<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038321_0001"/>
kdC<lb/>
ar<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
r Our<lb/>
A<lb/>
R<lb/>
N<lb/>
ir?<lb/>
hours<lb/>
Aircraft<lb/>
ivigatio?<lb/>
training<lb/>
ictiona in<lb/>
jpower,<lb/>
before<lb/>
idually<lb/>
Sabre,<lb/>
(Observer<lb/>
I the T-29<lb/>
to first-<lb/>
t.<lb/>
eserv9?<lb/>
bervers,<lb/>
?e eligible<lb/>
iey have<lb/>
you are<lb/>
- Air<lb/>
lad?<lb/>
- weeks-<lb/>
handball<lb/>
l?<lb/>
waii, Far<lb/>
? of duty,<lb/>
fts in new<lb/>
our fly"1<lb/>
sgaCAA<lb/>
do:<lb/>
Staff Welcomes Senior Visitors<lb/>
We of the East Carolinian staff would like to take this<lb/>
opportunity to welcome you, our high school visitors, to East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
We hope that you are finding your stay here enjoyable<lb/>
and that you are able to feel free and at home on our campus.<lb/>
We do not think that it is in any way childish to say that we are<lb/>
proud of our school and feel that for educational standards and<lb/>
hospitality it is among the top. It is our hope that you will see<lb/>
nt to return to East Carolina next fall to begin your college edu-<lb/>
cation.<lb/>
During your stay here you have seen the different depart-<lb/>
ments that comprise East Carolina college. We hope that you<lb/>
have been favorably impressed. We who have been here for at<lb/>
least a year can fully appreciate the indecision that may be in<lb/>
your minds with regard to selecting a school at which to further<lb/>
your education.<lb/>
You have observed East Carolina. Now it is our hope that<lb/>
your impressions have been favorable, and we are looking for-<lb/>
ward to seeing many of you again next fall.<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
VOLUME XXVIII<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1953<lb/>
Number 24<lb/>
High School Seniors Visit Campus Today<lb/>
??<lb/>
State Home Ec Club Here<lb/>
For Workshop Convention<lb/>
Playhouse Stages 'Robin Hood<lb/>
For Children, April 16-24<lb/>
Over 100 Delegates<lb/>
From 17 NC Colleges<lb/>
Vttend Two-Day Meet<lb/>
Members of the College Clubs di-<lb/>
u of the North Carolina Home<lb/>
lomics association are holding<lb/>
r eighth annual workshop at East<lb/>
:ina college today and tomorrow.<lb/>
Approximately 100 delegates from<lb/>
. 7 North Carolina colleges and junior<lb/>
tges are attending. Schools rep-<lb/>
lied are Appalachian, Campbell,<lb/>
wba, East Carolina, Elon, Flora<lb/>
Uaedonald, Gardner-Webb, Greeiis-<lb/>
oro, High Ponn, Meredith, Pem-<lb/>
 ke, Pfeiffer, Queens, Salem, War-<lb/>
Wilson, Woman's college and<lb/>
Western Carolina.<lb/>
Anne Moore of Turkey, East Caro-<lb/>
aa student, is president of the or-<lb/>
ation. Other officers are B 'sy<lb/>
of Appalachian, vice president;<lb/>
y Tier of Flora Macdonald, ee-<lb/>
ry; Virginia Mumford of Mars<lb/>
Hill, treasurer; and Celia Wood of<lb/>
Meredith, reporter.<lb/>
Program events for the<lb/>
:e a presentation ot<lb/>
'E Lea EL Richards' Challea<lb/>
by Gwendola Williams<lb/>
ro and based on the caret r of a<lb/>
eer home economist, tonight by<lb/>
? East Carolina Home Economic<lb/>
Speakers who are participating in<lb/>
the work-hop program include Deaa<lb/>
V. Jenkins of East Carolina and<lb/>
atherine T. Dennis, vice president<lb/>
f the American Home Economics<lb/>
ation. Dean Jenkins talked this<lb/>
?rning at 9 o'clock on "Our Respon-<lb/>
ibilities in Home and Family<lb/>
g As principal speaker at a<lb/>
:? meeting Saturday, Mis<lb/>
discuss "Looking to th<lb/>
Home Economics<lb/>
Business conducted during the<lb/>
work-hop will include installation<lb/>
f new officers. East Carolina stu-<lb/>
dents will be hostesses Saturday at<lb/>
a tea in honor of visitors.<lb/>
i p.m.<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
ance is<lb/>
8 p.m<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
?Movie is in Austin.<lb/>
?Ray Anthony concert and<lb/>
in Wright auditorium.<lb/>
?Faculty Lecture club meets<lb/>
in Flanagan. Dr. T. H. Eaton speaks.<lb/>
Students and faculty invited to at-<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
6:45 p.m.?Commerce club meets<lb/>
Flanagan.<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
3:30-4:3U p.m.?Home Ec Fashion<lb/>
takes place in Austin audi-<lb/>
<lb/>
show<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
7-8<lb/>
m eung<lb/>
the skit<lb/>
e writ-<lb/>
o I ' 'ak-<lb/>
p.m.?SGA meets in Flanagan.<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
3-5:15 p.m.?Recital by Moon Man-<lb/>
ning will be given hi Austin audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
6 p.m.?Workshop play will be<lb/>
i d in the College theatre.<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
1-3:30 pan.?Fashion show is on<lb/>
 in Austin auditorium.<lb/>
Spanish Class<lb/>
Presents Drama<lb/>
Liv-<lb/>
din-<lb/>
Denni<lb/>
Future<lb/>
Student members at East Carolina<lb/>
f the foreign languages fra-<lb/>
tj Sigma Pi Alpha gave a one-<lb/>
act comedy in Spanish "Mi Novio<lb/>
? at Atlantic Christian col-<lb/>
! ge lasi Thursday night. The pro-<lb/>
gram was presented there before the<lb/>
Ah ha Gamma chapter of the fra-<lb/>
ternity.<lb/>
The program by East Carolina stu-<lb/>
dents included also group singing of<lb/>
songs, directed by Jane Sim-<lb/>
of Bessemer City, and short<lb/>
y Jacqueline Phalempin, East<lb/>
ia scholarship student from<lb/>
Fiance, and by Nancy Kesler,<lb/>
?prings, president of the<lb/>
chapter.<lb/>
More than 25 student members of<lb/>
the Teachers playhouse of East Caro-<lb/>
lina college will appear in roles fam-<lb/>
ous in story and ballad when the<lb/>
dramatic club presents this month<lb/>
as its annual play for school children<lb/>
Owen Davis' "Robin Hood, or the<lb/>
Merry Outlaws of Sherwood Forest<lb/>
Douglas Mitchell, Greenville fresh-<lb/>
man, will have the title role of Robin<lb/>
Hood, and Ann McCrary, sophomore<lb/>
from Durham, will play Lady Marian.<lb/>
David Lee of Tarboro, as Little<lb/>
John; C. Poe Mooring of S.now Hill,<lb/>
as Friar Tuck; Ralph Rives of En-<lb/>
field, as the Sheriff of Nottingham;<lb/>
T Groups Hold<lb/>
Initial Service<lb/>
In New Building<lb/>
Student members of the YWCA and<lb/>
the YMCA at East Carolina college<lb/>
held their first vesper service in<lb/>
the recently completed Y Hut on the<lb/>
campus Thursday of this week.<lb/>
President John D. Messick of the<lb/>
college was speaker. Maidred Morris<lb/>
of Kenly and Charlie B. Bedford of<lb/>
P ceville, presidents of the two reli-<lb/>
gious organizations, participated in<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
The new Y Hut was completed<lb/>
about two weeks ago. Keys to the<lb/>
building were turned over to Miss<lb/>
.Morris and Mr. Bedford by College<lb/>
Business Manager F. D. Duncan<lb/>
Thursday, April 2, at a ceremony<lb/>
attended by YWCA-YMCA officers<lb/>
and faculty advisors and administra-<lb/>
tive officers of the college.<lb/>
Andrew K. Meeder of Norfolk, Va<lb/>
president of the YMCA during the<lb/>
li52-li)53 term, is now conducting a<lb/>
campus drive for funds to provide<lb/>
equipment and furnishings for the<lb/>
new Y Hut. Contributions will come<lb/>
largely from the college faculty.<lb/>
the period of April 16-24. Five of<lb/>
these, presented for school children<lb/>
of Pitt county, will be staged in the<lb/>
College theatre, and one at the<lb/>
Eppes school in Greenville. Two per-<lb/>
formances on April 24 will be give-n<lb/>
in Kinston. Several thousand people<lb/>
are expected to attend.<lb/>
Dr. Lucile H. Charles of the fac-<lb/>
ulty, director of dramatic arts at the<lb/>
college, is director of "Robin Hood<lb/>
The Greenville Chapter of the Amer-<lb/>
ican association of University Wo-<lb/>
men, sponsor of the annual chil-<lb/>
dren's play for the past several<lb/>
years, is again cooperating with the<lb/>
Teachers playhouse in this year's<lb/>
production.<lb/>
Members of the cast include also<lb/>
Charles Bedford, Pikeville; Thomas<lb/>
Pierce, Rocky Mount; Andrew Meed-<lb/>
er, Norfolk, Va Billye Canady, Clar-<lb/>
endon; Ruth Lassiter, Four Oaks;<lb/>
Peggy Barfield, Ayden; Kenneth<lb/>
Boideaux, Mt. Olive; and others who<lb/>
have minor roles.<lb/>
Ft nc<lb/>
mons<lb/>
ha 1 ke<lb/>
Caroli<lb/>
Arras<lb/>
of<lb/>
I1:<lb/>
Fuquay<lb/>
Surma<lb/>
Ray Anthony Musicians Here<lb/>
For Concert, Dance Monday<lb/>
Monday night, April 20, 8 p.m is<lb/>
the date and time and Ray Anthony,<lb/>
"The Young Man With the Horn<lb/>
America's top band leader, is the<lb/>
man of the hour.<lb/>
Beginning at 8 with a concert in<lb/>
ght auditorium and following up<lb/>
a better than two hours of dance<lb/>
music Ray Anthony and his orchestra<lb/>
present an evening of top music<lb/>
for the students and faculty of East<lb/>
Carolina college and their guest.<lb/>
Students will be admitted on their<lb/>
Identification card and are allowed<lb/>
to purchase one ticket from the<lb/>
Budget office prior to the dance for<lb/>
a non-student guest.<lb/>
Anthony, since forming his band<lb/>
upon discharge from the Navy in<lb/>
1946, has sky-rocketed to popular<lb/>
acclaim among the popular musicians<lb/>
of the nation. Famed as 'The Young<lb/>
Man With A Horn Anthony was<lb/>
born in Bentleyville, Pa and raised<lb/>
in Cleveland.<lb/>
He played with local bands while<lb/>
attending high school in Cleveland<lb/>
and then landed his first name band<lb/>
job with Al Donahue's outfit. Fol-<lb/>
lowing a brief stay with Jimmy Dor-<lb/>
sey, Anthony joined the Glenn Miller<lb/>
aggregation in 1940 and played dur-<lb/>
ing several coast-to-coast tours.<lb/>
After his hitch in the Navy, during<lb/>
which he directed a top notch service<lb/>
band in the Pacific, Ray and his<lb/>
ever present trumpet formed his own<lb/>
band and soon was hailed as Ameri-<lb/>
ca's greatest musical name since the<lb/>
late Glenn Miller.<lb/>
Anthony, who is married to Dee<lb/>
Keating, a former vocalist with his<lb/>
band, stands five feet, eight inches<lb/>
tall and bears a strong resenblance<lb/>
to screen star Cary Grant. He is a<lb/>
rabid baseball fan and holds as his<lb/>
main ambition the desire to make<lb/>
a record which will sell a million<lb/>
platters.<lb/>
Anthony is not the whole show<lb/>
of his orchestra, however. Included<lb/>
among his performers are Jo Ann<lb/>
Greer, a new discovery at the Holly-<lb/>
wood Paladium, and Tommy Mercer,<lb/>
recently voted the top male vocalist<lb/>
currently performing with the coun-<lb/>
try's dance bands.<lb/>
Monday night's performance will<lb/>
mark the second consecutive year<lb/>
that Ray Anthony has appeared at<lb/>
Bast Carolina. His performance dur-<lb/>
ing the spring of 1952 was well re-<lb/>
ceived by all present and present<lb/>
indications point to another top-notch<lb/>
turnout for his show.<lb/>
Anthony and his orchestra are<lb/>
luring brought to Greenville and East<lb/>
Carolina as the final number on the<lb/>
1952-53 Entertainment series spon-<lb/>
sored by the college.<lb/>
BSO Pays Visit,<lb/>
Presents Program<lb/>
The East Carolina Baptist Student<lb/>
union presented a religious program<lb/>
at Pembroke State college at Pem-<lb/>
broke, in Robeson county, Sunday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
This was an exchange program<lb/>
scheduled last year when arrange-<lb/>
ments were made for them to be<lb/>
held at Pembroke and Greenville.<lb/>
East Carolina's Alice Jackson pre-<lb/>
sided. Others on program included<lb/>
Hattie Ruth Wilson, Nora Mills,<lb/>
Carolyn Bullard and E. J. Hines.<lb/>
The theme of the meeting was<lb/>
"The Eternal Friendship Evelyn<lb/>
Eury sang "The Stranger of Galilee<lb/>
accompanied at the piano by Laura<lb/>
Pope.<lb/>
Election Keynote<lb/>
Of Science Meet<lb/>
Tuesday Evening<lb/>
Election of officers for the 1953-<lb/>
54 school year highlighted a meeting<lb/>
of the Science club Tuesday at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in the Flanagan building.<lb/>
Those chosen were Ray Kirby,<lb/>
president; Frances Green, secretary-<lb/>
treasurer; and Olene Civils, public<lb/>
relations director. A run-off will be<lb/>
held at the next meeting between<lb/>
Lois Tucker and Lillian Haynes for<lb/>
the office of vice president.<lb/>
Advisors for the club next year<lb/>
will be Mr. J. C. Derrick and Dr.<lb/>
Christine Wilton.<lb/>
Following the election the final<lb/>
plans for the spring tour were dis-<lb/>
cussed. It was decided that the tour<lb/>
would take place on April 24 and 25<lb/>
to the Duke Gardens on the Duke<lb/>
university campus and the dye mills<lb/>
at Burlington. The first day of the<lb/>
tour would conclude with an outing<lb/>
at Morrow Mountain State park. The<lb/>
second day will be spent touring the<lb/>
ark and the Planetarium at Chapel<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
Following the discussion members<lb/>
of the Science club from Atlantic<lb/>
Christian college presented a pro-<lb/>
gram. A recreation period concluded<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
Enrollment Here<lb/>
Shows Increase<lb/>
Over Last Year<lb/>
With 2,656 individual students en-<lb/>
rolled here over a 12 month period,<lb/>
fhe enrollment at East Carolina col-<lb/>
lege has increased five and one-half<lb/>
per cent over last year's total, ac-<lb/>
cording to Dr. Orval L. Philips,<lb/>
registrar. This period covers the<lb/>
time from the beginning of Spring<lb/>
quarter 1952 through the beginning<lb/>
of the current Spring quarter.<lb/>
Two thousand two hundred eighty<lb/>
students have been enrolled here dur-<lb/>
ing the present school year. Out of<lb/>
this number 870 are freshmen. This<lb/>
is an increase over last year's enroll-<lb/>
ment. The number of sophomores this<lb/>
year totaled 447. There have been<lb/>
337 juniors and 393 seniors here thi<lb/>
year.<lb/>
In addition to the regular students<lb/>
there have been 263 graduate stu-<lb/>
dents enrolled at East Carolina this<lb/>
year and 24 special students, includ-<lb/>
ing some students from foreign coun-<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
Dr. Phillips explained that al-<lb/>
though only 80 Korean veterans have<lb/>
been enrolled at East Carolina this<lb/>
year, he expects the number to rise<lb/>
sharply during next year.<lb/>
During the same 12-month period<lb/>
from last spring through this, a new<lb/>
maximum of 467 graduate students<lb/>
have attended East Carolina college.<lb/>
Dr. Phillips added that the enroll-<lb/>
ment at East Carolina has already<lb/>
-quailed and surpassed that of two<lb/>
or three of the major Southern col-<lb/>
leges, and that further increase is<lb/>
anticipated during the next few<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Groups See College In Action;<lb/>
Day Offers Varied Activities<lb/>
More than 3,000 seniors from high schools in North Caro-<lb/>
lina and Virginia are participating in activities of High School day<lb/>
today on the campus of East Carolina college.<lb/>
A program crowded with events suited to the varied in-<lb/>
terests of visitors was planned under the direction of Dr. Ed J.<lb/>
Carter of the faculty, chairman of the High School day commit-<lb/>
tee at the college.<lb/>
Radio Schedule<lb/>
6:30-6:45<lb/>
organ<lb/>
7:15-7:30<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
p.m. WGTC, Greenville,<lb/>
reveries (George Perry)<lb/>
p.m. WGBR Goldsboro,<lb/>
organ reveries<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
2:00-2:30 p.m. WGTM Wilson, stu-<lb/>
dent recital (Jeanine Ennis, Dolores<lb/>
Matthews, Carolyn Brothers, Ellen<lb/>
Sprinkle, Elizabeth Beam, Julia<lb/>
George)<lb/>
4:45-5:00 p.m. WCPS Tarboro, or-<lb/>
gan reveries<lb/>
6:30-7:00 p.m. WCEC Rocky Mount,<lb/>
student recital (Catherine Stephen-<lb/>
on. Jeanine Ennis)<lb/>
7:30-8:00 p.m. WGTC Greenville,<lb/>
East Carolina orchestra, Varsity<lb/>
Glee cluo. (Soloists, Dolores Mat-<lb/>
thews and Bernard Ham)<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
10:15-10:30 p.m. WFTC Kinston,<lb/>
organ reveries<lb/>
Bein.u broadcast weekly, otherwise<lb/>
indefinite schedule:<lb/>
Organ Reveries over WRRF Wash-<lb/>
ington<lb/>
WIAM Williamston?Music depart-<lb/>
ment program. This week woodwin<lb/>
quintet, brass ensemble, clarinet quar-<lb/>
tet.<lb/>
Lecture Club Convenes<lb/>
Dr. Theodore H. Eaton, faculty<lb/>
member of the department of science<lb/>
at East Carolina, will speak at a<lb/>
meeting of the Faculty Lecture club<lb/>
Monday, April 20, at 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Flanagan auditorium, according to<lb/>
Dr. James Poindexter, program chair-<lb/>
man of the organization.<lb/>
Legislature Calls<lb/>
Meeting To Revise<lb/>
Old Constitution<lb/>
Student Government association<lb/>
President Mitchell Saieed recom-<lb/>
mended to the legislature to call for<lb/>
a constitutional convention to revise<lb/>
the present constitution at the Wed-<lb/>
nesday night meeting of the group.<lb/>
The measure was approved by the<lb/>
body and as it stands the convention<lb/>
will begin Monday at 2 p.m.<lb/>
The Executive council will act as<lb/>
the official constitutional committee<lb/>
and will be in charge of the details.<lb/>
Everyone is invited to this change<lb/>
which will effect each and every<lb/>
student in college.<lb/>
Some of the proposed changes in-<lb/>
clude reorganization of Men's and<lb/>
Women's judiciary committee, change<lb/>
in budget appropriations, organize<lb/>
committees to adjust club and or-<lb/>
ganization meetings and clarifica-<lb/>
tion of constitutional conflicts.<lb/>
Other changes will be proposed by<lb/>
the legislature and student body later.<lb/>
Four Represent<lb/>
EC In Colorado<lb/>
At ACE Session<lb/>
Campus Y Hut Now Complete, Ready For Use<lb/>
Bay Anthony<lb/>
East Carolina college's new Y Hut<lb/>
has been completed, and the keys to<lb/>
the building have been presented by<lb/>
Business Manager F. D. Duncan to<lb/>
the presidents of the campus YMCA<lb/>
and YWCA.<lb/>
The Hut is planned for student<lb/>
use. Vesper services conducted by<lb/>
the Y organizations will be held there;<lb/>
and the building will he available for<lb/>
other meetings, both religious and<lb/>
recreational.<lb/>
An attractive one-story structure,<lb/>
the Hut is located on the south cam-<lb/>
pus just to the rear of the College<lb/>
infirmary. A fine grove of pines,<lb/>
dogwoods, oaks, hollies and other<lb/>
trees lend beauty to the setting.<lb/>
More than 25 years ago the college<lb/>
acquired its first Y Hut. Until last<lb/>
fall the building was extensively used<lb/>
for religious services, meetings of<lb/>
various organizations and recreation-<lb/>
al activities of students.<lb/>
Old Hut Torn Down<lb/>
When the site for the new Joyner<lb/>
library, now under construction on<lb/>
the campus, was chosen, it was nec-<lb/>
essary to move or demolish the old<lb/>
Y Hut, The building, a frame struc-<lb/>
ture, was razed last summer; and<lb/>
much of the material was salvaged<lb/>
land used later in the construction of<lb/>
the new Hut.<lb/>
The contract for the Joyner library,<lb/>
Business Manager Duncan states,<lb/>
provided sufficient funds to move the<lb/>
old Hut to a new location. When it<lb/>
was decided to tear down the struc-<lb/>
ture and rebuild it, the college Board<lb/>
of Trustees authorize the use of funds<lb/>
donated to the college for any pur-<lb/>
pose approved by the Board. So far<lb/>
as possible, college labor was used<lb/>
for construction of the new building.<lb/>
The recently completed Hut is a<lb/>
cottage-type structure. The exterior<lb/>
is finished in brown asbestos siding,<lb/>
and doors and window frames are<lb/>
white. Steps leading to the entrance<lb/>
are of brick and are built in semi-<lb/>
circular pattern.<lb/>
The main room within the building<lb/>
is spacious and well-lighted. It meas-<lb/>
ures 49 f?et by 32 feet. A handsome<lb/>
brick fireplace faces the entrance.<lb/>
"We are indebted for the materials<lb/>
of the hardwood floors Mr. Duncan<lb/>
states, "to the Garris-Evans Lumber<lb/>
company of Greenville, who present-<lb/>
ed them as a gift to the college and<lb/>
to the YMCA and the YWCA<lb/>
Windows with sliding panes light<lb/>
the room on four sides. The heating<lb/>
system is connected with the college<lb/>
power plant.<lb/>
Comforts of Home<lb/>
A kitchen equipped with an electric<lb/>
stove and a refrigerator, a porcelain<lb/>
sink and ample cabinet space opens<lb/>
into the main room. A cloak room<lb/>
and an office are located near the<lb/>
entrance. Toilet facilities are pro-<lb/>
vided in the building.<lb/>
The Hut will be furnished by the<lb/>
YMCA and the YWCA, and a drive<lb/>
for funds for the interior decoration<lb/>
of the building will begin soon on the<lb/>
campus. A piano and some furniture<lb/>
from the original Hut will be used.<lb/>
Charlie B. Bedford of Pikeville and<lb/>
Maidred J. Morris of Kenly, newly<lb/>
elected presidents of the Y organi-<lb/>
zations for the 1953-1954 term, re-<lb/>
ceived this week keys to the Hut<lb/>
from Mr. Duncan. Presidents for the<lb/>
1952-1953 college term who have<lb/>
assisted in planning the Hut and its<lb/>
furnishing are Andrew Meeder of<lb/>
Norfolk, Va and Joyce Gurley of<lb/>
Goldsboro and Graee Baker of Ken-<lb/>
ansville.<lb/>
A group of approximately 20 atu-<lb/>
dent officers and other members of<lb/>
the two organizations also partici-<lb/>
pated in activities leading toward<lb/>
the building and equipping of tht<lb/>
new Y Hut<lb/>
Dr. Eva Williamson of the East<lb/>
Carolina college department of edu-<lb/>
cation and three student representa-<lb/>
tives of the college branch of the<lb/>
Association for Childhood Education<lb/>
attended April 5-10 in Denver, Colo.<lb/>
the 1953 Study conference of ACE<lb/>
International.<lb/>
Students selected by ACE members<lb/>
here to participate in the Denver<lb/>
conference were Alice Roberson of<lb/>
Wilson, vie president of the campus<lb/>
organization; Jane M. Credle of New<lb/>
Holland; and Anne DuRant of Wil-<lb/>
mington. All are active members of<lb/>
the college branch of the ACE.<lb/>
Dr. Williamson, who is faculty ad-<lb/>
visor of the campus branch of the<lb/>
ACE, has accepted an invitation to<lb/>
serve as a special contributor to one<lb/>
of the study and laboratory groups<lb/>
which met during the conference.<lb/>
The topic for consideration was<lb/>
"What Do We Know About the Role<lb/>
of Science in Childhood Education?"<lb/>
The Denver conference was plan-<lb/>
ned to offer fresh approaches and<lb/>
new techniques for those concerned<lb/>
with the education and well-being of<lb/>
children. Visits to public elementary<lb/>
schools, schools for children under<lb/>
six and child care centers in Denver<lb/>
were included on the program.<lb/>
Performances of Garson Kan'n's<lb/>
Broadway hit "Born Yesterday" by<lb/>
the Teachers playhouse of the coi ege<lb/>
and of Sigmund Romberg's operetta<lb/>
"The Student Prince" by a cast of<lb/>
150 students and the East Carolina<lb/>
orchestra were major attractions of-<lb/>
fered for the ente; ainment of visit-<lb/>
ors. Music by the College band, the<lb/>
College choir, and the Varsity Glee<lb/>
club was a part of an assembly pro-<lb/>
gram this morning.<lb/>
Cadets Parade<lb/>
A parade by the college Air Force<lb/>
ROTC wing of approximately 500<lb/>
cadets was staged on the tampu-<lb/>
during tht morning. Lt. Col. Roger<lb/>
G. Fuller, professor of air science<lb/>
and tactics at East Carolina, spoke<lb/>
at the assembly program on the<lb/>
ROTC and its advantages to college<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Athletic events for today include<lb/>
a Northeastern conference baseball<lb/>
game between the Greenville and the<lb/>
Elizabeth City high schools. During<lb/>
the afternoon the Acquatics club oi<lb/>
Bast Carolina is staging a contin-<lb/>
uous program of swimming, diving<lb/>
and water s'ports at the pool in the<lb/>
Memorial gymnasium.<lb/>
Afternoon Dance<lb/>
At an afternoon fashion show spon-<lb/>
sored by home econmics students at<lb/>
the college new spring styles for<lb/>
women are being modeled. A dance<lb/>
in the Wright building in honor of<lb/>
visitors has also been arranged. A<lb/>
barbecue luncheon was served on the<lb/>
campus picnic groonds.<lb/>
Departmental exhibitions have been<lb/>
open all day to give visitors an op-<lb/>
portunity to observe work in their <lb/>
fields of special interest. An exten-<lb/>
sive display based on the biological<lb/>
and physical sciences is being offered<lb/>
by the department of science.<lb/>
Art students are displaying their;<lb/>
work in the Austin building and th<lb/>
college library, and a display of ma-<lb/>
terials of interest to foreign -??<lb/>
guages students is also being shown.<lb/>
The departments of business edtte-<lb/>
tion and industrial arts are holding<lb/>
open house for visitors and c<lb/>
departments are offering manukur<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
Former Student<lb/>
Dies In Florida<lb/>
Airplane Crash<lb/>
Second Lt. Stanley T. Smith of<lb/>
Kinston was one of two men killed<lb/>
in the crash of a training plane near<lb/>
Marianna, Fla Tuesday, April 7. He<lb/>
was stationed at Graham Air base<lb/>
in Florida undergoing flight training<lb/>
at the time of the accident.<lb/>
Smith graduated from East Caro-<lb/>
lina college in May, 1952 with an<lb/>
A. B. degree in business education.<lb/>
On May 18, 1951, he was awarded<lb/>
the Distinguished Military atndent<lb/>
honor from the college AFS.OTC de-<lb/>
partment. In his senior year he was<lb/>
appointed cadet colonel.<lb/>
Before enrolling at EGG, Bmfflk<lb/>
was a veteran of World War II a?4<lb/>
served overseas in Gtasaaay ia "$?<lb/>
Air Force.<lb/>
He was married to Basel Rob3<lb/>
also from Kinston and an al<lb/>
of East Carolina collega,<lb/>
Upper-Classmen<lb/>
Eligible To Apply<lb/>
For Scholarships<lb/>
The college now has avail<lb/>
plication blanks for ?e -<lb/>
for 0 scholarships si $&amp;. t&amp;c (for<lb/>
?undents who will b? lap<lb/>
for the school yef I, As<lb/>
nouncement conceiS:<lb/>
arships was recently - made fei tl '?<lb/>
the newspapers.<lb/>
Scholarships will a aw s<lb/>
the basis of ciuttwster, m at-<lb/>
tic ability and qualit?a ?<lb/>
Any student wishing? h<lb/>
cation for one of ttfeSPt<lb/>
may secure an applicant<lb/>
Dean Prewett<lb/>
When the tod??t<lb/>
the application, it if, fl<lb/>
secure the signature<lb/>
major advisor battwt<lb/>
application to Paan I<lb/>
sideration by Jhe i.<lb/>
committee. Sfcadewti <lb/>
for one of ibum <lb/>
do so promptly ,<lb/>
Seniors<lb/>
Eleet<lb/>
Royise $a<lb/>
C. ha<lb/>
gxadnai<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
spring<lb/>
tivitle<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00038321_0002"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1&amp;&amp;<lb/>
PBJDA-<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
BAST CABOLINI AN<lb/>
East-Carolinian:<lb/>
Published Weekly by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
college, Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952<lb/>
Entered a3 second-class matter December 3, 1925 at the<lb/>
U S Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under the act of<lb/>
March 3, 1879<lb/>
Ye Editor s<lb/>
s<lb/>
by Tommie Lupton<lb/>
Who's WWAt East Carolina<lb/>
81<lb/>
by Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
TIMELY TOPICS<lb/>
By Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
S<lb/>
?ay<lb/>
Stoocfated CoBe6idte Pnw<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
Association<lb/>
First Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March, 1953<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press Association<lb/>
? The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Move on; nor all your piety nor wit,<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line, <lb/>
all your tears wash out a word of it.<lb/>
Nor<lb/>
E. Fitzgerald<lb/>
EDITORIAL STAFF<lb/>
Ray Anthony is on everyone's mind<lb/>
at the present, ibeing he will play<lb/>
for a concert and dance here Monday<lb/>
evening as the last part of this year's<lb/>
college Kntertainment series. Most<lb/>
of us who were at East Carolina last<lb/>
year well remember the performance<lb/>
pat on by the A-nthony musicians.<lb/>
We won hi like to remind everyone<lb/>
that the dance is closed to the public.<lb/>
Students will be admitted free upon<lb/>
presentation of student identification<lb/>
cards. Each student may purchase<lb/>
one ticket for an outside guest if he<lb/>
is accompanying the guest.<lb/>
Eitor-ln-Chief<lb/>
Managing Edi<lb/>
Assistant Editor<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
 A? HH.rSo?, Emily Boyce, Pay. MM<lb/>
Mary H. Greene<lb/>
C. L. Perkins Jr.<lb/>
Tommie Lupton<lb/>
Edwina McMullan<lb/>
Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Phyllis Carpenter<lb/>
Kay Johnston,<lb/>
Ediorial Advisor<lb/>
Staff Photographer<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Sports Assistants<lb/>
SPORTS STAFF<lb/>
Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Sam Hux, Bruce Phillips, Jack Scott<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Awistant Business Manager<lb/>
Business Assistants<lb/>
Atwood Smith, Dwight Garrett<lb/>
 Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
Edna Massad<lb/>
Faye Jones<lb/>
Mary Gillette,<lb/>
"Student Prince" was really great!<lb/>
We feel that everyone really bene-<lb/>
fited from the presentation. Over<lb/>
1200 students made the production<lb/>
possible, and from the calibre of the<lb/>
acting and singing we are able to<lb/>
say that all the hard work put ia<lb/>
over many hours really yielded big<lb/>
dividends.<lb/>
We have been told that the gardens<lb/>
he girls' dorms are loaded<lb/>
sun bathers on pretty<lb/>
imagine that many stu-<lb/>
h<lb/>
Marty MacArthur,<lb/>
Rxohango Editor<lb/>
down w<lb/>
days. We<lb/>
dents have been hitting the beaches<lb/>
regularly on week ends lately.<lb/>
itlf Help Rates Low<lb/>
Th student self help rate at East Carolina is<lb/>
42.8 cents an hour. At the University of North<lb/>
Carolina it is 75 cents and other state supported<lb/>
schools have a slight higher rate than w.<lb/>
F D Duncan, business manager ot the col-<lb/>
lege, gives an exi lanation of this The expenses<lb/>
at Carolina and some other state schools are high-<lb/>
er than here UNC charges up to $45 per quartet<lb/>
for a dorm room, whereas East Carolina charges<lb/>
onlv $20 to $23. The cost of eating in the college<lb/>
ours. For these reasons Carolina can afford a<lb/>
dining halls at Chapel Hill is also higher than<lb/>
hitrher self-help rate. , .<lb/>
When the state allocates the college budget<lb/>
every year, a part is set aside for student help.<lb/>
This is supplemented by the profits from the<lb/>
dormitories and dining hall. (The dorms and<lb/>
dining halt are more or less independent from<lb/>
the state.) But the state's fund only furnishes<lb/>
less than half of the 42.8 cents.<lb/>
Mr Duncan, who wrote $15,000 worth of<lb/>
checks to self-help students last quarter, says<lb/>
that he ho-oes that he can find it possible to raise<lb/>
the student help-rate by July 1 How much he<lb/>
could raise it is undetermined, but Mr. Duncan<lb/>
says it may be from 10 to 15 per cent.<lb/>
Mr. Duncan further adds that he realizes<lb/>
that the student help-rate is low and will do all<lb/>
he can to raise it. We feel that persons doing<lb/>
these odd campus jobs to help aid their financial<lb/>
funds to further their education should make<lb/>
more money; however, under the present con-<lb/>
ditions the'possibilities of higher pay are ques-<lb/>
tionable.<lb/>
Talking the other day to Registrar<lb/>
Orval L. Phillips, we found out that<lb/>
there will be no pre-registration this<lb/>
spring for next year. We imagine<lb/>
the reason for not taking time out<lb/>
for pre-registering is that next fall<lb/>
during registration all students do<lb/>
not have to go through the proce-<lb/>
dures on the same day.<lb/>
This past week end saw many<lb/>
students on campus taking part ia<lb/>
various athletic games. There were<lb/>
two games of softbaB going on Sat-<lb/>
urday afternoon at one time or an-<lb/>
r a court full of tennis players<lb/>
were gaming, and several golfers<lb/>
were out driving. This just proves<lb/>
there are a few persons who<lb/>
campus week ends.<lb/>
The outstanding student chosen for<lb/>
this week's "Who's Who" is Maurice<lb/>
Moore, a senior from Wilmington.<lb/>
Maurice has been at East Caro-<lb/>
lina for two years and plans to<lb/>
graduate May 18 of this year with<lb/>
a B.S. degree.<lb/>
His freshman and sophomore years<lb/>
were spent at Wilmington college in<lb/>
his home town, where he was an<lb/>
outstanding student. There he was<lb/>
active in basketball and dramatics<lb/>
and he also served on the school<lb/>
paper staff.<lb/>
He chose East Carolina to com-<lb/>
plete his education after visiting out-<lb/>
campus and as he put it, "I com-<lb/>
pared it with the campuses and at-<lb/>
titudes of other schools that I had<lb/>
attended during the summer or visit-<lb/>
ed and decided to come and stay; so<lb/>
here I am. In fact I wish that I had<lb/>
come my full four years to ECC<lb/>
School's Reputation Known<lb/>
Maurice feels that the students<lb/>
have a friendliness on campus that<lb/>
is seldom found at a college. "It<lb/>
sold me he said, "for I had at first<lb/>
planned to attend UNC He in-<lb/>
formed us that the people at Stetson<lb/>
university in Florida had heard about<lb/>
our friendliness, for the football<lb/>
players mentioned it to him.<lb/>
This social studies major and Eng-<lb/>
lish minor did his practice teaching<lb/>
in Greenville high school winter quar-<lb/>
ter of this year. He taught eco-<lb/>
nomics and American history. We<lb/>
asked if he had any unusual experi-<lb/>
ences, to which he replied, "Heavens,<lb/>
it was three months of nothing but<lb/>
experiences<lb/>
There was one rather amusing in-<lb/>
cident, though, that we would like to<lb/>
tell about. On this certain day, Mau-<lb/>
rice was conducting a class on inter-<lb/>
ests and putting up property as col-<lb/>
lateral. A boy raised his hand and<lb/>
asked, "Mr. Moore, how much in-<lb/>
terest would I have to pay<lb/>
we<lb/>
11 as<lb/>
rt. He stated that he would<lb/>
,ave liked very much to participate<lb/>
b various other extracurricular ac-<lb/>
tivities but his military and<lb/>
rying maximum<lb/>
prevented this.<lb/>
hours each quarter<lb/>
Last<lb/>
.summer Maurice attended<lb/>
?? camp at McDill Air Force<lb/>
near Tampa, Fla for a month.<lb/>
he listened to lectures ana<lb/>
The 1953-54 Student Government at East<lb/>
Carolina has started off in fine form and all in-<lb/>
dications point to a promising future ol progr<lb/>
Perhaps the most important item carried out by<lb/>
the SGA was the election to decide on n<lb/>
Ertertainment series programs.<lb/>
The SGA sho'ild be congratulated 1 n their<lb/>
fine work in sponsoring the election, but the<lb/>
student body as a whole should be ashamed of<lb/>
themselves. .<lb/>
The turnout ot votes on this IS<lb/>
trustingly small considering the amount<lb/>
ing done by students with reference to thi<lb/>
serKs of program. It was obvious I<lb/>
LHvii<lb/>
ate of the Air Force demon<lb/>
"ie baa"<lb/>
the oMofthe programs presented during<lb/>
 ?? 1 ?? heartilv suported the vast m ty of<lb/>
on<lb/>
$100<lb/>
Maurice Moore<lb/>
if 1 put up a piece of land in Arabia<lb/>
as collateral?" Maurice told the boy<lb/>
that the interest would be out of<lb/>
reason, but at the same time he was<lb/>
thinking to himself what a foolish<lb/>
question for a high school senior to<lb/>
ask. Much to his surprise, though,<lb/>
he later found that the boy actually<lb/>
did own some land in Arabia for his<lb/>
father was in the oil business and<lb/>
traveled there.<lb/>
Likes Teaching<lb/>
Maurice liked student teaching<lb/>
very much and found it quite inter-<lb/>
esting, for he said that you had the<lb/>
opportunity to see many various<lb/>
types of people and personalities.<lb/>
II, .aid, "It helps you to study if<lb/>
nothing else and teaches you to 'read<lb/>
between the lines<lb/>
The activity here at East Carolina<lb/>
that has taken up the majority of<lb/>
his time is AFROTC. He has been<lb/>
a m mber of this both years that he<lb/>
has been here and is wing command-<lb/>
er as a senior. Also he's a member<lb/>
of the officer's club this year, as<lb/>
base<lb/>
There<lb/>
HZL Gen. A?strong was the :a,e ? - -  ,<lb/>
commander. Ine met. i<lb/>
stated, was having access to<lb/>
fie r's club and open post after dutj<lb/>
hours until 10 p. ?. "Now I know<lb/>
what the girls have to go through<lb/>
when signing out, for I had to do<lb/>
the same thing whenever 1 weol W<lb/>
the library and post office<lb/>
Sports Draw Interest<lb/>
Sports are his primary interest in<lb/>
the way of spending spare time. He<lb/>
likes tennis, football, baskefall, salt<lb/>
water fishing and bird and duck<lb/>
hunting. Another favorite pastime H<lb/>
"roaming the beach<lb/>
In his hometown Maurice was quite<lb/>
active in the Presbyterian church<lb/>
There he was president of the youth<lb/>
league and also served on various<lb/>
committees and councils. While still<lb/>
in high school he went for several<lb/>
weeks to Flora McDonald college for<lb/>
a workshop meeting. There he met<lb/>
many people of other towns who were<lb/>
there for the same purpose, to take<lb/>
I part and lead devotional. The classes<lb/>
consisted of such things as the study<lb/>
of the Bible and devotionals. Future<lb/>
work was planned in the workshops.<lb/>
After graduation Maurice will re-<lb/>
ceive his commission and go into<lb/>
active duty. When completing his ser-<lb/>
vice in the Air Force his plans to go<lb/>
into textiles or attend Wharton School<lb/>
ef Business in Pennsylvania to study<lb/>
business, furthering and broadening<lb/>
his major here.<lb/>
 a<lb/>
ncen '<lb/>
Bue-<lb/>
to<lb/>
con1<lb/>
The<lb/>
high0<lb/>
etk<lb/>
:<lb/>
ui,i we heartily suported tne vaM in<lb/>
the criticism. The trouble remains h<lb/>
that once an oportunity was prea the<lb/>
students to have something done to br n<lb/>
programs here insignificant interest v<lb/>
Not more than one-third of th elij<lb/>
us voters exercised the privilege o<lb/>
ballot for or against the numei<lb/>
It is obvious, therefore, that if next yeai<lb/>
doe's not apeal to the students then I<lb/>
no one but themselves to blame.<lb/>
The SGA cooperated in the v !<lb/>
Entertainment committee agreed<lb/>
the balloting in as far as possible bu1<lb/>
as a whole, let their own argument d wn V<lb/>
be better than that presented during<lb/>
sincerely that next year's Entertain!<lb/>
but if it is not then the student- of i.<lb/>
lina have no one but themselves to Man<lb/>
and<lb/>
Mild "<lb/>
pat<lb/>
tunng<lb/>
that <lb/>
Hid<lb/>
,<lb/>
that<lb/>
remain<lb/>
on<lb/>
A<lb/>
were<lb/>
Head"<lb/>
? The<lb/>
lent who catches on quickly<lb/>
three books to the Michigan<lb/>
college library last month. They<lb/>
"Stop Forgetting "Use Your<lb/>
and "How to Remember<lb/>
books were a week overdue.<lb/>
Boys, Beware Of Suncourts<lb/>
Definition of "college according<lb/>
to the Michigan State Normal News:<lb/>
-i stitutions which sometimes lower<lb/>
entrance requirements with an end<lb/>
in view?not to mention promising<lb/>
ackles and backs<lb/>
Sorry, The Line Is Busy<lb/>
Bzzz, Bzzz, Bzzz. And once more a disgrun-<lb/>
tled slams down a telephone somewhere due to<lb/>
the fact that the phones in Austin building are<lb/>
yVe wonder how often, day after day, this<lb/>
scene is reenacted by the many people who must<lb/>
make calls to Austin building. The cause of the<lb/>
difficulty lies in the fact that only one line leads<lb/>
to Austin and this must serve the three tele-<lb/>
phones located there. Therefore, if one phone is<lb/>
in use this automatically causes a busy signal to<lb/>
register when a call is made to either of the<lb/>
other two outlets.<lb/>
For many a day various groups have been<lb/>
clamoring for'more telephones, not only in Austin<lb/>
building but at other strategic spots on campus.<lb/>
The difficulty lies not only with the tact<lb/>
that there are too few phones in Austin, but<lb/>
with the business of having the three existing<lb/>
phones serviced by one line.<lb/>
The answer to this would be to install a<lb/>
college switchboard which could handle effec-<lb/>
tively the existing calls and the badly needed new<lb/>
phones. Rumors are that a switchboard has been<lb/>
on its way to East Caroina.<lb/>
One must be familiar with the problem ol<lb/>
finding a phone anywhere outside of the dorm<lb/>
in order to be abje to appreciate the frustrations<lb/>
encountered, and we feel sure that those who<lb/>
have attempted to find a phone in a hurry will<lb/>
agree with our viewpoint.<lb/>
(Note: The 1953-54 SGA has taken an ad-<lb/>
mirable step forward in an attempt to eliminate<lb/>
the problem by installing a phone in the Post<lb/>
Office lobby. Let's hope that more such action<lb/>
on the part of someone will soon follow.)<lb/>
Appearance Much Better Now<lb/>
Back earlier in the year we wrote an edi-<lb/>
torial criticizing the condition that bulletin boards<lb/>
on campus were always in. To find anotice on<lb/>
one of the bulletin boards in the Post Office lobby,<lb/>
one would have to scramble up all the notices<lb/>
and posters and spend five or ten minutes hunt-<lb/>
ing before he could find the item he was looking.<lb/>
Now we are glad to say, the situation is<lb/>
very much improved, for the bulletin boards are<lb/>
being kept up as they should have been all the<lb/>
time Two service fraternities, the EPO and the<lb/>
APO, have set up their own bulletin boards in<lb/>
the lobby. By just spending a little more time m<lb/>
posting the notices and advertisements on a spot,<lb/>
it is possible to have a neat display.<lb/>
Another thing we were glad to see was the<lb/>
(Continued in Column 6)<lb/>
Coeds at Utah State college have<lb/>
been asked to refrain from wearing<lb/>
jeans in the classroom. College offi-<lb/>
cials ay the girls should wear jeans<lb/>
only<lb/>
Is when milking cows.<lb/>
You have to know how to write<lb/>
if you want to graduate from Michi-<lb/>
gan State college. A new ruling there<lb/>
states that seniors can't graduate<lb/>
until their "writing technique is im-<lb/>
proved to a point where they can<lb/>
write lejri' ly<lb/>
Currently 418 students are enrolled<lb/>
in a non-credit writing course, de-<lb/>
signed to improve literacy among fu-<lb/>
ture degree "holders. MSC officials<lb/>
have said nothing thus far about<lb/>
any reading requ'laments.<lb/>
If you would venture out onto the<lb/>
suncourt of one of the local dorms,<lb/>
you probably would get the shock of<lb/>
your life.<lb/>
The first thing you would notice<lb/>
would be the very peculiar objects<lb/>
lying on anything from blankets to<lb/>
imagination. Most of these people<lb/>
would be your friends, but. you would<lb/>
have a difficult time recognizing<lb/>
them. Terrible frowns would cover<lb/>
their faces and they would shout<lb/>
horrible things to you, such as "get<lb/>
out of the way, you're putting a<lb/>
shadow on me<lb/>
Covering their frowning faces<lb/>
would be all kinds of oils, liniments<lb/>
and creams to protect them from the<lb/>
blistering sun. Some of these tanned<lb/>
beauties will be wearing bathing<lb/>
suits, some shorts and others?maybe<lb/>
because they're bold or maybe be-<lb/>
cause they're poor?will only be wear-<lb/>
ing their?well!<lb/>
Most all of them will be busy, not<lb/>
forsaking a moment of their educa-<lb/>
tion for sunbathing. For if you notice<lb/>
closely they will be hovering over<lb/>
By Kay Johnston<lb/>
the very popular "love-books You<lb/>
might even hear a remark or two<lb/>
su b as this, "Hey listen you-all to<lb/>
Llli , 'Dan, my darling, come back to<lb/>
me, I'm sorry I ran away with the<lb/>
milkman; if you'll only come back to<lb/>
me, I'll always be true But Mary<lb/>
knew in her heart that she would<lb/>
never see Dan again, for she had a<lb/>
slight suspicion that he had run<lb/>
away with the maid<lb/>
If the day happens to be Tuesday<lb/>
or Thursday, another treat will be<lb/>
in store for you, for the girls never<lb/>
fail to serenade the local AFROTC<lb/>
oys who line up n the back of the<lb/>
dorms. As the poor blushing boys do<lb/>
about face" the LCC "Andrew<lb/>
burst into the original?<lb/>
Your son is not over the ocean<lb/>
Your son is not over the sea<lb/>
So take down that service flag,<lb/>
Mother,<lb/>
Your son's in the ROTC.<lb/>
Oh yes, if you would ever venture<lb/>
out into the sun-court of one of the<lb/>
local dorms, you probably would get<lb/>
the shock of your life!<lb/>
Shooting<lb/>
The Bull<lb/>
One of the major items under c<lb/>
for action by this year's SGA is a r<lb/>
the Student Government constitution.<lb/>
a matter that has been needing at<lb/>
some time. The need for revision<lb/>
constitution under which we are pr? ?<lb/>
is one that is fine for a school of a<lb/>
1000 students, but times and students<lb/>
ed and a new constitution is deli;<lb/>
Among items that could be advai<lb/>
changed are those concerning wider Bt<lb/>
resentation on major committees,<lb/>
change in the judiciary set up and la"<lb/>
if possible, for women students on Frida<lb/>
The SGA meetings in Flanagan<lb/>
each Wednesday night are open to all.<lb/>
is in the best interest of East Carolina<lb/>
to turn out to hear, and if necessary ch<lb/>
the discussion on the part of their elect<lb/>
resent ives.<lb/>
Enough Said.<lb/>
times<lb/>
cap'<lb/>
of Jhn l<lb/>
an<lb/>
Students Give Reasons For Liking College<lb/>
by T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Couple Of The Week<lb/>
Clara Mac Harris and Bill Spencer,<lb/>
our "Couple of the Week have been<lb/>
going pretty steady since last Sep-<lb/>
tember. "I had been looking forward<lb/>
to meeting Clara for a long time<lb/>
Bill said. "You see, my roommate<lb/>
had been talking about this cute<lb/>
little girl for a long time, and when<lb/>
we went to the dance he spent the<lb/>
entire night looking for her. Well<lb/>
you can take the story from there;<lb/>
we met and now she spends all her<lb/>
time looking for me (Ouch, that<lb/>
male ego!)<lb/>
Clara, who hails from Washing-<lb/>
ton, i a rimary major, and Bill,<lb/>
who hails from Raper, is a science<lb/>
major. "We hope to be able to get<lb/>
married within another year Bill<lb/>
said, "then Clara will be able to keep<lb/>
up with me better<lb/>
(Editor's note: By being named<lb/>
"Couple of the Week Clara and<lb/>
Bill will each be given a carton of<lb/>
Chesterfields, a free pass to the Pitt<lb/>
theatre, a free meal at the Olde<lb/>
Tcwne Inn and an item from Sas-<lb/>
low's jewelers.)<lb/>
For the high school seniors in de-<lb/>
ciding what college to choose, we<lb/>
took a survey of East Carolina stu-<lb/>
dents on their opinions of the college.<lb/>
The question was: "Why do you like<lb/>
East Carolina?"<lb/>
Faye Jones, Bear Grass, junior:<lb/>
"I like ECC because it offers the<lb/>
best course in business and, too, I'm<lb/>
nearer home. I was impressed on<lb/>
High School day by the friendly at-<lb/>
t<lb/>
mosphere on the campus.<lb/>
Edna Massad, Benson, junior: "I<lb/>
be durned if I know why I chose<lb/>
EC, but it is a mighty fine school<lb/>
Jane Kanoy, Thomasville, sopho-<lb/>
more: "I like EC because it is a<lb/>
co-educational college. I have always<lb/>
heard that the all-girl schools were<lb/>
like mental institutions<lb/>
Virginia Haymes, Greenville,<lb/>
freshman: "It's a growing school in<lb/>
by T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
In recent months fear of Commu-<lb/>
nism has spread over the nation.<lb/>
The probing on campuses made by<lb/>
Congressional committees has fright-<lb/>
ened college professors to the extent<lb/>
that they now voice their political<lb/>
opinions with caution in public for<lb/>
fear that it may be interpreted as<lb/>
Communistic or un-American. The<lb/>
administration at Michigan State<lb/>
have for the first time warned their<lb/>
staff how far they could go in voicing<lb/>
theit opinions.<lb/>
The Communist party is here in<lb/>
the South. There are quite a few<lb/>
Communist publications circulating<lb/>
through this area that promote prop-<lb/>
aganda on the financial, racial and<lb/>
social problems. One such journal is<lb/>
mimeographed at Chapel Hill (no<lb/>
affiliated with UNC). Another comes<lb/>
from Missouri and others from the<lb/>
Nothern states hitting on Southern<lb/>
weak points.<lb/>
Fortunately to say, the Communist<lb/>
party in the United States is still a<lb/>
minority group. There is no call for<lb/>
a panicky fear on the individual<lb/>
thinking that his next door neighbor<lb/>
is a Red or that the whole nation is<lb/>
headed for Communistic government.<lb/>
In the words of the late Franklin D.<lb/>
Roosevelt, "All we have to fear is<lb/>
fear itself<lb/>
POT POURRI<lb/>
by Emily Boyce<lb/>
Everybody is watching the progress<lb/>
new library with interest these days. With i<lb/>
week it stems to rise higher with perfeel<lb/>
None are watching it grow any more res<lb/>
than those students in library science wh<lb/>
here at the college. These students talk<lb/>
improvements and opportunities the new<lb/>
will offer them and others. They talk al<lb/>
library in terms as familiar to them as<lb/>
night?words such as, the stacks, juvenili<lb/>
documents. Wilson cards, publishers blur, ?<lb/>
pepper the conversation with an air of I<lb/>
brary science interest.<lb/>
The building of the new library could<lb/>
as a sort of growing symbol to tht<lb/>
Their field is broadening all the while and i<lb/>
progress is a growing realization of the<lb/>
tance of the demand for trained libra i<lb/>
over the country. These students are pr<lb/>
their work and'enjoy it. They are looking<lb/>
ward to the completion of the new library<lb/>
impatient zest.<lb/>
While on the subject of the library. I<lb/>
in use now is certainly a credit to the<lb/>
The exhibit that was put up for Pan An<lb/>
day (April 14th) was excellent. Such<lb/>
help to create interest in our neighbors and<lb/>
encourage us to read the books concerning 'hem.<lb/>
On the "Judy Canova Show" Judy<lb/>
portrays her parents as slightly lazy.<lb/>
One morning at breakfast Ma says<lb/>
to Pa: "Pa, there's a fly a-srwimming<lb/>
around in your coffee And Pa re-<lb/>
plies: "Aw, don't be so stingy, Ma,<lb/>
how much do you think a little ol'<lb/>
fly will drink?"<lb/>
It's here! The three dimensional<lb/>
movie came to Greenville this week.<lb/>
The 3-D is Hollywood's latest crea-<lb/>
tion in movies with a realistic touch.<lb/>
Using three reels projected on the<lb/>
screen at different angles gives the<lb/>
movie depth.<lb/>
The depth distinguishes 3-D f ro n<lb/>
ordinary pictures. For example, in<lb/>
the full-length 3-D movie of the<lb/>
"Bwana Devil" a lion seemingly<lb/>
sprang out right in the tape of the<lb/>
audience. In another scene a native<lb/>
tossed a spear and immediately peo-<lb/>
ple ducked under their seats. In a<lb/>
desert scene a gust of wind blew<lb/>
dust that appeared to be coming<lb/>
out of the screen into the theatre.<lb/>
There were spontaneous sneezes from<lb/>
the effects of it.<lb/>
Of course these examples are ex-<lb/>
aggerated a little, but the 3-D is<lb/>
quite different from regular movies.<lb/>
a growing section of Carolina, and<lb/>
I wish to grow with it<lb/>
Faye O'Neil, sophomore, Selma:<lb/>
"Bast Carolina is the friendliest cam-<lb/>
pus in the South<lb/>
Ann Duke, Greenville, junior: "ECC<lb/>
has a friendly atmosphere between<lb/>
the teachers and students<lb/>
The WAA of East Carolina college<lb/>
their annual house party last weekend<lb/>
tic beach. A better time couldn't have ?<lb/>
according to the 40 girls who attended. 1 <lb/>
the number was SO great that two large c<lb/>
conveniently located, were rented. The g<lb/>
their own cooking and really proved thems<lb/>
worthy of the title of good cooks on $a1<lb/>
night when golden brown, fried chicken w;<lb/>
ed. Sun bathing, pool and bowling all h Iped<lb/>
create some tired, but happy girls, and a<lb/>
end of fun for the WAA.<lb/>
Gregg Rife, Arlington, sophomore:<lb/>
Oh she has a pretty mouth all right, Worthal?It's just that moat I "There's a lot of activity on the be COmmenTedTor the fine improvement<lb/>
freshman'girls are a little bashful on blind date Jcampua her appearance of the boards.<lb/>
The production of Th Student V ?J<lb/>
greeted with wide applause by both "Wente"?<lb/>
faculty members here. The opinion on whel<lb/>
it was better than last year's production of u<lb/>
New was varied, but all agreed that the music<lb/>
was terrific! The specialties, the tap dancing oi<lb/>
Martha Benton and the voice of Berme H<lb/>
were enthusiastically praised, although a gi<lb/>
deal of criticism was voiced on the way the nun-<lb/>
bers were worked in with the production, v<lb/>
Friday night these two talents were omitted, w<lb/>
are now eagerly awaiting The Advent<lb/>
Robin Hood, soon to be given.<lb/>
(Continued from Column 1) t<lb/>
glass case built around the Student G?vernme<lb/>
association bulletin board. Members of the ltfc <lb/>
lature are now able to find minutes of old m<lb/>
ings, business for the coming meeting and o<lb/>
announcements. f eaCh<lb/>
To keep the present conditions in state. <lb/>
person who posts a notice should see to 11 <lb/>
the notice is taken down and thrown away d<lb/>
it is outdated. Each of these organizations sn<lb/>
i?  ? x ?? :??vOTrient ol t"c<lb/>
<pb facs="00038321_0003"/><lb/>
APRIL<lb/>
W.<lb/>
PICS<lb/>
ure of prog1<lb/>
5 rari out K-<lb/>
hViiaU,(l fo their<lb/>
w ashamed of<lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1968<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? di,<lb/>
t&amp; the0rplmJ<lb/>
  past year<lb/>
! majority 0f<lb/>
mas, hoover<lb/>
J to the<lb/>
,r"? more<lb/>
camp-<lb/>
ating a<lb/>
'ions.<lb/>
! M-ries<lb/>
" J have<lb/>
"?e voting, the<lb/>
abide by<lb/>
students<lb/>
I We hope<lb/>
1052-53,<lb/>
'it win<lb/>
lst Caro-<lb/>
I'iame.<lb/>
deration<lb/>
tsion of<lb/>
This is<lb/>
icn for<lb/>
us. The<lb/>
?ving<lb/>
um&amp;tely<lb/>
e chang-<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
antageously<lb/>
?nt rep-<lb/>
a possible<lb/>
e privileges,<lb/>
nights.<lb/>
iitorium<lb/>
. and it<lb/>
-tudents<lb/>
 challenge,<lb/>
cted rep-<lb/>
-<lb/>
and li<lb/>
RRI<lb/>
oyci<lb/>
A ? hi<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
?"? ? " ???" ' ?" ' ???? ?. t ml Lir?-?ig<lb/>
?AGE THRBI<lb/>
trirlf<lb/>
and<lb/>
?<lb/>
eek-<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
the<lb/>
round of I one<lb/>
round oi j once more that he would make an<lb/>
is firmly underway in the able addition to any pitching staff<lb/>
Division of the North State in the state.<lb/>
Out west Lenoir-Rhyne is giving<lb/>
ie pi ess of the<lb/>
. . ?. h every<lb/>
ct form.<lb/>
iy i reverently<lb/>
ho work<lb/>
of the<lb/>
library<lb/>
1 k about the<lb/>
lay and<lb/>
le room,<lb/>
lur, etc<lb/>
true li-<lb/>
,? library could stand<lb/>
people-<lb/>
I and in its<lb/>
Ezation of the impor-<lb/>
trained librarians aU<lb/>
tudents are proud rf<lb/>
are looking tcr-<lb/>
 ?ow library Witt<lb/>
if the library, the one<lb/>
to the college-<lb/>
r Pan American<lb/>
 &amp; Such "f S<lb/>
tr neighbors and abo<lb/>
oks concerning them-<lb/>
?imlina college had<lb/>
we4end at Attaj-<lb/>
uhln-t have been had<lb/>
En winded. T&amp;1<lb/>
; Vree cottages-<lb/>
hat two laiK? "f , did<lb/>
? a The Rirls<lb/>
rented. nth;mselves<lb/>
ll.v proved them<lb/>
ad cooks on Satur<lb/>
(1 chicken wa?J?<lb/>
luln aU helped<lb/>
b0tSofwnether<lb/>
? onion on <lb/>
jr's production of<lb/>
Jod hatthe of<lb/>
I thtaRernfe H?<lb/>
voice of Berni t<lb/>
Led, although a <lb/>
Id on the way the qd<lb/>
fth the Proved. We<lb/>
lent, were om? 0f<lb/>
The Advcm<lb/>
1 u.<lb/>
nl column1) mm<lb/>
l? Student Gp <lb/>
. Members of i <lb/>
in state. et<lb/>
and Scions <lb/>
E?se orfiran?? nt ? ?<lb/>
ne improve611<lb/>
Now that<lb/>
.( ball<lb/>
is tern<lb/>
ference it seems that Elon's<lb/>
vans are once more the team<lb/>
at as far as East Carolina is<lb/>
oncerned.<lb/>
The Bucs, who have been riding<lb/>
,vu of late, were rudely upset last<lb/>
when Elon dismantled the Pi-<lb/>
s' perfect record in conference<lb/>
Coach Jim Mailory has turned<lb/>
another top ranch club and,<lb/>
,ld his hitters come through, will<lb/>
another squad capable oi cap-<lb/>
tig the divisional title.<lb/>
Phe Pirates, as usual, bave a club<lb/>
is capable of a championship.<lb/>
t remains to be seen whether<lb/>
Carolina's mixture of rookies<lb/>
veterans can hold up in the<lb/>
tch. The loss to Elon by a 3-2<lb/>
last week showed several<lb/>
ags: One is that the Bucs can't<lb/>
rd to make mistakes at crucial<lb/>
9 against a first rate cluo and<lb/>
ther was that the Pirates, de<lb/>
r errors and miscalculations<lb/>
fcble of giving the best in<lb/>
ue quite a game<lb/>
he<lb/>
in<lb/>
era Division of the conference<lb/>
times during the process of the<lb/>
iule. Three more contests are<lb/>
on tap with the Christians, so<lb/>
notic<lb/>
of th<lb/>
ins<lb/>
ier the pre at set-up<lb/>
will meet each team<lb/>
pile<lb/>
are<lb/>
the<lb/>
Pi-<lb/>
the<lb/>
that it will be in the thick<lb/>
rg once more in the run for<lb/>
league pennant. The Bears, due<lb/>
?lie cooler atmosphere, have been<lb/>
trifle Blow in getting underway,<lb/>
in three games so far have<lb/>
von their mettle. Two of the con-<lb/>
ts were against teams of the pro-<lb/>
al (lass B Tri-State league<lb/>
in oth games the Bruins came<lb/>
aa top dog. It will be remem-<lb/>
i that last year the Bears topped<lb/>
for the overall league crown.<lb/>
ite what happens out west<lb/>
astern picture seems to fcadi-<lb/>
tat the two clubs that will be<lb/>
ling for the top position are<lb/>
and East Carolina. The re-<lb/>
maining squads, capable of being<lb/>
troublesome though they be, do not<lb/>
se m at present to have the neees-<lb/>
ary depth or experience to warrant<lb/>
I<lb/>
-1<lb/>
ihig them as serious<lb/>
con-<lb/>
tenders.<lb/>
Last Inning Scoring<lb/>
Gives Pirates Victory<lb/>
Over Quaker Nine, 6-5<lb/>
. v,<lb/>
ing<lb/>
tiled.<lb/>
has by any measure been<lb/>
bright spot in the Pirate base-<lb/>
picture has been the pitching<lb/>
Jim Piner, seasoned righthander<lb/>
m Beaufort. Piner received the<lb/>
gainst Elon. but it was hardly<lb/>
3 fault. He spun a neat five-hitter,<lb/>
, second of the year, and proved<lb/>
j Rallying for three ru'ns in the<lb/>
nth inning, the East Carolina K-<lb/>
tes came from behind to slip<lb/>
? the Guilford Quakers, 6-5, in<lb/>
Guilford April 3.<lb/>
Starter Jimmy Byrd scattered nine<lb/>
Quaker -ingles through eight innings<lb/>
iefor? giving way to Ted Barnes.<lb/>
Gaither Cline slugged out a double<lb/>
and two singles in four trips to lead<lb/>
the Hues to their fifth straight win.<lb/>
1 Cecil Heath had three for five at the<lb/>
vl late.<lb/>
Leading the Guilford svingers was<lb/>
Pirates Slaughter Panthers<lb/>
By 22-2 Margin In Slugfest<lb/>
Jim Byrd Gets Credit i A - i a l l<lb/>
For Win; Hue Hatters GrUCS3l C0i!t6SlS<lb/>
Stage Hitting Splurge j m m <lb/>
On Tap For Bucs<lb/>
In Coming Weeks<lb/>
Coach Jack Boone's Pirates, who<lb/>
met the Guilford Quakers there this<lb/>
afternoon, swing out to High Point<lb/>
tomorrow to meet the Panthers for<lb/>
the third time this season.<lb/>
Action next week will see the Bucs<lb/>
in one game away and two home<lb/>
battles. Tuesday the locals travel to<lb/>
Wilson to meet arch-rival Atlantic<lb/>
Christian in one of the Bohunk Tro-<lb/>
phy series. Wednesday the Buccaneers<lb/>
play host to Elon's Christians in a<lb/>
return game here.<lb/>
The Pirates will enter each contest<lb/>
as favorites with the possible excep-<lb/>
tion of the Elon encounter. Elon was<lb/>
victorious in a previous contest, 3-2.<lb/>
Coach Boone still has not used a<lb/>
specific line-up but the probable<lb/>
starters for the tilts are: first base,<lb/>
Sonny Russell; second base, Cecil<lb/>
Heath; shortstop, Paul Jones; third<lb/>
base, Charlie Cherry; left field, Gai-<lb/>
ther Cline; centerfield, W. C. San-<lb/>
derson; right field, Major Hooper;<lb/>
and catcher, Ralph Britt.<lb/>
Pirate Ace<lb/>
by Sam Hux<lb/>
It was all East Carolina here<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon as the Pirates<lb/>
slugged away for 21 hits and a 22-2<lb/>
victory over the High Point Panthers.<lb/>
Off to a great start, seven runs in<lb/>
the first inning, the Bucs never let<lb/>
up on the visitors. The other big<lb/>
inning was the six-run fourth.<lb/>
Bob Penly, frosh sensation, Cecil<lb/>
Heath and W. C. Sanderson each<lb/>
slammed out three hits. Wilbur<lb/>
Thompson, Paul Jones and Gaither<lb/>
Cline were good for two. On the<lb/>
mound, Jimmy Byrd and Lenny Sulli-<lb/>
van combined talents to limit the<lb/>
Panthers to seven safeties.<lb/>
High man for High Point was Cat-<lb/>
cher Jim Morgan with two for four.<lb/>
Score by innings:<lb/>
High Point 000 200 000? 2<lb/>
East Carolina 720 620 41x?22<lb/>
Elon Bows To Buccaneers g<lb/>
In Golf, Tennis Matches<lb/>
Buccaneers Lose First<lb/>
To Montclair Redmen<lb/>
Pictured above is Martin Byrd, ace<lb/>
Pirate hurler from Tabor City. Byrd<lb/>
has turned in several excellent jobs<lb/>
on the mound for the Pirates this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
! Good Food, Km-Mm1 j Bohbv Calicut with . healthy throe<lb/>
lESTfoOD for four. Bailey Nunn wma the losing<lb/>
j DIXIE LUNCH ! East Carolina . 002 010 003-6<lb/>
5<lb/>
ford<lb/>
011 001 110?5<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN FOOTWEAR<lb/>
It's<lb/>
MERIT SHOES<lb/>
Montclair State's Redmen handed<lb/>
East Carolina its first loss of the<lb/>
season here April 8 by a 7-2 score.<lb/>
The loss ended a five game Buc win-<lb/>
ning streak.<lb/>
Striking swiftly, the visitors tal- <lb/>
lied three runs in the opening innng,<lb/>
mainly with the aid of a booming<lb/>
two run homer over the left field<lb/>
fence by Red Goldwater.<lb/>
East Carolina's two markers came<lb/>
in the eighth. Gaither Cline reached<lb/>
base mi a single. Brother Bill Cline,<lb/>
a first year man with the Bucs then<lb/>
drove the ball over the leftfield fence.<lb/>
Gaither led the vain Pirate attack<lb/>
with three hits in as many trips to<lb/>
the plate. Johnny Gray had a double<lb/>
and a single in four at-bats to lead<lb/>
the Redmen.<lb/>
Martin Byrd started on the mound<lb/>
for the Bucs but gave way to Clyde<lb/>
Owens who was relieved by Leonard<lb/>
Sullivan. Durkee went the route for<lb/>
the visitors and allowed but seven<lb/>
hits.<lb/>
Montclair ? 310 200 100-7<lb/>
East Carolina . 000 000 020?2<lb/>
Piner Hurls Triumph<lb/>
Over High Point Nine;<lb/>
Allows But Five Hits<lb/>
With Jimmy Piner turning in an<lb/>
excellent five hit performance, the<lb/>
East Carolina Pirates defeated the<lb/>
High Point Panthers 6-3, in High<lb/>
Point April 2, to sweep their second<lb/>
conference victory in as many tries.<lb/>
Taking advantage of their nine<lb/>
nits and six High Point errors, the<lb/>
Bucs spread their runs through the<lb/>
first, fourth and seventh innings.<lb/>
W. C. Sanderso-n pounded out his<lb/>
second homer of the young season<lb/>
and one single for two singles in<lb/>
five tries.<lb/>
High Point's plate attack was led<lb/>
by third baseman Ray Hudson with<lb/>
two for five. Mabry started and fin-<lb/>
ished on the mound for the .Panthers.<lb/>
East Carolina 200 200 200-6<lb/>
High Point  000 003 000-3<lb/>
gjtart)<lb/>
brand.<lb/>
. oSe just ?"<lb/>
SoSs wear<lb/>
A <lb/>
rf? xuat's deep<lb/>
En?9<lb/>
uetach<lb/>
James F;of Not<lb/>
(Jniv<lb/>
ersity<lb/>
to?<lb/>
Une'8,ty<lb/>
W<lb/>
v<lb/>
???<lb/>
r<lb/>
t&amp;'t<lb/>
<lb/>
,<lb/>
:$<lb/>
S5<lb/>
Nothing-no, nothing-beats better taste<lb/>
andLUCKHS<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/>
Whv? Luckies are made better to taste better. And,<lb/>
what's more, LuckTeT7re made bf fine tobacco.<lb/>
L.S.M.F.T Lucky Strike Means Fine Tbbacco.<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/>
rfe<lb/>
S&amp;v<lb/>
isO<lb/>
Last week was a fruitful one for<lb/>
the East Carolina athletic teams as<lb/>
the tennis and golf squads came<lb/>
through with splendid showings on<lb/>
their respective fields of endeavor.<lb/>
The Pirate netters took the courts<lb/>
against Elon last Thursday and Fri-<lb/>
day and the outcome was par ex-<lb/>
cellent. The scores read: 9-0 and 9-0.<lb/>
Coach Porter's meshmen administered<lb/>
the whitewashings with comparative<lb/>
ease, winning all the matches with-<lb/>
out having to press. Joe Hallow tak-<lb/>
ing over the exalted number one po-<lb/>
sition, had a fine afternoon on the<lb/>
asphalt as he whipped Elon's best,<lb/>
Bill Blackstone, 6-3, 7-9, 6-4. Paul<lb/>
Cameron, Don Muse, Amos Stroud,<lb/>
Frazier Bruton and Dal Foscue were<lb/>
EC's other net conquerors. As a unit<lb/>
the Pirates' tennis team looks good<lb/>
and shows plenty of promise. With<lb/>
a little more support from the stu-<lb/>
dent body the racqueteers will def-<lb/>
initely add further prestige to our<lb/>
, school.<lb/>
The golf team also defeated an<lb/>
Elon aggregation twice last week,<lb/>
23 to 3 and 23-4. The local linkers<lb/>
have a stalwart golf club and can<lb/>
give any college in the state a rough<lb/>
afternoon. Claude King heads the<lb/>
array of fine drivers and putters and<lb/>
shoots in the low seventies and high<lb/>
sixties. King plays a steady game<lb/>
and posseses terrific driving power.<lb/>
Moult Massey, a veteran returning<lb/>
to holster the squad, also swings a<lb/>
formidable club and plays a fine<lb/>
game from a point of speculation.<lb/>
Robert Braun, a Virginian, is another<lb/>
who handles himself well on the<lb/>
greens. He is an extremely good<lb/>
put tar and plays a steady game.<lb/>
Dave Martin, former number one<lb/>
man in his high schooling days at<lb/>
Cramerttm, often is a par man and<lb/>
plays a consistent game of golf. Har-<lb/>
ry Rainey, a Salisbury linkman, also<lb/>
can hold his own against some of the<lb/>
finest collegiate golfers around. Ber-<lb/>
rtae Ham is no slouch on the fairways<lb/>
cither and has a classy style that<lb/>
brings him his share of victories.<lb/>
As a whole the team looks very<lb/>
strong and should do well against all<lb/>
-hallengers.<lb/>
Buc Rally Fails<lb/>
As Elon Triumphs<lb/>
For MS Victory<lb/>
by Sam Hux<lb/>
A ninth inning rally by the East<lb/>
Carolina Pirates fell short Friday,<lb/>
and as a result the Bucs dropped<lb/>
their first North State conference<lb/>
clash of the year to Elon's Chris-<lb/>
nans, 3-2.<lb/>
Some shoddy playing staked the<lb/>
visitors to an early lead which they<lb/>
managed to maintain throughout the<lb/>
contest. A walk, a single and a wild<lb/>
pitch gave the Christians one run m<lb/>
the opening frame. The Bucs man-<lb/>
aged to tie the score by tallying a ,<lb/>
ione marker in the bottom of the<lb/>
third but Elon bounced back in the<lb/>
fifth to turn three hits, two errors<lb/>
and a fielder's choice into two more<lb/>
scores.<lb/>
Jimmy Piner, ace Pirate right-<lb/>
hander from Beaufort, went the<lb/>
route for the locals and gave up<lb/>
only five hits. Sherrill Hall worked<lb/>
he complete contest for Elon and<lb/>
ilso gave up only five hits.<lb/>
The Pirates threatened to pull the<lb/>
game out of the fire in the bottom<lb/>
?f the ninth when, with one man out,<lb/>
Sonny Russell, Buccaneer first sack-<lb/>
?r, lashed out a single. He went to<lb/>
econd when Paul Jones grounded<lb/>
,ut and scored when shortstop<lb/>
Thompson errored on Hooper's ground<lb/>
ball. Hooper, however, was thrown<lb/>
out in an attempt to steal second<lb/>
and the Christians had their first<lb/>
conference victory of the year.<lb/>
Score by innings:<lb/>
Bio 100 020 000?3<lb/>
East Carolina 001 000 001-2<lb/>
Pirate Squad Records<lb/>
Shutout Tennis Wins;<lb/>
Win Easily On Links<lb/>
The East Carolina college golf and<lb/>
tennis squads made it warm for<lb/>
Elon's Christians in two golf match s<lb/>
and two tennis outings here last week.<lb/>
On the tennis court the Bucs, with<lb/>
Joe Hallow and Paul Cameron lead-<lb/>
ing the way, turned back the Chris-<lb/>
Jans both Thursday and Friday by<lb/>
identical scores of 9-0. Hallow, Cam-<lb/>
eron, Don Muse, Frazier Bruton,<lb/>
Amos Stroud and Dal Foscue turned<lb/>
n victories for the local netters.<lb/>
On the links of the Greenville<lb/>
ountry club the Pirate golf team<lb/>
EC Takes Twin Bill<lb/>
From Montclair Squad<lb/>
Avenging a previous loss, East<lb/>
Carolina's Pirates drubbed the Mont-<lb/>
clair State Redmen here April 10, by<lb/>
sweeping a twin bill from the visit-<lb/>
ors, 8-7 and 6-2.<lb/>
The first contest saw the locals<lb/>
throw off a 7-0 deficit to gain the<lb/>
victory against the New Jersey nine.<lb/>
Two Pirate freshmen, Ted Barnes<lb/>
;lnd Eugene Rose, shared the mound<lb/>
duties with Rost taking the win. Ma-<lb/>
jor Hooper paced the batsmen with<lb/>
two singles in three trips.<lb/>
Behind a blistering 10 hit attack<lb/>
freshman Ken Hall emerged as the<lb/>
winning pitcher for the Bucs in the<lb/>
second game. Hall limited the visit-<lb/>
ors to two hits in shaping the win.<lb/>
Sub rightfielder Bob Penley and Hall<lb/>
each had two for three in the hit<lb/>
column.<lb/>
soundly thumped Elon by a 23H-3V4<lb/>
score Thursday and came back the<lb/>
ollowing day for a repeat triumph<lb/>
by a 23-4 count.<lb/>
The results of Friday's contests:<lb/>
TENNIS<lb/>
Singles.<lb/>
Hallow defeated Blackstone<lb/>
7-9, 6-4.<lb/>
Cameron defeated Howell, 6-2, 6-2.<lb/>
Muse defeated Schraeder, 6-1, 6-l.j<lb/>
Seated Rochelli, 6-2, 6-2.<lb/>
Bruton deieateu g<lb/>
Foscue defeated Sears, 6-3,<lb/>
Doubles<lb/>
Browning and Stroud defeat-<lb/>
Schraeder and Rochelli, 6-4, 64.<lb/>
Muse and Foscue defeated Painte<lb/>
and Sears, 6-1, 6-4.<lb/>
Hallow and Cameron defeat,<lb/>
Blackstone and Howell, 6-8, 6-2, 6-0j<lb/>
GOLF<lb/>
King (ECC) defeated Smith, 2-<lb/>
Massey (ECC) defeated McGrifi<lb/>
3-0.<lb/>
King and Massey defeated Smitj<lb/>
and McGriff, 2-1.<lb/>
Braun (ECC) defeated Small, 3-C<lb/>
Martin (ECC) defeated Workma<lb/>
3-0.<lb/>
Braun and Martin defeated Smi<lb/>
and Workman, 3-0.<lb/>
Rainey (ECC) and Harvey<lb/>
1-1.<lb/>
Ham (ECC) defeated Cooper,<lb/>
Rainey and Ham defeated Coopj<lb/>
and Harvey, 2Va-<lb/>
.<lb/>
First game:<lb/>
Montclair <lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Second game:<lb/>
Montclair ?<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
133 000 0?7<lb/>
002 303 x?8<lb/>
002 COO 0?2<lb/>
110 400 x?6<lb/>
Tennis Team Defeats<lb/>
Guilford In Shutout<lb/>
The East Carolina college teni<lb/>
team ahalked up their third shut(<lb/>
win in the last three starts wl<lb/>
they downed Guilford 7-0 in a mat<lb/>
played at Guilford Monday.<lb/>
The scoring:<lb/>
Singles<lb/>
Hallow (EC) defeated Brown<lb/>
6-4<lb/>
Cameron (EC) defeated Pn<lb/>
6-2, 6-0<lb/>
Muse (EG) defeated Wall 6-0,<lb/>
Bruton (DC) defeated Bussick<lb/>
6-0<lb/>
Stroud (EC) defeated Tyson<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
Doubles<lb/>
Hallow and Cameron deft<lb/>
Brown and Pringle 6-4, 6-2<lb/>
Muse and Foscue defeated J<lb/>
and Bussick 6-1, 6-0<lb/>
TO BE IN STYLE<lb/>
TRY OUR LINE OF MEN'S CLOTHINC<lb/>
The FRANK WILSON Stor<lb/>
King Clothiers Since 1893<lb/>
34.<lb/>
ml<lb/>
5n&amp;<lb/>
LARRY'S SHOE STOiUS<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S NEWEST AND WOST M0DEKN<lb/>
AT FIVE POINTS<lb/>
KMH MMMMll<lb/>
?ur ? '? <lb/>
?e<lb/>
Happy<lb/>
UJCKY!<lb/>
53;<lb/>
?x?<lb/>
Punch's Shoe Service<lb/>
Expert Shoe Repairing<lb/>
510 Cotanche Street<lb/>
College Student!?<lb/>
COME IN AND SBS<lb/>
OUR FINE SELECTION OF SUITS : <lb/>
C HEBER FOR IS<lb/>
T<lb/>
M<lb/>
'<lb/>
m<lb/>
?Vio<lb/>
oor<lb/>
YS?d<lb/>
,wVv<lb/>
r<lb/>
3<lb/>
,cape 4<lb/>
,our<lb/>
taste<lb/>
fcn?ac? ?WLi<lb/>
s?<lb/>
Ge'alJork V??l<lb/>
Tie<lb/>
yo<lb/>
:??.<lb/>
'???:<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
fi<lb/>
<lb/>
x<lb/>
<lb/>
Where's your ingie?<lb/>
It's easier than you think to<lb/>
make $25 by writing a Lucky<lb/>
Strike jingle like those you see<lb/>
in this ad. Yes, we need jingles<lb/>
-and we pay $25 for every one<lb/>
we use! So send as many as you<lb/>
like to: Happy-Cio-Lucky, P. O.<lb/>
Box 67, New York 46, N, Y-<lb/>
Good Food ? Sandwiches<lb/>
CAROLINA GRILL<lb/>
24 Hour Service<lb/>
YOU ARE WELCOME TO<lb/>
Mrs. Morton<lb/>
II<lb/>
SCOTTS CLEANERS<lb/>
m<lb/>
PRODUCT OF<lb/>
jfc Jnum M?&amp;r?rr<lb/>
OA.T.C<lb/>
Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
45 RPM Accessories<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE<lb/>
That you can dr<lb/>
Sedan for V<lb/>
Taxes, Oil F<lb/>
when you bus<lb/>
ful New 53 Ft<lb/>
J<lb/>
Co. Inc.<lb/>
S?ne? 1866<lb/>
<pb facs="00038321_0004"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1953<lb/>
PACE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
sti??<lb/>
c- I ii ' " ' ' <lb/>
'Johnny' Visits Campus Soon<lb/>
Johnny Jr. of Philip Morris, fam-<lb/>
ous living trade-mark, will make a<lb/>
one day personal visit to East Caro-<lb/>
lina on April 28 from 10:48 a.m. to<lb/>
1<lb/>
9 <lb/>
noon.<lb/>
Johnny, with his red coat and<lb/>
brass buttons and his "Call for Philip<lb/>
Morris is known by radio and tele-<lb/>
vision audiences from coast to coast.<lb/>
He M easily identified by the mil-<lb/>
lions who see Philip Morris' news-<lb/>
paper and magazine ads or who have<lb/>
seen his cheerful smile on the life-<lb/>
size facsimiles of Johnny in store<lb/>
windows all over America.<lb/>
J, hnny was discovered by an ad-<lb/>
vert, sing agency executive who gave<lb/>
him a card on which was written:<lb/>
"Call for Philip Morris Given a<lb/>
tip, he was told to make the call<lb/>
just as it was written. His enuncia-<lb/>
tion of the slogan and his clear bell-<lb/>
like tone have I een heard by millions<lb/>
liiMM that day.<lb/>
A or ying ?' hwny on his local<lb/>
tour in his bright red convertible<lb/>
roadster, custom built down to his<lb/>
small size, is his traveling compan-<lb/>
ion as well as Dwight Garrctt, the<lb/>
local Philip Morris representative.<lb/>
The lightweight Philip Morris good-<lb/>
will ambassador, whose age is a<lb/>
"Budgetary" secret, is a celebrity in<lb/>
his own right. He counts among his<lb/>
many friends, officials of high office<lb/>
in national, state and city govern-<lb/>
ments. He is a star who's well-known<lb/>
by the "greats" of Broadway and<lb/>
Hollywood.<lb/>
During his visit on the campus<lb/>
Johnny will be seen at the soda shop.<lb/>
Phillips Leads Sophs<lb/>
Bruce Phillips of Raeford has been<lb/>
chosen by his classmates as presi-<lb/>
dent of the Sophomore class at East<lb/>
Carolina college for the 1953-1954<lb/>
term. He has participated in various<lb/>
student activities at the college this<lb/>
year and has served as a sports<lb/>
writer on the "East Carolinian<lb/>
Other officers of the class will be<lb/>
Gary Scarboro. Kinston. vice presi-<lb/>
dent; Phyllis Eisele, Statesville, sec-<lb/>
retary; Janet Watson. Greenville,<lb/>
treasurer; and Ann Bowles. Wilming-<lb/>
ton. Student Government association<lb/>
representative.<lb/>
?nHK-t) -???- V<lb/>
Better Shoes Reasonably Priced<lb/>
AT<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
517 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
Far Drug Needs, Cosmetics and Fountain Goods<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
Procter Hotel Building<lb/>
?p?M 8 A. M. - 10 P. M. ? Sunday 8 :30 A. M. - 10:30 A. M<lb/>
4 P. M. - 10 P. M.<lb/>
Old, New Council<lb/>
Of Wesley Group<lb/>
Meet For Supper<lb/>
The "Old and New Council" supper<lb/>
for the outgoing and incoming offi-<lb/>
cer- of the Wesley foundation was<lb/>
held at the Methodist Student center<lb/>
on Monday evening at 5 o'clock.<lb/>
Newly elected officers for 1953-54<lb/>
were special guests.<lb/>
After the supper, the council meet-<lb/>
ing was called to order by President<lb/>
Waylon Unchurch. He expressed his<lb/>
appreciation for all that his service<lb/>
in the Wesley foundation had meant<lb/>
to him in the understanding of God<lb/>
and the meaning of the Christian<lb/>
life during his college years.<lb/>
Other seniors on council also ex-<lb/>
pressed their appreciation for the<lb/>
fellowship and inspiration received<lb/>
through the pi-ogram of the Wesley<lb/>
foundation and gave words of chal-<lb/>
lenge and encouragement to the new<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Waylon Upehurch, president for<lb/>
this past year, then gave the gavel,<lb/>
which was tied with white and green,<lb/>
Wesley foundation colors, to the in-<lb/>
coming president, Mattie Huber.<lb/>
Members of the Wesley Foundation<lb/>
council for 1953-54 are: president,<lb/>
Mattie Huber; vice president, Willa<lb/>
Dean Lindsay; secretary, Lou Kir-<lb/>
ven; and treasurer, Charlie Bedford.<lb/>
Eight Pledges Become<lb/>
Members Of Fraternity<lb/>
In Initiation Ceremony<lb/>
Eight student pledges of the Spring<lb/>
class of the Kappa Upsilon chapter<lb/>
of Alpha Phi Omega, national service<lb/>
fraternity at East Carolina college,<lb/>
have been accepted as members of<lb/>
the college chapter.<lb/>
John C. Helms of Monroe, chap-<lb/>
ter president, conduced the ceremony.<lb/>
Assisting him in the rites were<lb/>
Charles Kluttz, Henderson; John B.<lb/>
Johnson, Rocky Mount; David Pen-<lb/>
nington, Rocky Mount; Joseph Crady,<lb/>
Kinston. all students, and Alumni<lb/>
Secretary James W. Butler, chairman<lb/>
of the chapter advisory committee.<lb/>
New members are Kenneth R. Bor-<lb/>
deaux, Mt. Olive; John P. Carr,<lb/>
Goldaboro; Norman L. Edgerton,<lb/>
Kenly; Paul D. Emmett, Gastonia;<lb/>
John W. Hudson, Kinston; Floyd T.<lb/>
Lefler, Mt. Gilead; E. Matthew Pres-<lb/>
cott, New Bern, and Gary Scarboro,<lb/>
Kinston.<lb/>
ACE Initiates<lb/>
Group Officers<lb/>
Installation ceremony for new of-<lb/>
ficers was held by the ACE Tuesday<lb/>
night in the Flanagan auditorium.<lb/>
Officers for 1953-54 were then in-<lb/>
stalled in a candlelight service. They<lb/>
are Anne Durant, president; Pat<lb/>
Corbett, first vice president; Sue<lb/>
Hicks, second vice president; Pat<lb/>
Stanley, third vice president; and<lb/>
Jane (redle, treasurer.<lb/>
Other nwly elected leaders include<lb/>
Anne Toler, publications chairman;<lb/>
Agnes Mallard and Adah Bass, cor-<lb/>
responding secretaries; Emily Boyce,<lb/>
publicity chairman; Lou Moon- and<lb/>
Jean Flora, historians; Anne Smith,<lb/>
reporter; and Glenna Thomas, Patsy<lb/>
Pappendick and Shirley Wiggins,<lb/>
members-at-large.<lb/>
Stephenson In Sunday Recital<lb/>
Catherine Stephenson of Willow<lb/>
Springs, student of music at East<lb/>
Carolina college, will ap; ear in 8<lb/>
Mag recital Sunday afternoon, April<lb/>
19, at 4 o'clock in the Austin audi-<lb/>
torium. Bill Siddell, pianist, of Ra-<lb/>
leigh will be accompanist on the<lb/>
program. The public is invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
YWCA Picks Officers<lb/>
Officers for the 1953-54 school year<lb/>
were elected recently by the campua<lb/>
YWCA.<lb/>
Serving as president for the com-<lb/>
ing term will be Maidred Morris.<lb/>
Lena Taylor was selected vice presi-<lb/>
lent and Marvina White, secretary.<lb/>
Carolyn Bullard will assume the du-<lb/>
ties of treasurer.<lb/>
A senior at the college, M<lb/>
on is one uf a small gi<lb/>
student chosen this spi I<lb/>
"honors" recital Tho<lb/>
this recognition for<lb/>
work in the d?pj t of i<lb/>
are selected by memlw ra of<lb/>
ulty of the<lb/>
in voice and instru<lb/>
Earlier this spring Mi<lb/>
-on gave a joint recital ?<lb/>
Ennis of Dunn, soprano. On ?<lb/>
gram Miss<lb/>
by composers of mu<lb/>
The program Sundaj afk n<lb/>
ent the young singer in<lb/>
J groups of songs. Mr.<lb/>
 piano soloist, will pli<lb/>
Bach, Scarlatti and De Falla.<lb/>
YYVrTTYTY ,?????????????<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/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
College Contributes<lb/>
To Red Cross Drive<lb/>
East Carolina college students and<lb/>
faculty members contributed $563.70<lb/>
in the recently completed 1953 Red<lb/>
Cross drive in Pitt county.<lb/>
Faculty members at the college<lb/>
gave $363.70 as their contribution to<lb/>
drive. Students contributed $200.<lb/>
D an Leo W. Jenkins of East<lb/>
Carolina headed the fund-raising<lb/>
campaign for Pitt county. On the<lb/>
u-s faculty members assisted as<lb/>
solicitors in classroom buildings at<lb/>
the college.<lb/>
Teachers needed for California and<lb/>
all other Western states. Vacancies<lb/>
in beautiful towns and cities.<lb/>
Especially need Grade Teachers,<lb/>
English, Spanish, Math, Music,<lb/>
Commerce. Girls Phys. ed Home<lb/>
Ec. Salaries S350U-S7000.<lb/>
Teachers Specialists Bureau,<lb/>
Boulder, Colorado<lb/>
y IMMMHE ? ?AMHMMHE?AHl?AHHl?<lb/>
3c fwfii a teat o<lb/>
00 ilecfcreS<lb/>
jeieefo<lb/>
.<lb/>
EARN $1000 THIS SUMMER<lb/>
Here's your opportunity for<lb/>
pleasant profitable summer work<lb/>
with a Marshall Field owned or-<lb/>
ganization. Openings for college<lb/>
nun and women to assist the di-<lb/>
rector of CHILDCRAFT work in<lb/>
your home state. Complete training<lb/>
given. Company representatives<lb/>
will conduct personal interviews on<lb/>
campus in the Alumni Office, Aus-<lb/>
tin Building, April 22, 10 o'clock<lb/>
until 1 o'clock.<lb/>
i J. C. PENNEY CO.<lb/>
t<lb/>
 "Always First Quality"<lb/>
j WE CAN OUTFIT THE j<lb/>
I COLLEGE STUDENT j<lb/>
j COMPLETELY - j<lb/>
lAND SAVE YOU MONEY!<lb/>
i I<lb/>
no Federal tax<lb/>
ffirmafoti's<lb/>
:)<lb/>
ucjiess<lb/>
JEWEL CASE<lb/>
PATRONIZE THE<lb/>
Y STORE<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
BAKERY PRODUCTS<lb/>
PEOPLES BAKERY<lb/>
?????????????????? ????'<lb/>
grain Texol, tooled in gold  bound and locked with<lb/>
isthe DUCHESS is built to last with Farrmgton's<lb/>
re til-metal Duroframe construction  lined in velvet<lb/>
slipper satin. Rose, Green, Ivory or Aqua.<lb/>
(Velvet nd Jktia u?ed are rayon.)<lb/>
rriug$on Fashion from $1.50 to $12.50<lb/>
LAUTARES BROS.<lb/>
"Registered Jewelers"<lb/>
-mgmmd Specialists"<lb/>
AUTHENTIC<lb/>
FASHIONS<lb/>
FOR MEN<lb/>
3? AC QUEEN ST.<lb/>
KINSTON<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S FOOD CENTER<lb/>
East Fifth and Cotanche Streets<lb/>
???<lb/>
Kares Restaurant<lb/>
For Best In<lb/>
LUNCHES and SNACKS<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
"Your College Shop"<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C<lb/>
ftJLlga ?? Mil I'ii<lb/>
QUALITY JEWELRY<lb/>
At Trices To Meet Your Budget<lb/>
Your Headquarters For<lb/>
Bulova Watches<lb/>
Also<lb/>
HAMILTON BENRUS<lb/>
ELGIN WADSWORTH<lb/>
Scientifically Trained Mechanics To Serve You<lb/>
STAUFFERS JEWELERS<lb/>
407 Evans Street Ihone 2i52 j<lb/>
 vv " ' - w s ' ?.?-?:??: ?: " " ?<lb/>
?:?.??:?:?.?:???<lb/>
1?<lb/>
Just as I've told you on<lb/>
our Dragnet<lb/>
lr oi<lb/>
sh??s. i ? ? pck;uch<lb/>
milder Chestertieia i <lb/>
tUOW-<lb/>
. ? S  ??il?i?S? ? . <lb/>
CHESTERFIELD contains tobaccos<lb/>
of better quality and higher price than<lb/>
any other king-size cigarette the<lb/>
same as regular<lb/>
Chesterfield.<lb/>
mittmmtmm<lb/>
UoiMT 4 MYtfiS T<lb/>
GARETTE5<lb/>
U5G?"n t N"V?RS fOBACCOCO<lb/>
Chesterfield?first premium quality<lb/>
cigarette in both regular &amp; king-size<lb/>
Sot YOU!<lb/>
T X THEN you are asked to try a cigarette<lb/>
 you want to know, and you ought to<lb/>
know, what that cigarette has meant to people<lb/>
who smoke it all the time.<lb/>
For a full year now, a medical specialist<lb/>
has given a group of Chesterfield smokers<lb/>
thorough examinations every two months.<lb/>
He reports:<lb/>
no adverse effects to their nose, throat<lb/>
or sinuses from smoking Chesterfields.<lb/>
More and more men and women all over<lb/>
the country are finding out every day that<lb/>
Chesterfield is best for them.<lb/>
oftoi tfowt, ShnoAmf<lb/>
Try Much Milder Chesterfield<lb/>
with its extraordinarily good taste.<lb/>
  a? Cm<lb/>
It Pa:<lb/>
ith <lb/>
That A<lb/>
SPri<lb/>
Tuei<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Vppan<lb/>
Carter.<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
w<lb/>
-<lb/>
Copyright WJ3, U?o?n M??? Tomcco Cm.<lb/>
Attenti<lb/>
Jot<lb/>
the v-<lb/>
that the<lb/>
be h?<lb/>
May 2 u!<lb/>
annual Ju<lb/>
Th?<lb/>
dinner. J<lb/>
char-<lb/>
?hirh iril<lb/>
Klutz i<lb/>
not -<lb/>
that<lb/>
?ddfd th<lb/>
the<lb/>
Pla<lb/>
At<lb/>
en a<lb/>
benj <lb/>
A<lb/>
bepq<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ma:<lb/>
"nd <lb/>
To I<lb/>
11 will<lb/>
y Anr<lb/>
fai?oas<lb/>
Sensol<lb/>
???? ? f<lb/>
B n 1<lb/>
rheood<lb/>
<pb facs="00038321_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>