oe >* ast €a Eas t Carolina rolinian College GREENVILLE, N. C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1963 Number 3200 Offers vidual Mastery 5 ones of course. Kappa Alpha Rose (RET _ -% : n Play Tickets |. Performances — February 1 public), 3, 4, a, in MeGinnis Auditorium. (for gener Tickets available a. Lobby of East Cafeteria b. January 25, 28, 29, 30. 31, Feb. 1 Ticket Policy a. Free Tickets (1) Each student upon presenting his TD card will receive a ticket. (2) A student teacher may have a friend pick up his ticket by presenting the = stu- dent teachers ID card. Faculty members may pickup tickets. Since all seats are reserved, a student may pick up_ his date’s ticket by pre- senting her ID card. You may choose the performance you wish to attend (Feb. 3, 4, 5). . Tickets for sale to staff, student dates, and public. (1) $2.00 each (2) Saturday, Feb. 2, is reserved for the pub- lic, and tickets may be purchased at any time. jo a ORF for the Gamma Rho Co-ed Visitation Program Students enjoy co-ed recreation in Aycock Dormitory. IDC Stages Successful Co-ed | } | | | Boys were numerous, girls less so, but Wednesday night’s IDC | mitiation of Go-ed Visitation was | well attended. The girl students | | who were there received their first | e jview of the } recreation room of | Aycock dormitory. | Starting at 7:00 p.m., the pro- |gram ineluded dancing, playing cards, playing socializing. Members of the Wom- en’s Judiciary, acting as hostesses, Dr. Walter H. Judd, recognized authority on U. S. foregn policy and Republican leader, will speak January 31 in Austin Auditorium. His topic has not yet been an- nounced, Congressman, physician, medical missonary to China, and one of this country’s most jpopular and influ- entail lecturers; these are leading roles which Dr. Judd has played in a long and distinguished career. In 1925, under the Foreign Ms- sions Board of the Congregational Church, he bagan a six-year period of service as a medical missionary in South China. On his return to this country, he lectured extensive- ly on the menace of Communism and Japanese militarism and held a fellowship in surgery in 1932 at the Mayo Clinic. In 1924, he went to | North China for another four years las a medical missionary. Dr. Judd was elected to Congress in 1942 and until 1960 served in the house as a representative of the Fifth Minesote District. His major efforts in Congress were di- rected toward helping to develop the new and vital role of America in today’s contracted and danger- ously divided world with its threats to U. S. survival as a free nation. Dr. Judd has continued to speak to interested groups all over the ping-pong, and} Republican Judd Speaks In Austin, January 31 served soft drinks from the soda | fountain. | Ruth White, Dean of Women, who also attended the coke party, | smiled, “I think that this | gram of co-ed visitati i |vide good, wholesome recreation. | I would like to see it turned into a regular program.” Oran Perry, President of the | Interdormitory Council, said, “I him give the keynote address at the Republican National Conven- tion in Chicago n 1960. Some 60 million [Americans heard Dr. Walter H. Judd Notice Formal rush for fraterni- ties will be held Monday, Jan- uary 28-Thursday, January 31. Compulsory registration will be held at the mass meet- ing in Library Auditorium, | worthwhile project which will pro- ! isitation In Aycock Dormitory ; think this first co-ed visitation is }a success. As the word gets | around, there will be a wider ac- captance of it. It is a big step for- ward for EC.” | Go-ed visitation will take place each Wednesday and Friday night in the recreation rooms of >, t would take care of all oull t wisest choice screening. Another Possibility discussed was| tier which Chevrolet hoose! nhotner possiblity discussed was no ma er Ww iE: e you C. oose ! 1e activities to help iron out their bl Chairmen would receive These four different cars are alike in one expect only in costly cars. Chevy H fea- 1naton which they could pass important way. Each is a product of tures parkable size, perky performance to their members to help them Chevrolet Division of General Motors. and outstanding fuel economy. Corvair prepare for screening. So each will give you more performance, gives you rear engine maneuverability a = = beauty, comfort and good news at trade- and sports car flair. The new Corvette in. But each is tailored to a certain kind Sting Ray can best be deseribed as 7 bia Proves | ests | of buyer. Our big Chevrolet dramatic. With a choice of 3: : | has the Jet-smooth ride, models, there’s one Chevrolet luxury and styling you’d that will suit you best. 2-quate For © olleges ew can enable them to over- eir somewhat weak verbal the start of college. & ’ said “Tit is encouraging to note,’ | Mr. Coleman, “ that the mean grade group in Contemporary ion was C plus (as com- >» B minus for all fresh- , and in English, a low C plus | freshmen).” He added: “Fin- , 6 per cent of these 72 fresh- -anked in the top quarter of , 16 per cent in the sec- quarter, 25 per cent in the ird quarter, and 53 per cent in he bottom quarter. ye may infer from these early itisties that, although low verbal are a fairly reliable pre- of academic success in the ran year, they do not accur- measure the well-motivated lent’s ability to survive, and in |some cases prosper, in a rigorous 1cademic program. It will be in- to compare the class after the sophomore | 7, SS pay i as Notice WOULDN’T YOU LIKE TO VISIT EUROPE THIS SUMMER? as ita hahaa Soe sh ian a spn a tie ie For only $310 you may fly by jet from New York to Lon- don and back to New York. For six wonderful weeks, you nvironment, n education in master-| may explore Europe on your 1 verbal own or with a group bus tour. Coleman If interested, contact DR. ae ese XANDER, SCHOOL : 3 SS ° nd cations ee M. J. ALEXANDE oem Chevy II Nova 400 Station Wagon, Chevrolet Impala Sport Sedan, id potential. OF BUSINESS, R 20s. Corvette Sting Ray Sport Coupe and Corvair Monza Club Coupe SR is following] phe group will leave New York nts oe only a few days after the first two years, at- son whether other| term of summer school closes. See four entirely different kinds of cars at your Chevrolet dealer’s. Members of the Playhouse position tain slowly opens upon the medieval kingdom depicted in Once Upon a Mattres, the audience in McGinnis Auditorium will see of the perfected results of weeks intensive labor. A good dramatic production en- more than jest walking a stage speaking lines writ- some well-known play t. Besides lines to be learned, } sets to be built and props found (or built). Lighting, and music must be be de- and all of these coordinated. The a show, whether it be on Broadway, in Hollywood, or in Mc- Ginnis. MES must and made must be Ed Loessin, director of the pro- responsible for the co- well m as as the original on of all the factors of mro- duction. John Sneeden, technical director for Once Upon a Mattress, has de- igned the scenery and planned the cing of lights. The eighteen set include a throne room, a ‘ workshop, tournament tents, a bedroom with a huge bed, and numerous corridors. Working him are stage managers Shei- lights in the light loft for proper lighting. la Swift and Suzi Truesdale. They are responsible for the smooth run- ning of the show back stage. Allen, property mistress, - crew have made and found ssortment of ‘props includ- ing such items as a dead bird with feathers, a plucked chicken, a hu- man-sized bird cage, lutes, spiked an e1rgnt weapons, sided hypnotic mirror, an hourglass that doesn’t look like an egg tiber, a dumbbell, and a throne. John Sneeden said, ‘This must crat area. not be a aristo- There very second any- isn’t a throne to be hand found, where. The costumes are designed and executed by Noel Tisdale who is as- sted by Kathy Hollingsworth. Dr. Rickert is the milliner. n medieval the trains Corrine style, cos- tumes have flowing and sleeves and fur trim. As she leaped across a pile of taffetas and bro- ades, Dr. Rickert jokingly estimat- ed, “We to wrap enough material here the adminstration » have around foundation to roof All of the 62 costumes were made here. building from 483 times.” I ‘ais the lighting di- rector: Betty Rose Griffith is the choreograrher; and Gene Strassler is the conductor. Shown here is the fly loft which the fly area space is controlled. This and the other technical stations of the play area connect by tele- phone. Copy by Katherine E. Johnson Photography by Bill Weidenbacher Here viewing the queen’s costume, aba calien Sneeden, John the final set. the costume crew technical director, is in charge of making al EAST CAROLINIAN eer so — hy cme ; Carter Directs B Sd i Or | a sot ts ip - diet Clinics In Ga., Car. Director of ron li ] dent Kap. Delt. Holds Iniliation; Guest Speaker, Dean White 1a Sigma Chapter of Kappa|t an engraved Sorority initiated three of one Ward, who was members of its 1962 pledge | “ Pa on January 18. St. James if teeth es 26 | Methodist Church was the site of | “ledge” of her class. Lana McCoy e \pproves Ss | the nitiation services. joo a a ramit ——— the The new members are as follows: and the I I an Steckel : : : arshij sre ini d int Yorth Carolina : x | Patricia Ann Arant, Lana K >- | book Award, 1 } a}Kappa of Sigma Ph silor place eC Lost ID Card | Coy, and Diane Marie Ward. | W m4 x 1 the “Whi ‘ ty in ceremonies held oon | llowing the services, the so-| Rose i a Silver >, | frater _ St the new ini Pat Waff, presided. Dean R y Kappa speaker. St $ ? 3 g x ATTA oe OTRO ER: taut women stu- ce is neces- out that de- rom colleges in thel broad. Interest- ild contact Dr. R 202-203 or Jim 21 Great Tobaccos make 20 Wonderful Smokes! the EAST CARO- ib es on the top CHESTERFIELD KING tastes great, smokes mild. You get _ | °f Wright Building. 21 vintage tobaccos grown mild, aged mild and blended mild, and made to taste even milder through its longer length. : tl om 3 Cae : : CHESTERFIELD KING ; assified Ad ae eS sd _ | Longer length means milder taste ! Q : ( i GARE (TES 28 The smoke of a Chesterfield King é ‘a Omega Pi Soror- ie meliows and softens as it flows YARD. Notify: . — through longer length ... becames rith 136 or Post Tobaccos too mild to filter, pleasure too good to miss! 5 : smooth and gentle to your taste. ORDINARY CIGARETTES dE. Page 6 === eee eee eee ee oe OTTO OE TO TO OE SPORTS REVIE By LLOYD “STACK” LANE een ee ee OOS ILO LILL ET LOL OS | This week seems to be a very slack period in athletics | at EC. The major sports entertainment will be the Pirate | game with Oglethorpe. EC beat Oglethorpe earlier this year | 34-32 in Atlanta on a jump shot in the last three seconds by Lacy West. This same ball control club will be welcomed into the Pirate cove tomorrow night. It should be FUN to see a real ball control game with both teams holding the ball for five to ten minutes before taking a shot. Maybe the ball will bounce towards the Pirates and the fans can see a good, fast game. Although it may sometimes be better to play a ball: contro] game, it makes dull viewing. + oe ek OS It is nice to see a smal] man awarded any sports trophy, especially today in the era of the big men. Sports today re- quire height and weight. Football and basketball are two prime examples. You don’t see college or Pro football players who are comparatively light weight. Basketball players have gotten so that the man under six feet is the exception to the average height. Knowing this, it is good to see someone who weighs 157 Ib. and stands 5-7 win an award for being the top athlete of the year. Maury Wills of the Los Angles Dodg- ers received the RAE HICKOK PROFESSIONAL ATH- LETE OF THE YEAR award. The little speed demon won the Hickok $10,000 gold-buckled, jeweled belt last Monday night. This award is just one of the awards that the fleet | footed man has been given this year. He was named the National League’s Most Valuable Player and the Associated Press’ Athlete of the Year Award. Maury achieved his fame | and established himself in the record books by stealing 104, bases for L. A. last year. His bat was a consistant factor in the Dodgers pennant chase. Wills hit .299. He beat out two of the big men in athletics for the award, namely Jim Taylor Green Bay Packer fullback and Wilt Chamberlin of the San Francisco Warriors. * Some Odds and Ends Have you looked closely at the Associated Press poll on national rankings this week? The ACC has three represent- atives in the top thirty. Duke is high in the poll and in the ACC. Duke is rated as the fourth best team in the country. UNC broke into the top twenty. The big surprise is that Wake Forest is ranked 30th in the nation. * * * * * * * * * Fred Hetzel of Davidson is leading the Southern Con- ference in scoring. Rod Thorn has dropped to second. Hetzel is currently hitting the basket at 23.3 a clip, while Thorn is a close second with 22.7. One game made the difference. Davidson’s 6-8 sophomore scored 35 against Wofford for the move-ahead points. * * * * * Art Heyman is leading the ACC with a 25.7 average. His closest competitor is UNC’s Billy Cunningham. Cunning- ham is at the 20.8 mark. Cunningham is the leading rebound- er in the conference with a 15.1 grab mark. Heyman is be- hind Cunningham with 11.0. Mckenna Speaks At Football Banquet! Last Thursday night, EC held its annual Football Banquet in the South Caferteria to honor the 1962 edition of the football Pirates. John McKenna, football coach at Virginia Military Institute was the guest speaker. McKenna centered his speech around the fact that the officer of the Greenville Naval Re- serve Unit. Dr. David Tucker presented the outstanding player award to soph- omore tailback Bill Cline. This award is presented by the APO Fraternity. Ted Day received ‘the Blocking EAST “T Grapplers Tackle Old Dominion Fri. 'that is wrestling this year,” says | object of a coach is developing young men. The sucessful mentor from VMI denied that old saying in football that “Winning is not the most im- portant thing, it is the only thing.” However, winning has been impor- tant to Coach McKenna. He has been named ‘Coach of The Year in the Southern Conference for the third time im his 10 year reign at the SC school. Presentation of Awards Dave ‘Smith, captain of the Pirates, was a double winner at the bamquet. He received the E, E. Rawl Award for being outstand- ing scholastically and athletically. He also received the Lanshe Award. This award is presented in honor of F. E. Lanshe, former commanding Trophy for his hard hitting line play last year. Blocking back Maurice ‘Alien was the recipiitant of the Most Valuable Player Award. Last year was the first time Allen had called signals in his life. Buddy Bovender received the Outstanding Freshman Award for the ability he has shown in his initial year in a Pirate uniform. Each of the nine graduating seniors received awards . These awards were presented by Coach Clarence Stasavich. Billy Strick- land, Dave Smith, Mickey Brown. Jim Floyd, Murray McDiarmid, Dan Rouse, Richard Stevens, Bob- by Bumgardner, and Earl Sweet each received one of these momen- tos. The EC Wrestling team has its first home contest tonight at eight in the gym. The Pirates play host Old Although the Pirates have not won a match this season, Coach Bob Gantt feels that they are about due for a reversal in their record. | “The men have wrestled well in | the previous but have} faced some of the finest wrestlers | | in the State. Their losses have} j to Dominion. matches, been no indication on the material Coach Gantt. | The Pirates, who have been un-} defeated this year, are Bill Cinniff | in the unlimited weight class and | Bernie Colardo in the 130 tb. class. | Both have two decisions against no | losses. Irving Williams has done} well for EC this season. Williams, | who wrestles in the 147 Ib. cate- gory has won two and lost one. | | The roster features Bob Lane— | 123 Ib class, Keith Douglas — 137} class, Bob Moody — 157 |b.) class, Dick Jones and Guy Hager- | __ 167 Ib class, and Neel Linker | and Ramon Rerry — 177 lb. class. lb. 1 aay ty The Pirate matmen have partic- pated in three matches this year. | They lost to UNC at 18-14, tied | Phiffer at 16-16, and lost to VMI 14-12. After the match with Old Domin- ion Friday night, they will wrestle Fort Bragg Saturday. If there is anyone interested in | wrestling for the Pirates, Coach | Gantt can be found in the Gym and he will be glad to talk to you. | | West Averages — 16.7 In Last Year ’s Lacy West is winding up his | basketball career wth the Pirates | at a very fast pace. Durng the first ten games he has a comfortable 16.7 joint average, but he still won't admit that he has reached his peak for the season. Lacy has shown steady improve- ment every year he has been at EC, which invited Coach Earl Smith to make the statement he could take five men with basketball talent like West and give his competition a fit. The Pirate co-captain easily list- ed his top game so far this year as the Elon game at EC when he reg- istered 33 points, (Nine field goals and 15 for 16 at the line.) Coach Smith explained just why Lacy was a real court champion. “When the chips are down, he hits under pressure and he can handle our opponent’s toughest man on defense. He’s the type of a boy all coaches dream about since he can play any position and do it well.” West played four years of high school basketball for Asheboro High Schoo] and during his senior year he was All-Conference, All-| State, All-Tournament and partic- ipated in the Greensboro Daily News East-West game. He is mar- ried to the former Sandra Jane Randolph and they have a daughter 16 months old. Lacy is a Physical Education major and hopes to coach when he gets his degree. He is also a fine baseball pitcher and two years ago helped lead EC to the national championship when he batted over 500 in the finals. West gives lots of credit for his basketball prowness to Buddy Haw- kins, Recreational Director for Mc- Creary Mills and former Asheboro High ‘School basketball coach. Lacy says that he is not a natural born athlete. It has taken a lot of hard work to develop his game. Today, he s a polished-first rate college basketball player .. . CAROLINIAN Friday, Januar Bill Brogden gives Pirates backcourt strer Brogden Contributes Leadership To Pirates Wilmington’s gift to EC basket- ball is Sophomore guard Bill Brog- of New Hanover coach den son Leon Brogden. The lanky six foot back court man is a regular starter for Coa Earl Smith’s Pirates and has aver- aged 9.4 points thus far this season in the ten games played through last Saturday. Still Billy is not satisfied with his total performance and is aim- ing still for the same 17 points his ser | ,, | player ay West | ja | In the meantime | lot of baske | before he gets average which he turned in at the | end of his senior year during his high school career. When asked to | name his best performance during the past ten games of the EC schedule he refused, saying, “I’m | really not satisfied that I’ve play- ed a good game yet.” Coach Earl Smith has nothing but praise for Brogden. He stated | that “Billy is beginning to give our | basketball team something that we haven’t had since Ike Riddick was with us at EC in ‘59-‘60. thing is back line leadership.” “He (Brogden) seems to play better basketball against our tough- er opponents. His two bette games were Citadel, in which he had 15 points, and Davidson, where he bucketed 12.” Coach Smith labeled Billy’s best moves on the court as being tough on two counts: one, his special abil- ity to set up the outside shot, and two, his natural ability to take — of clear outs under the bas- et, Smith also remarked that Billy exemplified himself as a fine pro- duct of his father’s ; s coach: counseling. ~— “Anyone knowing Bil i derstand well why sy rab! has been named the Dean of all orth Carolina coaches, It’s @ case of ‘Like father, like son,’ as the old ad: ” i ns “igeg goes,” added the Pirate That | | Merchandist Arriving Daily Student Charge a, vited. All you need is 1 Card. ti 222 East Fifth 5 f 1