<?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="00038339_0001"/>
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It Pays To Do Business<lb/>
With Those Businesses<lb/>
That Advertise With Us<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Attend Chapel Services<lb/>
Each Tuesday At Noon<lb/>
In Austin Auditorium<lb/>
VOLUME XXIX<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1954<lb/>
Number 15<lb/>
Visiting Team Participate in Spiritual Emphasis Week<lb/>
Above are the participants in the Spiritual Emphasis Week program which ended here Thursday night,<lb/>
visiting team of five were on campus Monday through Thursday addressing student assemblies, conducting<lb/>
informal conversations in the dormitories, lecturing in the class rooms and giving personal guidance to a num-<lb/>
of students. The theme of this year's program was "This Nation Under God?Our Moral and Spiritual<lb/>
Heritage From left to right art W. Parker Marks, president of the Interreligious Council at the college; Jhe<lb/>
William W. Finlator. pastor of the First Baptist Church of Elizabeth City; Dr. W. I. Wolverton, rector of<lb/>
the Episcopal Church in Greenville; Rabbi Nathan Hershfield of Temple Emmanuel in G?.stonia; Dr. Gordon WT.<lb/>
 vejoy, educational consultant for the National Conference of Christians and Jews; Dr. Carl V. Harris, director<lb/>
of religious activities at the college; Dr. James G. Hug-tin. pastor of Central Methodist Church in Shelby; the<lb/>
Rei Harrj S. Jones, director of the Carolina Region of the National Conference of Christians and Jews; the<lb/>
Rev. Leonard W. Topping pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Greenville; and Dr. J. D. Messick, presi-<lb/>
dent of East Carolina College. (Photo by Tommie Lupton.)<lb/>
ECC Vet Performs<lb/>
As 'Great Tado'<lb/>
M Thursday Meet<lb/>
William Louis Tadlock, otherwise<lb/>
known as the "Great Tado will<lb/>
perform his feats of magic at the<lb/>
next Veterans Club meeting which is<lb/>
scheduled for Flanagan Auditorium<lb/>
Thursday, January 28, at 7 pjn.<lb/>
An important business session will<lb/>
open the meeting and President Fred<lb/>
Joseph urges all campus veterans to<lb/>
;e present.<lb/>
The "Great Tado who has given<lb/>
performances for civic groups and<lb/>
hools in the surrounding area, will<lb/>
? rform various acts of magic in-<lb/>
cluding disappearance and feats of<lb/>
mental telepathy.<lb/>
A native of Washington, the "Great<lb/>
Tado" is a veteran of military service<lb/>
during the Korean campaign and a<lb/>
student at East Carolina.<lb/>
All veterans who plan to attend<lb/>
this meeting may bring guests.<lb/>
Musical Entertainments On Tap<lb/>
Featuring Guests, College Students<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Ed Foundation Seeks Grants<lb/>
For Scholarships, Projects<lb/>
Messick Reviews College On Television<lb/>
 East Carolina College<lb/>
a ed I y President J. D.<lb/>
:k Sato rday on th weekly pro-<lb/>
n, "To College over the Green-<lb/>
statkm, WNCT.<lb/>
Satur lay t le local TV channel<lb/>
: gram from 2 to 2:30<lb/>
nent will continue<lb/>
. le future.<lb/>
Sprinkle and Alice Mattox<lb/>
atured on the program Sat-<lb/>
ly, January 9. Appearing last<lb/>
Dr. Messick was the Col-<lb/>
eisisting of Marvin Brown<lb/>
Starling, Douglas Brown,<lb/>
. M  hy, Ann- Butler, Myrl<lb/>
. Frances Smith and Jeanne<lb/>
c i i r "<lb/>
Saturday (tomorrow) Dr.<lb/>
?  Cuthbert, who has charge<lb/>
TV programs for the time<lb/>
liscuse briefly the work<lb/>
ask department, after which<lb/>
 id Keister, tenor and violin-<lb/>
and Mrs Keister, pianist, will<lb/>
give the program.<lb/>
Cites History<lb/>
Dr. Messick r viewed the activities<lb/>
of the college, stating that the bach-<lb/>
elor's degree was authorized No-<lb/>
 mtber 20, 1920; the master of arts,<lb/>
August, 1933; and the bachelor's<lb/>
degree, non-teaching, in 1941. In 1946.<lb/>
he said, 123 were awarded the bach-<lb/>
elor of science, or teaching degree,<lb/>
and 27 the bachelor of arts, or non-<lb/>
teaching degree, and only five were<lb/>
graduates with the MA degree. Last<lb/>
year, 1953, there were 22 graduates<lb/>
with the bachelor of arts degree and<lb/>
349 with the bachelor of science, while<lb/>
the number receiving the master of<lb/>
arts had increased to 118.<lb/>
Increase in graduates of teachers<lb/>
has I een phenomenal as has the in-<lb/>
crease in enrollment from 1,049 in<lb/>
1946 on the campus as compared to<lb/>
2,342 in 1954 and no extension stu-<lb/>
dents in 1P46 to 371 this year, giving<lb/>
a total enrollmtnt increase of 1,664, or<lb/>
Dr. Cuthbert Reveals Cast<lb/>
For 'Blossom Time' Musical<lb/>
Casting for the musical production, Schubert, features Vienna, Austria,<lb/>
ssom Time is complete, an-<lb/>
nounced Dr. Kenneth N. Cuthbert,<lb/>
te music department and<lb/>
lirector of the annual production<lb/>
red by the SGA.<lb/>
Working with Dr. Cuthbert in the<lb/>
I reduction, which is scheduled for<lb/>
? ?nation here April 27 and 28,<lb/>
Dr. Elizabeth Utterback of the<lb/>
English department who will direct<lb/>
.? dramatic Carolyn Clapp of<lb/>
ts Btudent director.<lb/>
"Blossom Time which is based<lb/>
the musical and love life of Franz<lb/>
Dances Feature<lb/>
Two Name Bands<lb/>
To ftooear Here<lb/>
Plans were made Wednesday for<lb/>
two name bands to appear on campus<lb/>
February and March.<lb/>
Ralph Marterie and Orchestra will<lb/>
furnish music for the Freshman-<lb/>
Sophomore-Senior Dance, February<lb/>
L5, Marterie has a 15-piece band and<lb/>
plays the trumpet. He was billed<lb/>
with Nat "King" Cole and Sarah<lb/>
Vaughan in Raleigh in the "Greatest<lb/>
Show of 1953<lb/>
The Sauter-Finegan Orchestra will<lb/>
be featured on the Entertainment<lb/>
Series, March 16. The group will<lb/>
give a concert and will be followed<lb/>
by a dance. The orchestra, headed by<lb/>
Ed Sauter and Bill Finegan, are<lb/>
featured on Vaughn Monroe's "Camel<lb/>
Caravan" radio program. They have<lb/>
appeared recently at the University<lb/>
of Notre Dame, University of In-<lb/>
diana and Duquesne.<lb/>
in 1826. All music in the production<lb/>
is by Schubert and was arranged<lb/>
and adapted by Sigmund Romberg,<lb/>
composer of "Student Prince Dr.<lb/>
Cuthbert says that the production<lb/>
has light comedy characteristics.<lb/>
Taking the lead roles are Gerald<lb/>
Murphy of China Grove as Franz<lb/>
Schubert; Frank Hammond, Wilming-<lb/>
ton, as Baron Schober; Frances<lb/>
Smith, Robersonville, as Mitzi; and<lb/>
Patsy Pappendick, Elizabeth City,<lb/>
as Bellabruna.<lb/>
Other parts for the musical include<lb/>
Vogl, portrayed by George Starling<lb/>
of Rocky Mount; Kitzi, by Jeanne<lb/>
Pritchard of Elizabeth City; Fritzi,<lb/>
by Carolyn Clapp of Greenville;<lb/>
Ercman, by Roy Askew of Elizabeth<lb/>
City; Binder, by rving Ennis of<lb/>
Goldsboro; Kupelweiser, by Frank<lb/>
Bodkin of Greenville; Von Schwindt,<lb/>
by Charles Starnes of Wilmington;<lb/>
Greta, by Carolyn Willis of Mar-<lb/>
shailburg; Mr. Kranz, by Ronnie Rose<lb/>
of Goldsboro; Count Scharntoff, by<lb/>
Carl Carter of Tarboro; and Mrs.<lb/>
Coburg, by June Crews of Creedmoor.<lb/>
The Men's Varsity Glee Club and<lb/>
the Women's Chorus will combine to<lb/>
form the chorus for the production.<lb/>
Such familiar songs as "Ave Ma-<lb/>
ria "Serenade" and "Song of Love"<lb/>
will be featured.<lb/>
The plot of the musical will be<lb/>
centered on Schubert and Schober<lb/>
who are rivals for Mitzi. Bellabruna,<lb/>
which is one of the lead comedv<lb/>
roles, carries a humorous love affair<lb/>
with Schober, but she is continually<lb/>
being followed by Count Schamtoff.<lb/>
Also providing laughs is Mr. Kranz,<lb/>
a serious minded father who is al-<lb/>
ways perturbed about his unwed<lb/>
daughters, Mitzi, Fritzi and Kitzi.<lb/>
He is "suspicious" about his daugh-<lb/>
ters' actions.<lb/>
from 1,049 in 1946 to 2,713 in 1954.<lb/>
Cost of College<lb/>
President Messick stated that a<lb/>
tu.i nt could attend East Carolina<lb/>
"ollege for approximately $300 a<lb/>
year not counting board. "We strive<lb/>
'o give the most possible for the mini-<lb/>
mum cost he said, "recognizing<lb/>
that many of our students have<lb/>
difficulty in attending college under<lb/>
any con ideration<lb/>
Five n illion, nine hundred twenty-<lb/>
; ix thousand, and twelve dollars has<lb/>
een appropriated by the General<lb/>
Assembly from 1947 through 1953<lb/>
for repairs, replacements, new equip-<lb/>
ment, new buildings, athletic fields,<lb/>
walks, drives and land. Even then, he<lb/>
s;ud, the need is tremendous.<lb/>
In continuing, he said the college<lb/>
maintains a Placement Bureau and<lb/>
al-o some follow-up service because<lb/>
of its interest in the students not only<lb/>
while they are on the campus but<lb/>
after graduation. Of the 488 graduates<lb/>
in 1953, there were 446 registered<lb/>
with the Placement Bureau; 315 went<lb/>
into public school work as teachers,<lb/>
principals, supervisors or superinten-<lb/>
dents. Others secured positions as<lb/>
scientists, accountants, bank clerks,<lb/>
secretaries, salesmen and many other<lb/>
areas. A goodly number continued on<lb/>
into graduate or professional schools,<lb/>
while 29 received commissions as sec-<lb/>
ond lieutenants in the Air Force and<lb/>
went directly into service.<lb/>
Regional College<lb/>
Dr. M( ssick emphasized the idea<lb/>
of this college's being recognized as<lb/>
a regional college and of educating<lb/>
its own people and, insofar as possible,<lb/>
having these graduates remain in<lb/>
their section of the state to help<lb/>
build it up again to its relative posi-<lb/>
tion in the state comparable to what<lb/>
it once was.<lb/>
Keister Team<lb/>
Presents Recital<lb/>
Tuesday Evening<lb/>
Dr. Elwood Keister, tenor and vio-<lb/>
linist and faculty member of the<lb/>
East Carolina College department of<lb/>
music, will be presented in a recital<lb/>
Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Austin<lb/>
auditorium. He will be accompanied<lb/>
at the piano by his wife, Gloria.<lb/>
The program will be sponsored by<lb/>
the college department of music as<lb/>
one of a series of recitals by faculty<lb/>
members given during the present<lb/>
school year. The poblic is invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
The program Tuesday will include<lb/>
a group of Brahms songs, "IS With<lb/>
All Your Hearts" from Mendelssohn's<lb/>
'Elijah tlie aria "E Lucevan Le<lb/>
Stelle from "Tosca" by Puccini, and<lb/>
everal contemporary songs. The last<lb/>
portion of the evening will be devoted<lb/>
to the "Sonata in A Major" for vio-<lb/>
lin anl piano by Cesar Franck.<lb/>
The Educational Foundation Com-<lb/>
mittee has been established at East<lb/>
Carolina College, according to an<lb/>
mnouncement by Dr. Leo W. Jenkins,<lb/>
Jean of the college and a member of<lb/>
the committee.<lb/>
Heading the committee is Dr. Keith<lb/>
Holmes of the education department.<lb/>
Working with Dr. Holme are Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins, Dr. Elwood Keister, Dr.<lb/>
J. K. Long, Dr. George Pasti, Dr.<lb/>
James Poindexter, W. W. Smiley, Dr.<lb/>
James White and Dr. J. A. Withey.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins states that the com-<lb/>
mittee has a three-fold objective for<lb/>
serving the students and the youth<lb/>
in Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
College TV Channel?<lb/>
First of these objectives is cata-<lb/>
'oging and investigating sources for<lb/>
foundation fund grants to the college<lb/>
to do research and study projects.<lb/>
For example, he added, the commit-<lb/>
tee is now seeking funds to install a<lb/>
television system here at the college.<lb/>
Such grants would make possible<lb/>
the originating of "live" broadcasts<lb/>
in the Joyner Library (now under<lb/>
construction). This project would call<lb/>
for approximately $100,000.<lb/>
Scholarships Available<lb/>
The second objective is "to dis-<lb/>
cover and to make known the fellow-<lb/>
ships and scholarships for our own<lb/>
students he said, "of which several<lb/>
East Carolina students have already<lb/>
api lied<lb/>
Objective number three is to "dis-<lb/>
cover and make known" to high<lb/>
schools in Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
scholarships, fellowships and loan<lb/>
funds available for their students.<lb/>
"Although the committee realizes<lb/>
that many recipients of these will<lb/>
of necessity go to other colleges, it<lb/>
is keeping with the spirit of East<lb/>
Carolina to encourage deserving fu-<lb/>
ture citizens to attend college Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins commented.<lb/>
Approximately two and a naif bil-<lb/>
lion dollars are available each year<lb/>
in money for foundations offering<lb/>
scholarship, fellowship and loan<lb/>
funds, be further added.<lb/>
Students who are interested in<lb/>
obtaining scholarships may contact<lb/>
Dr. Holmes or Dean Jenkins. "There<lb/>
are a number of scholarshrps in<lb/>
various fields available and often<lb/>
some are never taken Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
said. "We will be glad to help any<lb/>
student to look them over<lb/>
Canterbury Club<lb/>
Hears Rev. Wright<lb/>
The Right Rev. Thomas H. Wright,<lb/>
tshop of the Diocese of East Caro-<lb/>
lina or he Episcopal Church, will be<lb/>
guest speaker at the regular Even-<lb/>
song service of the Canterbury Club<lb/>
Sunday at 5:30 p.m. at St. Paul's<lb/>
Episcopal Church.<lb/>
Following the service there will be<lb/>
a reception in the Canterbury room.<lb/>
All students are invited.<lb/>
The Right Rev. Wright is the for-<lb/>
mer director of college work of the<lb/>
Episcopal Church in the United States<lb/>
and a former chaplain at Washington<lb/>
and Lee University, Va and the<lb/>
University of North Carolina.<lb/>
You can't kiss a girl unexpectedly<lb/>
?only sooner than she thought you<lb/>
would.<lb/>
Sophomore: "What does 'homoge-<lb/>
nized' mean?"<lb/>
Professor: "That is when milk is<lb/>
shaken so violently that the fat par-<lb/>
ticles break into very small bits<lb/>
scattered evenly throughout the<lb/>
milk<lb/>
Sophomore: "How in the world do<lb/>
they ever get the cows to shimmy<lb/>
that much?"<lb/>
EC Scout Council<lb/>
Meets On Campus<lb/>
To Elect Officers<lb/>
More than 350 Scouters, many of<lb/>
them accompanied by their wives,<lb/>
attended the annual Recognition<lb/>
Night dinner of the East Carolina<lb/>
Council, Boy Scouts of America, on<lb/>
the campus of East Carolina College<lb/>
last Friday afternoon and night.<lb/>
President J. D. Messick of East<lb/>
Carolina College was re-elected vice<lb/>
president of the Boy Scout Council,<lb/>
and was installed along with other<lb/>
officers, including Penn T. Watson<lb/>
of Wilson, president of the council.<lb/>
Alumni Secretary James W. But-<lb/>
ler was also named to another term<lb/>
on the executive committee of the<lb/>
Council and was appointed to the<lb/>
three-man public relations committee.<lb/>
The program following the dinner,<lb/>
arranged by Business Manager F. D.<lb/>
Duncan and Paul Julian, College<lb/>
steward, included awarding of Silver<lb/>
B avers to four outstanding adult<lb/>
leaders of the Scouting program and<lb/>
citing four men as members of the<lb/>
Order of the Silver Compass for<lb/>
distinctive service to the Council dur-<lb/>
ing the past year.<lb/>
The event drew an attendance from<lb/>
20 eastern North Carolina counties.<lb/>
Finlator Cites<lb/>
Five Heritages<lb/>
'Hot For Sale'<lb/>
There are five heritages in human<lb/>
lives that are "not for sale the Rev.<lb/>
William W. Finlator, pastor of the<lb/>
First Baptist Church in Elizabeth<lb/>
City, said in his address to the mem-<lb/>
bers of the Circle K Club Tuesday<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
The Rev. Finlator is a member of<lb/>
the visiting team here for Spiritual<lb/>
Emphasis Week. He is a member of<lb/>
the Kiwanis International, a civic<lb/>
group which the Circle K is affiliated.<lb/>
As an example, the Rev. Finlator<lb/>
referred to Bibical times when per-<lb/>
sons did not sell their property which<lb/>
was inherited from their fore fathers.<lb/>
"Today there are several heritages<lb/>
that we have that are 'not for sale "<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
These heritages were health, a good<lb/>
name, freedom, marriage and relig-<lb/>
ion. "If we lose any of these, the<lb/>
price we paid was too high He also<lb/>
pointed out that even though these<lb/>
"articles" were inherited, it was up<lb/>
to the individual to maintain and not<lb/>
to "sell" them. A good motto, he<lb/>
added, is "not for sale" to "our preci-<lb/>
ous heritages<lb/>
Charlie Bedford, president of YM<lb/>
CA, introduced the Rev. Finlator.<lb/>
Comedienne Russell,<lb/>
'Carmen Recitals<lb/>
Coming Events Here<lb/>
East Carolina College includes in<lb/>
its schedule for this month and next<lb/>
a number of programs of music,<lb/>
including performances by guest art-<lb/>
ists on the campus. Both students<lb/>
and faculty members will participate<lb/>
in a series of recitals sponsored by<lb/>
the college department of music.<lb/>
Events expected to attract audi-<lb/>
ences from localities throughout this<lb/>
section of the state include a recital<lb/>
February 2 by the internationally<lb/>
known comedienne Anna Russell and<lb/>
a performance of "Carmen" by the<lb/>
Grass Roots Opera Company, Febr-<lb/>
uary 16.<lb/>
Miss Russell, described in the press<lb/>
as a "hilarious artist" and "a schol-<lb/>
ar, a wit and an actress will appear<lb/>
in the Wright auditorium at 8 p.m.<lb/>
under the sponsorship of the East<lb/>
Carolina College Entertainment Com-<lb/>
mittee. The Grass Roots artists will<lb/>
present Bizet's opera under the aus-<lb/>
pices of the Greenville Music Club at<lb/>
S p.m. in the College Theatre.<lb/>
A faculty recital by Dr. Elwood<lb/>
Keister, tenor and violinist, Tuesday,<lb/>
January 26, will be the first in a<lb/>
series of programs by musicians from<lb/>
the college. Dr. Kei3ter. who joined<lb/>
the East Carolina faculty last fall,<lb/>
is known to many concert goers as<lb/>
director of the December, 1953, per-<lb/>
formance at the college of Handel's<lb/>
"The Messiah The vent was at-<lb/>
tended by an audience of approxi-<lb/>
mately 3,000 people from the eastern<lb/>
pe-t of t' e ?-tate.<lb/>
Two and concerts will be presented<lb/>
on the campus during a two-day<lb/>
session of the Eastern Division of<lb/>
the All State Band Clinic. The East<lb/>
Carolina College Concert Band will<lb/>
play Friday, Febiuary 5, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
'n the Col ege Theatre. The following<lb/>
night a Clinic Band of more than a<lb/>
hundred high school students will<lb/>
present a program at the same hour<lb/>
and place.<lb/>
Two senior students in the depart-<lb/>
ment of music will give their grad-<lb/>
uating recitals in February. Dolores<lb/>
Matthews of Henderson, pianist, will<lb/>
appear Tuesday, February 9, at 8<lb/>
p.m. in the Austin auditorium. Ruth<lb/>
Little of Winterville, soprano, wiU<lb/>
give a program of songs Sunday<lb/>
afternoon, February 21, at 4 o'clock<lb/>
in the Austin auditorium.<lb/>
Oppelt Says 111 Seniors<lb/>
Practice-Teach In Winter<lb/>
New Joyner Library Modern In Every Respect<lb/>
I by Anne George<lb/>
It is a far cry from the old stuffy they are covered with formica tops<lb/>
libraries of Grandma's day; in fact tnat won't be scratched, written or<lb/>
every detail of the new $900,000<lb/>
Joyner Library is modern.<lb/>
With the help of Wendell W. Smi-<lb/>
ley, Eric G. Flanagan, architect, drew<lb/>
up the plans for the building. Most<lb/>
of the color schemes were Mr. Smi-<lb/>
ley's creations. The walls are to be a<lb/>
soft green with the tile and marble<lb/>
floors carrying out the color style.<lb/>
The walls are all trimmed in maple,<lb/>
with th 3 desks and chairs the same.<lb/>
"Peculiar" Furniture<lb/>
There is a certain peculiarity<lb/>
about the 4,000 new chairs: they<lb/>
won't tilt. The legs are so sloped<lb/>
as to cause the chairs to slide, no<lb/>
matter how badly you want to tilt<lb/>
back in them. Although, if you do<lb/>
want comfort, there is a reading<lb/>
lounge that will be equipped with<lb/>
soft, plush chairs for just that<lb/>
purpose.<lb/>
The tables also are unusual, as<lb/>
carved on.<lb/>
Many of the doors separating the<lb/>
rooms, besides the main doors, are<lb/>
in glass which add also to the modern<lb/>
air that prevails throughout the<lb/>
building. Throughout the entire li-<lb/>
brary, there is fluorescent lighting.<lb/>
Radio Room<lb/>
Part of one wing on the second<lb/>
floor is dedicated to audio-visual<lb/>
education The radio studio is sound<lb/>
proof with three inch doors, with<lb/>
the walls in pale green and red.<lb/>
There is also a projection room and<lb/>
a curriculum lab in this particular<lb/>
wing.<lb/>
A balcony on the second floor<lb/>
overlooks the reference room, which<lb/>
f.$ 25 feet tall and 80 fast in width.<lb/>
The books in the balcony will bt<lb/>
restricted to subjects concerning<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
In the room behind the main desk<lb/>
is an elevator, which will enable the<lb/>
workers in the library to obtain books<lb/>
from the stacks more rapidly. Re-<lb/>
turned books can be deposited in a<lb/>
slot, on the side of the main desk,<lb/>
and a truck will catch them there.<lb/>
Why Joyner?<lb/>
As the old library was named after<lb/>
J. Y. Joyner, thsy decided to keep<lb/>
his name for the new one. Mr. Joyner<lb/>
was superintendent of public instruc-<lb/>
tion in the state of North Carolina<lb/>
from 1900-191?. Through bis help,<lb/>
this college was created. He was also<lb/>
the first ahaiwnmn of trustees at<lb/>
East Carolina College.<lb/>
The library was first started m<lb/>
the Spring of 1962, and Mr. Smiley<lb/>
says, "We hope to move in there<lb/>
soon<lb/>
But until then, why not go over<lb/>
and wander through? It will be<lb/>
breath-taking to visualise lbs nasr<lb/>
library.<lb/>
With 111 seniors already at work<lb/>
in classrooms of public schools in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina, East Caro-<lb/>
lina College has begun its program<lb/>
of student teaching for the winter<lb/>
quarter. Those now receiving practi-<lb/>
cal experience as teachers include 89<lb/>
engaged in work in the primary and<lb/>
the grammar grades.<lb/>
Dr. J. L. Oppelt, director of stu-<lb/>
dent teaching and placement at the<lb/>
college, is coordinator of the pro-<lb/>
gram. Supervising teachers from the<lb/>
public schools and from the college<lb/>
faculty direct the activities of the<lb/>
seniors.<lb/>
In the fall quarter 101 seniors<lb/>
completed their work as student<lb/>
teachers. The total for the firs two<lb/>
quarters of the present school yT<lb/>
is thus 212 men and women prsparlfeg<lb/>
for careers hi education. A lafgjt<lb/>
group of seniors is expected to enroll<lb/>
in the student teaching progranv in<lb/>
the spring.<lb/>
Student teachers now a we&amp; -t.<lb/>
the public schools include SS man ad<lb/>
76 women. Thirty-eight have MalWr<lb/>
ments in the Laboratory S0-I t&amp;<lb/>
tfoe college and ar" teaebjteg- there<lb/>
in grades one fcb?ufc ?$gSB Osms<lb/>
senior is teaching sevaajl grd? a?h-<lb/>
jects in the sdboot 1st the J &amp;<lb/>
Raleijrh.<lb/>
SevsaHMMt. fssstoff ar<lb/>
high school ?aib<lb/>
High Seltosi ?f in<lb/>
ondary j?h?ot? tt ??? North Car-<lb/>
olhwu On aaaJat is teaefciftff ? in<lb/>
the city high school tfte toge<lb/>
parienet ea fl lew ?f psfclte aebool<lb/>
instructs la taw fltW.<lb/>
Suji be ?! ? ? ??<lb/>
Carolina seniors working in<lb/>
schools include art, business f<lb/>
tion, English, home economics<lb/>
trial arts, mathematics, ?Nb?<lb/>
sical education, science, ieltigft<lb/>
guages and the social sttt&amp;ksv.<lb/>
'In addition to the Grew?? 1<lb/>
School, where S3 ?wakw saw 'tea<lb/>
mg, centers of istttreei art It<lb/>
tentnea, PariiTffl sttafttft, shfrw-<lb/>
eonviile, Bebnfe, Wastta"<lb/>
terville, Bs&amp;et, $ifeof Wmmmk<lb/>
Chkod, Bath, Ay den sffid Stoke.<lb/>
Oit Tap ApriUO,<lb/>
Tcutati plasis ware laid for tfcs<lb/>
annual JunioTsSapr Dance at a<lb/>
!ti?f of' the Jbmior Class officers<lb/>
on January 11, recording to clan<lb/>
fecaosat Bb !fiitoa.<lb/>
The dwaerarfU be fecM on Saturday<lb/>
nlfbt, Aril i0 to. Wright auditorium<lb/>
and will be ieM oa for members<lb/>
f tfc. Junior sntt Senior classes and<lb/>
their islam astetts committee are<lb/>
to be ,?Hwl8?l" by the president at<lb/>
the usat meeting of the class on<lb/>
Jmury 26.<lb/>
mm Class Meets<lb/>
Iaor Class President Bob<lb/>
ftatiaast has called a class mat-<lb/>
ing far January 2? at 9'M p.m.<lb/>
in Aestia building, room W.<lb/>
At tbia Um plans for the .Naior<lb/>
Scalar Dance will be discaased.<lb/>
President Neilson argea that aU<lb/>
Member of the class be present<lb/>
fee this very important meeting.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038339_0002"/><lb/>
FAGB TWO<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published Weekly by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
College, Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Phone 12. East Carolina College<lb/>
For News and Advertising<lb/>
Nam changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952.<lb/>
Srjtered as second-class matter December 3, 1925 at the<lb/>
U. S. Pot Office, Greenville, N. C, under the act of<lb/>
March 3, 1879.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 19fc<lb/>
iday.<lb/>
Ye Editor s<lb/>
by T.<lb/>
Sa<lb/>
Parker Maddrey<lb/>
T<lb/>
Who's Who Among Students At East Carolina<lb/>
Vainwright Holds Numerous Campus Offices<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
First Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March, 1953<lb/>
by Kay Johnston<lb/>
A true example of citizenship as<lb/>
well as scholarship is Julian Vain-<lb/>
wright. Julian, a senior, is a business<lb/>
education major from Greenville and<lb/>
plan3 to graduate in May. He will<lb/>
receive his AB degree. "Therefore<lb/>
he says, "I won't be having to go<lb/>
the editor written by a teen-ager, .through the trials and tribulations of<lb/>
student teaching this year, anyway.<lb/>
"One of the main reasons I chose<lb/>
One of the professors here found<lb/>
a clipping from "Ideas of Today" on<lb/>
his desk which was probably left by<lb/>
a student. The clipping was a letter<lb/>
Sports Editor <lb/>
Sport Asslstnats<lb/>
EDITORIAL STAFF<lb/>
Editor-in-chief - T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Managing Editor Faye O'Neal<lb/>
Assistant Editor Emily S. Boyce<lb/>
Feature Editor  Kay Johnston<lb/>
Staff Assistants Anne George, Pat Humphrey,<lb/>
Joyce Smith, Erolyn Blount, Faye Lanier, Jerry<lb/>
Register, Valeria Shearon, Wiley Teal and Ed<lb/>
UaVbews.<lb/>
SGA Reporter Betty Salmons<lb/>
Facuky Advisor  Mary H. Greene<lb/>
SPORTS STAFT<lb/>
 Eob Hilldrup<lb/>
Bruce .Phillips, Answer Joseph and<lb/>
David Evans<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Business Manager Ed? Massad<lb/>
Assistant Business Manager  Faye Jones<lb/>
Business Assistants Edna Whitfield,<lb/>
Mary Ellen Williams and Jean Godwin.<lb/>
Sh-h-h! Future Genius At Work<lb/>
Social life is a wonderful thing and no person<lb/>
should be deprived of this enjoyable privilege.<lb/>
Like other things, there is a time and a place for<lb/>
socializing. The library doesn't seem to be the<lb/>
proper place for it, however.<lb/>
There is a constant hum of mumbling voices<lb/>
in the Library at nights. A student may be found<lb/>
wandering from one table to another talking in<lb/>
loud whispers to other students who are busy at<lb/>
work. It has been observed that a student entered<lb/>
the library and yelled to a friend (in a whisper,<lb/>
of course)' three or four tables down, "Hi ya kid V<lb/>
We have in this country freedom of almost<lb/>
everything as long as it doesn't infringe upon the<lb/>
rights of others. Students have the right to social-<lb/>
ize and students have the right to study. However,<lb/>
the library was established for studying and not<lb/>
bull sessions. Therefore, one who exercises loudly<lb/>
his right to socialize in the library is infringing<lb/>
n others who are trying to study.<lb/>
If a student wants to study, for gosh sakes,<lb/>
don't hinder him in any way. He may be behind in<lb/>
quality points and every moment of study is<lb/>
valuable.<lb/>
- Take in consideration the other fellow before<lb/>
whispering loudly to your friend that you made<lb/>
a four on your history test. The other fellow<lb/>
doesn't care to hear your troubles, he has probably<lb/>
enough of his own.<lb/>
We thought it was amusing and yet<lb/>
brought out some good points. The<lb/>
letter is as follows:<lb/>
 I can be taxed plenty for<lb/>
my summer earnings, but I can't<lb/>
vote: that's taxation without repre-<lb/>
sentation. I can be drafted to kill<lb/>
ihe enemy, but I cannot legally buy<lb/>
bullets to hunt rabbits. I can drive<lb/>
a tank, but I cannot legally buy a<lb/>
car, in Massachusetts anyway. I can<lb/>
earn my own money, but I cannot<lb/>
buy my foreman a beer. My girl can<lb/>
get married, but she hasn't yet<lb/>
reached the age of consent.<lb/>
"Those adults who insist on ob-<lb/>
serving the uninhibited few who<lb/>
drink themselves silly, dope them-<lb/>
selves delerious, or sex themselves<lb/>
indiscrim nately, might learn to put<lb/>
soch things in their proper perspec-<lb/>
tive. We might ask our sensation-wise<lb/>
and smut-conscious supervisors if<lb/>
teen-age statistics are any worse in<lb/>
the over-all picture than those for<lb/>
adults, who set our examples. Then<lb/>
let's cut grass in our own backyard<lb/>
East Carolina was because I lived<lb/>
in Greenville. However, I'm sure now<lb/>
that I certainly couldn't have made<lb/>
a better choice<lb/>
Played In Band<lb/>
During his freshman year, Julian<lb/>
played in tLe college band and went<lb/>
out for baseball. He also joined the<lb/>
Canterbury Club, a religious club for<lb/>
Episcopalians on campus. Julian was<lb/>
elected president of this club last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
A member of the Circle K Club,<lb/>
he has done outstanding work and<lb/>
is this year's secretary for the or-<lb/>
ganization.<lb/>
Two years a member of the Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi, Julian was elected vice<lb/>
president this year, but had to<lb/>
withdraw because of his many other<lb/>
activities. This honorary fraternity<lb/>
is composed of a select group of males<lb/>
POT POURRI<lb/>
by Emily S. Boyce<lb/>
Julian Vainwright<lb/>
with high scolastic averages and with<lb/>
p "ties of leadership.<lb/>
This year a new organization,<lb/>
Future Business Leaders of America,<lb/>
has been organized on campus, which<lb/>
is for the advancement of students<lb/>
interested in business education. Ju-<lb/>
lian feels that this club will do<lb/>
much for the betterment of East<lb/>
.Carolina's business education majors.<lb/>
) He was elected the first president<lb/>
of the club which received its national<lb/>
cha rter recently.<lb/>
As a member of the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association for two years,<lb/>
he has been quite active. He was<lb/>
last year's chairman of the point<lb/>
syotem In the Student Legislature.<lb/>
Participates In Sporta<lb/>
An active participant in sports,<lb/>
he has played on the basketball and<lb/>
soft all intramural teams. "I also<lb/>
like hunting and any sport on and<lb/>
in the water Julian says.<lb/>
Among other organizations, Julian<lb/>
was a member also of the Alpha Phi<lb/>
Omega Upt year. Thus honorary fra-<lb/>
ternity has as its purposes to de<lb/>
velop friendship and service to hu-<lb/>
manity, the student body, youth and<lb/>
the community and members of the<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
"I finishd AFROTC at summer<lb/>
camp at Moody Air Force Field near<lb/>
Valdos-ta, Ga. this past summer<lb/>
says Julian, "and I really miss play-<lb/>
ing in the Drum and Bugle Corps<lb/>
this year. I hope to get my commis- l<lb/>
sion this spring, if they don't change<lb/>
any more rules. And then?well, it's<lb/>
up to Uncle Sam after that<lb/>
The bus was scheduled to get to Manteo<lb/>
sometime that afternoon. At every path and<lb/>
road the big bus stopped to let passengers off<lb/>
and take a lone traveler on. This stopping and<lb/>
starting went on for many miles before the im-<lb/>
patient woman sitting directly behind the driver<lb/>
spoke up: "Driver, do you have to stop at every<lb/>
telephone pole?" The driver turned slightly, and<lb/>
with a slow grin announced: "Why, lady, this<lb/>
happens to be a Greyhound bus<lb/>
While writing the above, two girls here on<lb/>
campus told this bus tale. They were riding the<lb/>
bus home to spend the weekend. When the bus<lb/>
stopped to open its door as it always does at a<lb/>
railway crossing, one of the girls out of curiosity<lb/>
asked the bus driver why this was don The<lb/>
driver quickly replied, "Well, you see there are<lb/>
a great many more passengers than there are<lb/>
bus drivers; that open door is for me, girls<lb/>
"Bus" tales might not be as humorous as travel-<lb/>
ing salesman stories, but they are printable.<lb/>
Know Your Campus Activities<lb/>
A fellow just won't have the op-<lb/>
portunity for relaxation anymore in<lb/>
the library. Wendell W. Smiley, col-<lb/>
lege librarian, informs that chairs<lb/>
for the new library will be construct-<lb/>
ed so that persons cannot "lean<lb/>
back When the student tries to<lb/>
. , . ,  . iirs who are winding up work On tne<lb/>
attain his relaxed position on two of<lb/>
Thirty Keep Busy To Produce<lb/>
College Yearbook, 'Buccaneer'<lb/>
by Valeria Shearon<lb/>
There are 30 very busy staffers in<lb/>
a certain Austin office these days.<lb/>
We are referring to the staff mem-<lb/>
the four legs of this piece of furni-<lb/>
ture, he will be surprised to find<lb/>
that the chair slides back and that<lb/>
all four legs will stay put on the<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
Mr. Smiley says that the chairs<lb/>
cost a little more than the regular<lb/>
ones, but they will be a good invest-<lb/>
ment in the long run for they are<lb/>
more durable. "Leaning back" on<lb/>
rwo legs lessens the life of a chair,<lb/>
he adds, and also damages the floor.<lb/>
It's Much Clearer Inside<lb/>
by Jerry Register<lb/>
Tell us, did any one pay any attention to<lb/>
itual Emphasis Week? We know that some<lb/>
but we mean the majority of you.<lb/>
Dr. Richard Todd, a social studies instructor,<lb/>
that he saw four students from his first<lb/>
history class at assembly Monday night.<lb/>
are 54 students in that class. That is just<lb/>
54, good average, don't you think? May-<lb/>
were holding the meetings at the wrong<lb/>
'they probably should have held them in<lb/>
soda shop, that is where a number of the<lb/>
?its were.<lb/>
Pi know, we just didn't need it?that's it.<lb/>
fiae that we, the young people, the back-<lb/>
lie nation, have all the spiritual guidance<lb/>
, ? - I you don't think you need spiritual<lb/>
Ml can just stop reading this article<lb/>
we think all of us do need it!<lb/>
; for the "Spiritual Emphasis Week"<lb/>
fcion Under God we, as said before,<lb/>
me of that nation, we are that<lb/>
al our nation strong, we make it<lb/>
 sleally with our young man-power and,<lb/>
should make it strong spiritually<lb/>
v ?.?; Jk, That reminds us of the follow-<lb/>
S nan m talking to a woman outside of<lb/>
iday morning. He said, "This is<lb/>
I have seen you here in a long<lb/>
s s,M sn? mid, "and I imagine that it will<lb/>
- ?l will see me here for a long<lb/>
'??4fe?towfe?" ?$?"<lb/>
 WWm.m<lb/>
Thursday night after the play,<lb/>
"Fair Was the Morning (written<lb/>
by Dr. Elizabeth Utterback of the<lb/>
English department), Dr. Ted Eaton<lb/>
gave an evaluation followed by com-<lb/>
ments from the audience.<lb/>
Dr. Eaton referred to the final<lb/>
-scene where the sheriff tells the<lb/>
widow mother that he does not love<lb/>
her but her daughter instead and<lb/>
they plan to marry. In rage the<lb/>
mother grabs the shotgun from the<lb/>
mantel in the Kentucky home as the<lb/>
sheriff and the daughter make a<lb/>
hurried exit followed by the mother's<lb/>
idiot son. The mother fires away<lb/>
(probably at the sheriff) and acci-<lb/>
dentally shoots and kills her son.<lb/>
Ft seems to me that the sheriff,<lb/>
being an officer of the law, would<lb/>
have returned to the scene of the<lb/>
crime Dr. Eaton said.<lb/>
Dr. H. A. Coleman then responded:<lb/>
"As a reason for not returning,<lb/>
maybe the sheriff thought the gun<lb/>
was double-barrelled<lb/>
m<lb/>
Couple Of The Week<lb/>
gagi, "every Sunday I come<lb/>
lOple preach about not doing<lb/>
it Just as soon as they get<lb/>
they say shouldn't be done.<lb/>
than them in that respect,<lb/>
a Vm ??rf slough not to have to go to<lb/>
turned toward a tinted glass<lb/>
that the sun was shining<lb/>
iMyou see that window?"<lb/>
"What is the picture on<lb/>
IiL "The sun is shining<lb/>
"Maybe you can see<lb/>
at the window.<lb/>
Is shining through<lb/>
It is a picture of<lb/>
a flock of sheep<lb/>
arms<lb/>
can see it clearer<lb/>
ihsA. the church is<lb/>
rto see life<lb/>
Hiding of<lb/>
you can't do out-<lb/>
by Erolyn Blount<lb/>
This week's couple, Delia Dean<lb/>
from Durham and Norwood Elliott<lb/>
from Chapanoke, have been going<lb/>
together since November, 1951. Nor-<lb/>
wood had been dating a girl who<lb/>
stayed right across the hall from<lb/>
Delia. This girl made the fatal mis-<lb/>
take of introducing Delia to him.<lb/>
Right after their first date Delia<lb/>
had the flu and was in the infirmary<lb/>
for a week. Norwood tried to find<lb/>
out where she was and nobody knew,<lb/>
so when she did get out, he took no<lb/>
chances on losing track of her again.<lb/>
He asked her to go steady and this<lb/>
:ast June 21, they decided to make<lb/>
it a p rmanent relationship by be-<lb/>
coming engaged. The wedding date<lb/>
has been set for next Christmas.<lb/>
Dlia and Norwood like dancing,<lb/>
foot all, window shopping and, most<lb/>
of all, basketball. Norwood loves pho-<lb/>
tography and says Delia, "His en-<lb/>
thusiasm has been catching. Now I<lb/>
help him take and develop pictures<lb/>
just like a regular professional<lb/>
After finishing school in February,<lb/>
"Norwood, who is majoring in science,<lb/>
will enter flight training. He is plan-<lb/>
ning to make the Air Force his ca-<lb/>
reer. Delia, who will finish next<lb/>
November, is majoring in grammar<lb/>
grade education. Says she, "Sure<lb/>
hope there's a big shortage of teach-<lb/>
ers wherever Norwood is stationd,<lb/>
so I won't have any trouble getting<lb/>
a job<lb/>
(Editor's note: By being named<lb/>
Couple of the Week, Delia and Nor-<lb/>
wood will each receive a gift from<lb/>
Saslow's Jewelers and a ticket to the<lb/>
Pitt Theatre.)<lb/>
1954 "better than ever" Buccaneer.<lb/>
The college annual is published by<lb/>
a student staff supervised by faculty<lb/>
and college staff members. The editor-<lb/>
in-chief, or in this case, the co-editors,<lb/>
Tommie Lupton and Mildred Rey-<lb/>
nolds, are selected by the college Pub-<lb/>
lications Board which is composed of<lb/>
students, faculty and administrative<lb/>
representative. Working in editorial<lb/>
capacities with Tommie and Mildred<lb/>
as Associate Editor is Jant Kanoy and<lb/>
Business Manager is Evelyn Davis.<lb/>
Because February 1, is the deadline<lb/>
for copy to be in the hands of Las-<lb/>
siter, Inc Charlotte printers, the<lb/>
staff is proud of the fact that they<lb/>
will have all copy ready to go by next<lb/>
week. Pictures were sent to Charlotte<lb/>
Engraving Co. January 1.<lb/>
Each staff mmber has been respon-<lb/>
sible for an essential portion of the<lb/>
work. The work began last spring<lb/>
with the photographing of baseball<lb/>
pictures. In the fall football shots<lb/>
were tackled. Next came the long<lb/>
t"dious process of making individual<lb/>
pictures and last, but far from least,<lb/>
was the problem of group and feature<lb/>
pictures. The photography has been<lb/>
handled by Waller and Smith of Ra-<lb/>
leigh and Bell Studio of Greenville.<lb/>
The lone man with a camera on the<lb/>
staff is Co-Editor Tommie, who snaps<lb/>
pictures here and there to fill those<lb/>
much enjoyed snapshot pages. All<lb/>
the members help schedule the pic-<lb/>
tures and do "write-ups Early in<lb/>
the year the staff votes for the per-<lb/>
sons to whom the yearbook will be<lb/>
dedicated.<lb/>
This year's staff have an efficient<lb/>
manner in which finances have been<lb/>
managed. Each year the Student<lb/>
Legislature, acting upon the recom-<lb/>
mendation of the Budget Committee,<lb/>
sets aside a certain amount for the<lb/>
annual. Last year the annual cost<lb/>
$16,700. This year's cost will run<lb/>
$1,500 less. "Yet assures Tommie,<lb/>
"this year's book has as much color,<lb/>
six or eight more pages of picturta<lb/>
and we are having 100 more co-pies<lb/>
printed<lb/>
The staff meets every Monday<lb/>
night, with usually about 25 present.<lb/>
In the near future the co-editors will<lb/>
sponsor the annual staff supper. The<lb/>
'54 Buccaneer is due to arrive from<lb/>
the press around May 1, and students<lb/>
will receive them shortly afterwards.<lb/>
Any student not staying in school<lb/>
all three quarters this year may pay<lb/>
$2.50 for each quarter they are not<lb/>
here and rceive an annual, Tommie<lb/>
said. But only as long as they last,<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
Food<lb/>
For<lb/>
Thought<lb/>
Forgot to sign in?that'll be two demerits.<lb/>
Locked out? Your box number please. . . . The<lb/>
weekly House Committee meeting in Fleming<lb/>
Hall is usually boring in a different sort of way.<lb/>
However, whatever monotony is involved<lb/>
certainly broken this past Monday night when<lb/>
two delinquents broke out in a vast and ?<lb/>
oughly complete state of the giggles. Before the<lb/>
president could keep a straight face and sentence<lb/>
the hysterical two, the whole meeting waa in<lb/>
stitches. The committee agreed that they really<lb/>
hated to give the girls demerits after such an<lb/>
interesting laugh over nothing. Laughs over<lb/>
nothing really are the funniest, aren't they?<lb/>
by<lb/>
This Week's Movie<lb/>
by Faye O'Neal<lb/>
"Dream Wife a sophisticated<lb/>
farce with Cary Grant playing the<lb/>
h ro's part, will be shown in Austin<lb/>
auditorium at 7 p.m. Saturday night.<lb/>
This film has been rated excellent<lb/>
by several critics.<lb/>
Grant portrays a young business<lb/>
man who is completely willing to get<lb/>
married, but can't decide which girl<lb/>
to marry. He drops his devoted<lb/>
fiance, because he fears she will<lb/>
become a slave to a materialistic<lb/>
world inasmuch as she is very seri-<lb/>
ous about her job.<lb/>
Deciding to pick a gal of the<lb/>
opposite type in every way, Grant<lb/>
offers his hand to a provocative Per-<lb/>
sian princess. Typical of the situa-<lb/>
tions that Cary Grant can get into<lb/>
is the confusion that follows. Luckily<lb/>
for him, enough time is necessary to<lb/>
arrange for the former betrothal<lb/>
arrangements of the princess to be<lb/>
adjusted to allow Grant to change<lb/>
his mind.<lb/>
Since women are continuously ac-<lb/>
cused of never being able to make a<lb/>
decision and abide peacefully by it,<lb/>
it might be interesting for the girla<lb/>
here to watch a man in a dilemma.<lb/>
The picture should be good enter-<lb/>
tainment for everyone.<lb/>
Wade Cooper, Dong King, Ed<lb/>
Mathews, "Buzz" Y?unjj<lb/>
An institution of East Carolina<lb/>
College of which little is known to<lb/>
most of us is the student supply<lb/>
stores, including both the soda shop<lb/>
and the stationery store. During the<lb/>
past few years these stores have<lb/>
seen a growth from a scanty begin-<lb/>
ning to a state of profitable opera-<lb/>
tion and serviceable existence that is<lb/>
symbolic of the overall advancement<lb/>
that has been so rapidly realized here<lb/>
over the past few years. The stores<lb/>
are of particular significance for<lb/>
they not only provide the convenience<lb/>
of on-campus places to buy various<lb/>
necessary articles, but have also re-<lb/>
alized their aim of aiding the school<lb/>
in another direct way: scholarship<lb/>
grants to deserving students.<lb/>
Seven or eight years ago there<lb/>
were no supply stores on the ECC<lb/>
campus and the soda shop was a<lb/>
soda fountain in the basement of<lb/>
Austin Building. The need for a sup-<lb/>
ply store was evident and in the<lb/>
basement of Austin a small store<lb/>
began its meager operations, with a<lb/>
tiny stock and an eye on the future,<lb/>
the soda shop being moved to its<lb/>
present location (which was then<lb/>
adequately spacious). According to<lb/>
Lloyd Bray, manager, the store has<lb/>
been steadily growing, with its prof-<lb/>
its, through last year, being turned<lb/>
back into the store to increase the<lb/>
stock to the point that the original<lb/>
.stock of approximately $7,000 in<lb/>
value has climbed to a value of about<lb/>
$40,000. Today the two stores do a<lb/>
combined business of over $100,000<lb/>
per year, providing everything from<lb/>
text books to decals and chocolate<lb/>
popsicles.<lb/>
At the beginning of this year it<lb/>
was found that it was not necessary<lb/>
to turn all of last year's proceeds<lb/>
back into the stores; they had made<lb/>
a true profit to be put to use by the<lb/>
school. Seventy-five per cent of this<lb/>
money was set aside in a scholarship<lb/>
fund to be given to deserving stu-<lb/>
dents of any classification who ap-<lb/>
plied for grants in aid at the dis-<lb/>
cretion of the school's scholarship<lb/>
committee of which Dean Clinton<lb/>
Prewett is chairman. For the fall<lb/>
quarter of this year approximately<lb/>
50 grants were made from this fund,<lb/>
mostly of about $100 each. In the<lb/>
future the amount available for this<lb/>
pupose should become larger. None<lb/>
of these scholarships were made for<lb/>
athletic purposes. The percentage of<lb/>
profits used each year for student<lb/>
aid is to remain constantly at 75<lb/>
per cent.<lb/>
A portion of the student body feels<lb/>
that perhaps it would be fairer to<lb/>
give all the students a share in the<lb/>
supply store profits by cutting the<lb/>
costs of books and supplies. For<lb/>
example: If the profit was 20 per<lb/>
cent on gross income during the<lb/>
past year, costs could be cut 15 per<lb/>
cent, thus leaving a five per cent<lb/>
safety margin, should any unfore-<lb/>
seen circumstances arise.<lb/>
The situation today will improve<lb/>
tomorrow. Already plans have been<lb/>
made and work is being done on a<lb/>
new store and soda shop to be lo-<lb/>
cated in the new Student Union, The<lb/>
change will bring a great improve-<lb/>
ment. The spaciousness and added<lb/>
facilities of the stores' future home<lb/>
will be a credit to the campus, rep-<lb/>
resentative of the general advance-<lb/>
ment now being made at ECC.<lb/>
The total eclipse of the moon on Monday<lb/>
night attracted many of the students. Groups<lb/>
were sitting in windows and standing m the cold<lb/>
with their necks arched to the sky. The period<lb/>
of totality was between 9:17 and 11:47 p.m. EST,<lb/>
even then some light from the sun got through<lb/>
to the moon. This is because the sun's rays art-<lb/>
refracted around the intervening earth by the<lb/>
earth's atmosphere?and the red rays reach the<lb/>
moon. During totality this can give the moon a<lb/>
reddish color.<lb/>
Forum And Against'em<lb/>
Sliding Parity<lb/>
by Faye O'Neal<lb/>
Parity is a standard for measuring farm<lb/>
prices'declared by law to be fair to farmers in re-<lb/>
lation to the prices they pay. The present natio<lb/>
farm program features 90 per cent parity. US<lb/>
Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson says<lb/>
that this 90 per cent support is costing the tax-<lb/>
payer too much. In the new farm bill proposed<lb/>
by the Eisenhower administration, Benson has<lb/>
advocated a flexible program of supports, rang-<lb/>
ing from 75 to 90 per cent. According to a quiz<lb/>
before the Senate last Monday, Benson believes<lb/>
this flexible system of supports will prevent fu-<lb/>
ture surpluses by lowering price incentives to<lb/>
production in time of surpluses and by raising<lb/>
them in time of scarcity.<lb/>
How do the students here, where agricultural<lb/>
prosperity is the security of financial backing f n<lb/>
almost everyone of us, feel about these proposed<lb/>
flexible farm supports?<lb/>
Commodore Caswell, a Whiteville junior who<lb/>
has spent the last six summers in active participa-<lb/>
tion with the federal program of measurement<lb/>
tobacco acreage and, working in warehouses in<lb/>
Columbus County, does not want flexible price<lb/>
supports. Caswell's family owns farm land and<lb/>
after having had experience with tenants and<lb/>
farmers in general, he believes that lowering the<lb/>
support price on tobacco at any time will in-<lb/>
evitably end in upping of production by the farm-<lb/>
er who will maintain the view that he has to make<lb/>
as much money as he can. "Most farmers will not<lb/>
realize that upping production will only lower the<lb/>
selling value even more says Caswell.<lb/>
Vice-president of the campus Young Republi-<lb/>
can Club, James L. Fish, has lived on a farm all<lb/>
his life. Fish agrees with the Benson farm pro-<lb/>
gram. "During the past and present "Regime<lb/>
emphatic emphasis has been laid thickly on such<lb/>
things as farm quota, acreage allotments, etc all<lb/>
of which have led to greater production and the<lb/>
origination of the problem of oversupply which<lb/>
we are now being faced with. The farmer, along<lb/>
with everybody else has been interested in getting<lb/>
higher prices. The upper level has been reached,<lb/>
and a stop will come, one way or another. What<lb/>
Benson proposes will be a way of leveling the price<lb/>
situation off, a gradual one but at least a step<lb/>
down the path to cutting the high costs of living<lb/>
that everyone is complaining about Fish admits<lb/>
that there will necessarily be a few years of re-<lb/>
cession to allow the plan to come to success.<lb/>
Nancy Lou Kesler, a junior honor student,<lb/>
lives in a small central North Carolina town<lb/>
where her family runs a department store and<lb/>
is completely dependent on the farmer's good<lb/>
year for success, claims no political affiliations,<lb/>
but thinks that Secretary Benson may be right.<lb/>
Nancy says that the high parity rate has been<lb/>
something of a crutch in the eyes of many farm-<lb/>
ers. They have become too dependent on the gov-<lb/>
ernment, assured that they will be rescued if a<lb/>
bad year comes and, in many cases, failing to pre-<lb/>
pare as well as they might for bad times, accord-<lb/>
ing to Nancy. Realizing that there is often a<lb/>
great difference in theory and practice, she<lb/>
wishes to give the new program a trial and con-<lb/>
demn it only after a fair period of unsuccessful<lb/>
execution.<lb/>
Bob Williams, a graduate student from<lb/>
Thomasville, says that the farmer is deserving of<lb/>
the assurance that he has a chance when a year<lb/>
of bad weather threatens him and his family with<lb/>
ruin. Williams states, "the world situation, with<lb/>
hunger prevailing in so many places, is enough<lb/>
initiative to urge protection to farmers, who fill<lb/>
the world's breadbasket<lb/>
s<lb/>
The<lb/>
1<lb/>
by<lb/>
Catamount<lb/>
i look ?!<lb/>
that<lb/>
-or<lb/>
gfej<lb/>
awray<lb/>
I<lb/>
the<lb/>
all alor<lb/>
cerr<lb/>
road gam<lb/>
loo;<lb/>
ani<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00038339_0003"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 22, 1964<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
orivej<lb/>
?'Very<lb/>
? and<lb/>
? this<lb/>
-re on<lb/>
 the<lb/>
le bus<lb/>
at a<lb/>
'lOsity<lb/>
The<lb/>
re are<lb/>
k are<lb/>
rirls<lb/>
fravel.<lb/>
The<lb/>
Jming<lb/>
way.<lb/>
when<lb/>
thor-<lb/>
the<lb/>
itence<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ireally<lb/>
-h an<lb/>
over<lb/>
nday<lb/>
froups<lb/>
cold<lb/>
friod<lb/>
aST,<lb/>
ough<lb/>
i are<lb/>
ly the<lb/>
h the<lb/>
)on a<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
e Sues' undefeated record went<lb/>
j tin boards Monday night, but<lb/>
- f press time the Pirates still<lb/>
 first plate in the North State<lb/>
erenee under wraps.<lb/>
to W stern Carolina's<lb/>
could cause trouble but<lb/>
ok at last year's record shows<lb/>
East Carolina came out even<lb/>
? on their road trip to Lenoir<lb/>
e and WOC and still wrapped<lb/>
e regular season tit I<lb/>
LOiv;<lb/>
i mounts<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
Bucs Win, 74-64: Then Lose By 68-65<lb/>
" 8 t?<lb/>
t<lb/>
farm<lb/>
in ra-<lb/>
tional<lb/>
. US<lb/>
says<lb/>
tax-<lb/>
?sec<lb/>
has<lb/>
rang-<lb/>
quiz<lb/>
lieves<lb/>
it fu-<lb/>
to<lb/>
lising<lb/>
Itural<lb/>
for<lb/>
osed<lb/>
who<lb/>
ici pa-<lb/>
nt of<lb/>
les in<lb/>
price<lb/>
and<lb/>
and<lb/>
(g the<lb/>
11 in-<lb/>
farm-<lb/>
bnake<lb/>
li not<lb/>
r the<lb/>
ubli-<lb/>
mall<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
irne<lb/>
such<lb/>
, all<lb/>
the<lb/>
rhich<lb/>
ilong<lb/>
Itting<lb/>
;hed<lb/>
trhat<lb/>
price<lb/>
step<lb/>
iving<lb/>
Imits<lb/>
i re-<lb/>
nt,<lb/>
town<lb/>
and<lb/>
Igood<lb/>
lions,<lb/>
ight.<lb/>
I been<lb/>
irm-<lb/>
Igov-<lb/>
if a<lb/>
pre-<lb/>
:ord-<lb/>
m ?<lb/>
she<lb/>
Icon-<lb/>
rful<lb/>
? the only thine, there-<lb/>
at the North State got out<lb/>
Catamount triumph was the<lb/>
vledge that the Bucs could be<lb/>
s iu tiling local fans knew<lb/>
ng.<lb/>
lespite the loss, the Pirates<lb/>
? considered over the hump<lb/>
as th regular season is con-<lb/>
It must be remembered that<lb/>
 games remain with three of the<lb/>
- arch-rivals, High Point, Elon<lb/>
an, but other contests<lb/>
? ? als m Memorial Gym<lb/>
Lace where no North State<lb/>
school has ever defeated<lb/>
I I o major steps taken at<lb/>
Carolina in recent years has<lb/>
ie formation of the Pirate<lb/>
mermen have had rough<lb/>
going so far this season in dropping<lb/>
meets to the freshman teams of<lb/>
Davidson, Carolina and State College.<lb/>
But few schools have ever inaugu-<lb/>
rated a new sport and come up with<lb/>
a winner right from the start.<lb/>
Without ,attempting to alibi the<lb/>
Pirate losses, we'd like to point out<lb/>
that both the Davidson and Carolina<lb/>
frosh clubs have defeated the varsi-<lb/>
ties of their respective schools in<lb/>
going Jintra-squad meets. Freshmen or not,<lb/>
it's tough opposition that the Bucs<lb/>
are facing thus year and one thing<lb/>
that always helps, whether winning<lb/>
or losing, is student support.<lb/>
The East Carolina pool is, by the<lb/>
statement of State's frosh coach,<lb/>
the second lest in the state (only<lb/>
Carolina's is rated better) and the<lb/>
spirit shown by the members of the<lb/>
Pirate squad well matches the quality<lb/>
of the pool.<lb/>
By the time next winter rolls<lb/>
around it is hoped that swimming at<lb/>
East Carolina can be enlarged enough<lb/>
so that the Buccaneers can have<lb/>
winning teams in six varsity sports.<lb/>
Buo if this is to be accomplished<lb/>
then the student body must lend its<lb/>
-up: ort. Clemson University will be<lb/>
here in February to swim against the<lb/>
locals and we believe that the cause<lb/>
of swimming at East Carolina would<lb/>
be furthered by a capacity turnout<lb/>
oi spectators.<lb/>
Guilford Team Plays Host<lb/>
To Pirate Five Tomorrow<lb/>
LARRY'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
CAMPUS FOOTWEAR FOR ALL OCCASIONS<lb/>
AT FIVE POINTS<lb/>
MERLE NORMAN SHOP<lb/>
(Thi Pink House On Evans St.)<lb/>
COSMETICS - COSTUME JEWELRY<lb/>
JEWELRY CASES<lb/>
Use Our Lay-A-Way Plan<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands1'<lb/>
"Your College Shop<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Pirate Swimmers<lb/>
Drop Tw? Meets<lb/>
East Carolina's newly formed swim-<lb/>
ming team took it on the nose in two<lb/>
successive meets last. Saturday and<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Tin- Pirate mermen dropped a 36-<lb/>
30 decision to the University of North<lb/>
Carolina frosh Saturday and followed<lb/>
up by taking a 41-25 thrashing at the<lb/>
hands of N. C. State's Wolfpack<lb/>
Monday. Both meets were held in the<lb/>
local pool.<lb/>
Tn Saturday's outing the visiting<lb/>
Tar Heels jumped away with a clean<lb/>
sweep in the opening 150 Yard Relay<lb/>
and were never headed. The Bucs took<lb/>
only one first, that in the final event<lb/>
of the day, when Bill Costner, Ronnie<lb/>
Rose, Wade Cooper and Dickie Denton<lb/>
umbin  forces to capture the 200<lb/>
Yard R lay Race.<lb/>
In Monday's match the Pirates<lb/>
Guilford's Quakers will furnish the<lb/>
opposition tomorrow night when the<lb/>
high-flying East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
continue their drive for the North<lb/>
State Conference crown.<lb/>
The contest, which will be the sec-<lb/>
ond of the year between the two clubs,<lb/>
will be played on the Quaker's court.<lb/>
Bobby Hodges, East Carolina's sen-<lb/>
ior center, is expected to lead the<lb/>
attack against the mediocre Guilford<lb/>
club. So far this season Hodges is<lb/>
averaging in the neighborhood of 25<lb/>
points per contest. He collected 32<lb/>
on December 5 when the Bucs lam-<lb/>
basted the Quakes 92-58.<lb/>
Monday night the Pirates tangle<lb/>
with another of the North State Con-<lb/>
ference's weaker ball clubs. Catawba's<lb/>
Indians, who suffered an 83-42 set-<lb/>
back at the hands of the Bucs, will<lb/>
play host to the Pirates.<lb/>
One more outing, this one scheduled<lb/>
for Wednesday night, again finds the<lb/>
Pirates playing on a foreign floor.<lb/>
High Point's Panthers, a hot and<lb/>
cold club no far this season will<lb/>
in Mondays match the Pirates attempt to halt the high scoring East<lb/>
rot off to a good start when Rose, Carolina attack. Kent Mosely, a dim-<lb/>
Milton Foley and Costner swept the<lb/>
opening lo0 Yard Medley Relay. Their<lb/>
offorts weren't enough however as<lb/>
the Wolf; ack swimmers captured<lb/>
firsts in the remainder of the day's<lb/>
?vt nts.<lb/>
Saturday's results:<lb/>
R suits of Saturday's meet: 150<lb/>
Yd. Medley Relay, Smith, Dryer,<lb/>
Hal (VXC); 200 Yd. Free Style,<lb/>
Krepp (UNC), Henton (ECC), Heitle-<lb/>
n: i (UNC); SO Yd. Free Style,<lb/>
Brenner (UNC), Cortner (ECC),<lb/>
Hunter (UNC); 150 Yd. Individual<lb/>
Medley, Drake (UNC), Cooper and<lb/>
Foley (ECC); 100 Yd. Free Style,<lb/>
Marks (UNC). Denton (ECC),<lb/>
. .Merlin (UNC); 100 Y? . Back<lb/>
Stroke. (ECC), Smoot (UNC), Flo-<lb/>
wers (ECC); 100 Yd. Brest Stroke,<lb/>
Mclnnis (UNC), Fuller and Cooper<lb/>
(ECC); 200 Yd. Relay, Cortner, Rose,<lb/>
Cooper and Newton (ECC).<lb/>
Monday's results: 150 Yd. Medley<lb/>
Relay, Rose, Foley, Costner (ECC);<lb/>
200 Yd. Free Style, Prodo (S), Denton<lb/>
and Tuton (ECC); 50 Yd. Free Style,<lb/>
Merche (S), Costner (ECC), Climo<lb/>
(S); 150 Yd. Individual Medley,<lb/>
Mclntyre (S), Verreault (S) and<lb/>
Moore (ECC); 100 Yd. Free Style,<lb/>
Prodo (S), Denton and Cooper (ECC);<lb/>
100 Yd. Back Stroke, Merchel (S),<lb/>
inutive guard who does his scoring on<lb/>
long set shots, will be the Panthers'<lb/>
answer to Hodges. Mosely, at press<lb/>
time this week, was leading the North<lb/>
State in scoring.<lb/>
Prior to the Appalachian game<lb/>
Thursday night the Bucs were still<lb/>
holding on to the loop's top position.<lb/>
In their six loop outings so far the<lb/>
locals had compiled a 5-1 mark and,<lb/>
should they cop all three contests<lb/>
next week, would practically be con-<lb/>
ceeded the regular season conference<lb/>
crown.<lb/>
The starting line-up for tomorrow's<lb/>
battle at Guilford will probably find<lb/>
Hodges at center, J. C. Thomas and<lb/>
Cecil Heath at guards, and Charlie<lb/>
Huffman and Paul Jones at forwards.<lb/>
Don Harris, the Laurinburg fresh-<lb/>
man, is slated to see plenty of action<lb/>
in the week's contests as is Oak Ridge<lb/>
transfer Waverly Akins. Both boys<lb/>
turned in good games last week when<lb/>
the Bucs faced Lenoir Rhyne and<lb/>
Western Carolina.<lb/>
Ross and Wallace (ECC); 100 Yd.<lb/>
Brest Stroke, Mclntyre (S), Fuller<lb/>
(ECC) and Moore (S); 200 Yd. Relay,<lb/>
Prodo, Verreault, James and Climo,<lb/>
(S).<lb/>
Four great N<lb/>
in Chevrol<lb/>
U<lb/>
Firsts<lb/>
?<lb/>
Western Carolina<lb/>
Takes Win After<lb/>
Bucs Defeat L-R<lb/>
An undefeated season went by the<lb/>
boards Monday night as the Western<lb/>
Carolina College Catamounts upset<lb/>
East Carolina 68-65 in the second<lb/>
game of the Pirates' recent western<lb/>
tour.<lb/>
In a contest the previous Saturday<lb/>
the Bucs turned back Lenoir Rhyne's<lb/>
highly rated Bears 74-64 to run their<lb/>
win skein to seven contests this year.<lb/>
Monday's game found East Caro-<lb/>
lina out in front 34-27 at halftime<lb/>
but the determined cats whittled<lb/>
away at the margin to come from<lb/>
behind in tne final three minutes.<lb/>
The contest was a rough one<lb/>
throughout and was marred by spo-<lb/>
radic officiating. Near the end of the<lb/>
game an intentional foul by J. C.<lb/>
Thomas in order to gain the ball for<lb/>
the Bucs brought spectators onto the<lb/>
floor but order was soon restored.<lb/>
Despite the outcome of the contest<lb/>
the Pirates' senior center and cap-<lb/>
tain, Bobby Hodges, chalked up 26<lb/>
points. Charlie Huffman and Cecil<lb/>
Heath sank 16 and 14 respectively.<lb/>
Jimmy Jordan's timely shots paced<lb/>
the Catamounts but he played second<lb/>
fiddle to Martin who was high for<lb/>
the winners with 19 markers.<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
The opening game of the two-<lb/>
contests western swing was a differ-<lb/>
ent story, however, as the Bucs<lb/>
turned back Lenoir Rhyne 74-64. Bob-<lb/>
by Hodges once more paced the Bucs<lb/>
with 26 markers.<lb/>
East Carolina jumped away to an<lb/>
18-15 first period margin and length-<lb/>
ened it to 40-28 at halftime. The<lb/>
Bears rallied in the third period but<lb/>
-ome timely foul shooting by forward<lb/>
Paul Jones enabled the Bucs to pull<lb/>
away in the final quarter.<lb/>
Charlie Huffman contributed some<lb/>
timely scoring to the Pirate attack<lb/>
as he hit for 18 points. Huffman's<lb/>
total marked the fifth time this year<lb/>
that he has hit the 18 point figure.<lb/>
The results of the road trip gave<lb/>
East Carolina 5-1 conference record<lb/>
and an overall mark of 7-1.<lb/>
The boxes:<lb/>
East Carolina (74) fg ft pf tp<lb/>
Huffman, f  8 2 3 18<lb/>
Akins, f 2 1<lb/>
Harris, f<lb/>
Jones, f<lb/>
Hodges, c<lb/>
Thomas, g<lb/>
Heath, g<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 7<lb/>
7 12<lb/>
3 1<lb/>
4 1<lb/>
4 5<lb/>
2 0<lb/>
0 9<lb/>
3 26<lb/>
5 7<lb/>
1 9<lb/>
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You simply swing your foot from<lb/>
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equipped with Powerglidev auto-<lb/>
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NEW AUTOMATIC<lb/>
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NEW ANTOMATIC<lb/>
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Optional at extra cost on Bel Air<lb/>
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nation with Automatic Seat Control<lb/>
Optional at extra cost.<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
Barker, f<lb/>
Wells, f <lb/>
Hassell, f .<lb/>
Ortmeyer, c<lb/>
Propst, g<lb/>
Feltner, g -<lb/>
Buff, g <lb/>
25 24 18 74<lb/>
fg ft pf tp<lb/>
5 5 4 15<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
5<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
4 10<lb/>
3 9<lb/>
5 6<lb/>
3 14<lb/>
0 5<lb/>
2 5<lb/>
Totals ? 23 18 21 64<lb/>
Score by quarters:<lb/>
East Carolina  18 22 14 20?74<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne 15 13 22 13?64<lb/>
Free throws missed: (East Caro-<lb/>
lina) Akins 3, Jones i, Hodges 2,<lb/>
and Heath 2; (Lenoir Rhyne) Barker<lb/>
3, Wells 5, Ortmeyer 1, Propst 2,<lb/>
Feltner 3, and Buff 3.<lb/>
Officials: Bergman and Hollar.<lb/>
fg ft pf tp<lb/>
7 2 5 16<lb/>
East Carolina (65)<lb/>
Huffmani<lb/>
Akins 10 0 2<lb/>
Harris  112 3<lb/>
Rice - 0 0 0 0<lb/>
Hodges  8 11 5 26<lb/>
Moye  0 0 0 0<lb/>
Thomas  0 3 3 3<lb/>
Heath 4 6 3 14<lb/>
Totals ? 21 22 18 65<lb/>
Western Carolina (68) fg ft pf tp<lb/>
Ray<lb/>
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3<lb/>
1<lb/>
8<lb/>
6<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
7<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
<lb/>
5 7<lb/>
3 10<lb/>
5 4<lb/>
4 16<lb/>
3 19<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
5 8<lb/>
1 3<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
25 18 26 68<lb/>
Good Food R?umaM PrioM<lb/>
and Friandly Atmosptar<lb/>
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Formation Of Swimming Team<lb/>
Adds New Sport To College<lb/>
by Bruce Phillips<lb/>
The winning ways, of East Carolina<lb/>
College's teams in major intercolle-<lb/>
giate sports have grown intensely<lb/>
familiar in Southern circles in recent<lb/>
yeans. Football, basketball and base-<lb/>
ball achievements' have reached an<lb/>
all-time high here and in response<lb/>
to East Carolina's rise to a nationally<lb/>
recognized level in its athletic pro-<lb/>
gram, minor sports are being empha-<lb/>
sized.<lb/>
son freshman turned the locals back<lb/>
in their opener. The Pirates certainly<lb/>
gave a good account of themselves<lb/>
against the Cats (who incidently<lb/>
whipped the Davidson varsity by a<lb/>
humiliating score) by pushing the<lb/>
home team to the limit and taking<lb/>
two first places.<lb/>
In their first home meet, East<lb/>
Carolina ran head-on into the skiewy<lb/>
s ten-<lb/>
High<lb/>
North Carolina freshman swimmers<lb/>
fel?68 the Pirate golf team strok- and had t0 fi ht hard k<lb/>
ed H way to the North State Con- . margin of vicU) at M<lb/>
championship, fee aftcrnoofl of week <lb/>
charges of Coach De Shaw again<lb/>
played host to one of the Souths most<lb/>
renown swimming aggregation?<lb/>
North Carolina State. The Wolfpack<lb/>
emerged victorious by a 41-25 count,<lb/>
ut all those who witnessed agreed<lb/>
all the young Pirates need is a little<lb/>
more experience &amp;s a unit.<lb/>
East Carolina meets Clemson here<lb/>
in their next home go February 13.<lb/>
Meet time 2 p. m. The locals will be<lb/>
gunning to upset the Tigers and<lb/>
prove that losing to such powerhouses<lb/>
as UNC and State is nothing to be<lb/>
ashamed of.<lb/>
loop schedule undefeated. ECC<lb/>
nis team finished second to<lb/>
Point's .Panthers.<lb/>
Now, in hopes of further equal-<lb/>
izing its athletic status with its<lb/>
ballooning enrollment, East Carolina<lb/>
is fielding a swimming team?the<lb/>
first in its history. Interest in form-<lb/>
ing an aquatic swimming team began<lb/>
in 1052, but the necessary enthusias-<lb/>
tic leader that it takes to make su.<lb/>
a hope a reality canu into focu<lb/>
only this year. With Dr. Charles D<lb/>
Shaw of the physical education de-<lb/>
partment at the head and a few-<lb/>
other enthusiastic individuals who<lb/>
got the movement under way, plus<lb/>
the completion of the new Memorial<lb/>
pool. East Carolina hop s to get th<lb/>
tpktshing Pirates securely established<lb/>
In the water port that Ls so promi-<lb/>
nent in East'Tn North Carolina.<lb/>
Kins:on, Wilson, Goldsboro, Wil-<lb/>
mington and Tarboro, to mention a<lb/>
few, are towns that have had the<lb/>
aquatic bug for years and b6at some<lb/>
of the finest marine units in the<lb/>
AAU.<lb/>
Wade Cooper and Jim Lassiter,<lb/>
who formerly swam with Raleigh<lb/>
High School, a team that won the<lb/>
?tate swimming title for five years in<lb/>
a row, are the teams stalwarts. Mil-<lb/>
ton Foley, a home grown Greenville<lb/>
product, swam with the U. S. Military<lb/>
Academy freshmen. Practically all<lb/>
the members have had AAU exper-<lb/>
ience.<lb/>
The roster of the traveling squad<lb/>
and the events they swim follows:<lb/>
Sprinters?Milton Foley, Jerry Pow-<lb/>
ell, Dick Denton and Bill Costner.<lb/>
Breasttrokers?Frank Moore and<lb/>
Bob Fuller. Backstrokers.?Ronnie<lb/>
Rose and Hugh Flowers. Distance<lb/>
Swimmers?Garland Tuton and Wade<lb/>
Cooper. Individual Medley?Moore<lb/>
and Cooper. Diver?Jim Lassiter.<lb/>
The gym pool is completely equiped<lb/>
and laid out for the home meets.<lb/>
Under water lights have been in-<lb/>
stalled for night contests. The gym<lb/>
bleachers can be turned around to<lb/>
seat about 700 observers.<lb/>
The Pirates have had three in-<lb/>
tercollegiate matches to date with<lb/>
the top ranking swimming teams of<lb/>
the nation. The highly touted David-<lb/>
More Than 200 Take<lb/>
Part In Intramural<lb/>
Basketball League<lb/>
Over 200 East Carolina students<lb/>
are taking part in the men's intra-<lb/>
mural basketball program here.<lb/>
Twenty teams, comprising the<lb/>
largest intramural session in the<lb/>
history of the school, are divided<lb/>
into two leagues with 10 teams to<lb/>
each league.<lb/>
In the "A" League, which is rated<lb/>
the stronger of the two three teams?<lb/>
EPO, Badgers and Johnnie Rebs?<lb/>
are tied for first place. In the "B"<lb/>
League the EPO, Jr. is pacing the<lb/>
field with an undefeated record.<lb/>
League play ends February 8 at<lb/>
which time the tournaments will be-<lb/>
gin. The program is under the spon-<lb/>
sorship of the physical education<lb/>
department and is directed by Bob<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
League Schedule<lb/>
Next week's schedule for Men's<lb/>
Intramural Basketball is:<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
6 p.m.?EPO, Jr. vs Net Strippers<lb/>
6 p.m.?Coolest Ones vs Red Skins<lb/>
7 p.m.?Jocks vs Phantoms<lb/>
7 p.m.?Cats vs Wolf Pack<lb/>
8 p.m.?EPO vs Black Hawks<lb/>
8 p.m.?Sheriffs vs Johnnie Rebs<lb/>
Conscience: Something that feels<lb/>
terrible when everything else feels<lb/>
swell.<lb/>
Leave Your khoes At COLLEGE VIEW CLEANERS<lb/>
SUB-STATION For Prompt Shoe Repairs<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE SHOP<lb/>
DIAL 2056<lb/>
QUALITY JEWELRY<lb/>
At Prices To Meet Your Budget<lb/>
Your Headquarters For<lb/>
Bulova Watches<lb/>
Also<lb/>
HAMILTON, ELGIN and BKNBUS<lb/>
Scientifically Trained Mechanics ffc Sm? Ym<lb/>
STAUFFER'S JEWELERS<lb/>
407 Evans Street Phone 2452<lb/>
STATE<lb/>
Red's Newest<lb/>
Uproarioas<lb/>
Romatic Comedy<lb/>
Hit<lb/>
9<lb/>
BIG DAYS<lb/>
Sunday-Monday-Tuesday<lb/>
First<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
PITT PRICES THIS ATTRACTION<lb/>
<pb facs="00038339_0004"/><lb/>
PAGB FOUR<lb/>
?? ? ????? i -<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, J.V-<lb/>
a i.i-<lb/>
Veterans Should Enroll Now<lb/>
For Gl Educational Benefits<lb/>
egin Gl<lb/>
Th? spring school tei<lb/>
erlv in 1954. mark the<lb/>
ment i<lb/>
Gl Bill for<lb/>
v teran<lb/>
tion sai<lb/>
rhe reaso<lb/>
the la-A<lb/>
t Kore<lb/>
:<lb/>
t enroll- j crainn .<lb/>
e Korean Un<lb/>
t Korea i must <lb/>
V <lb/>
which to<lb/>
aw, a veteran actually<lb/>
in and begin" training<lb/>
e w ants to<lb/>
afterwards. The mere<lb/>
a lication !? forehand,<lb/>
of stait ng after-<lb/>
I iugl . VA pointed<lb/>
- ? veteran will be ox-<lb/>
i ' m or at<lb/>
. ? ' n his deadline<lb/>
i . i tarted in<lb/>
i rmitti .I to int r-<lb/>
cause of the sinn-<lb/>
er for other reasons<lb/>
ir for any circum-<lb/>
Write If You Like It<lb/>
Students and others who<lb/>
watch "To College" which fea-<lb/>
tures student and faculty of East<lb/>
Carolina College, should write<lb/>
the Greenville TV channel, WN-<lb/>
CT, if they like the program.<lb/>
The local station will continue<lb/>
this feature, which is presented<lb/>
every Saturday from 2 to 2:30<lb/>
p. in if enough enthusiasm is<lb/>
show n.<lb/>
mm News<lb/>
Alumni Move To New<lb/>
Location This Week<lb/>
Y <lb/>
; 11<lb/>
e ex-<lb/>
al these cut-off-<lb/>
nly to veterans<lb/>
Koreai Gl Bill.<lb/>
thos i rolled<lb/>
World War II<lb/>
: (.ARRIS GROCERY <lb/>
E'S FOOD CENTER <lb/>
 <lb/>
 and Cotanche Streets <lb/>
?<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
BETTER SHOES REASONABLY PRICED<lb/>
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY<lb/>
B?on Ave.<lb/>
Greenville. N. C.<lb/>
Opportunity<lb/>
Knocks<lb/>
SUMMER EUROPE TRIP<lb/>
WITH EXPENSES PAID<lb/>
A small number of students and<lb/>
teachers can travel to and from Eu-<lb/>
rope without cost by serving on the<lb/>
educational and recreational staff of<lb/>
the 1954 student sailings of thi firsi<lb/>
class ship "Castel Felice according<lb/>
to Anthony S. Pinter, president of<lb/>
Study Abroad Inc in charge of those<lb/>
;sailin.<lb/>
Duties of the staff include assist-<lb/>
ance with the program of lectures<lb/>
.? discussions about the European<lb/>
countries and problems of the edu-<lb/>
? al tourist, language classes, the<lb/>
newspaper and library; and super-<lb/>
vision of the deck games, swimming,<lb/>
talent shows, dances, moving pictures<lb/>
and shipboard discipline.<lb/>
These positions are open to Ameri-<lb/>
c tns and to Europeans who have<lb/>
been studying or teaching in the<lb/>
United States, Mr. Pinter announced,<lb/>
; ut only applicants with qualifica-<lb/>
tions in the fields should write to<lb/>
tl e Castel Felice Staff Council. Study<lb/>
Abroad Inc 250 West 57th Street.<lb/>
New York 19, N.Y.<lb/>
FELLOWSHIPS OPEN<lb/>
FOR SCIENCE GRADS<lb/>
The Alumni office of East Caro-<lb/>
lina College now is in its new home<lb/>
on the college campus.<lb/>
Moving was begun lat Motidaj<lb/>
and Tuesda: building form r-<lb/>
ly designated the Home Manage meat<lb/>
House - - - and earlier known to<lb/>
tudents of a form r g nt ration as<lb/>
I ; ary - - and the staff in<lb/>
the office is working overtime to<lb/>
eomplel the ti ansi i n fr ni ? he one-<lb/>
room ofii. e in Austin Building.<lb/>
Alumni Secretarj James W. Butler,<lb/>
Mrs. S i ie VV . Webb, ' imni of-<lb/>
t ice secretary, and u ? ' k<lb/>
Helen Bland and Frank Dees, have<lb/>
een putting in long hour this week<lb/>
to havi rei ord: files, desks and oth i<lb/>
iff ice ii I pro erly.<lb/>
The planning and ? ent oi<lb/>
? 'pro o coin<lb/>
into a modern and commodious<lb/>
Alumni Faculty H e  '?" ? :<lb/>
given the ! ersonal attention ? I<lb/>
dent J. D. Messick, Bush ? - Man<lb/>
Alumni Secretary Butler, Dean of<lb/>
Womi 'A . and Dt. Bes e<lb/>
McNei i ad of th department<lb/>
honii economics.<lb/>
on to<lb/>
i<lb/>
i -sg i.<lb/>
f, ,? the alumni aifaii then are ??<lb/>
en's lounge, a n i ?' lounge, a<lb/>
11<lb/>
Cep1 ion room, a n pai loi. a<lb/>
room en. i<lb/>
<lb/>
as i '?  ,lity are<lb/>
the fun ? will b i<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Homo Ec Club Plans<lb/>
Second Clothes Drive<lb/>
,i<lb/>
?<lb/>
Iuesda)<lb/>
1 i<lb/>
 ednesda<lb/>
nun<lb/>
M<lb/>
late to obta<lb/>
, . . ! ie facil ' i<lb/>
iltj B i ?<lb/>
i. , . . rov id<lb/>
?  Mi v i I . am<lb/>
Speaks- To Metl<lb/>
i r<lb/>
. I<lb/>
i 'oi ' e "r- ?? ' '<lb/>
??i , Bul '<lb/>
.  r m '? ? ?? ' ' '?' ?<lb/>
fice f0 the c Hegi fa- ultj<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
i  ?<lb/>
 offici for<lb/>
the b a. of Field Sen ic<lb/>
. i v.  11<lb/>
I also ? . ?<lb/>
? ?' <lb/>
 D. Duncan, and en<lb/>
the facuitj am, stafi including i ta d last falL<lb/>
College Students<lb/>
COME IN AND SEE<lb/>
OUR FINK SELECTION OF SUITS and COATS<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
FOR THE BE WEAR<lb/>
M ERIT SHOES<lb/>
?.<lb/>
4<lb/>
K)OT LONG HOTDOGS<lb/>
25c<lb/>
CHICKEN AND SHRIMP<lb/>
IN-THE-BOX<lb/>
WILL DELIVER ANY ORDER OF<lb/>
$3.00 OR MORE<lb/>
Just Dial 5741<lb/>
GREENVIEW DRIVE-IN<lb/>
West End Circle<lb/>
I dlege seniors majoring in chem-<lb/>
physics, engineering are<lb/>
to a. ply tor Atomic Energy<lb/>
i 'onimis ? onsored graduate 1 1-<lb/>
lowshrpe ? radiological physics for<lb/>
?' i 105 1-55 school year.<lb/>
. doj - - L; i new and<lb/>
ng field of scii nee. It is<lb/>
cerned with health physics, radiation<lb/>
ring and i ontrol, radio s? I<lb/>
measurements, and similar activities<lb/>
as; ociat d with the use of radioi<lb/>
r the reh as of nuclear energy.<lb/>
As many as 75 f ??? - maj<lb/>
be awarded. with fully-accredited<lb/>
luate study to<lb/>
loca<lb/>
? rate .<lb/>
ler '?'<lb/>
the A .<lb/>
? Univi<lb/>
N'atii :<lb/>
Basic st<lb/>
  carr i d out in<lb/>
I t : gram i<lb/>
v rsit of Roches r<lb/>
; a ratory,<lb/>
University of Wa i-<lb/>
Hai f r I Works of<lb/>
e third I y Vander-<lb/>
and  e Oak Ridge<lb/>
<lb/>
When You Shop at<lb/>
JOHN LAI TARES<lb/>
JEWELER<lb/>
i can be sure of friendly, personal<lb/>
?? bai ked by years uf invaluable<lb/>
? . Iet us help you in (hints-<lb/>
arved<lb/>
DIAMOND RINGS<lb/>
tip,  for fellows is $1,60<lb/>
er ? ? ar, with an allow ance  <lb/>
irried and $350 r i ach le-<lb/>
nt child. 1' vi rsit y tuition and<lb/>
r quin I fees will be paid by the Oak<lb/>
Ridg In tit ute of NTuclear St i s,<lb/>
adn nisters the program for<lb/>
the AEC.<lb/>
Add  information concerning<lb/>
the program may be obtained from<lb/>
cience department heads or by writ-<lb/>
ing the University Relations Division<lb/>
of the ak Ridge Institute of Nu-<lb/>
clear Studies, PO Box 117. oak<lb/>
Ridge, Tenn.<lb/>
TELEPHONE JOBS<lb/>
OPEN TO GRADS<lb/>
I M. Raby of the Carolina Tele-<lb/>
? and Telegraph Company, Tar-<lb/>
ro, has announced that the Traffic<lb/>
Di partment of the company has sev-<lb/>
eral vacancies which he would like<lb/>
to fill with H'o-l graduates.<lb/>
The ; roposed jobs would concern<lb/>
working as or with operating per-<lb/>
sonnel and as an ultimate to become<lb/>
a part of sup' rvisory management<lb/>
 the Traffic Department. This<lb/>
ork is highly specialized; therefore,<lb/>
he employee must go through a<lb/>
raining period.<lb/>
Any 1954 graduate interested in<lb/>
 irk of this sun, should contact<lb/>
'r. Raby and arrange for a personal<lb/>
nterview.<lb/>
A tcarved Diamond R ? been beloved by<lb/>
for more than 100 years, rheii beauty, quality and<lb/>
are unexcelled. Each rinj: is guaranteed and registei<lb/>
us and I trtcart ed.<lb/>
-<lb/>
. ' ?. -<lb/>
JOHN LAUTARES<lb/>
JEWELER<lb/>
Opposite Belk-Tyler<lb/>
She was just the chimney sweep's<lb/>
daughter, but she soots me fine.<lb/>
 Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
45 RPM Accessories j<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE <lb/>
a uiTornad<lb/>
yrtcarved j?<lb/>
?!??! ??-<lb/>
1<lb/>
J. C. PENNEY CO.<lb/>
"Always First Quality"<lb/>
WE CARRY THE VERY<lb/>
LATEST STYLES FOR<lb/>
COLLEGE WEAR<lb/>
Kares Restaurant<lb/>
For That Extra Snack<lb/>
Golden Brown, Buttered<lb/>
W A F F L E S<lb/>
F r Pruj v'<lb/>
BIG GS<lb/>
Pn<lb/>
Open 8 A. M. 10 P. !<lb/>
i<lb/>
Vint<lb/>
I) R r (, STO R E<lb/>
- . .<lb/>
4 P. M10 P. M.<lb/>
MMV<lb/>
AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR<lb/>
2-WAY CIGARETTE<lb/>
THE QUALITY YOU WANT<lb/>
No matter which size Chesterfield<lb/>
you buy you get the same premium<lb/>
quality cigarette, and all the flavor<lb/>
and mildness that goes with it! You<lb/>
get the world's best tobaccos, sek cted<lb/>
by Chesterfield buyers with the help<lb/>
of our researcli chemists . . . and<lb/>
proven, by actual tobacco tests, to be<lb/>
highest in quality.<lb/>
THE LOW NICOTINE YOU WANT THE PROOF YOU OUGHT TO HAVE<lb/>
Before we buy tobaccos for Chester-<lb/>
fields, our laboratories take samples<lb/>
from all over the tobacco country<lb/>
and analyze them for low nicotine<lb/>
content. The extra care pays off! In<lb/>
recent "tobacco tests the six h ailing<lb/>
brands of cigarettes were chemically<lb/>
analyzed. The findings: of them all,<lb/>
Chesterfield is highest in quality ?<lb/>
low in nicotine.<lb/>
A group of C!1- st rfi Id<lb/>
amiru d by a d ct r c v? ry tv<lb/>
two y tts. ? them ? on ti.<lb/>
been smoking i field for well over 1 vears<lb/>
The doctoi 's t tmin w <lb/>
no adverse effects to<lb/>
the nose, throat and<lb/>
sinuses from smoking<lb/>
Chesterfield.<lb/>
C nsider Ch st rfield's re ?<lb/>
I with thea smokers ?<lb/>
with mil other<lb/>
smok( rs tl I Amer-<lb/>
ica. Change to Chesterfield<lb/>
and enjoy tin tast and mildness you want ?<lb/>
highest in quality?low in nicotine?best for you'<lb/>
T!i<lb/>
<lb/>
Capfujbi 19V. Uactn ? Mrm Tcmx? Ca<lb/>
<pb facs="00038339_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>