<?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">
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<pb facs="00038320_0001"/>
?y<lb/>
K<lb/>
ne<lb/>
Now Is Your Chance To Vote!<lb/>
al h, ??<lb/>
ti;<lb/>
' ATS<lb/>
ds<lb/>
A.M.<lb/>
O.<lb/>
tte<lb/>
to<lb/>
le<lb/>
it<lb/>
but the 1953-54 SGA ItoAtriW f?f H<lb/>
East Carolina a chance to do omptr,i?t k f he 8tudent at<lb/>
?. now The JI'AllR- <lb/>
be largely determined by a student vote Thursday Apr 1 9<lb/>
We are running a sample of what the ballot will l 11<lb/>
,vhere on this page. We feel that Kdf?ch<lb/>
o see to it that everyone goes to the polls Thursday and votes<lb/>
for next years entertainments. In the nast thp t?,w v,<lb/>
only been able to talk about the programs after ttyTaleap<lb/>
roared here but now iach person who so desires hafthe chance"<lb/>
10 exprf3 h?sef b?fore the schedule is set up for next year<lb/>
The balot, which is in a survey form, Should be tTen<lb/>
s nouslv by all persons who fill it out. Each school year the<lb/>
programs that appear on campus cost the student body over<lb/>
$7,000. It is the students that pay this money, and every student<lb/>
aid do all m his power to see to it that he gets his monev's<lb/>
Are we going to do anything about our Entertainment<lb/>
series? If we are, we better do it Thursday because that is when<lb/>
we witl have the chance that we have been wanting.<lb/>
Teachers Playhouse Presents<lb/>
Annual Children's Play Soon<lb/>
Dramatics Group Plans<lb/>
To Stage Six Showings<lb/>
In Schools Of County<lb/>
Adventures of Robin Hood and his<lb/>
will be enacted by members of<lb/>
 East Carolina college Teachers<lb/>
OttiM when they present in April<lb/>
- annual play for children. Six<lb/>
rr'ormances, primarily for the en-<lb/>
? ill of school children in Pitt<lb/>
mty, have been scheduled for pre-<lb/>
ation in Greenville. Two addi-<lb/>
.1 performances will be given in<lb/>
K nston.<lb/>
. eral thousand people, both chil-<lb/>
and adults, are expected to at-<lb/>
: the play.<lb/>
nsoring the children's play<lb/>
D this year as formerly will be<lb/>
?'?? nville Branch of the Ameri-<lb/>
association of University Women.<lb/>
C. A. Bowen of Greenville is<lb/>
aging the distribution of tickets<lb/>
? schools throughout Pitt county.<lb/>
Dr. Lucile H. Charles of the East<lb/>
arolina English department, direc-<lb/>
f dramatic arts for the college,<lb/>
direct the Robin Hood produc-<lb/>
The cast and the technical and<lb/>
?ess staffs will be composed of<lb/>
nt members of the Teachers<lb/>
house.<lb/>
The dramatization chosen for the<lb/>
; reduction is "Robin Hood, or The<lb/>
Merry Outlaws of Sherwood Forest"<lb/>
; the well-known playwright Owen<lb/>
'avis. It presents in an attractive<lb/>
version legends of the famous out-<lb/>
law and catches the spirit of Merry<lb/>
England. Characters include many of<lb/>
? who have become immortal in<lb/>
ory and ballad?Robin Hood him-<lb/>
? If, Maid Marian, Little John, Friar<lb/>
tc and others.<lb/>
- play will be first presented<lb/>
I 16 at the Eppes high school<lb/>
Greenville. Adults will have an<lb/>
rtunity to attend a evening per-<lb/>
' rmance April 20 in the College<lb/>
re. Matinee performances in the<lb/>
-?? theatre are scheduled as fol-<lb/>
lows: April 20, 21, 22, 23. The two<lb/>
nuances in Kinston will take<lb/>
; lace April 24.<lb/>
m.<lb/>
Radio Schedule<lb/>
SUNDAYS<lb/>
WGTM Wilson?2:00-2:30 p. m<lb/>
Music department broadcast<lb/>
WGTC Greenville?7:30-8:00 p<lb/>
East Carolina orchestra<lb/>
SATURDAYS<lb/>
WGTC Greenville?6:30-6:45 p. m.<lb/>
"Organ Reveries7 (George Perry)<lb/>
THURSDAYS<lb/>
WFTC Kinton?10:15-10:30 p. m.<lb/>
"Organ Reveries" (George Perry)<lb/>
The Music department broadcast<lb/>
will be a portion of the recital by<lb/>
Jeanine Ennis, soprano, and Catherine<lb/>
Stephenson, pianist, presented in Aus-<lb/>
tin auditorium, March 23.<lb/>
Note: Beginning the. week of April<lb/>
5th, the music department program<lb/>
will be broadcast also over Station<lb/>
WIAM Williamston.<lb/>
Easttaro<lb/>
VOLUME XXVIII<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1953<lb/>
Pick Your Entertainments<lb/>
 ?Krder tohelP the Eftst Carolina college Entertainment com-<lb/>
?ZL !? C Ural proerams t0 the mpus which meet with the<lb/>
ThTvJi ?? StUdentS' apProval' the Student Government has requested<lb/>
otnW .C0I"mittee t0 prepare a qtionnaire which will be<lb/>
ITc t ?lT?ngn G "tUdent b?dy ?n Bt?? AP"1 ?? is hoped that<lb/>
each student will answer the questionnaire at that time<lb/>
The questionnaire will be in three parts. The first part lists all<lb/>
i, ZITTSJ W6re presented bv the Entertainment committee dur-<lb/>
ing 1J553. Every student is asked to rate each of these programs ac-<lb/>
cording to good, fair, or poor and to vindicate wheather he attended the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Number 23<lb/>
The second part of the questionnaire lists 15 programs which the<lb/>
committee has tentatively selected for the 1953-54 school year, and it<lb/>
is hoped the students will check eight of the programs which they would<lb/>
like most to see.<lb/>
The third part of the questionaire permits each studecit to make any<lb/>
comments which he feels necessary in order to help the Entertainment com-<lb/>
m selecting its 1953-64 series of programs.<lb/>
Sample Ballot<lb/>
Business Ed Frat<lb/>
Prepares To Name<lb/>
Award Recipient<lb/>
Members at East Carolina college<lb/>
of the Beta Kappa chapter of Pi<lb/>
Omega Pi, honor society for students<lb/>
of business education, are now pre-<lb/>
paring to select the recipient of the<lb/>
National Chapter award offered an-<lb/>
nually by Pi Omega Pi. The award<lb/>
will go to the chapter, among 85<lb/>
in this country, which is judged most<lb/>
outstanding in its activties during<lb/>
the present school year.<lb/>
Last year, when the award was<lb/>
established, the Beta Kappa chapter<lb/>
at East Carolina was selected as the<lb/>
first to receive this national recog-<lb/>
nition. As a result, this spring the<lb/>
college chapter here will act as judge<lb/>
hi choosing the recipient. The deci-<lb/>
sion will be made by April 15.<lb/>
New Counselors<lb/>
Begin Functions<lb/>
Next Fall Term<lb/>
Twenty-six women students at East<lb/>
1 iriina college have been selected<lb/>
? i act as counselors to new women<lb/>
students attending the college during<lb/>
1963-1954 term, according to an<lb/>
? nouneement from the office of I<lb/>
Dean of Women Ruth White. Their i<lb/>
itieg will begin with the opening<lb/>
I -he fall quarter of 1953.<lb/>
m-elors were chosen for the<lb/>
ant qualities they have .shown<lb/>
n scholarship, leadership, character,<lb/>
(operation with others and service<lb/>
to the college. Their work will be<lb/>
directed toward the orientation of<lb/>
women students to campus life and<lb/>
adjustment to the college program.<lb/>
Those honored by being chosen as<lb/>
counselors are Anna K. Avant,<lb/>
Whiteville; Airlee Barbour, Four<lb/>
Oaks; Nancy Bruce, Wilmington;<lb/>
Betty Jo Carroll, Greenville; Jane<lb/>
Mann Credle, New Holland; Laura<lb/>
B. C.edl , New Holland; Patsy Davis,<lb/>
Raleigh; Sadie Francis, Conway; Ha-<lb/>
zel Garner, Roanoke Rapids; Betty<lb/>
Kay Harri Halifax; Nancy C. Hen-<lb/>
derson, Hubert; and Erleen Lilley,<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
0ther8 who will act a? counselors<lb/>
include Sara Harrington, Fairmont;<lb/>
Janet Latta, Roxboro; Mary Ann<lb/>
Lougklin, Southport; Carol Lucas,<lb/>
West End; Joyce McNeely, Rocky<lb/>
Mount; Mary packer, Warsaw; Au-<lb/>
drey Phillips, Trenton; Frances Poe,<lb/>
Fuquay Springs; Mildred Reynolds,<lb/>
Columbia; Barbara Rigshee, Dur-<lb/>
ham; Jane Riley, Fuquay Springs;<lb/>
Susie Spivey, Windsor; BeveTly Sum-<lb/>
ner, Wilmington; and Marvina<lb/>
White, WinfalL<lb/>
Another With All Ones<lb/>
In last week's "East Carolinian"<lb/>
there was a release of Dean's list<lb/>
and Honor roll students. A list of<lb/>
students making all ones appeared<lb/>
in the issue. Rebecca Gail Plemmons'<lb/>
name was not included in the early<lb/>
list, according to Registrar Grval L.<lb/>
Phillips; therefore, we are running<lb/>
the correction now.<lb/>
Listed elow are the programs which were sponsored by East Caro-<lb/>
lina college Entertainment committee during 1952-53. The committee should<lb/>
i:ke to have your reaction to these various programs. Please check after<lb/>
inch program whether you saw it, did not see it and rate it according to<lb/>
good, fair, poor:<lb/>
Program Did See Did Not See Rate<lb/>
YALENTINA OUMANSKY, dramatic dancer<lb/>
PAUL FLEMING, magician ,<lb/>
WILLIAM AND EMILY MU.IR, sculptor and<lb/>
artist in lecture demonstration M<lb/>
BY RON JAN IS, pianist  <lb/>
ROBERT SHAW CHORALE<lb/>
EUGENE CONLEY, tenor <lb/>
THE SALZBURG MARIONETTES <lb/>
DR. T. K. BEBEK, lecturer <lb/>
IjAY ANTHONY, concert-dance band (future event)<lb/>
In order to help your Entertainment committee briTig cultural pro-<lb/>
grams to the campus which meet with the majority's approval, there is<lb/>
 ted below a number of programs which are being tentatively considered<lb/>
or 1953-54. Please check eight programs which you would like to see most:<lb/>
(1. DON COSSACK CHOIR AND DANCERS?Twenty-five male<lb/>
singers and dancers of Russian folk songs and boisterous regi-<lb/>
mental Cossack dances.<lb/>
i 2. NORTH CAROLINA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA<lb/>
(3. BORIS GOLDOVSKY'S OPERA THEATRE?presents Mozart's<lb/>
"Merry Masquerade a thre-act comic opera with seven featured<lb/>
singers and accompanists.<lb/>
(4. THE AMERICAN ALBUM OF FAMILIAR MUSIC?The company<lb/>
includes a7i orchestra of 20 excellent musicians, a chorus of eight<lb/>
and four brilliant soloists. This group of 32 brings you the music<lb/>
America loves best. (Similar to Rogers and Hammerstein pro-<lb/>
gram!)<lb/>
(5. BARTER THEATRE?presenting Eugene O'Neill's most disarming<lb/>
play, "Ah Wilderness<lb/>
(6. IMMORTAL MUSICALS?An evening of Sigmund Romberg's<lb/>
music m concert form, featuring a concert version of "Desert Song"<lb/>
with a special narration written by Oscar Hammerstein II, four<lb/>
featured singers and a mixed vocal chorus of twelve voices.<lb/>
(7. BALLET RUSSE DE MONTE CAROLO CONCERT COMPANY?<lb/>
featuring "Gaite Parisienne"?Company of 17 with two pianos.<lb/>
(8. PANEGYRIS?Twenty-two foremost singers, dancers a-nd instru-<lb/>
mentalists in a colorful panorama depicting 300 years of the art<lb/>
and culture of the Cradle of Civilization.<lb/>
(9. EUZKADI?a festival company of Basque dancers and singers<lb/>
known as "Euzkadi Very colorful.<lb/>
(10. PHILHARMONIC PIANO QUARTETTE?Four-piano team-<lb/>
Something new and spectacular in piano playing.<lb/>
( 11. DOROTHY WARENSKJOLD?Soprano.<lb/>
( 12. MILDRED MILLER?Mezzo-soprano.<lb/>
( 13. ANNA RUSSELL?(Comedienne?"Mimic of highbrow music<lb/>
(14. CHARLES L. WAGNER GRAND OPERA COMPANY?presenting<lb/>
"Verdi's 'II Trovatore The company includes a 26-piece orchestra,<lb/>
select chorus and six featured singeTS.<lb/>
( 15. FAMOUS CONCERT-DANICE BAND.<lb/>
In the space 'below please make any comments which you feel neces-<lb/>
sary in order to help the Entertainment committee in selecting its 1963-4<lb/>
series of programs.<lb/>
Annual High School Day April 17<lb/>
Offers Seniors Varied Program<lb/>
Principals In Musical<lb/>
George Starling and Leonard Starling will be two of the featured<lb/>
soloists in the musical "Student Prince There will be two performances<lb/>
of the musical, Thursday and Friday nights of next week. Students will<lb/>
be admitted free of charge on either of the two nights. Other members of<lb/>
the cast of over 200 are pictured in the background.<lb/>
'Student Prince9 On Schedule<lb/>
Thursday, Friday Next Week<lb/>
"It's terrific<lb/>
So commented a visitor to a re-<lb/>
hearsal this week of "The Student<lb/>
Prince to be presented on the cam-<lb/>
pus by the Student Government as-<lb/>
sociation Thursday and Friday, April<lb/>
9 and 10.<lb/>
Fourteen student soloists, a chorus<lb/>
of 120 men and women, the East Car-<lb/>
olina orchestra of 60 pieces, Mr. Ken-<lb/>
neth N. Cuthbert as dirertor, Dr.<lb/>
Elizabeth Utterback as dramatic<lb/>
reader, .plus the gay, spirited and<lb/>
tuneful music of Sigmund Romberg<lb/>
add up to what bids fair to be one<lb/>
of the most attractive musical shows<lb/>
?ver to be staged on the campus.<lb/>
The operetta will be given in a<lb/>
concert version. Soloists will be cos-<lb/>
tumed for their parts, and will pre-<lb/>
sent scenes from the musical. Mem-<lb/>
bers of the chorus of 120 carefully<lb/>
selected vocalists will be dressed in<lb/>
formal evening attire. Elaborate<lb/>
Plays In Faculty Recital<lb/>
Elizabeth Drake, faculty member of the college department of music,<lb/>
will appear in a recital of com positions for the piano Sunday afternoon,<lb/>
April 12, at 4 o'clock in the College theatre. The program will be one of a<lb/>
series presented daring the school year by members of the faculty under<lb/>
the sponsorship of the department of music.<lb/>
File Applications Now<lb/>
Male students who desire dormi-<lb/>
tory space for either or both of the<lb/>
summer sessions are asked by Dr.<lb/>
Clinton R. Prewett, dean of men<lb/>
and director of student affairs at<lb/>
Bast Carolina, to make application<lb/>
now.<lb/>
Dean Prewett also reminds stu-<lb/>
dents who desire to apply for self-<lb/>
help positions for summer or fall<lb/>
sessions at East Carolina to do so<lb/>
soon. Men students should file ap-<lb/>
plication at the office of the dean<lb/>
of men, and women should contact<lb/>
Miss Ruth White, dean of women.<lb/>
Cantor: I'm trying to get tickets<lb/>
for a train that leaves on tracks<lb/>
seven, eight, nine and ten.<lb/>
Von Zell: That must be a leng train.<lb/>
Cantor: No, a woman engineer; she<lb/>
brought it in sideways!<lb/>
Bob Neilson Heads<lb/>
Junior Class Work<lb/>
Bob Nielson was elected president<lb/>
of the Junior class Monday of this<lb/>
week at East Carolina. Nielson was<lb/>
opposed by Bill Penuel.<lb/>
Chosen to assist the president in<lb/>
carrying on the activities of the<lb/>
Junior clas? was Robert Baird, who<lb/>
was opposed for the vice presidency<lb/>
position by Kris Anderson.<lb/>
Secretarial duties will be perform-<lb/>
ed next year by Bobby Anderson,<lb/>
who emerged victorious over Mildred<lb/>
Rouse. Financial ends of the Junior<lb/>
class' business will be handled by<lb/>
Howard Rooks. Edwin Rooks was on<lb/>
the short end of the vote-count in<lb/>
the race for treasurer.<lb/>
Ann Siler won the job of Student<lb/>
Government association representa-<lb/>
tive by receiving more votes than<lb/>
her opponents, Charlotte Hales and<lb/>
Janet Hodges.<lb/>
Students Do Not Pay<lb/>
Students will be admitted to<lb/>
"The Student Prince" on either<lb/>
Thursday or Friday evening on<lb/>
presenting their identification<lb/>
cards, according to an announce-<lb/>
ment by Dr. Kenneth N. Cuthbert,<lb/>
director of the production. The<lb/>
April 10 performance will also be<lb/>
attended by the public.<lb/>
lighting effects by George McFayden<lb/>
will contribute to the artistic staging<lb/>
of the show; and specialty numbers,<lb/>
including dances, will add variety.<lb/>
George Starling, Carolyn Eisele,<lb/>
Carolyn Mahoney, Leonard Starling,<lb/>
Ruth Little and Robert E. Roebuck<lb/>
are principals in the cast. Also ap-<lb/>
pearing in roles of the operetta are<lb/>
Bernard Ham, Andrew Meeder, Ger-<lb/>
ald Murphy, Willa Rae Bullock, Fran-<lb/>
ces Smith, Irving Ennis, Charles<lb/>
Starnes and Mitchell Saieed. This<lb/>
array of talented students promises<lb/>
an evening of fine music to those<lb/>
who attend "The Student Prince<lb/>
The operetta wiil be given in the<lb/>
Wright auditorium in two perform-<lb/>
ances, April 9 and 10 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Wednesday, April 8<lb/>
Spring holidays end; classes re-<lb/>
sume.<lb/>
7-8 p.m.?SGA meets in Flanagan<lb/>
auditorium.<lb/>
Thursday, April 9<lb/>
6 p.m.?Workshop play in Austin.<lb/>
1:30-6 ,p.m7:16-on?Northeastern<lb/>
district Debating contest conducted<lb/>
by Dr. M. N. Posey in Flanagan.<lb/>
8 p.m.?"Student Prince" produc-<lb/>
tion in Wright auditorium. (Student's<lb/>
night)<lb/>
Friday, April 10<lb/>
8 p.m.?"Student Prince" produc-<lb/>
tion in Wright auditorium. (Towns-<lb/>
people night)<lb/>
Saturday, April 11<lb/>
7 p.m.?Movie in Austin auditori-<lb/>
um.<lb/>
in<lb/>
Tuesday, April 14<lb/>
4 p.m. in Austin and 7 p.m.<lb/>
Training school?Italian movie.<lb/>
Wednesday, April 15<lb/>
8 p.m.?Screen tours in Austin.<lb/>
Thursday, April 16<lb/>
6 p.m.?Workshop play in Austin.<lb/>
Friday, April 17<lb/>
High School day.<lb/>
Arts festival m Wright in the<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
'Phi Sig' installs<lb/>
'53-54 Officers<lb/>
At Dinner-Dance<lb/>
Jim Ellis took over the reins of<lb/>
the Phi Sigma Pi honorary fraterni-<lb/>
ty at East Carolina at the annual<lb/>
Founders day banquet and dance held<lb/>
at the Greenville Country club last<lb/>
evening. Jerry Sandford is the retir-<lb/>
ing president.<lb/>
Gu .st speaker for the supper meet-<lb/>
ing was L. M. Stocks, Greenville<lb/>
lawyer, who delivered a talk on the<lb/>
Federal Bureau of Investigation.<lb/>
Bob Robinson, past Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment association president, wel-<lb/>
comed the new officers, and Dr.<lb/>
Robert Holt, director of religious ac-<lb/>
tivities at East Carolina, gave the<lb/>
invocation.<lb/>
Fraternity vice president for next<lb/>
year is Julian Vainright Other of-<lb/>
ficers include Waylon Bass, secretary;<lb/>
Dwight Garrett, treasurer; Percy<lb/>
Wilkfcis, assistant secretary; and Bob-<lb/>
by Hodges, eergeant-at-arms.<lb/>
Past officers other than Sandford<lb/>
were Doc Smith, vice president; Don<lb/>
Cox, secretary; Dwight Shoe, treas-<lb/>
urer; Billy Laughinghouse, assistant<lb/>
secretary; and Bill McDonald, ser-<lb/>
geant at-arms. Dr. Richard Todd<lb/>
serves the organization as advisor.<lb/>
Packed Day Of Events<lb/>
Includes Campus Tour,<lb/>
Talks, Luncheon, Game<lb/>
Final preparations are now<lb/>
being made for the annual High<lb/>
School day here at East Caro-<lb/>
lina college. Over 3,000 high<lb/>
school seniors from the Eastern<lb/>
and Piedmont sections of North<lb/>
Carolina are expected to attend<lb/>
the special day on April 17.<lb/>
The seniors will engage in a<lb/>
a ied program planned f <lb/>
their entertainment, accordin<lb/>
io Dr. Ed J. Carter, director of<lb/>
the East Carolina Bureau of<lb/>
Field Services and chairman of<lb/>
-he High School day committee.<lb/>
The day's event will begin with a<lb/>
parade by cadets of the college Air<lb/>
I'crce ROTC wing accompanied by<lb/>
their Drum and Bugle corps and a<lb/>
program in the Wright auditorium.<lb/>
ul: tarter will preside at this as-<lb/>
embly and President John D. Mes-<lb/>
ick of the college will deliver an<lb/>
address. Lt Col. Roger G. Fuller,<lb/>
feead of the department of ir Sci-<lb/>
snee and Tactics, will discuss the<lb/>
AFROTC riOgram. Music by the Col-<lb/>
e choir, the Colkge Concert band<lb/>
and the Varsity Glee club will be<lb/>
presented.<lb/>
Par- i From Comedy<lb/>
Excerpts lasting 45 minute8 from<lb/>
a production of rVmberg's The<lb/>
Student .Prince with a cast and a<lb/>
chorus of college, music students,<lb/>
will be a special attraction in the<lb/>
morning. In the afternoon the come-<lb/>
dy "Born Yesterday" will be pre-<lb/>
sented lby the members of the Teach-<lb/>
er's playhouse, the college dramatic<lb/>
club.<lb/>
Educational exhibitions will be on<lb/>
display in classroom buildings.<lb/>
Through them the seniors will have<lb/>
m opportunity to gain an idea o.<lb/>
i.he activities of the departments of<lb/>
instruction at East Carolina and to<lb/>
talk with college students and teach-<lb/>
ers working in areas of interest to<lb/>
the visitors.<lb/>
Athletic Events<lb/>
The physical education department<lb/>
will present a program of various<lb/>
recreation, including swimming and<lb/>
di g. A baseball game is scheduled<lb/>
in the afternoon and is free to all<lb/>
high school seniors.<lb/>
Home economics students will pre-<lb/>
sent in the afternoon their second<lb/>
annual High School day Fashion s: ow<lb/>
in the Austin building. A tea-dance,<lb/>
with music by the East Carolina<lb/>
Collegians, will take place in the<lb/>
Wright building.<lb/>
A barbecue luncheon, given an-<lb/>
nually as an event ef High School<lb/>
day, is scheduled for one o'clock.<lb/>
Cuests will be served on the college<lb/>
picnic grounds on the Wet campus.<lb/>
Music Students<lb/>
Become Eligible<lb/>
or Scholarships<lb/>
Through contests held at East Car-<lb/>
olina college Saturday, five students<lb/>
of music became eligible to compete<lb/>
for prizes and scholarships offered by<lb/>
the North Carolina Federation of<lb/>
Music clubs.<lb/>
Student members of 12 junior mu-<lb/>
sic clubs met at East Carolina Sat-<lb/>
urday to participate :n the Eastern<lb/>
District Junior Music festival. The<lb/>
event was directed by Fannie Lewis<lb/>
of Scotland Neck, district contest<lb/>
chairman, ar.d Elizabeth Drake of<lb/>
the East Carolina college music fac-<lb/>
ulty, o-chairman<lb/>
Jack Wiliiford of FarmvUle, fresh-<lb/>
man at East Carolina college, was<lb/>
chosen to compete for a $126 prisa<lb/>
offered for use by an outstanding<lb/>
student pianist for study during the<lb/>
summer. Those entering this contest<lb/>
wore advanced students, and the se-<lb/>
lection played was a concerto. Rachel<lb/>
Mundine of Newport was selected as<lb/>
alternate.<lb/>
At a result of Saturday's contests,<lb/>
Venu. Woo ten of Kinston, advanced<lb/>
student of piano, became eligible to<lb/>
compete for a $125 scholarship, also<lb/>
for summer study. Adelaide Hart of<lb/>
New Bern was chosen as alternate.<lb/>
Shirley Tripa of Ayden, voice stu-<lb/>
dent, was named competitor for the<lb/>
Samuel Goodwin Scholarship to ths<lb/>
Juilliard School of Mtuk.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038320_0002"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1966<lb/>
t<lb/>
?AGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CABOLINIAK<lb/>
asttaroliniari<lb/>
Published Weekly by the student of East Carolina<lb/>
college, Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Name changed from TEfcp ECHO November 7, 1962<lb/>
lEntered as second-class matter Dm mber 3,<lb/>
TJ S Post Office, Greenville, N. C<lb/>
March 3, 1879<lb/>
Y.<lb/>
1S26 at the<lb/>
under the act of<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
by<lb/>
Editor s<lb/>
Say<lb/>
Tommie Lupton<lb/>
Who's Wko At East Carolina<lb/>
by Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
tewdcted Gotefticte Pr?<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division Columbia Scholastic<lb/>
Association<lb/>
Pirfct Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March, 1968<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press Association<lb/>
Well, spring holidays are here.<lb/>
There will be no more vacation peri-<lb/>
ods until the end of school, but there<lb/>
are only 28 more school days left<lb/>
until<lb/>
df<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wit,<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word<lb/>
0f it"?E. Fitzgerald<lb/>
EDITORIAL STAFF<lb/>
Tommie Lupton<lb/>
Edwina McMullan<lb/>
Parker Maddrey<lb/>
? Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
Kay Johnston,<lb/>
Assistants ? "J .<lb/>
Mildred Henderson, Emily Boyce, Faye 0 Nea4<lb/>
 Mary H. Greene<lb/>
C. L. Perkins Jr.<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Assistant Editor<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
Staff<lb/>
Rporta Editor <lb/>
Sports Assistants<lb/>
Editorial Advisor<lb/>
Staff Photographer <lb/>
SPORTS STAFF<lb/>
 Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Sam Hux, Bruce Phillips, Jack Scott<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Business Manager  Ed? Massad<lb/>
Assistant Business Manager  Faye Jones<lb/>
? ? i?? Mary Gillette,<lb/>
Business Assistants  axaij, ?<lb/>
Marty MacArthur, Atwood Smith, Dwight<lb/>
Exchange Editor<lb/>
Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
Why Not More Voters?<lb/>
Oftentimes there seems to be a lag in the<lb/>
number of persons who turn out to vote in cam-<lb/>
pus elections. We realize that the percentage of<lb/>
eligible voters over the entire nation who actual-<lb/>
ly vote in all major elections is small; however,<lb/>
we think that a person going to college would<lb/>
consider himself above the average voter in every<lb/>
day<lb/>
summer vacation. The period<lb/>
little more than five week is<lb/>
really jun-packed with activities.<lb/>
There seems to be something big<lb/>
just about every week. Next week<lb/>
we are having two showings of<lb/>
"Student Prince and that will be<lb/>
a treat in itself. The following Fri-<lb/>
day will be High School day, and we<lb/>
at East Carolina will be entertaining<lb/>
some 3,000 high school seniors who<lb/>
will be visiting our campus.<lb/>
April 20 will see Ray Anthony<lb/>
here. The concert and dance are the<lb/>
final programs on the college Enter-<lb/>
tainment series for this academic<lb/>
year. Each student can purchase one<lb/>
ticket to the dance for some friend<lb/>
who is not enrolled here; however,<lb/>
all persons at East Carolina will be<lb/>
given admission by use of student<lb/>
identification cards.<lb/>
Juniors and seniors here are an-<lb/>
ticipating the Junor-Senior dance,<lb/>
which is on tap for May 2. This<lb/>
dance is usually one of the best of<lb/>
the year at East Carolina.<lb/>
For persons who like to watch<lb/>
baseball, golf and tennis there will<lb/>
be an opportunity to do so -nearly<lb/>
any afternoon of the week. The ath-<lb/>
letic calendar at East Carolina is<lb/>
rather full with the three spring<lb/>
sports.<lb/>
And then there is studying, but<lb/>
we will not say anything ahout that.<lb/>
life. You do not have to register to vote in<lb/>
campus elections. Does it take too much effort to<lb/>
read the ballot and make your mark?<lb/>
There were over 900 persons who voted in<lb/>
u Student Government association election.<lb/>
ihis was better than some of the past years'<lb/>
elections. Voting is a privilege all Americans<lb/>
have; yet we might consider it an obligation, for<lb/>
you are letting someone down if you do not vote.<lb/>
Do you not care who runs your club, class or col-<lb/>
lege government?<lb/>
We do feel, however, that if you are not go-<lb/>
ing to vote seriously that you are doing the right<lb/>
thing in not voting at all. Elections are not jokes.<lb/>
The naming of leaders for your organizations is<lb/>
not a popularity contest, or is it?<lb/>
At a recent meeting that we know of there<lb/>
.re only two persons present to name the offi-<lb/>
ers of the group which should be composed of<lb/>
some 200 or 300 students. In past years the offi-<lb/>
cers of this same group have been elected by less<lb/>
than a dozen voters. Potentially an organization<lb/>
that is supposedly so large could be very power-<lb/>
ful, but as it stands at the present the group<lb/>
should not even be permitted to keep its seat on<lb/>
the legislature.<lb/>
The above club is only one example. The ex-<lb/>
ample may be a special case, but it should not be<lb/>
at all. We know of another meeting that was<lb/>
called where there should have been a large group<lb/>
present. There are 359 eligible members, and<lb/>
only three members and the advisor showed up.<lb/>
We ask, what is wrong? Whose fault is it that<lb/>
only such a small number shows up for the meet-<lb/>
Ushered m Wednesday night of<lb/>
this week was the new slate of Stu-<lb/>
dent Government association officers.<lb/>
The new administration has high<lb/>
ambition, and we feel that with the<lb/>
cooperation of everyone here the<lb/>
group will be able to employ its power<lb/>
to build a better East Carolina.<lb/>
The "East Carolinian" stands be-<lb/>
hind the SGA, and we wish them a<lb/>
full and successful reign.<lb/>
This week's Who's Who spotlight<lb/>
points to Emily Dell Faircloth of<lb/>
Fayetteville. She came to East Caro-<lb/>
lina college Fall quarter of '49 and<lb/>
plans to graduate May 18 of this<lb/>
year with a BS degree in Home Eco-<lb/>
nomics.<lb/>
When Emily was asked if EC was<lb/>
her first choice, she said, "Definite-<lb/>
ly, for several times before graduat-<lb/>
ing from high school I visited friends<lb/>
here and liked the campus and people<lb/>
so much that I soon decided that this<lb/>
was the school for me. You also hear<lb/>
a person talk about a place so much<lb/>
that you want to go there. Well,<lb/>
that's what happened to me<lb/>
The first quarter that Emily was<lb/>
in college, business was her major,<lb/>
but she changed to home economics<lb/>
and said that it certainly was her<lb/>
calling, for she likes it very much.<lb/>
Practice Teaching<lb/>
This quarter she is doing her prac-<lb/>
tice teaching at Greenville high<lb/>
school and has about 30 students in<lb/>
second and third year home econom-<lb/>
ics. She is enjoying teaching, but sayg<lb/>
it is a lot of hard work. Emily re-<lb/>
mains after class many afternoons<lb/>
to help the students who want and<lb/>
need the extra help that she is quite<lb/>
willing to give. She said that one<lb/>
class period just wasn't enough time<lb/>
to cover all of the material.<lb/>
"Now, my classes are studying<lb/>
family relations and the girls seem<lb/>
to be getting up hope that they will<lb/>
some day, after graduating from col-<lb/>
lege, marry the loys that they are<lb/>
going with now she said. "And, oh<lb/>
yes, they like for the student teachers<lb/>
to be either engaged or married so<lb/>
that we won't take their boy friends<lb/>
away from them. They don't even<lb/>
think about the age differences in<lb/>
the matter '<lb/>
was a member of the<lb/>
junior year she<lb/>
Teachers playhouse. This<lb/>
reatest honor I<lb/>
YDC and<lb/>
year she received her fc<lb/>
named in Who's<lb/>
Universities and<lb/>
TIMELY TOPIGS<lb/>
By Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
pus more<lb/>
Emily Faircloth<lb/>
Emily definitely plans to teach aft-<lb/>
er graduation but first she is to be<lb/>
married to her high school sweet-<lb/>
heart, now a senior at North Caro-<lb/>
lina State. The date has been set for<lb/>
June 10.<lb/>
This outstanding student has many<lb/>
extra-curricular actvities on her<lb/>
record. For four years she has been<lb/>
a member of the Home Economics<lb/>
club, vice president her junior year,<lb/>
president her senior year and vice<lb/>
president of the state club her senior<lb/>
year. She takes part in the activities<lb/>
of the YWCA and BSU. Both her<lb/>
freshman and junior years she served<lb/>
on the House committee, and sopho-<lb/>
more and junior y?ars was piano<lb/>
accompanist for the May Day fes-<lb/>
tivities.<lb/>
As a freshman and sophomore she<lb/>
was a member of the WAA and presi-<lb/>
dent of the Sophomore class. Her<lb/>
which was being<lb/>
Who in American<lb/>
Colleges. "I truly was surprised and<lb/>
honored to be chosen she said, "but<lb/>
I feel that there are others on cam-<lb/>
deserving than I<lb/>
Attends Workshops<lb/>
Emily has attended two Home Eco-<lb/>
nomics workshops sponsored by the<lb/>
Late. The first at which she wan a<lb/>
delegate was held at Flora McDonald<lb/>
coll ge. She was a sophomore at the<lb/>
time and at the convention was elect-<lb/>
ed vice president. They exchanged<lb/>
ideas and gave suggestions that the<lb/>
del gates might carry back to put<lb/>
into ; ractice in their own clubs.<lb/>
The second was at WC of UNC<lb/>
in Greensboro. There she gave the<lb/>
purpose of the workshr introduced<lb/>
the main speaker, and was chairman<lb/>
of the nominating committee.<lb/>
When a junior she was elected to<lb/>
represent East Carolina college at a<lb/>
Providence workshop at Clemson, S.C.<lb/>
She said that they did approximately<lb/>
the same things here as at the other<lb/>
two, only covered more territory. This<lb/>
convention included North Carolina,<lb/>
South Carolina, Georgia and eastern<lb/>
Tennessee.<lb/>
Emily has helped work her way<lb/>
through college with self-help jobs,<lb/>
except for the past two quarters.<lb/>
She has worked in the circulation<lb/>
department of the library and also<lb/>
the physical education department as<lb/>
piano accompanist for the various<lb/>
dance classes.<lb/>
"I hate to think of not being back<lb/>
at ECC again, but I'm looking for-<lb/>
ward to the future very much<lb/>
Emily stated when asked whether or<lb/>
not she was glad to be graduating.<lb/>
Female Views ROTC Program:<lb/>
Proud Of Work Of EC Group<lb/>
Male students who have been cast-<lb/>
ing suspicious glances in the direc-<lb/>
tion of their draft boards got some<lb/>
reassurance recently.<lb/>
A federal judge ruled that a draft<lb/>
board acted illegally when it inducted<lb/>
an honor student in New Jersey be-<lb/>
cause he flunked a chemistry course.<lb/>
The student, now at Fort Dix, will be<lb/>
discharged from the Army and return<lb/>
to Upsala college.<lb/>
The court based its ruling on the<lb/>
fact that the student actually did<lb/>
not have to take the chemistry course<lb/>
but enrolled voluntarily in summer<lb/>
school in order to graduate early.<lb/>
an<lb/>
by Faye O'Neal<lb/>
If the uninformed grandmother of<lb/>
ECC coed should appear on the<lb/>
campus for a visit on Tuesday or<lb/>
Thursday while the AFROTC is hav<lb/>
ing drill exercises,<lb/>
Ings? What can be done about it?<lb/>
rilege Or Korea?<lb/>
m The Chart, Joplin Junior college, Mo.) :<lb/>
5foung men of today are faced with the<lb/>
of armed service. Still, this is no sign<lb/>
to stop planning for their future. Hear-<lb/>
statements as, "I might as well go out<lb/>
Mt the works; they get me sooner or lat-<lb/>
tices a draft-eligible student sit up and take<lb/>
What about Korea? Even if there were<lb/>
other problems would take its place.<lb/>
sd of roses. Take the boy who has to<lb/>
raple of years to save up for college. He<lb/>
iem. He doesn't give up and forget<lb/>
Ug to school. The world doesn't stop<lb/>
faces his problem 3quarely and over-<lb/>
Use same should apply to Korea,<lb/>
point he can knock around a bit is<lb/>
is. He should compare himself with<lb/>
men over the world.<lb/>
pretty lucky here in the good old<lb/>
m in the wheel chair had the right<lb/>
said, "The only thing we have to<lb/>
lelf.  So, in his famed words,<lb/>
HI see this thing through yet<lb/>
rOieKifl<lb/>
fCansan, University of Kansas):<lb/>
we realize it or not, many of <lb/>
regard us as just so many<lb/>
t as the future leaders of the<lb/>
Mamencement speakers would<lb/>
jimp down the old fogies'<lb/>
for a little analysis of the<lb/>
tnat only our bad actions<lb/>
if be as pure as the driven<lb/>
watch the headlines for<lb/>
An American history prof asked<lb/>
his class for a list of the eleven<lb/>
greatest Americans, reports the Post-<lb/>
script, Richmond Professional insti-<lb/>
tute, Va. While the students wrote,<lb/>
the teacher strolled around the room.<lb/>
Finally he paused at one desk and<lb/>
asked the youth if he had finished<lb/>
his list.<lb/>
"Not yet said the student. "I<lb/>
can't decide on the fullback<lb/>
A psychology professor at Bristol<lb/>
university, England, puts his students<lb/>
at ease by serving free cocktails<lb/>
before each lecture. The professor,<lb/>
who serves as bartender, says he is<lb/>
testing hie students on the effect of<lb/>
small doses of alcohol. (Hope no one<lb/>
transfers.)<lb/>
Couple Of The Week<lb/>
she would really<lb/>
be surprised, don't you think? Grand-<lb/>
ma would probably shriek with hor-<lb/>
ror and run to! the nearest telephone<lb/>
to get her granddaughter's parents<lb/>
on the line.<lb/>
Vehemently and pointedly we might<lb/>
explain to mamma and poppa that<lb/>
"little Iodine" is attending a college<lb/>
that has been taken over by hordes<lb/>
of servicemen, and that, in her<lb/>
opinion it is not at all proper for a<lb/>
nice girl to come in contact with so<lb/>
many experienced men. Let's hope<lb/>
that mother and dad would succeed<lb/>
in calming the dear lady before she<lb/>
fainted away.<lb/>
Seriously, the currently new change<lb/>
in campus life to accord with the<lb/>
present military emergency has its<lb/>
shocking aspects to those of the old<lb/>
school, so to speak. Things have<lb/>
really made a radical change since<lb/>
Grandmother was in school; even<lb/>
since our older brothers and sisters<lb/>
were in school.<lb/>
Probably the last four years have<lb/>
yielded more change in the number<lb/>
of college men enrolled in reserve<lb/>
officer training than any others in<lb/>
history. This change has been so<lb/>
emphatic that campus life has neces-<lb/>
sarily been changed to an extent to<lb/>
agree with it. Almost all of us have<lb/>
been personally affected by this<lb/>
change.<lb/>
Probably the men will disagree<lb/>
with our comments on drilling, for<lb/>
they are purely expressive of a wo-<lb/>
man's view of the situation. Actual-<lb/>
ly, watching the AFROTC drill brings<lb/>
a feeling of exaited patriotism right<lb/>
up into our throats. The men seem<lb/>
to take on a mature look, and one<lb/>
of commendable seriousness<lb/>
Shooting<lb/>
The Bull<lb/>
The big squawk among civic newspapers this<lb/>
past week, especially the Raleigh News and Ob-<lb/>
server, has been the move by the state legisla-<lb/>
tors in Raleigh to ban reporters and the public<lb/>
from certain meetings.<lb/>
It seems that a group of representatives de-<lb/>
cided that some of the discussions on finance had<lb/>
best be held in private and informed the press<lb/>
their decision. In order to maintain their secrecy<lb/>
they chipped in money from their own pockets<lb/>
and rented a hotel room in order to discuss cer-<lb/>
tain measures of the budget in private.<lb/>
This met with extreme disfavor among<lb/>
newsmen present, and although the legisla<lb/>
declared that it was not an official meeting they<lb/>
apparently went armed for lengthy discussion<lb/>
and held to their stand of refusing to admit the<lb/>
press This caused a howl that has rebounded<lb/>
from front page to editorial page throughout<lb/>
state. Just to make the porceedinga regal the :<lb/>
concerned pat Bed a ruling placing the secret n<lb/>
ings on the law books. Once more the press rais d<lb/>
a howl.<lb/>
We can see perhaps where certain measu-<lb/>
might, in vague possibility, warrant secret<lb/>
cussion by various politicians; but when finam<lb/>
matters of the State of North Carolina are <lb/>
discussed then th" public certainly has a right<lb/>
to know what their money may go for. It is real-<lb/>
ly surprising that this infringement of the peo-<lb/>
ple's right has been carried out and more auda-<lb/>
cious still that these men will so flagrantly ab<lb/>
their position.<lb/>
In addition to imposing the secrecy ruling ,a<lb/>
rider has been attached which says that<lb/>
newspaper man violating the secrecy of the m<lb/>
ing may be fined. At last report several Raleigh<lb/>
reporters were fighting tooth and nail for the<lb/>
privilege of being the first fined and thereby be-<lb/>
coming a martyr to the cause.<lb/>
The people of North Carolina should be just-<lb/>
ly proud of those few representatives who <lb/>
maintained their stand against this violation of<lb/>
right and should do everything possible to<lb/>
move this ruling whereby public affairs may b?<lb/>
carried on in secret. The representatives are<lb/>
there to serve those that elected them, and v.<lb/>
thev step from the floodlight of the public eye to<lb/>
carry on public business then something should<lb/>
be done.<lb/>
Enough said.<lb/>
Maybe<lb/>
this is "uniform magic" working on<lb/>
gullible females, but nevertheless it<lb/>
is true.<lb/>
Certainly one will stop and watch<lb/>
the men as they keep perfect (we<lb/>
hope) time to the efforts of the<lb/>
drum and bugle corps. Also it is<lb/>
interesting to note the differences in<lb/>
personality and ability to give orders<lb/>
among the flight leaders and group<lb/>
commanders. Some of the boys may<lb/>
seem reluctant to act as a superior<lb/>
to their classmates, but most of<lb/>
them seem to be real officer ma-<lb/>
terial. It may be said that there is no<lb/>
fooling around in drill practice which<lb/>
shows that the East Carolinians who<lb/>
are members of AFROTC have be-<lb/>
come well adapted to military prac-<lb/>
tice.<lb/>
We are without doubt proud of the<lb/>
AFROTC on campus, and it is not<lb/>
hard to accept the changes that are<lb/>
a part of its program. It is good that<lb/>
lour young men may receive a part<lb/>
of their military training while they<lb/>
are getting their formal education.<lb/>
Bven if it is strange to have "flyboys"<lb/>
all over the place, we have gotten<lb/>
adapted to it and are silently thank-<lb/>
ful that so many of our classmates<lb/>
are here with us instead of in a boot<lb/>
camp or overseas somewhere.<lb/>
by'T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
It seems that no matter where an<lb/>
East Carolina student ?oes, he'll<lb/>
meet a fellow student.<lb/>
Take for example, this past week<lb/>
end at the Wilmington Azalea festi-<lb/>
val. There were quite a few ECC<lb/>
students there and they called for<lb/>
a class reunion. In the midst of the<lb/>
ceremonies, they chimed in with<lb/>
"Praise to Your Name So Fair<lb/>
Yes, by golly, everyone knew that<lb/>
East Carolina was there. One of the<lb/>
boys even asked Alexis Smith for a<lb/>
date. She accepted, but it seems that<lb/>
Romeo forgot where Alexis<lb/>
.staying. Too lad.<lb/>
POT POURRI<lb/>
by Emily Boyce<lb/>
The arrival of spring was culminated in the<lb/>
annual Azalea festival held at Wilmington this<lb/>
past weekend. Judging from the deserted campus<lb/>
during that time, it seem.s that most of the ECC<lb/>
students enjoyed the festivities there. Various<lb/>
comments were made by students who went. One<lb/>
girl said main street in Wilmington looked like<lb/>
our back campus, for there were so many EC<lb/>
students there. So we were really well represent-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
was<lb/>
If there is a run on the stores in Greenville<lb/>
during the next two weeks, you can believe about<lb/>
40 girls in the WAA are buying beachwear<lb/>
their coming annual house party. The house party<lb/>
is the highlight of the year's activities. There will<lb/>
be two cottages rented this year with around 20<lb/>
In New York we were crossing I p;irls in each cottage. Atlantic Beach v ill long<lb/>
42nd and Broadway which is called J remember the weekend of April 10, 11 and 12.<lb/>
rossroads of America At this<lb/>
For those students majoring in elementary<lb/>
and primary education who have to make files<lb/>
should take advantage of the grand free material<lb/>
stacked upstairs in the College library. The ma-<lb/>
terial is good and should prove to be quite a help<lb/>
to those interested.<lb/>
point it is said that if one stands<lb/>
here he will see someone he knows<lb/>
in less than ten minutes. Well, we<lb/>
did not have to wait, for a member<lb/>
in our group met an old friend from<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
At the Junior-VSenior dancs at<lb/>
Weldon high school last Friday night,<lb/>
we were surprised to see four East<lb/>
Carolinians and to see the EC or-<lb/>
chestra playing.<lb/>
This Summer at a ball game in<lb/>
Washington, D. C, six students at-<lb/>
tended in three different parties and<lb/>
were dumbfounded when they all met<lb/>
accidentally in the stadium.<lb/>
Well, the whole thing boils down<lb/>
to one or two things: It must be a<lb/>
small world or there must be a lot<lb/>
Betty (better known as "Little-<lb/>
Bit") Tally and Jimmy Bazemore<lb/>
have been going steady since Octo-<lb/>
ber 3 of this year. Betty is a sopho-<lb/>
more and Jimmy is a junior, and they<lb/>
think ECC is "the best<lb/>
Before Jimmy and "Little-Bit" got<lb/>
to know each other too well, they<lb/>
both thought the other was very con-<lb/>
ceited. The moral is, get to know a<lb/>
person you think is conceited; there<lb/>
might be a romance in it!<lb/>
This summer both Little-Bit and<lb/>
Jimmy plan to work in their own<lb/>
hometowns, but the week ends will<lb/>
be spent together.<lb/>
(Editor's note: By being named<lb/>
"Couple of the Week Jimmy and<lb/>
Betty will each be given a carton of<lb/>
Chesterfields, a free P ss to the Pitt<lb/>
theatre, a free meal at the Olde<lb/>
Towne Inn and an item from Sas-<lb/>
lowV jewelers.)<lb/>
Colleges Oppose Discrimination<lb/>
All those who saw The Curious Savage last<lb/>
week seemed to thoroughly enjoy it. Dr. Jones of<lb/>
the science department scored quite a hit with<lb/>
most students in his portrayal in the comedy. We<lb/>
say hats off to the staff for giving such grand<lb/>
performances.<lb/>
(ACP) Most college students are<lb/>
against discriminatory clauses in<lb/>
fraternity and sorority constitutions,<lb/>
accoiding to the ACP National Poll<lb/>
of Student Opinion. Clauses which<lb/>
discriminate against Negroes meet<lb/>
with more approval than clauses<lb/>
which discriminate aganst Jews.<lb/>
The poll was taken last December<lb/>
against a backdrop of increasing stu-<lb/>
dent dissatisfaction with national<lb/>
bias clauses. Fraternity chapters at<lb/>
"I would have It no other way,<lb/>
says a student from the University<lb/>
of the South, Tenn referring to all-<lb/>
white fraternities.<lb/>
A freshman at the University of<lb/>
Nebraska is sorry he approves of<lb/>
bias clauses. "Wish I felt different-<lb/>
ly he says, "but habit and training<lb/>
are hard to overcome<lb/>
Students in the South are evenly<lb/>
divided on the question, while stu-<lb/>
dents in the North are overwhelm-<lb/>
The cinema actress, Gloria Grahame, won an<lb/>
Academy award for the best supporting act;<lb/>
for her role as the outhern belk in The Pad and<lb/>
the Beautiful. This certainly surprised the ma-<lb/>
jority of the southerners who saw the movie. II<lb/>
of East Carolina students and alumni 1 role was a caricature, and not a comedy role.<lb/>
circulating in this country. the Southern accent and actions of Miss Grahame<lb/>
seemed" to most Southern audiences as strictly<lb/>
comedy.<lb/>
Maybe Hollywood needs to come south and<lb/>
take notice of our accent in the rough. The drawl<lb/>
of Miss Jones in the movie Ruby Gentry also re-<lb/>
ceived many comments, but these were overshad-<lb/>
owed by others concerning the quality of the pic-<lb/>
ture.<lb/>
If most of the students were asked what they<lb/>
Williams, Amherst and elsewhere ingly against discriminatory policies.<lb/>
circulating in this country<lb/>
High School day is slated for April<lb/>
17, the date of the next issue of this<lb/>
paper. The "whole college is prepar-<lb/>
ing for this date. Dr. Ed Carter is<lb/>
busy with the invitations and some of<lb/>
the activities for the high school sen-<lb/>
iors in the state. James W. Butler,<lb/>
Alumni secretary, is rushing around<lb/>
making preparations. The county<lb/>
An East Carolina co-ed wrote:<lb/>
atfOB?th? folks I De?r Parents,<lb/>
I I'm getting along fine at ECC.<lb/>
the ackrfarships are<lb/>
ikat their mon-<lb/>
instead of school<lb/>
at stodest wages?or<lb/>
through with that<lb/>
pause. And read<lb/>
weigh 113 pounds, stripped for gym.<lb/>
Love,<lb/>
Daughter<lb/>
Dear Daughter,<lb/>
Who' Jim?<lb/>
Love,<lb/>
Mom and D?d.<lb/>
have recently violated their national<lb/>
constitutions by admitting either a<lb/>
Negro or a Jew. Student governments<lb/>
at more than a dozen universities a-nd<lb/>
colleges have set deadlines for fra-<lb/>
ternities to get rid of bias clauses<lb/>
on penalty of expulsion.<lb/>
ACP asked the question: Some<lb/>
fraternities and sororities have claus-<lb/>
es in their constitutions stating that<lb/>
they will accept as members only<lb/>
individuals of the white race. How<lb/>
do you feel about this policy?<lb/>
The answers:<lb/>
Approve  26<lb/>
Disapprove 66<lb/>
No opinion  7<lb/>
Other3<lb/>
Here's the breakdown:<lb/>
North South<lb/>
Approve 20 44<lb/>
Disapprove  71 44<lb/>
No opinion  7 8<lb/>
Other  2 4<lb/>
As for policies which limit mem-<lb/>
bership to non-Jews, student opinion<lb/>
is as follows: approve, 12 per cent;<lb/>
disapprove, 80 per cent; mT opinion,<lb/>
six per cent; other, two per cent.<lb/>
"People of the Jewish faith usually<lb/>
have their own fraternities and so-<lb/>
rorities says a sophomore coed at<lb/>
Richmond Professional institute, Va.<lb/>
Says a senior at the University of<lb/>
Toledo who disapproves of "Aryan'<lb/>
lubs are assisting also with the did this week, they would probably say they went<lb/>
to see The Body, alias Marilyn Monroe, in Nia-<lb/>
gara. When a girl was asked whether or not Miss<lb/>
Monroe deserved an Academy award for her per-<lb/>
formance, she said. "Marilyn should have an<lb/>
award, but I'd rither not say what kind<lb/>
preparatory.<lb/>
Why all the hustle-bustle? Well,<lb/>
the high school seniors are coming<lb/>
to look over the college to see if<lb/>
they would like to enroll here. Nat-<lb/>
urally, when "company" comes you've<lb/>
got to look and be your best to make<lb/>
an impression.<lb/>
However, the high school senior<lb/>
will be impressed more if a student<lb/>
here would give him a personal chat<lb/>
first about the courses, social life,<lb/>
extra-curricula activities, living con-<lb/>
ditions and the type of college this<lb/>
is. Then the prospective enrollee will<lb/>
be looking forward for High School<lb/>
day to see for himself what East<lb/>
Carolina is like.<lb/>
We urge all students to have tht<lb/>
personal contacts with the high school<lb/>
seniors of their home during the<lb/>
Easter holidays in order to give them<lb/>
clauses, "I believe in equal rights a preview of the college.<lb/>
Standards Of Humor Drop<lb/>
This month's issue of 'Technolog'? the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Minnesota's engineering magazine-<lb/>
has been withheld from students because of<lb/>
magazine's "failure to maintain higher standards j<lb/>
of humor i<lb/>
A committee on student affairs has ruled that<lb/>
the magazine may be circulated provided it in-<lb/>
cludes a "conspicuous insert" explaining the com-<lb/>
mittee's disaproval of the magazine's humor. Al-<lb/>
so to be included is a statement by the editor<lb/>
saying he will "cooperate in the establishment oi<lb/>
an effective procedure for pre-publication review<lb/>
of th humor content<lb/>
The Minnesota Daily considers the question to<lb/>
be one of freedom of the press vs. censorship.<lb/>
s<lb/>
lio<lb/>
The <lb/>
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ir.nin<lb/>
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Third on<lb/>
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WE C<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038320_0003"/><lb/>
aprh.<lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1968<lb/>
ics<lb/>
ne Public<lb/>
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that any<lb/>
Raleigh<lb/>
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who have<lb/>
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RI<lb/>
minated in the<lb/>
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theECC<lb/>
Various<lb/>
went One<lb/>
?ked like<lb/>
 EC<lb/>
ell rep resent-<lb/>
- 'IVlIif<lb/>
?e about<lb/>
rhwear for<lb/>
house party<lb/>
I There will<lb/>
- h around 20<lb/>
lench will long<lb/>
10. 11 and 12.<lb/>
in ?'lementary<lb/>
ike files<lb/>
material<lb/>
. The ma-<lb/>
be quite a help<lb/>
I :r. Jones of<lb/>
hit with<lb/>
the comedy. We<lb/>
hnp such grand<lb/>
phame. wonj?<lb/>
LortinR actress<lb/>
fin The Bad and<lb/>
fpriaed the g<lb/>
, the movie. He<lb/>
loinedy role- 0?<lb/>
FkS as tnctlr<lb/>
(come ?ujj<lb/>
? uh. The dra<lb/>
lality of theP<lb/>
,ked what thjT<lb/>
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her or not?<lb/>
should h?e<lb/>
(hat kind.<lb/>
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Kng mafof<lb/>
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v. ? nil <lb/>
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Plication <lb/>
M<lb/>
theH<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
sm<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PACE THHEu<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
The recent release of East Caro-<lb/>
lina's 19D3 football schedule has<lb/>
atnuaed much speculation and favor-<lb/>
la) comment on campus,<lb/>
ginning with Wilson Teachers<lb/>
Li ge, of Washington, D. C, on<lb/>
iteuber 19 the Pir? es inaugurate<lb/>
heavy nne game sh te. The Wash-<lb/>
gtonirw ire the flia of xhree out-<lb/>
ad r? fcv'N U b. met by the<lb/>
am ?rs ext rali.<lb/>
Following he WJlaon game me<lb/>
Bucs will play uoat to Lonoir-Rhy):e's<lb/>
conference champion Bears. The<lb/>
Bean are going to be hard hit by<lb/>
graduation come spring and will lose<lb/>
virtually their entire squad.<lb/>
Third on the list for the Bucs will<lb/>
be Catawba'a Indians. The Bucs and<lb/>
e Indians battled to a 7-7 stalemate<lb/>
last year at College stadium and<lb/>
next fall's encounter promises to be<lb/>
of the highlights of North State<lb/>
conference play.<lb/>
The men from Salisbury seem to<lb/>
us to be the c'ub to beat as far as<lb/>
East Carolina is concerned. Of course<lb/>
of the other conference squads<lb/>
can be disregarded. Elon will be out<lb/>
to avenge last year's 25-9 defeat at<lb/>
the hands of the Pirates. Appalachi-<lb/>
an, Western Carolina and Guilford<lb/>
will also be seeking to upend the<lb/>
Pirates in retaliation for lickings ad-<lb/>
ministered by the Bucs during 1952.<lb/>
Des-pite the fact that the latter four<lb/>
9 will be out for the Pirates, it<lb/>
still seems that Catawba presents<lb/>
paramount threat. The Indians<lb/>
will have a veteran squad complete<lb/>
A-ith an outstanding coach, as East<lb/>
oliniana can testify.<lb/>
Coach Clyde Biggers, who will<lb/>
take over the reins at Catawba, will<lb/>
undoubtedly be pointing for the East<lb/>
J. C. PENNEY CO.<lb/>
"Always First Quality"<lb/>
WE CAN OUTFIT THE<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENT<lb/>
COMPLETELY -<lb/>
AND SAVE YOU MONEY!<lb/>
Carolina game in an &amp;? 'empt to<lb/>
"show up" his former protv ges.<lb/>
The scheduW at present calls for<lb/>
the final two contests to be played<lb/>
in Florida Novtnber 7 at Tampa and<lb/>
November 14 at Stetso: Although<lb/>
we do not know wlw urra, t rnts<lb/>
have been made, it seems tnaw cne<lb/>
most logical thing to do would be to<lb/>
have the Bucs remain in the land of<lb/>
sunshine from the 7th through the<lb/>
14th. T1. j host schools would probably<lb/>
provide room and board for the boys<lb/>
and they would also be able to get<lb/>
in more practice in the Southern<lb/>
climate, so unlike Greenville's con-<lb/>
tinuous rain.<lb/>
New Jersey Team<lb/>
Faces Buccaneers<lb/>
At College Field<lb/>
Closing out the week's baseball<lb/>
activities, the East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
traveled to Guilford today for an<lb/>
Eastern Division league contest.<lb/>
The Bucs met the High Point Pan-<lb/>
thers yesterday in High Point. Both<lb/>
games were played after the "East<lb/>
Carolinian" went to press.<lb/>
Returning to Greenville after the<lb/>
holidays, the locals enter a three-<lb/>
game series with Montclair State of<lb/>
New Jersey on Wednesday and Thurs-<lb/>
day, April 8 and 9. Elon's Christiana<lb/>
invade the local field Friday, April<lb/>
10.<lb/>
During the week of April 13 the<lb/>
Pirate basebillers will face the High<lb/>
Point Panthers on the local field and<lb/>
the Guilford Quakers at Guilford col-<lb/>
lege, on Wednesday and Friday, re-<lb/>
spectively.<lb/>
Coach Jack Boone has yet to settle<lb/>
on a definite line-up. So far he has<lb/>
experimented in all nine positions<lb/>
to find the best combination.<lb/>
Pirates Shutout<lb/>
Bulldogs By 7-0<lb/>
In First Contest<lb/>
Jimmy Byrd and Jimmy Piner com-<lb/>
bined their pitching abilities to blank<lb/>
a iivai AGC nJ"ie on seven hits last<lb/>
Friday in Wilson as the Pirates gained<lb/>
a 7-0 victory in the opening contest<lb/>
for voth te m.s.<lb/>
Byre' hia.ed five innings and gv?<lb/>
ui) five hits. Piner then finished the<lb/>
contest, allowing two singles.<lb/>
Left fielder Paul Gay was the only<lb/>
Hue to connect for two hits. He had<lb/>
two singles in five trips.<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
East Carolina AB R H O A E<lb/>
Heath, 2b -300100<lb/>
Hoskins, 2b 0 10 0 0 0<lb/>
Pirate Baseball Coach<lb/>
ilanlison, 2b 1<lb/>
Hooper, rf 3<lb/>
Russell, lb 1<lb/>
G. Cline, 3b, rf 5<lb/>
Britt, c 2<lb/>
B. Cline, c .  2<lb/>
Gay, If 5<lb/>
Sanderson, lb, rf 3<lb/>
Cherry, 3b 1<lb/>
Stevens, ss 1<lb/>
Thompson, ss 0<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
2 1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
10 0<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
2 0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
7<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
2 1<lb/>
10 0 0 1<lb/>
Jones, ss<lb/>
0 0 0 0 0 0<lb/>
Corbin, cf  2<lb/>
Webb, cf<lb/>
Byrd, p<lb/>
Piner, p<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0 0 1<lb/>
0 11<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
10 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
Pirates Take Third Victory<lb/>
By Besting Textiles, 13-3<lb/>
34 7 9 27 7 1<lb/>
AB R H O A E<lb/>
5 0 2 4 0 1<lb/>
! Good Food, Reasonable Prices<lb/>
I and Friendly Atmosphere<lb/>
BEST IN FOOD<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Atl'tic Christian<lb/>
Byrum, cf <lb/>
Morris, 2b 3 0 0 2 4 0<lb/>
Davis, If, 3b 3 0 2 5 10<lb/>
Crowder, ss-i 4 0 13 10<lb/>
Lane, rf 4 0 110 0<lb/>
Williams, 3b 3 0 0 2 0 0<lb/>
Williughby, If<lb/>
Hai-ris, lb<lb/>
Price, c<lb/>
Dominquez, p<lb/>
Hamp, p<lb/>
Todd, p <lb/>
Z-Holmes <lb/>
10 0 0 0 0<lb/>
4 0 0 4 0 0<lb/>
4 0 16 2 0<lb/>
10 0 0 0 0<lb/>
0 0 0 0 0 0<lb/>
10 0 0 0 0<lb/>
10 0 0 0 0<lb/>
Totals 34 0 7 27 8 1<lb/>
z?Hit for Dominquez in 7th.<lb/>
Score by innings:<lb/>
ECC 010 100 014?7<lb/>
A( V  000 000 000?0<lb/>
Runs batted in: Hardi?on 2, Gay<lb/>
Two-base hits: Sanderson, Crowder,<lb/>
! Lane. Base on balls: Byrd 2, Piner<lb/>
Pictured above b Jack Boone, head coach of East Carolina's baseball<lb/>
fortunes. Under Boone's tutorlage the Bucs triumphed in their firs.t three<lb/>
contests of 1953.<lb/>
Buccaneer Linksters<lb/>
Open Golfing Season<lb/>
By Downing High Point<lb/>
The East Carolina college golf team<lb/>
opened its season Monday by down-<lb/>
ing Hisjh Point 12-6 at the Emery-<lb/>
wood country club in Hign Point.<lb/>
Atk. is of High Point turned in the<lb/>
low score for both clubs as he carded<lb/>
a 77 over the difficult 18 holes.<lb/>
Claude King had a 79 to take medal-<lb/>
ist honors for East Carolina.<lb/>
The pairings:<lb/>
Pirate Hurlers<lb/>
Miss No-Hit Game<lb/>
In Last Of Ninth<lb/>
by Sam Flux<lb/>
Three East Carolina hurlera were<lb/>
deprived of a combination no-hitter<lb/>
by a ninth inning single here Monday<lb/>
as the Pirates whitewashed a New<lb/>
Bedford institute club 7-0.<lb/>
Thn New Englanders' third base-<lb/>
man Wall England slammed ore of<lb/>
Ted Barnes pitches down the first<lb/>
? iae line to reak the ict. The two<lb/>
previous Buc pitchers who eav? up<lb/>
no hits were Martin Byrd, the start-<lb/>
er, and Clyde Owens.<lb/>
Pacing the Pirates' plate attack<lb/>
was riffhtfielder Major Hooper, who<lb/>
knocked two singles in three trips.<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
New Bedford AB R H O A E<lb/>
Camacho, cf  3 0 0 10 1<lb/>
England, 3b 4<lb/>
Thatcher, ss  2<lb/>
Poitras, c  3<lb/>
Martinez, If  3<lb/>
Rodil, 2b 2<lb/>
Katterman, rf 3<lb/>
Arruda, lb 1<lb/>
Chapman, lb  1<lb/>
Pomber, p 2<lb/>
xBachand  1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
6 0<lb/>
5 0<lb/>
0 4<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
Atkins (HP) defeated King (EC),<lb/>
3-0.<lb/>
Braun (EC)<lb/>
(HP), 3-0.<lb/>
defeated Beavers<lb/>
King and Braun tied Atkins and<lb/>
Beavers, lVz-lVi.<lb/>
Martin (EC)<lb/>
(HP) 2<lb/>
defeated Barrett<lb/>
Rainey (EC) defeated Lowe (HP)<lb/>
2-1.<lb/>
Martin and Ra aey defeated Bar-<lb/>
Dominquez 3, Ham 3, Todd 1. rett and Lowe, 3-0.<lb/>
S2LST- <lb/>
Th???-<lb/>
0njversit<lb/>
Nothing-no. nothing-beats better taste<lb/>
. nreshef<lb/>
&amp;?S&amp;<lb/>
LUCKIES<lb/>
TASTE BETTER!<lb/>
Cleaner, Fresher, Smoother!<lb/>
Ask yourself this question: Why do I smoke?<lb/>
You kfiow, 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.T.?Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco.<lb/>
So, for the thing you want most in a cigarette<lb/>
for better taste?for the cleaner, fresher, smoother<lb/>
taste of Lucky Strike <lb/>
Be Happy-GO UlCKf!<lb/>
w<lb/>
? -w-<lb/>
fc:?:<lb/>
??? -ftR tfCKltS<lb/>
COV ,M NATION0 student<lb/>
w- ITS- ? ?Z<lb/>
tion t"? otbet P?<lb/>
W: . vl-tories ov?-r Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian ncv and New Bedford twice,<lb/>
the h:i e aimg Buccaneers have giv-<lb/>
en tho EC lans an opponnity to<lb/>
tfet a ringside glance at tho stout-<lb/>
nesa ol' Coach Tack Boone's nine.<lb/>
Although the vanquished tr'o pro-<lb/>
vided weak opposition, the Pirates<lb/>
looked good, especially the battery<lb/>
men.<lb/>
J.m Byid and Jim Piner tossed the<lb/>
7-0 wi ov r the outclassed AC club.<lb/>
Byrd looked extraordinarily loose on<lb/>
the nuund showing no effects of a<lb/>
bad ar. . that had previously plagued<lb/>
him. Pi.ier hurled four innings of<lb/>
excellent baseball. He seems to have<lb/>
already hit mid-season prime.<lb/>
Martin Byrd, senior moundsman<lb/>
from Tabor City, throws streaks of<lb/>
lightning and if he stays in shape<lb/>
and contn eg to get the better side<lb/>
of control he will be a sure winner.<lb/>
Clyde Oweit, Beaufort's contribution<lb/>
to the sq.jad, has been the talk of<lb/>
the campu . The 6-3 righthander can<lb/>
r ally whip 'cm by the stickmen. In<lb/>
his brief appearance against New<lb/>
Bedford, Owens sent four batters in<lb/>
a row back to the bench shaking<lb/>
their heads. He pitched three hitless<lb/>
innings. Keep your eye6 on this lad.<lb/>
Other pitchers who have shown<lb/>
line diamond prowess are Ted Barnes,<lb/>
Ken Hall, Leonard Sullivan and A.J.<lb/>
Rose.<lb/>
Gaither C line is undoubtedly the<lb/>
fans' favorite. His terrific long ball<lb/>
hitting would make him a prominent<lb/>
?ure on any ball club. Against<lb/>
New Bedford he cannoned a terrific<lb/>
clout over the right field fence some<lb/>
350 feet away. Cline moves excep-<lb/>
tionally fa-L for a big man and is<lb/>
death with tv.t glove.<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
7<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
Totals  28 0 1 24 11 3<lb/>
xHit for Pomber in 9th.<lb/>
East Carolina AB R H O A E<lb/>
Hardison, 2b 211200<lb/>
Heath, 2b  3<lb/>
Hooper, rf 3<lb/>
Russell, lb 0<lb/>
Britt, c, rf 5<lb/>
Corbin, rf  0<lb/>
Gay, If, cf 3<lb/>
Hayes, cf . 1<lb/>
Sanderson, lb, rf 2<lb/>
B. Cline, c 2<lb/>
Stevens, ss  2<lb/>
Jones, 22  2<lb/>
Thompson, ss 1<lb/>
Webb, cf 1<lb/>
Cherry, 3b 0<lb/>
Sauls, 3b  0<lb/>
Byrd, p 1<lb/>
Jwens, p  2<lb/>
Barnes, p 0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
0 0 1<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
0 11<lb/>
Ken Hall Gets Credit<lb/>
For Triumph Against<lb/>
Massachusetts Squad<lb/>
Coach Ja.k Boone's East Carolina<lb/>
Pirates made  three straight and<lb/>
two in a ? ? over New Bedford here<lb/>
Tuesday as they came out on the<lb/>
long end of a 13-3 count.<lb/>
After giving up two runs to the<lb/>
Textiles in the first inning, the Bucs<lb/>
got back in the game in the third<lb/>
and ent ar.ead in the fourth.<lb/>
Top man in the hit column for<lb/>
the Boone-men was Cecil Heath. The<lb/>
spunky second sacker got three for<lb/>
three. Gaither Clii:3 tagged the<lb/>
game's hardest 'w with a homer<lb/>
over the right field fence in the sixt<lb/>
Cline went two for three. W. C. San-<lb/>
derson included in his two for four<lb/>
an in-the-park four bagger. Wilbur<lb/>
Thompson hit two for three.<lb/>
A. J. Rose, Ken Hall and Eugene<lb/>
Rose limited the Northerners to four<lb/>
base knocks.<lb/>
New Bedford AB R H O A E<lb/>
Camacho, cf 4 0 0<lb/>
England, 'ib  3 10<lb/>
Thatcher, es4 11<lb/>
Poitraa, c ?. 4 0 1<lb/>
Baines, c  0 0 0<lb/>
Martinez, If 3 11<lb/>
Rodil, 2b 3 0 1<lb/>
Pomber, rf 2 0 0<lb/>
Katterman, rf  10 0<lb/>
Chapman, 2b  3 0 0<lb/>
Arruda, 2b 10 0<lb/>
Bachand, p 2 0 0<lb/>
Dahlburg, p  10 0<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
1 5<lb/>
1 4<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
J. 0<lb/>
3 3<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
7<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
. 0<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
al&amp;<lb/>
i <lb/>
OA-T.Co.<lb/>
riooucT or<lb/>
iltUIOA'l UUAZXa MAMUrACTOKBB OV CXQAHBTTBO<lb/>
Totals  34 7 9 27 8 1<lb/>
Score by innings:<lb/>
New Bedford 000 000 000?0<lb/>
East Carolina   011 100 04x?7<lb/>
Runs batted in: Hardison; G. Cline,<lb/>
2; Britt. S Struck out by: Byrd, 4;<lb/>
Owens, 5; Barnes, 2; Pomber, 4. Bases<lb/>
on balls off: Barnes, 2; Pomber, 8.<lb/>
Hits off: Byrd?0 in 4, Owens?0 in 3;<lb/>
Barnes?1 in 2. Winning pitic.er:<lb/>
Owens.<lb/>
The Pirates' defenders are looking<lb/>
tactful and give the Bucs an infield<lb/>
as tight as a hat band.<lb/>
The outer garden is patrolled by<lb/>
a host of speedy, sharp hitting hope-<lb/>
fuls.<lb/>
Stevens, ss 0<lb/>
Webb, cf 1<lb/>
Russell, lb  2<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
Totals 31 3 4 24 15 5<lb/>
East Carolina AB R H O A E<lb/>
Hardison, 2b 2 10 0 2 1<lb/>
Heath, 2b  3<lb/>
Hooper, rf  2<lb/>
G. Cline, If 3<lb/>
Sauls, 3b 1<lb/>
Cherry, 3b 4<lb/>
Sanderson, lb-rf 4<lb/>
Britt, rf 1<lb/>
Gay, lh-cf . 4<lb/>
Corbin, cf ?. 1<lb/>
Thompson, ss 3<lb/>
Jones, ss 2<lb/>
1 3<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
2 2<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
2 2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
Hardee, c 2 0 0<lb/>
B. Cline, c 2 2 0<lb/>
A. Rose, p  0 0 0<lb/>
Hall, p  2 0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
9<lb/>
7<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
2 0<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
E. Rose, p 0 1<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
0 0 3 0<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
39 13 14 27 11 1<lb/>
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to College Placement Office, Box<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038320_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
BAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 195s<lb/>
Audience Lauds Performance<lb/>
Of College Faculty In Comedy<lb/>
East Carolina college staff mem-<lb/>
bers who appeared in two perform-<lb/>
ances of John Patrick's comedy "The<lb/>
Curious Savage" Thursday and Fri-<lb/>
day, March 26 and 27 .received hearty<lb/>
applause and many favorable com-<lb/>
ments on their performances from<lb/>
audiences representing both the<lb/>
 u. 'i the city of Greenville.<lb/>
 ponsored by thfc Green-<lb/>
ville Branch of the American asso-<lb/>
on of University Women, was<lb/>
given a a benefit performance for<lb/>
East Carolina college Foreign<lb/>
Study Scholarship fund. George E.<lb/>
Perry of the faculty was director.<lb/>
More than 50 people, in addition<lb/>
the members of the cast, partici-<lb/>
pated in work on the production.<lb/>
These included college faculty mem-<lb/>
bers and administrative officers, and<lb/>
members of the AAUW and of the<lb/>
Teachers playhouse, the Student Gov-<lb/>
association, the Future<lb/>
1 r- of America and the foreign<lb/>
languages fraternity Sigma Pi Al-<lb/>
; East Carolina.<lb/>
Mrs. Dorothy W. Perkins, director<lb/>
of education in the depart-<lb/>
ment of education, as Mrs. Ethel<lb/>
Savage, eccentric millionairess, had<lb/>
tie role in "The Curious Sav-<lb/>
" Her sympathetic interpretation<lb/>
of the part won an enthusiastic re-<lb/>
sponse from audiences at both per-<lb/>
formances.<lb/>
A supporting cast of ten staff<lb/>
members was made up of Elizabeth<lb/>
Walker, Dr. Harold Jones, Beatrice<lb/>
Chauncey, Donald Amelon, Mrs. Sally<lb/>
Klir.jrenschmitt, Dr. Theodore Eaton,<lb/>
Dr. Hubert Coleman, Mrs. Agnes<lb/>
Barrett, Ruth Lambie, and Dr. James<lb/>
Poindexter. Larry Holt, eight-year<lb/>
old Gretnville boy, appeared as guest<lb/>
actor in the final scene of the play.<lb/>
An attractive stage setting designed<lb/>
by Assistant Dean of Women Edith<lb/>
Zinn contributed to the effectiveness<lb/>
of the comedy. The artistic lighting<lb/>
effects which marked the production<lb/>
were executed by Ernest White, stu-<lb/>
dent from Waynesboro, Va.<lb/>
Talk With Your Uncle<lb/>
A Naval Aviation Cadet Procure-<lb/>
ment team for this area, composed<lb/>
of Lt. Cmdr. C. W. Perdue and Lt.<lb/>
John A. Henning from the Naval Air<lb/>
station, Norfolk, Va will interview<lb/>
students interested in the Naval Avi-<lb/>
ation cadet program. They will be<lb/>
on campus at 10 a.m. April 10, and<lb/>
will remain here in the afternoon,<lb/>
if necessary.<lb/>
Eligibility requirements for Navy<lb/>
cadet training are that the applicant<lb/>
must be at least 18 and not over 27<lb/>
years of age; has completed 90 quar-<lb/>
ter hours in college; has not married<lb/>
and must remain unmarried until<lb/>
commissioned; and must meet with<lb/>
certain physical requirements.<lb/>
BSU Student Attends<lb/>
Tennessee Conference<lb/>
Gwendola Williams, junior from<lb/>
Oakboro, attended last week end in<lb/>
Nashville, Tenn the National Plan-<lb/>
ning conference of the Baptist Stu-<lb/>
dent union. She represents the cam-<lb/>
pus BSU organization here. She was<lb/>
accompanied to Nashville by stu-<lb/>
dents from other Baptist Student<lb/>
unions of the state. At the college she<lb/>
is an active worker in the Baptist<lb/>
student group and is also vice presi-<lb/>
dent of the student Home Economics<lb/>
club.<lb/>
TO BE IN STYLE<lb/>
TRY OUR LINE OF MEN'S CLOTHING<lb/>
The FRANK WILSON Store<lb/>
King Clothiers Since 1898<lb/>
?<lb/>
Home Economics Group<lb/>
Names Williams Prexy<lb/>
Gwendola Williams of Oakboro,<lb/>
sophomore at East Carolina college,<lb/>
will head the Home Economics club<lb/>
at the college during the 1953-1954<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
Other officers chosen in a recent<lb/>
election to serve next year in the<lb/>
club, one of the largest departmental<lb/>
organizations on the campus, are<lb/>
Marceline Aycock, Black Creek, vice<lb/>
president; Evelyn Davis, Warsaw,<lb/>
secretary; Peggy Faircloth, Rosoboro,<lb/>
treasurer; and Mary Lee Gillette,<lb/>
Jacksonville, and Kitty Gerringer,<lb/>
Draper, reporters on student publi-<lb/>
cations.<lb/>
Home Ec Society<lb/>
Adds 11 Members<lb/>
Of Honor Rating<lb/>
In recognition of their excellent<lb/>
scholastic records and high profes-<lb/>
sional standards, eleven home eco-<lb/>
nomics students at East Carolina<lb/>
college have been chosen as members<lb/>
of Phi Omicron, honor society. All<lb/>
have completed or are now complet-<lb/>
ing their sophomore year as majors<lb/>
in the department of home economics<lb/>
at the college.<lb/>
Ruth Haislip, senior from Oak City,<lb/>
presided at an initiation ceremony<lb/>
in the Flanagan auditorium at which<lb/>
the students were formally accepted<lb/>
as members of the society. Ruth<lb/>
Lambie, director of the college Nur-<lb/>
sery school and faculty advisor of<lb/>
Phi Omicron, also participated in the<lb/>
service.<lb/>
New members of the organization<lb/>
are Marcelline Aycock, Black Creek;<lb/>
Betty L. Boyette, Selma; Ann L.<lb/>
Carawan, Swan Quarter; Mary Sue<lb/>
Cook, Hertford; Peggy Ann Cox,<lb/>
Richlands; Sally Credle, Scranton;<lb/>
Emily J. Eaves, Henderson; Peggy<lb/>
J. Faircloth, Roseboro; Anna L.<lb/>
Laughton, Beaufort; L. Gwen Wil-<lb/>
liams, Oakboro; and Bertha Pate<lb/>
Jones, Tarboro.<lb/>
Inspection Team<lb/>
Awards AFROTC<lb/>
Highest Rating<lb/>
The East Carolina college Air Force<lb/>
ROTC detachment received the high-<lb/>
est po?il le rating during the annual<lb/>
Federal inspection conducted Wed-<lb/>
nesday and Thursday, March 25 and<lb/>
26.<lb/>
All unit facilities underwent a<lb/>
thorough inspection during the two<lb/>
days. The inspection was climaxed by<lb/>
a ceremonial wing parade on Thurs-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Colonel Adolph M. Wright, officer<lb/>
in charge of the Federal inspection<lb/>
team, met with Cadet Colonel Mau-<lb/>
rice H. Moore of Wilmington and his<lb/>
staff at the conclusion of the parade.<lb/>
At this meeting Colonel Wright said,<lb/>
"The cadets of the East Carolina<lb/>
college Air Force ROTC wing are to<lb/>
be commended on their splendid per-<lb/>
formance. It reflects a high degree<lb/>
of effort on the part of each cadet<lb/>
Please pass this on to all personnel<lb/>
in the Cadet wing<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S FOOD CENTER<lb/>
East Fifth and Cotanche Street<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN FOOTWEAR<lb/>
It's<lb/>
MERIT SHOES<lb/>
1<lb/>
BUY YOUR<lb/>
New '53 Ford or Guaranteed Used Car<lb/>
From<lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co. Inc.<lb/>
Pay Only During The Months You Teach Under Our<lb/>
 SCHOOL TEACHER FINANCE PLAN<lb/>
Serving Eastern Carolina Since 1866<lb/>
Bunch's Shoe Service<lb/>
Expert Shoe Repairing<lb/>
510 Cotanche Street<lb/>
Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
45 RPM Accessories<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE<lb/>
1l <lb/>
College Students<lb/>
COME IN AND SEE<lb/>
OUR FIXE SELECTION OF SUITS and COATS<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
Good Food ? Sandwiches<lb/>
CAROLINA GRILL<lb/>
24 Hour Service<lb/>
Better Shoes Reasonably Priced<lb/>
AT<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
517 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
YOU ARE WELCOME TO<lb/>
Mrs. Morton's Bakery<lb/>
SCOTT'S CLEANERS<lb/>
Sh<lb/>
<lb/>
For Dr?c Neeee, Cosmetics aod Feuatain Goods<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
BI??S DRUG 6TORS<lb/>
Preetar Hotel Building<lb/>
?pen 8 A. M. - 1 ? P. M. ? Sunday S :30 A. M. - lt :3t A. M<lb/>
4 P. M. - 10 P. M.<lb/>
PATRONIZE THE<lb/>
Y STORE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
BAKERY PRODUCTS<lb/>
PEOPLES BAKERY<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
"Your College Shop"<lb/>
Sterling by one of<lb/>
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Silversmiths ? ? ?<lb/>
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THE CAMPUS RAGE<lb/>
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It Contains All The Materials<lb/>
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Making A Pair Of<lb/>
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without<lb/>
stag get ing<lb/>
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6 piece<lb/>
place setting<lb/>
for only $19.75<lb/>
'Pick your Violet today and<lb/>
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price and with our conven-<lb/>
ient budget plan. A charm-<lb/>
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STOP BY TODAY<lb/>
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Certified Gemologist<lb/>
Kares Restaurant<lb/>
For Best In<lb/>
LUNCHES and SNACKS<lb/>
IF YOU CAN WIN<lb/>
THESE WINGS YOU CAN EARN OVER<lb/>
55,000 A YEAR AFTER GRADUATION<lb/>
Important (acts about the opportunities lor YOU<lb/>
as a Commissioned Officer-Pilot or Aircraft Observer-<lb/>
in the United States Air Force<lb/>
Musi I be a college graduate to toko Aviation Cadet Training?<lb/>
No. But you must have completed a minimum of 60 semester<lb/>
hours or 90 quarter hours toward a degree. In addition, under<lb/>
the new Aviation Cadet training program, you must be be-<lb/>
tween the ages of 19 and 26 years, unmarried, and in good<lb/>
physical condition?with high requirements for eyes, ears,<lb/>
heart and teeth.<lb/>
How long before 1 gef my commission?<lb/>
60 calendar weeks. You will receive the finest aviation training<lb/>
in the world?training that not only equips you to fly modern<lb/>
military aircraft but prepares you for executive and administra-<lb/>
tive work as well. At the completion of your training, you will<lb/>
have acquired a commission as a 2nd Lieutenant and the<lb/>
coveted silver wings of the United States Air Force.<lb/>
Where do I take my training?<lb/>
Pre-fiight training will be at Lackland Air Force Base, San<lb/>
Antonio, Texas. Primary, basic and advanced training will be<lb/>
taken at any one of the many Air Force bases located throughout<lb/>
the South and Southwest.<lb/>
What happens if I flunk the training course?<lb/>
Every effort is made to help students whose progress is unsatis-<lb/>
factory. You can expect extra Instructions and whatever indi-<lb/>
vidual attention you may require. However, if you fail to<lb/>
complete the course as an Aviation Cadet, you will be required<lb/>
to serve a two-year enlistment to fulfill the minimum requirement<lb/>
under Selective Service laws. Veterans who have completed a<lb/>
tour of military service will be discharged upon request if they<lb/>
fail to complete the course.<lb/>
What pay do get as an Aviation Cadet? And after?<lb/>
As an Aviation Cadet you draw $109.20 a month pay. In<lb/>
addition, you get summer and winter uniforms, flight clothes,<lb/>
equipment, food, housing, medical and dental care and insurance<lb/>
 all free. After you are commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant you<lb/>
will be earning $5,300.00 a year?with unlimited opportunities<lb/>
for advancement.<lb/>
Are all Aviation Cadets trained to be Pilots?<lb/>
No. You can choose between becoming a Pilot or an Aircraft<lb/>
Observer. Men who choose the latter will become commissioned<lb/>
officers in Navigation, Bombardment, Radar Operation, or<lb/>
Aircraft Performance Engineering.<lb/>
Your future is assured if you con qualify! Here's what to do:<lb/>
1 Take a transcript of your college credits and a copy of your birth certificate to your<lb/>
? Air Force Base or Recruiting Station. Fill out the application they give you.<lb/>
2 If application la accepted, the Air Force will arrange for you to take a physical<lb/>
examination at government expense.<lb/>
? Next, you will be given a written and menus! aptitude test.<lb/>
4 If you pass your physical and other tests, you will be schedvied for sa<lb/>
Aviation Cadet training class. The Selective Service Act allows you<lb/>
a four-month deferment while waiting class assignment.<lb/>
WHERE TO GET MORE DETAILS<lb/>
Visit your nearest Air Fore Bate, Air Force Recruiting Officer,<lb/>
or your nearest Air Force ROTC Unit. Or writ to:<lb/>
AVIATION CADET, HEADQUARTERS, U. S. AIR FORCE<lb/>
Washington 25, D. C<lb/>
is. air ioTut:<lb/>
Do Aircraft Observers get flying training, too?<lb/>
Yes. Aircraft Observer Cadets receive approximately 200 hours<lb/>
of "in the air" instructions. The primary phase of Aircraft<lb/>
Observer training is the same for all branches (navigation,<lb/>
bombardment, etc.). The basic and advanced phases of training<lb/>
vary, depending on the specific course you pursue.<lb/>
What kind of airplanes will I fry?<lb/>
You will fly jets. The Pilot Cadet takes his first instructions in<lb/>
a light, civilian-type plane of approximately 100 horsepower,<lb/>
then graduates to the 600 horsepower T-6 "Texan" before<lb/>
receiving transition training in jets. You then advance gradually<lb/>
until you are flying such famous first-line aircraft as F-86 Sabre,<lb/>
F-89 Scorpion, B-47 Stratojet, B-60 Superfortress. Observer<lb/>
Cadets take flight instructions in the C-47 Dakota, the T-29<lb/>
Convair, and the TB-50 Superfortress before advancing to first-<lb/>
line aircraft such as the F-89 Scorpion, B-47 Stratojet.<lb/>
Will my commission be in the Regular Air Force or Reserve?<lb/>
Aviation Cadet graduates, both Pilots and Aircraft Observers,<lb/>
get Reserve commissions as 2nd Lieutenants and become eligible<lb/>
to apply for a regular Air Force Commission when they have<lb/>
completed 18 months of active duty.<lb/>
How long must I remain in Service?<lb/>
After graduation from the Aviation Cadet Program, you are<lb/>
tendered an indefinite appointment in the United States Air<lb/>
Force Reserve and are called to active duty with the United<lb/>
States Air Force for a period of three years.<lb/>
Who recreation and leisure time wUI I have as a Cadet?<lb/>
Discipline will be rigid?especially for the firs few weeks<lb/>
However, it is not all work. You'll find swnunming pools, handball<lb/>
courts, movies and other forma of recreation en the post.<lb/>
Where will I be stationed when I got my commission?<lb/>
You may be stationed anywhere in the world ? Hawaii, Far<lb/>
East, Europe, Puerto Rico, elsewhere. During your tour of duty,<lb/>
you will be in close touch with the latest developments in new<lb/>
flying techniques. You will continue to build up your flying<lb/>
experience and later should have no difficulty securing a CAA<lb/>
commercial pilot or navigator rating.<lb/>
Stai<lb/>
tie ?? -<lb/>
1<lb/>
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prom<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038320_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>