<?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>
<pb facs="00038313_0001"/>
r coiu??? h<lb/>
h'?a C <lb/>
' . ' i<lb/>
"e - vn hi<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?' -i in the al<lb/>
' aPProxijtlat.<lb/>
!ATS<lb/>
IRRES<lb/>
t Pays To Do Business<lb/>
nth Those Businesses<lb/>
hat Advertise With Us<lb/>
East?<lb/>
Attend Chapel Services<lb/>
Each Tuesday At Noon<lb/>
In Austin Auditorium<lb/>
ME XXVIII<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1953<lb/>
Number 16<lb/>
Audubon Screen Tours Show<lb/>
)n Slate Tonight In Austin<lb/>
Science Seniors<lb/>
Have Opportunity<lb/>
For Fellowships<lb/>
Jolorf ul Film Story,<lb/>
cture On Wildlife<lb/>
w Evening's Program<lb/>
By Priced<lb/>
PTORE<lb/>
TOR<lb/>
inds"<lb/>
iop<lb/>
r?<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
<lb/>
colorful film story and a lecture<lb/>
e wildlife of Lake Erie and on<lb/>
clues as to the changes in<lb/>
on over past eras will be<lb/>
,i at East Carolina college<lb/>
at 7:30 in the Austin audi-<lb/>
im. The program is the second<lb/>
ies of Audubon Screen tours<lb/>
red by the National Audubon<lb/>
ty and scheduled for presenta-<lb/>
 the college during the school<lb/>
i<lb/>
r. G. Harrison Orians of the Uni-<lb/>
,f Toledo, Ohio, distinguished<lb/>
ar, naturalist and nature pho-<lb/>
ipher, will give the talk on<lb/>
(hanging Shores" as coiti-<lb/>
on his film picturing the<lb/>
iery and the wildlife of the re-<lb/>
action picture reveals to the<lb/>
? evidences of the time when<lb/>
ake Erie country was part of a<lb/>
ous shallow sea. "Once the<lb/>
ants says information from<lb/>
National Audubon society, "in-<lb/>
 forms of life now extinct,<lb/>
e in fossilized rocks; and<lb/>
dunes, moraines, extensive<lb/>
- give up secrets of the dis-<lb/>
ast Against the scenic back-<lb/>
d of Lake Erie Dr. Orians has<lb/>
"a dynamic world of wildlife"<lb/>
g seasonally many changes,<lb/>
program will be sponsored<lb/>
. y the East Carolina college<lb/>
nee club, the Greenville Woman's<lb/>
and the city schools of Green-<lb/>
The public is invited to attend,<lb/>
admission charge will be<lb/>
a naturalist, Dr. Orians has<lb/>
Led widely m this country and<lb/>
 He was at one time a ranger<lb/>
smite National park and dur-<lb/>
World War II served with the<lb/>
v Air corps.<lb/>
i?W<lb/>
fUM cril n? o?9<lb/>
itt Red Gross<lb/>
lelects Jenkins<lb/>
Is Co-Chairman<lb/>
I i Carolina Dean Leo W. Jen-<lb/>
lr.s and Mrs. Blair Cox Wheless<lb/>
ive been appointed as chairman and<lb/>
Cross Fund campaign in the<lb/>
chairman of the 1953 American<lb/>
ty and county.<lb/>
The appointment of the two was<lb/>
1 and announced by E. Hoover<lb/>
, chairman of the Pitt county<lb/>
ter of the Red Cross.<lb/>
Mrs. Wheless will have charge of<lb/>
campaign in the county town-<lb/>
is and Dr. Jenkins will conduct<lb/>
? campaign in the city of Green-<lb/>
ilk<lb/>
Dt. Jenkins served last year as<lb/>
lirman of the Red Cross Fund<lb/>
Snpaign. "His experience and abili-<lb/>
as an organizer will mean much<lb/>
the success of the campaign<lb/>
ited Taft. "He has high apprecia-<lb/>
ot; of the work of the Red Cross,<lb/>
becially the blood program<lb/>
East Carolina seniors majoring in<lb/>
chemistry, physics or engineering are<lb/>
eligible for Atomic Energy Commis-<lb/>
sion-sponsored graduate fellowships<lb/>
in -radiological physics for the 1953-<lb/>
54 school year.<lb/>
Radiological physics is a new and<lb/>
expanding field of science. It is con-<lb/>
cerned with health physis, radiation<lb/>
monitoring and control, radioisotope<lb/>
measurements and similar activities<lb/>
associated with the use of radioiso-<lb/>
topes or the release of nuclear ener-<lb/>
gy-<lb/>
Up to 75 fellowships may be award-<lb/>
ed, with fully-accredited gfraduate<lb/>
study to be carried out in three loca-<lb/>
tions. One program is operated by<lb/>
the University of Rochester and<lb/>
Broovhaven National laboratory, an-<lb/>
other by the University of Wash-<lb/>
ington and the Hanford Works of<lb/>
the AEC, and the third by Vander-<lb/>
bilt university and the Oak Ridge<lb/>
National laboratory.<lb/>
In each case, nine months of course<lb/>
work at the university is followed by<lb/>
three months of additional study and<lb/>
field training at the cooperating<lb/>
AEC installation. The program is<lb/>
accredited for graduate-level train-<lb/>
ing leading toward an advanced de-<lb/>
gree.<lb/>
Basic stipends for fellows is $1600<lb/>
per year, with an alowanre of $350<lb/>
if married and $350 for each de-<lb/>
pendent child. University tuition and<lb/>
required fees will be paid by the<lb/>
Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Stud-<lb/>
ies, which administers the program<lb/>
for the AEC.<lb/>
Additional information on the pro-<lb/>
gram may be obtained from science<lb/>
department heads or direct from the<lb/>
Institute at Oak Ridge, Tenn.<lb/>
'Couple Of The Week'<lb/>
Beginning next week the "East<lb/>
Carolinian" will run a "Chester-<lb/>
field Couple of the Week" in every<lb/>
issue. The couple will be given a<lb/>
write-up in the paper and will re-<lb/>
ceive tickets to a movie, a free<lb/>
meal, a carton of cigarettes, an<lb/>
item from a jewelry store and<lb/>
other favors.<lb/>
Earl Davenport, Chesterfield<lb/>
representative on campus, is in<lb/>
charge of the "Chesterfield Couple<lb/>
of the Week<lb/>
Religious Leader<lb/>
Talks To Members<lb/>
Of Circle K Club<lb/>
Speaking on the qualities of a good<lb/>
leader, Dr. James L. Stoner, Director<lb/>
of the University Christian Mission<lb/>
of the National council of the Church-<lb/>
of Christ in the United States,<lb/>
es<lb/>
spoke before members of the Circle<lb/>
K club at East Carolina at a meeting<lb/>
Tuesday night at the Olde Towne Inn.<lb/>
On the campus as a leader of the<lb/>
annual Religious Emphasis week ac-<lb/>
tivities, Dr. Stoner stressed the im-<lb/>
portance of good leaders to organi-<lb/>
zations and advised members of Cir-<lb/>
cle K not to spread their leadership<lb/>
over too large a field. He further<lb/>
added that it was best to do a good,<lb/>
thorough job for one club.<lb/>
Club President Al Harrington an-<lb/>
nounced plans for the annual Duck<lb/>
Deifiy event which will be sponsored<lb/>
m campus at a date in the future.<lb/>
Committees were named to begin<lb/>
work on the yearly club project.<lb/>
A report was given on the prog-<lb/>
ress of planning to give a trophy to<lb/>
'he outstanding basketball player at<lb/>
East Carolina. Circle K has taken<lb/>
this idea as an annual affair, and<lb/>
the trophy will be presented at the<lb/>
half of the last home game to the<lb/>
outstanding player of the year. The<lb/>
player will be selected by a vote of<lb/>
the members of the team.<lb/>
Local Merchant<lb/>
Serves At Head<lb/>
Of Talent Show<lb/>
Eli Bloom, Greenville merchant,<lb/>
will serve as master of ceremonies<lb/>
at an amateur talent night, sponsor-<lb/>
ed by members of the "East Caro-<lb/>
linian" staff, Tuesday, February 3,<lb/>
in Austin auditorium at 8 p.m. ATI<lb/>
persons interested in performing in<lb/>
the talent program should file appli-<lb/>
cation in the newspaper office as<lb/>
soon as possible.<lb/>
The program will probably consist<lb/>
of musical selections on various in-<lb/>
struments, dance routines, comedians<lb/>
and songs by leading vocalists on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Mixed in with the student ama-<lb/>
teurs will be other numbers rendered<lb/>
by talented persons of this area. No<lb/>
cash prizes will be awarded; how-<lb/>
ever, there will be prizes given to top<lb/>
performers on the evening's enter-<lb/>
tainment.<lb/>
Past talent nights have filled Aus-<lb/>
tin auditorium with students and<lb/>
townspeople who turn out to hear<lb/>
and see the students at East Carolina<lb/>
perform.<lb/>
s<lb/>
onny<lb/>
Here For<lb/>
Dunham Orchestra Plays<lb/>
Class Dance Thursday<lb/>
Plays For Class Dance<lb/>
?WwftWW-<lb/>
Teachers Playhouse Presents<lb/>
Performances Of 'Everyman'<lb/>
Two performances of the famous<lb/>
morality play "Everyman presented<lb/>
by the Teachers playhouse of East<lb/>
Carolina college on January 15 and<lb/>
16, began the annual campus ob- I<lb/>
servance of Religious Emphasis week.<lb/>
Percy Wilkins of Benson, sophomore<lb/>
at the college, had the title role in<lb/>
the medieval religious drama.<lb/>
Taking the parts of the personi-<lb/>
fied vices and virtues in the alle-<lb/>
gory were the following studeint<lb/>
members of the Teachers playhouse:<lb/>
Walter Noona and Andrew Meeder,<lb/>
Norfolk, Va Donald Roebuck,<lb/>
Stokes; Lloyd Whitfield, Kinston;<lb/>
Ann McCrary, Durham; Pete Wil-<lb/>
liams, Dover; Ralph Rives, Enfield;<lb/>
Carolyn Clapp, Greenville; Bobby<lb/>
Jean Cadwell, Wadeville; Dorothy<lb/>
Bradshaw Jones, Elizabeth City; Clar-<lb/>
ence Poe Mooring, Snow Hill; Wil-<lb/>
iam Baldwin, Whiteville; Larry Wil-<lb/>
Baptist Minister Addresses<lb/>
Faculty Lecture Club Tuesday<lb/>
iams, Ocracoke; Joseph Johnston,<lb/>
Jacksonville; .Peggy Barfield, Ayden;<lb/>
Billye Cannady, Clarendon; Jenette<lb/>
Rivenbark, Watha; and Robert Lee<lb/>
Vickery Jr Mooresville,<lb/>
"Everyman" was given in the Col-<lb/>
lege theatre with an elaborate musi-<lb/>
cal setting. Choirs of approximately<lb/>
100 students, singing under the dir-<lb/>
ection of Dr. Kenneth N. Cuthbert,<lb/>
Dan E. Vornholt and Dr. Karl V.<lb/>
Gilbert of the music faculty, present-<lb/>
ed church music suited to the med-<lb/>
ieval character of the play. George E.<lb/>
Perry of the faculty was organist for<lb/>
the production.<lb/>
The drama was produced in an ar-<lb/>
rangement and adaptation by Dr. Luc-<lb/>
ile Charles of the' college English de-<lb/>
ile Charles of the colege Engish de-<lb/>
partment, director of dramatic arts<lb/>
Fayetteville was student director, and<lb/>
at the college. Gilbert McLeod of<lb/>
William Penuel of Goldsboro was tech-<lb/>
nical director. Elaborate lighting ef-<lb/>
fects, which contributed to the artis-<lb/>
tic qualities of the performances, were<lb/>
produced under the direction of<lb/>
Ernest L. White of Waynesboro, Va.<lb/>
Organization which sponsored the<lb/>
Vet's Publication<lb/>
Emphasizes Loan<lb/>
Investment Value<lb/>
"Prospectus for Investors a pub-<lb/>
lication emphasizing the high invest-<lb/>
ment caliber of Veterans administra-<lb/>
tion direct loans, is now available at<lb/>
all VA regional offices.<lb/>
More tan 24,000 home loans, with<lb/>
an agj "gate principal amouTit of<lb/>
more than $100 milliin, are available<lb/>
for sale by VA to private investors.<lb/>
The loans have been made by VA<lb/>
under the direct loan program es-<lb/>
tablished by the Housing Act of 1950,<lb/>
which authorizes VA to make home<lb/>
mirtgage loans directly to veterans<lb/>
in those areas where VA finds that<lb/>
private capital is not available for<lb/>
GH four per cent guaranteed loans.<lb/>
YA's direct loans are sold at par<lb/>
and are guaranteed up to 60 per cent<lb/>
of the loan in the same manner as<lb/>
a GI loan made by a private lender.<lb/>
They all carry an interest rate of<lb/>
four per cent per annum.<lb/>
VA said these are logical invest-<lb/>
ments for smaller investment insti-<lb/>
tutions in or near the town or com-<lb/>
munity where the security is located.<lb/>
T. B. King, Director of VA's Loan<lb/>
Guaranty service, said, "VA consid-<lb/>
ers that its direct loans are prac-<lb/>
tically free of principal risk to the<lb/>
lender and the guaranty offers many<lb/>
liberal advantages to the investor<lb/>
?a-<lb/>
Appearing at East Carolina Thursday night in Wright auditoriun<lb/>
the dance sponsored by the Freshman, Sophomore and Senior classes will be<lb/>
Sonny Dunham and His Orchestra. A previous announcement stated that<lb/>
Claude Thornhill would play for the dance, but the group was unabls to<lb/>
keep the engagement. <lb/>
Columbia Professor Speaks<lb/>
At Faculty Meeting Monday<lb/>
s&amp; - -<lb/>
standard driv-<lb/>
roved standard<lb/>
r Steering, ?P<lb/>
L mot woiig;<lb/>
low-price fi?-<lb/>
Igt coet! ?mtmm<lb/>
1 HJ5Ifc<lb/>
lFOCtg<lb/>
4<lb/>
EB'S'<lb/>
K growing cooperative spirit<lb/>
ong Christians of the world is an<lb/>
jouraginaj development of modern<lb/>
ies, Dr. Edward Hughes Pruden,<lb/>
nister at the First Baptist church<lb/>
Washington, D. C, told members<lb/>
the East Carolina college Faculty<lb/>
rture club Tuesday evening.<lb/>
Phs distinguished speaker, a guest<lb/>
s week at the college and a prin-<lb/>
1 participant in the annual ob-<lb/>
-vance of Religious Emphasis week<lb/>
the campus, was heard by club<lb/>
jlembeis and guests from the city<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
In discussing the growth of the<lb/>
momenical spirit in Ohristianty, Dr.<lb/>
ruden gave an alcount of the Third<lb/>
forld conference on Faith and Order<lb/>
hich he attended last summer in<lb/>
veden. Beginning with the Inter-<lb/>
itional Missionary conference in<lb/>
prusalem in 1910, he told of the<lb/>
Ne World Conferences on Faith<lb/>
Order which have been held<lb/>
ice then and of the organization of<lb/>
e World Council of Churches.<lb/>
 Present in the ancient university<lb/>
ad cathedral town of Lund, Sweden,<lb/>
r the 1952 conference, he said, were<lb/>
Baptist Student Group<lb/>
Reveals Program Topic<lb/>
For Next Three Weeks<lb/>
Forums at the Baptist Student cen-<lb/>
ter for the next three weeks will be<lb/>
on summer work opportunities for<lb/>
students, it has been announced.<lb/>
Programs will foe as follows: Janu-<lb/>
ary 23, summer work camp in Eu-<lb/>
rope, slide presentation by Miss Car-<lb/>
olyn Flewellen of Greenville, nutri-<lb/>
tionist with the state Health depart-<lb/>
ment; January 30, the Rev. Richard<lb/>
K. Redwine, manager of the Caswell<lb/>
representatives of 116 denominational<lb/>
bodies from 41 different countries of<lb/>
the world. He gave a vivid picture<lb/>
of outstanding personalities at the<lb/>
conference and described some of the<lb/>
impressive events, such as the joint<lb/>
communion service at the cathedral.<lb/>
Results of the conference, he stat-<lb/>
ed, were that memfoers became ac-<lb/>
quainted with points of view with<lb/>
which they were previously unfami-<lb/>
liar and developed sympathy with<lb/>
and appreciation of many of these<lb/>
views. Those attending departed, he<lb/>
said, with a "strengthening of the<lb/>
idea that greater unity is needed<lb/>
After his lecture, Dr. Pruden an-<lb/>
swered a number of questions asked<lb/>
by members of the audience. Con-<lb/>
tributors of ideas and comments<lb/>
during this period were Dr. James<lb/>
Lloyd Stoner of New York City, di-<lb/>
rector of the University Christian<lb/>
Mission; Dr. Arthur Lee Kinsolving,<lb/>
rector of St. James Protestant Epis-<lb/>
copal church in New York City; and<lb/>
Dr. Clarence Linton of Teachers col-<lb/>
lege, Columbia university, visitors<lb/>
on the campus during Religious Em-<lb/>
phasis week.<lb/>
production of "Everyman' as part of Baptist assembly, Southport, will<lb/>
the annual observance "of Religious<lb/>
Emphasis week on campus were the<lb/>
Inter-Religious council, the YMCA<lb/>
and the YWCA of East Carolina.<lb/>
speak on the staff opportunities and<lb/>
program there; and February 6,<lb/>
slides and talk by Mr. B. G. Henry<lb/>
on the Fruitland Baptist assembly.<lb/>
The factual study of religion in<lb/>
the public schools is fundamental in<lb/>
general education, Dr. Clarence Lin-<lb/>
ton, professor of education at Teach-<lb/>
ers college, Columbia university, stat-<lb/>
ed at a meeting of the East Carolina<lb/>
college faculty Monday afternoon.<lb/>
Dr. Linton, who is a visitor on the<lb/>
campus during Religious Emphasis<lb/>
week distinguished between "factual<lb/>
study" and the teaching of religion<lb/>
in an effort to create belief or to<lb/>
indoctrinate. He emphasized the right<lb/>
of the citizen to freedom of belief.<lb/>
Dr. Linton has recently made a<lb/>
national survey on the subject of<lb/>
religion in pulblic education for the<lb/>
Committee on Religion and Educa-<lb/>
tion of the American Council on Edu-<lb/>
cation. This study is based on data<lb/>
collected over a wide area in this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
In beginning his discussion of the<lb/>
controversial subject, Dr. Linton gave<lb/>
as basic assumptions the ideas that<lb/>
religion is an important factor in<lb/>
human life and "intrinsic to the on-<lb/>
going experience of education<lb/>
9 A three-fold goal of religious in-<lb/>
struction in the schools, he stated,<lb/>
is to make young people "literate<lb/>
about religion, to make them "intel-<lb/>
ligent in understanding the role of<lb/>
religion in human affairs and to<lb/>
give them the "sense of personal<lb/>
obligation to achieve conviction<lb/>
Three approaches in education, he<lb/>
said, are the avoidance of religious<lb/>
instruction; planned religious activi-<lb/>
ties, such as weeks of Religious Em-<lb/>
phasis held on many campuses in the<lb/>
nation; and the factual study of re-<lb/>
ligion. The last, he said, seems the<lb/>
desirable type of instruction in gen-<lb/>
eral education.<lb/>
Issues involved, he pointed out, are<lb/>
"Will the public let you do it?" and<lb/>
"Can we prepare teacher for doing<lb/>
the job?"<lb/>
Lack of religious instruction in the<lb/>
schools, he said, tends to create the<lb/>
effect of making religion seem un-<lb/>
important in education. After many<lb/>
years, he concluded, we may achieve<lb/>
a change. In the interim, he advised,<lb/>
only highly trained teachers should<lb/>
be allowed to experiment in the<lb/>
public schools to see what is in-<lb/>
volved in the factual study of reli-<lb/>
gion as part of general education.<lb/>
Concert On Schedule<lb/>
In Wright Auditorium;<lb/>
Use Student Tickets<lb/>
Sonny Dunham and His Or-<lb/>
chestra will play for the January<lb/>
29 dance sponsored by ths<lb/>
Freshman, Sophomore and Sen-<lb/>
ior classes. Described as "Amer-<lb/>
icas foremost trumpet and<lb/>
trombone stylist Dunham<lb/>
leads a dance ensemble which<lb/>
has become a stellar attraction<lb/>
in theatres and ballrooms from<lb/>
coast to coast.<lb/>
Students will be admitted on<lb/>
tertainment tickets.<lb/>
A concert will be presented ay<lb/>
Dunham and his orchestra from t<lb/>
p. m. to 9:30 p. m in th? Wright<lb/>
auditorium, Klutts hat announced.<lb/>
Dancing will follow from 9:30 until<lb/>
midnight.<lb/>
Because of varioua difficultia in!<lb/>
arranging a schedule, Claude Thorn-<lb/>
hill and His Orchestra, fir.st announc-<lb/>
ed for the dance, were unable to kaep I<lb/>
the engagement for January 29 a:I<lb/>
East Carolina. John Robrt KlutUs,<lb/>
president of the Senior class, and<lb/>
others working with him oa plar.a<lb/>
for the social eent, have now comp-<lb/>
leted arrangements to bring tha<lb/>
Dunham outfit to the campus.<lb/>
Sonny Dunham, handsome orche ra<lb/>
leader, is noted as one who has per-<lb/>
formed the difficult feat of maatar-<lb/>
ing both the trumpet and the trom-l<lb/>
bone technique. This unusual accora-<lb/>
plishment has been featured in Rip-<lb/>
ley's famous "Believe It or Not" ear-<lb/>
toon,<lb/>
Dunham's rise to fame began when<lb/>
he joined Glen Gray's Casa Lomal<lb/>
orchestra. The dual-instrumentali5t's<lb/>
part in the activities of that out-<lb/>
standing organization is music hi!<lb/>
tory. Ha playing on the Casa Lor<lb/>
rtcordinig of "Pagan Love Song<lb/>
which he arranged, and in "Mem'rii<lb/>
of You" wae a sensational success.<lb/>
1940 Dunham became leader of<lb/>
own Sband.<lb/>
Dunham has appeared since th<lb/>
with his orchestra in leading thel<lb/>
tres and entertainment centei<lb/>
throughout th nation, has been fel<lb/>
tured in motion pictures for Universi<lb/>
Picture, and Columbia Pictures, hi<lb/>
filled engagements over the Nl<lb/>
ABC, CBS, MBS radio networks ai<lb/>
has made many popular recordings.<lb/>
Majority At ECC In Training For Teaching<lb/>
Messick Attends<lb/>
AACTE Session<lb/>
This Week End<lb/>
Among the 1,575 undergraduate<lb/>
students who registered at East Caro-<lb/>
lina college for the fall or winter<lb/>
quarter, or both of 1952-1953 as maj-<lb/>
ors in the various areas of teacher-<lb/>
training, 486 have received or are<lb/>
receiving preparation as teachers in<lb/>
primary and grammar grades.<lb/>
A report just issued by Registrar<lb/>
Orval L. Phillips analyzes the en-<lb/>
rollment for this period by indicat-<lb/>
ing the curricula in which students<lb/>
specialize in their work at the college.<lb/>
The study concerns 2,167 individuals<lb/>
students at the college for one or<lb/>
both of the quarters<lb/>
In addition to the 1,575 under-<lb/>
graduates registered in tearher-<lb/>
training courses, 155 graduate stud-<lb/>
ents enrolled for courses leading to<lb/>
the master's degree, which at East<lb/>
Carolina is a degree for teachers and work in the lower grades.<lb/>
school administrations. Thus out of a<lb/>
total of 2,167 men and women study-<lb/>
curricula preparing them for service<lb/>
winter quarters, 1,720 are majors in<lb/>
' at the college in the fall and<lb/>
in the public schools; and 447 are<lb/>
majors in other areas.<lb/>
Of those in the field of elementary<lb/>
education, 243 enrolled for work in<lb/>
primary education, and 225 for work<lb/>
in grammar-grade education. At<lb/>
present 14 men students taking work<lb/>
in elementary education make up<lb/>
the largest group of men to major<lb/>
in this field during a single quarter<lb/>
at East Carolina. Because of the<lb/>
national scarcity of elementary<lb/>
teachers, East Carolina has for several<lb/>
years earned on an active program to<lb/>
Students taking work preparing<lb/>
them "as teachers in secondary schools<lb/>
number 1,107, Dr. Phillips' report<lb/>
shows. The subject matter areas in<lb/>
which they specialize include arts,<lb/>
music, Ibusiness education, library<lb/>
science, home economics, industrial<lb/>
arts, health and physical education<lb/>
and other academic fields.<lb/>
In addition to the students receiving<lb/>
preparation as teachers, others tfeidy-<lb/>
ing at in the fall and winter included<lb/>
219 candidates for the liberal ir?<lb/>
degree; 101 taking a two-year tem-<lb/>
course; 97 taking prevocatiaiiai<lb/>
courses in the jrtHl?tf?l, pre?-<lb/>
gineering pre-laboratory ech?fcia?<lb/>
pro-legal. pre-nH&amp;sl m? pr?amsto$<lb/>
years cameo on an ?t??e prv8?i w Fw-??.?w, -????? ? <lb/>
encourage studente to prepare for I curricula; and 80 ipedal ?BM8i.<lb/>
President John D. Messick of &amp;<lb/>
Carolina college is attending thi<lb/>
week end, January 23-25, in Oneon-<lb/>
ta, N. Y the semi-annual meeting<lb/>
of the Accreditation Committee of the<lb/>
American association of Colleges for<lb/>
Teacher Education. At this ??eting<lb/>
applications for marabeiehip In the<lb/>
AACTE and evaluations of member<lb/>
colleges and univea-adties doing work<lb/>
in teacher education are being ttud-<lb/>
ied and decisions as to mesrfberahip<lb/>
status are heing made.<lb/>
Dr. Messick has been a memfeef ,pt<lb/>
the Accreditation committee of<lb/>
AiAiCTE since 1951. The weak .??<lb/>
committee provides for vi<lb/>
member mstitations if tJbe<lb/>
tion and for accrediting<lb/>
of instruetlea in these coll<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
Among institutionji i<lb/>
sick ha vteitsi vnjjt<lb/>
assisted in evaluating<lb/>
ests of the Mkm<lb/>
Stat? college, ??<lb/>
hody cones. $<lb/>
Miami uaJventlf<lb/>
BSD Schedules<lb/>
Series Of Forun<lb/>
For Friday Might<lb/>
Members of the Baptist<lb/>
union at East Carolina eollefh<lb/>
scheduled a series of fox<lb/>
summer work opportuMt<lb/>
dents will be presented ;tof<lb/>
interested . in reiigioos wtti -J<lb/>
young people.<lb/>
Mary Agnes 0mk si<lb/>
rum ehairmta ef tks8Js <lb/>
ration, has arrssppi Si mm<lb/>
ings vriH km heM a ftl<lb/>
evenings at tUs B i<lb/>
ter on East V&amp;&amp;<lb/>
Caron<lb/>
nutritionist<lb/>
department<lb/>
annuner. wo?<lb/>
mill iHna&amp;ra<lb/>
mads<lb/>
eled a<lb/>
youth<lb/>
The<lb/>
SfS?Sj?<lb/>
Soul<lb/>
and<lb/>
of<lb/>
fop<lb/>
Pil<lb/>
<pb facs="00038313_0002"/><lb/>
FAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 195S<lb/>
A- 3A<lb/>
Easttarolinian<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 as 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/>
Who's WTio At East Carolina<lb/>
by Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
TIMELY TOPICS<lb/>
By Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
S<lb/>
ttoodcfed QA&amp;&amp; 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/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wit5<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word of itE. Fitzgerald<lb/>
EDITORIAL STAFF<lb/>
 Tommie Lupton<lb/>
Edwina McMullan<lb/>
Parker Maddrey<lb/>
 Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
 Kay Johnston,<lb/>
mith, Mildred Henderson, Stuart Arrington,<lb/>
Don Muse, Ami Hogan, Emily Boyce.<lb/>
Editorial Advisor Mary H G???<lb/>
C. L. Perkins Jr.<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Assistant Editor<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
Saff Assistants<lb/>
Staff Photographer<lb/>
SPORTS STAFF<lb/>
SgHlt8<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Editor - - <lb/>
Assistants  Sam Hux, Bruce Phillips,<lb/>
Jack Scott, Jim Ellis<lb/>
We are going to run a column on<lb/>
a few facts and figures on highway<lb/>
safety which we thought might be in-<lb/>
teresting for our reacers. Not know-<lb/>
will be using figures and percentages<lb/>
of 1951.<lb/>
There were 28,590 persons from<lb/>
the ages 15-64 who met death on the<lb/>
highway 44.4 were pedestrians while<lb/>
23.1 per cent were in cars. Bicycles<lb/>
accounted for 15.3 per cent of the<lb/>
deaths, while 13 per cent died as<lb/>
result of non-cohision accidents.<lb/>
Looking into the age groups of<lb/>
drivers in accidents, we found that<lb/>
only 2.3 per cent of the accidents<lb/>
were caused by drivers under 18<lb/>
years of ae. From 18 to 24 the<lb/>
figures revealed that there were 18.6<lb/>
per cent and from 25-64 the per-<lb/>
centage was 76.7, but we understand<lb/>
that there would be many more driv-<lb/>
ers in that age group. Over 65 years<lb/>
of age, where there would be fewer<lb/>
drivers, there was 2.4 per cent<lb/>
Bob Hilldrup I Approximately 97 per cent of the<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Business Manager  Edna Massad<lb/>
Assistant Business Manager  Faye Jones<lb/>
Business Assistants . ? ?&amp; Jyce owen,<lb/>
Mary Gillette, Marty MacArthur, Atwood Smith,<lb/>
Dwight Garrett<lb/>
E -change Editor Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
Crmpus Circulation  Shirley Brown Manning<lb/>
of<lb/>
Our Value To Greenville<lb/>
How much do you think that East Carolina<lb/>
is worth to the city of Greenville? Have you<lb/>
really ever thought of how much money is spent<lb/>
in'Greenville by students of this college alone?<lb/>
Our figuring, which might be over or under<lb/>
what the true figures might reveal, shows that<lb/>
each vear we, the students at East Carolina,<lb/>
spend'over one million dollars in this community<lb/>
Smiles from the merchants always greet the<lb/>
students of this college as they enter the business<lb/>
establishments, and one can easily see why. Many<lb/>
Greenville merchants look forward to seeing the<lb/>
first of school each year more than they look<lb/>
forward to seeing the tobacco market open, though<lb/>
both reallv are important to Greenville.<lb/>
Last year a survey by one department of<lb/>
the college" revealed that the average college stu-<lb/>
dent spends approximately $50 a month with<lb/>
dowtown merchants. Does this amount seem to<lb/>
sound high to one? If it does sound a bit high,<lb/>
just stop and figure for yourself.<lb/>
Looking over the list of just a few of the<lb/>
items which students purchase here one might<lb/>
change his mind very quickly. How much do you<lb/>
suppose the average student might spend for<lb/>
movies alone in a month's time? Clothiers get<lb/>
many dollars each month direct from this cam-<lb/>
pus; drug stores sell an innumberable number<lb/>
of essentials to the students; students operating<lb/>
automobiles find that their monthly spendings<lb/>
will run over the $50 average; and many persons<lb/>
eat as many as half of their meals at downtown<lb/>
restaurants.<lb/>
These items are just a few that come to our<lb/>
mind, but we feel that any student could quickly fjut the reas0n is probably because<lb/>
there are just more cars on the road<lb/>
then.<lb/>
Or only advice is to DRIVE<lb/>
SAFELY!<lb/>
drivers had had over one year<lb/>
driving experience prior to their ac-<lb/>
cident. Then men may not like this,<lb/>
but male drivers were the victims<lb/>
of 89.3 per cent of the accidents.<lb/>
Siding with the males, we might<lb/>
add that there are more male drivers<lb/>
and that the male drivers cover many<lb/>
more miles on the highway.<lb/>
Contrary to what many persons<lb/>
might tend to think, our study of<lb/>
highway accidents showed that 77.7<lb/>
per cent of the accidents occurred in<lb/>
clear weather, while 68.4 happened<lb/>
on 3ry highways. These figures go<lb/>
to show that drivers are much more<lb/>
careful under bad driving conditions.<lb/>
Taxis and buses proved safer than<lb/>
passenger cars, though here there<lb/>
would not be as many on the high-<lb/>
way. Passenger cars were involved<lb/>
in 81J per cent of the vehicles fa<lb/>
fatal and non-fatal accidents.<lb/>
Sixty-seven per cent of the auto-<lb/>
mobiles and other vehicles in acci-<lb/>
dents were traveling straight, while<lb/>
11.6 were stopping or slowing down.<lb/>
Over 57 per cent of accidents caused<lb/>
by vehicles occur at intersections.<lb/>
Only 22.8 per cent occur on the<lb/>
straight highway.<lb/>
Less than 3 per cent of all the<lb/>
motor vehicles appear in bad me-<lb/>
chanical condition, with one per cent<lb/>
of those defective being with brakes.<lb/>
?If you want to drive at the safest<lb/>
hour of the day, you will htve to<lb/>
rise early. Less than two per cent<lb/>
of the accidents occur during the<lb/>
hour from 6 to 7 a.m. The hours of<lb/>
3 to 8 p.m. proved to be the most<lb/>
dangerous ones in which to operate<lb/>
a vehicle.<lb/>
Tuesdays seemed to be the safest<lb/>
day on the highway, with 11.1 per<lb/>
cent of the accidents taking place<lb/>
that day. As nearly everyone<lb/>
Sports announcing, sports writing,<lb/>
sports editing, in fact sports in any<lb/>
way, shape or form seem to appeal<lb/>
to this week's Who's Who, Lloyd<lb/>
Whitfield. If you have ever attended<lb/>
any East "Carolina athletic events,<lb/>
you have no doulbt heard this Kin-<lb/>
ston senior announcing the plays of<lb/>
the game, and until this quarter he<lb/>
has been writing and editing the<lb/>
sports page of the school paper.<lb/>
Lloyd said that he thoroughly en-<lb/>
joyed journalism and really missed<lb/>
not having the time to write articles<lb/>
or just sit in the "East Carolinian"<lb/>
office and talk.<lb/>
"When I wrote a sports column in<lb/>
'the TECO ECHO, now the 'East<lb/>
Carolinian he said, "Dr. Jorgensen<lb/>
was the subject of numerous critical<lb/>
attacks concerning the scheduling of<lb/>
service teams; however, I now know<lb/>
for a fact that he contacted several<lb/>
colleges down the east coast and<lb/>
found difficulty in reaching contract<lb/>
agreements because of the money<lb/>
required to bring large schools to<lb/>
our campus. Our seating capacity<lb/>
isn't sufficient to draw a crowd large<lb/>
enough to pay traveling expenses<lb/>
of an out-of-state school<lb/>
Planned To Transfer<lb/>
His irterest in journalism is so<lb/>
great that he had previously planned<lb/>
to transfer to the University of<lb/>
North Carolina his junior year and<lb/>
make it his major, but he said, "I<lb/>
came here and made so many good<lb/>
friends and loved East Carolina so<lb/>
well that when the time came to<lb/>
transfer, I just couldn't do it<lb/>
Lloyd wants to give recognition to<lb/>
Coach Amos Sexton of Grainger high<lb/>
school for helping him to obtaim<lb/>
year and president junior and senior<lb/>
years); and Teacher' Playhouse<lb/>
(president junior and senior years)<lb/>
H<lb/>
e was<lb/>
Lloyd<lb/>
several of the jobs that he was for-<lb/>
tunate enough to receive here at EC.<lb/>
This popular senior not only excels<lb/>
in writing but also in the field of<lb/>
dramatics. He has appeared in all<lb/>
of the latest major productions giv-<lb/>
en by the students here at the col-<lb/>
lege. "Plays and journalism have<lb/>
taken up an endless amount of time,<lb/>
hut I wouldn't trade it for anything<lb/>
because, of the experience he stated.<lb/>
Beside? these two extracurricular<lb/>
activities there are many others.<lb/>
As a freshman he was a mem-<lb/>
ber of the YMCA, assistant<lb/>
sports editor of the TECO ECHO,<lb/>
sports publicist for athletics and had<lb/>
his own sports roadcast over the<lb/>
campus station.<lb/>
His sophomore year he was on the<lb/>
Wilson hall House committee, a mem-<lb/>
ber of the Phi Sigma Pi (historian,<lb/>
junior and senior years); Lenoir<lb/>
County club (secretary sophomore<lb/>
a member of the Circle K.<lb/>
his junior and senior years, sports<lb/>
editor of TECO ECHO and on the<lb/>
student legislature bis junior aad<lb/>
senior years. This year he is pep<lb/>
rally chairman and has also received<lb/>
the honor of being selected for<lb/>
"Who's Who Among Students in<lb/>
American Colleges and Universities<lb/>
Practice Teaching Now<lb/>
Lloyd, an English major and so-<lb/>
cial studies minor, is doing his prac-<lb/>
tice teaching at Greenville high<lb/>
school this quarter. In his tenth<lb/>
grade cla-s he is teaching the short<lb/>
storv and in the eleventh grade a<lb/>
unit" on "Finding Your Life's Work<lb/>
All practice teachers have amusing<lb/>
experiences and Lloyd is no excep-<lb/>
tion to this rule.<lb/>
As many others have discovered,<lb/>
Lloyd too has found that practice<lb/>
teaching has made him mature more<lb/>
than all of the rest of his college<lb/>
days together. He said that you learn<lb/>
more while teaching than you could<lb/>
possibly learn in classes as far as the<lb/>
knowledge of actual teaching is con-<lb/>
cerned.<lb/>
Lloyd came to us in the fall of<lb/>
1949 and will graduate at the end<lb/>
of this quarter. If he doesn't get a<lb/>
commission in some branch of the<lb/>
service, he will be drafted and after<lb/>
serving with Uncle Sam a while, he<lb/>
plans to come back to East Carolina<lb/>
and work on an AB degree. When<lb/>
we asked him what he thought about<lb/>
leaving he said, "Whe-e-w, it's hard<lb/>
to explain, but I sure do hate<lb/>
leave this fine place<lb/>
to<lb/>
Our Lives Have Many Embarrassing Moments<lb/>
on<lb/>
knows week ends are the most dan-<lb/>
gerous times to be on the highway,<lb/>
name more. For nine months each year there is<lb/>
an average of nearly 2,000 enrolled here; for<lb/>
the three summer months there is an average of<lb/>
over 900. Take your pencil and paper and start<lb/>
figuring, and you can readily see what we have<lb/>
m talking about. We don't think that we have<lb/>
rerestimated our value.<lb/>
As a whole the merchants are indeed good to<lb/>
tudents here and are always ready to meet<lb/>
halfway. They have every reason to be. We<lb/>
shear any compliments from students about<lb/>
len in the city, or do we often receive<lb/>
from the operators of the stores con-<lb/>
tions of the students here. That is the<lb/>
business should be.<lb/>
rolina college really helps the citizens<lb/>
and in turn the people of the city<lb/>
iy to help us when we call upon<lb/>
or The Idiots<lb/>
Letter From Korea<lb/>
-<lb/>
ibaloo, Tulane University, La.)<lb/>
idiots, the poor, stumbling,<lb/>
come to college every year un-<lb/>
themselves. We feel real sorry<lb/>
4pl like 'eir<lb/>
itions ?11 over the country,<lb/>
me in recent years developed<lb/>
these "idiots These poor<lb/>
)le to take care of them-<lb/>
believe.<lb/>
counsellors, house<lb/>
ail being crammed<lb/>
us, guide us, keep us<lb/>
 point to the early<lb/>
college youth was<lb/>
Itralponsibile. Then<lb/>
, and say today's<lb/>
(Editor's note: The following let-<lb/>
ter was written by a sailor who spent<lb/>
Christmas day off the coast of Korea<lb/>
and was received a few weeks later<lb/>
by a student at East Carolina.)<lb/>
Hi June,<lb/>
I received your lovely card on<lb/>
Christmas day, and I was a little<lb/>
surprised but happy to get it. I can't<lb/>
say that i had a very happy Christ-<lb/>
mas, because we were in Korea at<lb/>
the time. In fact, we had been there<lb/>
since Thanksgiving. I'll bet that we<lb/>
had something that you didn't have<lb/>
in Greenville and that was legal<lb/>
fireworks. Of course they weren't<lb/>
firecrackers, but they were a lot<lb/>
more powerful. It so happened that<lb/>
we were on the firing line the week<lb/>
of Christmas and we were bomfoard-<lb/>
ing the coast all Christmas day.<lb/>
I was rather disappointed when<lb/>
Santa didn't come aboard to see us<lb/>
but I guess he was pretty busy in<lb/>
the states. Last year we were in<lb/>
Japan for Christmas, and he came<lb/>
aboard ship by helicopter.<lb/>
I am enjoying this cruise more<lb/>
than I did the last one over here<lb/>
because we are going to hit a lot<lb/>
more ports. Right now we are on<lb/>
our way to Saigon in French Indo-<lb/>
In everyone's life, there are many<lb/>
embarrassing moments. This week<lb/>
"East Carolinian" took an extensive<lb/>
survey among students to get their<lb/>
most emlbarrassing moments. Some<lb/>
were too embarrassing for print and<lb/>
some were. . . . oh, never mind.<lb/>
The question of the week: "What<lb/>
was your ir st embarrassing mo-<lb/>
ment?"<lb/>
The answers:<lb/>
Stuart Arrington, Southport: My<lb/>
most embarrassing moment was over<lb/>
a broken date. Boy one calls for a<lb/>
date and I accept. Boy two calls for<lb/>
a date, and I accept also. I call boy<lb/>
one to break date. When the fatal<lb/>
night comes, boy two picks me up<lb/>
with another couple in the car, who<lb/>
happens to be boy one and his date.<lb/>
Jane Wilson, Louisburg: I was mak-<lb/>
ing conversation with a girl of slight<lb/>
acquaintance. "Do you know that<lb/>
John Doe is the biggest sot in town?<lb/>
Why, he drinks all the time, and I<lb/>
hear that he is 90 per cent alcohol<lb/>
I gasped when she made this reply<lb/>
of my gossip: "John Doe is my bro-<lb/>
ther<lb/>
Robert Beard, Roanoke Rapids (for-<lb/>
merly from Culba): This may not be<lb/>
an embarrassing incident, but it cer-<lb/>
tainly made me a trifle angry. When<lb/>
I was in Cuba, a group of "yama<lb/>
dankees" made this statement: "Civ-<lb/>
ilization onl exists north of the<lb/>
Mason-Dixon line<lb/>
Sophomore girl (name withheld by<lb/>
request): My face has never been<lb/>
redder than it was in the soda shop<lb/>
the other night. It all happened when<lb/>
I was studying in bed and the "gang"<lb/>
pulled me out to go to the "Y" store.<lb/>
So I rolled up my pajama pants and<lb/>
threw on a long coat. I paraded by<lb/>
by T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
stare. (Everyone tells me I have<lb/>
Betty Grable legs.) Then I suddenly<lb/>
realized that my pajamas were show-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Tom Nobles, Barnesville: I was<lb/>
most embarrassed when, dancing with<lb/>
my best girl, I noticed that my zipper<lb/>
was flying.<lb/>
.Patricia Dawson, Belhaven: In high<lb/>
school I was in a May Pole dance<lb/>
wearing a crepe-paper dress. During<lb/>
one of the rounds, the dress ripped<lb/>
all the wav down in the back. An<lb/>
We had an interesting discussion the othei<lb/>
day with a young man just back from a tour i<lb/>
duty with the United States Army of Occu<lb/>
in Germany. Our friend gave us several very u.<lb/>
lightening facts on how the Germans were i .<lb/>
ing to the American troops and how the ail i<lb/>
with regard to Communism seemed to be ?<lb/>
up.<lb/>
One thing that surprised us a great eal<lb/>
the fact that the German people apparent)<lb/>
no great antagonism toward the dictator that!<lb/>
brought about their downfall, Adolph Hitler, it!<lb/>
seems that the German people haw mer<lb/>
ged off Hitler's efforts and let that be that. aJ<lb/>
a result of this many Americans who"<lb/>
that the German people were all right a<lb/>
and that the Nazi party was responsible<lb/>
world's late grievances are now turning<lb/>
friendly eye on the German nation.<lb/>
The relationship between the low<lb/>
German and the American soldier is, as a<lb/>
good but this is brought about by the fad<lb/>
many lower class Germans virtually mak<lb/>
living by exploiting the American GI. Tl <lb/>
bers of the upper-class German society feel<lb/>
the American soldier is beneath their<lb/>
and as a result go out of their way to avoid<lb/>
contact with them.<lb/>
To the majority of Germans it api<lb/>
Communism is not a lucrative idea bul<lb/>
a few German towns riots between pro-wi<lb/>
pro-Russian factions occur. As a rule the<lb/>
can Army of Occupation tries to avoid<lb/>
tanglement in these affairs and leave them u<lb/>
the German civil police. Army inter J<lb/>
curs only when an American soldier is<lb/>
The penalty upon an American fur b m in-<lb/>
volved in a brawl with German civil<lb/>
quite stiff, and as a result Communi<lb/>
often go out of their way to attack lone<lb/>
The German people apparently r<lb/>
they are in a position, defeated though tl<lb/>
to bargain with the west, offering th ii<lb/>
tion in return for protection against the<lb/>
of the Red Army. Unfortunately, i<lb/>
situation seems to indicate that should thi<lb/>
sian army see fit to launch an attack<lb/>
Europe they could rapidly overrun th<lb/>
army units.<lb/>
Morale on the part of the Americans<lb/>
high, and each unit is assigned a specific an<lb/>
which it is responsible to defend in<lb/>
Russian attack. At least three unann<lb/>
each month an "alert" is given Army uni<lb/>
unaw<lb/>
I<lb/>
A"<lb/>
u of th<lb/>
-Co1<lb/>
.<lb/>
body-<lb/>
1<lb/>
we '<lb/>
football<lb/>
have bet-n<lb/>
h <lb/>
did a" ,Hil<lb/>
 rw '<lb/>
and e-<lb/>
other ? 1<lb/>
Una f? <lb/>
ever, a<lb/>
Pirate '<lb/>
Lire ' I<lb/>
Pirat'<lb/>
?l<lb/>
the<lb/>
club.<lb/>
alert clown rushed to me and did a<lb/>
quick seamstress jofe with pins. Ev-<lb/>
erybody thought it was part of the<lb/>
Ret<lb/>
Rudolph Scheller, Greenville: My j they proceed with all haste to their asi<lb/>
most embarrassing moment was when<lb/>
I had to face my parents the second<lb/>
time for wrecking the car twice ni<lb/>
one night.<lb/>
Tommie Lupton, Greenville: Well.<lb/>
my most embarrassing moment waft<lb/>
the time that. . . (CENSORED by<lb/>
the editor for obvious reasons).<lb/>
sitions. These moves and the constant inl<lb/>
felt from the Communists keep the Ai<lb/>
doughboy aware of the gravity of the situati<lb/>
German Student Tells Of Life<lb/>
Around Frankfurt University<lb/>
A<lb/>
free.<lb/>
by Gunter Friedrichs<lb/>
Editor, Der Kernfrage, Frankfurt universal:<lb/>
German student is completely<lb/>
POT POURRI<lb/>
by Emily Boyce<lb/>
At Frankfurt university are study-<lb/>
in- about 5,000 students. There is no<lb/>
one living in dorms, fraternities or<lb/>
rooming-houiis. They all have their<lb/>
own rooms on rent without a-ny<lb/>
kinds of regulations or restrictions.<lb/>
And there is no student party in-<lb/>
side and outside of the university<lb/>
without alcoholic drinks.<lb/>
Students greet their professors in<lb/>
class by knocking with pencils on<lb/>
the desks. If they are not agreeing<lb/>
with their professor, they will dem-<lb/>
onstrate their contrary opinion by<lb/>
scraping with feet. Today, because<lb/>
most are wearing crepe-shoes, it is<lb/>
more popular to hiss by mouth.<lb/>
Agreeing is expressed by knocking<lb/>
with pencils or by trampelling. It<lb/>
happens very often that one part of<lb/>
the class agrees, while the rest is<lb/>
the "cheese checkers" in the shop, hissing?in the same moment,<lb/>
and they all gave me a favorable ' Now between high school in<lb/>
th<lb/>
China, and then we are going to Ma-<lb/>
IBOre responsible, nila before we return to Korea. I<lb/>
HgO. Why, then, was hoping that we would go .to<lb/>
Hong Kofcg, but I don't gues we will.<lb/>
Well, how is school these days.<lb/>
Just think, if I hadn't joined the<lb/>
Navy I could have been at East<lb/>
Caroline I nSy like that school,<lb/>
and I may still go when I get out.<lb/>
Tel ail the guys and gals hello for<lb/>
mm, and write me when you find the<lb/>
tiCMt.<lb/>
Love,<lb/>
Jack<lb/>
of supervision<lb/>
its need guid-<lb/>
sponsibility<lb/>
students,<lb/>
up to these<lb/>
<lb/>
Jo<lb/>
USA in Germany there is a funda-<lb/>
mental difference. The kids in Ger-<lb/>
many enter high school at the age<lb/>
of 10 and stay there for nine years.<lb/>
During this time they have to take:<lb/>
Nine years English, six years Lat-<lb/>
in, four years a third language<lb/>
(French, Italian or Spanish), one<lb/>
years biology, five years chemistry,<lb/>
nine years geography, six yeas, phy-<lb/>
sics and nine years of mathematics.<lb/>
In addition, they must take sports,<lb/>
history, German, religion, music and<lb/>
drawing.<lb/>
About 45 per cent of all German<lb/>
children are going through high<lb/>
?chool.<lb/>
German universities expect that a<lb/>
student will do the most important<lb/>
part of his studies at home by read-<lb/>
ing books. Courses have only the<lb/>
functions of introductions. There are<lb/>
no textbooks.<lb/>
The professor names a certain<lb/>
number of books. The student has to<lb/>
decide what he wants to read. By<lb/>
this way, it is possible that a Ger-<lb/>
man university has about six months<lb/>
vacation during a year.<lb/>
But a serious student has to study<lb/>
rather hard during this time.<lb/>
Many students renounce certain<lb/>
classes if the professor is not out-<lb/>
standing. They will register for the<lb/>
class and prefer to read good books<lb/>
in the field at home.<lb/>
There are no tests and examina-<lb/>
tions betwieen the situdies. After<lb/>
three to four years the student will<lb/>
pass a big and difficult examination<lb/>
to get the master degree.<lb/>
He will apply for permission to<lb/>
take the examination if he has the<lb/>
feeling of being well prepared. But<lb/>
almost 30 per cent wilT fail and can<lb/>
repeat the exam after a certain<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Green Speaks At Meet<lb/>
"Better clean it up today, Prof, that's the dean of women wearin<lb/>
those colored glasses in the' back row<lb/>
Dr. Sylvester Green, executive vice-<lb/>
president of the Medical foundation<lb/>
of North Carolina, will be guest<lb/>
speaker at the monthly meeting of<lb/>
the International Relations club at<lb/>
One of the better westerns to be prod<lb/>
Hollywood in recent months is The Lau<lb/>
starring Rock Hudson and Julia Adams.<lb/>
story is based on the biography of one Jol<lb/>
ley Hardin, son of a Methodist preacher in 7<lb/>
during the reconstruction period follow.<lb/>
War Between the States.<lb/>
The story beautifully filmed in Technicolor,<lb/>
twists and twines through a somewhat bewi!<lb/>
ing series of events, which turns Hardin (R<lb/>
Hudson) from merely an energetic card playing<lb/>
young man to an outlaw with a price on his head.<lb/>
Following a dispute with his father, young Hard-<lb/>
in leaves home in a fit of anger, promis<lb/>
return for his lady love, one fair-haired Ji<lb/>
Arriving in town he becomes engaj<lb/>
little game known as five card draw, in wh<lb/>
the object is to win the other fellow's it:<lb/>
Hardiii's opponent lays down three kin<lb/>
John Wesley's five clubs take the pot. An a<lb/>
ment ensues and the two go for their guns in fine<lb/>
western style. As it's too early in the film for<lb/>
Hardin to lose, the result of the gunplay is easily<lb/>
foreseen.<lb/>
The three Handley boys, brothers of the<lb/>
dead man, arrive on the scene aecompan:<lb/>
elements of the Union Army. A chase en<lb/>
during which young Hardin bags himself a passel<lb/>
of Yankees.<lb/>
Arriving at his uncle's farm Hardin<lb/>
refuge with his relatives on a cattle driv<lb/>
Kansas. While there he engages in a gun:<lb/>
with another of the Handley brothers and<lb/>
usual gets his man. .<lb/>
John Wesley then returns home to get<lb/>
future bride but is trapped by a posse. In the<lb/>
resulting gunfire Jane is shot down and Hardin.<lb/>
bleeding profusely with Hollywood catsup, geads<lb/>
for the woods. He is rescued by Julia Adams, ww<lb/>
puts in a timely appearance and the couple flea,<lb/>
for safety.<lb/>
Living together they wander throughout the<lb/>
west living from day to day on the turn of a card.<lb/>
Trapped by detectives they are forced to<lb/>
refuge in Alabama where a belated marTia<lb/>
ceremony is performed and the couple settles dow<lb/>
to raise horses. On a bright summer's day Haro-<lb/>
in leaves for a Pensacola, Fla. horse show but i<lb/>
captured at the train station by the ever P?<lb/>
lawmen. Returned to Texas to stand trial he re-<lb/>
ceived a 25-year sentence as a result of variou<lb/>
misdeeds and is carried off to prison. During nia<lb/>
absence a son is born, and following hlf PaIL<lb/>
at the end of :6 years he returns to his Alabaro<lb/>
farm. . -<lb/>
His son has grown into a strapping you"<lb/>
man but has inherited his father's wildness. 3"<lb/>
nfraid is Hardin that his son might f?'10 '<lb/>
his footsteps that he strikes his son, whereuix<lb/>
the boy straps on his father's gun, hops astriu<lb/>
a stallion and departs for town. In a local bar i<lb/>
is challenged by a bully making insulting remar<lb/>
about his father. Just as the gunplay isi aoou-<lb/>
to begin, John Wesley intervenes but in the VJ<lb/>
 the back. In a s"1?1<lb/>
the college Tuesday, January 27, in<lb/>
Flanagan auditorium at 7:S0 p.m. j ending Hardin fails to die in his wife s a?5.<lb/>
He will apeak on S'A Student's Stake i is carried, bleeding but brave, back to his<lb/>
rl<lb/>
Mondavi<lb/>
(aroiina<lb/>
come haH<lb/>
Rhyn<lb/>
Pirate-<lb/>
greatest<lb/>
ball n? r<lb/>
Ronald H<lb/>
VmericaiJ<lb/>
I<lb/>
in World Affairs<lb/>
where they live happily ever after.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038313_0003"/><lb/>
ifXJARY<lb/>
opics<lb/>
LflDAY, JANUiARY 28, 1&amp;58<lb/>
Idrijp<lb/>
discus<lb/>
?ack<lb/>
Ai<lb/>
f ion the<lb/>
,us several vj?'0<lb/>
ndhwCit<lb/>
sha<lb/>
I ? a<lb/>
r3-?C<lb/>
' t be hf<lb/>
e f0r<lb/>
In n<lb/>
rning<lb/>
an <lb/>
 lower da<lb/>
?irtu- Mv " f?Ct 5<lb/>
i" t h?se rneia.<lb/>
!lr <lb/>
aJ to avoid any<lb/>
?ut in quijj<lb/>
X e the Ameri-<lb/>
-1 any ?.<lb/>
'muptn<lb/>
nerence oc-<lb/>
' nvolvei<lb/>
I scorning in.<lb/>
rman civilians cati be<lb/>
tunist groups<lb/>
 realize that<lb/>
I ugh they be,<lb/>
'heir cooper.<lb/>
st the might<lb/>
' th<lb/>
tild the Rib.<lb/>
ck at Allied<lb/>
rrun the Americaa<lb/>
?Ticans remains<lb/>
scried a specific arei<lb/>
1 in case of;<lb/>
I Q unced timo<lb/>
 Army units and<lb/>
assigned po-<lb/>
? nt influence<lb/>
'he America<lb/>
. he situation,<lb/>
produced bj<lb/>
h(i J Adams. The<lb/>
a? ne John We<lb/>
acher in Teas<lb/>
following the<lb/>
Ai.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
?i<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Daughtry Receives Ball From Elon Game<lb/>
v.<lb/>
filmed in Technicolor,<lb/>
, a hat bewilder-<lb/>
:n turns Hardin (Kod<lb/>
energetic card playinf<lb/>
nth a price on his head.<lb/>
lia father, young Hart-<lb/>
f anger, promising<lb/>
ne fair-haired Jane.<lb/>
, becomes engaged a?<lb/>
I card draw, in W<lb/>
1 other fellow's money.<lb/>
duwn three kings. ?<lb/>
hake the pot An f<lb/>
for their guns inflj<lb/>
earlv in the film J<lb/>
flfthenplayis<lb/>
boys, brothers of <lb/>
ne accompany<lb/>
Ikrmv A chase ensO?<lb/>
fin bags himself a P<lb/>
U farm Hardmj<lb/>
-n a cattle<lb/>
leturns home to tf j<lb/>
1 shot dovui ana ,<lb/>
Hollywood .M"L1?<lb/>
j wander thr1 I<lb/>
fcey are forceu i<lb/>
Fd the couple sett <lb/>
tht summers d?<lb/>
F Fla' "fhfeverV<lb/>
Ition thetrial &amp;.U<lb/>
las to standtrJvarf I<lb/>
fff to pn??ntf ys P<lb/>
t returns to htf<lb/>
into a strapfDi<lb/>
Lis father s folio<lb/>
ikes his son, <lb/>
itr?<lb/>
' ni9 9 hops <lb/>
Lther's JgS<lb/>
Itervenee but <lb/>
Pvel<lb/>
1 gver <lb/>
?n<lb/>
item of which we were com-<lb/>
ely unaware was called to our<lb/>
n this week, that being- the<lb/>
mcement made during the<lb/>
istmas holidays that head foot-<lb/>
coach, Jack Boone, was named<lb/>
e North State conference's<lb/>
. f the Year We have heard<lb/>
comment on the situation and the<lb/>
- that we have made lead us<lb/>
Vt. that the entire student<lb/>
a not aware of the honor paid<lb/>
Coach Boone and East Carolina<lb/>
The report appeared in the<lb/>
- luring- our Christmas holidays.<lb/>
old adage, "better late than<lb/>
?' will have to apply now as<lb/>
extend to Coach Boone hearty<lb/>
-ratulations and state our con-<lb/>
that a better choice could<lb/>
e been made.<lb/>
, K?t ball is not as far from the<lb/>
elight as some readers might sup-<lb/>
ie. Winter drills for the Pirates<lb/>
 been underway and the action<lb/>
. been getting rough. Coach Boone<lb/>
an outstanding job last fall in<lb/>
firt year as head football coach<lb/>
1 every indication points to an-<lb/>
ther successful season next fall,<lb/>
rhose who have followed East Caro-<lb/>
lina football closely will agree, how-<lb/>
tevt-r. a great amount of credit for<lb/>
p ne football fortunes should go to<lb/>
1 Coach Clyde Biggers. It was<lb/>
Riggers' able talent that molded the<lb/>
Pirates' forward wall into one of the<lb/>
Lost feared in the South and gave<lb/>
locate their well balanced ball<lb/>
?club.<lb/>
Shoe Receives Honor<lb/>
on the topic of football we<lb/>
it is in order to mention an<lb/>
il honor that has come to<lb/>
? Shoe, the Pirates' outstand-<lb/>
fridiron end. Dwight was recent-<lb/>
I guest at the annual banquet of<lb/>
t Greensboro Daily News which is<lb/>
for memfoers of the All-State<lb/>
" all squad. Noted men in ath-<lb/>
s from all over the state were<lb/>
; ent at the celebration.<lb/>
e basketball loss suffered at the<lb/>
: Is of Le-noir Rhyne Saturday<lb/>
- came as a shock to a portion<lb/>
te student body. Many students<lb/>
1 . . already adopted the attitude that<lb/>
Buca were a cinch to make a<lb/>
vay with North State laurels.<lb/>
 . te the fact that the Pirates had<lb/>
n the Bears once before, the<lb/>
 d from Hickory put up a good<lb/>
and as a result came out on top.<lb/>
Dumping the Points<lb/>
Monday night's loss to Western<lb/>
Carolina was a disappointing one to<lb/>
come hard on the heels of the Lenoir<lb/>
Rhyne game. From all reports the<lb/>
Pirates' 102-97 defeat was one of the<lb/>
greatest displays of offensive basket-<lb/>
ball ever seen in the Cullowhee gym.<lb/>
Ronald Rogerss the Catamounts' All-<lb/>
American forward, matched Sonny<lb/>
Russell basket for basket in as thrill-<lb/>
ing a court duel as has ever been<lb/>
staged. Russell ended up the evening<lb/>
with 35 points to Rogers' 36. Sixteen<lb/>
of Rogers' markers came via the<lb/>
free throw line.<lb/>
By the time this issue is printed<lb/>
the Pirates will have played one<lb/>
more conference game, that being<lb/>
with Catawl ia's winless Indians. Fol-<lb/>
lowing the game at Salisbury the<lb/>
locals will play at High P:nt and<lb/>
then will be at home for all but two<lb/>
contests, one at Appalachian and one<lb/>
just a few miles away at Atlantic<lb/>
Christian.<lb/>
Some criticism of the Pirates' sche-<lb/>
dule has been heard, but perhaps this<lb/>
four-game road trip, disastrous so<lb/>
far, will have its good points after<lb/>
all. When the team returns home for<lb/>
the Atlantic Christian game January<lb/>
30 the remainder of the schedule will<lb/>
definitely be in their favor, and the<lb/>
Bucs should once again be able to<lb/>
grab the top spot in the North State<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
Western Carolina Downs Pirates<lb/>
102-97; Takes Conference Lead<lb/>
Bears Down Bucs<lb/>
By 69-64 Margin<lb/>
For First Loss<lb/>
Athlete<lb/>
Of The Week<lb/>
John Daughtry, former East Carolina football star out of action last<lb/>
season f'ue to illness, is shown as he receives the football used in the Elon-<lb/>
East Carolina game last fall. Coach Jack Boone is making the presentation.<lb/>
Coach Jack Boone Presents<lb/>
Football To John Daughtry<lb/>
Good Food ? Sandwiches<lb/>
CAROLINA GRILL<lb/>
24 Hour Service<lb/>
Unsurpassed by any basketballer<lb/>
in the state, both as an offensive<lb/>
phenomenon and a defensive special-<lb/>
ist, Sonny Russell is beginning to<lb/>
monopolize the ATHLETE OF THE<lb/>
WEEK column.<lb/>
The class of the local dribble derby<lb/>
has shown All-American potential in<lb/>
every contest. His latest sensational<lb/>
exhibition was against a victorious,<lb/>
but bewildered Western Carolina five<lb/>
as he bucketed a tremendous 35<lb/>
points. Lauded as the greatest one-<lb/>
night performance ever portrayed<lb/>
at the Catamount gym, his sparkling<lb/>
play will li'ftger in the minds of the<lb/>
Western Carolina spectators for some<lb/>
time. Most of his pointage came from<lb/>
difficult angles and many shots were<lb/>
previously thought impossible.<lb/>
The agile and jet-propelled Russell<lb/>
will fake you, take you and massa-<lb/>
cre you! His capabilities are he envy<lb/>
of all less-talented cagers around<lb/>
the loop, and admiration is readily<lb/>
shown by them. His relentless bril-<lb/>
' fiance makes him a coaches' dream<lb/>
in reality.<lb/>
Sonny is a terrific drawing card<lb/>
and the galleries fill with Russell-<lb/>
infatuated fans. He is a remarkable<lb/>
playmaker, and when he sets up a<lb/>
play the "oohs" and "ahs" flow with<lb/>
abundance. Plays that would ordi-<lb/>
narily stand others on their heads are<lb/>
executed by Russell with the ease<lb/>
and grace of ballroom dancers. His<lb/>
tantalizing lay-up shot is one for<lb/>
speculation. No one, anywhere, can<lb/>
dunk 'em better than Sonny when it<lb/>
comes to this.<lb/>
As we've said before, this whole<lb/>
sports page could be devoted to Son-<lb/>
ny Russell and there wouldn't be<lb/>
any exaggeration!<lb/>
At a banquet held last week at<lb/>
the Proctor hotel members of the<lb/>
1952 Pirate football squad and coach-<lb/>
ing staff were honored. Various dis-<lb/>
tinguished guests were present in-<lb/>
cluding John Daughtry, former mem-<lb/>
ber of thj Pirate squad who was<lb/>
unable to participate during the past<lb/>
year due to illness.<lb/>
Daughtry, who plans to re-enter<lb/>
East Carolina soon, was presented<lb/>
with the football used during the<lb/>
East Carolina-Elon gridiron clash.<lb/>
The members of the Pirate squad<lb/>
voted unanimously to present the<lb/>
ball to Daughtry following the game<lb/>
in which East Carolina overcame a<lb/>
9-0 deficit to triumph, 25-9.<lb/>
Also honored at the celebration<lb/>
was Head Football Coach Jack Boone,<lb/>
who was named during the Christ-<lb/>
mas holidays as "Coach of the Year"<lb/>
in the North tate conference. Dr.<lb/>
John D. Messick, president of East<lb/>
Carolina college, paid tribute to the<lb/>
athletic program at the college in a.<lb/>
address at the dinner.<lb/>
Sheriffs, Jocks<lb/>
Lead League Play<lb/>
n Intramurals<lb/>
The latest tabulations of results<lb/>
and standings in Men's Intramural<lb/>
Basketball play are as follows:<lb/>
"A" League<lb/>
Results<lb/>
Knights-of-the-Hardwoi I 56, Globe<lb/>
Trotters 41<lb/>
Sheriffs 47, Hot Pants 39<lb/>
Carterets 45, Whiz Kids 35<lb/>
Sheriffs 62, Carterets 50<lb/>
Knights-of-the-Hardwood 41, Whiz<lb/>
Kids 36<lb/>
Globetrotters 33, Arabs 32<lb/>
Hot Pants won over Fancy Pants<lb/>
by forfeit.<lb/>
"A" League<lb/>
Standings<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne college of Hickory<lb/>
handed the East Carolina Piratei<lb/>
their first basketlball defeat in North<lb/>
State conference play as they down-<lb/>
ed the locals 69-64 Saturday night.<lb/>
Roland Barker and Bob Ortmyer<lb/>
led the Bears to victory with their<lb/>
11 round play, Barker bagging 25<lb/>
o .its. including 11 for 11 fram the<lb/>
rree throw line, and Ortmyer COS<lb/>
' rolling the backboards.<lb/>
Both clubs hit 21 field goals from<lb/>
the floor, but the Bears sank 27 of<lb/>
39 from the free throw line, whereas<lb/>
the Pirates could collect only 22 of 45.<lb/>
Bobby Hodges led the way for the<lb/>
Bucs as he collected 28 points. Sonny<lb/>
Russell bagged 16.<lb/>
Russell opened the game's scoring<lb/>
as he hit with a field goal. The Bears<lb/>
retaliated and were never headed'<lb/>
again. During the majority of the<lb/>
contest the victors coasted along with<lb/>
an eight to ten point margin. Only<lb/>
in the final quarter did the Pirates<lb/>
begin to collect. A tight defense held<lb/>
the Bears to one field goal, but 14<lb/>
free throws gave them the game.<lb/>
The Pirates' outstanding duo, Son-<lb/>
ny Russell and Bobby Hodges, were<lb/>
left completely in the cold in their<lb/>
attempt to gain control of the re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Russell, f ?<lb/>
Carr, f ?<lb/>
Huffman, f ??<lb/>
O'Kelley, f ?<lb/>
Hodges, c <lb/>
Hayes, c  2<lb/>
Heath, g  2<lb/>
Moye, g  0<lb/>
King, g .  ?<lb/>
Thomas, g ? 1<lb/>
Jones, g ? O<lb/>
Now that the two-platoon system<lb/>
has been abolished by a killing vote<lb/>
of the NCAA Football Rules com-<lb/>
mittee, it seems that the validity of<lb/>
the popular argument is question-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
Here is a small spot check of some<lb/>
opinions that warrant consideration:<lb/>
Coach Jack Boone, "Naturally, small<lb/>
colleges will benefit by the new<lb/>
change. Football will be played by<lb/>
backs who can block and tackle as<lb/>
well as run and pass. Linemen, from<lb/>
flank to flank, will have to be able<lb/>
to open holes as well as close 'em.<lb/>
The new rule will also enlist stronger<lb/>
competition to colleges from the pro-<lb/>
fessional teams who have unlimited<lb/>
substitution . . . Lewis Hallow,<lb/>
Pirate linemen, "It'll bring men back<lb/>
into footfoall, as it should be . . .<lb/>
Jim Thorpe, former All-American at<lb/>
Carlisle institute, "We'll once again<lb/>
have real AU-Americans, not half-<lb/>
Americans. No change in the rules<lb/>
is going to make it easier for schools<lb/>
with a small squad to defeat the<lb/>
schools with a large personnel but<lb/>
the new regulation should even<lb/>
things up somewhat<lb/>
"Tubby" Thomas, "I'm fully op-<lb/>
fg ft pf tp<lb/>
5 6 3 16<lb/>
Bucs Meet High Point<lb/>
Next Wednesday Night<lb/>
In Conference Contest<lb/>
The East Carolina Pirates, beaten<lb/>
in their first two starts of the cur-<lb/>
rent road tour, will meet the High<lb/>
Point Panthers Wednesday night,<lb/>
January 28, at High Point.<lb/>
The Panthers are, at this writing,<lb/>
boasting a three-won, two-lost record<lb/>
in the North State conference and<lb/>
are in a tie with Elon's Christians<lb/>
for third place.<lb/>
A defeat for either club would in-<lb/>
sure a substantial drop in the stand-<lb/>
ings for the loser.<lb/>
Following the High Point game<lb/>
the Pirates will play Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian in East Carolina's Memorial<lb/>
gym on January 30.<lb/>
W<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
"Your College Shop"<lb/>
East Carolina opened its 1939 foot-<lb/>
iball season by dropping a 20-6 deci-<lb/>
sion to Klutztown (Pa.) Teachers on<lb/>
the victor's field.<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C<lb/>
Bunch's Shoe Service<lb/>
Expert Shoe Repairing<lb/>
510 Cotanche Street<lb/>
I j;<lb/>
J FOOT LONG HOTDOGS .<lb/>
<lb/>
I 25c<lb/>
CHICKEN AND SHRIMP<lb/>
TN-THE-BOX<lb/>
WILL DELIVER ANY ORDER OF<lb/>
$3.00 OR MORE<lb/>
JUST DIAL 5741<lb/>
GREENV1EW DRIVE.IN<lb/>
WEST END CmCLE<lb/>
VmTTTTTTTTTTT ?"?<lb/>
Sheriffs <lb/>
Knights of H. <lb/>
Carterets <lb/>
Hot Pants <lb/>
Globetrotters  <lb/>
Fancy Pants  "<lb/>
Whiz Kids   ?<lb/>
Arabs   ?<lb/>
"B" League<lb/>
Results<lb/>
Hambones 38, Wolfpack 32<lb/>
Jocks 35, Hottrotters 16<lb/>
Phantoms 38, Cyclones 29<lb/>
Hambones 31, Hit Trotters 27<lb/>
Jocks 30, Slow Pokes 23<lb/>
Low Landers 30, Phantoms 27<lb/>
Cyclones 27, Jelly Bellies 13<lb/>
Jefly Bellies 26, Slow Pokes 18<lb/>
"B" League<lb/>
Standings<lb/>
W<lb/>
Jocks <lb/>
Low Landers ? ?<lb/>
o<lb/>
Hambones  <lb/>
Jelly Bellies ? 1<lb/>
Cyclones ?<lb/>
Totals  21 22<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
Barker, f ?<lb/>
posed to the new rule, not because I<lb/>
played only on defense last year,<lb/>
but because a lot of boys who ordi-<lb/>
narily would see action in the two-<lb/>
platoon system will have to warm<lb/>
the bench . . . Worth Lutz, Duke's<lb/>
sensational quarterback, "I have at<lb/>
times played on both offense and<lb/>
defense in a single game and I think<lb/>
I will enjoy that as well as a full-<lb/>
time job . . . David Lee, another<lb/>
defensive specialist last season, "I<lb/>
don't like the new regulation because : Hilburn, g<lb/>
Russell Sparks Bucs<lb/>
In Second Consecutive<lb/>
Loss During Roai. Trip<lb/>
by Jack Scott<lb/>
Coach Howard Porter's East Caro-<lb/>
lina Pirates lost possession of the<lb/>
North State conference lead Monday<lb/>
night when they dropped ? 102-97<lb/>
decision to the Western Carolina Ca<lb/>
amounts in a game played at Cu<lb/>
lowhee. The loss vas the secon I<lb/>
straight for the Bucs who had won<lb/>
six conference games in a row before<lb/>
embarking on their three-game west-<lb/>
ern swing.<lb/>
All-State forward Sonny Russell<lb/>
led the Pirates in the scoring coluir1<lb/>
with 13 field goals and nine freo<lb/>
throws ior a total of 35 points, tl e<lb/>
highest individual total for an ECC<lb/>
player this year. Russell also placed<lb/>
a brilliant defensive game and set<lb/>
up numerous scores with his spec-<lb/>
tacular passing.<lb/>
Big Bobby Hodges was runner-uo<lb/>
with 22 points while Charlie Huff-1<lb/>
ma" contributed 17 markers. Cecil<lb/>
Heath and J. C. Thomas netted 19<lb/>
points each to give the Pirates five<lb/>
men scoring in the double figures.<lb/>
Little All-America Ronald Rogers I<lb/>
sparked the Catamounts' offense withl<lb/>
36 points while Cecil MoCormick andl<lb/>
Ned Straehia followed with<lb/>
17 points, respectively.<lb/>
In the opening minutes of thel<lb/>
game, the Pirates played the Cats on<lb/>
even terms, but when WCTC begai<lb/>
hitting from outside and pulled away<lb/>
from the Bucs. By the end of tht<lb/>
first quarter they held a 26-19 lea<lb/>
and had stretched it to 50-35 at half-<lb/>
time.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Russell, f <lb/>
Huffman, f <lb/>
Hodges, c . <lb/>
Carr, c <lb/>
Heath, g <lb/>
Moye, g <lb/>
fg ft pf tp<lb/>
7 11 8 25<lb/>
E. Lutz   0<lb/>
Hassell, f ? ? 2<lb/>
T. Lutz, f 0<lb/>
Cohen, f  8<lb/>
Ortmyer, c  8<lb/>
Hudson, g ? 2<lb/>
Lojsperberger, g  1<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
8<lb/>
1<lb/>
6<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
7<lb/>
0<lb/>
9<lb/>
13<lb/>
10<lb/>
3<lb/>
i-think that the players will natural-<lb/>
ly be tired having to play longer<lb/>
and when reflexes are sluggish, con-<lb/>
sequently, the players' capacity will<lb/>
'be smaller<lb/>
Lloyd Whitfield, former sports edi-<lb/>
tor of the East Carolinian, "I'm<lb/>
against it. It'll limit participation,<lb/>
and therefore cut many athletes out<lb/>
of scholarships and education II-<lb/>
lard Yarborough, stellar back on the<lb/>
'52 team, "Many players won't see<lb/>
action and will be cut from the squad.<lb/>
I'm fully oppostd and I don't see how<lb/>
(Continued on Page 4)<lb/>
Thomas, g  4<lb/>
Jones, g <lb/>
fg ft pf t<lb/>
13 9 4 3<lb/>
3<lb/>
B<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
7<lb/>
7<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
3 1'<lb/>
4 25<lb/>
1<lb/>
5 1<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
 21 27 27 69<lb/>
Totals ?? 35 27 29j<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
Ray, f <lb/>
Martin, f <lb/>
Jordan, f <lb/>
McCormick, c <lb/>
Rogers, g ?<lb/>
Straehia, g -??<lb/>
fg ft pl<lb/>
4 1<lb/>
 4 3<lb/>
 4 3<lb/>
 7 4<lb/>
10 16<lb/>
8 1<lb/>
Totals  37 28<lb/>
East Carolina  19 16 32 3C<lb/>
Western Carolina 26 24 25 27-<lb/>
j Good Food, Reasonable Prices<lb/>
and Friendly Atmosphere<lb/>
BEST IN FOOD<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
Phantoms -<lb/>
Slow Pokes<lb/>
Hot Trotters<lb/>
Wolfpack -<lb/>
L<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
WASHING GREASING<lb/>
COLLEGE ESSO STATION<lb/>
GAS<lb/>
Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
45 RPM Accessories<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE<lb/>
The 1939 baseball team at East<lb/>
Carolina won seven, lost seven and<lb/>
tied one. Team batting average .300.<lb/>
H. L. Hodges &amp; Co.<lb/>
PAINTS and Hardware<lb/>
Kares Restaurant<lb/>
For Best In i<lb/>
LUNCHES and SNACKS<lb/>
Special On<lb/>
STATIONERY<lb/>
At The<lb/>
Students Supply<lb/>
Stores<lb/>
SCOTTS CLEANERS<lb/>
LITTLE KNOWN FACTS<lb/>
DIAMOND<lb/>
J. C. PENNEY CO.<lb/>
"Always First Quality"<lb/>
WE CAN OUTFIT THE<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENT<lb/>
COMPLETELY -<lb/>
AND SAVE YOU MONEY!<lb/>
???????????????????? ??????'<lb/>
PATRONIZE TH11<lb/>
Y STORE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
BJBRY PRODUCTS<lb/>
PEOPLES<lb/>
l???Aa?ft?<lb/>
THE BRIDESMAIDS<lb/>
Wbea wafriort caniad ?f<lb/>
girt frieada tried t?<lb/>
wet tfce original<lb/>
the nowrn oms<lb/>
bride aanyiat<lb/>
?ynbottria<lb/>
neM, at do<lb/>
Cofttoam Hrf'<lb/>
'HI to&amp;<lb/>
vd<lb/>
<pb facs="00038313_0004"/><lb/>
EAST CAROLINI AN<lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1953<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
<lb/>
Many Fudge On Book Reports Pecking ftway<lb/>
by Emily Boyce<lb/>
Book reports in our high schools a book<lb/>
today present the teacher with more<lb/>
of a problem than the student. The<lb/>
average student has no trouble with<lb/>
these required reports. They can be<lb/>
: ought, sold or copied with little<lb/>
effort The student is merely con-<lb/>
cerned with the day on which the<lb/>
report has to be turned in. The only<lb/>
way the teacher can combat this<lb/>
cleverness on the students part is<lb/>
to be equally more clever.<lb/>
We arc not in favor of written<lb/>
reports, probably because we remem-<lb/>
ber what a farce they went while we<lb/>
h school. But most of the<lb/>
written report is the only<lb/>
real way the teacher has to find out<lb/>
,c or not the student has read<lb/>
quired book. If this is the case,<lb/>
not vary the procedure. The<lb/>
teach ild present the class with<lb/>
a ' a roved books with which<lb/>
usl be acquainted.<lb/>
The , after a week or two, the<lb/>
instructor should announce that with-<lb/>
week there will be a class<lb/>
report pop! The teacher<lb/>
shouldn't want the straight story,<lb/>
plus title and author. This takes little<lb/>
effort and less thought on the part<lb/>
of the student. The teacher should<lb/>
make, a list of the things required<lb/>
on the board, such as: the author,<lb/>
title, time, the scene, the characters,<lb/>
the climax and other books by the<lb/>
same author. The story doesn't have<lb/>
to enter into the report.<lb/>
Another type of written report in<lb/>
class could be a character study of<lb/>
one of the more outstanding charac-<lb/>
ters in the book We would encourage<lb/>
individual reaction to books. Students<lb/>
should not feel that they have to like<lb/>
a book just'because it is required.<lb/>
Discussions and dramatizations by<lb/>
small groups which have read the<lb/>
same book can be interesting and<lb/>
fun. The main point is that the teach-<lb/>
er must put forth effort as must the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
North State Standings<lb/>
(Continued from P??) d lace in the<lb/>
it can last . . . "Hawk" Akins, an<lb/>
sports enthusiasts,<lb/>
v-<lb/>
m i<lb/>
per. ! le for<lb/>
vrite their reports.<lb/>
the individuals<lb/>
In other words,<lb/>
The 1941 edition of the Pirates<lb/>
was the only undefeated and untied<lb/>
football team in the history of the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Better Shoes Reasonably Priced<lb/>
AT<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
517 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
College Students<lb/>
COME IN AND SEE<lb/>
OUR FINE SELECTION OF SUITS and COATS<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
ikkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk<lb/>
QUALITY JEWELRY<lb/>
At Prices To Meet Your Budget<lb/>
Your Headquarters For<lb/>
Bulova Watches<lb/>
Also<lb/>
ttamtttoN BENRUS<lb/>
ELGIN WADSWORTH<lb/>
Scientifically Trained Mechanics To Serve You<lb/>
STAUFFER'S JEWELERS<lb/>
407 Evans Street Phone 2452<lb/>
?????????????<lb/>
rjNATtAlNABtE$HE<lb/>
BECAME DESIRABLE<lb/>
 keycmJ all reason!<lb/>
Men were ready f? 4i? lor<lb/>
hersmiletolc?l!or<lb/>
V briefest<lb/>
(fftt<lb/>
TtERMEy<lb/>
ANDREWS<lb/>
WEBB<lb/>
X<lb/>
T<lb/>
U<lb/>
E<lb/>
S<lb/>
w<lb/>
E<lb/>
D<lb/>
'I'm for the new<lb/>
change. There will not be so much<lb/>
'hanging loose' on the field a-nd the<lb/>
spectators will be able to 'put better<lb/>
eys on 'em<lb/>
This scribe would like to express<lb/>
his opinions on the merits of dis-<lb/>
pelling the ewo-platoon system.<lb/>
Football championships will be<lb/>
reaped in the future by the same<lb/>
gridiron machines that have sur-<lb/>
mounted all who challenged their su-<lb/>
premacy under the old two-platoon<lb/>
system. The abolition of the two-<lb/>
platoon style of play was a good<lb/>
thing. When it was voted in<lb/>
many critics thought its existence<lb/>
would be short-lived, but only last<lb/>
week did it terminate. Many schools<lb/>
will continue to have squads as large<lb/>
as they carried last season, but it will<lb/>
he possible to field a terrific football<lb/>
power with only about 30 good varsity<lb/>
football players. With this formular<lb/>
in action reduction of squads will<lb/>
send excess players to other schools<lb/>
so in need.<lb/>
We agree with Bill Murray of Duke<lb/>
when he pointed out that a boy did<lb/>
not benefit from any personal struggle<lb/>
to overcome his deficiencies. His na-<lb/>
tive talent for one phase of the game<lb/>
was enough to make him a national<lb/>
hero.<lb/>
Here at East Carolina we have<lb/>
the manpower that'll be the deciding<lb/>
factor in many a contest. We have<lb/>
the necessary "double-duty" calibre<lb/>
of grid greats that can readily switch<lb/>
from the old system into the new one.<lb/>
Coaches Boone and Biggers really<lb/>
have their work cut out for them,<lb/>
though, as they reconstruct the type<lb/>
of play they employed last fall. One<lb/>
thing is certain, the day of the 120-<lb/>
pound band members kicking extra<lb/>
points and winning games and the<lb/>
quarterbacks who could throw strikes<lb/>
all day but who couldn't even tackle<lb/>
the waterboy is no longer here.<lb/>
The fans will be able to learn the<lb/>
layers. The players will get to know<lb/>
each other. The coaches' job will not<lb/>
be so flared.<lb/>
It all amounts up to something<lb/>
about like this?the era of the special-<lb/>
is; is gone, and coaches will have to<lb/>
ro back to teaching fundamentals.<lb/>
Recruiting will be lessened, and it will<lb/>
defintely benefit the smaller schools.<lb/>
The definite results? . . . Well, only<lb/>
time will tell!<lb/>
The Bucs, up to Wednesday's game<lb/>
with Catawba, possessed a 6-2 record<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
V L Pet.<lb/>
Western Carolina ? 5<lb/>
East Carolina  6<lb/>
Elon ? <lb/>
High Point  3<lb/>
Atlantic Christian<lb/>
I enoir Rhyne 3<lb/>
3<lb/>
Appalachian<lb/>
Guilford<lb/>
Catawba<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
6<lb/>
.833<lb/>
.750<lb/>
.600<lb/>
.600<lb/>
.500<lb/>
.500<lb/>
.429<lb/>
.286<lb/>
.000<lb/>
Girls' Intramural<lb/>
Announcement made this week stat-<lb/>
ed that the first week of the Spring<lb/>
quarter would be devoted to playoffs<lb/>
in the Women's Intramural basket-<lb/>
ball league.<lb/>
The results during the paat week:<lb/>
Slowpokes 41 Prog 15<lb/>
Cottentrotter 30 Jets 18<lb/>
Midgets 26 Slowleakg 14<lb/>
Little Bucs 15 Phantoms ?<lb/>
Snowballs 16 Ragmoppers 15<lb/>
Cottentrotters 32 Pro 21<lb/>
L<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN FOOTWEAR<lb/>
It's<lb/>
MERIT SHOES<lb/>
YOU ARE WELCOME TO<lb/>
Mrs. Morton's Bakery<lb/>
MERRY CHRISTMAS AND<lb/>
A HAPPY NEW YEAR<lb/>
MERELE NORMAN STUDIOS<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S FOOD CENTER<lb/>
East Fifth and Cotanche Streets<lb/>
TO BE IN STYLE<lb/>
TRY OUR LINE OF MEN'S CLOTHING<lb/>
The FRANK WILSON Store<lb/>
King Clothiers Since 189S<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Your New 53 Ford<lb/>
FROM THE<lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co. Inc.<lb/>
Your Friendlv Fcrd 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/>
Vi:<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 Book.<lb/>
UNDERWOOD PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS<lb/>
Carolina Office Equipment Co.<lb/>
304 Evans Street Greenville, N.<lb/>
For Drug Needs, Cosmetics and Fountain Goods<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
Proctor Hotel Building<lb/>
Open 8 A. M. - 10 P. M. ? Sunday 8:30 k. M. - 10:30 A. M<lb/>
4 P. If. - 10 P. M.<lb/>
Valentine's<lb/>
GIVE THE GIFT THAT COUNTS<lb/>
Day<lb/>
Phone 5573<lb/>
Picture Of You<lb/>
FROM THE<lb/>
BELL STUDIO<lb/>
of<lb/>
Photography<lb/>
217 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
?fSS5?<lb/>
<lb/>
Cccani<lb/>
. r?m J Jarta-<lb/>
Cor11 v<lb/>
vAk<lb/>
Jan<lb/>
27th<lb/>
28th<lb/>
1<lb/>
Kfc<lb/>
iss&amp;w"<lb/>
vV<lb/>
ll<lb/>
ti<lb/>
&amp;&amp;. i??<lb/>
&amp;HttW?<lb/>
o I o n y<lb/>
iT PRICE<lb/>
AKQfRSOH<lb/>
s<lb/>
Petot<lb/>
F<lb/>
T<lb/>
H<lb/>
U<lb/>
s<lb/>
v<lb/>
Ww-<lb/>
m.<lb/>
One<lb/>
Day<lb/>
Jan<lb/>
29th<lb/>
' - tV ciyT sroo?y stra<lb/>
Nothing-no, nothing-beats better taste<lb/>
and LUCK1ES<lb/>
TASTE BETTER!<lb/>
Cleaner, Fresher, Smoother!<lb/>
Ask yourself this question: Why do I smoke?<lb/>
You know, yourself, you smoke for enjoyment<lb/>
And you get enjoyment only from the taste of a<lb/>
cigarette.<lb/>
Luckies taste better?cleaner, fresher, smoother!<lb/>
Why? Luckies are made better to taste better. And,<lb/>
what's more, Luckies are made of fine tobacco.<lb/>
LS.MJ.T-Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco.<lb/>
So, for the thing you want most in a cigarette<lb/>
for better taste?for the cleaner, fresher, smoother<lb/>
taste of Lucky Strike <lb/>
STATE<lb/>
3 Big Days Start <lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
Hilarious Comedy Of<lb/>
The Year<lb/>
(hip Makes (humps Out of The<lb/>
Professors and Makes the K ?<lb/>
Team a Scream.<lb/>
HES THE<lb/>
TOUCHDOWN<lb/>
 TERROR<lb/>
OF THE<lb/>
TEAM!<lb/>
ftlttKfj<lb/>
.y.NyyyA <lb/>
LUCKY<lb/>
STRIKE<lb/>
$rs.roSTT&amp;<lb/>
???&amp;<lb/>
GeIstern<lb/>
,<lb/>
LUCKY!<lb/>
? $&amp;? r ?<lb/>
u<lb/>
?fSk<lb/>
?r On<lb/>
Stjflgere<lb/>
Where's your jingle? 'QiSjt.<lb/>
It<lb/>
1<lb/>
It's easier than you think to<lb/>
make $25 by writing a Lucky<lb/>
Strike jingle like those you see<lb/>
in this ad. Yes, we need jingles<lb/>
?and we pay $25 for every one<lb/>
we use! So send as many as you<lb/>
like to: Happy-Go-Lucky, P.O.<lb/>
Box 67, New York 46, N.Y.<lb/>
s<lb/>
'Cause<lb/>
$$??<lb/>
9SODUCT C?<lb/>
? AM MICA'S LBADIMO If AMUFACTUKBR OF CIOARBTTM<lb/>
OUCk<lb/>
IHOraiNR-OHHSKS<lb/>
EDMUi GWENN - 616f MEM,<lb/>
H UCflHI 02333<lb/>
<lb/>
Pitt Prices This<lb/>
Attraction<lb/>
If s Brand If s Great<lb/>
v5Lu?1<lb/>
I'M<lb/>
In s<lb/>
Of Se<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
fra-<lb/>
at ?<lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
and<lb/>
Fai<lb/>
Prl<lb/>
8rl<lb/>
I<lb/>
will<lb/>
TT!Usi!<lb/>
colle-<lb/>
Entej<lb/>
ancp<lb/>
Thl<lb/>
fame<lb/>
that<lb/>
an A<lb/>
?lot<lb/>
Sinci<lb/>
Pan vi<lb/>
Eurci<lb/>
thoul<lb/>
burg)<lb/>
an<lb/>
end<lb/>
<pb facs="00038313_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>