<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
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It Pays To Do Business<lb/>
With Those Businesses<lb/>
That Advertise With Us<lb/>
Eastti<lb/>
ff<lb/>
Attend Chapel Services<lb/>
Each Tuesday At Noon<lb/>
In Austin Auditorium<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
VOLUME XXVIII<lb/>
Name Band Plays At Dance<lb/>
On Campus For January 29<lb/>
?<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1953<lb/>
Number 1$<lb/>
I ndergraduate Classes<lb/>
?k Event Featuring<lb/>
Thornhill's Orchestra<lb/>
e sponsored by Freshmen,<lb/>
re and Senior classes at East<lb/>
a college Thursday, January<lb/>
are Claude Thornhill, His<lb/>
: His Orchestra, nationally<lb/>
ance band. The social event<lb/>
u Id in the Wright building<lb/>
be attended by students and<lb/>
guests.<lb/>
Robert Kluttz of Goldsboro,<lb/>
of the Senior class, is in<lb/>
f arrangements for the dance<lb/>
g him are Eniil E. Boado, of<lb/>
on, Freshman class presi-<lb/>
; Percy Wilkins of Benson,<lb/>
re class president.<lb/>
meert will be presented by<lb/>
11 and his ensemble from 8<lb/>
9:30 p. m Kluttz has an-<lb/>
Dancing will follow from<lb/>
midnight.<lb/>
a band leader Thornhill is<lb/>
: for his distinctive performance<lb/>
. pianist and for hi unusual<lb/>
rations. The theme song of the<lb/>
Snowfall" is his own comp-<lb/>
n and arrangement and displays<lb/>
 as a pianist to advantage.<lb/>
rung at the Cincinnati Con-<lb/>
y and the Curtis Institute of<lb/>
enable him to combine a class-<lb/>
background with the current<lb/>
i in popular music. As pianist<lb/>
arranger he worked with such<lb/>
cal "greats" as Binjr Crosby,<lb/>
ioodman, Charlie Spivak and<lb/>
late Glenn Miller.<lb/>
ie orchestra presents an unusual<lb/>
ingement of the reed and the brass<lb/>
ill and his band have appeared<lb/>
vocalist are included in the group<lb/>
ns, including a French horn.<lb/>
 entertainment centers as the<lb/>
re in New Yok, the Edgewater<lb/>
. in Chicago, and the Sherman<lb/>
er hotel and the Paramount<lb/>
in Chicago.<lb/>
All College Assembly<lb/>
The first All-college assembly<lb/>
for Religious Emphasis week will<lb/>
be held in Wright auditorium on<lb/>
Monday, January 19, at 10 a.m.<lb/>
The speaker will be Dr. Edward<lb/>
Pruden, world traveler, author and<lb/>
prominent minister in Washington,<lb/>
D. C Music will be rendered by<lb/>
the College orchestra and the Var-<lb/>
sity Glee club.<lb/>
We Need Your Talent<lb/>
Vn amateur talent night is be-<lb/>
ing sponsored by members of the<lb/>
"East Carolinian" staff Tuesday,<lb/>
February 3, in Austin auditorium<lb/>
al 8 p.m. All persons interested<lb/>
in performing in the talent pro-<lb/>
gram should file application in the<lb/>
newspaper office as soon as pos-<lb/>
sible.<lb/>
Plans for the evening's enter-<lb/>
tainment are being worked out at<lb/>
the present time. There will be no<lb/>
cash prizes, but there will be prizes<lb/>
awarded to the top performers.<lb/>
College Reveals<lb/>
Dates Of Exams<lb/>
For MA Degrees<lb/>
East Carolina college has announc-<lb/>
ed dates on which durrng 1953 ex-<lb/>
aminations for the master's degree<lb/>
will be given. At the college the mas-<lb/>
ter's is a degree for teachers and<lb/>
school administrators and is designed<lb/>
to enable them to meet the require-<lb/>
ments for the graduate certificates<lb/>
issued by the State Depatrment of<lb/>
Public Instruction.<lb/>
According to an announcement by-<lb/>
Registrar Orval L. Phillips and Di-<lb/>
rector of the Department of Educa-<lb/>
tion J. K. Long, a compehensive ex-<lb/>
amination for all candidates for the<lb/>
master's degree and an examination<lb/>
in educational fields will be given<lb/>
the same day each quarter.<lb/>
To be eligible for the comprehen-<lb/>
sive, a student must have completed<lb/>
at least 12 quarter hours of graduate<lb/>
work, according to these officials.<lb/>
The examination in education should<lb/>
not be taken until the candidate has<lb/>
completed the courses required for<lb/>
the graduate certificate plus the ma-<lb/>
jor portion of elective courses in edu-<lb/>
cation. This examination will be given<lb/>
orally by a committee in each of the<lb/>
three areas of administration, secon-<lb/>
dary education, and elementary edu-<lb/>
cation.<lb/>
The Winter quarter examinations<lb/>
will be given Saturday, January 24,<lb/>
at 9 a.m those for the Spring quar-<lb/>
ter, Saturday, April 11, at 9 a.m<lb/>
and those for the two terms of the<lb/>
Summer quarter, Wednesday June<lb/>
24, for the first term, and Wednes-<lb/>
day, August 5, for the second term.<lb/>
Summer examinations will take place<lb/>
at 3 p.m. All examinations will be<lb/>
given in.Room 200 of the Graham<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Air Force Sends<lb/>
Representatives<lb/>
Here This Month<lb/>
Representatives of the United<lb/>
States Air Force will be at East Car-<lb/>
olina college January 22-23 to dis-<lb/>
cuss changes in policy in the avia-<lb/>
tion cadet program; to inform inter-<lb/>
ested students as to the type of air-<lb/>
craft flown, training received and<lb/>
advantages graduates will incur upon<lb/>
completion of the program; and also<lb/>
to answer questions which students<lb/>
may ask.<lb/>
Aviation cadet training is avail-<lb/>
able to all qualified men who have<lb/>
completed 60 semester hours of col-<lb/>
lege. Applicants must be unmarried<lb/>
citizens and be between the ages of<lb/>
19 and 26 1-2 at the time of appli-<lb/>
cation. The Air Force is primarily<lb/>
interested in securing applications<lb/>
from college graduates or from men<lb/>
who will culminate their college<lb/>
training at the conclusion of this<lb/>
semester; however, applicatiins will<lb/>
be accepted from men who will be<lb/>
forced to discontinue their college<lb/>
training after at least two academic<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The Air Force is undergoing a tre-<lb/>
mendous expansion at present, and<lb/>
this also applies to the aviation<lb/>
cadet program. Qualifications for par-<lb/>
ticipation in this program have un-<lb/>
dergone a considerable change.<lb/>
Religious Emphasis Week He<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi Sends Members<lb/>
To National Meet In Chicago<lb/>
Members of East Carolina college's<lb/>
eta Kappa chapter of Pi Omega Pi.<lb/>
naJ business education fraterni-<lb/>
articipated in the program of-<lb/>
i at the recent national conven-<lb/>
n of the organization held in Chi-<lb/>
cago. As a result of the outstanding<lb/>
: done by the campus chapter,<lb/>
students and faculty members<lb/>
received appointments and as-<lb/>
ignments in the national organiza-<lb/>
Carter Director<lb/>
Of Band Meeting<lb/>
During This Week<lb/>
V. a luncheon at the Congress<lb/>
the college chapter was given<lb/>
al recognition for winning the<lb/>
National Chapter award of the fra-<lb/>
?rnity for 1951-52. Ineligible to com-<lb/>
ete for the honor this school year,<lb/>
Beta Kappa chapter will aet as<lb/>
e to determine the winner of the<lb/>
-1953 award. <lb/>
Ann Baysden of Ernul, president<lb/>
the East Carolina chapter, was<lb/>
the only student speaker at a banquet<lb/>
ng the convention. She spoke on<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi at East Carolina<lb/>
Delegates from the campus here<lb/>
were appointed during tha Chicago<lb/>
? t ting to various committees. As-<lb/>
signments are as follows: Kenneth<lb/>
Kennedy of Greenville, constitution<lb/>
and by-laws; Miss Baysden and Bet-<lb/>
ty Sue Branch of Greenville, Na-<lb/>
tional Chapter award; Paul Weeks of<lb/>
Whitakers, publications; and Maggie<lb/>
Gatlin of Ernul, records and reports.<lb/>
Dr. Audrey V. Dempsey, faculty<lb/>
adviser of the East Carolina chapter,<lb/>
was elected during the convention as<lb/>
National Organizer of Pi Omega Pi<lb/>
for 1953-1954. She will fill this posi-<lb/>
tion until the national convention in<lb/>
December, 1964.<lb/>
Herbert L. Carter, faculty member<lb/>
of the department of music and di-<lb/>
rector of the college band at East<lb/>
Carolina, is directing a two-day high<lb/>
school band clinic at Rockingham to-<lb/>
day and tomorrow.<lb/>
Student members and directors of<lb/>
bands in Rockingham, Lumberton,<lb/>
Wadesboro, Sanford, Smithfield,<lb/>
Hamlet, Laurinburg and other towns<lb/>
in the area are present for the event<lb/>
and are participating in a program<lb/>
of discussions and rehearsals fol-<lb/>
lowed by a concert.<lb/>
During the clinic a band of student<lb/>
musicians is being organized by Mr.<lb/>
Carter; and as final event of the two-<lb/>
day meeting this group, with Mr.<lb/>
Carter as conductor, will present a<lb/>
program. During the clinic sectional<lb/>
rehearsals for performers on the va-<lb/>
rious band instruments are being<lb/>
held. Music chosen for the State con-<lb/>
test to be held later in the school<lb/>
year ;s being used.<lb/>
For the past five years Mr. Carter<lb/>
has been in charge of arrangements<lb/>
for the Eastern division of the All-<lb/>
State Band clinic, which meets an-<lb/>
nually at East Carolina. He has<lb/>
served as President of the North<lb/>
Carolina Bandmasters association.<lb/>
10:00<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
4:00<lb/>
Schedule For Week<lb/>
MONDAY, JANUARY 19<lb/>
7:30 DEVOTIONAL PERIOD?Flanagan Auditorium Speaker,<lb/>
Dr. Stoner.<lb/>
STUDENT AND FACULTY ASSEMBLY?Wright Auditor-<lb/>
ium. Keynote Address, Dr. Pruden. Music by the College<lb/>
Orchestra and Varsity Glee Club.<lb/>
COFFEE HOUR?Flanagan, Room 8-1<lb/>
SEMINARS: ?<lb/>
"Are First Things Last?" (Christian Campus Life)?Aus-<lb/>
tin, Room 209. Leader, Dr. Kinsolving. Sponsored by the<lb/>
YMCA.<lb/>
"Christian Vocation"?Austin, Room 224. Leader, Dr.<lb/>
Stoner. Sponsored by the Business Club.<lb/>
"Religion and Higher Education"?Flanagan Auditorium.<lb/>
Leader, Dr. Linton. For Faculty only.<lb/>
STUDENT AND FACULTY ASSEMBLY?Austin Auditorium.<lb/>
Speaker, Dr. Douglas. Music by the Women's Chorus.<lb/>
SEMINARS:<lb/>
"Are First Thing3 Last?"?Continued.<lb/>
"Should Religion Be Taught in Public Schools?"? Austin,<lb/>
Room 224. Leader, Dr. Linton. Sponsored by the FTA.<lb/>
BULL SESSIONS?Various Dormitories. (Places listed under<lb/>
OPPORTUNITIES).<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
9:15<lb/>
Six Prominent Men Appearing<lb/>
On Program During Activities<lb/>
College President<lb/>
Back From Miami<lb/>
University Visit<lb/>
President John D. Messick of East<lb/>
Carolina college has returned to the<lb/>
campus here after spending several<lb/>
days in Florida at Miami university,<lb/>
where he participated in an evalua-<lb/>
tion of the school by the American<lb/>
Education. He is a member of the<lb/>
association of Colleges for Teacher<lb/>
Accreditation committee of the na-<lb/>
tional organization.<lb/>
Other memibers of the AACTE com-<lb/>
mittee working with Dr. Messick in<lb/>
Florida were President A. B. Norton<lb/>
of Alabama State Teachers college<lb/>
and Dr. M. W. Moorer of the Flori-<lb/>
da State Department of Education.<lb/>
The evaluation of the university,<lb/>
an institution with approximately<lb/>
7,000 students, a large faculty and<lb/>
an expanding physical plant, involv-<lb/>
ed observation in classes of the<lb/>
School of Education and interviews<lb/>
with students, teachers and admin-<lb/>
istrative officers in regard to the<lb/>
work done there.<lb/>
While at Miami university, Dr.<lb/>
Messick and other members of the<lb/>
committee were honor guests at a<lb/>
dinner given by Dr. J.F.W. Pearson,<lb/>
acting president; Dean John Berry<lb/>
of the School of Education; and Dean<lb/>
Charles Tharp of the College of Arts<lb/>
and Sciences. , w<lb/>
Wheelchair Vets<lb/>
Receive Housing<lb/>
Grants From VA<lb/>
In a year-end report on the pro-<lb/>
gram of money grants for the special<lb/>
housing requirements of veterans who<lb/>
cannot walk without help, Veterans<lb/>
slightly over $25,000,000 has been<lb/>
administration said that a total of<lb/>
granted to eligible veterans for this<lb/>
purpose.<lb/>
The number of veterans receiving<lb/>
the "wheelchair" housing grants is<lb/>
approximately 2,700.<lb/>
Of this number, 80 per cent have<lb/>
used their benefit to build new houses<lb/>
from the ground up suitable for<lb/>
wheelchair living, with ramps, extra-<lb/>
wide doorways and similar features.<lb/>
The other 20 pen cent used their<lb/>
grants to remodel homes they al-<lb/>
ready owned.<lb/>
Eligible for this special housing<lb/>
grant are veterans having a service-<lb/>
connected disability due to war or<lb/>
peace-time service ? entitling them to<lb/>
compensation for permanent and to-<lb/>
tal disability which results in the<lb/>
loss or loss of use of both lower ex-<lb/>
tremities, bo that they can move<lb/>
afbout only with braces, canes, crutch-<lb/>
es, wheelchairs or'similar devices.<lb/>
TUESDAY, JANUARY 20<lb/>
7:30 DEVOTIONAL PERIOD?Flanagan Auditorium. Speaker,<lb/>
Dr. Pruden.<lb/>
9:30 COFFEE HOUR?Austin, Y Reading Room.<lb/>
12:00 CHAPEL?Austin Auditorium. Sjpeaker, Dr. Stoner.<lb/>
3:00 COFFEE HOUR?Flanagan, Room 8-1.<lb/>
4:00 SEMINAR: "Are You Fit To Be Tied?" (Preparation for<lb/>
Family Life)?Austin, Room 209. Leader, Dr. Douglas.<lb/>
7:00 STUDENT AND FACULTY ASSEMBLY?Austin Auditor-<lb/>
ium. Speaker, Dr. Linton. Music by the College Choir.<lb/>
8:00 SEMINAR: "Are You Fit To Be Tied?"?Continued.<lb/>
9:15 BULL SESSIONS?Various Dormitories.<lb/>
Religious Emrhasis week at<lb/>
East Carolina college, annual<lb/>
observance sponsored by stu-<lb/>
dent religious organizations,<lb/>
will bring to the campus for<lb/>
events extending from Sundiy,<lb/>
January 18, through Thursday,<lb/>
January 22, six speakers promi-<lb/>
nent in educational and religious<lb/>
-Flanagan Auditorium. Speaker,<lb/>
9:30<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
4:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21<lb/>
7:30 DEVOTIONAL PERIOD-<lb/>
Dr. Douglas.<lb/>
COFFEE HOUR?Austin, Y Reading Room.<lb/>
COFFEE HOUR?Flanagan, Room 8-1.<lb/>
SEMINARS:<lb/>
"Is It As Late As You Think?" (World Relatedness)?<lb/>
Austin, Room 209. Leader, Dr. Pruden. Sponsored by the<lb/>
IRC.<lb/>
i "Can You Defend Your Faith?"?Austin, Room 224. Leader,<lb/>
Dr. Stoner. Sponsored by the Emerson Study Group.<lb/>
STUDENT AND FACULTY ASSEMBLY?Austin Auditorium.<lb/>
Speaker, Dr. Kinsolving. Music by the College Singers.<lb/>
SEMINARS:<lb/>
"Is It As Late As You Think?"?Continued.<lb/>
"Can You Defend Your Faith?"?Continued.<lb/>
9:15 BULL SESSIONS?Various Dormitories.<lb/>
THURSDAY, JANUARY 22<lb/>
7:30 DEVOTIONAL PERIOD?Flanagan Auditorium. Speaker,<lb/>
Dr. Kinsolving.<lb/>
COFFEE HOUR?Austin, Y Reading Room.<lb/>
COFFEE HOUR?Flanagan, Room 8-1.<lb/>
SEMINARS:<lb/>
"What Do I Believe?" (The Meaning of Christian Faith)<lb/>
?Austin, Room 209. Leaders, Drs. Kinsolving and Pruden.<lb/>
Sponsored by the YWCA.<lb/>
"Is There a Conflict Between Science and Religion?"?<lb/>
Austin, Room 224. Leader, Dr. Douglas. Sponsored by the<lb/>
Science Club.<lb/>
EVALUATION?For the Committee of One Hundred.<lb/>
STUDENT AND FACULTY ASSEMBLY-Austin Auditor-<lb/>
ium. Speaker, Dr. Stoner. Music by the Varsity Glee Club.<lb/>
Flewellen Speaks<lb/>
To Home Ec Club<lb/>
At Tuesday Meet<lb/>
Caroline Flewellen, who went to<lb/>
Europe last summer on a Methodist<lb/>
Youth caravan, was guest speaker<lb/>
at the regular monthly meeting of the<lb/>
East Carolina Home Economics club<lb/>
meeting in Flanagan auditorium on<lb/>
Tuesday night.<lb/>
As Miss Flewellen showed slides<lb/>
taken on her trip, she told club mem-<lb/>
bers incidents of her trip. Countries<lb/>
she visited included Italy, France,<lb/>
Austria and Germarny. While there,<lb/>
the caravan lived in homes and work-<lb/>
ed with the Methodist young people<lb/>
in the various countries.<lb/>
"The purpose of the caravan<lb/>
Miss Flewellen said, "was to carry<lb/>
the good-will of the American young<lb/>
people to our friends acrtss the sea<lb/>
During the business session of the<lb/>
meeting, Clara Mason, chairman of<lb/>
the budget committee, presented a<lb/>
budget for the present year, and the<lb/>
budget was accepted by the club.<lb/>
Ruth Dixon, chairman of the com-<lb/>
munity service committee, announced<lb/>
that her committee would sponsor a<lb/>
drive for food and'clothes for needy<lb/>
families in Greenville. She urged all<lb/>
the girls to participate in the drive<lb/>
when memibers of the committee<lb/>
canvas the dormitories on Monday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
9:30<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
4:00<lb/>
5:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
Students Receive New Offers<lb/>
Of Fellowship Opportunities<lb/>
A brochure listing nearly 200 fel-<lb/>
lowship opportunities for American<lb/>
students to study abroad during the<lb/>
1953-54 academic year was issued<lb/>
this week by the Institute of Inter-<lb/>
national Education, 1 East 67th<lb/>
street, New York City.<lb/>
The awards, which are largely for<lb/>
graduate study, are offered to Ameri-<lb/>
can students by private organizations<lb/>
and y foreign governments and uni-<lb/>
versities. Most of the awards are for<lb/>
study in European and Latin Ameri-<lb/>
can universities. Grants are also<lb/>
available, however, at the University<lb/>
of Ceylon and at the University of<lb/>
Teheran.<lb/>
In announcing the opening of the<lb/>
competition for these fellowships, the<lb/>
Institute of International Education<lb/>
emphasized the fact that although a<lb/>
good knowledge of the language of<lb/>
the country is a prerequisite, the<lb/>
awards are not l'mited to the study<lb/>
of languages anc. literature. Suggest-<lb/>
ed fields of study in the sciences, the<lb/>
humanities, and the social sciences<lb/>
are given with the listing of grants.<lb/>
General eligibility requirements for<lb/>
the majority of the grants are (1)<lb/>
US citizenship; (2) a Bachelor's de-<lb/>
gree; (3) a good academic record;<lb/>
(4) a good knowledge of the langu-<lb/>
age of the country of study. The clos-<lb/>
ing date for applications for grants<lb/>
given by the French government is<lb/>
February 1; for most of the other<lb/>
grants the closing date is March 1.<lb/>
The pamphlet, entitled "Fellowship<lb/>
Opportunities for American Students<lb/>
to Study Abroad, 1953-54 may be<lb/>
obtained from the Institute of Inter-<lb/>
national Education, US Student Pro-<lb/>
gram, 1 East 67th Street, New York<lb/>
21, New York.<lb/>
The Institute of Tnternational Ed-<lb/>
ucation is a private, non-profit or-<lb/>
ganization which administers inter-<lb/>
national scholarships and fellowships<lb/>
for many private and governmental<lb/>
agencies.<lb/>
Tenor Star Sings<lb/>
In Concert Here<lb/>
Wednesday Night<lb/>
Student Artists<lb/>
Displaying Work<lb/>
Currently on display at the Com-<lb/>
munity Art gallery of the Sheppard<lb/>
Memorial library of Greenville is a<lb/>
joint exhibition of etchings and print<lb/>
by East Carolna college students of<lb/>
art and of paintings by Mrs. T. Y.<lb/>
Walker, local artist.<lb/>
Dry paint etchings and lraolecm<lb/>
prints in color in the show are 1fce<lb/>
work ot students taught by Fraacis<lb/>
Lee Neel, acting director of the de-<lb/>
partment of art at lait Carolina,<lb/>
Mrs. Walker's exh&amp;ttion tocludea<lb/>
five studies of birds in natural set-<lb/>
tings and an oil painting. For her<lb/>
bird pictures the worked with oil<lb/>
paint on watereolor paper. A recent<lb/>
review of the exhibition praises these<lb/>
five works for their "visual honesty,<lb/>
unaffected craftsmanship and sapet<lb/>
eobat.M<lb/>
Eugene Conley, tenor star of the<lb/>
Metropolitan Opera company, ap-<lb/>
peared at East Carolina college in a<lb/>
concert scheduled for Wednesday,<lb/>
January 14, at 8 p.m. in the Wright<lb/>
building. The program by the young<lb/>
American singer, described as the<lb/>
newest sensation on the operatic<lb/>
horizon was the sixth program on<lb/>
the college Entertainment seriet for<lb/>
the current school year.<lb/>
Conley made his debut at the Met-<lb/>
ropolitan in January, 1950, in the<lb/>
title role of "Faust" Both press "and<lb/>
public declared that here was one<lb/>
of the foremost tenors of the world.<lb/>
He followed his initial success with<lb/>
performances?of Lt. Pinkerton in<lb/>
"Madame Butterfly" and Edgardo fc.<lb/>
"Lucia di Laanmennoor<lb/>
Conley came to the Metropolitan<lb/>
with a record of having sung leading<lb/>
roles with most of the greatest opera<lb/>
.companies in the world. In America<lb/>
he has appeared with the New York<lb/>
City Center, San Carlo, Boston<lb/>
Pittsburgh, San Francisco, Chicago<lb/>
and other operas. In Europe he has<lb/>
been heard with Covent Garden, Lon-<lb/>
don; the Royal Opera, Stockholm j<lb/>
the Garr.d Opera, Paris; the Theftfa<lb/>
Reale, Rome; San Carlo, Naples; La<lb/>
Seals, Milan; and in a dmm less<lb/>
Italian cities. He has also mavg with,<lb/>
the National Opera fei Kexie "in<lb/>
Havana, and throughout Central A?-<lb/>
erica.<lb/>
Concerts with leading<lb/>
radio works and recordings bfNMf<lb/>
the young American artist a<lb/>
and enthusiastic audieRce<lb/>
home and abroad. Me p<lb/>
a time in the program<lb/>
series Eugene Oeniey? of<lb/>
Broadcasting company.<lb/>
Conley j a natfr of<lb/>
?His wifeis the.<lb/>
singer Winifred<lb/>
the Gtty Met<lb/>
several cMes of<lb/>
have appeared<lb/>
cert.<lb/>
activities and in public life in<lb/>
this country.<lb/>
Under the direction of Dr.<lb/>
Robert L. Holt, director of reli-<lb/>
gious activities at East Caro-<lb/>
lina, c nd Waylon C. Upchurch of<lb/>
Sanford, president of the col-<lb/>
lege Inter-Religious council, a<lb/>
full program has been prepared.<lb/>
"Operation Lift: Live in Faith<lb/>
Today" is the theme of Religious<lb/>
Emphasis week this year.<lb/>
Dr. Edward Hughes Pruden, pas-<lb/>
tor of the First Baptist church of<lb/>
Washington, D. C, a past president<lb/>
of the American Baptist convention,<lb/>
and formerly a teacher in the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Shanghai, will give the<lb/>
keynote address of the four-day ob-<lb/>
servance. He will speak at an as-<lb/>
sembly Monday morning, January 19,<lb/>
at 10 o'clock in the Austin audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
Speaking Here<lb/>
Other speakers and participants in<lb/>
Religious Emphasis eek are Dr.<lb/>
Arthur Lee Kinsolving, rector of St.<lb/>
James Protestant Episcopal church<lb/>
in New York City; James Lloyd Slo-<lb/>
ner, director of the University Chria<lb/>
tion Mission of the National couna<lb/>
of Churches of Christ in the United<lb/>
States; the Hoi. Brooks Hays, rep-<lb/>
resentative of the Fifth district of<lb/>
Arkansas in the House of Repre-<lb/>
sentatives; George A. Douglas, wi<lb/>
ly traveled sociologist now with B<lb/>
Charlotte city schools; and Dr. ClBf<lb/>
ence Linton of Teachers college,<lb/>
lumbia university.<lb/>
One of two performances of toft<lb/>
Fourteenth Century morality pli<lb/>
"Everyman" by the Teachers pl?<lb/>
house, college dramatic club, wr<lb/>
presented last night at 8 p.m. in 4j?<lb/>
College theatre. The second wM<lb/>
formance will be staged tonight J<lb/>
a prelude to Religious EmpfciH<lb/>
week. Three student choirs, inchi<lb/>
ing more than a hundred vo'ces, pt1<lb/>
vide a musical background for 1<lb/>
religious drama.<lb/>
On Sunday morning visiting 1<lb/>
ers at Religious Emphasis week<lb/>
speak in Greenville churches,<lb/>
that evening they will be guess<lb/>
five student religious centers '<lb/>
tained by city churches. Mr .<lb/>
will talk Sunday afternoon sat<lb/>
itual Retreat held by coratnitee<lb/>
bers of organizations sponsor<lb/>
week's programs.<lb/>
Programs Daily<lb/>
Visiting speakers will part<lb/>
m a series of daily progn ?<lb/>
uled for Monday through<lb/>
Each afternoon and evening<lb/>
cbnduct seminars on such<lb/>
Christian Vocations, the 3<lb/>
Christian Faith and Preparat<lb/>
Family Life. Other events i<lb/>
address by one of the guest<lb/>
each evening at 7 o'clock in 1<lb/>
tin auditorium, discussion V<lb/>
dents in the college dor?5itoti?, f<lb/>
sonal conference with i s<lb/>
talks before various call je  <lb/>
Religious Emphasis wed<lb/>
sored at East Oarolraa by !<lb/>
Religious council of the eoli<lb/>
organization made up of nil<lb/>
dent religious gtoap? tm the campus<lb/>
Among coopea?iig organismtioeui<lb/>
which have assisted -Is pkomisg 'the<lb/>
event are the degsexteents of art,<lb/>
muset, home eeonoasiee Nd ku )<lb/>
trial arts, Vaxsu latest ew.hi aura<lb/>
acting as aponaefis of seiehww,<lb/>
?f- Mjtii.i ijjfiaeiteiaMiMww<lb/>
Work<lb/>
Matt of i?<lb/>
Carefte.<lb/>
o the later-<lb/>
platutin el<lb/>
week' the eel-<lb/>
<pb facs="00038312_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, U<lb/>
EasirCarolinian<lb/>
Published Weekly by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
college, Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952<lb/>
Entered a second-class matter December 3, 1925 at. the<lb/>
U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C. under the act of<lb/>
March 3, 1879<lb/>
Ye Editor s<lb/>
Say<lb/>
by Tommie Lupton<lb/>
Wko's WTio At East Carolina<lb/>
by Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
fteocfcfed OoieCiote P?<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
Association<lb/>
First Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March, 1952<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press Association<lb/>
"Tke moving finger writes, end, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wit,<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word of it<lb/>
E. Fitzgerald<lb/>
Editor-Ln-Chief<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Assistant<lb/>
EDITORIAL STAFF<lb/>
 Tommie Lupton<lb/>
 Edwina McMullan<lb/>
Editor   Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
Staff Assistants<lb/>
Frances Smith<lb/>
Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
 Kay Johnston,<lb/>
Mildred Henderson, Stuart Arrington,<lb/>
Don Muse, Aim Hogan, Emily Boyce.<lb/>
Editorial AdvisorMary H. Greene<lb/>
Staff Photographer  C. L. Perkins Jr.<lb/>
SPORTS STAFF<lb/>
Editor  Bob HiUdrup<lb/>
Assistants  Sam Hux, Bruce Phillips,<lb/>
Jack Scott, Jim Ellis<lb/>
How much do you think the Enter-<lb/>
tainment committee had to pay to<lb/>
bring Eugene Conley here for the<lb/>
one night performance. That oae<lb/>
program cost $1,000! A program like<lb/>
the Robert Shaw chorale and ensem-<lb/>
ble cost $2,500; however, there were<lb/>
over 25 persons appearing in that<lb/>
?night's entertainment.<lb/>
Rogers and Hammerstein night,<lb/>
which was brought here last year,<lb/>
cost $2,500, but we believe that any-<lb/>
one who heard the program will<lb/>
agree with us when we say that it<lb/>
was one of the best ever heard at<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
Appearing here in February on the<lb/>
Entertainment series will be the<lb/>
Salzburg Marionettes, which should<lb/>
be one of the better programs mak-<lb/>
ing appearance here this year.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Busiaess Manager <lb/>
Assistant Business Manager <lb/>
. Edna Massad<lb/>
Faye Jones<lb/>
Peggy Joyce Bowen,<lb/>
Mary Gillette, Marty MacArthur, Atwood Smith,<lb/>
Dwight Garrett<lb/>
Exchange Editor Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
Campus Circulation barley Brown Manning<lb/>
Lift: Live In Faith Today<lb/>
We must all live in faith today, or our lives<lb/>
will not be satisfactory. Without faith we have<lb/>
nothing. Faith can move mountains. Religious<lb/>
Emphasis week begins Sunday for the students<lb/>
at East Carolina college, and the week's program<lb/>
will carry the theme, "Live In Faith Today<lb/>
To achieve a well-rounded education, and<lb/>
that is what we supposedly came to college for<lb/>
Persons who wish to obtain copies<lb/>
of any of the pictures that have been<lb/>
taken for this year's annual may do<lb/>
so by dropping by the office of this<lb/>
paper. We will be able to have nearly<lb/>
any shot printed for you.<lb/>
We have never seen the like of<lb/>
rain since the first of the year. One<lb/>
professor was overheard as saying<lb/>
that he doubted if he would even<lb/>
recognize the sun now.<lb/>
"Nice things come in small pack-<lb/>
ages Well, that is the case of this<lb/>
week's WHO'S WHO. Nora Ellen<lb/>
Faulkner, a 5' 1" girl from Kinston,<lb/>
has taken her place as one of the<lb/>
most outstanding students on the<lb/>
East Carolina campus.<lb/>
She came to us from Grainger<lb/>
high school in her hometown Fall<lb/>
quarter of 1950 and has completed<lb/>
every school year term and summer<lb/>
school term since. By doing this,<lb/>
along with much hard studying, she<lb/>
will graduate after the first six weeks<lb/>
of summer school this year, with a<lb/>
BS degree in Primary Education.<lb/>
Nora Ellen's grades are above av-<lb/>
erage, but as she so modestly stated<lb/>
to us, "I've managed to make the<lb/>
honor roll a few times, but I'm cer-<lb/>
tainly no genius<lb/>
Not only does she have to keep<lb/>
her studies up to date, but her self-<lb/>
help job takes up much of her time.<lb/>
She worked in the English office for<lb/>
two quarters, and the winter of 1950<lb/>
she transferred to the Entertain-<lb/>
ment committee where she has work-<lb/>
ed ever since.<lb/>
"The typing that I took as an elec-<lb/>
tive in high school has helped me<lb/>
obtain my jobs here at EC she said.<lb/>
"Of course at the time that I was<lb/>
taking it, I had no idea that it would<lb/>
be of much use to me except for<lb/>
typing themes; but it has really-<lb/>
helped me tremendously<lb/>
Extra-curricular activities are not<lb/>
the only thing that Nora Ellen excels<lb/>
in, for she is very active in the social<lb/>
TIMELY TOPICS<lb/>
By Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
teaching. This she is doing during<lb/>
the jnesent quarter at the Trains-<lb/>
school under the supervision of "M.oS<lb/>
Sally<lb/>
"My second grade little cherubs<lb/>
as she C tiled them, "never cease to<lb/>
surprise me. Each day you ha-dly<lb/>
know what to expect next Nora<lb/>
Ellen has had several amusing ex-<lb/>
periences, but we will relate only<lb/>
one of these to you.<lb/>
A little boy in one of the reading<lb/>
classes was mfai (having and Nora<lb/>
Ellen corrected him by saying that<lb/>
he would have to remain after school<lb/>
that afternoon with her if e did not<lb/>
that afternoon with her if he did not<lb/>
behave himself. To this he replied<lb/>
flatly, "Oh, no, you ca-n't keep me in<lb/>
Sunday begins a big week at East<lb/>
Carolina. Religious Emphasis week<lb/>
begins, and all indications lead us<lb/>
to believo that the entire program for<lb/>
the we? will be one which will be<lb/>
very interesting and inspirational to<lb/>
all who attend.<lb/>
There are no home ball games dur-<lb/>
ing the week or no numbers on the<lb/>
entertainment series; therefore, there<lb/>
should not be too many excuses for<lb/>
Nora Ellen Faulkner<lb/>
honored her in 1951 by electing her<lb/>
Homecoming queen and Jarvis elect-<lb/>
ed her vice-president of the dormi-<lb/>
tory for 1952-1953. This Kinston<lb/>
senior was chosen by the student<lb/>
body at East Carolina to reign Miss<lb/>
Summer School" of 1952, and last<lb/>
but not least she received the honor<lb/>
this year of being selected as "Who's<lb/>
Who Among Students in American<lb/>
Universities and Colleges<lb/>
Nora Ellen has another interest<lb/>
which is not here at EC. His<lb/>
Dame b Bill Darby. When asked<lb/>
what her future plans were, she im-<lb/>
mediately replied, "To become a Mrs.<lb/>
in May or July, all depending upon<lb/>
Bill's work She said that getting<lb/>
married would not change her mind<lb/>
life of the school. She has been a<lb/>
member of the ACE for four years<lb/>
and publicity manager in 1952. Also about teaching, though, for she had<lb/>
she has served on the entertainment i fallen in love with the profession<lb/>
eithercause I have to go to the dent-<lb/>
ist"<lb/>
This she said, was one time that<lb/>
words completely failed her for a few<lb/>
moments. Finally she managed to ex-<lb/>
plain to him that he could stay the<lb/>
next afternoon instead. "Practice<lb/>
teaching Nora Ellen said, "is wond-<lb/>
erful and I wouldn't give it up for<lb/>
anything. I'm one of the lucky ones<lb/>
too, because I got to teach the grade<lb/>
that I applied for; many don't<lb/>
Ojie question that we usually ask<lb/>
the WHO'S WHO ach week is their<lb/>
opinion of East Carolina. Each one<lb/>
has been favorable and this is no<lb/>
exception. Nora Ellen said that if<lb/>
she were offered a scholarship to<lb/>
any other school that she'd stay right<lb/>
here. "I've made so many good friends<lb/>
and best of all, this is where I met<lb/>
Bill. I'm both sad and glad to leave<lb/>
East Carolina, for I hate to leave my<lb/>
friends, but I want to get some little<lb/>
For the first time in many a year a full sealj<lb/>
Republican administration is firmly entrench<lb/>
along the banks of the Potomac. The vote thl<lb/>
put these men there were cast by a reeord-breal<lb/>
ing throng and now that the election has die<lb/>
away amidst Christmas and New Year's some<lb/>
the vote casters, especially those in the traditioi<lb/>
ally Democratic South, are beginning to wond<lb/>
if their November action was an intelligi<lb/>
The Republicans have long been knov<lb/>
"big business" and "civil rights" party and<lb/>
being have accumulated the wrath of the<lb/>
During the last several years, however, tirm<lb/>
have changed. Thejlepublicans still repress j<lb/>
business but their" stand has slanted to one fi<lb/>
vorable toward Southern states rights.<lb/>
Normally the average Southerner, being b<lb/>
sically an agricultural man, has a strong i<lb/>
ment against those representing big busines<lb/>
But today far-sighted individuals in the<lb/>
realize that the coming future fn his hi i<lb/>
lies not necessarily in agriculture alone bu t,<lb/>
development of industry.<lb/>
Many large northern manufacturing<lb/>
corns are rapidly shifting their center-<lb/>
duction to the South because of the natui<lb/>
sources and cheap labor to be found here. Manj<lb/>
Southerners, however, still think of the -<lb/>
piney woods and magnolias; but let's fat<lb/>
days are gone forever.<lb/>
An influx of northern manufaetur<lb/>
cerns would bring more money to the souti ,<lb/>
ever before and raise the standard of I<lb/>
siderably. With the Repuh n view of tl<lb/>
states handle their segregation problem<lb/>
selves this could mean great strides of proj<lb/>
Money, more money than ever before, would<lb/>
in and the revenue collected by the stab<lb/>
enable them to build facilities for Negroes<lb/>
to the letter with those of whites. In this mai t<lb/>
the South would find itself vastly richer a<lb/>
have its unalienable right of segregate<lb/>
served.<lb/>
committee four years. Fleming hall I after doing some<lb/>
of her practice ' students of my own<lb/>
Book Review Reveals How One Can Find God<lb/>
must have a background in all activities of i students not attending.<lb/>
we .<lb/>
college life. Religion is certainly one topic which<lb/>
should be included in a student's program while<lb/>
ff to school. East Carolina offers a large variety<lb/>
of vents for the benefit of those who wish to<lb/>
develop themselves fully.<lb/>
Football, basketball and baseball games play<lb/>
a large part in the life of a college. No person j<lb/>
should ever leave school without observing all<lb/>
the sports activities that are offered.<lb/>
Our college entertainment program brings<lb/>
a selection of professional artists who are among<lb/>
the best in their respective fields. We have opera<lb/>
stars, magicians, dancers, piano players and other<lb/>
talented personalities who appear here each year.<lb/>
Human nature is so set up whereby none of<lb/>
us enjoy all the things that happen. Some of us<lb/>
like our ball games, while others had rather stay<lb/>
in the dorm and read. There are those of us who<lb/>
do not care for certain types of entertainment,<lb/>
but our personalities are not supposed to be such<lb/>
that we like everything all the time.<lb/>
In like manner there are those of us who<lb/>
may not like to hear sermons, although we feel<lb/>
quite sure that there are none of us who do not<lb/>
need to hear them. Every person in this nation<lb/>
has a right to his own personal beliefs, and no<lb/>
one has any right to deny him of them.<lb/>
This country was set up by people who want-<lb/>
ed to establish their own beliefs and faiths, and<lb/>
that is the way that our life is run today. Despite<lb/>
the high-pressure existence of which each person<lb/>
is a part, the American people as a whole have<lb/>
not forgotten their basic right to individual be-<lb/>
liefs and faiths.<lb/>
In comparison then, the coming week will<lb/>
give us ah opportunity to partake in our inherent<lb/>
freedom of religion and also present us with the<lb/>
chance to further broaden our education in the<lb/>
study of worship. Several speakers of varied opin-<lb/>
ions will be here and their talks will be of per-<lb/>
sonal value to each student. A chance for the<lb/>
study of the greatest of all subjects, our religion,<lb/>
will be presented to us during Religious Empha-<lb/>
sis week. Let's use it well!<lb/>
Speaking on the various nights will<lb/>
be some very prominent men who<lb/>
have been featured in the "East<lb/>
Carolinian" in the past few issues.<lb/>
We urge everyone to help the Inter-<lb/>
Religious council make this annual<lb/>
project a big success.<lb/>
The scientiiic method has appar-<lb/>
ently gone too far at Baylor uni-<lb/>
versity, Texas. Students going to the<lb/>
biology building have narrowly es-<lb/>
caped being hit by a flying cat's<lb/>
liver or some other animal hmard.<lb/>
This type of thing has been going on<lb/>
for a long time and has been the<lb/>
butt of countless complaints.<lb/>
Now the department head has is-<lb/>
sued a statement condemning the<lb/>
entire business and warning the scien-<lb/>
tists that "this just isn't the right,<lb/>
way to dispose of used biology ex-<lb/>
periments <lb/>
We thank The Appalachian for the<lb/>
following poem:<lb/>
The codfish lays a million eggs,<lb/>
The barnyard hen but one;<lb/>
The codfish doesn't cackle,<lb/>
To show what she has done.<lb/>
We scorn the modest codfish<lb/>
The cackling hen we prize?<lb/>
Proving that, beyo'nd a douibt<lb/>
It pays to advertise.<lb/>
is<lb/>
on<lb/>
The "Fast Carolinian" staff<lb/>
sponsoring an amateur program<lb/>
Tuesday night, February 3, in Austin<lb/>
auditorium. All persons interested in<lb/>
participating in the program should<lb/>
turn in their names and what they<lb/>
intend to do to the office of this<lb/>
paper before February 2.<lb/>
(This is a book report written on<lb/>
the book HOW CAN I FIND GOD?)<lb/>
The first and only way for you<lb/>
yourself to find God is to get your-<lb/>
self out of the way so that God can<lb/>
find out. That may seem a rather<lb/>
peculiar way to answer the question<lb/>
"How can I find God?"?but it is not<lb/>
the sheep that finds the shepherd,<lb/>
the shepherd finds the sheep. Yes,<lb/>
our search is His progressive finding<lb/>
of us, for without Him we could not<lb/>
seek Him and when we find Him and<lb/>
are brought into a filial relation with<lb/>
Him through the forgiveness of our<lb/>
sins then He begins a work in us<lb/>
which is the work of His grace and<lb/>
not the result of our new effort or<lb/>
resolution.<lb/>
But first we must present our-<lb/>
selves to God in a way so that He<lb/>
will be able to reach us. There are<lb/>
many ways of doing this for each<lb/>
way would be for one and 7iot for<lb/>
another. The question that must be<lb/>
answered by all, however, is "Do I<lb/>
really want to find Him?" We must,<lb/>
in a word, want Him with our whole<lb/>
mind and want Him for His own<lb/>
sake and not for what we can get out<lb/>
of Him?not even the undoubtedly<lb/>
good things we want from Him.<lb/>
Many of us find that we want Him,<lb/>
and we do not want Him; for we<lb/>
want His way, and we want our own<lb/>
way and held in the grip of ouf<lb/>
conflict, we are trying to live in two<lb/>
worlds. We then settle down to what<lb/>
we call a compromise, but the real<lb/>
truth is that we are consciously or<lb/>
unconsciously evading God. We must<lb/>
);e doing so if He seeks us and yet<lb/>
we are not found of Him.<lb/>
Stop Evading Him<lb/>
How can we stop evading GodOne<lb/>
by Kay Johnston<lb/>
of the ways is by repentance. But<lb/>
first what is repentance? Repent-<lb/>
ance is not mere self-reproach,<lb/>
fear of consequences, or mere sense<lb/>
of sin, but it is changing our way<lb/>
of life. Quite frequently men hold<lb/>
back from allegiance to God on the<lb/>
ground that they do not understand<lb/>
Christianity. Quite honestly the dif-<lb/>
ficulties in the way of man are rarely<lb/>
intellectual, for instance, you don't<lb/>
find him holding iuack from riding<lb/>
in a car because he is ignorant of<lb/>
the principle of the internal combus-<lb/>
tion engine. .It is more likely im-<lb/>
purity, selfishness or bad temper.<lb/>
Men also sometimes hide from God<lb/>
in serri to their fellowman. The<lb/>
first thiu? to learn in this situation<lb/>
is first the Father's arms, then the<lb/>
Father's errands. First the solving<lb/>
of our own moral conflicts, then our<lb/>
service to a hungry world. Half-<lb/>
cured invalids are not efficient doc-<lb/>
tors, and nicely veneered pagans are<lb/>
not very effective prophets. Men<lb/>
who have become used to dug-outs<lb/>
make yoor leaders over the top at<lb/>
dawn. And the matter comes down<lb/>
to us all as a personal message, to<lb/>
get the first thing right for ourselves.<lb/>
Never must religion become a spe-<lb/>
cies of dope to the individual, for we<lb/>
must not blind ourselves to the fact<lb/>
that religion is very attractive from<lb/>
the mere point of selfishness. It of-<lb/>
fers an inward peace, splendid hopes<lb/>
and promises which reach even unto<lb/>
a future life; but there is another<lb/>
side to it all. To expect to find com-<lb/>
fort and peace and rest without car-<lb/>
rying out the obligations involved is<lb/>
to seek an illicit shelter of the soul,<lb/>
and so far from finding God it is to<lb/>
evade the real God. Every Christian<lb/>
truth, gracious and comfortable, has<lb/>
a corresponding obligation, searching<lb/>
and sacrificial.<lb/>
Men who simply seek a kind of<lb/>
illicit shelter for their soul in reli-<lb/>
gion as an isolated kind of exper- <lb/>
ience which has little power to help<lb/>
them, and it will he to them like a<lb/>
memory of some song they heard<lb/>
years ago, vague and distant and<lb/>
unrelated to life. Je.is doesn't say<lb/>
"If you follow me, life will be a<lb/>
crown with a wreath of roses He<lb/>
indicates quite clearly that most prob-<lb/>
ably it will be crowned with thorns.<lb/>
Religion is a conquest, because<lb/>
man is placed in touch with such<lb/>
amazing resources that whatever<lb/>
happens, nothing can conquer his<lb/>
spirit. The man who has found God<lb/>
that not insured himself against ca-<lb/>
lamity, but has found One who will<lb/>
show him how to turn calamity into<lb/>
triumph.<lb/>
Too often, though we do not per-<lb/>
ceive it, there is a door which is shut<lb/>
against God. Therefore we must look<lb/>
for the door that keeps Him out. We<lb/>
must pray for the Holy Spirit to<lb/>
reveal this thing to us.<lb/>
Often the door is a disguised self-<lb/>
ishness, or a life of sin going hand<lb/>
in hand with a love of righteousness,<lb/>
or the fear of what people will say<lb/>
and think.<lb/>
When we find the thing which<lb/>
stands in our way, then there must<lb/>
be the surrender of that which is<lb/>
keeping us from being found of Him.<lb/>
A note from the lighter side:<lb/>
The Appalachian, student newspaper at A<lb/>
palachian State Teachers college, usually c I<lb/>
up with some of the best remarks to i<lb/>
And we quote:<lb/>
Ron: "Last night I finally persuaded r;<lb/>
to say yes<lb/>
Don: "Congratulations, old man. when' <lb/>
wedding?"<lb/>
Ron: "Wedding? What wedding?<lb/>
POT POURRI<lb/>
by Emily Boyce<lb/>
You Can Believe That!<lb/>
"You can belilve that<lb/>
"That's right, it's in the book<lb/>
Ever since you were old enough to talk, you<lb/>
had a coined phrase to deny a lie. When you were<lb/>
in the first grade, you probably said to your<lb/>
teacher after stinging her by mistake with a spit-<lb/>
ball : "Cross my heart and hope to live to Doom's<lb/>
day, I didn't do it<lb/>
Today, in college, you are still denying lies,<lb/>
but with different idioms. The old-time favorites<lb/>
are: "That's certainly so "Sure I'm sure<lb/>
"That's for sure "Honest to goodness" and<lb/>
"Thats the truth if I ever told it<lb/>
A few months ago you came up with some<lb/>
new versions. One of these was "That's right, it's<lb/>
in the book This became popular on the campus<lb/>
soon after the song "It's in the Book" made its<lb/>
debut.<lb/>
The very latest one is: "You can believe<lb/>
ghal which comes in many models as: "You<lb/>
can start believing that" and "You better believe<lb/>
iiui m and so and so (Idiom plus your little<lb/>
H?.) Xou can believe that" and its various<lb/>
farms feavfe been so overworked that it has be-<lb/>
come a cliche.<lb/>
Somttiiiieft these denial phrases become in-<lb/>
?&amp;bmid overbearing in conversation. But<lb/>
? a remedy: Never deny a lie. Better still<lb/>
va8 M Us la the first place. Truth is<lb/>
rr tlwai fiction. You can believe that be-<lb/>
"it is the book.<lb/>
Matthew 6:25. Do not be anxious about j<lb/>
life, what you shall eat or what you shal<lb/>
nor about your body, what you shall put on.<lb/>
For the Gentiles seek all these things; and , uj<lb/>
heavenly Father knows that you need tl<lb/>
But seek first his kingdom and hi. righl J<lb/>
and all these things shall be yours as well.<lb/>
The meaning of these words is plain.<lb/>
they are not to be taken lightly. In them is a<lb/>
sage of reassurance for us all, so much in<lb/>
mand during these days of this new year W<lb/>
live in the atomic age, an age of super n<lb/>
science, but we also find ourselves engu<lb/>
an age and day of anxiety, worrv and v-<lb/>
where each individual wages a constant<lb/>
against inner confusion and doubt.<lb/>
We work and play at a terrific rate of<lb/>
A modern quotation might readily fit the<lb/>
of the situation?"Live fast, die young ami<lb/>
a good looking corpse The majority of us<lb/>
to have lost contact with our true peat-<lb/>
which can only be gained by faith. We maj '<lb/>
in the atomic age, but to most of us the<lb/>
anxiety would more nearly create a parali<lb/>
our feelings.<lb/>
We are not forced to look far for the a j<lb/>
of this anxiety. Pick up a newspaper?sufficienl<lb/>
cause appears on every page. Two world wars<lb/>
since 1900 and now the threat of a third ij<lb/>
brothers and boy friends engaged in the blood<lb/>
"police action" in Korea. The mechanization am<lb/>
industrialization of modern life, which ha<lb/>
pace at which only a bloodless robot can<lb/>
successfully. The threat of world commun<lb/>
with its cleverly woven network of lies and<lb/>
cidal "opportunities<lb/>
But ours is not the first age of anxiety the<lb/>
world has seen. The age of revolutions: the tW<lb/>
world wars and their aftermath; or take the :<lb/>
century in which Christianity was struggling<lb/>
arise through the chaos of human minds. And<lb/>
that world, so like our own, the Gospel broughl<lb/>
a solution. This does not. mean that our God will<lb/>
declare that everything will be all right tomorj<lb/>
row?rather the solution involves something fJ<lb/>
deeper and more permanent. The Gospel does mj<lb/>
promise an immediate transformation of pres !<lb/>
conditions; instead it sets forth principles wbicr<lb/>
are certain to be carrjed out. It presents us witj<lb/>
an inner strength to withstand today's anxie<lb/>
and live on to learn and improve. We have bee<lb/>
given the opportunity of gaining religious faitl<lb/>
. . . "But seek first his kingdom and his ngni<lb/>
eousness, and all these things shall be yours a<lb/>
well Matthew 6:25.<lb/>
"Well Dean, for th' last few days we've been discussing theories of<lb/>
revolution?an' then about ten minutes after class took up today . . ,<lb/>
The library has displayed certain religioul<lb/>
books this week under the heading "Have yoi<lb/>
Read These Books?" "The Christian Way.<lb/>
study of new testament ethics in relations to ?rea<lb/>
ent problems, by Sydney Cane. "The Psalms am<lb/>
Their Meaning for Today by Samuel Terrier<lb/>
"God Keeps an 0en House by Lilian Laufertj<lb/>
is a deeply personal and practical message ?<lb/>
hope, filled with enthusiasm and confidence thai<lb/>
God is indeed the ever-present, all wise and om<lb/>
nipotent Creator who never deserts the work oi<lb/>
His hand. These books are brought to our at<lb/>
tention especially during Religious Emphasii<lb/>
week, but that does not mean for us to forg<lb/>
them at the end of this week.<lb/>
$<lb/>
i<lb/>
rJ<lb/>
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taken a<lb/>
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tollegutl<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038312_0003"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
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Ink Manv<lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1953<lb/>
3BSK<lb/>
3<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
s<lb/>
? thoet<lb/>
?anufu.tur.ng con.<lb/>
f.th than<lb/>
vin-g con-<lb/>
"ew of letting ft,<lb/>
Problem them-<lb/>
-v of process<lb/>
?. would pour<lb/>
y th? states would<lb/>
for Negroes equal<lb/>
I ' is manner<lb/>
I and also<lb/>
' ation pre-<lb/>
r at Ap-<lb/>
ege, usually comes<lb/>
to be seen.<lb/>
(:? ? ded my girl<lb/>
when's the<lb/>
eddii<lb/>
RRI<lb/>
ia about your<lb/>
hat you shall drink,<lb/>
ou put on. <lb/>
Be 1  and your<lb/>
eed them all.<lb/>
.teousness,<lb/>
is well.<lb/>
plain, but<lb/>
v. 1: ? isarae<lb/>
all, so ranch in de<lb/>
?a year. Wt<lb/>
I , : . er modern<lb/>
- engulfed ii<lb/>
1 vexation,<lb/>
s a constant battle.<lb/>
idoubt.<lb/>
terrific rate of speed.<lb/>
tadily fit the attitudj<lb/>
die young and ha?<lb/>
majority of us ?eea<lb/>
tr ace of mind,<lb/>
faith. We may live<lb/>
Lost of us the age ?<lb/>
treate a parallel <lb/>
?ok far for the ca<lb/>
fewapaper-suf<lb/>
'vp Two world <lb/>
.gaged ntheb<lb/>
ie mechanization ?J<lb/>
I ufe, which has jj;<lb/>
, robot can folio<lb/>
orld communij<lb/>
work of lies and <lb/>
It age of anxiety<lb/>
revolutions; the -<lb/>
Uth ; or take the<lb/>
litv was strjggindiE<lb/>
L,urnGrr<lb/>
h. the Oot-pe' , 4<lb/>
tan that our GoO<lb/>
I. The Gospe? u e<lb/>
tformation oi f hi4<lb/>
forth princlPfuS 3<lb/>
t. It preset <lb/>
stand today s ?<lb/>
.prove. We fr<lb/>
Je heading 'w  ?,<lb/>
lane. ine j Terr!w<lb/>
T ?Tan II<lb/>
r deserts tne jj<lb/>
,ean for ?9 t0<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Who's Got Their Finger In The Pie?<lb/>
I ast week's "Sports Echo" con-<lb/>
.  several remarks about the<lb/>
g(j v and their action concerning<lb/>
rleadera at college basketball<lb/>
- Hue to our comments we were<lb/>
asked to investigate the situation<lb/>
fully. It was discovered that<lb/>
 this reporter but the cheer-<lb/>
. and members of the admin-<lb/>
d had received the impres-<lb/>
Iat the SGA was attempting<lb/>
.?.mediately curtail the cheerlead-<lb/>
??. formance.<lb/>
s was not the intention of the<lb/>
s . The matter is still under con-<lb/>
ration by the Student Govern-<lb/>
and the report that was released<lb/>
caused the confusion among<lb/>
imst ration and the cheer-<lb/>
has been successfully cleared<lb/>
 e feel sure that a solution<lb/>
?? ory to all will be speedily<lb/>
?-i out by members of the Stu-<lb/>
? Government.<lb/>
ed by none, while hi, accuracy from<lb/>
the floor oftentimes defies description.<lb/>
Frank McGuire, coach of the Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina Tar Heels,<lb/>
t team that edifed the locals last<lb/>
w ak, had quite a few compliments<lb/>
for Bodge and Russell. McGiire is<lb/>
quoted as saying that both hoys<lb/>
could make any basketball team in<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
The conclusion that could be drawn<lb/>
from our build-up is that we think<lb/>
the Pirate five is invincible. Far be<lb/>
it fro.a that. The locals have a good<lb/>
ball club, but they still have a rough<lb/>
road to travel.<lb/>
,?v that the basketball season is<lb/>
i.tuaily out of the embro stage<lb/>
seems to have been definitely es-<lb/>
hed that East Carolina is the<lb/>
team to beat in the North State<lb/>
rence's hardwood wars. The Pi-<lb/>
rates present a well-rounded basket-<lb/>
ball club that has already proven<lb/>
itself, especially in the recent game<lb/>
with the University of North Caro-<lb/>
rhe Buc guard positions are ably<lb/>
by two excellent floormen.<lb/>
Heath and J. C. Thomas. Heath<lb/>
shown himself to be a stellar<lb/>
handler and outstanding set shot<lb/>
?. Thomas, as a freshman, has<lb/>
era promise of developing into a<lb/>
?r unded ballplayer.<lb/>
center there is Bobby Hodges,<lb/>
 player who needs no introduc-<lb/>
llowers of Pirate athletics.<lb/>
Iges' height and rebound ability<lb/>
ike him one of the outstanding<lb/>
teers in the state.<lb/>
Fhe forward positions are well<lb/>
' iken care of in the personages of<lb/>
I harlie Huffman and Sonny Russell.<lb/>
Huffman has come into his own this<lb/>
a-on and his height and accurate<lb/>
M-oring ability from in close makes<lb/>
him an ever dangerous performer.<lb/>
Last hut not least is the ball player<lb/>
?ho many rate as the outstanding<lb/>
mllegiate performer in the state,<lb/>
Sosmy Russell. As a ball-handler and<lb/>
nlay-maker there Russell is surpass-<lb/>
Athlete<lb/>
Of The Week<lb/>
The title "Athlete of the Week"<lb/>
for this issue of the East Carolinian<lb/>
goes to Bobby Hodges, stellar center<lb/>
for the last two years on Coach<lb/>
Howard Porter's basketball team.<lb/>
Hodges, now in his third year on<lb/>
earn; us. has contributed greatly to<lb/>
East Carolina's athletic fortunes.<lb/>
Outstanding as Hodges' gridiron<lb/>
play has been, perhaps his greatest<lb/>
athletic mark has been made in the<lb/>
season's current ssport, basketball.<lb/>
As a freshman Bobby held down a<lb/>
regular post with the Pirate five<lb/>
Aui when tournament time rolled<lb/>
around Kinston's favorite son con-<lb/>
tinued his outstanding play. Tourney<lb/>
officials found cause to place Hodges<lb/>
on the all-star team and named him<lb/>
to the honor of "Most Valuable<lb/>
Player<lb/>
Last year Bobby continued his out-<lb/>
standing court performances by<lb/>
sparking the Pirates throughout the<lb/>
"season. He finished off with an av-<lb/>
erage of better than 20.points per<lb/>
game. As of this year it seems as if<lb/>
Hodges is once more going to have a<lb/>
great season. Against the University<lb/>
of North Carolina just a few days<lb/>
ago, Bobby dumped in 15 points and<lb/>
followed up with 34 point? two nights<lb/>
later against Appalachian's Moun-<lb/>
taineers. It looks like a great season<lb/>
for East Carolina's Pirates, but<lb/>
whatever the case one can be sure<lb/>
that a large measure of success will<lb/>
go ta one Bobby Hodges.<lb/>
Pirates Post Sixth Conference<lb/>
Win Bv Downinq Guilford, 81<lb/>
Sonny Russell and Bobby Hodges are shown as they do battle with<lb/>
unidentified Guilford players for possession of the basketball in Tuesday's<lb/>
game at Memorial gym.<lb/>
Bucs Play Three On Road<lb/>
East Carolina college Pirates,<lb/>
fresh from six consecutive triumphs<lb/>
in North State conference basketball<lb/>
play, take to the road tomorrow night<lb/>
for the first of three important<lb/>
league tilts.<lb/>
Tomorrow's battle will see the lo-<lb/>
cals at Hickory, where they will meet<lb/>
the defending conference champion,<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne. The Bears have been<lb/>
sputtering along for the first weeks<lb/>
of rday but still present a potent<lb/>
outfit that is still capable of repeat-<lb/>
i ing last year's triumphs. East Caro-<lb/>
! Una, however, defeated the Bears<lb/>
? 71-65 in the Pirates' second outing<lb/>
i of the season.<lb/>
' Following Saturday's battle with<lb/>
the Bears the Bucs will journey to<lb/>
Cullowhee to take on the Catamount<lb/>
of-Western Carolina Teachers college.<lb/>
T"(iis will be the first meeting of the<lb/>
young cage season betw en the Teach-<lb/>
ers and the Pirates. Western North<lb/>
Carolina sports writers rate the Cata-<lb/>
mounts as the darkhorse of the<lb/>
North State conference and the team<lb/>
most likely to pull an upset in the<lb/>
race for league laurels. The game<lb/>
will be played Monday night, Janu-<lb/>
ary 19.<lb/>
The Pirates will round out their<lb/>
three game tour for the week when<lb/>
?they travel to Catawha on Wednes-<lb/>
day to meet the Indians. In a pre-<lb/>
vious contest the locals downed the<lb/>
Indians by an 80-67 count.<lb/>
. we cturftp a ?r<lb/>
BBBSaa-i<lb/>
Russell, Hodges<lb/>
Pace Buccaneers<lb/>
To Win Over Elon<lb/>
All-conerence forward Sonny Rus-<lb/>
sell scored 10 points in a hectic last<lb/>
quarter Saturday night as the East<lb/>
Carolina college Pirates defeated Elon<lb/>
76-75. The game was played in Elon's<lb/>
Memorial gymnasium and marked the<lb/>
first time the Christians have lost to<lb/>
a conference foe this year.<lb/>
Russell wound up with a total of<lb/>
0 points for the game, but the most<lb/>
important two came with 45 seconds<lb/>
of playing time remaining. At that<lb/>
stage of the game, the score was tied<lb/>
73-73. A driving lay-up put the Pi-<lb/>
rates ahead 75-73. Bobby Hodges<lb/>
provided the actual winning margin<lb/>
some 35 seconds later when he dump-<lb/>
ed in a free throw.<lb/>
- Hodges led the Pirates' scoring<lb/>
with 23 points with Russell's 20 sec-<lb/>
ond high. Charlie Huffman, the big<lb/>
junior from Thomasrville who almost<lb/>
went to Elon, was third man in the<lb/>
Pirate race with 19 points.<lb/>
Despite the scoring efforts of the<lb/>
Pirates' "big three game scoring<lb/>
honors for the night went to Elon's<lb/>
Ben Kendall. The All-State and All-<lb/>
Conference forward from Kokomo,<lb/>
Ind. scored 29 points for the Chris-<lb/>
tians. Billy Hawkins took runner-up<lb/>
honors for Elon with 20 points.<lb/>
The game, close all the way, was<lb/>
tied twice and the lead changed hands<lb/>
10 times in the last eight minutes of<lb/>
action. Russell and Kendall accounted<lb/>
for most of the scoring after that<lb/>
time.<lb/>
The victory was the Pirates' fifth<lb/>
straight over North State conference<lb/>
opposition.<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
East Carolina (76) fg ft pf tp<lb/>
Russell, f  8 4 2 20<lb/>
Huffman, f ? 8<lb/>
O'Kelley, f 0<lb/>
Hodges, c  - ? 9<lb/>
Heath, g ? 2<lb/>
Jones, g   0<lb/>
Thomas, g <lb/>
Totals <lb/>
Elon (75)<lb/>
Kendall, f <lb/>
Hall, f<lb/>
Malloy, f ?<lb/>
Gauldin, f <lb/>
Atkinson, c  3<lb/>
McDaniels, c  0<lb/>
Maddox, c ? 3<lb/>
Musten, g  1<lb/>
Quakenbush, g 0<lb/>
Hawkins, g 7<lb/>
Totals 28 19 17 75<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
3 19<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
3 23<lb/>
5 9<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
3 5<lb/>
29 18 17 76<lb/>
fg ft pf tp<lb/>
11 7 3 29<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
6<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
Score by quarters:<lb/>
East Carolina 16 25 15 20?76<lb/>
Elon -? 20 22 13 20?75<lb/>
Free throws missed: Kendall 3,<lb/>
Atkinson 2, Maddox 1, Hawkins 1,<lb/>
Russell 1, Hodges 5, Heath 1, Thom-<lb/>
as 1.<lb/>
Officials: Landes and Mills.<lb/>
Wham! Bam! Thank 'ya, mam!<lb/>
They're knocking heads again! The<lb/>
fun and frolic is over for the gridders<lb/>
as they fall out for five weeks of<lb/>
pigskin ponderation. A refresher<lb/>
course on fundamentals and physical<lb/>
tactics is the primary intention of<lb/>
Coaches Jack Boone and Clyde Big-<lb/>
gere.<lb/>
The spring rehearsals got under-<lb/>
way Tuesday and will culminate only<lb/>
when the mentors think something<lb/>
definitely had been accomplished.<lb/>
Workouts will 'be devoted to experi-<lb/>
menting and testing. Packed into 30<lb/>
days of nothing but football, with<lb/>
special drills on running, blocking,<lb/>
tackling, passing and punting will be<lb/>
tnainng and tutorage that the Pirates<lb/>
need badly in preparation for their<lb/>
challenge for North State supremacy.<lb/>
Coaches Boone and Biggers will<lb/>
field a mass of blue ribbon pigskin-<lb/>
ners who are already being tabbed<lb/>
as perennial champions in the con-<lb/>
ference when the league unfolds the<lb/>
chalk lines next fall. The formidable<lb/>
fleet of talent leaves the coaches a<lb/>
delightful problem of selecting a<lb/>
starting eleven.<lb/>
With the returnees many high<lb/>
school senior performers will be au-<lb/>
ditioned. From authentic reports this<lb/>
scribe can assure you that East<lb/>
Carolina will be loaded with outstand-<lb/>
ing recruits. The college recruiting<lb/>
staff hasn't slackened a minute in<lb/>
search of prep gridiron celebrities.<lb/>
Many renowned athletes will look<lb/>
over the Pirates' campus and, in turn,<lb/>
show their football prowess.<lb/>
Coach Biggers exclaims, "With<lb/>
three rugged offensive linemen we'll<lb/>
be hard to handle next fall Al-<lb/>
ready induced to helmet-up for the<lb/>
Pirates is Corky Gaines .tremendous<lb/>
tackle from Fayetteville high school.<lb/>
Biggers is confident that Gaines will<lb/>
be contributing to the Buccaneers.<lb/>
Gaines pulled down All-state laurels<lb/>
while playing for the Fayetteville<lb/>
Bulldogs.<lb/>
The coaches are optimistic about<lb/>
enlisting outstanding players from<lb/>
Fayetteville, Rock Mount, aurinburg,<lb/>
Wilmington, Fairmont, Greenville and<lb/>
many other schools. With the few<lb/>
weak spots patched up by magnifi-<lb/>
cent freshmen, the .Pirates will un-<lb/>
doubtedly create terror around the<lb/>
loop.<lb/>
The workouts have (been sparkling<lb/>
and hustling determined individuals<lb/>
have shown admirable potential.<lb/>
Sonny Russell Scores<lb/>
28 As Buccaneers Stay<lb/>
Undefeated In League<lb/>
by Sam Hux<lb/>
It was just too much Sonny Rus-<lb/>
sell and Bobby Hodges Tuesday night<lb/>
when East Carolina's Pirates bat-<lb/>
tered Guilford' Quakers 81-63 in Me-<lb/>
morial gymnasium. The win gave the<lb/>
locals a 6-0 conference record and<lb/>
the loop lead.<lb/>
The Bucs' All-conference pair, Rus-<lb/>
sell and Hodges, scored over half the<lb/>
BCC points, as Russell dropped in<lb/>
28 and Hodges 24. Russell also stood<lb/>
out with his terrific floor ply.<lb/>
Jumping to an early 6 1 lead the<lb/>
Pirates led all the way. At the end<lb/>
of a somewhat slow first quarter,<lb/>
the Bucs were out front, 16-11. Then<lb/>
the locals turned on the heat in the<lb/>
second quarter for 31 points and a<lb/>
47-31 lead at intermission.<lb/>
Guilford's Bob Shoaf, a fancy for-<lb/>
ward, turned in a spectacular per-<lb/>
formance which netted him 22 mark-<lb/>
ers. He was followed by Callicut<lb/>
with 13.<lb/>
Russell and Hodges were the only<lb/>
Bucs to score in the double figures.<lb/>
Cecil Heath bucketed nine points<lb/>
while Charlie Huffman turned in an<lb/>
outstanding all around performance.<lb/>
Guilford fg ft pf tp<lb/>
Shoaf, f 9<lb/>
Mikales, f  0<lb/>
Smith, f  0<lb/>
Armstrong, f 3<lb/>
Schmidt, f  1<lb/>
Schorr, c  1<lb/>
Woodall, c  1<lb/>
Callicut, g<lb/>
Godfrey, g<lb/>
Hildcjrand, g<lb/>
Osteen, g <lb/>
Totals <lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Russell, f <lb/>
Carr, f <lb/>
Huffman, f ?<lb/>
O'Kelley, f <lb/>
Hodges, c ?<lb/>
Hayes, c <lb/>
Heath, g <lb/>
Moye, g <lb/>
Hilburn, g ?<lb/>
Thomas, g<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
5<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0 22<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
7<lb/>
2<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
13<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
9<lb/>
0<lb/>
7<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
20<lb/>
11<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
11<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
Jones, g  ? 0<lb/>
Gay, g ? ?<lb/>
1<lb/>
? i<lb/>
0<lb/>
2,<lb/>
I<lb/>
ll<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
C<lb/>
i a<lb/>
2 8<lb/>
I 24<lb/>
1<lb/>
4.<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
i<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
i<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
34 m<lb/>
Bucs Score 52!<lb/>
In Seven Gams;<lb/>
Hodges High<lb/>
League<lb/>
Jocks Pace V<lb/>
As Teams<lb/>
Tie In 'A' Play<lb/>
The latest standings and results<lb/>
for Men's Intramural basketball play<lb/>
are as follows:<lb/>
"B" League Results<lb/>
Hot Trotters 39 Slowpokes 20<lb/>
Cyclones 18 Wolfpack 13<lb/>
Lowlanders 27 Hambones 16<lb/>
Jocks 32 Phantoms 14<lb/>
Jocks 39 Wolfpack 26<lb/>
Lowlanders 26 Cyclones 21<lb/>
"B" League Standings<lb/>
Conference Standings<lb/>
As of Wednesday morning East<lb/>
Carolina college Pirates were firmly<lb/>
entrenched as top dog in the North<lb/>
State conference. The Pirates, pos-<lb/>
sessing a 6-0 record, defeated Guil-<lb/>
ford Tuesday night.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
Elon <lb/>
Appalachian <lb/>
Atlantic Christian -<lb/>
Guilford <lb/>
High Point <lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
Catawbs <lb/>
W<lb/>
6<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
L Pet.<lb/>
0 1.000<lb/>
.760<lb/>
.667<lb/>
.600<lb/>
.400<lb/>
.333<lb/>
.333<lb/>
.250<lb/>
.000<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
The results of the poiflt<lb/>
Pirate basketball games <lb/>
Guilford contest show 8?Sk<lb/>
out in front with a MJB <lb/>
age. Sonny Russell bt sie bel "<lb/>
with 19.4 points per rstst<lb/>
Player ' ? -<lb/>
Hodgea<lb/>
Russell<lb/>
Huffman?i J ! 1<lb/>
Heath <lb/>
Thomas<lb/>
Carr <lb/>
Hayes .<lb/>
CKeUy .<lb/>
Moye<lb/>
I<lb/>
Gay ?<lb/>
Hilburn<lb/>
Jones -<lb/>
Blake ?i<lb/>
Opponents<lb/>
?$<lb/>
V?????????V??????????f??<lb/>
Jocks <lb/>
Lowlanders<lb/>
Hot Trotters ?<lb/>
Cyclones <lb/>
Slow Pokes ?<lb/>
Hambones <lb/>
Phantoms <lb/>
Wolfpack <lb/>
Jelly Bellies<lb/>
"A"<lb/>
W<lb/>
I<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
L<lb/>
?<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
'I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
? I<lb/>
t<lb/>
?I<lb/>
I<lb/>
(<lb/>
OA.T.C<lb/>
League Results<lb/>
Sheriffs 38 Globetrotters 31<lb/>
Carterets 82 Arabs 3t<lb/>
Whiz Kids &amp; Hot Pants SIS<lb/>
Knights of the Hardwood M Fancy<lb/>
Pants 22<lb/>
"A" League Steadings<lb/>
Sheriffs -<lb/>
Whis Kids<lb/>
Carterets<lb/>
FOOT LONG<lb/>
Ww?<lb/>
CHICKEN AND<lb/>
IN<lb/>
L DELIVER<lb/>
Knights of theHardwood<lb/>
Globetrotters 1<lb/>
Hot Pants ???<lb/>
Fancy Pasta ?'?-<lb/>
Arabs?'??-<lb/>
GRE<lb/>
<pb facs="00038312_0004"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, li<lb/>
EAST CAftOLtNIAN<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
Marine Corps Offers Seniors<lb/>
Specialized Officers Training<lb/>
A majority of the college seniors<lb/>
and graduates who enoll now for the<lb/>
Marine Corps Officer Candidate<lb/>
course which will be conducted in<lb/>
March, 1953, will receive specialized<lb/>
training, Captain Nate L. Adams,<lb/>
USMC, declared this week.<lb/>
After completing ibasic officer<lb/>
training 57. per cent of the graduates<lb/>
of this program will be assigned to<lb/>
specialists schools at Marine Coups<lb/>
schools, Quantico, Va. The remaining<lb/>
43 per cert, he stated, will be as<lb/>
signed infantry billets.<lb/>
-The need for college men is great-<lb/>
er than ever before uue to the pre-<lb/>
sent expansion he observed. "Such<lb/>
course, as Supply, Engineering, Na-<lb/>
val Gunfire, Motor Transport, Com-<lb/>
munications, Naval Flight Training<lb/>
and others are available<lb/>
Captain Adams said officer train-<lb/>
ing programs are open to both collage<lb/>
graduates and seniors who graduate<lb/>
between now and March 1, 1953. Ap-<lb/>
plicants may be married or single. He<lb/>
advised interested college men to<lb/>
contact the Marine Corps Officer<lb/>
Procurement office, Room 1105, 1400<lb/>
 Pennsylvania avenue, N. W Wash-<lb/>
ington, D. C? or .call Executive<lb/>
3-7585 for an interview<lb/>
Once selected, an applicant is en-<lb/>
listed in the Marine Corps reserve<lb/>
and attends a ten-week training<lb/>
course at the Marine Corps schools,<lb/>
Quantico, Va. (35 miles from Wash-<lb/>
ington, D. C). Upon completion of<lb/>
this course the candidate becomes a<lb/>
Second Lieutenant and serves for<lb/>
two years on active duty as a com-<lb/>
missioned officer. ?<lb/>
Application forms for the March<lb/>
class (and the July class, for June<lb/>
graduates), are available at the Ma-<lb/>
rine Procurement office. He stated<lb/>
it is advisable for prospective can-<lb/>
didates to apply as soon as possible.<lb/>
Presbyterian Junior college was<lb/>
East Carolina's opponent in the first<lb/>
night game ever played by the locals.<lb/>
The Pirates triumphed 40-0 that Oc-<lb/>
tober night in 1940.<lb/>
I<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN FOOTWEAR<lb/>
It's<lb/>
MERIT SHOES<lb/>
r<lb/>
Your New 53 Ford<lb/>
FROM THE<lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co. Inc.<lb/>
Your Friendlv Ford Dealer in Greenville is Guaranteed for<lb/>
Two Full Years or Twenty-Five Thousand Miles<lb/>
Two Years or Twenty-Five Thousand Miles<lb/>
of Carefree Driving<lb/>
Mews For Vets<lb/>
Veterans holding National Service<lb/>
Life Insurance and other forms of<lb/>
Government life insurance were ad-<lb/>
vised by the Veterans administration<lb/>
that thv may make a savins: fc? the<lb/>
payment of premiums if ttiey are<lb/>
abie to pay them in advance on a<lb/>
quarterly, semi-annual or annual ba-<lb/>
sis instead of every month.<lb/>
Veterans who are able to pay pre-<lb/>
miums in advance in this fashion will<lb/>
have a reduction over the regular<lb/>
monthly premium rates of 3 per cent<lb/>
per year.<lb/>
Paying premiums every three<lb/>
months, six months or twelve months<lb/>
has another definite advantage over<lb/>
monthly payments, VA said, in that<lb/>
there is much less chance of the<lb/>
veteran overlooking one of the month-<lb/>
ly payments and running the risk<lb/>
that his insurance may lapse.<lb/>
As a taxpayer, a veteran will be<lb/>
contributing to more economy in<lb/>
Government costs if he is able to pay<lb/>
insurance premiums on an advance<lb/>
basis istead of each month. A small-<lb/>
er number of monthly payments to<lb/>
be received and processed by VA<lb/>
means a savings in the number of<lb/>
employees required for this work.<lb/>
For the benefit of veterans who<lb/>
are receiving regular compensation<lb/>
or pension payments, VA reminded<lb/>
that they can authorize their regional<lb/>
office to deduct Government insur-<lb/>
ance premiums each month from the<lb/>
payments due them. This method is<lb/>
helpful and time saving and the vet-<lb/>
eran can avoid any worry about<lb/>
meeting the premium payments as<lb/>
they fall due, since VA will take the<lb/>
responsibility of making them on<lb/>
time. Information on this can be<lb/>
obtained from any VA Contact Rep-<lb/>
resentative.<lb/>
VA Offers Education Advice<lb/>
For veterans who will apply for<lb/>
education or training under the Ko-<lb/>
rean GI bill, Veterans administration<lb/>
offered advice on two important items<lb/>
that must be listed in their appli-<lb/>
cations.<lb/>
The first is a listing of the vet-<lb/>
eran's educational or vocational goal<lb/>
and the second is a statement of how<lb/>
he proposes to reach the goal.<lb/>
A careful consideration of both the<lb/>
goal and the means of reaching it is<lb/>
vital, VA said, because the Korean<lb/>
GI bill provides that a veteran may<lb/>
make one change in his course after<lb/>
he has started it, hut no more than<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Rxamples of goals would be law or<lb/>
medicine as professional aims; high<lb/>
schools or college diplomas as edu-<lb/>
cational aims; or carpentry or plumb-<lb/>
ing as vocational aims.<lb/>
Example of the listing for meth-<lb/>
ods if reaching the goal would be a<lb/>
statement of the highest degree to<lb/>
gotten, if a college or universi<lb/>
course is involved. If the vetei<lb/>
does not aim for a degree to<lb/>
educational training, he should<lb/>
the actual subjects which will<lb/>
taken under his l'n. In vocatioi<lb/>
training, a description of the<lb/>
of worn touid be gTven.<lb/>
Korean veterans wishing to api<lb/>
for education or training who<lb/>
not sura of their goal or m<lb/>
retching it may receive sp?<lb/>
cational guidance from VA. Oi<lb/>
application form they should ch<lb/>
the ox which requests guida<lb/>
For benefits under the GI bill vi<lb/>
emng who have served in the arrnli<lb/>
forces anywhere in the world n<lb/>
eligible. There are now appr <lb/>
ly 1,500,000 such veterans, VA i<lb/>
of whom many are expected to<lb/>
for education or training<lb/>
coming spring term.<lb/>
"I'm sure I've some cigarettes here someplace<lb/>
For Drug Needs, Cosmetics and Fountain Good<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
Proctor Hotel Building<lb/>
Open 8 A. M. -10 P. M. ? Sunday 8:30 A. M. - :?? A. M.<lb/>
4 P. M. - 10 P. M.<lb/>
College Students<lb/>
COME IN AND SEE<lb/>
OUR FINE SELECTION OF SUITS and COATS<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
The 1939 Pirate baseball team met<lb/>
several out-of-conference clubs.<lb/>
Among them were the New Bern<lb/>
Bears of the Coastal Plain league,<lb/>
Ohio Wesleyan university and Dan-<lb/>
ville Military institute.<lb/>
MARCH OF DIMES<lb/>
HEADQUARTERS FOR<lb/>
Nan Buntly Suits<lb/>
Assorted Sizes and Colors<lb/>
START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT<lb/>
CHECK THESE ITEMS FOR YOUR NEEDS<lb/>
? Social Stationery ? Wallets and Keytainers<lb/>
? Fountain Pens ? Desk Lamps<lb/>
? Zipper Note Books ? Photo and Scrap Books<lb/>
UNDERWOOD PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS<lb/>
Carolina Office Equipment Co.<lb/>
Better Shoes Reasonably Priced<lb/>
AT<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
517 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
304 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brandt"<lb/>
"Your College Shop"<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
FIGHT<lb/>
INFANTILE<lb/>
PARALYSIS<lb/>
HE FASHION SHOP i JANUARY 2-31<lb/>
517 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
Between Five Points and White's Store<lb/>
J. Paul Sheedy Switched lo Wildroot Cream-Oil<lb/>
Because He Flunked The Finger-Nail Test<lb/>
?&amp;?' ? ?<lb/>
 <lb/>
Good Food ? Sandwiches<lb/>
CAROLINA GRILL<lb/>
24 Hour Service<lb/>
uyoicfiS<lb/>
THE BEL AIR SERIES<lb/>
to be compared only with<lb/>
higher-priced cars!<lb/>
The glamorous Bel Air Series<lb/>
for 1953 is truly a new kind<lb/>
of Chevrolet. Four new Bel<lb/>
Air models?4-Door Sedan,<lb/>
2-Door Sedan, Convertible,<lb/>
Sport Coupe?create a won-<lb/>
derful new class of cars.<lb/>
An anHraly naw kind of Ch?vrolt In on ontkoly now HoM ail H owe<lb/>
"t<lb/>
S?<lb/>
H. L. Hodges &amp; Co.<lb/>
PAINTS and Hardware (<lb/>
4?. ?? -  m " " "<lb/>
Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
45 RPM Accessories<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE<lb/>
THE "TWO-TEN" SERIES<lb/>
sensational advances from<lb/>
bumper to bumperl<lb/>
The 4Two-Ten" Series offers:<lb/>
two new station wagons?the<lb/>
Townsman and "Two-Ten"<lb/>
Handyman?the 4-Door, 2-<lb/>
Door, Convertible, Club<lb/>
Coupe and Sport Coupe.<lb/>
fft- '?K1.<lb/>
N<lb/>
li<lb/>
: ttU. Sheedy wu xesUf in hot water. His<lb/>
t Maiae tfr?nf I don't like about you is the<lb/>
a't yon red about Wildroot Ciearr -<lb/>
 Relieves annoying dryness.<lb/>
ko Jrofc Help you plot the Finger-Nail<lb/>
i d? ye nsed lanolin on that water-<lb/>
IftMkiMt Cseaaft-Oil and now he shore<lb/>
I m ?!?&amp; eway girl on campua. So<lb/>
 txm? htk, baser shell out 291 at<lb/>
t? btttft ?r ?be of Wildroot Cream-<lb/>
l" MA fcr H ? yow barber, an<lb/>
SCOTT'S CLEANERS<lb/>
4nazyty ecoiorn'ca?<lb/>
 Good Food, Reasonable Prices<lb/>
and Friendly Atmosphere<lb/>
BEST IN FOOD<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
PATRONIZE THE<lb/>
Y STORE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
BAKERY PRODUCTS<lb/>
PEOPLES BAKERY<lb/>
THE "ONE-FIFTY" SERIES<lb/>
lowest priced of all quality<lb/>
cars!<lb/>
Smart new Chevrolet styling<lb/>
and advanced features! Five<lb/>
models include the 4-Door<lb/>
and 2-Door Sedans, Club<lb/>
Coupe, Business Coupe, "One-<lb/>
Fifty" Handyman,<lb/>
I<lb/>
UmwmiMttw.mr<lb/>
CHEVROLET<lb/>
The great new Chevrolet line for 1953<lb/>
brings you a car for any purpose.<lb/>
Choose high-compression power with<lb/>
the new 115-h.p. "Blue-Flame" engine<lb/>
teamed with new Powerglide for the<lb/>
finest automatic driving. Or choose the<lb/>
high-compression 108-h.p. "Thrift-<lb/>
rContinwotion of standard ?quipmont and trim iHat-<lb/>
' is d?p?nd?f an evatlabiftfy ?f<lb/>
King" engine for finest standard driv-<lb/>
ing. Choose the improved standard<lb/>
steering, or new Power Steering, op-<lb/>
tional at extra cost.<lb/>
Come in and see the most wonder-<lb/>
ful selection in the low-price field?<lb/>
and it's yours at lowest cost!<lb/>
?Cnmiinonon tf Potntratid tnmmnric tnuumistitn and iIS-k.p. "Bhm<lb/>
Flam" mgin optional tm "Twm-Tm" ?W Bat Air mnodi 1 wstrm c?V<lb/>
MORE PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLETS<lb/>
THAN ANY OTHER CARI<lb/>
(ttfefy AEU ifoaupA av? iitougif<lb/>
aa?????<lb/>
SEE IT AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER'S!<lb/>
m<lb/>
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