Fast Caroli East Carolina College GREENVILLE, N. Number 1 ferry Sanford and EC’s platform on the feotball school, and elementary students last Friday. \ field where Sanford addressed col- (Photo by Bill Weidenbacker) Newest Dorm Open For Male for men j ternoon, inspection by in- steady stream n Greenville and) localities toured the two to five o’clock. since September Campus Stations | tnvite Students 2sted in radio, or any aspect are invited to nd floor of Joyner of day FM Radio or ness manager. nd transmitters are second floor of the East Carolina Playhouse cordially invites you to Open House Tuesday, September 25 7:00 p. m. McGinnis Auditorium “What is Unitarianism” is the topic of discussion at Uni- tarian Fellowship to be held at the “¥” Hut, Sunday, Sep- tember 23, 8 p. m. All students are invited. Students Schedule For Annual Portraits Editor Walter C. Faulkner of | the BUCCANEER has announced nlans for class portraits for the +©63 yearbook. Each student, grad- juate, or undengraduate is entitled +o have his portrait made for the | There is no charge for these sittings since they have been paid * by funds allocated by the Stu- | lent Government Association. Anyone having a picture made yust (1) make an apointment in the College Union area, (2) go to hird floor Wright Building where | the photographers are set up, (3) | pick up and fil lout cards complete- | ly and accurately, and (4) wear the | apparel described below. | President Jenkins approach the) It is imperative that all students | wear the prescribed anparel. The | female students are to wear dark. Shethand cardigan sweaters over a te Bermuda-collar blouse, These | will be furnished by the BUCCA- | NEER. Male students are to wear a white shirt and a dark, solid tie and coat. Graduate students are urged to ve a photograph made im order 10 by approximately 500 men, the dormitory is the third to he erected on the South cam- pus for use by men students. The new building, constructed | at a cost of approximately $1,200, 000, is modern in design and, as companion structure in location, | the style of architecture in | and Aycock dormitories. give a better reresentation to the Graduate School. In the past, | only a small portion of the grad- | uate strudents have had pictures | One night per week, when the | photographers will be on campus, | .. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, =p == Editor Announces ° oe ee demn the U. S. along with Russia | | will be set aside for those students | who are student-teaching this | quarter. These dates will be an- | nounced later, The hours for these ‘angements in the building, | nights, however, will be from 7:00 | however, introduce a new note in sidence halls on the campus. central | it to the rear of the building | ree wings around a 1 outside corridors and stair- -s. Opening on these on each of the four floors of the dormitory | are four-room suites, each de- signed to a accommodations ided with built-| nd include closets. q 1 sul a bathroom. In addition to living space for students, the dormitory in- cludes near the entrance the office of the head counselor, Edward Nécholson, and a re- ception room for visitors, both paneled in pine. A post office where students will receive their mail is located just to the rear of these rooms. A recreation room for students occupies the basement of the Fuilding. ‘A TV room, rest rooms, and other ‘accommodations are located here. Those living in the new dormi- tory may use the cafeteria in Jones | dormitory nearby and a newly established snack bar in Aycock dormitory. | pm. until 9:00 p.m. Giles Assumes Registrar’s Duties | Franklin D, Giles has begun his Inties as registrar here. From | 1958 until coming to Greenville, | | acted as assistant director | | NSA delegates had adopted a the role of the student in policy 4resses to making, freedom of the press,|in care of student rights, administrative vio- is Saptember 28. lation of search and seizure laws. unfavorable iparental control ov students by admn rights, and violation of faculty volume of all existing NSA legislation will be published nual National Studen later this year by NSA. When Congress held recently in| this codification of policy is released, the EAST CARO- id from August 15 to August 31} LINIAN will introdvce a ser- the Ohio State University cam-| ies of articles dealing with NSA and its r ion to the The debate on whether to con- student. Nuclear testing DEOYCO. to bef bus, Ohio. The Congress was | uming nuclear testing lasted until six wclock th next morning, When Freshmen Fleet the final tally 1 announced the lution condemning b Officers Oct. 2 Freshmen el ons will be held prominent issues at the | October tes are requested Wrigh: Building There is no fee. Instructor for the classes is Scarlett Miiler. posted on Board. resume The College Union will its Duplicate Bridge sessions on letin a ae (Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf,” ” Loves of Dobie Gillis,” ete ANOTHER YEAR, ANOTHER DOLLAR With today’s entry I begin my ninth year of in your school newspaper for the makers of Nine years, I believe you will a it took only a little longer than Canal, and you know what a gigantic To be sure, the work would have shovel been invented at that time, but, as we shovel was not invented until 1946 by Walter R Cleveland, Ohio. Before Mr. Shovel’s discovery in digging was done with sugar tongs—a method unquestior dainty but hardly what one would call rapid. There were, rally, many efforts made to speed up digging before Mr. 3} breakthrough— notably an attempt in 1912 by the im: Thomas Alva Edison to dig with the phonograph, but the y thing that happened was that he got his horn full of sand. This so depressed Mr. Edison that he fell into a fit of melancho! from which he did not emerge until two years later when his friend William Wordsworth, the eminent nature poet, cheered him up by imitating a duck for four and a half hours. But I digress. For nine years, I say, I have been writing this column for the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, and for nin years they have been paying me money. You are shocked. ) think that anyone who has tasted Marlboro’s unpar flavor, who has enjoyed Marlboro’s filter, who has revelled Marlboro’s jolly red and white pack or box should be more thar willing to write about Marlboro without a penny’s compenss- tion. You are wrong. Compensation is the very foundation stone of the Way of Life. Whether you love your work or hate > year undertaki gone more Fr 1Q4 eI Ar > it, our syste absolutely requires that you be paid for it. For « have a friend named R terir mear ex Glebe, a ve “Imply adores to worm dogs. | ay, “Hey, Rex ) natten some _ iys reply, “No, > wants a dog wort It’s the same with me and Marlboro Ci Marlboro’s flavor represents the art. I think Marlboro’s filter represen filter-maker's art. I think Marlhare'e , the pinnacle of the packager’s art. I thir ure and a treasure, and | fairly burst wit! been chosen to speak for Marlboro on in same, I want my money every Marlboro understand this full well understand it. In the columns wh turn the hot white “s s life—the i se heh many and varied dilemmas which beset th: wt ie urning questions like “Should Chaucer class- rooms be converted to parking garages?” and ‘ be given a saliva test?” and “Should foreis B be held for ransom?” psi. And in these columns, vex campus America, [ Marlboro Cigarettes. If any money, pinnacie week. And They don’t like it, but t ich follow this o} 7 , ening installment, I light of truth on the pressing problems ‘Should proctors xchange students while grappling with the crises that a, make occasional brief mention of do not, the makers will not give me © 1962 Max Shulman