<?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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With Those Businesses<lb/>
That Advertise With Us<lb/>
Easttarolinia<lb/>
?. JB<lb/>
Attend Chapel Services<lb/>
Each Tuesday At Noon<lb/>
In Austin Auditorium<lb/>
VOLUME XXVIII<lb/>
r<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1953<lb/>
Number 17<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity Recei<lb/>
ives<lb/>
Chapter Charter At Tuesday Program<lb/>
isY Members Assist<lb/>
In Installing Officers<lb/>
0( Service Organization<lb/>
3 for installation of the<lb/>
i college chapter of Al-<lb/>
i mega, national service<lb/>
were held Tuesday night<lb/>
an's club in Greenville.<lb/>
n S. Roth of Chapel Hill acted<lb/>
g officer, and members<lb/>
tiapter of the University<lb/>
a assisted.<lb/>
Carolina chapter, offi-<lb/>
nated as the Kappa Up-<lb/>
r of APO, the 269th unit<lb/>
? . was organized during<lb/>
met term.<lb/>
Messiefc Accepts Charter<lb/>
entation made by Roth<lb/>
by acceptance for the<lb/>
lent John D. Messick<lb/>
Men Clinton R. Prewett;<lb/>
Carolina Boy Scout<lb/>
. Erskine Duff of Green-<lb/>
rman of the Council Or-<lb/>
and Extension committee;<lb/>
apter, by Alumni Sec-<lb/>
V. Butler, chairman of<lb/>
nunittee, and John<lb/>
: Monroe, chapter presi-<lb/>
prograra Lt. Col. R. G.<lb/>
CaroVim Air Force<lb/>
I D m Leo W. Jenkins<lb/>
emphasized the essen-<lb/>
ds i r leadership and<lb/>
?- -i ility.<lb/>
installation ceremo-<lb/>
?? r members and guests<lb/>
r were welcomed by<lb/>
The ritual was led<lb/>
James Davis,<lb/>
Bradley and<lb/>
Green Stresses Importance<lb/>
Of World Affairs To Students<lb/>
Dr. Sylvester Green, executive vice<lb/>
president of the Medical Foundation<lb/>
of North Carolina, told student mem-<lb/>
bers of the East Carolina college<lb/>
International Relations club Tuesday<lb/>
evening of this week that knowledge<lb/>
of world affairs has become essential<lb/>
to young people.<lb/>
"Tomorrow Dr. Green stated, "the<lb/>
uninformed person will be left out;<lb/>
he will be futile in a world which<lb/>
overlooks him<lb/>
Former editor of the Durham Her-<lb/>
ald and at one time president of<lb/>
Coker college, Dr. Green was guest<lb/>
speaker at the regular January<lb/>
meeting of the IRC. He chose as his<lb/>
topic "A Student's Stake in World<lb/>
Affairs Bettie J. Dougherty of<lb/>
Fayetteville, vice president and pro<lb/>
gram chairman of the club, intro<lb/>
duced him.<lb/>
Stressing the essentiality to the<lb/>
serious student of broad and accurate<lb/>
knowledge of international events,<lb/>
Dr. Green stated that "(public infor-<lb/>
mation enjoys today the best media<lb/>
that the world has ever known News<lb/>
a'nd the interpretation of news, he<lb/>
continued, are a present more ade-<lb/>
quate and more quickly and widely<lb/>
disseminated than ever before.<lb/>
Books, the press, radio, television<lb/>
and improved means of travel, he<lb/>
stated, leave "no excuse for ignorance<lb/>
or lack of knowledge today<lb/>
Discussing th idea of the inescapa-<lb/>
bility of one's ibeing a part of inter-<lb/>
national developments, he emphasized<lb/>
the increasing demand for intelligent<lb/>
leadership in this country. Only those<lb/>
with a broad knowledge of world<lb/>
events and capability to interpret<lb/>
i hem wisely, he pointed out, are<lb/>
qualified as leaders. He indicated the<lb/>
opportunities open to young people<lb/>
as career diplomats.<lb/>
Areas in which the young man or<lb/>
.voman can put into operation his<lb/>
iv.iOwledge of world affairs, he said,<lb/>
are the movement toward world<lb/>
eace, the effort to secure inter-<lb/>
i ational economic stability and the<lb/>
: odeavor to achieve cultural prog-<lb/>
s. He recommended to his student<lb/>
lUddeoce teaching, writing, and public<lb/>
iie as satisfying and rewarding<lb/>
it-Ids of service.<lb/>
Nor on,<lb/>
? ??. John<lb/>
len.<lb/>
J raternity Officers<lb/>
to Helm chapter of-<lb/>
Tomlinsos Cox, Mt.<lb/>
president; John D. John-<lb/>
Mount, corresponding sec-<lb/>
M ton Foley, Greenville, re-<lb/>
? try; Robert Sears, Nor-<lb/>
reasurer; and Charles<lb/>
r, sergeant-at-arms.<lb/>
. the administration of<lb/>
? , advisory commit-<lb/>
Messick, Dean Prewett,<lb/>
. Dr. N. M. Jorgensen,<lb/>
tiager F. D. Duncan and<lb/>
- cretary Butler.<lb/>
idvisors include Ercell S.<lb/>
rman of the Pitt district;<lb/>
? Dollar, field executive;<lb/>
Parks, Wyatt Brown and<lb/>
 Greenville,<lb/>
?? r, made up of 32 charter<lb/>
the first non-iprofession-<lb/>
rnity at East Carolina. Mem-<lb/>
n to men duly enrolled<lb/>
i standing at the college<lb/>
r have been previously<lb/>
. the Boy Scouts of<lb/>
State Novelist<lb/>
Discusses Writing<lb/>
At English Club<lb/>
Mrs. Mobane Holoman Burgwyn<lb/>
of Woodland, North Carolina novel-<lb/>
ist, will discuss "Writing for Young<lb/>
People" at a joint meeting of the<lb/>
student English club, the Associa<lb/>
tion for Childhood Education and<lb/>
the Future Teachers of America at<lb/>
East Carolina college Tuesday, Febr-<lb/>
uary 10.<lb/>
The program will take place in<lb/>
the College theatre at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Those who wish to hear Mr?. Burg-<lb/>
wyn are invited to be present.<lb/>
While on the campus, Mrs. Burg-<lb/>
wyn will be honor guest at a dinner<lb/>
tt the Greenville Woman's club. Hosts<lb/>
and hostesses will be members of the<lb/>
chree organizations sponsoring her<lb/>
risit to the college. After the talk<lb/>
in the College theatre, an informal<lb/>
reception will be held to give club<lb/>
members and their guests an op-<lb/>
portunity to meet Mrs. Burgwyn.<lb/>
Three novels have won for the<lb/>
North Carolina author a large and<lb/>
recerptive reading puiblic and high<lb/>
praise from critics and reviewers.<lb/>
"Penny Rose" is her latest published<lb/>
book. Two earlier novels, popular<lb/>
works for young people, are "River<lb/>
Treasure" and "Lucky Mischief As<lb/>
a writer, she has pictured vividly<lb/>
and charmingly the Occoneechee Neck ! made to dependents of veterans due<lb/>
country of Northeastern North Oaro- to their death.<lb/>
lina j Payments to veterans under the<lb/>
Arrangements for Mrs. Burgwyn's War Claims act also are non-taxable<lb/>
Tuesday Program<lb/>
Spotlights Talent<lb/>
Of Local Students<lb/>
Student talent will be featured in a<lb/>
?program Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock<lb/>
in Austin auditorium by members of<lb/>
the "East Carolinian" staff. The Var-<lb/>
sity Glee club, under the direction of<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Cuthbert, will open the<lb/>
evening's entertainment.<lb/>
Serving as master of ceremonies<lb/>
will be Eli Bloom, Greenville mer-<lb/>
chant, who will be right at home<lb/>
serving in these capacities; for he<lb/>
has headed many programs that have<lb/>
appeared at East Carolina.<lb/>
This talent program is filling in<lb/>
for the show that is usually spon-<lb/>
sored each year by the community<lb/>
recreation class of the health and<lb/>
physical education department at the<lb/>
college.<lb/>
There will be a 25 cent admission<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
Persons who are still interested in<lb/>
participating on the program should<lb/>
contact some member of the "East<lb/>
Carolinian" staff by Monday after-<lb/>
noon. Plans at the present call for<lb/>
prizes which will be given to each<lb/>
participant.<lb/>
Appearing on Ue program other<lb/>
I the student talent will be a few<lb/>
numbers rendered by members of the<lb/>
local community who have performed<lb/>
in various such attractions. Some of<lb/>
the student talent will include musi-<lb/>
cal numbers, radio skits, impersona-<lb/>
tions and gymnastics acts.<lb/>
Hi3h School Bands Participate<lb/>
In State Clinic Here Next Week<lb/>
VA Gives Hints<lb/>
On New Veterans'<lb/>
Tax Deductions<lb/>
When making out Federal income<lb/>
tax returns, veterans should remem-<lb/>
ber that payments received as vet-<lb/>
erans' benefits are generally not tax-<lb/>
able and do not have to be reported<lb/>
as income received during the year.<lb/>
Such payments would include com-<lb/>
pensation, pension, subsistence for<lb/>
education under the GI Bill, dividends<lb/>
on Government life insurance and any<lb/>
proceeds from such insurance.<lb/>
The same applies to payments<lb/>
Order Invitations Soon<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday, Feb-<lb/>
ruary 3 and 4, will be the dead<lb/>
line for those who desire to order<lb/>
invitations for graduation in May-<lb/>
A booth will be set up in the<lb/>
post office lobby from 6 to 8<lb/>
p. m. for those who wish to order.<lb/>
College Issues Invitations<lb/>
For Annual High School Day<lb/>
East Carolina college has issued<lb/>
invitations to the Eleventh Annual<lb/>
High School day, to be observed on<lb/>
the campus Friday, April 10. Seniors<lb/>
in high schools in North Carolina<lb/>
'Born Yesterday'<lb/>
Features Grimes<lb/>
In Starring Role<lb/>
Barbara A. Grimes of Roberson-<lb/>
ville, junior at East Carolina college,<lb/>
has been chosen to play the part of<lb/>
Billie Dawn in the production of the<lb/>
hit Broadway comedy "Born Yester-<lb/>
day" by the Teachers playhouse, stu-<lb/>
dent dramatic club. The role, made<lb/>
famous by Judy Holliday in the stage<lb/>
and movie versions, won her an<lb/>
Academy award for her performance.<lb/>
The popular comedy by Garson Ka-<lb/>
nin will be presented by tht Teachers<lb/>
playhouse in the College theatre at<lb/>
East Carolina February 19 as one<lb/>
of the major productions of bhe<lb/>
college dramatic club for the school<lb/>
year. Rehearsals are now in progress.<lb/>
Ralph Rives of Enfield, graduate<lb/>
student at the college, will direct<lb/>
"Born Yesterday Dr. Locile H.<lb/>
?Charles of the department of English,<lb/>
director of dramatic arts at the col-<lb/>
lege, will be faculty advisor and will<lb/>
supervise the production.<lb/>
Rives and Atwood R. Smith of<lb/>
Kinston are slated for important<lb/>
roles in the comedy. Others in the<lb/>
cast are Lena Taylor, Sea Level;<lb/>
Clarence P. Moori' g, Snow Hill; Wil-<lb/>
liam Taylor, Robersonyille; Imogene<lb/>
Jennette, Mount Olive; Andrew Meed-<lb/>
er, Norfolk, Va J. Richard Mat-<lb/>
thews, Robersonville; Ruth Lassiter,<lb/>
Four Oaks; and Edna Boykin, Wil-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
-Q<lb/>
and elsewhere will be honor guests;<lb/>
and superintendents, principals and<lb/>
teachers will also be present. At-<lb/>
tendance in previous years has ex-<lb/>
ceeded 3,000 people.<lb/>
Dr. Ed. J. Carter, director of the<lb/>
Bureau of Field Services at East<lb/>
Carolina, is chairman of a student-<lb/>
faculty committee which is planning<lb/>
the events of High School day. Ac-<lb/>
tivities are designed, Dr. Cartei'<lb/>
states, to make the occasion "a rich<lb/>
educational experience for the sen-<lb/>
iors<lb/>
The program will include a series<lb/>
of varied events planned to show "a<lb/>
college in action Both educational<lb/>
and recreational aspects of campus<lb/>
life will be stressed.<lb/>
College classes will continue as<lb/>
usual, Dr. Carter announces; and<lb/>
guests have been invited to visit<lb/>
departments of instruction in which<lb/>
they are interested. Dramatic pro-<lb/>
luctions, musical programs, athletic<lb/>
events, an Air Force ROTC drill and<lb/>
.arade, a spring fashion show and a<lb/>
Lea dance will be among the high-<lb/>
lights of the day.<lb/>
Famous Puppets<lb/>
Present Music,<lb/>
Brama On Campus<lb/>
Salzburg Marionette theatre<lb/>
be presented in an evening of<lb/>
and drama at East Carolina<lb/>
? Thursday, February 19, a<lb/>
r.th program on the current<lb/>
Entertainment aerie The perform-<lb/>
?vl take place at 8 ip.m. in the<lb/>
" ' arm auditorium.<lb/>
The theatre, described as "the most<lb/>
famous and celebrated marionette<lb/>
kre in the world is now making<lb/>
n American tour and repeating pre-<lb/>
vious successes here and abroad,<lb/>
ita founding in 1913, the com-<lb/>
pany has played in nearly two score<lb/>
European countries and has give1<lb/>
thousands of (performances in Sali-<lb/>
?t. where since 1936 it has been<lb/>
an integral part of the Salflburg<lb/>
Mozart festival. The periodical Paris<lb/>
Fi?aro declared that the marionettes<lb/>
"enchanted all of Paris<lb/>
The marionettes specialize in Mo-<lb/>
2art, and their repertoire includes his<lb/>
Sorter opera. In addition, plays,<lb/>
filets and fairy tales are (presented<lb/>
to music by the Salzburg Mozarteum<lb/>
orchestra and a chorus. English i?<lb/>
ed for both singing and speaking.<lb/>
visit to East Carolina are being<lb/>
made by a steering committee com-<lb/>
posed of student officers of the three<lb/>
sponsoring organizations and their<lb/>
faculty advisers. Students planning<lb/>
the occasion include Vernie B. Wilder<lb/>
of Nashville and Betty J. Peele of<lb/>
Durham, English club; Mary Jo John-<lb/>
son of Coats and Ruth Babbitt of<lb/>
Creedmoor, Future Teachers of<lb/>
America; and Anne DuRant of Wil-<lb/>
mington, Alice Roberson of Wilson,<lb/>
and Vivian Mercer of Raleigh, Asso-<lb/>
ciation of Childhood Education.<lb/>
Veterans' bonus payments received<lb/>
from any State are not taxable as<lb/>
income by the Federal Government.<lb/>
Korean veterans who served in the<lb/>
combat zone during 1952 do not have<lb/>
to report as income any month's pay<lb/>
ea-rned as an enlisted man or war-<lb/>
rant officer while serving in the<lb/>
combat zone or hospitalized as a re-<lb/>
sult of such service. For officers, the<lb/>
first $200 of any such month's pay-<lb/>
is exempt. The combat zone is desig-<lb/>
nated as Korea and the waters sur-<lb/>
rounding it.<lb/>
Carter Steers Group<lb/>
To Select Band Music<lb/>
Herbert L. Carter, faculty member<lb/>
of the department of music at East<lb/>
Carolina college, has been appointed<lb/>
chairman of a committee which will<lb/>
select music for bands to be used in<lb/>
the 1954 State High School Music<lb/>
contest. He was chosen for this work<lb/>
and appointed by Robert Klepfer of<lb/>
Mooresville, president of the North<lb/>
Carolina Bandmasters association.<lb/>
Mr. Carter has also been named a<lb/>
member of a committee which will<lb/>
recommend revisions to the constitu-<lb/>
tion and by-laws of the bandmasters'<lb/>
iomen's Groups<lb/>
Sponsor Program<lb/>
For Citizenship<lb/>
Citizenship in Action was the theme<lb/>
of a conference on world affairs held<lb/>
!n the Training school auditorium at<lb/>
East Carolina college today. The con-<lb/>
ference was one of three to be spon-<lb/>
sored this spring by women's organi-<lb/>
zations of the state. Asheville, Dur-<lb/>
ham and Greenville have been des-<lb/>
ignated as places of meeting.<lb/>
Mrs. L. B. Pate of New Bern organization<lb/>
In 1951, Mr. Carter served as presi-<lb/>
dent of the North Carolina Band-<lb/>
masters association. He has also act-<lb/>
ed for the past several years as chair-<lb/>
man in charge of the program of the<lb/>
Eastern division of the All-State Band<lb/>
clinic, an annual event at East Caro-<lb/>
lina which is attended by high school<lb/>
band members and their directors.<lb/>
Noted Educator<lb/>
Addresses IRG<lb/>
Tuesday Evening<lb/>
Dr. Sylvester Green, executive vice<lb/>
president of the Medical foundation<lb/>
of North Carolina, spoke at a meet-<lb/>
ing of the International Relations<lb/>
lub of East Carolina college Tues-<lb/>
day. Basing his remarks on the topic<lb/>
"A Student's Stake in World Affairs<lb/>
he talked to student members of the<lb/>
organization and their guests in the<lb/>
Flanagan auditorium at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Well-known as an author, lecturer,<lb/>
educator and student of international<lb/>
affairs, Dr. Green was formerly edi-<lb/>
tor of the Durham Herald. He has<lb/>
been a minister at Baptist churches<lb/>
in Durham and Richmond, Va and<lb/>
served at one time as president of<lb/>
Coker college, Hartsville, S. C.<lb/>
Arrangements for Dr. Green's visit<lb/>
to East Carolina were made by Bet-<lb/>
Lie J. Dougherty of Fayetteville, vice<lb/>
president and program chairman of<lb/>
the college International Relations<lb/>
club.<lb/>
Thirty-six High Schools<lb/>
In Eastern Counties<lb/>
Plan To Attend Meet<lb/>
High school bands representing 36<lb/>
schools in the eastern counties of<lb/>
North Carolina are scheduled io par<lb/>
lici. ate in the Eastern division of the<lb/>
All-State Band clinic at East Caro-<lb/>
lina college Friday and Saturday,<lb/>
February 6-7. Both student musiciai s<lb/>
and band directors will atteni.<lb/>
Herhert L. Carter, faculty membt r<lb/>
of the East Carolina department of<lb/>
music and former president of the<lb/>
North Carolina Bandmasters' asso-<lb/>
ciation, is chairman in charge of ar<lb/>
ranging the program.<lb/>
Norval Church, head of the de-<lb/>
partment of instrumental music t<lb/>
Teachers college, Columbia universi-<lb/>
ty, will be music director of the eli ;c<lb/>
here, Mr. Carter has announced. Mr.<lb/>
Church is nationally known in<lb/>
field of music education and is <lb/>
author of a - tniber of text look3 fi.<lb/>
music.<lb/>
A major cent of the two-day pro-<lb/>
gram will be the oganizat on on r.e<lb/>
campus of a 126-?piece Clinic baud<lb/>
made up of selected musicians from<lb/>
the participating high schools. Mr.<lb/>
Church will rehearse with this en<lb/>
semble and on Saturday night will<lb/>
be its conductor at a public per-<lb/>
formance given as closing event of<lb/>
the clinic.<lb/>
Sectional rehearsals for perform-<lb/>
ances of various instruments of the<lb/>
band will be held Fridaj id Sal<lb/>
day mornings. Instructor will be<lb/>
directors who have done outstanding<lb/>
work with high school bands of the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
The East Carolina Concert bard,<lb/>
conducted by Mr. Carter, will give a<lb/>
program Friday night in honor of<lb/>
visitors on the campus. Social eventt<lb/>
will include a dance immediate'<lb/>
ier this concert, an inform .<lb/>
tion for visiting directors and tl<lb/>
wives on Friday, and a luncheon<lb/>
Saturday at which Mr. Church will<lb/>
speak.<lb/>
VA Announces Expenditures;<lb/>
Operating Cost Appears Low<lb/>
The cost of operating Veterans<lb/>
administration during fiscal year 1952<lb/>
took less than five cents out of each<lb/>
tax dollar that VA spent in that<lb/>
year, VA announced.<lb/>
Cash benefits took slightly more<lb/>
than 79 cents.<lb/>
Medical benefits and veterans<lb/>
counseling took nearly 14 cents.<lb/>
And construction and repairs took<lb/>
a little over two cents.<lb/>
This information is contained in<lb/>
VA's Annual report for fiscal 1952,<lb/>
now on sale at the Government Print-<lb/>
ing office in Washington, D. C.<lb/>
VA spent $5.99 billion during fiscal<lb/>
1952, ending June 30, 1952. Of this<lb/>
amount, $4.86 billion was spent from<lb/>
funds appropriated by the Congress<lb/>
and the balance, from trust and<lb/>
other funds. .<lb/>
The amount spent from appropriat-<lb/>
ed fund, came from the taxpayers;<lb/>
whereas, the amount spent from<lb/>
trust and other funds came from the<lb/>
.premiums paid by veterans on their<lb/>
GI life insurance, for which VA acts<lb/>
M the trustee, and from additional<lb/>
source other than the taxpayers.<lb/>
Of the $4.86 billion spent from the<lb/>
taxpayers' dollars, $3.85 billion was<lb/>
distributed in cash benefits to or in<lb/>
behalf of veterans or their depend-<lb/>
ents and beneficiaries under laws<lb/>
enacted by the Congress. This rep-<lb/>
resents 79.2 per cent of the expendi-<lb/>
tures from the taxpayers' dollars.<lb/>
Th remaining $1 billion of expendi-<lb/>
tures from the taxpayers' money was<lb/>
-pent as follows:<lb/>
$664 million, or 13.7 per cent, for<lb/>
medical, hospital and domiciliary care;<lb/>
for the legally authorized travel of<lb/>
veterans; for the counseling of vet-<lb/>
rans under the education and train-<lb/>
ing laws that VA administers, and<lb/>
for the burial of veterans who died<lb/>
in VA installations.<lb/>
$224 million, or 4.8 per cent, for<lb/>
Carolina Federation of Home Demon-<lb/>
stration chibs, announced the pro-<lb/>
gram for the conference here. Speak-<lb/>
ers included Dr. Guion Johnson of<lb/>
Chapel Hill, research specialist and<lb/>
nresident of the North Carolina Wo-<lb/>
man's council and members of the<lb/>
faculty of East Carolina college.<lb/>
At a planning session held at the<lb/>
college January 15, Mrs. Pate and<lb/>
home demonstration leaders of the<lb/>
eastern section of the state met with<lb/>
representatives of other women's or-<lb/>
ganizations in the area to plan today's<lb/>
program. Attending were members<lb/>
of the state Federation of Women's<lb/>
clubs, the state Federation of Home<lb/>
Demonstration clubs, the .Pilot clubs,<lb/>
the Business and Professional Wo-<lb/>
men's clulbs, the Altrusa clubs, the<lb/>
North Carolina Congress of Parents<lb/>
and Teachers and the American As-<lb/>
sociation of University Women.<lb/>
Dr. Johnson made the principal<lb/>
address of the day at a meeting<lb/>
scheduled for 10 a.m. In the after-<lb/>
noon she led an evaluation session<lb/>
based on ideas presented during the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Also during the morning five mem-<lb/>
bers of the East Carolina faculty<lb/>
held a symposium on citizenship as<lb/>
it applies to the home, the school,<lb/>
the community, the nation and the<lb/>
world. Speakers were Dr. Robert L.<lb/>
Local Home Ec Student<lb/>
Runs For Nat'l Office<lb/>
Gwendola Williams of Oakboro,<lb/>
; aphomore at East Carolina college,<lb/>
has been nominated by the North<lb/>
Carolina Home Economics clubs as<lb/>
their candidate for National Secretary<lb/>
of the College Clubs Division of the<lb/>
Amercian Home Economics associa-<lb/>
tion. She was chosen at a recent<lb/>
meeting held by representatives of<lb/>
the state organization at Meredith<lb/>
college in Raleigh.<lb/>
Air Force Offers Graduates<lb/>
New Assignment Opportunities<lb/>
administrative costs, including those<lb/>
for medical, hospital and domiciliary j Holt, director of religious activities;<lb/>
Dr. Howard Clay, Dr. Kathleen<lb/>
care; and,<lb/>
$113 million, or 2.3 per cent, for<lb/>
the construction of new hospitals and<lb/>
other VA buildings, and for major<lb/>
alterations, improvements and re-<lb/>
pairs to VA hosipitals and installa-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Stokes, Dr. George Pasti and Dr. W.<lb/>
E. Marshall of the social studies de-<lb/>
partment.<lb/>
A luncheon had been arranged for<lb/>
the occasion and was followed by<lb/>
the afternoon evaluation meeting.<lb/>
New opportunities for interesting<lb/>
assignments within the rapidly ex-<lb/>
panding US Air Force are being<lb/>
offered to college graduates in a pro-<lb/>
gram aimed at securing highly qual-<lb/>
ified commissioned personnel.<lb/>
Headquarters Fourteenth Air Force<lb/>
announced that this program is de-<lb/>
signed to attract persons with scien-<lb/>
tific or engineering backgrounds for<lb/>
work in certain technical specialties.<lb/>
Those appointed as officers in the<lb/>
Air Force reserve will be called to<lb/>
immediate active duty and trained at<lb/>
technical schools, if necessary, to<lb/>
completely qualify them for assign-<lb/>
ment to duties in the electronics,<lb/>
communications, research and devel-<lb/>
opment and weather fields.<lb/>
College graduates, and those who<lb/>
have completed three and one half<lb/>
years study toward a degree major-<lb/>
ing fci engineering, mathematics,<lb/>
physics or chemistry, are urged to<lb/>
consider the advantages of career ad-<lb/>
vancement in the Air Force. Appli-<lb/>
cations may be submitted prior to<lb/>
1 graduation, but appointment will not<lb/>
be made until a final transcript of<lb/>
scholastic record is submitted.<lb/>
College graduates with a bacca-<lb/>
laureate degree, including mathe-<lb/>
matics through integral calculus and<lb/>
one year of college physics, may<lb/>
apply specifically for a reserve com-<lb/>
mission in the meteorology field. This<lb/>
particular specialty offers great op-<lb/>
portunity for further study at sev-<lb/>
eral leading colleges and universities.<lb/>
Applicants must be less than 27<lb/>
years of age, American citizens and<lb/>
able to meet the physical qualifica-<lb/>
tions for military service.<lb/>
Application for appointment as an<lb/>
Air Force reserve officer under this<lb/>
program may be obtained at any<lb/>
Air Force installation and should be<lb/>
submitted to the Commanding Gen-<lb/>
eral, Fourteenth Air Force, Robbins<lb/>
Air Force base, Ga. For further in-<lb/>
formation about opportunities in the<lb/>
Air Force reserve, write to Com-<lb/>
manding General, Fourteenth Air<lb/>
7orce, Robbins Air Force base, Ga<lb/>
Attention: Office of Military Per-<lb/>
sonnel .Procurement.<lb/>
Planatarium Trip<lb/>
Discussion Topic<lb/>
For Science Club<lb/>
A planetarium trip at Chapel Hill<lb/>
will be the topic for discussion at<lb/>
the next Science club meeting to be<lb/>
held in Flanagan auditorium Tues-<lb/>
day night, February 3, at 7 o'clock.<lb/>
The Chapel Hill trip is tentatively<lb/>
-cheduled for sometime in the next<lb/>
several weeks. The trip to the mour.<lb/>
tains, an annual event for the Science<lb/>
club, will take plact sometime durin rl<lb/>
the Spring quarter. It is hoped thatl<lb/>
tnis outing can be of two days dura-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Following the business discussion!<lb/>
i program under the direction of1<lb/>
J. O. Derrick of the Science depart-<lb/>
ment will be presented. The prognaml<lb/>
is entitled "The Advances of Science!<lb/>
During 1952 and Predictions for the<lb/>
Future<lb/>
Appearing or the program will b j<lb/>
Lois Tucker, sophomore from Green-<lb/>
ville; Ruby Underhill, sophomore<lb/>
from Selma; and Lucious Butt, soph-<lb/>
omore from Hertford.<lb/>
Lillian Haynes, publicity chair-<lb/>
i man for the organization, urgesi<lb/>
that all members be present in on'er<lb/>
to participate in the discussion o1<lb/>
the planned events.<lb/>
Pitt Alumni Sponsor<lb/>
Card Tourney To Aid<lb/>
College Scholarship<lb/>
The Pitt County Memorial' Schol-<lb/>
arship foundation will benefit from a<lb/>
bridge and canasta tournament givei<lb/>
February 13 by the Pitt County chap-<lb/>
ter of the College Alumni associa-<lb/>
tion. The event will take place at<lb/>
8 p.m. in the college dining hall ar<lb/>
is expected to be attended by a large<lb/>
number of (people.<lb/>
Proceeds wili go to the college<lb/>
scholarship fund. Friends of Eastj<lb/>
Carolina in Pitt county are now in<lb/>
process of raising a sum of $100,00C<lb/>
to be used to aid worthy and needj<lb/>
students who wish to attend the col-<lb/>
lege but are financially unalble tc<lb/>
do so.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038314_0002"/><lb/>
PRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1953<lb/>
FAGE TWO<lb/>
ft<lb/>
f<lb/>
BAST<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published Weekly by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
college, Greenvlhe, N. C.<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952<lb/>
Enured as second-class matter December 3, 1926 at the<lb/>
U 8. Post Office, Greenville, N. C. under the act of<lb/>
March 3, I8'y<lb/>
Ye Editor's<lb/>
Say<lb/>
by Tommie Lupton<lb/>
Wko's Wko At East Carolina<lb/>
by Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
ftoodtfed G&amp; <lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teaehen 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, haying writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wit,<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line, niMM,y<lb/>
Nor all your tear, wash out a word of it. ?E. Fitzgeraio<lb/>
This week has really been a busy<lb/>
one for students at East Carolina,<lb/>
and it is not over yet. We trust that<lb/>
everyone had a good time at the<lb/>
concert and dance last evening. To-<lb/>
night we have a basketball game<lb/>
with our arch rival, Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian college, and tomorrow night the<lb/>
Catamounts from Western Carolina<lb/>
Teachers college invade our campus.<lb/>
One linds that his studies tend to<lb/>
interfere with his social life.<lb/>
EDITORIAL STAFF<lb/>
E4ier-In-Ohief<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Assistant Editor<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
Staff Assistants<lb/>
Tommie Lupton<lb/>
Edwina McMullan<lb/>
 Parker Maddrey<lb/>
 Phyllis CarpenteT<lb/>
Kay Johnston,<lb/>
FrancSm'ith, Mildred Henderson, Stuart Arrington,<lb/>
Don Muse, Anm Hogan, Emily Boyce<lb/>
Editorial Advisor<lb/>
Staff photographer ?<lb/>
we<lb/>
Winter quarter is about over, and<lb/>
will be pre-registerdng for the<lb/>
Spring quarter next week. Let's all<lb/>
remember to do a thorough job of<lb/>
pre-registering in order to simplify<lb/>
our work on registration day come<lb/>
March 3.<lb/>
Mary H. Greene<lb/>
C. L. Perkins Jr.<lb/>
SPORTS STAFF<lb/>
ftpcrta Editor <lb/>
Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
ZZZ Assistants  Sam Hux, Bruce Phillips,<lb/>
Sport Assvstant. <lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Edna Massad<lb/>
Taking form now is the new col-<lb/>
lege library. Since the framework<lb/>
has been constructed we are able<lb/>
to tell a little more about how the<lb/>
new building will look when com-<lb/>
pleted. All nidications lead us to<lb/>
believe that the structure is going<lb/>
to be large enough to house many<lb/>
books of knowledge. Many of us here<lb/>
now will not be around to make use<lb/>
is finished.<lb/>
Excitement is in tne air in our of-<lb/>
fices as members of the "Buccaneer"<lb/>
and "East Carolinian" staffs are<lb/>
making preparations to attend the<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press associa-<lb/>
tion convention in New York during<lb/>
the second week of March. The con-<lb/>
vention is the highlight of the year<lb/>
for the East Carolina publications'<lb/>
staffs, though a limited number of<lb/>
persons are able to attend.<lb/>
Infirmary, Not 'Snake Pit'<lb/>
There have always been trong rumors that<lb/>
the College infirmary is a horrible facsimile ot<lb/>
a modern-day "Snake Pit that the patients are<lb/>
treated like dogs.<lb/>
All this is bunk. It may have been that way,<lb/>
but not now. .???? nn<lb/>
Last week, a staff member of the East Caro-<lb/>
linian disguised himself as being a victim of the<lb/>
flu in order to find the truth about the infirmary.<lb/>
Acquiring a temperature of 103 degrees, a sore<lb/>
throat, a hoarse voice and a stuffed, dead head,<lb/>
he staggered into the infirmary. Immediately he<lb/>
was attended to and ended up in spending a tive-<lb/>
day stretch in one of their soft beds.<lb/>
He gives us his report:<lb/>
"During my stay, I did not at any time find<lb/>
the conditions horrible or unbearable. The stall<lb/>
is very competent and most friendly.<lb/>
"Take for example Mrs. Blount. She is the<lb/>
little nurse who always has a smile, a sense of<lb/>
humor and a penicillin needle. To boost the mo-<lb/>
rale of her male patients, she wJl waltz with<lb/>
them. She can also do the shag, the two-step, the<lb/>
Charleston and the rhumba. With the penicillin<lb/>
needle, she is most gentle and easy.<lb/>
"Miss Stokes, a very competent nurse, is best<lb/>
known for her patience. Patience is an essential<lb/>
qualitv for a nurse. It is told that Miss Stokes<lb/>
was to give a certain boy a shot of penicillin but<lb/>
the boy had exited via the fire-escape and had<lb/>
no intentions of returning. Miss Stokes asked<lb/>
where he was and the other boys in his ward<lb/>
told her that he was in the wash-room. Miss<lb/>
Stokes waited patiently with the needle in her<lb/>
hand for him to come back.<lb/>
"It was two months later when the boy paid<lb/>
a return visit to the infrmary. Miss Stokes was and<lb/>
still holding the same needle when she spied the<lb/>
boy. "Oh, there you are she shouted, as she<lb/>
threw him across the table and proceeded to give<lb/>
him the penicillin. The boy had come back for a<lb/>
band-aid for his cut finger.<lb/>
"Dr. Irons is a very jovial fellow. However,<lb/>
he is a very busy doctor, so he gets down to busi-<lb/>
ness right away. To the girls who have formed<lb/>
the wierd idea that all inf ormary doctors are big<lb/>
flirts, they have got Dr. Irons all wrong. He is<lb/>
pleasant, but not flirtatious.<lb/>
"The meals are strictly superb. They are<lb/>
cooked in the infirmary's own kitchen. The food<lb/>
is second to home-cooking and is varied from<lb/>
steak, ham, chicken and oysters to chicken-salad.<lb/>
"All in all, the infirmary is not a horror<lb/>
house nor a 'Snake Pit but an ideal place to<lb/>
stay when you are sick. Most narrow-minded<lb/>
students stay in their rooms when they are ill<lb/>
because they have always heard that the infirm-<lb/>
ary is the last place to go. This notion is silly<lb/>
when there is a competent medical staff and an<lb/>
adequately furnished building to attend to and<lb/>
house those in need for medical care TPM<lb/>
"Gosh, this sure is a big surprise<lb/>
and honor said Grace Giles when<lb/>
she was informed that she had been<lb/>
chosen to be this week's "Who's<lb/>
Who" for the "East Carolinian "I<lb/>
never expected this<lb/>
Grace, who is from Linden, oame<lb/>
to East Carolina Fall quarter of 1949<lb/>
and plans to graduate this May. Her<lb/>
first impression of our campus was<lb/>
a favorable one and as she expressed<lb/>
it, "I fell in love with it the first<lb/>
time that I came here<lb/>
But as all freshmen, a-nd she was<lb/>
no different, she felt a little out of<lb/>
place. Grace was at a disadvantage,<lb/>
though, for she knew absolutely no<lb/>
one here; however, she was not long<lb/>
making many good friends and there-<lb/>
fore taking part in campus activities<lb/>
as anyone else. While thinking back<lb/>
over her freshman days, she describ-<lb/>
ed them ?s "quite a new experience<lb/>
Extra-curricular activities take up<lb/>
much of Grace's time, but she still<lb/>
remains a Dean's list student most<lb/>
of the time. It is quite an accom-1<lb/>
plishment to make such exc<lb/>
grades and also take such an active<lb/>
part in the campus life and organi-<lb/>
zations.<lb/>
Extra-Curricular Activities<lb/>
She has been a member of the<lb/>
Home Economics club for four years<lb/>
raledictorian of her<lb/>
&amp;h said,<lb/>
of the library, unless we stay to do<lb/>
01 uie iimij, '  trfiprfuir' ? ?oihomore year and com<lb/>
graduate work; for it will probably r ? sc :<lb/>
be a couple of years before the work<lb/>
A columnist for the Plainsman,<lb/>
Alabama Polytechnic Institute, has<lb/>
started what he calls the I Hate<lb/>
Professors" club, and he invites all<lb/>
interested parties to join.<lb/>
The rules, he says, are quite sim-<lb/>
ple, and you need only follow "the<lb/>
ones adaptable to your special tal-<lb/>
ents Here are a few of the more<lb/>
salient ones:<lb/>
Be late to all classes at least half<lb/>
the time. When entering a classroom<lb/>
late, glare at the iprofessor and in-<lb/>
sinuate that he started the class 10<lb/>
minutes early.<lb/>
Talk to one or more of your class-<lb/>
mates in a whisper just loud enough<lb/>
for the instructor to hear you, but<lb/>
not loud enough for him to under-<lb/>
stand the words.<lb/>
Fifteen minutes before the end of<lb/>
tne class hour, begin to stack your<lb/>
mittee chairman, junior and senior<lb/>
years); Westminster fellowship for<lb/>
four years (vice president junior<lb/>
year and president, senior year);<lb/>
YWCA her freshman, junior and sen-<lb/>
ior years; Phi Omicron her junior<lb/>
and senior years, vice president Jun-<lb/>
ior class, and a member of the WAA<lb/>
her freshman and sophomore years.<lb/>
As a senior she is hospitality<lb/>
chairman of the Inter-Religious coun-<lb/>
cil, president of Jarvis hall and a<lb/>
member of the Student legislature<lb/>
and Women's judiciary. The honor<lb/>
that she prizes most though was being<lb/>
I chosen as "Who's Who in American<lb/>
Universities and Colleges "That is<lb/>
one honor I never expected to receive.<lb/>
It was a complete surprise but such<lb/>
a nice one<lb/>
Grace Giles<lb/>
Grace was chosen as a representa-<lb/>
tive to the forty-third annual meet-<lb/>
ing of those interested in home eco-<lb/>
nomics in Alantii City, N. J last<lb/>
June. She was the only college student<lb/>
representative from the state of<lb/>
North Carolina present. They had<lb/>
many inspirational speakers who were<lb/>
all interested in home economices, de-<lb/>
livering interesting messages during<lb/>
her stay there. She also has served<lb/>
as a representative from the West-<lb/>
minster fellowship to the young peo-<lb/>
ple's leadership school in Montreat,<lb/>
which is a school for the young peo-<lb/>
ple of the Southern Presbyterian<lb/>
church. They had a religious empha-<lb/>
sis week of study, activities and in-<lb/>
spiration. Dr. Charles Templeton, an<lb/>
evangelist from the National Council<lb/>
of Churches, was the principal speak-<lb/>
er.<lb/>
Hospitality Worker<lb/>
Last week was Religious Emphasis<lb/>
week here at East Carolina. The<lb/>
Inter-Religious council, of which<lb/>
Grace is a member, was in charge<lb/>
of hospitality. This gave Grace the<lb/>
opportunity to become well acquaint-<lb/>
ed with our guest speakers, and she<lb/>
commented, "We really have beeMj<lb/>
fortunate to have such ? <lb/>
gr0Up of men to talk wi us. I?<lb/>
Lve that the students b.v?u??<lb/>
more advantage of the opportune<lb/>
Tan ever before. The conferences<lb/>
 thle men have given have een<lb/>
3o successful that they even UlW<lb/>
over the problems of the students<lb/>
with them durmg their meal<lb/>
Grace, a very capable leader and<lb/>
follower, received much recognition<lb/>
for her hard work while in h gh<lb/>
school. She was presented wuh the<lb/>
athletic medal for g!rls which was<lb/>
given to the most oul<lb/>
athlete and was v <lb/>
graduating class. "This,<lb/>
?is probably because there were so<lb/>
lew in tne class. You see, there were<lb/>
only 14 of us<lb/>
Practice Teachers<lb/>
Last quarter Grace did her practice<lb/>
teaching in Greenville high school<lb/>
under the supervision of Miss Bett<lb/>
Hansinger. She taught two second<lb/>
year home economics classes. In these<lb/>
she taught family relations and cloth-<lb/>
ing. Many of us seem to think that<lb/>
student teaching will be simple and<lb/>
that you won't have anything to do<lb/>
except observe for a few days and<lb/>
teach once in a while, but Grace<lb/>
knows different. She made approxi-<lb/>
mately 50 home visits to see her<lb/>
students' environment in which they<lb/>
were living. These visits helped her<lb/>
to understand why some of the stu-<lb/>
dents did certain things in class. She<lb/>
liked student teaching, but felt that<lb/>
she would have liked it a great deal<lb/>
more if the quarter had not been<lb/>
such a rushed one.<lb/>
When asked if she had any special<lb/>
reason for choosing East Carolina<lb/>
she answered, "Yes She said that<lb/>
it had a reputation of having one of<lb/>
the best home economics departments<lb/>
in the state and also she liked the<lb/>
varied activities that it offered.<lb/>
"These were confirmed for me when<lb/>
I enrolled here she said. "Even<lb/>
though I love EC very much and kind<lb/>
of hate to leave, I'm looking forward<lb/>
to graduating in June<lb/>
La Rue, Andre Advise Lovers<lb/>
 for weeks, and he refuses to call for<lb/>
me in the parlor. He just comes by<lb/>
and whistles every night. I've tried<lb/>
to explain to him that he's giving<lb/>
me a "dog" complex, but he only<lb/>
look expectantly toward the door.<lb/>
Keep an eye on your watch through-<lb/>
out the entire period and the other<lb/>
eye looking out the window. If a<lb/>
window isn't handy, stare at the<lb/>
ceiling from time to time. (Editor's<lb/>
note: Why not shake your watch<lb/>
occasionally to see if it is working.)<lb/>
Laugh at everything even remotely<lb/>
amusing, except your instructor's<lb/>
witticisms.<lb/>
If you must ask a question, be<lb/>
sure that it is completely off the<lb/>
subject or one that the professor<lb/>
cannot answer.<lb/>
We feel quite sure that in all<lb/>
these methods you can really show<lb/>
the professor that you hate him, and<lb/>
in return we guarantee you a big,<lb/>
fat five in the course.<lb/>
has been<lb/>
married only four times. She feels<lb/>
that with this experience she is very<lb/>
capable of instructing girls on "How<lb/>
to Get Your Man<lb/>
Andre, La Rue's present husband,<lb/>
is very well qualified (through one<lb/>
harrowing experience that he says<lb/>
he is still ipaying for) to give advice<lb/>
to his sex, on "How to Stay Clear of<lb/>
the Female Trap"?or other such<lb/>
similar problems. Andre is author of<lb/>
that famous French novel "I Was<lb/>
Trapped<lb/>
This charming young married co; -<lb/>
pie will be only too haptpy to help<lb/>
you with any problems you may have.<lb/>
Just address your letters in care of<lb/>
"La Rue and Andre the "East Car- problems are our problems!<lb/>
olinian Box 990. I<lb/>
The following letter is one that <lb/>
our two counselors have already re-<lb/>
ceived and answered:<lb/>
Dear La Rue and Andre,<lb/>
I have been dating a certain boy<lb/>
ries of counseling by the two famous<lb/>
French love and marriage councilors<lb/>
La Rue and Andrt Amount.<lb/>
La Rue, a Charming, vivacious<lb/>
brunette, was born and educated in laughs and says that he hates par-<lb/>
Marseilles, France, and has been lors. I don't fed that hes re-<lb/>
specting me enough. How can 1 maice<lb/>
him see my side of the story?<lb/>
"Fido"<lb/>
Dear Fido,<lb/>
There is only one solution as I can<lb/>
see it. Go out and purchase a dog<lb/>
(there are a few stray ones around<lb/>
campus) and the next time he whis-<lb/>
tles write a note containing "Here<lb/>
I am, darling, let's go"?paste it on<lb/>
the dog and send him out to meet<lb/>
your friend. From then on he will<lb/>
probably lead a "dog's life" and may-<lb/>
be he'll respect you enough to call<lb/>
jt you in the (parlor from then on.<lb/>
La Rue and Andre<lb/>
P.S. Remember now, students, your<lb/>
Shooting<lb/>
The Bull<lb/>
TIMELY TOPICS<lb/>
By Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Last week one of our staff members, Emily<lb/>
Boyce, turned out a good movie review in her<lb/>
column, "Pot Pourri As a result we think we'll I<lb/>
try our hand this week along the same line. Ihe<lb/>
movie which we have chosen as the victim of<lb/>
our comments is one which prompted much con-<lb/>
versation on campus last week, namely, "Ruby<lb/>
Gentry<lb/>
This motion picture, dealing with life in the<lb/>
coastal plain region of North Carolina, was ex-<lb/>
ceptional in many ways, both good and bad.<lb/>
Starring Jennifftr Jones, Charlton li ancj<lb/>
Academy Award winner Karl Maiden the picture<lb/>
gives a vivid and sometimes deceiving description<lb/>
of water-logged North Carolina life.<lb/>
Basically the cinema deals with a back<lb/>
girl, (Jenniffer Jones, playing the part of Buby)<lb/>
who is, to coin an expression ratrir well-built,<lb/>
and comes from the swamp to I<lb/>
master of the entire coastal village of Braddock.<lb/>
As the daughter of a hunting lodg<lb/>
Ruby meets many of her father's cusl<lb/>
jM-ccmes especially attracted to 01<lb/>
Heston. Their love affair is quencht d b<lb/>
when Heston marries a lady of quality. It.<lb/>
in a fit of anger, accepts Karl Mald<lb/>
and sets out to become a real social<lb/>
of her previous clandestine affairs she is frowned<lb/>
on by Braddock society, and when M<lb/>
an untimely end in a yachting<lb/>
public antagonism breaks out into tl<lb/>
With the money from Mald :<lb/>
becomes the most powerful person in<lb/>
and sets out to ruin the townspeo<lb/>
turned against her. As'part of her u<lb/>
ishe receives a note for. a large sum : mi<lb/>
which Heston had owed to Maiden. She<lb/>
to destory the note, if Charlton will returi<lb/>
and when he refuses she destroys him financia<lb/>
A ruined Heston then returns to her, beaten and<lb/>
bewildered.<lb/>
During Ruby's rise to local fame her<lb/>
ably portrayed by North Carolinian Tom T.<lb/>
is constantly to be found in the backgr ro-<lb/>
phesying her eternal damnation for h In<lb/>
a grisly ending the lovers Jones and B are<lb/>
interrupted in the swamp as brother T<lb/>
to do away with them. Panic stricken ilee<lb/>
through muck and mud with rifle bull-<lb/>
about their ears. As they lie exausted on a mud<lb/>
bank Ruby's brother appears, rifle<lb/>
Heston makes a valiant bid to wrest I rom<lb/>
him but is shot in the process. Ruby tu<lb/>
gun on her brother and does away with him.<lb/>
As a whole the movie makes excellent enter-<lb/>
tainment To the Southerner however. H<lb/>
wood's attempt at creating a Southern accer.<lb/>
pathetic. Jeniffer Jones does an excel t of<lb/>
acting, ably supported by a tight sweater and<lb/>
blue jeans. Heston shows flashes of true brill-<lb/>
iance, Maiden turns out a performance rcond<lb/>
only to that in "A Streetcar Named Desire and<lb/>
Tom Tully, the crackpot brother plays one of the<lb/>
best supporting roles ever.<lb/>
POT POURRI<lb/>
by Emily Boyce<lb/>
by T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Last week, just for the heck of it,<lb/>
we asked a student: "How do you<lb/>
like the campus newspaper?" Not<lb/>
knowing that we were on the staff,<lb/>
he gave us his verdict: "It stinks<lb/>
Well now, such comments really get<lb/>
our blood pressure up. For awhile,<lb/>
we were about to fight over those<lb/>
two little words. But, no, we would<lb/>
hear his reasons why he thought our<lb/>
paper stunk. After all, having been<lb/>
associated with only fellow journal-<lb/>
ists, we do not give ourselves the<lb/>
criticism we need sometimes.<lb/>
"Say, old chap, we are on the Truman possessions was leftbehind in the<lb/>
That one exception was a huge globe depicting<lb/>
the entire world in detail whicn the then uenerai<lb/>
Eisenhower had presented to his predecessor 1<lb/>
The following is quoted from the editorial<lb/>
page of The Neivs and Observer, and we think<lb/>
it bears rereading. u<lb/>
"When Harry S. Truman left the White<lb/>
House for his home state of Missouri, where he<lb/>
was given a tumultuous and unprecedented wel<lb/>
come, he literally and figuratively left the cares<lb/>
of the world behind him.<lb/>
"Reporters reported that only one of tne<lb/>
ce.<lb/>
staff<lb/>
"It still stinks he replied indig-<lb/>
nantly.<lb/>
"Well, we always listen to any<lb/>
suggestions for improvements. What<lb/>
do you suggest?"<lb/>
"Ya need a gossip column he said.<lb/>
"Horrors! A gossip column rn a<lb/>
college newspaper, No, never. That's<lb/>
Future Of Today's Youth<lb/>
From the Miami Hurricane, University of<lb/>
Letter From Korea<lb/>
(Editor's note: Dean Leo W. Jen-<lb/>
kins recently received the following<lb/>
letter from Lt. Col. Lomax L. May,<lb/>
who was professor of air science and<lb/>
tactics at East Carolina for three<lb/>
The future has always been man's salvation. I years a-nd who is at present serving<lb/>
If the past is dreary and the present is dark, he<lb/>
can always turn an eye toward the things-to-be<lb/>
and plan?or dream?of better days ahead.<lb/>
. . The college student who works and<lb/>
struggles to give himself an education has always<lb/>
solved his troubles with thoughts of the future,<lb/>
thoughts that foretell a job, marriage, a home<lb/>
and a reasonable measure of security.<lb/>
But what is the future of today's student as<lb/>
he fights to keep his head above the college whirl-<lb/>
pool? Can he plan for better days? Can he care-<lb/>
fully map his future, with security as a focal<lb/>
point? .<lb/>
The answer is simple. Today's youth is not<lb/>
even given the chance to plan.<lb/>
. . . Youth faces uncertain terms of military<lb/>
service, the hell of war?and always death lies<lb/>
just around the corner. . . . Despair lies always<lb/>
in the background. Youth shakes off its frustra-<lb/>
tions by living with a devil-may-care frenzy, by<lb/>
trying to wrench happiness out of every minute.<lb/>
Miami:<lb/>
Youth has always been accused of being the<lb/>
unstable porton of society. The present uncertain<lb/>
state of affairs is forcing age upon us faster than<lb/>
the usual job of time. We are hurrying toward<lb/>
a void. The future isn't rosy.<lb/>
We're walking right into it It will soon, too<lb/>
soon, be our problem. Can we face up to it?<lb/>
with the Air Force overseas.)<lb/>
Dear Friends,<lb/>
I hope this letter finds you all<lb/>
enjoying the best of health and hap-<lb/>
piness.<lb/>
I left the States about a month<lb/>
ago and am getting into the swing<lb/>
of things in a new job in a definitely<lb/>
new environment!<lb/>
I am executive officer of the 51st<lb/>
Air Base group and am located<lb/>
about 20 miles south of Seoul, Korea.<lb/>
It is just close up enough to be<lb/>
interesting. We don't worry too much<lb/>
about having to "bug out" as long<lb/>
as we have the Eighth Army and<lb/>
particularly the United States Ma-<lb/>
rines ahead of us.<lb/>
How is the Air Force ROTC pro-<lb/>
gram going at the college? Very<lb/>
fine, I trust.<lb/>
Give my best regards to the faculty<lb/>
and staff members at the college.<lb/>
I eertainly appreciated all that you<lb/>
fine folks have done for me in the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
Since 'That Memorable Night'<lb/>
by Kay Johnston<lb/>
Our couple of this week is Theo year. After his traindng is complete,<lb/>
Hollingsworth and Johnny Helmsk,<lb/>
who have been going together since?<lb/>
Quote Theo: "that memorable night<lb/>
on January 12, 1952.<lb/>
Theo is from Kenansville and John-<lb/>
ny is from Monroe, quite a few miles<lb/>
apart, but BCC takes care of that!<lb/>
Johnny and Theo became engaged<lb/>
on October 12, and Theo admitted<lb/>
that she was really surprised when<lb/>
Johnny presented her with her beau-<lb/>
tiful diamond, but Johnny has his<lb/>
doubts about that. He said he was<lb/>
sure she knew that she already had<lb/>
him hooked.<lb/>
the 1952 West Virginia<lb/>
Tech game three penalties, all for<lb/>
15 yards, were called against the<lb/>
Pirates on one play. They were hold- I for high hool papers. Such column<lb/>
ing, elipprng and roughing the kicker, j wouid oniy cause troufcle and dissen-<lb/>
tion among students on the campus,<lb/>
It would only inerest the few who<lb/>
know the victims bedng gossiped<lb/>
about. That would never work. Our<lb/>
aim is to interest every student.<lb/>
Besides, we mail out 1,000 papers<lb/>
to paid alumni members in 99 of the<lb/>
100 counties in North Carolina, in<lb/>
S<lb/>
mH<lb/>
ht'<lb/>
an<lb/>
Bor<lb/>
bu1<lb/>
lirm<lb/>
shy<lb/>
OOr<lb/>
but<lb/>
IB<lb/>
fOUTt<lb/>
been<lb/>
at<lb/>
1<lb/>
?thH<lb/>
bucket<lb/>
 the<lb/>
tftSl<lb/>
' No<lb/>
.<lb/>
4,ke only <lb/>
111 <lb/>
bebaU t<lb/>
I<lb/>
back t? <lb/>
kno.<lb/>
wr.e<lb/>
that J<lb/>
To iu?'<lb/>
Sport Ml<lb/>
in charge<lb/>
trap1)' '<lb/>
10U the<lb/>
pnial O<lb/>
ECTC ?<lb/>
thing to 1<lb/>
he and Theo plan to marry. They<lb/>
both want five boys so that they<lb/>
can have a family basketball team.<lb/>
Good luck to both of you!<lb/>
P. S. Believe it or not, both Theo<lb/>
and Johnny smoke Chesterfields!<lb/>
(Editor's -note: By being named<lb/>
"Chesterfield Couple of the Week<lb/>
Theo and Johnny will each be given<lb/>
a carton of Chesterfields, a free pass<lb/>
to the Pitt theatre, a free meal at<lb/>
th Olde Town Inn and an item from<lb/>
Saslow's jewelers.)<lb/>
eral years ago. Mr. Truman left that possession<lb/>
behind, along with the worldwide problems vnicn<lb/>
will continue to clutter his old desk.<lb/>
"Mr. Truman's attitude toward his succe<lb/>
has not been only correct, but cordial. He maa<lb/>
the transition between administrations tn<lb/>
smoothest ever to take place in American polinw<lb/>
and added to it numerous personal touches,u<lb/>
which his action in ordering Major John Vr<lb/>
hower sent home from Korea for his iatncr<lb/>
inauguration was one. Sooner or later, howe -<lb/>
Mr. Truman will find himself in public ue.<lb/>
When his voice is raid again, it will not tan<lb/>
deaf ears<lb/>
Theo was very amused when a9ked<lb/>
how she and Johnny met. She quoted<lb/>
something like the following: "Well,<lb/>
one of my best girl friends had been<lb/>
dating Johnny, and that's all I had<lb/>
heard for a few weeks. I wondered<lb/>
what on earth he had that the other<lb/>
boys lacked. Well, I soon found out<lb/>
when my girl friend (who had been<lb/>
dating Johnny) and I and a few<lb/>
more girls were picked up one after-<lb/>
noon while walking back to school.<lb/>
Since I wasn't introduced, I dida't<lb/>
know who we were with until about<lb/>
an hour later (over a coke) and was<lb/>
I surprised and embarrassed 'd<lb/>
impressed. Yea, I found out all right<lb/>
Best wishes for a happy new year. and I'm still finding out every day<lb/>
Most sincerely, Johnny graduate, aext fall quarter<lb/>
Lomax L. May and is going into flight school for a<lb/>
The Kiss<lb/>
A boy and girl<lb/>
out on a date.<lb/>
Art automobile,<lb/>
the hand ot fate.<lb/>
A few short words,<lb/>
two breaths, two sighs.<lb/>
A long, inviting look<lb/>
between a pair of eyes.<lb/>
A moment of silence,<lb/>
a movtment so quiet.<lb/>
Silence becomes more dense.<lb/>
Two lips are meeting,<lb/>
two hearts beat fast.<lb/>
Two minds receding,<lb/>
the seconds paea.<lb/>
So is Idas<lb/>
between a lad aad a lai<lb/>
Hawaii and Canada every week. Even<lb/>
the governor is reader of our paper.<lb/>
We have to interest those people too.<lb/>
Any other suggestions for improve-<lb/>
ments?"<lb/>
"Naw, but I still think ya need ft<lb/>
gossip column<lb/>
We politely excused ourselves from<lb/>
his presence and walked away<lb/>
most of the 48 states in the nation, In these first week of 1953, the bests of 19<lb/>
Cuba, Panama Canal, South America, have been polled. We've heard the most pop<lb/>
songs i)f the last year and seen or read aboUT<lb/>
outstanding movies. And now for popular reaa. <lb/>
material. According to Time magazine the i<lb/>
bookseller's delight was Herman Wouks no ?<lb/>
The Caihe Mutiny, first published in March i-<lb/>
It was never off the best-seller list and ranK<lb/>
top in the 1952 Fiction Best Sellers. But the u<lb/>
tinction of having written the year's best no<lb/>
went to the old master, Ernest Heminga. <lb/>
if yov have a complaint or sug- J The Old Man and the Sea gave him the re.oUS<lb/>
immediate audience ever reached by a ser<lb/>
gestion concerning this paper, write<lb/>
it legibly on a piece of dean paper<lb/>
and address it to: "Complaint De-<lb/>
partment Box 596, College. We will<lb/>
be most happy to hear any criticism,<lb/>
good or bad, about your college news-<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
author.<lb/>
Question of the week: How many<lb/>
girls would it take, holding hands<lb/>
and arms stretched, to reach from<lb/>
Greenville to Raleigh? (Hint: Ra-<lb/>
leigh to Greenville is 84 miles and<lb/>
an average girl's armstretch is 70<lb/>
inches.)<lb/>
The answer: It wouia take 84<lb/>
girls, because a miss is as good as a<lb/>
mile.<lb/>
That all.<lb/>
Sometimes the idea of including ajoke? rf<lb/>
column ia not a good one, but because the tu t<lb/>
this particular column entitles us to incI" tt<lb/>
everything and anything from soupy subjTthc<lb/>
those on the nutty side, we will continue whb<lb/>
following joke. -te a<lb/>
Garry Moore telis this one as a faV ghe<lb/>
housewife was seated at breakfast when -<lb/>
heard the back door slam. Thinking it '? out<lb/>
young son returning from play, she cauea<lb/>
"I'm in here, darling. I've been waiting for y?<lb/>
1 m in nere, aarnng. 1 ve uecn w??o - aD<lb/>
There was silence for a lone moment,tn11ir a<lb/>
u<lb/>
regular<lb/>
mere was silence ior a ion; nwu?? ? . 8<lb/>
embarrassed shuffling of feet and JV vou<lb/>
strong, masculine voice which said:<lb/>
ought to know, Madam, that I ain't your<lb/>
milkman<lb/>
<pb facs="00038314_0003"/><lb/>
iL?8 I fRiiAY- january 80, i96b<lb/>
ics<lb/>
ers Emily<lb/>
All'w in <lb/>
mu con<lb/>
1 Hub;<lb/>
hlifeinthe<lb/>
' - ?? ex<lb/>
" n;iI1d bad<lb/>
option<lb/>
- Ruby)<lb/>
11 "raddock.<lb/>
'Pcrator<lb/>
fW and<lb/>
harlton<lb/>
nowever<lb/>
rvUDV<lb/>
!osai<lb/>
Becaoae<lb/>
I r .wned<lb/>
n meets<lb/>
:ent the<lb/>
rte Ruby<lb/>
Mock<lb/>
at had<lb/>
ritancs<lb/>
"<lb/>
? offers<lb/>
' to her<lb/>
? ?oiallv.<lb/>
brother,<lb/>
m Tally,<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
- os. In<lb/>
D are<lb/>
?cides<lb/>
D a mud<lb/>
i ot enter-<lb/>
wever, Holly-<lb/>
Dt I<lb/>
rill-<lb/>
I econd<lb/>
and<lb/>
.e of the<lb/>
RI<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THESE<lb/>
Pirates Meet Bulldogs Here Tonight<lb/>
game<lb/>
with Atlantic<lb/>
ill decide the fate<lb/>
It Trophy the prized<lb/>
?at travels back and<lb/>
Wilson and Greenville<lb/>
teams from AC and East<lb/>
mpete. At present the<lb/>
the hands of the Bull-<lb/>
n to<lb/>
s game may well<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
fourteen years now the Trophy<lb/>
htiU  stake whenever Pirate-<lb/>
?iH,H, ithletk contests are held.<lb/>
The back? travels back and forth<lb/>
the school year and upends<lb/>
with the school that re-<lb/>
fer<lb/>
the final victory during the<lb/>
tfMi that Atlantic Christian has<lb/>
the Bohunk is at<lb/>
ng baskebal and ba?<lb/>
. ? to the Bulldogs'<lb/>
ieball triumph last spring, the<lb/>
bring the trophy<lb/>
lck to Ea ' Carolina tonight.<lb/>
r those who do not<lb/>
the TECO ECHO<lb/>
"East Carolinian")<lb/>
is at stake for the<lb/>
  11 of that year<lb/>
. jjs and Pirates clash-<lb/>
 ? for High School<lb/>
our ertwhile ancestor,<lb/>
Jack Daniels, who was<lb/>
the paper in 1939. "the<lb/>
rophv will be established to pro-<lb/>
B?U the whoIoaoBM (?) and con-<lb/>
genial (?) rivalry between ACC and<lb/>
. in plain language, if<lb/>
Rfht, let's have some-<lb/>
o fight over<lb/>
Why not, then, have a trophy case<lb/>
for the gym? East Carolina has<lb/>
in ver been a school to overemphasize<lb/>
athletics, but nevertheless we leel<lb/>
sure that there are several awards<lb/>
lying around somewhere in the Ath-<lb/>
letic department.<lb/>
lake, for example, the caee of the<lb/>
Most Valuable trophy, awarded each<lb/>
year to the outstanding football play-<lb/>
er in the conference. In the fall of<lb/>
1950 Roger Thrift, East Carolina's<lb/>
Little All-American quarterback, re-<lb/>
ceived the honor and the trophy came<lb/>
to East Carolina until the following<lb/>
fall. During the period that the tro-<lb/>
phy Mas on campus it was placed in<lb/>
the Administration building. This was<lb/>
not an ideal place for the award.<lb/>
True, those students who habitually<lb/>
went to the Administration building<lb/>
had occasion to see the trophy, but<lb/>
many students very rarely stop by;<lb/>
and when they do it is usually on<lb/>
business.<lb/>
We therefore think that a trophy<lb/>
case is definitely in order so that<lb/>
East Carolina's athletic awards may<lb/>
be displayed in a prominent place.<lb/>
This trophy case would also be an<lb/>
ideal setting for the Bohu'nk trophy,<lb/>
i'or it is our  elief that there are<lb/>
many seniors on campus today who<lb/>
ave not seen the trophy a single<lb/>
time during their four-year stay here.<lb/>
It would be great if something could<lb/>
be done before too long, for we feel<lb/>
sure that, eonie 8 p.m. tonight, the<lb/>
Bohunk trophy will be well on its<lb/>
wav back to Greenville.<lb/>
Intramural Basketball Play<lb/>
In Full Swing At Gymnasium<lb/>
irks concerning the<lb/>
hy bri7igs to mind a<lb/>
light well be under-<lb/>
energetic campus<lb/>
we have in mind<lb/>
y case for the col-<lb/>
i new gymnasium<lb/>
ler way to have a<lb/>
names of the alumni<lb/>
Intramural Standings<lb/>
Jocks<lb/>
Low Landers<lb/>
Ham bones<lb/>
Phantoms<lb/>
Slow Pokes<lb/>
Cyclones<lb/>
Wo If pack<lb/>
Hot Trotters<lb/>
ves in military actionJelly Fellies<lb/>
wL<lb/>
60<lb/>
51<lb/>
42<lb/>
22<lb/>
33<lb/>
24<lb/>
25<lb/>
14<lb/>
14<lb/>
The Itntramurbl basketball pro-<lb/>
gram, now in full swing at Memorial<lb/>
gym, is the best ever, according to<lb/>
Homer Thomas, program director.<lb/>
More than 150 boys are participating<lb/>
in the two-league play.<lb/>
Games are played several nights<lb/>
each week, and two at a time are<lb/>
executed on the gym floor. The port-<lb/>
able bleachers are rolled back, thus<lb/>
allowing the games to be played on<lb/>
cross courts which are at least as<lb/>
large, if not larger, than most high<lb/>
school courts.<lb/>
At the end of the regular schedule,<lb/>
playoffs in both the "A" and "B"<lb/>
leagues will be held. It is hoped that<lb/>
the champions of the respective loops<lb/>
can meet to determine the all-college<lb/>
champion.<lb/>
Although the program is running<lb/>
off to perfection with far fewer for-<lb/>
feits than last year, Director Thomas<lb/>
hopes that more students interest can<lb/>
be obtained. "The quality of basket-<lb/>
ball, he srtates, is at least as good as<lb/>
that seen in most high schools and<lb/>
I hope that more students will turn<lb/>
out to follow the contests<lb/>
Some nights there are as many as<lb/>
16 teams fighting it out for positions<lb/>
in both leagues. Most of the teams<lb/>
have as many as ten players who<lb/>
perform in the intramural hardwood<lb/>
program.<lb/>
The officiating is done by student<lb/>
tutors and members of various teams<lb/>
which are not playing at the time<lb/>
of the game they call. The score is<lb/>
kept by members of the teams as<lb/>
is the time.<lb/>
Kuch game consists of four quar-<lb/>
I ra just like any other regulation<lb/>
basketball game; however, the quar-<lb/>
ters are only eight minutes long,<lb/>
and the clock does not stop for foul<lb/>
hooting. There is time between each<lb/>
quarter and also at the half of the<lb/>
contest<lb/>
Russell Bags 38<lb/>
As Pirates Down<lb/>
High Point Five<lb/>
All-State and All-Conference For-<lb/>
ward Sonny Russell dumped in 38<lb/>
points Wednesday night in High<lb/>
Point to pace the East Carolina Pi-<lb/>
rates to a 79-68 North State win<lb/>
The victory strenghtened the locaL<lb/>
lead in the league race by giving them<lb/>
an 8-2 won-lost record.<lb/>
Assisting the brilliant Russell in<lb/>
the scoring ;parade was Forward<lb/>
Charlie Huffman, who sank 20 points<lb/>
for the Buc cause. Center Bobby<lb/>
Hodges was held to 10 points.<lb/>
Howard Porter's charges had the<lb/>
score doubled at half, leading 48-24;<lb/>
bat the Panthers outscored the Pi-<lb/>
rates in the final two periods to cut<lb/>
the margin down to 11 points.<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
East Carolina G<lb/>
Russell, f 18<lb/>
Carr, f 0<lb/>
Huffman, f 8<lb/>
O'Kelley, f  0<lb/>
Hodges, c ? 3<lb/>
Hayes, c<lb/>
Bucs Engage Catamounts<lb/>
In Revenge Game Saturday<lb/>
Heath, g<lb/>
Moye, g<lb/>
Thomas, g<lb/>
Jones, g .<lb/>
Gay, g<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
College Students<lb/>
COME IN AND SEE<lb/>
FINE SELECTION OF SUITS and COATS<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
East Carolina's first football team<lb/>
was organized in 1932. One of its<lb/>
defeats that year came at the hands<lb/>
of Guilford's Quakers by a score of<lb/>
79-0.<lb/>
Totals 32<lb/>
High Point G<lb/>
Sykes, f  3<lb/>
Lisk, f  0<lb/>
Thornton, f - ? 2<lb/>
Hicks, f 1<lb/>
Alexander, c 9<lb/>
Simpson, e 0<lb/>
Moseley, g  3<lb/>
Davidson, g 6<lb/>
Totals 24<lb/>
East Carolina 25<lb/>
High Point - l4<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
16<lb/>
F<lb/>
8<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
5<lb/>
0<lb/>
6<lb/>
1<lb/>
PF<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
21<lb/>
PF<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
TP<lb/>
38<lb/>
0<lb/>
20<lb/>
0<lb/>
10<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
5<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
79<lb/>
TP<lb/>
14<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
23<lb/>
0<lb/>
12<lb/>
12<lb/>
21<lb/>
23<lb/>
10<lb/>
17<lb/>
25<lb/>
18 68<lb/>
14?79<lb/>
19?68<lb/>
iou TTa. notKin9 ? vpuV. 4oun?<lb/>
<lb/>
Dt<lb/>
(jniversi<lb/>
fc<lb/>
f5<lb/>
rno<lb/>
uh-<lb/>
D"6 olKeny<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
we think<lb/>
the White<lb/>
here he<lb/>
ted wri-<lb/>
the cares<lb/>
Iniv one of the<lb/>
Ind in the office.<lb/>
fglobe depicting<lb/>
Ihe then General<lb/>
?predecessor sev-<lb/>
that possession<lb/>
problems whicn<lb/>
iesk. ? ? ?<lb/>
ird his success<lb/>
ordial. He made<lb/>
Inistrations the<lb/>
Wrican politic<lb/>
rial touches, ?<lb/>
jor John Eisen-<lb/>
for his father<lb/>
r however,<lb/>
It will not fa" on<lb/>
Ithe bests of 1952<lb/>
ttrazine tW ,<lb/>
(n Wouks no<lb/>
pr's best no<lb/>
LJ5<lb/>
Ws"bw&amp;?e<lb/>
Llrf-t ?w <lb/>
Inking ? ,Vj &amp;&amp;<lb/>
. she cn?f u.?<lb/>
lUiting f?" 0<lb/>
?moment "J, ,<lb/>
"n't 1 <lb/>
r:<lb/>
A Republican president hag been<lb/>
elected, the price of a cup of coffee<lb/>
has gone up to ten cents, Carolina<lb/>
has beaten State and the East Caro-<lb/>
linians are pinnacled aloft the North<lb/>
State conference. The ramppaging<lb/>
Buccaneers have had beaming suc-<lb/>
cess thus far a they have run up<lb/>
eight glistening victories, a glowing<lb/>
recorded dimmed onl by shadowy set-<lb/>
Hacks. Their losses were adminis-<lb/>
tered by very small margins; never<lb/>
more than five points.<lb/>
Coach Porter has assembled a fam-<lb/>
ily of sharpshooters that can toe the<lb/>
line with any cage aggregation in<lb/>
Tar Heel land. Boasting a point<lb/>
average of 70.2 points an outing,<lb/>
the Pirate quintet has .been hitting<lb/>
the hoops with the consistent accu-<lb/>
racy of our 'bacco-chewing gran'<lb/>
pap bulls-eyeing the spit-toon. Illus-<lb/>
trating their remarkable point-flares,<lb/>
they bucketed a bulky 97 points<lb/>
against an automatic Western Caro- Qg?.<lb/>
lina machine only to haul laurels as jjg<lb/>
second ibest when WCTC exploded<lb/>
for 102.<lb/>
Sonny Russell and Bobby Hodges<lb/>
are the concrete reasong for much<lb/>
of the hardwood prosperity. This<lb/>
magndficent caging couple North State<lb/>
assassins and have literally lac-<lb/>
erated the hopes of the eight com-<lb/>
peting ball clubs with their enormous<lb/>
scoring spurts and stout defensive<lb/>
damperings. Between them thus far<lb/>
they have accumulated a tremendous<lb/>
368 points. Name two other confer-<lb/>
ence basketballers who can. boast<lb/>
better marks!<lb/>
The All-State duo has class writ-<lb/>
ten all over them and show elite<lb/>
basketball finesse that again should<lb/>
shoo 'em in for All-State honors.<lb/>
Russell is a picture ballplayer that<lb/>
strikes one as a film short on grace,<lb/>
agility and basketball mastery. Hodg-<lb/>
es is a tower of strength who stands<lb/>
as a defensive .barrier to the "alti-<lb/>
tude men" around the loop. His<lb/>
height combined with an uncanny<lb/>
eye for the bottom of the baskets<lb/>
make him a fearful jeopardy to the<lb/>
opposing teams' welfare.<lb/>
Charlie Huffman also has shown<lb/>
plenty of style and has had numer-<lb/>
ous scoring blasts. Little Cecil Heath<lb/>
has developed into the finest floor-<lb/>
man in the league and is the pos-<lb/>
sessor of a (tantalizing setshot. Fresh-<lb/>
man J. C. Thomas has come along<lb/>
well and is becoming a fine point-<lb/>
maker. Jumping Jack Carr is prob-<lb/>
ably the "coolest" of the reserves.<lb/>
Russell, Hodges<lb/>
Pace Buccaneers<lb/>
As High Scorers<lb/>
Sonny Russell and Bobby Hodges<lb/>
are leading the Pirates in total pointg<lb/>
and average per game, respectively,<lb/>
according to statistics which include<lb/>
games through the Catawba contest.<lb/>
In ten games, Russell has scored 214<lb/>
points while Hodges has dropped in<lb/>
209 in nine games for a 23.2 per<lb/>
game average.<lb/>
As a team, the Pirates have scored<lb/>
756 points to the opponents' 707 in<lb/>
?posting a 7-3 won-lost record.<lb/>
G Pts Avg<lb/>
Hodges  9 209 23.2<lb/>
Russell  10 214 21.4<lb/>
Huffman  10 117 11.7<lb/>
Heath  10 86 8.6<lb/>
Thomas 10<lb/>
 9<lb/>
 6<lb/>
OTvelly   8<lb/>
Jones 8<lb/>
Moye<lb/>
Hilburn<lb/>
Gay<lb/>
King<lb/>
Blake<lb/>
9<lb/>
7<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
757.5<lb/>
202.2<lb/>
71.2<lb/>
81.0<lb/>
40.5<lb/>
40.4<lb/>
30.4<lb/>
20.7<lb/>
00.0<lb/>
72.3<lb/>
Total<lb/>
Opponents<lb/>
756 75.6<lb/>
707 70.7<lb/>
vflte<lb/>
V<lb/>
Nothing-no. nothing-beats better taste<lb/>
and LUCKIES<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/>
L.S.M.F.TLucky 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/>
Be Happy-GO UiCKYl<lb/>
Conference Standings<lb/>
As of the first of the week East<lb/>
Carolina college's Pirates were en-<lb/>
trenched in the top position of the<lb/>
North State conference.<lb/>
W L Pet.<lb/>
East Carolina 7 2 .800<lb/>
Eton 5 2 .714<lb/>
Western Carolina .53 .633<lb/>
High Point 4 3 .571<lb/>
.Atlantic Christian  3 3 .500<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne 3 4 .429<lb/>
Appalachian ? 3 5 .375<lb/>
Guilford  2 5 .286<lb/>
Catawba ? 1 7 .125<lb/>
East Carolina college's Pirates will<lb/>
play two cr-cial North State confer-<lb/>
ence bake.l'all games this week er. .<lb/>
The Pirates will entertain Atlantic<lb/>
Christian tonight and tomorrow will<lb/>
meet the Catamounts of Western<lb/>
Carolina Teachers college.<lb/>
Tonight's contest, scheduled for<lb/>
Memorial gym at 8 o'clock, will see<lb/>
the Bucs attempt to bring the Bo<lb/>
hunk trophy, the victor's prise In<lb/>
each AC-ECC game, back to Gre.<lb/>
ville. The Bulldogs have been in pos-<lb/>
session of the cherished wooden buc-<lb/>
ket since they defeated tne locals<lb/>
in a baseball game la3t srpring.<lb/>
Even In Conference<lb/>
The visitors will bring a 3-3 con-<lb/>
ference record here tonight and an<lb/>
overall season mark of 6-7. They are<lb/>
presently in fifth place fan the eight <lb/>
team North State conference.<lb/>
Tomorrow night the players of<lb/>
Coach Howard Porter will attemp-<lb/>
to avenge defeat suffered two week<lb/>
ago at the hands of Western Caro-<lb/>
lina. The 102-97 defeat at Cullowhee<lb/>
temporarily knocked the Bucs from<lb/>
the top sipot in the league.<lb/>
WCTC Scores High<lb/>
The Catamounts will boast a high<lb/>
scoring court outfit which, until they<lb/>
were defeated Monday night by Elo.i,<lb/>
had won six consecutive games in-<lb/>
cluding four contests in which they<lb/>
scored over 100 points per game. Dur-<lb/>
ing this win streak Western Carolina<lb/>
downed North Georgia 115-59; Pied-<lb/>
mont, 101-52; East Carolina, 102-97;<lb/>
and Charleston, 109-72.<lb/>
Victories in both contests woud<lb/>
give the locals a slight edge over t e<lb/>
nearest contenders, High Point, Elon<lb/>
and Western Carolina, and practically<lb/>
insure them a top seeding in the<lb/>
conference tournament which is sche-<lb/>
duled for Winston-Salem on Febr-<lb/>
uary 25-28.<lb/>
The locals, barring unforeseen<lb/>
events, will probably start the fol-<lb/>
lowing players in both contests:<lb/>
guards, Cecil Heath and J. C. Thom-<lb/>
as; center, Bobby Hodges; forwards,<lb/>
Sonny sell and Charlie Huffman.<lb/>
Hodges and Russell are currently<lb/>
among the top scorers in the state<lb/>
with averages of 20 points per con-<lb/>
test or better.<lb/>
WASHING GREASING GAS<lb/>
COLLEGE ESSO STATION<lb/>
"A" League Standings<lb/>
Sheriffs <lb/>
Knights of Hardwood -?<lb/>
Carterets <lb/>
Fancy Pants <lb/>
Whiz Kids <lb/>
Hot Pants <lb/>
Globetrotters <lb/>
Arabs <lb/>
W<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
L<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
Good Food ? Sandwiches<lb/>
CAROLINA JRILL<lb/>
24 Hour Service<lb/>
COSMETICS ? MEDALLIONS<lb/>
AND OTHER JEWELRY<lb/>
MERLE NORMAN STUDIOS<lb/>
Better Shoes Reasonably Priced<lb/>
AT<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
517 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
.?<lb/>
H. L. Hodges &amp; Co.<lb/>
PAINTS and Hardware<lb/>
? r wre.n<lb/>
Where V <lb/>
aier than y?utf x,ucky<lb/>
Strike WfL- e 1Z <lb/>
i-tnisa oreVe<lb/>
e f- ttaPPV-00"ky?<lb/>
BOX67,r,c ? "<lb/>
Beverly D??<lb/>
SCOTT'S CLEANERS<lb/>
LITTLE KNOWN FACTS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
and tyfeMi-Hff toestam<lb/>
$<lb/>
?<lb/>
v<lb/>
rsopucT or<lb/>
C mi<lb/>
;??&amp; m?m -<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/>
S-<lb/>
THE BEST MAN<lb/>
Back in the days when a man went<lb/>
out to capture hit bride, he took<lb/>
along his "best friend" in case of<lb/>
battle.<lb/>
THE HOPE CHEST<lb/>
In former days the groom looked<lb/>
over the Hope Chest. If he didn't<lb/>
like what he saw he could refuse to<lb/>
go through with the ceremony.<lb/>
Beautiful diamond solitv I.mked<lb/>
by two side diamonds. Set in 14K<lb/>
gold.<lb/>
90<lb/>
Lautares Bros.<lb/>
Certified Gemolosrist<lb/>
"Diamond Specialists'<lb/>
IF YOU DONT KNOW DIA.NDS - KNOW YOU JCWftfi<lb/>
<pb facs="00038314_0004"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 30<lb/>
EAST CAfcOLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
Successor To Charles Atlas??Could Be<lb/>
Weight Lifting Gives Muscles<lb/>
A couple of thousand years ago,<lb/>
incht3 to<lb/>
bv Bruce Phillips<lb/>
30. At first he wore ward) 25 pound:<lb/>
but- ! tually military press<lb/>
He can als<lb/>
(gtandi<lb/>
inVeTeyS"o, Greei atMe.s a boy ?h cdlar now he but, ; ??j-?" -<lb/>
and the Roma Radiators, finely tons-up e swe 16 That! weight, and that in itself i<lb/>
eveloped young men were followed<lb/>
around as gods by the populace. To-<lb/>
aj much of the intimate worshipping<lb/>
 culminated, but the envy and ad-<lb/>
ition is ever present for those<lb/>
who have reconstructed their porous<lb/>
odies into compositions of muscle<lb/>
and physical perfection.<lb/>
Ea ? Carolina has its own "Muscles.<lb/>
of<lb/>
tion<lb/>
oar<lb/>
vv n<lb/>
n<lb/>
arm:<lb/>
i arolin; s ? sample ot physical culture, i- pictured<lb/>
, . as weighed HN pounds when<lb/>
i ?. ral ears a go.<lb/>
I sm tics and Fountain Goods<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
Pr ctor Hotel Building<lb/>
p. M. ? Sunday 8:30 A. M. - 10:50 A. M.<lb/>
A P. M. - 10 P. M.<lb/>
Incorporated" in the personage<lb/>
i. ey Thorton I.edas. Rocbiey, a<lb/>
omore major in physical educa-<lb/>
iails from Petersburg, Va.<lb/>
attending high school at Pe-<lb/>
?sburg, he became interested in<lb/>
lifting, partially because of<lb/>
. diminutive structure that was a<lb/>
te defect in his capacities and<lb/>
ped him greatly.<lb/>
Working after school at a local<lb/>
A. he started drilling with the<lb/>
ells at regular intervals. Results<lb/>
. toun ling! Rock-ribbed muscle<lb/>
i gan to replace the slender<lb/>
i shallow chest. His frail<lb/>
blossomed out and muscular<lb/>
; iok pla '? . Following grad-<lb/>
.? is from high school Rodney en-<lb/>
. the Navy blue, and while<lb/>
erving with Uncle Sam. he was able<lb/>
o continue his remarkable body<lb/>
ng.<lb/>
Stamina Sport<lb/>
Weight lifting is a sport that calls<lb/>
?  . ? v tern ation and mag-<lb/>
tan i a. For r suits it has<lb/>
to be doi ularly an I thoroughly,<lb/>
takes a lot of guts, and if you<lb/>
. . lii us, just try it a couple<lb/>
times. Yours truly personally bar-<lb/>
: one afternoon, arid for two<lb/>
following couldn't even brush<lb/>
- teeth!<lb/>
Rodney Ledas had what it took,<lb/>
and following his hitch in the service<lb/>
 1 right wh re he left off.<lb/>
 ere at East Carolina<lb/>
ued the strenuous exercises<lb/>
: off, and he<lb/>
w for it. Rodney tips<lb/>
call reconstruction!<lb/>
The height of Rodney's succea<lb/>
came to a pinnacle last December<lb/>
when he entered with a lung lisl ol<lb/>
other body builders and strongmen<lb/>
in the "Mr. Capital District" physique<lb/>
and weight lifting contest. The con-<lb/>
testants were placed into threi class<lb/>
 gfeort man. average man a:id tall<lb/>
man. Our own "body-excellent" mus-<lb/>
Cled-off honors as "Mr. Capital Di<lb/>
trict" in his division. He was awarded<lb/>
a beautiful L2-inch trophy as a de<lb/>
notation for his outstanding achieve-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Sheer Strength<lb/>
To illustrate Rodney's capacity of<lb/>
sheer strength, he can prone (lying<lb/>
phenomenal!<lb/>
Rodney intends to eocitinue<lb/>
leaden exercises and plans to ?<lb/>
numerous future physique and weighl<lb/>
lifting decathalons. Pr ? I<lb/>
teaching a course in body<lb/>
,n the basemen! of the Wi ! I<lb/>
If your friends m i I you<lb/>
over their hea<lb/>
flat on his back and pushing up-<lb/>
mg.<lb/>
pressing you<lb/>
can be sure Rodney Leda . "Mu<lb/>
Incorporated has taken them nd? i<lb/>
his tutorage!<lb/>
Rodney takes In w<lb/>
and he truly belii <lb/>
weights makes one<lb/>
? . and happy R<lb/>
, g to become ;t Pn3<lb/>
Fortune to you. Rodney !?? '?<lb/>
i<lb/>
Before<lb/>
hi<lb/>
I JP99U C<lb/>
' -f&amp;piM eftspyy<lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co. inc<lb/>
AND TRUCKS TRACTORS AND<lb/>
??. iM EQUIPMENT<lb/>
cab 3 at 15 noun<lb/>
ted " lilding hims If a body" he<lb/>
his money worth while<lb/>
ir n at 11s. Mind you. this<lb/>
oundage isn't fat, but solid brazen<lb/>
muscle! Rodney has sweated for<lb/>
f it, and after two full<lb/>
j  al jerking the ponderous<lb/>
? . he has a truly magnificent<lb/>
did.<lb/>
He has developed biceps from a<lb/>
lii 13 inch - to a mighty 18 inches.<lb/>
: : nk that's an arm,<lb/>
? m, asure yours sometime! He<lb/>
i . a 45 inch normal) chest<lb/>
. a eg ? ? ? mk of 38 inches.<lb/>
B the ? i hi has p U bhree Inches<lb/>
. wa sit, coming from a shadow)<lb/>
TUESDAY For 3 I?iir Days!<lb/>
AND VDVENT1 Rl . ? - Filmed Against<lb/>
? Adventurous ! ckgrounds Ol The World Today<lb/>
?????? ? ?<lb/>
Gregory Susan<lb/>
PECK-HAYWARD<lb/>
Ava<lb/>
GARDNER<lb/>
I'm i - This Attraction<lb/>
50c - Sighl Tic - Children<lb/>
i rrn<lb/>
PIT!<lb/>
Li<lb/>
C7T<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
, 1:01) - 3:00 - 5:00 - 7:00 -9:00<lb/>
T II i: A T K E<lb/>
?<lb/>
? -?- - <lb/>
:<lb/>
:<lb/>
FOOT LONG HOTDOGS<lb/>
25c<lb/>
CHICKEN AND SHRIMP<lb/>
IN-THE-BOX<lb/>
WILL DELIVER ANY ORDER OF<lb/>
$3.00 OR MORE<lb/>
JUST DIAL 5741<lb/>
GREENVIEW DRIVE.IN<lb/>
WEST END CIRCLE<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
MMffffMyMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM<lb/>
fMOMrt KSWmKMTS - KAUTffWUY ttHD<lb/>
59 to $600<lb/>
BISSETTE'S<lb/>
DRUG STORE<lb/>
416 Evans Street<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
"Your College Shop"<lb/>
Greenville, N. C<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
r? atJTC'V<lb/>
?r-<lb/>
ARE YOU TOUGH ENOUGH FOR<lb/>
JOB?<lb/>
If you can make the grade, the.<lb/>
U.S. Air Force will award yob a<lb/>
commission, your wings and pay<lb/>
you over $5,000 a year!<lb/>
?&amp;fe<lb/>
JjMlMlttjgiMttMYiri I nfiVfiitrtlIVrt iWUfriiSmufniii i.Vi ?<lb/>
Can you "take it" 6 days a week? For 52 weeks? Can<lb/>
you meet the high standards required to be an Avia-<lb/>
tion Cadet? If you can?then here's a man-size oppor-<lb/>
tunity! An opportunity to serve your country and<lb/>
build a personal career that will fit you for responsible<lb/>
positions both in military and commercial aviation.<lb/>
It won't be easy I Training discipline for Aviation<lb/>
Cadets is rigid. You'll work hard, study hard, play<lb/>
hard?especially for the first few weeks. But when it's<lb/>
over, you'll be a pro?with a career ahead of you that<lb/>
will take you as far as you want to go. You graduate<lb/>
as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Air Force, with pay of<lb/>
$5,300.00 a year. And this is only the beginning-<lb/>
your opportunities for advancement are unlimited.<lb/>
ARE YOU ELIGIBLE?<lb/>
To qualify as an Aviation Cadet, you must have com-<lb/>
pleted at least two years of college. This is a minimum<lb/>
requirement?it's best if you stay in school and gradu-<lb/>
ate. In addition, you must be between 19 and 26Vi<lb/>
years, unmarried, and in good physical condition.<lb/>
YOU CAN CHOOSE BETWEEN<lb/>
PILOT OR AIRCRAFT OBSERVER<lb/>
If you choose to be an Aircraft Observer, your train-<lb/>
ing will be in Navigation, Bombardment, Radar<lb/>
Operation or Aircraft Performance Engineering.<lb/>
New Aviation Cadet Training Classes Begin Every Few Weeks I<lb/>
HERE'S WHAT TO DO:<lb/>
1. Take a transcript of your college credits and a copy<lb/>
of your birth certificate to your nearest Air Force<lb/>
Base or Recruiting Station. Fill out the application<lb/>
they give you.<lb/>
2. If application is accepted, the Air Force will arrango<lb/>
for you to take a physical examination.<lb/>
3. Next, you will be given a written and manual apti-<lb/>
tude test<lb/>
4. If you pass your physical and other tests, you will<lb/>
be scheduled for an Aviation Cadet Training Class.<lb/>
The Selective Service Act allows you a four-month<lb/>
deferment while waiting class assignment.<lb/>
WflBte tO g?t tnOte d?tll!S? Visit your nearest Air Force Base or Air Force Recruiting Officer.<lb/>
OR WRITE TO: AVIATION CADET HEADQUARTERS, U. S. AIR FORCE, WASHINGTON 25, D. C<lb/>
l.S. AIR FORCE<lb/>
nil<lb/>
<lb/>
v<lb/>
!<lb/>
 I<lb/>
<pb facs="00038314_0005"/><lb/>
l. ttfil<lb/>
flUPAy<lb/>
DECEMBER 12, 9o2<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
;s<lb/>
tte Presa<lb/>
? quite <lb/>
pmistra.<lb/>
en- Say8<lb/>
diversity<lb/>
f0r con-<lb/>
fly the<lb/>
J Penn<lb/>
Nnt D)<lb/>
d: "I be.<lb/>
er-t nes.<lb/>
(taste and<lb/>
3t inter-<lb/>
he adds,<lb/>
racV and<lb/>
r editorial<lb/>
f admin-<lb/>
University<lb/>
? liberal<lb/>
7'fuU re-<lb/>
duce of<lb/>
"ey make<lb/>
t are less<lb/>
public<lb/>
oms w?<lb/>
criticize<lb/>
?tely with<lb/>
re "free-<lb/>
e and de-<lb/>
should be<lb/>
? paper<lb/>
c some in<lb/>
Ffun, and<lb/>
"minately<lb/>
;e his ire.<lb/>
iat of the<lb/>
by those<lb/>
ceds to be<lb/>
SAY IT;<lb/>
t sen given<lb/>
to make<lb/>
to publk<lb/>
?n Thanks-<lb/>
laside each<lb/>
Yes, we<lb/>
fter as for<lb/>
Hollars are<lb/>
our pro-<lb/>
sis. Money<lb/>
he dreaded<lb/>
eals. With<lb/>
jght more<lb/>
present at<lb/>
Buy some<lb/>
be helping<lb/>
linated our<lb/>
ither, plus<lb/>
lA is again<lb/>
Irgest clubs<lb/>
I girls, from<lb/>
in library<lb/>
chedule for<lb/>
rsday, Dec-<lb/>
ks cent gift<lb/>
evidence of<lb/>
LA is lauD-<lb/>
and placef<lb/>
by WAA<lb/>
the toum-<lb/>
rward, Ann<lb/>
the guard8<lb/>
r, Ton<lb/>
jive "rolled<lb/>
(hi Sigm <lb/>
find a<lb/>
dirty<lb/>
h endeo<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Salisbury Scene Of Bowl Battle Saturday<lb/>
Mind f?i<lb/>
ftftt ur"<lb/>
0 bM!<lb/>
have<lb/>
been circulating of<lb/>
joncernm prospective ot,pon-<lb/>
for a?t fall rate erid team-<lb/>
these are strictly<lb/>
l been said by some<lb/>
with which negotiations<lb/>
itd out include Uni-<lb/>
. -ville, Hampden-Syd-<lb/>
of Richmond, Stet-<lb/>
od even the up and<lb/>
ia Polytechnic Insti-<lb/>
prowess by defeating Virginia Tech<lb/>
of the Southern conference.<lb/>
rtr<lb/>
?:?'<lb/>
niv'<lb/>
Congratulations are in order for<lb/>
Anwer Joseph who drew this week's<lb/>
fine cartoon. Joseph spent a lot of<lb/>
time on it and it should be obvious<lb/>
to all that he's done an excellent job.<lb/>
ho far as<lb/>
1L e! the.e teams,<lb/>
,hw column knows, has definitely<lb/>
" the Pirates next fall is concern-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
:?n ?? ?<lb/>
tagine '<lb/>
fa B<lb/>
?xa:i. ?<lb/>
In the<lb/>
r v<lb/>
Htm and Observer<lb/>
? st Sunday concero-<lb/>
iwsoB, football player<lb/>
V . n college which is<lb/>
f Richmond, Va.<lb/>
is mentioned that<lb/>
?f a severe brain<lb/>
the gridiron well<lb/>
ago, has been lying<lb/>
Medical college hos-<lb/>
f the leading brain<lb/>
tenon have worked on<lb/>
??<lb/>
id'<lb/>
.?? . to them it is still a<lb/>
baa survived.<lb/>
U -vligious followers of<lb/>
Law claim that it is pray-<lb/>
. . alone, that has kept<lb/>
during the past five<lb/>
Law-<lb/>
sor. I ii<lb/>
Protests<lb/>
;o HH ?<lb/>
Mat n<lb/>
i<lb/>
week5.<lb/>
 . intervals since<lb/>
. groups of Catholics,<lb/>
f. and Jews have flocked<lb/>
le chapel on the Randolph-<lb/>
to pray for the star<lb/>
recovery. Medical science<lb/>
:s bat! the boy struggles on.<lb/>
iai qo? rs that unless some<lb/>
plication arises Ted<lb/>
Lgvson stover and be able to<lb/>
rexrr. '? - ?? M well as to his<lb/>
hi w rtea.<lb/>
The local ragers opened their sea-<lb/>
son in fin? form last weekend by<lb/>
soundly thumping Guilford. Al-<lb/>
though the team looked fairly good<lb/>
in winn n?- it isn't going to be an<lb/>
??t road in the North State confer-<lb/>
ence this ear. High Point and Elon<lb/>
haTt both served notice of their<lb/>
Bears Play Here<lb/>
In First Contest<lb/>
At Home For Bucs<lb/>
by Jack Scott<lb/>
Coach Howard Porters E; ?t Car-<lb/>
olina Pirates play their first home<lb/>
game of the season tomorrow -night<lb/>
when they meet the Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
Bears in the new gymnasium at 8<lb/>
o'clock.<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne, defending North<lb/>
St ate conference champions, will<lb/>
bring a strong and high-scoring team<lb/>
to Greenville. In three non-confer-<lb/>
ence games last week, the Bears av-<lb/>
eraged better than 73 points per<lb/>
game in winning from Newberry and<lb/>
Wofford and losing to Presbyterian.<lb/>
Roland Barker has been bhe Bears'<lb/>
top point-maker thus far this sea-<lb/>
son, but the team is well balanced<lb/>
and will give the Bucs plenty of<lb/>
trouble.<lb/>
Although nothing definite has been<lb/>
announced, Coach Porter will prob-<lb/>
ably have a different line-up of<lb/>
carters agains Lenoir Rhyne. At<lb/>
the forwards will 'be Sonny Russell<lb/>
and J. C Thomas, Bobby Hodges<lb/>
will probably be at center, and at<lb/>
the guard posts Cecil Heath and<lb/>
Charlie Huffman will start. Other<lb/>
players who will be ready for action<lb/>
include Jack Carr, Richard Blake,<lb/>
Paul Jones, Jerre Hiliburn, Bob<lb/>
Move, Harold O'Kelley and Harry<lb/>
Hayes.<lb/>
By winning tomorrow night, East<lb/>
Carolina can take over first place<lb/>
m the North State conference stand-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
After Lenoir Rhyne, the Bucs'<lb/>
next game is scheduled against Ca-<lb/>
tawba Tuesday night in Greenville.<lb/>
Pirates MeetmGolden Eagles<lb/>
In First Post Season Clash<lb/>
Facts And Figures<lb/>
According to statistics of the East<lb/>
Carolina-Guilford game played last<lb/>
Saturday night in Greensboro, the<lb/>
Pirates hit on 34 per cent of their<lb/>
shots from the floor as compared to<lb/>
Guilford's 31 per cent accuracy.<lb/>
A closer look at the figures shows<lb/>
that the Bucs took more sl;ots than<lb/>
the Quakers, 72 to 64. It also shows<lb/>
that they were more consistent, mak-<lb/>
ing 33 per cent in the first half and<lb/>
36 per cent in the final periods while<lb/>
Guilford could hit on only 25 per<lb/>
cent during the first half and then<lb/>
came back to make 39 per cent of<lb/>
their second half shots from the<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
fga fg fta ft floor <lb/>
Guilford 64 20 42 28 81<lb/>
EOC 72 25 40 28<lb/>
Russell  - 23 9 7 6<lb/>
Huffman 17 5 5 5<lb/>
Thomas 7 3 5 3<lb/>
Carr 7 14 1<lb/>
Heath  6 3 11 8<lb/>
Blake 6 2 11<lb/>
Moye -  3 2 2 0<lb/>
O'Kelly 3 0 3 S<lb/>
Hilburn .0021 0<lb/>
Bend down and let's take amother<lb/>
ipeep through the keyhole at East<lb/>
Carolina's current cage edition. The<lb/>
highly-regarded Pirates outran a<lb/>
ford was over the orientation with<lb/>
three games under their belt and the<lb/>
Pirates were just stepping into the<lb/>
ring for round one. Grievously for<lb/>
the Quakers, the Pirates found the<lb/>
range after a few rounds and counter-<lb/>
attacked beautifully. The two teams<lb/>
toed the line and fought neck and<lb/>
neck right down to the final minutes.<lb/>
Sonny Russell turned in a splendid<lb/>
game, fanning the cords with 24<lb/>
points, most of those in the fading<lb/>
minutes. Charlie Huffman was a<lb/>
shining star on defense and also<lb/>
strong Guilford quintet, who, inci<lb/>
dentally, "ain't no slouch at pick 'em .contributed 15 points to the Pirate<lb/>
34<lb/>
39<lb/>
29<lb/>
43<lb/>
14<lb/>
50<lb/>
33<lb/>
67<lb/>
0<lb/>
ut and lay 'em down to open the<lb/>
gate on the new conference campaign.<lb/>
Playing minus the notable services<lb/>
of huge forward Bobby Hodges, the<lb/>
Bucs did a most creditable job in<lb/>
stepping on the Quakers' toes, 78-68.<lb/>
Until the final quarter, the score<lb/>
was as close as your T-shirt with<lb/>
Bob Sheaf, Guilford's terrific (point-<lb/>
maker, matching basket with 'basket<lb/>
with EC's big three, Sonny Russell,<lb/>
Charlie Huffman and little but loud<lb/>
Cecil Heath.<lb/>
The locals stayed one step behind<lb/>
the home club -throughout most of<lb/>
the contest, mainly because Guil-<lb/>
When dgSiikNr t, c<lb/>
6et something ?-J? srtlokes,<lb/>
 cleaner, sher.srnoo ,<lb/>
rled love some<lb/>
Udcij Strikes<lb/>
? r u I'm taught so many Words-<lb/>
In French lm "Mu9" ? ? ????<lb/>
 instance,<lb/>
onH: goto<lb/>
Un tucjeu. StrdSSr es<lb/>
For instance, rny '<lb/>
But7dor go; da?o<lb/>
?. Ar.ne Goldjarb<lb/>
tfwtrk State T.chr.<lb/>
Doris Bratt<lb/>
Dor,s D?? N9bra$ka<lb/>
University ot i'?<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
?v<lb/>
ledger. -In our opinion, Huffman<lb/>
proved himself capable of a starting<lb/>
assignment. Charlie's calibre of play-<lb/>
should merit him a regular position<lb/>
because he's too valuable a man to<lb/>
jockey the bench.<lb/>
Cecil Heath had his throttle op-<lb/>
ened all the way, and he didn't spare<lb/>
the steam as he poured in 14 points<lb/>
and stood as a defensive barrier for<lb/>
the Quakers all night. Heath should<lb/>
certainly develop into one of the<lb/>
finest floormen in the state. He<lb/>
combines speed, agility and fine aim<lb/>
from the floor to make up for lack<lb/>
of size.<lb/>
Frosh J. C. Thomas showed signs<lb/>
of future brilliance with flashes of<lb/>
sparkling play. Richie Blake also<lb/>
came off the bench to weigh heavily<lb/>
in the triumph. Bob Moye and Har-<lb/>
old O'Kelly denied the Quakers a<lb/>
higher score with fine defensive ac-<lb/>
tions before they left the game via<lb/>
the foul route.<lb/>
Bucs Win Opener<lb/>
As Russell Stars<lb/>
With 24 Markers<lb/>
East Carolina's Pirates opened<lb/>
their North State conference sched-<lb/>
ule Saturday night by downing the<lb/>
Guilford Quakers 78-68 in a game<lb/>
played on the loser's court.<lb/>
Sonny Russell, Charlie Huffman<lb/>
and Cecil Heath led the way to vic-<lb/>
tory for the Pirates. Russell, spark-<lb/>
.plug senior forward, ibucketed nine<lb/>
field goals and six free throws to<lb/>
pace the Pirate scoring with 24<lb/>
points. Huffman tossed in 15 and<lb/>
Heath 14. Bob Shoaf led the night's<lb/>
scoring, however, as he sank 10 field<lb/>
goals and 15 of 22 gratis shots for Painter<lb/>
a 35 point total.<lb/>
Heath, the smallest player on the<lb/>
Pirate squad, was the man who pull-<lb/>
ed the Pirates through. His stellar<lb/>
defensive game and some timely<lb/>
points in the closing minutes in-<lb/>
sured a Buccaneer victory.<lb/>
Guilford had a lead in the game<lb/>
from the start, marching out in front<lb/>
16-14 at the end of the otpening peri-<lb/>
od and holding a 35-34 margin at half;<lb/>
however, a fourth quarter Pirate<lb/>
spurt of 26 points clinched the game<lb/>
for the East Carolina lads.<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
East Carolina athletic history will<lb/>
ge made in Salisbury tomorrow as<lb/>
the Pirate gridders meet the Clarion<lb/>
State Golden Eagles in the annual<lb/>
Lions bowl.<lb/>
The game will mark the first<lb/>
Pirate venture in post-season foot-<lb/>
ball contests. The Lions bowl is the<lb/>
successor to the Pythian bowl.<lb/>
At least three Bucs will miss the<lb/>
big contest, as End Bobby Hodges<lb/>
and Halfback Hal O'Kelley are mem-<lb/>
bers of the EOC basketball crew.<lb/>
Hodges' left end position will prob-<lb/>
ably be shared by Larry Rhodes and<lb/>
J. D. Bradford.<lb/>
Grissom Out<lb/>
Placement specialist Hawk Gris-<lb/>
som will.ibe idle with an injured foot.<lb/>
Freshman Bubba Mathews is being<lb/>
groomed as a replacemeent.<lb/>
For seven seniors it will mark<lb/>
their last Buc clash. They are Sandy<lb/>
Siler, All-Conference Dwight Shoe,<lb/>
Doc Smith, Bill McDonald, Jack Ben-<lb/>
zie, Illard Yarborough and John<lb/>
Guilford<lb/>
Shoaf, f <lb/>
Mikles, f <lb/>
Smith, f <lb/>
Armstrong, f<lb/>
Robinson, c -<lb/>
Callicutt, g ?<lb/>
fg ft<lb/>
10 15<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
Godfrey, g 0<lb/>
Hilderbrand, g <lb/>
Osteen, g j<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
6<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
pftp<lb/>
5 35<lb/>
3 3<lb/>
4 6<lb/>
3 4<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
5 10<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
4 7<lb/>
3 2<lb/>
Statistically, the Pennsylvania<lb/>
school has it over the Pirates. But<lb/>
statistics often lie. ECC finished<lb/>
with a 6-2-2 record while Clarion<lb/>
State had a clean slate of eight<lb/>
victories.<lb/>
Pirates' Record 6-2-2<lb/>
The Bucs lost to Norfolk Navy,<lb/>
13-7, and to Lenoir Rhyne, 7-6. Ties<lb/>
were with Catawba, 7-7, and Stetson,<lb/>
19-19. The Buccaneers defeated Ap-<lb/>
prentice school, 37-6; Elon, 25-9;<lb/>
Western Carolina, 21-7; Guilford,<lb/>
41-0; Appalachian, 22-19; and West<lb/>
Virginia Tech, 34-7.<lb/>
Clarion State's record consisted of<lb/>
wins over Indiana State, 21-12; Ed-<lb/>
inboro State, 20-0; St. Vincent, 25-<lb/>
0; Thiel, 26-6; Brockport State, 24-<lb/>
6; California (.Pa.) State, 34-0; Slip-<lb/>
pery Rock, 12-0; and Geneva, 14-0.<lb/>
Totals  20 28 27 68<lb/>
East Carolina fg ft pftp<lb/>
Russell, f  9<lb/>
Jones, f 0<lb/>
Carr, f  1<lb/>
Blake, f  2<lb/>
Huffman, c<lb/>
Heath, g <lb/>
Hilburn, g<lb/>
5<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
'?SrwftSrt<lb/>
vvsofl<lb/>
tHis&amp;<lb/>
LUCKIES TASTE<lb/>
BETTER!<lb/>
They're made better to taste<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 1<lb/>
Why? Because Luckies are made better to taste<lb/>
better. And, what's more, Luckies are made of fine<lb/>
tobacco. L.S.M.F.TLucky Strike Means Fine<lb/>
Tobacco.<lb/>
So, for the thing you want most in a cigarette<lb/>
for better taste-cleaner, fresher, smoother taste<lb/>
Be Happy-Go Lucky!<lb/>
FOR A CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER TASTE<lb/>
Be Happy-GO LUCKY!<lb/>
HOME LOANS<lb/>
Interest Rate at 4 up to 20<lb/>
years to repay. No brokerage com-<lb/>
mission, no service charges.<lb/>
Insurance protects you, not the<lb/>
lender. Guarantees your widow:<lb/>
? A Home Paid For<lb/>
? Not a Mortage.<lb/>
Investigate Now and do not<lb/>
wait until your present mortgage<lb/>
expires.<lb/>
For Financing and Refinancing<lb/>
homes, consult<lb/>
Mamie Ruth Timstall<lb/>
Special Agent<lb/>
Equitable Life Assurance<lb/>
Society<lb/>
108 Grande Ave. Dial 2481<lb/>
mm<lb/>
CHRISTMAS CARDS<lb/>
"BUY THE BOX"<lb/>
Thomas, g ?l 3<lb/>
Moye, g  2<lb/>
O'Kelley, 0<lb/>
g<lb/>
6<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
5<lb/>
8<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0 24<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 3<lb/>
1 5<lb/>
3 15<lb/>
4 14<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
4 9<lb/>
5 4<lb/>
5 3<lb/>
Clarion State Record<lb/>
Clarion State 21, Indiana StaU 12<lb/>
Clarion State 20, Edenboro State t<lb/>
Clarion State 25, St. Vincent ?<lb/>
Clarion State 26, Thiel ?<lb/>
Clarion State 26, Brockpsrt StaU<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
25 28 24 78<lb/>
Clarion State 34, California State 0 Clarion State 12, Slippery Rock ?<lb/>
Clarion State 14, Geneva ?<lb/>
Good Food ? Sandwiche<lb/>
CAROLINA GRILL<lb/>
24 Hour Service<lb/>
Better Shoes Reasonably Priced<lb/>
AT<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
517 Dickinson Av?nu?<lb/>
c ?<lb/>
g <lb/>
e t<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?A.T.C<lb/>
C? 1N NATION-WIO dentifl-<lb/>
e survey based on ac <lb/>
ati?flTfn 80 leading -JjS cigarette<lb/>
terV1C efer L1" j-Luckies' better<lb/>
??&amp;-?- ' cky Strike gained<lb/>
by z!?Zd shows ? W than na-<lb/>
V<lb/>
"<lb/>
Qtortfi Potter coUt<lb/>
University of WO<lb/>
14<lb/>
l3faste<lb/>
also -? ,ruffai xu??? -?<lb/>
?rrs ?!?<lb/>
brands<lb/>
PRODUCT 0F(?eW-O?y<lb/>
AMERICA'S LEADING MAMOTACTUKBR OF CIOAKETTSt<lb/>
EVERGREEN<lb/>
14 for ?l.00<lb/>
AISGMIM<lb/>
LIFE<lb/>
'Decorated with<lb/>
gay sprays of colorful<lb/>
Christmas Evergreen.<lb/>
CAROLINA OFFICE<lb/>
EQUIPMENT CO.<lb/>
804 Evans St Dial 3570<lb/>
Your own snapshot it printed<lb/>
as part of each card. All you<lb/>
need to do is give us the pic-<lb/>
ture negative and select the<lb/>
card design you want. Prompt<lb/>
service on all orders.<lb/>
filSSETTE'S<lb/>
416 Evans Street<lb/>
<pb facs="00038314_0006"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>