student. We are beginning in the Friday edition two new services in an attempt fo further EAST CAROLINIAN ser- vices. A newspaper bulletin board, which will contain: of- ficial bulletin board notices as well as notices from various clubs and organizations, will be one new feature. The other aid you in obtaining rides West Philosophy, 7 in Internation- | al Relations and Comparative Gov- | | ernment. The remaining 66 scholar ships are in the fields of Asian |! | Art, Anthropology, Race Relations is here to serve you, the American students 100 all-ex- will be classified ads which will home, locating books and notes, and in finding employment. We hope they will be of service to you; however, the success of these projects is up to you, the student. fic Island Sti ship students from the U. S. and Drama 24 countries in Asia and the Pa- cifie are now living and studying for purposes of mutual inderstanding and cultural and | technical interchange, together Paper Stresses Purposes eal The EAST CAROLINIAN is a semi-wee edited by the students of East Carolin to good standards of journalism and a of news, the purpose of the newsp organ is ‘to inform, to educate, kly newspaper | 2 a College. Dedicated ccurate presentation aper as a communative} ! a and to stimulate intellectually. | U- September, Every country and area in Asia | nd the Pacifie is now represented t the Center. I; qually complete rom each of the 50 states in the Ss. be accomplished ean this is hoped that representation | | Quarterly Publishes The opinions expressed on this p ly representative of the majority of campus, the faculty, the staff, 6r rather those of the student writers. All letters to the editor mu and signed; names will be withh punctuation are the writer’s ow age are not necessari- i the students on this! the administration, but | Ebb’s Milton Paper Dr. John D. Ebbs, associat fessor of English, the current issue The Center is soliciting the best students from each of the 50 states who have high academic ability, leadership potential, and belief in the aims of the Center, who are interested in Asian lan- guages, history, and culture, and would like to study in a uniquely cosmopolitan atmosphere for two years. Ineluded in the scholarship ‘s a semester of study and travel in the ‘Asian area or countries of their choice. Candidate eligibility is based on high academic achievement, ex cellent health, ability to relate to Asians, and demonstrated interest in conributing to the objectives of the Center. Some thirty scholarships are available in Asian, Studies, 12 in --. Monty Mills | Overseas Operations, 8 in East- Kaye Burgess Bill Griffin Dan Ray - Helen Kallio Bill Sullivan - Tom MeAlister of “ suage Quarterly,” y a paper on “Milton’ Poetic Justice in ‘ ” st be typed, double spaced eld on request. Spelling and s Treatment of | Hl: e Samson Agonis- | tes’. | Dr. Ebb’s paper important ast €arolinian Published semi-weekly by the students of East Carolina College, Greenville, North ‘Carolina Member Carolinas Collegiate Press Association represents contribution tow better understanding of ton’s + ” tes, ard John Mil- | meaning in “Samson Agonis- | _ & poetic drama modeled upon ancient Greek tragedy, In addition to the current study | on Milton, he has contributed pa- | Pers to the “Journal of English and Germanic Philology” and the | “Shakespeare Quarterly.” Dr. Ebbs joined the East Caro- lina faculty in 1960 as a member | of the Department of English, | } 10:: | 110: ‘Associated Collegiate Press Keith Hobbs BUSINESS MANAGER Jean Peace EDITOR Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editor Associate Editor Sports Editor Cipy Editor Assistant Business Manager Proofreading Director . Photograipher Sao a be Cartoonists Sek Larry Blizzard, Columnists Junius Grimes, Monty Mills, Burgess, Dan Ray, Donna Bingham, Subscription and Exchange Director Typi'sts a Bais is Sunset Ser -Bonjour M :15—Organ Meditat :30—Nite-Beat 8:30—Folk M 9:00—The Fine Selective Service Test Applications: Due April ] Yay, ikedodew Applications for the Abril 17,;1 Bill Griffin, Kaye 1962 administration of the Col- Helen Kallio, Carol Euler|!©8¢ Qualification Test are novw| 5 Shillied Petiae available at Selective Service Sys- , Loretta Simmnons|t¢™ local boards throughout the ° country, Eligible students who intend to take this test should apply at once to the nearest Selec. tive Service local board for an application and 4 bulletin of information, Following instructions in the bulletin, the student should #1) out his application and mail it im-| le mediately in. the envelope i i | 0 SELECTIVE SERVICE EXAM. aIntsogaas Friday 2:58-—Sign On : 3:00—French In The 4 3:15—Serenade In Blue 3:3 ical Matinee . 0— Musical From Fre 5:15—The Pat Boone Stow 5:30—Sunset Serenade 7:00—Radio Magazine 7:28—Pirete Gports 7:30—Jazs, Cocktail 8:80—Fotk Music Panors* 9:00—The Finest In Mose 10:25—Be Stil] and Know 10:30—Sign Off : Patsy Reese Offices on second floor of Wright Building. Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264 Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. From the “Rubayait uf Omar Khayam.” “The moving finger writes, and, having writ, Moves on; nor all your piety not wit, Shall lure it beck to cancel half a line. Nor all your tears wash out a word of it.” translated by E. Fitzgerald. et ' | Representatives To Hold } Placement Interviews ives from the schoo] { firms listed below ampus before the end interview students, If like to have an inter. me or more of these ves, come to the Place- office, 203 Admin- up for an ap- COME IN PERSON UP. No appointments ide over the telephone inother person. cadline for the foliowing n.. Wednesday, March 21: a, N. C.—Interested in immar, Mathematics, | viee f New York (Insurance) r young men-who are to make a success, their military not concerned rvice in the near ied man with not a re- interested j cate in Beaufort, leted are Ke to 10¢ Tayne, Accounting Office, Virginia—Interested in} Intelligence p< Wish Typists, Secretaries, Be Agency, to inter- Steno- for the >. area, st Mills, Spray, their pro- training pro- to positions in pper manage- Winston- for} . Do not wish Ine Eexress, Recruiting bject to mili- | MEET- | 14, 4:00 Wright | | | Dorms Sponsor Inf formal Dance mmnual Inter-Dorm- lance will be staged I 8:00 Robert Wash- Hall, an “Maurice Will-! s” have been for the 17 li, at in Tum. of Jones rtalnment ind Aycock residents will be admitted Any other persons | to the dance by be purchased at five cents per occasion will be for the men: skirts their dates. The dance, of both for the officers inning the ' PAICE’S Serve | dents | a.m. NC Peace Corps Meets At UNC Dr. Robert E. Cramer, liaison officer at EC for the Peace Corps, has announced to the students that the Peace Corps Conference will be held at Chapel Hill, March 16- Fi. Because reservations must be made within a few days, Dr, Cra- mer requests that interested stu- dents contact him immediately. A nominal cost must be paid by the student or sponsor organization. Dr. Cramer asserts that “this is a unique opportunity for stu- dent leaders to learn more about the organization, and to return to the campus with information and contagious enthusiasm.” Peace Corps Exam A Peace Corps examination will administered to college stu- at Chapel Hill on March 17. Interested students should notify the University of North Carolina Peace Corps Conference Commit- Chapel Hill, prior to March be wee, 12. Notification may be by card or} letter stating name, age, and col- lege address. The field is wide open to com- munity development work teams, teachers, doctors, nurses and other health specialists and educators, home economists, agricultural ex- tension workers, land and road sur- veyors, architects, construction workers, librarians, statisticians, skilled craftsmen, and technicians. Sanford Speaks ‘To E Alumni Sanford will be the Annual to held alumni of Governor Terry rnc ipal spe aker Breakfast 16, by Convention of the Carolina Education Asso- Raleigh, Fodie Hodges President of the Col- Association has an- Fellowship be ch the in Kinston, Alumni nounced. The event is scheduled for 7:45 in the West Dining Hall of the N. C. State College Cafeteria. The program will end in ample time for those present to attend the first morning session of the convention, Mr. Hodges stated. President Leo W. Jenkins and a lange number of students, faculty members and administrative of- ficers from here will attend the breakfast. Dr. Jenkins will intro- duce Governor Sanford. Wednesday, March 14 ig the deadline for turning in Entry Forms to the College Union for space in the Spring Carnival. LS REPORTERS! TYPISTS! COPYREADERS! PROOFREADERS! Report at once to the office of the EAST CAROLINIAN—We need you! No experience necessary! We will train you. (Painlessly) U Barber Shop 804 Dickinson Ave., Greenville, N. C. HAIRCUTS FLATTOPS $1.00 $1.25 Newly eleeten officers of Pi Kappa Alpha are, fn left to right: Bill Worrell, Secgentel at-Arms; Cox, Secretary; Jerry Moore, Historian; Harold Carter, Treasurer; Jerry W — President. EASP! UAROLINIAN Pika Officers Sandy Billy Dallas, Vice President; and /.AUW’ Offers Stude nts Cas Study Award A awarded to a student at BHC for summer study abroad during 1962 has been announced by the Green- ville Branch of the American As- sociation of University Women, according to Dr. Kathleen E, Dun- lop, president of the organization. ! Applications are now being made to Mrs. Marguerite A. Perry, chairman of the ‘AAUW Scholar- ship Fund. _Eligible to receive the 1962 grant, Mrs, Perry stated, are jun- iors and seniors with a “B” aver- age “whose plans for a career would be particularly enhanced study in another country and personality and character recommend them for such study.” Choice of a recipient will be made mmittee of AAUW mem- vers and will be announced April 9 whose Dy. 2 Open to EC students exclus- ively and to majors in any SIC FLICS scholarship of $650 to be, department of instruction, the AAUW award is designed to broaden undergraduate outlook and exerience and to afford the exceptionally promising! and ambitious student an op- portunity for more extensive preparation in her field, she said. The most recent winner, Jane Murray, 1960 music graduate, has only recently returned from an extended stay in Germany, where she studied voice. chosen ROTC Cadets Prepare For Annual Formal Military Ball Preparations are now being made the Thirteenth Annual Mili- tary Ball to be held at East Caro- lina sponsored by the 600th AF iKOTC Cadet Group. The Ball is the only annual formal affair held at East Carolina. Approximately 400 persons are expected to receive bids to the “gala event” this year. The Military Ball will be held at the Moose Club on March 23, 1962, beginning at eight o’clock in the evening. Music for | | | | \ Col, will be provided by the new sixteen-piece Jimmy Burns with Miss as featured vocalist. of Dur- ham will reign as Military Queen for 1962, and will be crowned by i Professor of Air Science, Lt Norman F. Merritt. During intermission members of the Group will present a program of special entertainment whicl range from singing to skits. Orchestra, Rose Lindsay Miss LaVerne Blackley an “I say, is there a tobacco field somewhere near here?” 21 GREAT TOBAGCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD -THEY SATISFY Saturday Game Featutes Single Wing Teammates Sched, Purple-Gold Contey The Annual Purple and Gold, will be David Smi ith, Jim Leftwich, Seturda and Jim Hoover an gees et te So ater ies Buddy Stewart, Robert t ) College Stadium, Saturday, March | sbit, Bill Bintoo. and returning 2: m. The contest will fea-|)osterman, Skipper Duke, along 17, 2:00 p | lett a age \ture a new formation, the single| with James McDiarmid, t oe eens een sual alles Meltt el] Worthingtor ‘awbridge will | Coach Clarence Stasavich. This event will be an intra-squad | | game with the players competing | . onion penn lagainst their teammates. At pre- Ths will be the direst char sent, those running tailback ere: ve es ie eae er | Vinee Eiduke, saphomore from | ~ | Washington, Penn.; Bill Kline ffom a | Valdese, N. C.; ad Whittie Ba | freshman from Wilson, N. C. Others expected to see action | in the backfield include: Billie | gededepepeeeeedeee hdres ede “trickland, Portsmouth, Va.; Larry j Rudisill and Richard Jackson,! ; Hickory, N. C.; Pete Thorell, Staf- | C5 AKAN] | ford-Wayne, Penn.; Frank Gallo-| ! SHIRTMAKERS way, Wilson, N. C.; Tom Michel | and Bill Bailey. Expected to see action in Saturday's Purple and Gold Intra- Pe an game| On the line will be: Ends—John- | § are (left), Bobby Bumgardner, and Richard lie ny Anderson, Dan Rouse, Rich- — |ard Huneycutt, and Bobby Bum- Table Tennis Team + Foreign Film “GERVAISE” Easily Downs State a Austin Auditorium Thursday, March 15, N.C. State College Union was; was hindered by the exception- host to EC s CU Table Tennis ally slick floors which forced Team on March 1. EC easily de- him to alter his game. feated State by winning 23 games Mike Harris, an up-and-coming and loosing only 18. Freshman Novice player, played The major surprise of the day} well and won two of his four the defeat of State’s No. 1! matches, losing to Preston and *, Doug Moretz, while the| Martin Mainster, é6 | team lost to the No. 2 man, EC will be host to the State| K ] N G 0 F Preston, a former State| team some time this quarter, 1 hamipion. | —_—$——— —— K ] N G S aed Nelson Tugwell was the out-! All Seniors who plan to standing EC player, and the only; graduate in May should make | player take a game from Pres- cap and gown reservations and | ton, although dropping the match; also place orders for invita- S [ A [ E Theatre | ny Incomparable India Mad conviction of co gs , and purer with each wa &, native shades set off the 4 button-down collar and short make news. This meticu adjusts easily ' by a close score of 23-21. He won tions not later than March ail other matches during the team} 16 in the Stationery Store in oiteds | Wright Building. 2 a While Bowie Martin easily | ae defeated all of the State play- For The ers except Preston, Fleetwood PRP Seinen: ASSIFIED ADV ERTISING S 4p U D E N T Lilley also won all of hia IN THE EAST CAROLINIAN, matches except a loss to Pres- Terms: cash. All ads must be Who Know ee i if brought to the EAST CARO-71 Be wane on. Lilley, defense player, LINIAN Business Office in The st Wright Building by Friday, 3:00 Sanne Car Owners | /f.mior jhe Tuesday edition and The Most To Organize Club Friday edition. The EAST TRADITIONAL CAROLINIAN is not responsible Look In An organizational meeting of for errors not reported before the East a Sports Car Club} ihe second insertion nor is it | will be held Wednesday night,|[*svonsible for transactions re- Mare! ) 14, at 7:00 p.m. in Austin sulting from the ads. Building, ‘ives 109. ‘Anyone own- HEADINGS: Lost and F ing a Foreign or Domestic Sports For Rent ound Lady Car is invited to attend, Those Employment MACINTOSH who are interested but cannot at- For Sale Miscellane (rides, tend should contact Lowry Smith ous Me FROM ENGLAND ti i iL at 402 Oak Street or Gerald Grant, ai Phone PL 8-1481. a $32.95 ©1961 -Gon A. IN T S. SHIRTNAK TRS LADIES INDIA MADRAS PULLOVER ee | *.0 1082 -Puow Talk haan © THOSE "PILLOW TALK’ PLAYMATES ARE AT IT AGAIN ° ° rd Om Hupson 2 MACINTOSH FROM ENGLAND $32.95 “oven ‘#1 MACINTOSH i wmactie : q hi lend & MM, : FROM ENGLAND of an unsurpassed ‘ riliance Co 434 Now Ree tty . Obviously Madras was meant to be BACK” Golf Jacket $16.50 th button-dows collar design styled with smart three fla jz tenening “2 Eastman COLOR EXCLUSIVE AT tmely flattering cut. EDIE ADAMS JACK OANE JAC KRUSCHEN au Sem - Vvvve eve Pe eens paar ce a FVve9 lle Starts FRIDAY, March 16th afo at Offmans PITT THE ATRE Adm. T5e 222 E. 5th STREET = NS WEAS | “seuwnntnsoeeeeennnnsscsceceeersnessrent!