<?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="00038329_0001"/>
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riii<lb/>
Ptist<lb/>
meet<lb/>
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a ?"<lb/>
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Heet<lb/>
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FM<lb/>
It Pays To Do Business<lb/>
With Those Businesses<lb/>
That Advertise With Us<lb/>
Easttarollnlan<lb/>
We Welcome You, Alumni<lb/>
Back To East Carolina<lb/>
For A Rig Homecoming<lb/>
a ?? -r<lb/>
it<lb/>
LUME XXIX<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1958<lb/>
Number 5<lb/>
?' n1<lb/>
t? ?. r<lb/>
lumni Return Here For Homecoming Event<lb/>
'Hello ? East Carolina College'<lb/>
Chiefs Complete<lb/>
Yearbook Staff;<lb/>
Promote Kanoy<lb/>
-4<lb/>
Homecoming Program<lb/>
Jai<lb/>
Lou Grissem, left, has completed the first call through the PBX telephone switchboard recently<lb/>
stalled here ai the college. Dr. Messiek, right, president, is making the first call. Mrs. Grissom is one of the<lb/>
tors who "ill -a "Hello. East Carolina College" to calls off campus. (Photos by Norwood Elliot.)<lb/>
;5 More Phones<lb/>
low In Operation<lb/>
ith Hew System<lb/>
Where To Park<lb/>
A tien PBX telephone system, pro-<lb/>
? , ap roximately<lb/>
? ties on the Basl Carolina<lb/>
j i . went into operation<lb/>
day morning.<lb/>
lation of the new system has<lb/>
- ? Q progress for several weeks.<lb/>
 mately 26 s ? ? tel<lb/>
? Q Bd led to those already in<lb/>
All motorists are requested by<lb/>
the Homecoming Committee to<lb/>
secure off campus parking facili-<lb/>
ties all day Saturday (tomorrow).<lb/>
No cars will be parke Satur-<lb/>
day around Wright Circle, Cotten<lb/>
Hall and the Administration<lb/>
building from 12 noon until after<lb/>
tin- parade.<lb/>
16 Cadets Begin<lb/>
Initial Air Trips,<lb/>
Others To Follow<lb/>
the campus, Business<lb/>
D. Dui: states.<lb/>
Mans<lb/>
 PBX<lb/>
j .<lb/>
iewa<lb/>
iu:<lb/>
ui<lb/>
Ion<lb/>
Bystem Mr. Duncan<lb/>
a long-felt need for<lb/>
ephone s 'vvice<lb/>
 H- pointed out that<lb/>
k oi ? ' '??? hone and<lb/>
ts were I dy facili-<lb/>
for Austin. iai<lb/>
ding on the ca is,<lb/>
liege supply stores, the<lb/>
? Budget office, the eoJ<lb/>
Bureau, AFROTC headqnar-<lb/>
Alumni "Office, staff rooms<lb/>
student publications and six de-<lb/>
ta ef instruction carry on<lb/>
eh work.<lb/>
A switchboard for handling calls<lb/>
and off the campus was set<lb/>
. Austin building this fall.<lb/>
Lou Grissom of Greenville is<lb/>
perator. The switchboard pro-<lb/>
automatic connection for calls<lb/>
fithin the campus and the operator<lb/>
rill handle local and long distance<lb/>
ills.<lb/>
New telephones have been placed<lb/>
- offices of heads of dcpart-<lb/>
and of various college offi-<lb/>
 as to facilitate communica-<lb/>
ween East Carolina's 23<lb/>
rigs, Mr. Duncan states.<lb/>
Pay teU phones now located in stu-<lb/>
toriei will continue to be<lb/>
?d and to be connected directly to<lb/>
i? citj telephone system.<lb/>
business Ed Frat<lb/>
Initiates Nine<lb/>
In Organization<lb/>
Because of their high scholastic<lb/>
ds, nine East Carolina College<lb/>
have been invited to become<lb/>
ten of the Beta Kappa Chapter<lb/>
? Pi Omega Pi. national honorary<lb/>
fraternity for students of business<lb/>
Jdueation, President Donald McGlo-<lb/>
n of Winterville has announced.<lb/>
A pledge service for new members<lb/>
be held October 19, with Peggy<lb/>
lash of Durham, vice president of<lb/>
it chapter, in charge of arrange-<lb/>
lents. Formal initiation into the<lb/>
fraternity will take place in No-<lb/>
vember.<lb/>
Students to be initiated as new<lb/>
nrniberM of the fraternity are Rus-<lb/>
tll Barnes, Winterville; Margaret<lb/>
Lnn Bunting, Nashville; Nellie Rhea<lb/>
Gardner, Nashville; Edward M. Gore,<lb/>
Lsh; Robert E. Hicks, Deep Run;<lb/>
hn W Hudson, Kinston; Iris Mat-<lb/>
iews, Aberdeen; Geraldine Swindell,<lb/>
kelhaven; and Elbert A. Thomas,<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
Baptists Launch<lb/>
listen' Drive<lb/>
For Missions<lb/>
,v.<lb/>
Several hundred East Carolinians<lb/>
will unite their efforts with those<lb/>
of thousands of other students as<lb/>
approximately 30 campuses in North<lb/>
Carolina when the "Listen Campaign"<lb/>
is launched by the State Baptist<lb/>
Student Union next week.<lb/>
"Love Impels Sacrifice Toward<lb/>
iry Need" is the motto-slogan for<lb/>
campaign, a fund-raising project<lb/>
ch will be conducted through this<lb/>
school year. To provide food for<lb/>
starving people in other countries<lb/>
is one of the main objects of the<lb/>
drive.<lb/>
A penny a day or a meal a month<lb/>
hag been suggested as the minimum<lb/>
contribution per student, according<lb/>
to L. L. (Leo) Bishop Jr a Green-<lb/>
:ik graduate student, who is presi-<lb/>
dent of the East Carolina BSU. On<lb/>
the campus individual containers will<lb/>
he distributed to all interested stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty members. The 25th<lb/>
of each month is the date set for<lb/>
arsons to turn in their gifts to the<lb/>
Baptist Student Center office.<lb/>
Several other mission projects will<lb/>
be financed through these funds. For<lb/>
the past six years some $1,400 has<lb/>
been contributed annually by North<lb/>
Carolina students for scholarships<lb/>
and summer missionaries to Hawaii.<lb/>
Eas i- Carolina Baptists last year were<lb/>
one of th'1 three groups in the State<lb/>
to contribute more than $100 of this<lb/>
sum.<lb/>
Indoctrination flights for cadets<lb/>
in the AFROTC Wing at East Caro-<lb/>
 a College are now being held and<lb/>
many of those concerned are having<lb/>
heir first experiences in the air, as<lb/>
well m their first flights with the<lb/>
Mr Force.<lb/>
Sixteen cadets participated in a<lb/>
flight October 8. De arting from the<lb/>
Greenville Airport, the cadets were<lb/>
flown to Washington, M. C, and<lb/>
returned. En route, local landmarks<lb/>
were pointed out and each cadet was<lb/>
given the opportunity of flying the<lb/>
aircraft, an Air Force T6G, used as<lb/>
a primary trainer in the Air Force<lb/>
flying program.<lb/>
A similar flight is now being ar-<lb/>
ranged for Saturday, October 1<lb/>
when, weather , emitting, 10 addi-<lb/>
tional cadets will participate in an<lb/>
indocti-ination flight.<lb/>
Cadets who took part in the initial<lb/>
flight wire: Giles Dail Jr Kinston;<lb/>
Theodore Smith, Roxboro; James<lb/>
Alexander, Columbia; Frank Ham-<lb/>
mond, Wilmington; Walter Straughn.<lb/>
Rocky Mount; Ralph Smiley. Gre n-<lb/>
ville; Joseph O. Clark, Greenville;<lb/>
Lucious Butt, Hertford; Dalton<lb/>
M un, Manns Harbor; Phillip Mellon,<lb/>
Winterville; Corbitt Daughtry, Clin-<lb/>
ton; Robert Hicks, Deep Run; David<lb/>
Pennington Jr Lucama; David Ev-<lb/>
ans, Norfolk, Va John A. Messiek,<lb/>
Greenville; aeid James C, Spell, Tur-<lb/>
key.<lb/>
Kanoy has been named as-<lb/>
0 -iate editor of the 1953 "Buccaneer"<lb/>
y Co-Editors Mildred Reynolds and<lb/>
Tomsnie Lupton. Other staff positions<lb/>
were rmounced at the annual staff<lb/>
meeting Monday evening.<lb/>
Nmed senior editor was Susie<lb/>
"??? hall, who will have Harriet Davis<lb/>
nd Barbara Moore as her assistants.<lb/>
Shirley Manning will edit the junior<lb/>
p with the help of Betty Lois<lb/>
MrGowan.<lb/>
H : ling the so omore part of the<lb/>
;??!?' ook will he Mary .Packer. Jean<lb/>
Buchanan and Veryl Trueblood will<lb/>
1st Mary with her work. The fresh-<lb/>
man s cMon will be handled by Jean<lb/>
Davenpont, editor, and Helen Alex-<lb/>
ander, assistant.<lb/>
Arranging the fraternity section<lb/>
will be Mona Jay Toler, with<lb/>
Charlotte Hales serving as assistant.<lb/>
'ustice McKeel was selected to head<lb/>
the AFROTC section. Assistants for<lb/>
the military pages will be Bill Glover<lb/>
and Kenneth Cole.<lb/>
Carrying the bulk of the sports<lb/>
division of the book will be Jack<lb/>
Hudson. Ann Siler heads the organ-<lb/>
ization arrangements. Helping Ann<lb/>
are Audrey Powell and Kitty G.<lb/>
Brinson.<lb/>
The feature section will be edited<lb/>
by Elsie Harrelson, with Jessie Ann<lb/>
Rice and Cecelia Cartwright assisting.<lb/>
Evelyn Davis, business manager,<lb/>
has selected Jean Fisher and Betty<lb/>
Sugg to assist in the advertising<lb/>
soliciting. Lannie Crocker and Hattie<lb/>
Ruth Wilson wll compose the music<lb/>
part.<lb/>
Other staff ai-sistahts include Ann<lb/>
Butler, Betty Salmons, Diana Jones<lb/>
and Shirley Burrows.<lb/>
Approximately 1800 individual<lb/>
photos have beim taken by the Waller<lb/>
and Smith ohotgraphers.<lb/>
Proofs for individual pictures<lb/>
will be shown in the annual office,<lb/>
Austin 16, ' eginning Mondav.<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
P p rally at G:30 near Main-<lb/>
tenance building will be conduct-<lb/>
ed by the cheerleaders assisted by<lb/>
the band. A bon fire will be built.<lb/>
Folowing the pep rally there<lb/>
will be a "snake dance" behind<lb/>
the and marching around the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Aft r the "snake dance" there<lb/>
will be an informal pep rally<lb/>
dance until 10 p. m.<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
All decorations for the event<lb/>
will be compeleted by 10 a. m.<lb/>
Alumni Council will meet at<lb/>
11 a. m. in the Alumni office in<lb/>
Austin. Association President<lb/>
James L. Whitfield of Raleigh,<lb/>
state editor of the News and<lb/>
Observer, will preside.<lb/>
Alumni Luncheon is on tap at<lb/>
12:30 j). m. in the North dininp<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
At 1 p. m. the ; arade forms<lb/>
by the tennis courts near the<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
The parade begins at 2 p. m.<lb/>
from assembly point. The route<lb/>
is as follows: west on Fifth Street<lb/>
to Five Points, turning right<lb/>
at Evans, traveling two blocks<lb/>
and turning left on Third Street,<lb/>
going down on Washington<lb/>
Street, turning left to Dickinson<lb/>
Avtnue, coming back to Five<lb/>
Points and down Fifth Street<lb/>
to the main entrance to the col-<lb/>
lege at the Administration build-<lb/>
ing, passing Gotten Hall, travel-<lb/>
ing around Wright Circle to the<lb/>
stadium where the parade will<lb/>
disperse.<lb/>
Immediately following the<lb/>
parade, the YWCA and the<lb/>
YMCA will entertain the Alumni<lb/>
at a reception in the "Y" Hut.<lb/>
At 4:30 p. m. dedication cer-<lb/>
emony for the Veterans Club<lb/>
Victory Bell will commence near<lb/>
the Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
At 8 p. m. kick-off will mark<lb/>
the opening of the Elon-East<lb/>
Carolina game.<lb/>
Immediately follov ing the ball<lb/>
game there will be a dance until<lb/>
11:45 in Wright honoring the<lb/>
Homecoming Queen and alumni.<lb/>
r m<lb/>
I<lb/>
ins Students Sign<lb/>
For Marine ROTC<lb/>
m Wrr Jenkins<lb/>
Dean Leo Jenkins -dates that nine<lb/>
"?'? stud nts have joined the Ma-<lb/>
; offei<lb/>
Mtonv i<lb/>
to students of the college.<lb/>
? are expected to join on<lb/>
Veterans Entertain<lb/>
Returning Alumni<lb/>
At Dinner Meeting<lb/>
Memh is of the East Carolina Col-<lb/>
Waller, Watson Head<lb/>
Music Ed Club Socials<lb/>
Veterans Club are sharing in<lb/>
to entertain visitors to the<lb/>
i ge<lb/>
' ?' 11 -<lb/>
campus on Homecoming Day for<lb/>
Alumni Saturday of this week.<lb/>
A dinner in honor of veterans<lb/>
among aausnni will be included among<lb/>
vents on the day's program, accord-<lb/>
ing to Fred I. Joseph of Greenville,<lb/>
president of the club.<lb/>
The dinn r will take place Satur-<lb/>
!av at 5:30 p.m. at a Greenville<lb/>
restaurant.<lb/>
At the first meeting of the year<lb/>
of the Music Education Club, to-chair-<lb/>
men w're elected for the social com-<lb/>
mittee. They are Victor Waller and<lb/>
Janet Watson.<lb/>
A social was planned for Thursday<lb/>
night in the Pirates Den.<lb/>
Officers were installed at the meet-<lb/>
ing. They are Laura Pope, president;<lb/>
Jim Alexander, vice president; Jerry<lb/>
Peterson, treasurer; Jean. Eaton,<lb/>
"East Carolinian" reporter; Ellen<lb/>
Spinkle, "Buccaneer" reporter; and<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Cuthbert, faculty advisor.<lb/>
Final Plans Show Full Day<lb/>
Of Events For Tomorrow<lb/>
by Jerry Register<lb/>
Final plans have been laid for returning alumni who will<lb/>
visit the East Carolina College campus tomorrow, according to<lb/>
Alumni Secretary James W. Butler, chairman of the Homecoming<lb/>
Committee, and Charlie Kluttz, general student chairman of the<lb/>
)mmittee.<lb/>
Tomorrow will be filled with a variety of events to be<lb/>
staged in the honor of the former students. Most of the day will<lb/>
be devoted to reunions among former students and visits v ith<lb/>
faculty and students.<lb/>
? Opening the annual program n a<lb/>
ep rally tonight at 6:30 near the<lb/>
Maintenance building where the stu-<lb/>
ody will assemble around a bon-<lb/>
fire. The college band will assist.<lb/>
Following the pep rally the band<lb/>
will march over the earn, us leading<lb/>
tud? nta in a snake dance An<lb/>
informal p p rally dance near the<lb/>
Maintenance building will follow with<lb/>
by the Collegian until 10 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday's program will include<lb/>
Alumni Council meeting at 11 o'clock<lb/>
Hi serve Corps program which i in room 127. Austin, and Alumni<lb/>
luncheon at 12 in the North dining<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
In the afternoon the annual Home-<lb/>
coming Parade will get underway at<lb/>
2 o'clock at the tennis courts near<lb/>
the stadium. Following the parade<lb/>
there will be a reception for the<lb/>
alumni in the "Y" Hut. At 4:30 the<lb/>
Veterans Club Victory Bell will be<lb/>
iedicated.<lb/>
At 8 p.m. Elon and East Carolina<lb/>
kick off to open the football game.<lb/>
Immediately following the game<lb/>
there will be a dance in Wright audi<lb/>
torium until 11;45 in honor of the<lb/>
Homecoming Queen and the return-<lb/>
ing alumni, MmsIc will be furnished<lb/>
by the Collegians.<lb/>
Select Queens<lb/>
Election of the Homecoming<lb/>
was held Wednesday and<lb/>
of this week. The result's<lb/>
known until the parade<lb/>
Candidate for the qtw<lb/>
Brineon, Faculty Apai<lb/>
hara Tucker, ShirSer :<lb/>
vis Hall; Barbara<lb/>
ing Hall; Jean<lb/>
Fr 11; Marcia Milne.<lb/>
Joyce Smithy Rajg&amp;j<lb/>
Ship, Slay B?U; Jfe<lb/>
msn's Day $t?4mi?; ,?ftd<lb/>
i rson, Men's Bay<lb/>
have been annauiwied as P'r<lb/>
ry, SigsgRffe ,Phi Alp?ha, B'r f<lb/>
eil, Alpha Phi Omega; liascy<lb/>
Sigma "m Phis Pat Uml- <lb/>
CM; W?Ha Dean IMi<lb/>
and YMftA; C?el ?M<lb/>
b; ad Bofcfei ???"<lb/>
?  v 30, when recruiters will be<lb/>
k t thp college.<lb/>
The Marine Corps has no program<lb/>
n the campus. The students enlisted<lb/>
in the program go to camp each<lb/>
summer while in school. The first<lb/>
-uimmer the recruits receive the pay<lb/>
of a corporal and the second summer,<lb/>
the pay of a sergeant. They are then<lb/>
commissioned second lieutenants in<lb/>
Marines. The seniors, after they<lb/>
receive their commissions, will go to<lb/>
tram for 12 weeks and to a special<lb/>
hool for five months.<lb/>
Several former students who were<lb/>
in the program have returned bo the<lb/>
eaaapus: Lewis Collie, Junius Rose,<lb/>
George and others. Dean<lb/>
id a Reserve Offioer himself.<lb/>
Thotnej<lb/>
Jenkin<lb/>
He<lb/>
Holds 6<lb/>
odist Group<lb/>
s Commission<lb/>
KCC Dramatists Begin<lb/>
Workshop Productions<lb/>
In Austin Auditorium<lb/>
K mbers of the Teachers Play-<lb/>
house, student dramatic club, will<lb/>
begin their annual series of work-<lb/>
shop plays Thursday with a program<lb/>
of two one-act dramas, each pre-<lb/>
sent d with an all-freshman cast.<lb/>
The performance will begin at 8 p.m.<lb/>
and will be open to the public.<lb/>
Chosen, for this week are two com-<lb/>
edies, "Sparkin'  directed by Doug-<lb/>
las Mitchell of Greenville, and Re-<lb/>
hearsal directed by Patricia Good-<lb/>
win of Havelock.<lb/>
Dr. Joseph A. Withey of the col-<lb/>
lege English department, faculty ad-<lb/>
visor of the Teacherr Playhouse, will<lb/>
supervise the series and student<lb/>
members of the club will direct the<lb/>
plays.<lb/>
Plans for the school year include<lb/>
a program every two weeks. The<lb/>
plays are given informally and the<lb/>
series is designed to give partici-<lb/>
pants practical experience in various<lb/>
I phases of acting and production.<lb/>
Vets Dedicate Victory Bell Tomorrow At Gym<lb/>
East Carolina College's new Vic-<lb/>
tory Bell will be officially presented<lb/>
to the college and .dedicated to stu-<lb/>
dents in military service during<lb/>
Woild War II and the Korean en-<lb/>
gagement at a ceremony conducted<lb/>
October 10 at 4:30 p.m. during the<lb/>
annual observance of Homecoming<lb/>
Day for Alumni on the campus.<lb/>
Pr.bident John D. Messiek of East<lb/>
Carolina will accept the bell from<lb/>
members of the college Veterans<lb/>
Club, who recently completed ar-<lb/>
rangements to have the bell placed<lb/>
on the campus and to provide a<lb/>
tower for it. Fred I. Joseph of Green-<lb/>
ville, president of the student or-<lb/>
ganization, will make the presenta-<lb/>
tion. The marching band will provide<lb/>
music for the event.<lb/>
Intended as a symbol of victory<lb/>
in East Carolina athletics, the bell<lb/>
will be rung following contests won<lb/>
by the college Pirates.<lb/>
The Victory Bell is a gift to the<lb/>
college from the United States De-<lb/>
partment of the Navy. Once a part<lb/>
of the equipment of the "USS<lb/>
Broome it is made of brass, weighs<lb/>
382 pounds and measures 24 inches<lb/>
in height and 28 inches in width.<lb/>
Costs of shipping the bell to Green-<lb/>
ville and erecting a tower for it were<lb/>
met by the Veterans Club.<lb/>
The tower is a brick structure lo-<lb/>
cated just west of the Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium and near the college afch-<lb/>
letic field A temporary plaque, to<lb/>
e replaced later by a permanent<lb/>
bronze design, will bear the inscrip-<lb/>
rion of dedication to East Carolina<lb/>
students in the armed forces.<lb/>
Plans for securing a bell for the<lb/>
college and building a tower for it<lb/>
were begun by the East Carolina<lb/>
Veterans Club in 1951. Through the<lb/>
cooperation of the Department of<lb/>
the Navy, permission to place the<lb/>
bell from the "USS Broome" at<lb/>
East Carolina was obtained and this<lb/>
fall the Veterans Club completed<lb/>
the project.<lb/>
Meeting Sunday<lb/>
A commissioning service for offi-<lb/>
cers of the Wesley Foundation, or-<lb/>
ganization of Methodist students at<lb/>
Rst Carolina College, will be held<lb/>
 'nday morning at 9:45 at the Jar<lb/>
i- Memorial Church in Greenville.<lb/>
At this annually observed occa-<lb/>
sion the Rev. Leon Russell, pastor,<lb/>
will give to the Wesley Foundation<lb/>
Council members their commission<lb/>
from the church as student leaders<lb/>
in the work of the Methodist Chat?k<lb/>
on the college campus.<lb/>
Offic rs composing the Weijiy<lb/>
Foundation Council are Mattie Holier.<lb/>
Kinston, president; Willa Dean I&amp;fd-<lb/>
say, Clinton, vice president; t&amp;6i<lb/>
Ann Kirven, Sumter, S. C, secre-<lb/>
tary; and Charlie Bedford, Pifcsviile<lb/>
treasurer<lb/>
ate ?o<lb/>
Chairmen of coimuissfess ?? WUUn?r, and la ka?n<lb/>
wul xmt in se<lb/>
excpi?B vf ih WwBmmm sf ?1!<lb/>
who "will have &amp;- aper-m' ft<lb/>
k ?ilioay cteirmau<lb/>
Vvtid eonskt at<lb/>
m ur-s. iwek a .13<lb/>
ifh itoH "i h J Gr Hie<lb/>
ice Penny, Raleigh; Mehrin<lb/>
son, Sims; Marvina White, Wii<lb/>
Roy MeGnnis, Morveat Par'BavteJ<lb/>
Raleigh; Thoma&amp; Pierce,<lb/>
Mount; Anne Carlson, M0<lb/>
Long Island, N. Y.j Tona Ws<lb/>
Sumter, S. C; Dorothy Hofd. $<lb/>
and; Faye Lamer, fNirgftVf"<lb/>
Card r, Rocky Ifeasti- ajsd<lb/>
Civil Kinston.<lb/>
gfpMip<lb/>
HBE<lb/>
will, iftci<lb/>
efei! si<lb/>
This is East Carolina's Victory Bell which l located an the<lb/>
side of Memorial Gymnasium. The Veterans Club on eamptts, wtMs<lb/>
structe.1 the bell tower, will dedicate the heU tomorrow at 4:39 in<lb/>
of ECC veterans of World War II and of the Korean eajifltet,<lb/>
of the physical educatiae department Nell Suitings a.id Dr. K.<lb/>
geaaen inspect the new project, (Photo hj<lb/>
Perry, Ee<lb/>
Sonata On<lb/>
Dr Slwootl Kfislerv-<lb/>
Gfcorge Perry? pT-k.<lb/>
Ferry? sonata im?<lb/>
opus '? dnr<lb/>
recital on Thtirs<lb/>
oclock in A?ate<lb/>
Tise<lb/>
I960 5s ia<lb/>
and Is -<lb/>
Karl<lb/>
irt.<lb/>
Wmk<lb/>
hlMU-jod Educa-<lb/>
ipi for tee 19SS-<lb/>
iant by E-lisabelh<lb/>
In the campus<lb/>
tart felif :a)ea<lb/>
as in die 1 oct.<lb/>
i? the Training School<lb/>
3C freshmen steieats<lb/>
n? -with a nur-<lb/>
hoar followed the<lb/>
.   .? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00038329_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, lSgg<lb/>
22C<lb/>
8B<lb/>
Figures Show Parking Place<lb/>
For Every Car On ECC Campus<lb/>
In a survey made by Gorce Tuc-<lb/>
ker, i)resident of the EPO, and other<lb/>
members of the fraternity it is re-<lb/>
ported that there are 406 parking<lb/>
places on the EOC campus in the<lb/>
general vicinity from the Wright to<lb/>
Austin h sidings.<lb/>
There are SI7 cars registered with<lb/>
Dean Clinfa a 1'rewett's office. "This<lb/>
should be evidence enough that there<lb/>
is no real psaking problem on the<lb/>
campus Dr. Prewctt said.<lb/>
A.dd i al parking places are to<lb/>
und i construction immediately.<lb/>
parking plac will be in<lb/>
e Austia building and near<lb/>
rai . The new parking anas<lb/>
should relieve parking congestion in<lb/>
immediate vicinities.<lb/>
I ? re has been approximately $40<lb/>
Th<lb/>
PI<lb/>
JOHNSON'S<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC<lb/>
At Five Points<lb/>
in fines collected by Dean Prewett's<lb/>
office since the beginning of school.<lb/>
These fin eg are imposed for parking<lb/>
in no parking zones, parking over-<lb/>
time in restricted zones and other<lb/>
parking and traffic violations. The<lb/>
money collected through fines goes<lb/>
to the Student Welfare Fund. This<lb/>
is a lund used to aid students who<lb/>
are attending the college.<lb/>
Students arc asked to observe the<lb/>
parking rules and regulations here<lb/>
on the campus inasmuch as they are<lb/>
for the benefit of the student him-<lb/>
self. It is reported by the police<lb/>
staff that parking conditions on the<lb/>
campus have improved at least 600 f,r.<lb/>
"We are gratified by response that<lb/>
faculty and students have given fa<lb/>
resipons to parking on the campus<lb/>
is Dean Prewett's statement when<lb/>
asked about co-operation of the stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
????  a-j<lb/>
BUY'?TftttffcfcTFTY KOOAK<lb/>
A ROLL FOR<lb/>
YOUR CAVERA<lb/>
ONE FOR A SPARE<lb/>
And return your exposed<lb/>
films to us for developing and<lb/>
printing. Prompt service.<lb/>
BISSETTE'S<lb/>
DRUG STORE<lb/>
416 Evans Street<lb/>
Veterans Group<lb/>
Promotes 'Employ<lb/>
Handicap Week'<lb/>
Plans are being laid on a wide<lb/>
i scale for the eighth annual observ-<lb/>
1 ance from October 4 through 10 of<lb/>
National Employ the Physically Han-<lb/>
dicapped Week.<lb/>
In each state, governor's commit-<lb/>
tees are at work on arrangements,<lb/>
I with several agencies and organiza-<lb/>
, turns making plans for local observ-<lb/>
ances, Veterans Administration said.<lb/>
By Congressional enactment, the<lb/>
first full week of October of each<lb/>
year is set aside as "NEPH Week<lb/>
to intensify efforts throughout the<lb/>
country to make possible the full<lb/>
utilization of the skills and abilities<lb/>
of men and women who are physi-<lb/>
cally handicapped.<lb/>
Veterans Administration reports<lb/>
that the Korean war has inflicted<lb/>
100,000 American casualties, bring-<lb/>
ing the number of disabled veterans<lb/>
on VA rolls to 2,500,000, the highest<lb/>
total in history. During 1952, a total<lb/>
of 106,000 disabled veterans applied<lb/>
for work at public employment of-<lb/>
fices. The number of such applica-<lb/>
tions has increaed each year.<lb/>
EC Prof Writes<lb/>
On Englishman<lb/>
For NY Bulletin<lb/>
Dr. Edgar W. Hirshberg of the<lb/>
East Carolina College department of<lb/>
English is represented in the current<lb/>
issue of the "Bulletin of the New<lb/>
York Public Library' by an article<lb/>
entitled " 'Captain Bland' on the<lb/>
New York Stage which traces the<lb/>
 -ory of a little-known dramatic<lb/>
work by the better-known British<lb/>
author George Henry Lewes.<lb/>
"Captain Bland" was never pro-<lb/>
duced in England, Dr. Hirshberg<lb/>
states, and "was, to use the theatri-<lb/>
cal term, a flop" when presented<lb/>
May 30, 1864, "for the first time on<lb/>
any stage" at Wallack's Theatre in<lb/>
New York. Its interest now lies part-<lb/>
ly in its authorship by Lewes, Eng-<lb/>
lish philosophical writer whose bi-<lb/>
ography is linked with that of the<lb/>
great Victorian novelist George Eliot.<lb/>
For his study of "Captain Bland"<lb/>
Dr. Hirshberg found available in the<lb/>
New York Public Library the prompt-<lb/>
er's copy used for the Wallack pro-<lb/>
duction and, he states, "as far as I<lb/>
know . . . the only version of the<lb/>
play in existence From reviews of<lb/>
the play in contemporary newspapers<lb/>
and majrazines he traces the reac-<lb/>
tion of the theatre-going public to<lb/>
"Captain Bland" and gives a glance<lb/>
backward into conditions on the New<lb/>
York stage in the Civil War period.<lb/>
Dr. Hirshberg joined the East Car-<lb/>
olina faculty this summer. He is a<lb/>
graduate of Harvard, Cambridge and<lb/>
Yale and has taught at Indiana<lb/>
University, North Carolina State<lb/>
College and Ohio University.<lb/>
Alumni News<lb/>
<lb/>
L<lb/>
LARRY'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
CAMPUS FOOTWEAR FOR ALL OCCASIONS<lb/>
AT FIVE POINTS<lb/>
For Drug Needs, Cosmetics and Fountain Goods<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
Proctor Hotel Building<lb/>
Open 8 A. M10 P. M. ? Sunday 8:30 A. M10:30 A. M<lb/>
4 P. M10 P. M.<lb/>
Chime Concerts Begin<lb/>
Sunday At Four O'clock<lb/>
The first of a series of carillon<lb/>
concerts will begin Sunday at 4 p.m<lb/>
announced George E. Perry of the<lb/>
music faculty.<lb/>
Lasting from 20 to 30 minutes,<lb/>
they will be heard anywhere on the<lb/>
campus except in the Austin audi-<lb/>
torium where they will be played.<lb/>
The carillon, which are the tower<lb/>
bells, will be played by the organ<lb/>
students of Mr. Perry. Sunday's or-<lb/>
ganist will be Carolyn Clapp. Others<lb/>
who will play include Ellen Sprinkle,<lb/>
Janet Watson, Carolyn Brothers and<lb/>
Monteen Winstead. Others will be<lb/>
selected later.<lb/>
I Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
145 RPM Accessories <lb/>
1 McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE i<lb/>
PITT ALUMNI HEAR<lb/>
OF COLLEGE OPERATIONS<lb/>
r'ibt County alumni of East Caro-<lb/>
lina College ware urged by ECC<lb/>
President J. D Messick Tuesday<lb/>
night to give full support to the Pit<lb/>
County Educational Foundation in<lb/>
the current campaign to raise $100<lb/>
000.<lb/>
President Messick spoke on the<lb/>
college growth, needs, and alumni<lb/>
support at the meeting of the Pitt<lb/>
alumni chapter with Mary Thomas<lb/>
Smith, chapter president, in charge.<lb/>
Faculty and alumni cooperation in<lb/>
furnishing the "soon-to-be-complet-<lb/>
ed" faculty-alumni building being<lb/>
converted from the former home<lb/>
management house was also pointed<lb/>
up by President Messick as a project<lb/>
for early support. He described the<lb/>
building program, including comple-<lb/>
tion of the library, renovation of<lb/>
Wright building ground floor for a<lb/>
student union and the construction<lb/>
of the women's and men's new dor-<lb/>
mitories.<lb/>
Homecoming Day plans were re-<lb/>
viewed by Alumni Secretary James<lb/>
Butler, who said Pitt County alumni<lb/>
should make reservation immediate-<lb/>
ly for the Homecoming Luncheon at<lb/>
12:30 o'clock and tickets for the<lb/>
East Carolina-Elon football game at<lb/>
8 o'clock. Campus participation in<lb/>
selection of dormitory queens and<lb/>
the Homecoming Queen were also<lb/>
announced.<lb/>
The registration of alumni attend-<lb/>
ing the Northeastern District Meet-<lb/>
ing of the North Carolina Educa-<lb/>
tion Association at ECC on October<lb/>
23 was also announced by Mr. But-<lb/>
ler.<lb/>
There was a large atHmdance of<lb/>
alumni for the September get-ac-<lb/>
quainted meeting which featured on<lb/>
the program Dr. Keith Holmes, gui-<lb/>
tarist, in a folksong fest, with a<lb/>
"surprise" trio number performed<lb/>
by President Messick, Dr. Holmes,<lb/>
and Alumni Secretary Butler.<lb/>
Miss Smith announced that the<lb/>
chapter will hold a dinner meeting<lb/>
on November 10, its annual games<lb/>
tournament on February 12, 1954, and<lb/>
a buffet in April. Tbe minutes of<lb/>
the first Fall meeting were read by<lb/>
Mrs. Dorothy Johnston, chapter sec-<lb/>
rotary-treasurer.<lb/>
A social period followed the busi-<lb/>
ness meeting with Mrs. Ruel W.<lb/>
Tyson, Miss Christine Johnston and<lb/>
Mrs. Susie Webb.<lb/>
BURLINGTON ALUMNI<lb/>
CONTINUE SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
The first Fall meeting of the East<lb/>
Carolina College Ahimni Associa-<lb/>
tion's Burlington-Alamance Chapter<lb/>
was held recently in the home of<lb/>
Mrs. E. C. Pate with Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
W. C. Council as co-host and hostess.<lb/>
Mr. Council, president, appointed<lb/>
the following committees to help him<lb/>
during the coming year: ways and<lb/>
means, Ida Walters, Mrs. E. C. Pate;<lb/>
membership, Estelle McClees, Mar-<lb/>
garet Walker; hospitaity, Mrs. Helen<lb/>
Pope, Helen Johnson; yearbook, Mrs.<lb/>
W. C. Council, Mrs. Sophia Mayo.<lb/>
RALEIGH ALUMNI<lb/>
PLANNING BANQUET<lb/>
The annual banquet of the Raleigh-<lb/>
Wake County chapter of the East<lb/>
Carolina College Alumni Associa-<lb/>
tion will be held at the Woman's<lb/>
Club on Monday, Nov. 23, at 6:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Sam Dees, chapter president, who<lb/>
announced the annual event at the<lb/>
first fall meeting held at the home<lb/>
of Mrs. Thomas Rand Jr. Monday<lb/>
night, said officials of the college<lb/>
had been invited.<lb/>
Members of the chapter endorsed<lb/>
the chapter's scholarship program<lb/>
started last year and decided to be-<lb/>
gin a soliciation of funds immedi-<lb/>
ately that will enable a Raleigh or<lb/>
Wake County student to attend East<lb/>
Carolina College.<lb/>
Janus Whitfield, given recognition<lb/>
at the meeting for having been<lb/>
chosen as state president of East<lb/>
Carolina Alumni and being named<lb/>
recipient of the Alumni Award for<lb/>
1953. spoke briefly on what other<lb/>
chapters in the State have adopted<lb/>
as projects.<lb/>
Episcopal Rector<lb/>
Addresses ROTC<lb/>
On AF Ethics<lb/>
Dr. Wallace I. Wolverton, rector<lb/>
of St, Paul's Episcopal Church of<lb/>
Greenville and a member of the<lb/>
college faculty, discussed "A Code<lb/>
of Ethics for Air Force Officers"<lb/>
at a receat meeting of the college<lb/>
; ROTC in the College Theatre.<lb/>
The talk was one of a series plan-<lb/>
ned for cadets during the school year<lb/>
with the idea of expanding and im-<lb/>
proving the general education which<lb/>
. 11 , i ive in college.<lb/>
D Wolverton served as Chaplain<lb/>
 and I' AF .luring 1930-1952.<lb/>
Prom 1947 to 1949 he gave instruc-<lb/>
iii-i in professional ethics at the<lb/>
USAF War College, Montgomery,<lb/>
Via. " El deal Judgment of Air Force<lb/>
?fficers" is il eluded among his pub-<lb/>
i works.<lb/>
Dr. Wolverton's recent talk to ca-<lb/>
letg -tressed the qualities of self-<lb/>
control, goodwill and cooperation,<lb/>
professional integrity, and loyalty.<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Movie, "Macao to be held in<lb/>
Austin auditorium at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Roanoke Federation of Baptist<lb/>
Business Women's Circle will meet<lb/>
in Training School auditorium.<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Chapel services at 12 noon in <lb/>
tin auditorium.<lb/>
ACE meets in the eafete) a a-<lb/>
(5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Faulty Lecture Club will meet ia<lb/>
Flanagan auditorium at 8 p.m<lb/>
Kappa Delta Pi meets in Graham<lb/>
uilding at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
VVVCA a?d YMCA vesper ?ervie)<lb/>
held in "Y" Hut at 6:30.<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Pap rally on tap near MainU-i<lb/>
building at 6:30 p.m. with a boi<lb/>
followed by parade up to court<lb/>
ted bj the college band.<lb/>
Princeton High School<lb/>
Hear Dr. Holmes, Bufler<lb/>
Dr. Keith D. Holmes of the East<lb/>
Carolina Department of Education<lb/>
and James W. Butler, alumni secre-<lb/>
tary at the college, (participated<lb/>
Wednesday in exercises marking the<lb/>
opening of the new Reading Materi-<lb/>
als Center at the Princeton High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
As principal speaker on the pro-<lb/>
gram. Dr. Holmes discussed "The<lb/>
Purposes of a Reading Center Mr.<lb/>
Butler extended best wishes from<lb/>
the college and greeted East Caro-<lb/>
lina alumni on the school faculty<lb/>
and present as guests of the after-<lb/>
noon.<lb/>
VA Says Home Loans<lb/>
j Reach All-Time Peak<lb/>
VA home loan applications received<lb/>
the Veterans Administration dur-<lb/>
ing the month ending August 25,<lb/>
i 1953, topped the 31,000 mark, an<lb/>
! increase of 5800 over the previous<lb/>
month. VA announced.<lb/>
T. B. King, Aettng Assistant Dep-<lb/>
uty Administrator for Loan Guaran-<lb/>
ty, said: "The August rise indicates<lb/>
that veterans may be finding it some-<lb/>
what easier to obtain OI financing,<lb/>
although we cannot be certain on<lb/>
the basia of one month's experience.<lb/>
Also, it is still harder for veterans<lb/>
to gel GI loans in some areas than<lb/>
in others Mr. King emphasised that<lb/>
tone of the Auyust increase may be<lb/>
attributed to the rush of lenders to<lb/>
g ? loan applications approved by<lb/>
VA before the 4 percent gratuity<lb/>
was suspended after August 31, 1953.<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
BELL STUDIO<lb/>
of<lb/>
Photography<lb/>
FOR DISTINCTIVE<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHS<lb/>
East 5th Street<lb/>
By Old Swimming Pool<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
-m?Mminim in ??<lb/>
College Students<lb/>
COME IX AND SEE<lb/>
OUR FINE SELECTION OF SUITS and COATS<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
A<lb/>
H's easy as P?e-<lb/>
No enHY blanks!<lb/>
- No box tops!<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Sweaters, Skirts, Dresses, Suits, Coats<lb/>
At<lb/>
BLOOM'S<lb/>
Serving The College Students For<lb/>
Quarter of A Century<lb/>
?<lb/>
 H. L. HODGES &amp; CO.<lb/>
I<lb/>
J PAINTS<lb/>
AND<lb/>
HARDWARE<lb/>
1<lb/>
11<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/>
6REERWIEW DRIVE-IN<lb/>
End Circle<lb/>
You con cash in<lb/>
and again!<lb/>
again<lb/>
C'mon, let's go<lb/>
TWICE AS MANY AWARDS THIS YEAR<lb/>
WRITE A LUCKY STUIKE JINGLE<lb/>
based on the fact that LUCKIES TASTE BETTER!<lb/>
??ms to tarts unlsown,<lb/>
.SaWS&amp;r'<lb/>
Froi<lb/>
TWO-IN-ONE<lb/>
BILLFOLD BY<lb/>
BUXTON<lb/>
The Cenvertible for men . . .<lb/>
a luxurious billfold<lb/>
with removable, completely<lb/>
leather-covered photo-card<lb/>
Case that can be used alone.<lb/>
Billfold can then carry<lb/>
checkbook or memo pad.<lb/>
5.00 - 12.50<lb/>
LAUTARES BROS.<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
414 Evans Street<lb/>
Easiest $25 you ever made. Sit right<lb/>
down and write a 4-line jingle based on<lb/>
the fact that Luckies taste better.<lb/>
That's all there is to it. More awards<lb/>
than ever before!<lb/>
Read the jingles on this page. Write<lb/>
original ones just like them?or better 1<lb/>
Wruc as many as you want. There's<lb/>
no limit to the number of awards you<lb/>
can receive. If we pick one of your<lb/>
jingles, we'll pay you $25 for the right<lb/>
to use it, together with your name, in<lb/>
Lucky Strike advertising.<lb/>
Remember: Read all the rules and<lb/>
tips carefully. To be on the safe side,<lb/>
clip them out and keep them handy.<lb/>
Act now. Get started today.<lb/>
That win the enters <lb/>
www<lb/>
CUp OUT this INFORMATION<lb/>
RULES TIPS<lb/>
I. Write your Lucky Strike jingle on a plain piece<lb/>
of paper or post card and send it to Happy-Go-Lucky,<lb/>
P. O. Box 67, New York 46, N.Y. Be sure that your<lb/>
? name, address, college and class are included?and<lb/>
that they are legible.<lb/>
1. Base your jingle on any qualities of Luckies.<lb/>
"Luckies taste better is only one. (See "Tips)<lb/>
3. Every student of any college, university or post-<lb/>
graduate school may submit jingles.<lb/>
4. You may submit as many jingles as you like.<lb/>
Remember, you are eligible to receive more than<lb/>
one $25 award.<lb/>
To earn an award you are no limited to<lb/>
"Luckies taste better Use a' ,ther sales<lb/>
points on Lucky Strike, such as the fol-<lb/>
lowing:<lb/>
L.S.M.F.T.<lb/>
Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco<lb/>
Luckies taste cleaner, fresher, smoother<lb/>
So round, so firm, so fully p icked<lb/>
So free and easy on the draw<lb/>
Be Happy?Go Lucky<lb/>
Buy Luckies by the carton<lb/>
Luckies give you deep-down smoking<lb/>
enjoyment<lb/>
COP Tint AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY<lb/>
it P5?i<lb/>
WithTl<lb/>
That Ai<lb/>
volume<lb/>
iterator<lb/>
25 Mi<lb/>
Nowli<lb/>
With<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
j<lb/>
I<lb/>
us<lb/>
mori-<lb/>
until<lb/>
i<lb/>
'H<lb/>
da?<lb/>
N?<lb/>
Utrs, : A<lb/>
of -<lb/>
par"<lb/>
A <lb/>
<lb/>
up ii<lb/>
Mr?<lb/>
the<lb/>
' 1<lb/>
w '<lb/>
II ?<lb/>
New i<lb/>
I<lb/>
eisia<lb/>
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bui;<lb/>
Pay<lb/>
den-<lb/>
tht .<lb/>
Biisinl<lb/>
Initial<lb/>
InOrl<lb/>
pjgj<lb/>
haj<lb/>
hiemhers 0<lb/>
of mj<lb/>
fraternity<lb/>
cation,<lb/>
lh'n of w<lb/>
A pledge<lb/>
r111 be hell<lb/>
Kah of lJ<lb/>
the chaptJ<lb/>
I "tents, pj<lb/>
fraternity<lb/>
lumber.<lb/>
St?dent9<lb/>
"temher<lb/>
rU BarU<lb/>
Qn BuntiJ<lb/>
Wdner, Nl<lb/>
lh; Robel<lb/>
I John w Hl<lb/>
Wiln,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038329_0003"/><lb/>
parnv<lb/>
?-T<lb/>
It Pays To Do Business<lb/>
With Those Businesses<lb/>
That Advertise With Us<lb/>
Ehsteawlinia<lb/>
We Welcome You, Alumni<lb/>
Back To East Carolina<lb/>
For A Big Homecoming<lb/>
U)l LIME XXIX<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1953<lb/>
r ? ???<lb/>
M ?? ? ???'<lb/>
Number 5<lb/>
W 1 It . !?? SC<lb/>
Alumni Return Here For Homecoming Event<lb/>
'Hello ? East Carolina College'<lb/>
on Grissam, left, has completed the first call through the PBX telephone switchboard recently<lb/>
at the college. Dr. Messick, right, president, is makinj; the first caH. Mrs. Grissom is otve of the<lb/>
io iil saj "Hello. East Carolina College" to calls off campus.<lb/>
(Photos by Norwood Elliot.)<lb/>
25 More Phones<lb/>
Now In Operation<lb/>
ftith New System<lb/>
' ? system, pro-<lb/>
? ? roximately<lb/>
,? ? I , K si I larolina<lb/>
us, went into operation<lb/>
. system lias<lb/>
 r 'V; ral wet.ks.<lb/>
already in<lb/>
.i as Mana-<lb/>
, re<lb/>
tem Mr. Duncan<lb/>
long-f Deed for<lb/>
 tel rvice<lb/>
nted ?' that<lb/>
A tstin,<lb/>
on tl<lb/>
tone and<lb/>
ily facili-<lb/>
t!ie<lb/>
Where To Park<lb/>
Ml motorists are requested by<lb/>
the Homecoming Committee to<lb/>
secure off campus parking facili-<lb/>
ties all day Saturday (tomorrow).<lb/>
No cars will be parke Satur-<lb/>
day around Wright Circle, Cotten<lb/>
Hall and the Administration<lb/>
building from 12 noon until after<lb/>
the parade.<lb/>
M<lb/>
i rffice, staff rooms<lb/>
. Licationa and ix de<lb/>
 struction carry on<lb/>
iard for handling calls<lb/>
 i off the c;uii; us was set<lb/>
Austin building this fall.<lb/>
om ' Greenville is<lb/>
The switchboard Po-<lb/>
mnection for calls<lb/>
is and the operator<lb/>
:al and long distance<lb/>
ave been placed<lb/>
- of heads of depart-<lb/>
?' . ? as college ofi'i-<lb/>
Pacil ate eommunica-<lb/>
East Carolina's 23<lb/>
I incan states.<lb/>
? .v located in sta-<lb/>
es will continue to be<lb/>
. connected directly to<lb/>
hone system.<lb/>
Business Ed Frat<lb/>
Initiates Nine<lb/>
In Organization<lb/>
e of their high scholastic<lb/>
. nine East Carolina College<lb/>
? v ? been invited to become<lb/>
?f the Beta Kappa Chapter<lb/>
ega Pi, national honorary<lb/>
? y for students of business<lb/>
President Donald McGlo-<lb/>
f Winterville has announced.<lb/>
service for new members<lb/>
 eld October 10, with Peggy<lb/>
' Durham, vice president of<lb/>
ipter, in charge of arrange-<lb/>
Formal initiation into the<lb/>
fraternity will take place in No-<lb/>
vember.<lb/>
Students to be initiated as new<lb/>
members of the fraternity are Rus-<lb/>
e'l Barnes, Winterville; Margaret<lb/>
Am Bunting, Nashville; Nellie Rhea<lb/>
G&amp;rdner, Nashville; Edward M. Gore,<lb/>
A?h; Robert E. Hicks, Deep Run;<lb/>
John W. Hudson, Kinston; Iris Mat-<lb/>
thews, Aberdeen; Geraldkie Swindell,<lb/>
Belhaven; and Elbert A. Thomas,<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
Baptists Launch<lb/>
listen' Drive<lb/>
For Missions<lb/>
Several hundred East Carolinians<lb/>
will unite their efforts with those<lb/>
of thousands of other students as<lb/>
approximately 30 campuses in North<lb/>
Una when the "Listen Campaign"<lb/>
inched by the State Baptist<lb/>
Student Union next week.<lb/>
"Love Impels Sacrifice Toward<lb/>
. Need is the motto-slogan for<lb/>
campaign, a fund-raising project<lb/>
which will be conducted through this<lb/>
year. To provide food for<lb/>
starring people in other countries<lb/>
is one of the main objects of the<lb/>
drive.<lb/>
A pinny a day or a meal a month<lb/>
ha been suggested as the minimum<lb/>
ibution per student, according<lb/>
to L. L. (Leo) Bishop Jr a Green-<lb/>
ville graduate student, who is presi-<lb/>
dent of the East Carolina BSU. On<lb/>
the campus individual containers will<lb/>
be distributed to all interested stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty members. The 26th<lb/>
of each month is the date set for<lb/>
ersons to turn in their gifts to the<lb/>
Baptist Student Center office.<lb/>
Several other mission projects will<lb/>
be financed through these funds. For<lb/>
the past six years some $1,400 has<lb/>
been contributed annually by North<lb/>
iina students for scholarships<lb/>
and summer missionaries to Hawaii.<lb/>
East" Carolina Baptists last year were<lb/>
one of the three groups in the State<lb/>
to eontri ute more than $100 of this<lb/>
sum.<lb/>
16 Cadets Begin<lb/>
Initial Air Trips,<lb/>
Others To Follow<lb/>
Indoctrination flights for cadets<lb/>
in the AFROTC Wing at East Caro-<lb/>
lina College are now being held and<lb/>
many of those concerned are having<lb/>
h( ir first experiences in the air, as<lb/>
v ? their first flights with the<lb/>
Mr Koree.<lb/>
Sixteen cadets participated in a<lb/>
flight October 3. Departing from the<lb/>
Greenville Airport, the cadets were<lb/>
flown to Washington, N. C, and<lb/>
returned. En route, local landmarks<lb/>
were pointed out ami each cadet was<lb/>
given the opportunity of flying the<lb/>
aircraft, an Air Force T6G, used as<lb/>
a primary trainer in the Air Force<lb/>
flying program.<lb/>
A similar flight is now being ar-<lb/>
ranged for Saturday, October 17,<lb/>
when, weather permitting, 16 addi-<lb/>
tional cadets will participate in an<lb/>
indoctrination flight.<lb/>
Cadets who took part in the initial<lb/>
f!ight were: Giles Dail Jr Kinston;<lb/>
Theodore Smith, Roxboro; James<lb/>
Alexander, Columbia; Frank Ham-<lb/>
mond, Wilmington; Walter Straughn,<lb/>
Rocky Mount; Ralph Smiley. Gre n-<lb/>
ville; Joseph O. Clark, Greenville;<lb/>
Lucious Butt, Hertford; Dalton<lb/>
V ,in, Manns Harbor; Phillip Mellon,<lb/>
Winterville; Corbitt Daughtry, Clin-<lb/>
ton; Robert Hicks, Deep Run; David<lb/>
Pennington Jr Lucama; David Ev-<lb/>
ans, Norfolk, Va John A. Messick,<lb/>
Greenville; and James C. Spell. Tur-<lb/>
key.<lb/>
Chiefs Complex<lb/>
Yearbook Staff;<lb/>
Promote Kanoy<lb/>
Jane Kanoy has been named as-<lb/>
?? 'iate editor of the 1953 "Buccaneer"<lb/>
' y Co-Editors Mildred Reynolds and<lb/>
Tommie Lupton. Other staff positions<lb/>
v re ? nnounced at the annual staff<lb/>
n eting Monday evening.<lb/>
Nmed senior editor was Susie<lb/>
??? hall, who will have Harriet Davis<lb/>
1 Barbara Moore as her assistants.<lb/>
Shirley Manning will edit the junior<lb/>
 ?, with the help of Betty Lois<lb/>
MKJowan.<lb/>
1' ading the sophomore part of the<lb/>
rbook will he Mary Packer. Jean<lb/>
Buchanan and Veryl Tmeoiood will<lb/>
1 ist Mary with her work. The fresh-<lb/>
man a cion will be handled by Jean<lb/>
Davenport, editor, and Helen Alex-<lb/>
ander, assistant.<lb/>
Arranging the fraternity section<lb/>
will be Mona Jay Toler, with<lb/>
Charlotte Hales serving as assistant.<lb/>
'ustice IfcKeel was selected to head<lb/>
the AFROTC section. Assistants for<lb/>
the military pages will be Bill Glover<lb/>
and Kenneth Cole.<lb/>
Carrying the bulk of the sports<lb/>
division of the book will be Jack<lb/>
Hudson. Ann Siler heads the organ-<lb/>
ization arrangements. Helping Ann<lb/>
are Audrey Powell and Kitty G.<lb/>
Brinson.<lb/>
The feature section will be edited<lb/>
by Elsie Harrelson, with Jessie Ann<lb/>
Rice and Cecelia Cartwright assisting.<lb/>
Evelyn Davis, busine?s manager,<lb/>
has selected Jean Fisher and Betty<lb/>
Sugg to assist in the advertising<lb/>
soliciting. Lannie Crocker and Hattie<lb/>
Ruth Wilson wll compose the music<lb/>
part.<lb/>
Other s-tart assistants include Ann<lb/>
Butler, Betty Salmons, Diana Jones<lb/>
and Shirley Burrows.<lb/>
Approximately 1800 individual<lb/>
photos have been taken by the Waller<lb/>
and Smith ;ohotgraphers.<lb/>
Proofs for individual pictures<lb/>
will be shown in the annual office,<lb/>
Austin 16, ?'eginning Mondav.<lb/>
Homecoming: Program<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
P p rally at 0:30 near Main-<lb/>
tenance building will be conduct-<lb/>
ed by the cheerleaders assisted by<lb/>
the band. A bon fire will be built.<lb/>
Folowiiig the pep rally there<lb/>
will 1(. a "snake dance" behind<lb/>
the and marching around the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Aft r the "snake dance" there<lb/>
will be an informal pep rally<lb/>
dance until 10 p. m.<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
All decorations for the event<lb/>
will be compeleted by 10 a. m.<lb/>
Alumni Council will meet at<lb/>
11 a. m. in the Alumni office in<lb/>
Austin. Association President<lb/>
James L. Whitfield of Raleigh,<lb/>
state editor of the News and<lb/>
Observer, will preside.<lb/>
Alumni Luncheon is on tap at<lb/>
12:30 p. m. in the North dining<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
At 1 p. m. the ; arade forms<lb/>
by the tennis courts near the<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
The parade begin9 at 2 p. m.<lb/>
from assembly point. The route<lb/>
is as follows: west or Fifth Street<lb/>
to Five Points, turning right<lb/>
at Evans, traveling two blocks<lb/>
and turning left on Third Street,<lb/>
going down on Washington<lb/>
Street, turning left to Dickinson<lb/>
Avenue, coming back to Five<lb/>
Points and down Fifth Street<lb/>
to the main entrance to the col-<lb/>
lege at the Administration build-<lb/>
ing, passing Cotten Hall, travel-<lb/>
ing around Wright Circle to the<lb/>
stadium where the arade will<lb/>
disperse.<lb/>
Immediately following the<lb/>
parade, the YWCA and the<lb/>
YMCA will entertain the Alumni<lb/>
at a reception in the "Y" Hut.<lb/>
At 4:30 p. m. dedication cer-<lb/>
emony for thi Veterans Club<lb/>
Victory Bell will commence near<lb/>
th; Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
At 8 p. m. kick-off will mark<lb/>
the opening of the Elon-East<lb/>
Carolina game.<lb/>
Immediately follov ing the ball<lb/>
game there will be a dance until<lb/>
11:45 in Wright honoring the<lb/>
llonucoming Queen and alumni.<lb/>
Final Plans Show Full Day<lb/>
Of Events For Tomorrow<lb/>
by Jerry Register<lb/>
Final plans have been laid for returning alumni who will<lb/>
visit the East Carolina College campus tomorrow . according to<lb/>
Alumni Secretary James W. Butler chairman of the Homecoming<lb/>
Committee, and Chat-lie Kluttz, general student chairman of tha<lb/>
ommittee.<lb/>
Tomorrow will be filled with a variety of events to be<lb/>
staged in the honor of the former students. Most of the day will<lb/>
a devoted to reunions among former students and visits with<lb/>
faculty and students.<lb/>
? Opening the annual program ia a<lb/>
(<lb/>
Veterans Entertain<lb/>
Returning Alumni<lb/>
At Dinner Meeting<lb/>
Meroh rs of the East Carolina Col-<lb/>
1 ge Veterans Club are sharing in<lb/>
plans to entertain visitors to the<lb/>
campus, on Homecoming Day for<lb/>
Alumni Saturday of this week.<lb/>
A dinner in honor of veterans<lb/>
among aoumni will be included among<lb/>
vtiits on he day's program, accord-<lb/>
ing to Fred I. Joseph of Greenville,<lb/>
president of the club.<lb/>
The dinn r will take place Satur-<lb/>
day at 5:30 p.m. at a Greenville<lb/>
restaurant.<lb/>
Waller, Watson Head<lb/>
Music Ed Club Socials<lb/>
A' the first meeting of the year<lb/>
of the Music Education Club, co-chair-<lb/>
men w re elected for the social com-<lb/>
mittee. They are Victor Waller and<lb/>
Janet Watson.<lb/>
A social was planned for Thursday<lb/>
night in the Pirates Den.<lb/>
Officers were installed at the meet-<lb/>
ing. They ar" Laura Pope, president;<lb/>
Jim Alexander, vice president; Jerry<lb/>
Peterson, treasurer; Jean Eaton,<lb/>
"Eai t Carolinian" reporter; Ellen<lb/>
Spinkle, "Buccaneer" reporter; and<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Cuthbert, faculty advisor.<lb/>
ins Students Sign<lb/>
For Marine ROTC<lb/>
m Br. Jenkins<lb/>
Dean Leo Jenkins states that nine<lb/>
ROC Rtud ns have joined the Ma-<lb/>
s R tv(. Corps program which<lb/>
Is offered to students of the college.<lb/>
MTeny mor? are expected to join on<lb/>
October 3 when recruiter? will be<lb/>
' ' U t i the college.<lb/>
The Marine Corps has no program<lb/>
n the campus. The students enlisted<lb/>
in the program go to camp each<lb/>
summer while in school. The first<lb/>
rammer the recruits receive the pay<lb/>
of I corporal and the second summer,<lb/>
the pay of a sergeant. They are then<lb/>
commissioned second lieutenant in<lb/>
the Marines. The seniors, after they<lb/>
receive their commissions, will go to<lb/>
?'?m for 12 weeks and to a special<lb/>
-?hool for five months.<lb/>
Several former students who were<lb/>
in the program have returned to the<lb/>
campus: Lewis Collie, Junius Rose,<lb/>
Thomas George and others. Dean<lb/>
Jenkins in a Reserve Officer himself.<lb/>
ECC Dramatists Begin<lb/>
Workshop Productions<lb/>
In Austin Auditorium<lb/>
Members of the Teachers Play-<lb/>
house, student dramatic club, will<lb/>
begin their annual series of work-<lb/>
shop plays Thursday with a program<lb/>
of two one-act dramas, each pre-<lb/>
sent -d with an all-freshman cast.<lb/>
The performance will begin at 8 p.m.<lb/>
and will be open to the public.<lb/>
Chosen for this week are two com-<lb/>
edies, "Sparkin'  directed by Doug-<lb/>
las Mitchell of Greenville, and MRe-<lb/>
hearsal directed by Patricia Good-<lb/>
win of Havelock.<lb/>
Dr. Joseph A. Withey of the col-<lb/>
lege English department, faculty ad-<lb/>
visor of the Teachers Playhouse, will<lb/>
supt rvise the seriea and student<lb/>
members of the club will direct the<lb/>
plays.<lb/>
Plans for the school year include<lb/>
a program every two weeks. The<lb/>
plays are given informally and the<lb/>
series is designed to give partici-<lb/>
pants practical experience in various<lb/>
phases of acting and production.<lb/>
Vets Dedicate Victory Bell Tomorrow At Gym<lb/>
East Carolina College's new Vic-<lb/>
tory Bell will be officially presented<lb/>
to the college and dedicated to stu-<lb/>
dents in military service (hiring<lb/>
World War II and the Korean en-<lb/>
gagement at a ceremony conducted<lb/>
October 10 at 4:30 p.m. during the<lb/>
annual observance of Homecoming<lb/>
Day for Alumni on the campus.<lb/>
President John D. Messick of East<lb/>
Carolina will accept the bell from<lb/>
members of the college Veterans<lb/>
Club, who recently completed ar-<lb/>
rangements to have the bell placed<lb/>
on the campus and to provide a<lb/>
tower for it. Fred I. Joseph of Green-<lb/>
ville, president of the student or-<lb/>
ganization, will make the presenta-<lb/>
tion. The marching band will provide<lb/>
music for the event.<lb/>
Intended as a symbol of victory<lb/>
in East Carolina athletics, the bell<lb/>
will be rung following contests won<lb/>
by the college Pirates.<lb/>
The Victory Bell is a gift to the<lb/>
college from the United States De-<lb/>
partment of the Navy. Once a part<lb/>
of the equipment of the "USS<lb/>
Broome it is made of brass, weighs<lb/>
382 pounds and measures 24 inches<lb/>
in height and 28 inches in width.<lb/>
Costs of shipping the bell to Green-<lb/>
ville and erecting a tower for it were<lb/>
met by the Veterans Club.<lb/>
The tower is a brick structure lo-<lb/>
cated just west of the Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium and near the college ath-<lb/>
letic field. A temporary plaque, to<lb/>
e replaced later by a permanent<lb/>
bronze design, will bear the inscrip-<lb/>
tion of dedication to East Carolina<lb/>
students in the armed forces.<lb/>
Plans for securing a bell for the<lb/>
college and building a tower for it<lb/>
were begun by the East Carolina<lb/>
Veterans Club in 1951. Through the<lb/>
cooperation of the Department of<lb/>
the Navy, permission to place the<lb/>
bell from the "USS Broome" at<lb/>
East Carolina was obtained and this<lb/>
fall the Veterans Club completed<lb/>
the project.<lb/>
This is East Carolina's Victory Bell which is located on the weat<lb/>
side of Memorial Gymnasium. The Veterans Club on campus, who con<lb/>
strutted the bell tower, will dedicate the bell tomorrow at 4:30 ia memory<lb/>
of ECC veterans of World War II and of the Korean conflict. Members<lb/>
of the physical education department Nell Stallings and Dr. K. M. Jet<lb/>
gensen inspect the new project. (Photo by Norwood Elliot)<lb/>
Methodist Group<lb/>
Holds Commission<lb/>
Meeting Sunday<lb/>
A commissioning service for offi-<lb/>
B is of the Wetlcy Foundation, or-<lb/>
ganisation of Methodist students at<lb/>
r'i4 Carolina College, will be held<lb/>
?nday morning at 9:45 at the Jar-<lb/>
bj Memorial Church in Greenville.<lb/>
At this annually observed occa-<lb/>
-ion the Rev. Leon Russell, pastor,<lb/>
will give to the Wesley Foundation<lb/>
Council mombers their commission<lb/>
from the church as student leaders<lb/>
in the work of the Methodist Church<lb/>
on the college campus.<lb/>
Offic rs composing the Wesley<lb/>
Foundation Council are Mattie Huber,<lb/>
Kinston, president; Willa Dean Lind-<lb/>
say, Clinton, vice president; Laura<lb/>
Ann Kirven, Sumter, S. C, secre-<lb/>
tary; and Charlie Bedford, Pikeville,<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
Chairmen of commissions are Jan-<lb/>
ice Penny, Raleigh; Melvin Wilker-<lb/>
son, Sims; Marvina White, Winfall;<lb/>
Roy McGnnis, Morven; Patsy Davis,<lb/>
Raleigh; Thomas Pierce, Rocky<lb/>
Mount; Anne Carlson, Rego Park,<lb/>
Long Island, N. Y Tona Watt,<lb/>
Sumter, S. Cj Dorothy Howard, Gar-<lb/>
land; Fay Lanier, Burgaw; Robert<lb/>
Gardner, Rocky Mount; and Olene<lb/>
Civil. Kinston.<lb/>
pep rally tonight, at u near the<lb/>
Maintenance building where ths stu-<lb/>
ody will assemble around ? bon-<lb/>
fire. The college band will at<lb/>
owing the pep rally the band<lb/>
will march over the cam us leading<lb/>
lie stud nts in a " nake dance An<lb/>
informal pep rally dance near the<lb/>
tenance building will follow with<lb/>
? by the Collegians until 10 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday's program will include<lb/>
 Alumni Council meeting at 11 o'clock<lb/>
in room 127. Austin, and Alumni<lb/>
luncheon at 12:30 in the North dining<lb/>
hall.<lb/>
In the afternoon the annual Home-<lb/>
coming Parade will get underway at<lb/>
2 o'clock at the tennis courts near<lb/>
the stadium. Following the parade<lb/>
there will be a reception for the<lb/>
nni in tl ? "V Hut. At 4:30 the<lb/>
V, terans Club Victory Bell will bs<lb/>
ledicated.<lb/>
At 8 p.m. Elon ami Ea-t Carolina<lb/>
Icick off to open the football game.<lb/>
Immediately following the game<lb/>
ic will be a dance in Wright audi-<lb/>
torium until 11:45 in honor of the<lb/>
Homecoming Queen and the return-<lb/>
ing alumni. Music will be furnished<lb/>
by the Collegians.<lb/>
Select Queens<lb/>
Election of the Homecoming Queen<lb/>
was held Wednesday and Thursday<lb/>
of this w ek. The results will nt OS<lb/>
known until e parade tomorrow.<lb/>
Candidates for the queen were Kitty<lb/>
Biion, Faculty Apartments; Bar-<lb/>
' aia Tucker, Shirley Moose, Jar-<lb/>
vU Hall; Barbara Strickland, Finn-<lb/>
ing Hall: Jean Buchanan, Wilson<lb/>
Hall; Marcia Miine. Woman's Hall;<lb/>
Joyce Smith. Ragsdale Hall; Pat<lb/>
Shi p Slay Hall; Mary Beatty, Wo-<lb/>
rn, n Day Students; and Mary Pe-<lb/>
I rovi. Men's Day Students.<lb/>
Queeas from other organizations<lb/>
have been announced as Peggy Cher-<lb/>
ry, Sigma Phi Alpha; Shirley Coun-<lb/>
?il, Alpha Phi Omega; Nancy White,<lb/>
Sigma Rho Phi; Pat Medlin, Varsity<lb/>
Club; Willa Dean Lindsay, YWCA<lb/>
and YMCA; Carol Coffey, Veterans<lb/>
Club; and Bobbie Holler, Music Ed-<lb/>
ucation Club.<lb/>
These queens will ride in separate<lb/>
convertibles in the parade with the<lb/>
exception of the Homecoming Queen,<lb/>
who will have a special decorated<lb/>
float.<lb/>
Parade of 40 Units<lb/>
l: ! Nfeilson, chairman of the Float<lb/>
Committee, announced that ths pa-<lb/>
rade would consist of approximately<lb/>
40 units, including 13 float3 and four<lb/>
high schools bands, Greenville, Tar?<lb/>
boro, Williamston and Jacksonville.<lb/>
These bands will also participate<lb/>
in the half-time program of Satur-<lb/>
day's game. The 25-minute half-<lb/>
time will include a short welcome<lb/>
to the alurr.ni from Mr. Butler, in-<lb/>
troduction of the various queens and<lb/>
tricks in the dark by the college<lb/>
'and. Cards spelling "Welcome Aktra-<lb/>
ni" will illuminate in the darkened<lb/>
tadium.<lb/>
Highlighting the program will hm<lb/>
the introduction of the Homecomtof<lb/>
Queen. The college band will font; '(?<lb/>
heart with red lights on their e?pi<lb/>
while the stadium lights are w<lb/>
The queen will be escorted<lb/>
center of the heart while<lb/>
plays "Let Me Call You S<lb/>
ACE Begins<lb/>
With Folklore<lb/>
By Primar j<lb/>
Perry, Keister Give<lb/>
Sonata On October 15<lb/>
Dr. Elwood Keister, violin;st, and<lb/>
George Perry, pianist, will play Mr.<lb/>
Perry's sonata for violin and piano,<lb/>
onus 20. during the weekly student<lb/>
recital on Thursday afternoon, at 4<lb/>
o'clock in Austin auditorium.<lb/>
The sonata, uotitied "Summer,<lb/>
1050 is in three movements, "June<lb/>
"July and "August respectively,<lb/>
and is dedicated to Dr, and Mrs. Association to<lb/>
Karl Gilbert. Dr. Gilbert, a former t ti?n began its act<lb/>
faculty member at East Carolina,<lb/>
gave the sonata its premiere per-<lb/>
formance at a Greenville Music Club<lb/>
program in 1961.<lb/>
Besides the reading at the student<lb/>
recital, Dr. Keister and Ut, Perry<lb/>
will perform it at the District Musk<lb/>
Club Convention to be heM here is<lb/>
Greenville on October 81 and again<lb/>
at the State Muic dub Convention<lb/>
in Winein-Saleni next. April.<lb/>
64 year with<lb/>
Hymati,<lb/>
Training<lb/>
Miss Hj<lb/>
by Uncle 1<lb/>
The<lb/>
.calt<lb/>
att<lb/>
ok<lb/>
i<lb/>
asm<lb/>
<pb facs="00038329_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
? i ? ?<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER ?, 19&amp;8<lb/>
FRID'<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published Weekly by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
College, Oeenville, N. C!<lb/>
Phone 12. East Carolina Collegu<lb/>
For News and Advertising<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1932.<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter Decmber 3, 1925 at the<lb/>
U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under the act of<lb/>
March' 3, 1S79.<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Assoeiated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers Olleg Division Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
First Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March. 1963<lb/>
Ye Editor's<lb/>
by T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Who's Who Among Students At East Carolina<lb/>
SGA President Finds Little Time To Sleep, Eat<lb/>
I DITOR1AL STAFF<lb/>
Editor-in-chief T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Managing Editor ? aJe O'Neal<lb/>
Assistant Editor Emily s- Boe<lb/>
Feature Editor - fca' Johnston<lb/>
Staff it ants Anne George, Pat Humphrey,<lb/>
ce Smith, Erolyn Blount, Marilyn Scott, Mar-<lb/>
gai : Evans, Kugene Hayman, Faye Lanier, Cecil<lb/>
R ? trson, Jerry Register, Valeria Shearoa and<lb/>
Wiley TaaL<lb/>
SGA Reportei<lb/>
Faculty Advisor .<lb/>
SPORTS STAFF<lb/>
. Editor -  ?<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
'Ss ian age ? - -<lb/>
ant Business Manager<lb/>
!sa Assistants<lb/>
Marj Ell Williams and Jean Godwin.<lb/>
CIRCULATION<lb/>
. Editor - Mrs- Susie Webb<lb/>
"Pray for fair weather tomorrow<lb/>
Charlie Kluttz, general chairman for<lb/>
Homecoming, said after ?ompleting<lb/>
reparation for the annual event<lb/>
today. "A little rain will sure spoil<lb/>
'himrs he added.<lb/>
For the past several years it hasn't<lb/>
been known to rain on Homecoming<lb/>
Day, according to reports. Let's hope<lb/>
that Saturday will not break this<lb/>
record.<lb/>
However, it has rained every week-<lb/>
end since the quarter began with<lb/>
the exception of last weekend. You<lb/>
just can't tell a. out this Greenville<lb/>
weather.<lb/>
Sport:<lb/>
rtt-<lb/>
 -<lb/>
Bus<lb/>
Betsy Salmons<lb/>
Mary H. Greene<lb/>
Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Edna Massad<lb/>
Faye Jones<lb/>
Ednn Whitfield,<lb/>
Exe!<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wit,<lb/>
Shall hue it back to cancel half a line,<lb/>
Nor a!i o?r tears wash out a word of i<lb/>
?E. Fitzgerald<lb/>
A couple of pennies for your<lb/>
thoughts! We received a two-cent<lb/>
postal this week with the following<lb/>
mimeographed philosophy: "Manner<lb/>
of living and method of doing things<lb/>
are more likely to be the real rea-<lb/>
sons for discrimination rather than<lb/>
differences of religious beliefs or<lb/>
racial lines<lb/>
This fellow differed from the other<lb/>
free publicity-seeking hounds who<lb/>
flood our mail box with several<lb/>
pages of new releases every week<lb/>
trying to promote their product. But<lb/>
this fellow tried to sell nothing. If<lb/>
you have any ideas what his motive<lb/>
is in his statement, let us know.<lb/>
Welcome Home, Alumni<lb/>
Tomorrow wiii mark one of the biggest days<lb/>
on the year's calendar here at East Carolina as<lb/>
hundreds of former students will return to their<lb/>
alma mater for the annual Homecoming festivi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
One of tht "biggest Homecomings ever" is<lb/>
in stove j you alumni, according to Charlie<lb/>
Kluttz, general student chairman of the commit-<lb/>
tee f r the event. A full program is mapped out<lb/>
for you by Char and Alumni Secretary James<lb/>
W. Butler, general chairmaa of the Homecoming<lb/>
events.<lb/>
You'll find East Carolina has-undergone<lb/>
many changes since you were here a year or<lb/>
more ago. You'll see constructions and renova-<lb/>
tions completed and nearly completed, you'll find<lb/>
telephone switchboard for the college and<lb/>
b'll over other improvements on campus<lb/>
en place within the last year.<lb/>
But the friendly spirit for which our college<lb/>
becoming noted has not changed, it still exists,<lb/>
,d exists trmgly. It is the same friendliness<lb/>
?tiieii you helped to establish and to uphold dur-<lb/>
ing your yeans here. We are carrying on this<lb/>
tradition unchanged.<lb/>
With this same friendly spirit, we welcome<lb/>
pbu brick home and sincerely hope rou enjoy the<lb/>
fogram and the reunion of old classmates and<lb/>
iends. We want you to return to your homes<lb/>
ith the pride that you belong to a great alma<lb/>
ater. East Carolina College,<lb/>
Watch That Line Creaking<lb/>
"Sam, how did you manage to get up there<lb/>
so quick?"<lb/>
"Joe let me up here<lb/>
"Well, how about me?"<lb/>
This i conversation that goes on every day<lb/>
in the East. Carolina dir.mg hall. It is the con-<lb/>
versation of line breakers.<lb/>
A1 a recent meeting of the Student Legis-<lb/>
lature CI?arlie Huffman suggested a plan to<lb/>
curb this campus vice by placing a fine on<lb/>
the line Weaker. However, the legislative body<lb/>
felt thai this would be a little "stiff" on students<lb/>
involved and decided to put on a two-week cam-<lb/>
paign against line breaking. The campaign,<lb/>
which is now in effect, consists of placing posters<lb/>
in the dining hall lobbies "preying upon the<lb/>
conscious of the line breakers In addition rep-<lb/>
resentative; of the Men's Judiciary are being<lb/>
posted to call back line breakers.<lb/>
If this campaign doesn't succeed at the<lb/>
end of two weeks, there is a possibility that the<lb/>
legislature may accept the $1 fine plan.<lb/>
But must ibis flan be necessary? It isn't<lb/>
fair to students waiting patiently in line with<lb/>
others breaking in front of them. Line breaking<lb/>
isn't displaying good citizenship and is childish<lb/>
for any college student to practice.<lb/>
Though allowing a friend to break line may<lb/>
seem a gesture of friendship, there is more harm<lb/>
than good. The fellow who gets it in the neck is<lb/>
the honest one who stands in line.<lb/>
Don't Cheat Yourself!<lb/>
You are cheating yourself and the college<lb/>
pijen you pass on your student identification<lb/>
to a non-student to be used as free admit-<lb/>
to athletic events.<lb/>
The money your friend would have spent<lb/>
aj ticket could help the college athletic de-<lb/>
it to build better teams and provide more<lb/>
jips to potential athletes who would not<lb/>
have an opportunity for an education,<lb/>
year student identification cards are<lb/>
and come in two colors, distinguish<lb/>
??rs as males and females. Tickets<lb/>
guests are on sale at a special price<lb/>
first time this year.<lb/>
Reynolds, head of the ticket com-<lb/>
athletic events, said that this<lb/>
igements were not necessarily<lb/>
free passes, but to point out<lb/>
value of their cards.<lb/>
to Column 6)<lb/>
College students should put in at<lb/>
least 25 hours of study a week, so<lb/>
says Mrs. Elizabeth A. Simpson, di-<lb/>
rector of reading services at Illinois<lb/>
Institute of Technology. The 25-hour<lb/>
a week basis was determined on the<lb/>
basis of an average college student's<lb/>
load. If you not a fast reader, Mrs.<lb/>
Simpson prescribes more than 25<lb/>
hours per week.<lb/>
Ii a student followed her prescrip-<lb/>
tion, he would average a nine-hour<lb/>
working day with four hours of<lb/>
classes and five hours of study. This<lb/>
also gives the student a free week-<lb/>
end. There are a few hours left for<lb/>
extra-curricula, self-help job and so-<lb/>
cial life. That isn't bad when you<lb/>
consider the fellow who is working<lb/>
for a living puts in about the same<lb/>
amount of hours.<lb/>
by Kay Johnston<lb/>
Leadership, character and integrity<lb/>
are three words that describe Mitch-<lb/>
ell Saieed, a senior from Greenville.<lb/>
Mitchell, who is this year's presi-<lb/>
dent of the Student Government As-<lb/>
sociation, realized Jhe importance ot<lb/>
the SGA when he was vice president<lb/>
of this organisation last year. He<lb/>
said, "It enabled me to see and under-<lb/>
stand more fully the large and vital<lb/>
part that the SGA plays in the stu-<lb/>
dent's life on campus<lb/>
From then on Mitchell's greatest<lb/>
desire was to see the SGA made into<lb/>
a better and more powerful organi-<lb/>
zation. As this year's president of<lb/>
the SGA, he has worked to achieve<lb/>
just that. This year our SGA is one<lb/>
of the best and most powerful or-<lb/>
ganizations in North Carolina, ac-<lb/>
cording to a state meeting.<lb/>
'?1 think few of us realize how<lb/>
much our SGA affects each individual<lb/>
student on this campus Mitchell<lb/>
said.<lb/>
SGA Changes<lb/>
Many changes and improvements<lb/>
have taken place during the short<lb/>
while Mitchell has been in office.<lb/>
The constitution has been revised and<lb/>
14 new amendments have been added.<lb/>
For the first time the students have<lb/>
been allowed to vote on the Enter-<lb/>
tainment Series and the budget poli-<lb/>
cy has been opened.<lb/>
As a delegate in the year 1952-53<lb/>
to the Student Legislature Conven-<lb/>
tion of North Carolina colleges and<lb/>
universities at Raleigh, Mitchell was<lb/>
elected by unanimous vote as his-<lb/>
TIMELY TOPICS<lb/>
By Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Mitchell Saieed<lb/>
torian.<lb/>
Because of Mitchell's interest in<lb/>
public speaking, he has been a mem-<lb/>
ber of the college debate team for<lb/>
the past three years. While Mitchell<lb/>
was a member, the team won several<lb/>
debates against much larger colleges<lb/>
and universities from many states.<lb/>
He was president of the Jarvis Fo-<lb/>
rensic Club, a club which purposes<lb/>
are upholding the right of freedom<lb/>
of speech of the individual and those<lb/>
democratic principals which are a<lb/>
part of our American heritage.<lb/>
In addition to public speaking, this<lb/>
week's Who's Who is a member of<lb/>
the Varsity Glee Club and sings bass.<lb/>
Mitchell has also been a member<lb/>
of the Circle "K" Club for three<lb/>
years. This organization is made "P<lb/>
of men who are considered to have<lb/>
th qualities of leadershi , scholar-<lb/>
ship and citizenship at EOC. Spon-<lb/>
orei iV the Greenville Kiwanans,<lb/>
the c-lub here is the only Circle "K"<lb/>
Club in North Carolina.<lb/>
No Time U, Sleep<lb/>
It was at this point in the inter-<lb/>
view that Mitchell was asked when<lb/>
ITi t0 eat and -lee). "Well<lb/>
I do stay pretty busy Mitchell<lb/>
an lered, "but when a college offers<lb/>
v, , a much as Easl Carolina does,<lb/>
i feel like I would be missing a great<lb/>
il? al if i didn't tak ? part in some<lb/>
f itg activities<lb/>
: ? year Mitchell received the<lb/>
i . tion of being rhosen lieuten-<lb/>
r ?nel and wing director of the<lb/>
rsonnel fci the AFROTC. He at-<lb/>
end d ROTC summer camp at Moo-<lb/>
lv Air Force Base in Alabama this<lb/>
past summer. "We had quite a few<lb/>
riences Mitch11 said, "but you<lb/>
had better not print them<lb/>
Mitchell, for the past three years,<lb/>
ha also been a member of the Phi<lb/>
Sigma Phi, an honorary educational<lb/>
frat rnity which is exclusively for<lb/>
young nun preparng to enter the<lb/>
beaching profession.<lb/>
As a member of the Commerce<lb/>
Club, Mitchell served as general<lb/>
chairman of the club's lance and<lb/>
arnival last year.<lb/>
Mitchell will receive his AB degree<lb/>
in business administration this May<lb/>
and also his commission from the<lb/>
Air Force. "Then Mitchell said,<lb/>
"my future plans will be in the<lb/>
If the celebrations connected with ii ?<lb/>
coming this week-end aren't the besl th<lb/>
ever been held on the East Carolina i<lb/>
lack of work certainly won't be the cau<lb/>
People have literally been teaj in<lb/>
in an effort to gel final arrangement<lb/>
with regard to decorating dorms, <lb/>
parade, electing a Homecoming Que<lb/>
hope, therefore, that our visitors this ?<lb/>
will appreciate all the work thai I a<lb/>
ward making Homecoming Day a &amp;ucc<lb/>
Homecoming again: At leasl thai<lb/>
what's getting one secretary in the adn<lb/>
tion building down. It seems that an "i<lb/>
linian" staff memb r stopped in a certain ?<lb/>
t ilic administration1 building and inq<lb/>
litelj of the secretary ii Dr. Messick v.<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Tin secretary thought a moment and<lb/>
v, ith a puzzled expression, said. "M<lb/>
sick. I don't believe 1 ever heard of a Dr. M<lb/>
here. An you sure that's the person yo<lb/>
ing for?" It may sound rather silly but<lb/>
benefit of at least one person we'd like<lb/>
that Dr. -John D. Messick is president of<lb/>
Carolina College.<lb/>
Norwegian Student Here Finds USA Different<lb/>
By Wednesday afternoon of this<lb/>
week every student guest card avail-<lb/>
able for tomorrow's game was sold.<lb/>
The Student Budget office had a<lb/>
limited supply of these tickets to sell<lb/>
to students waiting in long lines.<lb/>
There will be no more guest tic-<lb/>
kets available for tomorrow's game.<lb/>
Billy Laughinghouse, SGA treasurer,<lb/>
announced.<lb/>
It shows that students will have<lb/>
to come early in the week that these<lb/>
tickets are on sale to be sure of<lb/>
obtaining them.<lb/>
Definition of "college according<lb/>
to the Michigan State Normal News:<lb/>
"Institutions which sometimes lower<lb/>
entrance requirements with an end<lb/>
in view?not to mention promising<lb/>
tackles and backs<lb/>
"How to Get Rich Quick Send<lb/>
only $1 and we'll send you the secret<lb/>
of this art.<lb/>
The above was an ad appearing<lb/>
in a magazine several years ago.<lb/>
The contents of supposed book was<lb/>
me sheet of paper bearing this<lb/>
philosophy: "How to gt rich quick<lb/>
Make all the money . a n and<lb/>
ion't spend a cent<lb/>
't was evident that the author<lb/>
practiced his philosophy.<lb/>
Couple Of The Week<lb/>
"We've been going together for<lb/>
U months, two week and one day<lb/>
Carolyn Johnson and Mac Eure said<lb/>
?promptly when th y were asked<lb/>
about the beginning of their court-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
Carolyn, a junior, is a primary<lb/>
major and is from Elizabeth City.<lb/>
Mac, a senior, is a physical educa-<lb/>
tion major, and is from Portsmouth,<lb/>
Va. Even though Mac is a Virginian,<lb/>
and Carolyn a North Carolinian,<lb/>
they live only 40 miles apart, "which<lb/>
made it rather nice when vacation<lb/>
came around last summer Carolyn<lb/>
and Mae said.<lb/>
"We get along fine they both '<lb/>
said, "but we certainly don't enjoy<lb/>
th- same sports; however, we try to<lb/>
be considerate and we both manage<lb/>
to sit through games we don't enjoy<lb/>
without biting off too many finger-<lb/>
nails<lb/>
"We have quite a bit of trouble<lb/>
with my car, too Mac said. "It's<lb/>
always breaking down! Somehow we<lb/>
always manage to get back to the<lb/>
dorm safely and on time, though. I<lb/>
just hope this luck lasts<lb/>
(Editor's note: By being chosen<lb/>
"Couple of the week Carolyn and<lb/>
Mac will each be given a free meal<lb/>
at the Olde Towtie Inn, a ticket to<lb/>
the Pitt Theatre, a gift from Sas-<lb/>
low' Jewelers and a carton of Ches-<lb/>
terfiald cigarette.)<lb/>
All the way from the Land of the<lb/>
Midnight Sun comes Berit Hillesland,<lb/>
a scholarship student who arrived<lb/>
on the East Carolina campus Sun-<lb/>
day. After a short introduction the<lb/>
"question box express" started roll-<lb/>
ing and Berit found herself answer-<lb/>
ing numerous questions. <lb/>
Berit came to America through<lb/>
the Fulbright Scholarship. The local<lb/>
Rotary Club is paying her expenses.<lb/>
Nine other Norwegian students, also<lb/>
Sponsored by the Fullbright Scholar-<lb/>
ship, are studying in other American<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Bent's home. Skudeneshavn, Nor-<lb/>
w:  i- located on an island close by<lb/>
th Norwegian coast. The island,<lb/>
which is connected to the mainland<lb/>
y a recently built bridge, has two<lb/>
towns and a population of 20,000.<lb/>
The rocky coast is hounded by the<lb/>
N rth Sea. Heather grows abundant-<lb/>
ly i. r the island, but there are few<lb/>
trees, an unusual circumstance since<lb/>
the Eastern and Southern parts of<lb/>
Norway are covered with large for-<lb/>
ests. There are mountains on the<lb/>
island, hut they are not high enough<lb/>
for good skiing, Berit regrets.<lb/>
"Fishing is to my island what to-<lb/>
bacco is to you observes Berit.<lb/>
Boats fill the harbors the year round,<lb/>
but especially in winter when the<lb/>
North Pea is infested with schools<lb/>
of herring. The fish migrate into<lb/>
inland waters. "Wealthy Americans<lb/>
 nd Englishmen rent our waterfalls<lb/>
avid rivers for fishing in the soring<lb/>
Schools Differ<lb/>
The Norwegian youngster starts<lb/>
to elementary school at the age of<lb/>
seven and continues there until he is<lb/>
14. He may then enter a three-year<lb/>
secondary school or a five year high<lb/>
school. Th? secondary school is omit-<lb/>
ted if the student plans to attend a<lb/>
univi rsity. Norway has two univer-<lb/>
sities, the University of Oslo and<lb/>
the Univi rsity of Bergen. Berit at-<lb/>
tended elementary school in her home<lb/>
town, but went to high school in<lb/>
Stavanger on the mainland. She has<lb/>
studied for one semester at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Oslo, where she took pre-<lb/>
paratory courses in philosophy and<lb/>
psychology. She plans to major in<lb/>
English. "I think college life in<lb/>
America i 1 ore informal. In Nor-<lb/>
way we don't go up to the teachers<lb/>
and talk-with them like you do. The<lb/>
by Valeria Shearon<lb/>
younger ones are friendlier than the<lb/>
old ones<lb/>
Last spring Berit discovered how-<lb/>
it felt to be a teacher. Her first<lb/>
experience was in a small country<lb/>
school about two miles from Skud-<lb/>
eneshavn. She bicycled back and<lb/>
forth every day. Later she taught<lb/>
in the elementary school in Skud-<lb/>
eneshavn. The school served around<lb/>
200 students. She taught the neces-<lb/>
sary curriculum consisting of read-<lb/>
ing, writing, spelling, arithmetic, re-<lb/>
ligion and history to pupils seven<lb/>
to 11 years old. She also gave a<lb/>
group of lo-year-olds their first les-<lb/>
sons in English.<lb/>
Homelife<lb/>
Berit, an only girl, lias two older<lb/>
brothers. Her father owns the only<lb/>
bookshop in Skudeneshavn. "In win-<lb/>
t r when it is so dark, I enjoy read-<lb/>
ing she says, " ut in summer we<lb/>
swim, row and take boat trips to<lb/>
small nearby islands for picnics<lb/>
She thoroughly enjoys an occasional<lb/>
excursion into the lofty, snow-capped<lb/>
mountains of the mainland to ski.<lb/>
Can you imagine skiing and throwing<lb/>
snowballs : 1 mid-summer? They do<lb/>
it in Norway!<lb/>
Bcrit's religion is Lutheran, the<lb/>
denomination of the State Church of<lb/>
It stems that another embarrassing ca<lb/>
mistaken status took place on campu<lb/>
Billy Laughinghouse, treasurer of the SG<lb/>
in his Austin building offiee when a young<lb/>
walked in. Now Billy, being a chant<lb/>
couteous young man. instantly placed him-<lb/>
the young lady's disposal by inquirinj<lb/>
most polished Don Juan manner. "Is t!<lb/>
thing I can do for you, honey?"<lb/>
Needless to say our SGA treasurer<lb/>
trifle embarrassed when he discovered he<lb/>
speaking to Dr. Dora Jean Ashe of the En<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Now that we've had our fling "1 sa<lb/>
jesting we'd like to turn serious for a m 1<lb/>
There will, in all probability, be a<lb/>
number of guests on the campus this<lb/>
We hope, therefore, that the students oi <lb/>
Carolina will conduct themselves as always<lb/>
attempt to make our visitors feel at hom<lb/>
Norway. Ther<lb/>
-ma,<lb/>
sects of<lb/>
and still smaller ones of<lb/>
Methodists and Baptists. Ninety-<lb/>
seven per cent of the population is<lb/>
1 ?! heran.<lb/>
Arrives in New York<lb/>
Beril sighted New York on Octo<lb/>
2. through an early morning mist,<lb/>
thus ending the voyage which had<lb/>
begu . on September 23. Enroute, tin-<lb/>
ship encountered a two-day storm.<lb/>
but Berit cheerfully relates that she<lb/>
did not get sea sick.<lb/>
Berit will be at Eas1 arolina for<lb/>
r mainder of the school year.<lb/>
is living in Jarvis Hall.<lb/>
Nexl summer she plans to return<lb/>
to h r homeland and com, lete her<lb/>
raining to teach. "I hope to see more<lb/>
of America before I go back home<lb/>
she says.<lb/>
Witt : "How helpless you men are! W<lb/>
would you do if there were no women to so<lb/>
y ur buttons for you<lb/>
Husband: "Has i1 occurred to you. my dea<lb/>
that if there were no women we man would ne<lb/>
no buttons?"<lb/>
POT POURR1<lb/>
by Emily S. Boya<lb/>
After Rejecting" Pro-Ball Offer<lb/>
Frosh Girl Continues Study<lb/>
by Anne George<lb/>
"Since I was old enough to dribble, nician.<lb/>
basketball has always been dominant<lb/>
in my life expresses Jean Anne<lb/>
Liverman, freshman from Winter-<lb/>
villa.<lb/>
Last month Jean Anne received B<lb/>
letter from John Tucker, coach of<lb/>
t h e Snow White Girls basketball<lb/>
team, offering her a job at the Snow<lb/>
White Dry Cleaners with an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to play professional ball dur-<lb/>
ing basketball season.<lb/>
Though Jean Anne was honored<lb/>
by the request, she feels that her<lb/>
education is too important now, "as<lb/>
one day I will become too old to play<lb/>
ball<lb/>
She ia majoring in pre-lab, and<lb/>
hopes to become a laboratory tech-<lb/>
Dunng her high school years sht<lb/>
was on the Winterville High School<lb/>
basket all team, coached by Paul J.<lb/>
Clark, iitut v - co-captain for three<lb/>
years. The last game she played for<lb/>
the high school team she accumu-<lb/>
lated 66 point alone.<lb/>
A trophy for the most valuable<lb/>
player was presented to her at the<lb/>
Cold Modal Tournament held in<lb/>
Farmville. The high school team also<lb/>
won the Pitt County Tournament for<lb/>
two yearg aI1(' snt' received the All-<lb/>
Conference Medal at that time.<lb/>
Jean Ann hopes to play for the<lb/>
East Carolina team, though she is<lb/>
still interested in her high school<lb/>
team.<lb/>
On Thursday, October 7. a new group<lb/>
organized here on campus. For the first tim<lb/>
college history, the indent library assista<lb/>
and majors and minors in library science me1<lb/>
a discussion body and organized a clu<lb/>
Library science will be the prevailing -<lb/>
ject discussed at the fin toe meetings. Talks will<lb/>
be given on the various works of the libra,<lb/>
assistants, exactly what they do and how tl<lb/>
do it. Any topics or suggestions brought up<lb/>
club members are to be consider d and talk- ;<lb/>
over during the meetings. Anyon who is int<lb/>
ested can join the group. This organization w<lb/>
?e a real contribution to the East Carolina <lb/>
pus and it is hoped that attendance in it'<lb/>
and numbers will be large.<lb/>
FIR5TATD<lb/>
DtMONSTHAPON<lb/>
TOOAV<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
6:30 p.m.?Teachers Playhouse re-<lb/>
hearsal will be held in Training<lb/>
School auditorium.<lb/>
7 p.m.?Home Ec Club will meet<lb/>
in Flanagan auditorium.<lb/>
7-9 p.m.?Messiah rehearsal will<lb/>
be held in Austin auditorium.<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
7 p.m.?SGA meets in Flanagan<lb/>
auditorium.<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
7:15 p.m.?FTA meets in 209 Aus-<lb/>
tin.<lb/>
8 p. m.?Teachers Playhouse will<lb/>
give workshop production in Train-<lb/>
ing School auditorium.<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
8 p.m.?Teachers Playhouse will<lb/>
give workshop production in Train-<lb/>
ing School auditorium.<lb/>
James Jones' memorable novel From H<lb/>
To Eternity seems about to set a re-cord as a I<lb/>
seller. The Signet paper-backed edition is<lb/>
pected to pass the million mark in one moi<lb/>
Since the widely acclaimed movie of the I<lb/>
appeared a few weeks ago, libraries all over<lb/>
country report that the book is number on<lb/>
demand again by borrowers.<lb/>
There is nothing- like a movie to stimuli<lb/>
a reader's interest or vice versa. . . . No<lb/>
Carolina author Ovid Pierce of Weldon is<lb/>
sidering a sequel to Th Plantation. . . . Fran!<lb/>
Slaughter had a new novel published last w<lb/>
by Doubled ay. His latest historically based n<lb/>
has a Florida setting in the time of the <lb/>
War.<lb/>
The State Department of Archives and 11 s-<lb/>
tory. Raleigh, have a great deal oi material<lb/>
North Carolina that they are glad to send I<lb/>
to these interested in obtaining it.<lb/>
A little booklet entitled Tai Heel Tali<lb/>
Mattie Erma Parker contains a group of vaiua<lb/>
tales about the early history of m state<lb/>
library has a supply of free materials that is<lb/>
good for teacher files. Such booklets as <lb/>
Modeling and information on various subs-<lb/>
pertaining to teaching is arranged on ta<lb/>
upstairs.<lb/>
Women, stop smoking! According to Dr. M.<lb/>
Priedall of Chicago, women are "much m<lb/>
sensitive" to nicotine and other tobacco produ<lb/>
nan men. The sensitivity probably explains ?<lb/>
women who enjoy cigarettes become habitus<lb/>
to them and find it hard to stop smoking. In<lb/>
tests on men and women using radioactive t<lb/>
niques to measure blood flow, women showed an<lb/>
average 33 per cent change in blood volurm<lb/>
compared with 19 per cent in men.<lb/>
(Continued from Column 1)<lb/>
No outsider should begrudge the fare to an<lb/>
athletic event to see one of the top college team<lb/>
in the state. Whereas, no one seems to mind<lb/>
the two and three dollar tickets to watch a Caro-<lb/>
lina. State, Duke or Wake Forest game, so whv<lb/>
would anyone complain about East Carolina's<lb/>
ticket prices?<lb/>
If you would explain this to your friend i<lb/>
a very tactful way, we are sure he wouldn't minu<lb/>
paying for a ticket. After all, it is for your bene-<lb/>
fit as well as the college's.<lb/>
in<lb/>
nd<lb/>
that<lb/>
favo<lb/>
rattf<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
x<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00038329_0005"/><lb/>
VY OCTOBER 9, 1953<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
I<lb/>
the<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
o says Clyde Biggers<lb/>
i Indiana weren't<lb/>
East Carolina last Sat-<lb/>
I be just a little<lb/>
exp i<lb/>
i out<lb/>
ititi'i I'st:<lb/>
The worst defeat ever suffered by<lb/>
Pirate club came a? the hands of<lb/>
1  achian in 1939 by a t4-0 count.<lb/>
Biggera ,n 1941, the only year the Pirates<lb/>
the w re undefeated, the locals played<lb/>
is from Tennessee, North Caro-<lb/>
na, Si uth Carolina. Virginia and<lb/>
Elon Here Tomorrow For Homecoming<lb/>
Christians Beaten In First<lb/>
Two Starts Of '53 Campaign<lb/>
A hectic Homecoming- week-end , ing play i. as End Bobby Hodges,<lb/>
will be climaxed here tomorrow night a six-foot ius senior who leads the<lb/>
 .<lb/>
a1 Salisburj agreed . jna ,<lb/>
? valiant at- M je,<lb/>
eals' romp to- Dunn;<lb/>
State Conference<lb/>
played a good<lb/>
u 'Jo years that the sport<lb/>
layed here many records<lb/>
fcto the books, but nothing<lb/>
aid 1 md mdicati d<lb/>
season was more<lb/>
1953 should be.<lb/>
that any<lb/>
successful<lb/>
x Right's contest should be<lb/>
( rent despite tin- fact<lb/>
records through the years<lb/>
smce 19tti. the year the<lb/>
l Elan -cries t ir? t gtart-<lb/>
? kuis hiOc taken six<lb/>
one for the Pirates. As <lb/>
o fact, last yeai was the <lb/>
thai i lie Buccaneers had<lb/>
ble t stop the visitors<lb/>
j) with a last half rallj<lb/>
laurels and commenda-<lb/>
n .v ded out at the end of<lb/>
tball season it too often seems<lb/>
school band does not receive<lb/>
i i- recognition. We feel sure<lb/>
of u who attended the<lb/>
une Saturday were equal-<lb/>
u'outl uf the local hand as of<lb/>
itball squad.<lb/>
performance put on by our<lb/>
campus musicians during the half<lb/>
points to wash out was one of the best we've ever seen.<lb/>
I) t ttristian lead.<lb/>
hy<lb/>
"East C<lb/>
Included in the numbers were "Cry-<lb/>
ing in The Chapel "The Bunny<lb/>
11 up ' ami a satire of "Dragnet"<lb/>
which had both Catawba and East<lb/>
Carolina fan- roaring with laughter.<lb/>
For the benefit of those who couldn't<lb/>
make the (atawba trip we most cer-<lb/>
tainlj hope that the band will see<lb/>
lit to stage the "Dragnet" number<lb/>
LARRY'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
i'lS FOOTWEAR FOR ALL OCCASIONS<lb/>
AT FIVE POINTS<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
?'77 Hd is, of Narm Brands"<lb/>
"Your College Shop<lb/>
when the East Carolina Pirates meet<lb/>
the Elon Christians at College Sta-<lb/>
dium in the annual Homecoming<lb/>
football clash. Game time is 8 p.m.<lb/>
The locals, coached by Jack Boone,<lb/>
an Elon alumnus, are riding th" crest<lb/>
of a three-game winning streak dur-<lb/>
ing which they have yielded but one<lb/>
touchdown. Their depth, lightning<lb/>
fast offense and powerful line have<lb/>
tabbed them as odds-on favorites<lb/>
to cop the North State Conference<lb/>
crown.<lb/>
Elon, however, has not faired as<lb/>
well. The Christians opened their<lb/>
s ason by taking a 33-0 thrashing<lb/>
at the hands ?f Wofford College's<lb/>
Terriers. Last week they drop ed a<lb/>
21-19 decision to Appalachian in their<lb/>
first league test.<lb/>
In an attempt to return to the<lb/>
victory column this season following<lb/>
lasii year's mediocre record, the<lb/>
Christians have hired Harry E. "Sid<lb/>
Varney, former University of North<lb/>
Carolina gridiron great. as head<lb/>
coach. Vamey's first move in an<lb/>
attempt to get the Christians off on<lb/>
the right foot waa to install the "T"<lb/>
formation. The visitors formerly op-<lb/>
erated from the single wing.<lb/>
Capacity Crowd<lb/>
A crowd in the neighborhood of<lb/>
10.1)00 or more is expected to pack<lb/>
the local stadium to watch Coach<lb/>
Boone unleash the attack that has<lb/>
averaged 30 points per game in<lb/>
three contests. Dick Cherry, the Bucs'<lb/>
All-Conference so; homore quarter-<lb/>
back, is expected to lead the locals'<lb/>
attack. He will direct a veteran back- j<lb/>
field composed of Claude King, Paul<lb/>
(Jay, Emo Boado. Tom Alls'orook,<lb/>
Toppy Hayes and Bubba Matthews.<lb/>
In the forewall the Pirates will<lb/>
call on the services of such outstand-<lb/>
club in scoring, Willie Holland, All-<lb/>
Confertnce tackle, Johnny Brown,<lb/>
A lid' Faircloth, Larry Rhodes, Al<lb/>
Habit, G orge Tucker, Don Burton,<lb/>
David Lee and Bo' by Thomas.<lb/>
Elon, which returned only 13 let-<lb/>
termen 'his year against East Caro-<lb/>
lina's 21), will offer senior fullback<lb/>
John Platt as their main offensive<lb/>
threat, other veteran performers to<lb/>
see action are ends Mai Bennett,<lb/>
J. C. Disher and Gene Williams;<lb/>
guards, Marvin Mass, Nick Theas<lb/>
and George St wart. Luther Barnes<lb/>
will be at center with Joe Smith,<lb/>
Dwiuht Dillon and Joe Widdifield<lb/>
sharing the burden at tackle.<lb/>
The Last Oarolina-Elon football<lb/>
series began in 1946 and has con-<lb/>
tinued uninterrupted since that time.<lb/>
It was not until last fall that the<lb/>
Buccaneers were able to record their<lb/>
first triumph over the Christians<lb/>
an they arc favored to do s again<lb/>
tomorrow.<lb/>
Probab! ! Starting line-ups:<lb/>
Pirates Down Indians By 13-6 Margin;<lb/>
Take Lead In North State Conference<lb/>
SALISBl RY A valiant band of waE snowed under by the charging<lb/>
Pos.ECC<lb/>
LKHodges<lb/>
LTHolland<lb/>
LGBurton<lb/>
CHallow<lb/>
RGLee<lb/>
RT Brown<lb/>
REHabit<lb/>
QBCh rry<lb/>
LHHaves<lb/>
R1IGay<lb/>
KBKing<lb/>
Elon<lb/>
Bennett<lb/>
Smith<lb/>
Mass<lb/>
Barnes<lb/>
Whatever the concoction hypo'd into<lb/>
the amis of the Indians by Coach Big-<lb/>
gers of Catawba it sho' was potent.<lb/>
The big man who used to push the<lb/>
Buccaneers through the grind had his<lb/>
Mibe on the warpath last Saturday<lb/>
in Salisbury and for a while the<lb/>
1 : rates' scalps were definitely in<lb/>
j opardy.<lb/>
Coach Boone's privateers played<lb/>
most of the struggle on their heels<lb/>
until the Cherry-O'Kelly pass combi-<lb/>
nation gave the Pirates the added<lb/>
weight that made the difference.<lb/>
From kickoff to stop-off. it vas sixty<lb/>
minutes of the oldtime knock-down-<lb/>
drag-out style of football. Way ahead<lb/>
in standout performance were two<lb/>
bruising linemen, Bo by Hodge- and<lb/>
Louis Hallow. Playing end and center<lb/>
respectively, this swashbuckling duo<lb/>
was East Carolina's Rock of Gi-<lb/>
East Carolina Pirates scored a last<lb/>
quarter touchdown to edge tno fired-<lb/>
up Catawba Indian- 13-6 at Shuford<lb/>
I ield Saturday nil<lb/>
Dickin rry. who put the Bucs i"<lb/>
'i onl :h  in tie opening ea sion<lb/>
vil a tou ? ? pa "end Bobby<lb/>
11" lg s, m-oi . i he winning mat k -<lb/>
un a ma yard quarterback sneak.<lb/>
In between the two tallies the two<lb/>
clubg butted heads b twi n the 30-<lb/>
yard lines in a rock 'em. sock ??<lb/>
display of one platoon foot all. Ca-<lb/>
tawba managi d leir tj ing mai k i<lb/>
early in the fourth quarter when<lb/>
Harvey Stiation intercepted a Cher-<lb/>
ry pass and galloped 46 yards to<lb/>
score.<lb/>
Defense Stiffens<lb/>
The defense stiffened, however,<lb/>
Pirate lin bis attempted extra<lb/>
i 11 t r y.<lb/>
Thi . he kickoff<lb/>
he Bu . I ad i hi ? d again. Larry<lb/>
Rhode returned to the 83, Harold<lb/>
O'Ki lly gol three ' ? kle and a<lb/>
Cherry-to- Hodgei misfired.<lb/>
Winning Score<lb/>
Thei Cherry, with I protection,<lb/>
faded I adk ed a strik to<lb/>
O'Kelly on ' ? I ? in  f.ird liae.<lb/>
T e blond half! ? High Point<lb/>
took i on Cue run hut was<lb/>
bumped oul of Is on the ons<lb/>
yard line. Bubba M . .vas stop-<lb/>
ped cold by the Indian line but<lb/>
( berry crashed lie following<lb/>
play. Matthews I I the point and<lb/>
the game, except for a little more<lb/>
king of heads, w led.<lb/>
ECC (atawba<lb/>
Theas bralter.<lb/>
Dillon<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
Wale<lb/>
Platt<lb/>
Bradham<lb/>
Morrison<lb/>
Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
JOHNSON'S<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC<lb/>
At Five Points<lb/>
Prevues And Revues<lb/>
lias Carolina 41. Wilson Teachers<lb/>
0<lb/>
East Carolina 34, Lenoir Rhyne 0<lb/>
Easl Carolina 13, Catawba 6<lb/>
October 10. Elon, here<lb/>
October 17. Western Carolina,<lb/>
there<lb/>
October 24, Guilford, here<lb/>
October HI, Appalachian, here<lb/>
November 7, Tampa University,<lb/>
there<lb/>
o i lilliei<lb/>
there<lb/>
Dick Cherry came through a gam<lb/>
like the seven o'clock alarm. The<lb/>
"worth his weight In gold" signal-<lb/>
caller i- truly veined in All- Auk i ican-<lb/>
ism. His touchdown toss in the open-<lb/>
ing quarter and "set-up" pitch in the<lb/>
final eriod we uassing perfection.<lb/>
Tomorrow the .Pirates should<lb/>
board a merry-go-round and lacerate<lb/>
the Lion lifeline with practically<lb/>
no effort. But with the "nothing<lb/>
to lose, everything to gain" attitude<lb/>
that the North State teams have<lb/>
when they go against the Buccaneers<lb/>
all the remaining foes will have to<lb/>
lie given consideration. When t he-<lb/>
Homecoming smoke has cleared, we<lb/>
gee something like East Carolina<lb/>
54, Elon 0. <lb/>
and the Indian whose coach wa<lb/>
bossing the Eas1 Carolina line at I First I)own<lb/>
this time last season, lost the ball i Yds. Gained Rushi<lb/>
to the Bucs. fl'ds. Lost Rushing<lb/>
Paul Cay. Claude King and Emo N b Vds. Rushing<lb/>
Boado combined talent to give the Pa -<lb/>
locals a firsl down on the Indian 43.<lb/>
Cherry then took to the air and hit<lb/>
Hodges for anol her fir -x and ?<lb/>
on I he 33. A pass fell incomph te,<lb/>
Boado picked up Is yard- on a nice I Fumbles Lost 1<lb/>
tun and then Cherry hil Hodges in Yards Penr.lized<lb/>
leJ flat for the score. Claude! Scoring<lb/>
? . ? empl for the ext ra . oint East 6 (<lb/>
12<lb/>
'M<lb/>
13<lb/>
Passes Completed 5<lb/>
 ds. Gained Pa 92<lb/>
ing A ? rage<lb/>
Fumble? 3<lb/>
12<lb/>
151<lb/>
77<lb/>
74<lb/>
11<lb/>
4<lb/>
20<lb/>
34.<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
40<lb/>
was wide.<lb/>
The quick Indian seme early in<lb/>
i fniii th j i eemed to hav a<lb/>
?di rmic efft m I he Pirates.<lb/>
onnv<lb/>
, ba<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Hodges and<lb/>
point, Matthews.<lb/>
Catawba<lb/>
0 7?11<lb/>
0 0 0 6?6<lb/>
coring: Touch-<lb/>
1 ?xtra<lb/>
Touchdown ?<lb/>
da<lb/>
lor i goal,<lb/>
l?? II,?<lb/>
-?- ?? "? ?<lb/>
There i.s a student on the campus<lb/>
1. Stetson University, j who never takes a drink.<lb/>
You gotta hand it to him<lb/>
iark Your Trailer At<lb/>
TRAILER PARK<lb/>
Convently located near Super Markets, and Rank.<lb/>
WEST END CIRCLE<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
B -? SB .ii ? H-<lb/>
 I<lb/>
i UJ<lb/>
Needs, I smetics and Fountain Goods<lb/>
I isii<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
Proctor Hotel Building<lb/>
- A M10 P. M. ? Sunday 8:30 A. M10:30 A. If<lb/>
1 P. Mlo P. M.<lb/>
SCOTT'S CLEANERS<lb/>
 U ALITV J E WELR Y<lb/>
At Pric s To Meet Your Budget<lb/>
Your 11 ? '??I'urti rs For<lb/>
Bulova Watches<lb/>
Ah<lb/>
s I<lb/>
J. C. PENNEY CO.<lb/>
"Always First Quality"<lb/>
WE CARRY THE VERY<lb/>
LATEST STYLES FOR<lb/>
COLLEGE WEAR j<lb/>
I<lb/>
HAMILTON, ELGIN and BENRUS<lb/>
callv Trained Mechanics To Serve You<lb/>
-????-<lb/>
STAIFFER'S JEWELERS<lb/>
<lb/>
Itreet<lb/>
Phone 2452<lb/>
 <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?????????<lb/>
everything that<lb/>
Christmas means<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
As lifting<lb/>
as love.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Goddess<lb/>
BRAS<lb/>
GODDESS Deep - Plunge<lb/>
Strapless is the bare es-<lb/>
?i.d for decollete dress.<lb/>
Fabulous flatterer lifts the<lb/>
' gom to cover-girl con-<lb/>
t urs. Comfort-plus since<lb/>
rubber padded at points<lb/>
f contact.<lb/>
$wat?<lb/>
I !<lb/>
$3.50<lb/>
SAIEED'S<lb/>
Your College Department Store<lb/>
111-117 E. 5th Street<lb/>
$<lb/>
????????-????-<lb/>
?-<lb/>
MMUMMAMM<lb/>
Warmest of greetings to<lb/>
those you love, most lasting<lb/>
of gifts in the pleasure it<lb/>
brings surely, this is the<lb/>
year to have your portrait<lb/>
made for Christmas giving!<lb/>
There's time, if you phone<lb/>
for your appointment, now.<lb/>
BELL STUDIO<lb/>
of<lb/>
Photography<lb/>
UJCKYJ<lb/>
.STRIKE?<lb/>
LATEST BULLETIN<lb/>
Brand-new national survey<lb/>
shows college students prefer Luckies<lb/>
Last year a survey was made in leading colleges<lb/>
throughout the country which showed that smokers in<lb/>
those colleges preferred Luckies to any other cigarette;<lb/>
This year another nation-wide survey was made?a<lb/>
representative survey of all students in regular colleges<lb/>
coast to coast. Based on thousands of actual student in-<lb/>
terviews?this survey shows that, as last year, Luckies<lb/>
lead again?lead over all other brands, regular oor king<lb/>
size?and by a wide margin! The reason: Luckies taste<lb/>
better.<lb/>
Pa S? Once again we're buying student jingles! $2<lb/>
goes to every student whose Lucky Strike jmffe is accept<lb/>
for our advertising. So hurry I Send yow? In right away fc:<lb/>
Happy-Go-Lucky, P. O. Box 67, Nwr Yok 46, N Y.<lb/>
.??? W? Wfc mm'ji<lb/>
CIGARETTES<lb/>
LUCKIESfASYE BETTER<lb/>
d.u GOWfCKl<lb/>
AMSKCAl UUniKO MAWVtACTV Of CttkASSTTBS<lb/>
OA.T.C<lb/>
moovcr of JA<lb/>
i<lb/>
B<lb/>
<pb facs="00038329_0006"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 152<lb/>
PAGE JOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Poetry Contest<lb/>
Open To Students<lb/>
The National Poetry Association<lb/>
announces the 10th annual comp.e-<lb/>
tion of college students poetry.<lb/>
Any Easl Carolina student is eli-<lb/>
gible to submit his verse. There is<lb/>
no Lin itatioi a to form or theme.<lb/>
Shorter works art preferred bj the<lb/>
nidge becaus? oi space limitations.<lb/>
Manuscripts should be seal to Na-<lb/>
 Poetr; Association, -10 Salby<lb/>
Avenue. Los Angeles 34, Calif.<lb/>
Lost: Purse<lb/>
Freshman Betty Blanthard re-<lb/>
poris she has lost a black lea-<lb/>
thtr purse containing a billfold<lb/>
and keys in the T shop Thurs-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Anyone who finds the purse<lb/>
may contact Betty at Cotten<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Pan I .<lb/>
J . v;<lb/>
i ai<lb/>
Hosiery Selling<lb/>
al le. Make $2.00 or<lb/>
ir. Give experi-<lb/>
Box 851<lb/>
Burlington. N. C.<lb/>
Town Art Gallery Open<lb/>
To Students, Faculty<lb/>
East Carolina students and faculty<lb/>
members are invited to visit the<lb/>
Community Art Gallery at Sheppard<lb/>
I Memorial Library, Mis. Don Murray,<lb/>
publicity director of the Community<lb/>
' An Center, announced.<lb/>
The u-alleiy will be open daily<lb/>
except Sunday through October -1<lb/>
between th hours of 2 and 6:36 p.m.<lb/>
and visitors who cannot come during<lb/>
ay contact the Librar-<lb/>
YDC Sends Delegation<lb/>
To State Convention<lb/>
In Raleigh This Week<lb/>
Ed Matthews, newly-elected presi-<lb/>
dent of the East Caiolina Young<lb/>
Democrats Club, will attend the state<lb/>
YDC Convention in Raleigh this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Ed will be accompanied by several<lb/>
numbers of the executive board of<lb/>
his organization.<lb/>
Richard Nelson, president of the<lb/>
national YDC, will he a principal<lb/>
speaker at the North Carolina con-<lb/>
vention. Nelson was an administra-<lb/>
tive assistant to Adlai Stevenson<lb/>
during his tenure of office as gov-<lb/>
ernor of Illinois.<lb/>
i?<lb/>
Alumni News<lb/>
IRTH ANNOUNCEMENT<lb/>
Pitt Alumni Chapter in 1052-58.<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Fodie<lb/>
announce the birth of a<lb/>
Carol Anrve, on September 26. 4rs.<lb/>
Hodges (Anne Parker) was a mem-<lb/>
ber of the Class of 1947 with an<lb/>
AB degree r iome Economics and<lb/>
Social Science. Mr. Hodges, principal<lb/>
of the Chicod high school, was a<lb/>
member of the Class ot 1939, AB in<lb/>
Science and History, and holds the<lb/>
MA degree in Administration, Class<lb/>
of 1949. He wa? president of the<lb/>
Hodges i ALl MNI ATTENDED<lb/>
' Wr CATAWBA GAME<lb/>
daUi Among East Carolina College<lb/>
Alumni attending the East Carohna-<lb/>
Catawba foot' all game in Salisbury,<lb/>
N. C, Saturday, October 8, were<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Grissom, Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Bill McDonald, and Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Bob Williams, all of Green-<lb/>
ville; Charles Self of Greensboro;<lb/>
Roger Thrift of Williamston; Paul<lb/>
Casey of Kinston and Goldsboro;<lb/>
Henry Selby of Goldsboro; Miss Doris<lb/>
Brown of Charlotte; and Joe Tew<lb/>
of Lexington.<lb/>
?v<lb/>
I<lb/>
!<lb/>
New and (iood Used Cars and Trucks<lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co Inc.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Since 1866<lb/>
the<lb/>
lours m<lb/>
ian for arrangements.<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN FOOTWEAR<lb/>
It's<lb/>
MERIT SHOES<lb/>
L<lb/>
Kares Restaurant<lb/>
For That Extra Snack<lb/>
Golden Brown, Buttered<lb/>
WAFFLES<lb/>
College Music Groups<lb/>
Elect Officers; Plan<lb/>
November Program<lb/>
The East Carolina Orchestra and<lb/>
the Men's Varsity Glee Club are now<lb/>
working on their fall program to be<lb/>
presented November 22 in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Officers for the year ware elected<lb/>
i y the orchestra recently. Neil Wil-<lb/>
liams, Rocky Mount, is to head the<lb/>
organization as president. Other of-<lb/>
ficers are Beverly Sumner, Wilming-<lb/>
ton, vice-president; Ellen Sprinkle,<lb/>
Asheville, secretary-treasurer; Jerry<lb/>
Peterson, New Bern, manager.<lb/>
(Cantebury Club Makes<lb/>
j Plans For Beach Trip<lb/>
Final plans for the Canterbury<lb/>
Club retreat to be held at Hawkins<lb/>
Beach October 16-18 will be discussed<lb/>
at the Sunday night meeting of the<lb/>
club, announces Dr. James Poindex-<lb/>
ter, advisor for the Episcopal group.<lb/>
Even Song begins at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
followed by Canterbury club meeting<lb/>
at 6:00.<lb/>
All members are urged to be pres-<lb/>
. nt by their advisor.<lb/>
H. L. HODGES &amp; CO.<lb/>
PAINTS<lb/>
AND<lb/>
HARDWARE<lb/>
1<lb/>
iOOT LONG HOTDOGS<lb/>
25c<lb/>
CHICKEN AND SHRIMP<lb/>
IN-THE-BOX<lb/>
WILL DELIVER ANY ORDER OF<lb/>
$3.00 OR MORE<lb/>
Just Dial 5741<lb/>
ItEEIllEI drive-in<lb/>
West End Circle<lb/>
i<lb/>
Good Food, Reasonable Prices j<lb/>
and Friendly Atmosphere<lb/>
BEST IN FOOD<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
a<lb/>
n?m?jK?-flu??H?? ???????t?-?n-??????????f'<lb/>
Leave Your Shoes At COLLEGE VIEW CLEANERS<lb/>
SUB-STATION For Prompt Shoe Repairs<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE SHOP<lb/>
DIAL 2056<lb/>
j Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
j45 RPM Accessories j<lb/>
 McCORMICK j<lb/>
MUSIC STORE j<lb/>
??????????????$<lb/>
 GARRIS GROCERY <lb/>
GREENVILLE'S FOOD CENTER<lb/>
East Fifth and Cotanche Streets<lb/>
?U??????????????????????????????<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ATTENTION VETERANS!<lb/>
Have your family with you while you arc<lb/>
in school.<lb/>
j<lb/>
Buy an American Coach House Trailer, a<lb/>
completely equipped home on wheels.<lb/>
See Jake Skinner of Mobile Home Salei<lb/>
for easy terms.<lb/>
MOBILE HOME SALES<lb/>
West End Circle<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
COLOR CAMERA<lb/>
FOR FALL PICTURE TAKING<lb/>
KODAK <lb/>
PONY 828 $3i5<lb/>
CAMERA I ,?. F.tV<lb/>
You won't find a better<lb/>
miniature camera for the<lb/>
money. Take flash shots,<lb/>
too. See it here. Cam-<lb/>
era, $31.15, inc. Fed.<lb/>
Tax; Flashholder, $8.25.<lb/>
BISSETTE'S<lb/>
DRUG STORE<lb/>
416 Evans Street<lb/>
SMOKERS BY THE THOUSANDS<lb/>
CHANGING TO CHESTERFIELD<lb/>
the ONLVcigarette ever to give you<lb/>
O<lb/>
This h Your Jeweler<lb/>
<lb/>
Graduate ECC class '41<lb/>
Veteran of four years as Navy<lb/>
Pilot<lb/>
Registered Jeweler and Certified<lb/>
Gemologist<lb/>
Graduate of Accredited<lb/>
Jewelers College<lb/>
Member of Lions Club<lb/>
Member of Masonic Lodge<lb/>
To you students and faculty at ECC our firm welcomes<lb/>
you. We offer yon a fine line of jeweury merchandise in all<lb/>
price ranges. Whether it is a small remembrance or a fine<lb/>
gift you can find it at our store.<lb/>
We hand engrave all jewelry at no extra charge. We gold<lb/>
stamp bill folds, utility kits, fountain pens, etc at no extra<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
We have a time payment and lay away plan for your con-<lb/>
venience.<lb/>
If you are having a hard time finding the right gift, let us<lb/>
offer a few suggestions.<lb/>
Each gift will be gift-wrapped for you using our school<lb/>
eolors if you prefer.<lb/>
And, whether you buy or not, you are always welcome at<lb/>
our store; so, ?m? on in and look around.<lb/>
Respectfully yours.<lb/>
GECRGE LAUTARES<lb/>
Class '41<lb/>
utares Bros Jewelers<lb/>
414 Evans Street<lb/>
of LOW NICOTINE<lb/>
HIGHEST QUALITY<lb/>
The country's six leading cigarette brands wtrt<lb/>
analyzed ?chemically ?and Chesterfield wai found<lb/>
low in nicotine ?highest in quality.<lb/>
?<lb/>
A PROVEN RECORD<lb/>
with smokers<lb/>
Again and again, over a full year and a half a group<lb/>
of Chesterfield smokers have been given thorough<lb/>
medical examinations  the doctor's reports are a<lb/>
matter of record, "No adverse effects to the nose,<lb/>
throat and sinuses from smoking Chesterfields<lb/>
A responsible independent research laboratory super-<lb/>
vises this continuing program.<lb/>
That A<lb/>
MB xXJ<lb/>
float in<lb/>
Colorful<lb/>
pus h<lb/>
comir ;<lb/>
?<lb/>
tone-<lb/>
MM I '<lb/>
?. -?ztm??Si.<lb/>
Copyright 1M, Umii &amp; Mvwt Tmmc C.<lb/>
ittra<lb/>
Comn,<lb/>
Eatl<lb/>
Edu,<lb/>
TV<lb/>
Ctr<lb/>
ak<lb/>
utiel,<lb/>
Speak i<lb/>
TV<lb/>
dr<lb/>
kteresi<lb/>
hoo'r<lb/>
ten  <lb/>
opi-<lb/>
Vt I<lb/>
 but hi<lb/>
hh school<lb/>
nd ?? af<lb/>
belief .<lb/>
 ?hor. <lb/>
fining;<lb/>
 hool<lb/>
metiC;<lb/>
There i<lb/>
?i. I<lb/>
? h"H<lb/>
Rowing<lb/>
<pb facs="00038329_0007"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>