<?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="00038340_0001"/>
5r on<lb/>
pr?i?ct,<lb/>
c on<lb/>
Ptg<lb/>
It Pays To Do Business<lb/>
With Those Businesses<lb/>
That Advertise With Us<lb/>
 (<lb/>
LUME XXIX<lb/>
Easttfarolininn<lb/>
Attend Chapel Services<lb/>
Each Tuesday At Noon<lb/>
In Austin Auditorium<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1954<lb/>
All-State Band Clinic<lb/>
Here Next Week End<lb/>
'<lb/>
Carter, Gray Conduct<lb/>
110-Piece Ensemble<lb/>
At Three-Day Event<lb/>
East Carolina College will be host<lb/>
110 high school musicians, re,pre-<lb/>
ng rods in 30 schools of the<lb/>
w on the Eastern Division of<lb/>
 State Band Clinic holds its<lb/>
 meeting on the campus here<lb/>
. j and Saturday, February 5 and<lb/>
Robert Gray of the East Carolina<lb/>
music department, chairman<lb/>
targe of arrangements this year,<lb/>
- announced a full program of<lb/>
for the visitors. Activities of<lb/>
: e clinic will include, he states,<lb/>
instruction for performers on<lb/>
the various instruments of the band,<lb/>
is of a Clinic Band to be<lb/>
?n the campus, two even-<lb/>
 rts open to the public, and<lb/>
vents for participants.<lb/>
k rt L. Carter, director of the<lb/>
Carolina College concert and<lb/>
ands, will serve as conduct-<lb/>
110-piece Clinic Band. A<lb/>
lent of the North Carolina<lb/>
Association and for<lb/>
years chairman of the annual<lb/>
re, Carter was chosen for the<lb/>
r by request of band directors in<lb/>
iction of the state.<lb/>
Qg concerts by the East Caro-<lb/>
ege Band and the Clinic Band<lb/>
i vents of chief public interest<lb/>
rig the meeting here.<lb/>
The College band will honor visitors<lb/>
a program in the College Theatre<lb/>
'? 8 p. m. Friday, February 5. The<lb/>
? Band, presenting high school<lb/>
cians dressed in their colorful<lb/>
I uniforms, will play Saturday<lb/>
, Wright auditorium at 8 p. m.<lb/>
Waldemar Bhosys of New "Vork<lb/>
a specialist in such instruments<lb/>
the oboe and the bassoon, will<lb/>
. a1 3 p. m. each day and will<lb/>
group instructions to visiting<lb/>
im ntalist.<lb/>
Practice sessions conducted by band<lb/>
:tors from schools in eastern<lb/>
Carolina have been scheduled<lb/>
.  morning.<lb/>
events of the clinic will<lb/>
a dance for student visitors<lb/>
. at 9 p. m. and a luncheon at<lb/>
Saturday, at which visiting<lb/>
?ectora will be guest of East<lb/>
ina College.<lb/>
Head Clinic<lb/>
Order Invitations<lb/>
Orders for commencement in-<lb/>
vitations will be taken Tuesday<lb/>
and Wednesday, from 5 to 7 p.m.<lb/>
in the dining hall lobby, an-<lb/>
nounced Royce J or don, president<lb/>
of the Senior Class.<lb/>
Royce urges all seniors who<lb/>
plan to graduate in May to give<lb/>
their orders next week, because<lb/>
the representative from the Star<lb/>
Engraving Co. will be here only<lb/>
on those two days.<lb/>
Herbert Carter<lb/>
Robert Gray<lb/>
ECC Benefactor<lb/>
Dies In Kinston<lb/>
Dr. J. Y. Joyner, North Carolina's<lb/>
"Grand Old Man of public school<lb/>
education and for many years state<lb/>
superintendent of Public Instruction,<lb/>
died in Kinston Sunday afternoon<lb/>
after a brief illness.<lb/>
Dr. Joyner is given credit in aiding<lb/>
the establishment of East Carolina<lb/>
College during his term of office as<lb/>
state superintendent from 1900 to<lb/>
1919. He was also the first chairman<lb/>
of trustees at the college.<lb/>
Both the present and the new li-<lb/>
brary (which is now being completed)<lb/>
were named for Dr. Jovner.<lb/>
Reporter Summarizes Speeches<lb/>
Of Spiritual Emphasis Week<lb/>
by Joyce Smith<lb/>
? Ar<lb/>
?<lb/>
I Spiritual Emphasis Week<lb/>
were brought out by the<lb/>
kers on the campus for the occa-<lb/>
All based their talks around<lb/>
: 'This Nation Under God?<lb/>
Moral and Spiritual Heritage<lb/>
! mes G. Huggins gave the<lb/>
. Iress. His topic was "Spir-<lb/>
i mdations of American Life:<lb/>
They?" The main points<lb/>
? by Dr. Huggins wore<lb/>
jnty of God and the belief<lb/>
a rth of the individual. He<lb/>
the fact that the found-<lb/>
hera stated their religious<lb/>
right in th constitution.<lb/>
student and faculty assem-<lb/>
tfonday night, Dr. Gordon W.<lb/>
was the speaker. His topic<lb/>
?Maintaining the Spiritual Foun-<lb/>
tioi . How We Abandoned Our<lb/>
tual Foundations He pointed<lb/>
?? too much emphasis is placed<lb/>
at s known as "famous las<lb/>
Why call them famous?<lb/>
f el that they know all there<lb/>
know about human relationship,<lb/>
fore, they think their work is<lb/>
Dr. Love joy brought out the<lb/>
? s fact that people of the world<lb/>
are full of prejudice. How can<lb/>
rejudiee be overcome? You, the<lb/>
luai has to make the change.<lb/>
r people can only make sugges-<lb/>
. he said.<lb/>
Rev. William W. Finlator,<lb/>
taker on Wednesday night, spoke<lb/>
on "The American Way versus the<lb/>
I'ommunist Way: What Are the Ba-<lb/>
sic Conflicts?" Mr. Finlator brought<lb/>
ut that America and Rassia are<lb/>
the hope or doom of the world to-<lb/>
morrow. He also pointed out that<lb/>
while Americans think the nation<lb/>
needs spiritual background, the Com-<lb/>
munists think you need materialism.<lb/>
The Americans believe in the worth<lb/>
of the individual while Communists<lb/>
think of people in masses. Mr. Fin-<lb/>
lator gave an illustration that ex-<lb/>
plained this. A group of men were<lb/>
charged with being disloyal to the<lb/>
Russian government. When asked if<lb/>
they would receive a fair trial, the<lb/>
answer was "yes and then shot<lb/>
The point was also brought out<lb/>
that people can have such a fear of<lb/>
omething that while trying their<lb/>
best to avoid it, they absorb the<lb/>
very thing they try to avoid. This is<lb/>
rue communism.<lb/>
EPO Initiates<lb/>
23 New Members<lb/>
The Sigma Rho Phi, service fra-<lb/>
ternity on campus, initiated 23 new<lb/>
members in their group last week-<lb/>
end, announced George Tucker, presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Beginning Thursday morning of<lb/>
last week, each new member under-<lb/>
went a planned program consisting<lb/>
of practical stunts and w-2re "tor-<lb/>
tured" by wearing coats and ties to<lb/>
classes on Friday.<lb/>
New members of the EPO fraterni-<lb/>
ty are: Jimmy Parkins, Johnny<lb/>
Gaines, Bob Owens, Anwer Joseph,<lb/>
Walter Humphrey, Bob Chambers,<lb/>
Richard E. Jvey, Bill Loving, Brucn<lb/>
Phillips, "Toppy" Hayes, Harry Rain-<lb/>
ey, Wayne Shoe, Emo Boado, Nor-<lb/>
wood Talton, Charles Helms, Wilburn<lb/>
Pope, Jimmy Glowers, Bob Julian,<lb/>
Harold Colson, Darron Flowers, Tuc-<lb/>
ker Smith, Kenneth Holt and Howard<lb/>
McAdams.<lb/>
Dr. Keister Finds<lb/>
Second Talent<lb/>
Useful In Recital<lb/>
Versatility as a musician proved<lb/>
helpful to Dr. Elwood Keister of the<lb/>
East Carolina College department of<lb/>
mu.sic Tuesday night. When a case of<lb/>
laryngitis prevented his singing a<lb/>
scheduled program of songs, he gave<lb/>
a recital of works for the violin.<lb/>
Dr. Keister, with his wife Gloria,<lb/>
pianist, as accompanist, played in<lb/>
the Autin auditorium on the campus<lb/>
b fore an audience of approximately<lb/>
:00 people from the college and the<lb/>
city of Greenville. The recital was<lb/>
sponsored by the college department<lb/>
of music as one of a series of pro-<lb/>
grams given during the school year<lb/>
by faculty members.<lb/>
Selections on Tuesday's program<lb/>
were received with enthusiastic ap-<lb/>
plause and Dr. and Mrs. Keister<lb/>
were ecalled to the stage for a<lb/>
number of encores. Of chief interest<lb/>
was Dr. Krister artistic and sym-<lb/>
pathetic interpretation of the "Sonata<lb/>
"or Violin and Piano in A Major" by<lb/>
Cesar Franck.<lb/>
Other numbers included works for<lb/>
the violin by Kreisler, Glazounow,<lb/>
Haesche, Brahms, and Samuel Gard-<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
After the evening's program Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Herbert Carter entertained<lb/>
informally in honor of Dr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Keister. Members of the college music<lb/>
department and other guests were<lb/>
present to congratulate the local<lb/>
artists On their performance.<lb/>
Number 16<lb/>
Teacher-Rating Test On Tap<lb/>
SGA Sets Polio Dance Tonight;<lb/>
Approves Constitution Changes<lb/>
The March of Dimes dance will be<lb/>
held tonight following the basketball<lb/>
game with Western Carolina. This<lb/>
dance will be held in Wright audi-<lb/>
torium with a combo furnishing the<lb/>
music, under tbe direction of Robert<lb/>
-Coon" Williams.<lb/>
Late permission has been obtained<lb/>
for the girls until 11:45 p. m.<lb/>
This among other items of business<lb/>
was discussed at Wednesday night's<lb/>
Student Legislature meeting. It was<lb/>
voted that $10 be retained from the<lb/>
gate receipts to pay the combo. All<lb/>
?ther receipts will be donated to the<lb/>
March of Dimes drive.<lb/>
Previously the March of Dimes<lb/>
German Refugee<lb/>
Tells Experience<lb/>
To Westminster<lb/>
Hettie Anders, a missionary of the<lb/>
Presbyterian Church, was guest<lb/>
speaker at the Westminster Fellow-<lb/>
ship meeting Monday night.<lb/>
Miss Ar 'ers, a German Jewish<lb/>
refuge- of World War II, fled from<lb/>
Germany to Rome and Shanghai be-<lb/>
fore arrivir in the United States.<lb/>
She related her experiences as a<lb/>
refugee. She went to Shanghai be-<lb/>
cause that was the only place where<lb/>
entrance visas were no4 ecessary.<lb/>
When she arrived there, "I only had<lb/>
$120 she said.<lb/>
She added that she was the only<lb/>
member of her family not 'iqu dated<lb/>
by the Nazis in the Hitl r regime.<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi Frat<lb/>
Sends Invitations<lb/>
To Five Students<lb/>
Because of their excellent scholas-<lb/>
tic records in the department of busi-<lb/>
ness education at East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege, five students have been chosen as<lb/>
members of the Beta Kappa chapter<lb/>
of Pi Omega Pi, national honor frat-<lb/>
ernity, according to an announcement<lb/>
by Peggy Nash of Durham, presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Students honored by the invitation<lb/>
to membership are Bobbie Jean Cred-<lb/>
le, Swan Quarter; John C. Furlong,<lb/>
Wilminton; Emil G. Massad, Benson;<lb/>
Mildred Rouse Suits, Greenville and<lb/>
Kinston; and Lloyd W. Whitley, Pine-<lb/>
tops.<lb/>
A pledge service for the new mem-<lb/>
bers is scheduled for February 15<lb/>
and is now being arranged. Donald<lb/>
McGlohon of Winterville, vice presi-<lb/>
dent, will preside. Formal initiation of<lb/>
the five honor students into the<lb/>
fraternity will take place during the<lb/>
spring quarter.<lb/>
dance was scheduled for last Thmu-<lb/>
day night after the ball game, but<lb/>
due to several conflicts, the dance<lb/>
was postponed until tonight. Health<lb/>
authoratives would not approve late<lb/>
.emission to girls for a week night,<lb/>
according to the Administration. Also<lb/>
a number of mid-term exams were<lb/>
being given on Friday. As another<lb/>
factor in postponing the dance, a<lb/>
combo could be obtained tonight, but<lb/>
only recorded music could be offered<lb/>
for last Thursday night.<lb/>
Approve Revisions<lb/>
Members of the Student Legislature<lb/>
unaminously accepted revisions and<lb/>
changes in the constitution. These<lb/>
changes and revisions will go into<lb/>
effect soon.<lb/>
Barbara Greenstein and Betsy Hob-<lb/>
good are in charge of the committee<lb/>
to investigate the constitutional re-<lb/>
visions.<lb/>
The "East Carolinian" will publish<lb/>
the revisions and changes in the com-<lb/>
ing issue.<lb/>
Official Lost And Found<lb/>
Official Lost and Found Bureau<lb/>
was named by the body as the Alumni<lb/>
offices now occupied in the former<lb/>
Home Management building. Alumni<lb/>
secretary James W. Butler was elected<lb/>
to head the bureau. All lost and found<lb/>
articles should be reported or turned<lb/>
in at this location.<lb/>
Two student members were added<lb/>
io the teacher criticism committee,<lb/>
Jimmy Winstead and Jimmy Alexan-<lb/>
der.<lb/>
A motion was passed that will en-<lb/>
able the Production Committee to<lb/>
have $100 more to spend. The com-<lb/>
mittee will receive $100 from the de-<lb/>
posit of musical scores and will be<lb/>
able to invest this return in the pro-<lb/>
duction for other expenses.<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
8 p.m.?East Carolina plays host<lb/>
to Western Carolina Teachers College.<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
7 p.m.?Donald O'Connor and Deb-<lb/>
hie Reynolds will co-star in the movie,<lb/>
"I Love Melvin' which will be<lb/>
shown in Austin auditorium.<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
8 p.m.?East Carolina will play<lb/>
Atlantic C1 .otian College here.<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
6:30 p.m.?"Y" Vespers<lb/>
conducted in the "Y" Hut.<lb/>
will be<lb/>
Thursday to Saturday<lb/>
All-State High School Band Clinic<lb/>
will convene here.<lb/>
Comedienne Comes<lb/>
To East Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday Evening<lb/>
Radio-TV Schedule<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
1:30 p.m.?WPTF, Raleigh, will<lb/>
resent the concert of Delores<lb/>
Mathews, clarinetist.<lb/>
2-2.30 p. mWNCT television,<lb/>
Greenville, will feature George E.<lb/>
Perry and Biupfbeth Drake, duo<lb/>
pianist.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
9:30 a.m.?WRRF, Washington,<lb/>
will present organ reveries by George<lb/>
E. Perry.<lb/>
2 p.m.?WGTM, Wilson, will pre-<lb/>
ent excerpts from Spiritual Empha-<lb/>
i? Week.<lb/>
9:30 p.m.?WGTC, Greenville, will<lb/>
present "Books Behind the News"<lb/>
with Dr. E. D. Johnson as commen-<lb/>
tator.<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
WFTC, Kinston, will present Oi<lb/>
gan Reveries by George E. Perry.<lb/>
Time will be announced later.<lb/>
YWCA Donates<lb/>
To International<lb/>
Christian Group<lb/>
On Monday night, January 25, the<lb/>
YWCA held its monthly meeting in<lb/>
the Y hut. After the devotion by-<lb/>
President Maidred Morris, the mem-<lb/>
-ers passed a motion to send $20 to<lb/>
the World Student Christian Federa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The members also discussed plans<lb/>
por securing a bulletin board for the<lb/>
Y hut.<lb/>
Lena Taylor and Joyce Gurley<lb/>
were nominated to head a committee<lb/>
on electing new officers for 1954-55.<lb/>
A committee composed of advisors<lb/>
Dr. Elizabeth Utterback and Miss<lb/>
Hazel Clark, Maidred Morris, Eileen<lb/>
Tilley and Jo Ann Lee were elected<lb/>
to work on the Basic Standard Re-<lb/>
port for the evaluation of the YWCA<lb/>
rom 1952-1955.<lb/>
New Joyner Library Nears Completion<lb/>
Anna Russell, international concert<lb/>
comedienne, promises- to be the most<lb/>
popular attraction on the East Caro-<lb/>
lina Entrtainment Series for the cur-<lb/>
rent season and interest among con-<lb/>
cert-goers over a wide area is being<lb/>
shown n her appearance on the cam-<lb/>
pus Tuesday, February 2.<lb/>
Her program at the college will<lb/>
be presented under the auspices of<lb/>
th East Carolina Entertainment Com-<lb/>
mittee, headed by Alumni Secretary<lb/>
Tames W. Butler, and will take place<lb/>
at 8 p. m. in the Wright building.<lb/>
Tickets priced at $1.80 for adults and<lb/>
$1.20 for children are now available<lb/>
at the Alumni Office on the campus.<lb/>
Students will be admitted on their<lb/>
activity card.<lb/>
As singer and actress Miss Rus-<lb/>
sell gives a program at once hilarious<lb/>
and informative, during which she<lb/>
pokes fun at opera and at musical<lb/>
highbrows in general. A musical<lb/>
training at the Royal College of<lb/>
Music, where she studied with Ralph<lb/>
Vaugh and Williams, and a natural<lb/>
flair fcr being funny have combined "good<lb/>
Students Grade<lb/>
Faculty Members<lb/>
February 15-20<lb/>
Studnts here will have the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to "grade" their instructor<lb/>
during the week of February 15-20,<lb/>
announced Louis Clark, chairman of<lb/>
the teacher-rating committee of the<lb/>
Student Government. Frank Fuller of<lb/>
the education department is assisting<lb/>
in the program.<lb/>
Conferences will be held during the<lb/>
latter part of this week with students<lb/>
and faculty to name members of an<lb/>
evaluation committee who will make<lb/>
the final tabulations for rating in-<lb/>
structors as a whole. The committee<lb/>
will consist of six students and three<lb/>
faculty members.<lb/>
During the testing week, studenta<lb/>
will rate the instructor of each of<lb/>
their classes on a form sheet. The<lb/>
sheet is divided into five categories:<lb/>
subject matter, classroom procedure,<lb/>
grading and testing, student relation<lb/>
and personality. In addition, there<lb/>
are several miscellaneous items.<lb/>
Students will not sign their names<lb/>
to the rating sheet. The instructor<lb/>
will compile the averages taken from<lb/>
all the rating sheets submitted and<lb/>
record it on one tabulation sheet,<lb/>
which he will present to the evalua-<lb/>
tion committee.<lb/>
Louis points out that "the real<lb/>
purpose and value of the rating seal<lb/>
still lies in the instructor's analysis<lb/>
of his own weakness. The rating<lb/>
sheets are also to help us improve<lb/>
instruction in this college When<lb/>
rating the instructor, "at all tinier<lb/>
be frank, but without prejudice<lb/>
Louis urges.<lb/>
This will mark the second rate-<lb/>
the-instructor program at East Caro-<lb/>
lina. During the winter quarter of<lb/>
1951, the program was initiated with<lb/>
Mr. Fuller as chairman of the eval-<lb/>
uation committee. The findings of<lb/>
the committee showed that approxi-<lb/>
mately 90 per cent of the faculty<lb/>
turned in reports reprasenting 5,900<lb/>
student ratings. On every question<lb/>
answered of the 1951 program, tbe<lb/>
threes far outnumbered the ones and<lb/>
the twos. Three is the grade for<lb/>
two is "fair and one ia<lb/>
to put her at the top as a comedinne.<lb/>
Press notices from many parts of<lb/>
the United States gives her such<lb/>
enthusiastic acclaim as "a riot "a<lb/>
scream "priceless and unforget-<lb/>
table "solid currency in any market<lb/>
and "a scholar, a wit and an actress<lb/>
"poor<lb/>
Some questions which will be in-<lb/>
cluded on the rating sheet are: "Does<lb/>
the teacher seem to know his field?"<lb/>
"Ts he interesting in his presentation<lb/>
of material?" "Does the teacher<lb/>
willing to help students?"<lb/>
Audience Applauds Playhou<lb/>
Musical Comedy "Banana Moon<lb/>
Pictured here is the new $900,000 Joyner Library bow being completed on the East Carolina campo. Date<lb/>
of completion is not definite, however, it is believed the new structure will be ready for occupancy before fall<lb/>
quarter of this year. It will replace the present Joyner Librar?, which is located near Wright Circle. Both buildings<lb/>
are dedicated to Dr. J. Y. Joyner, former superintendent of State Public Instruction who died Sanday at th<lb/>
age of 91.<lb/>
"Banana Moon musical comedy<lb/>
produced by students at East Caro-<lb/>
lina College under the auspices of<lb/>
the Teacher's Playhouse Monday eve-<lb/>
ning of this week, drew an audience<lb/>
of approximatly 300 people.<lb/>
Much of the credit for the per-<lb/>
formance is due to Douglas Mitchell<lb/>
of Greenville, who adapted the play<lb/>
from Laurence Riley's "Return En-<lb/>
gag rnent" and acted as director; to<lb/>
Patricia Goodwin of Havelock, who<lb/>
wrote the music and appeared in<lb/>
the cast; and to other members of<lb/>
the production staff.<lb/>
The musical was attractively stag-<lb/>
ed, and colorful and artistic cos-<lb/>
uming and lighting effects contrib-<lb/>
uted greatly to the success of the<lb/>
production. Jean Tetterton of Green-<lb/>
ville, stage manager, designed and<lb/>
supervised the building of the sets;<lb/>
an Ernest White of Waynesboro, Va.<lb/>
lanned the lighting. Betty Sue WU-<lb/>
Hams of Jackson was in charge of<lb/>
make-up. Miss Goodwin and Rachel<lb/>
Mundine of Newport were accompa-<lb/>
nists.<lb/>
Sev ral dances were included in th<lb/>
evening's program, for which Susie<lb/>
Denton of Raleigh served as ;hore?f<lb/>
rapher. Featured dancers were Miss<lb/>
Denton, Charbs E. Shearon of Dur-<lb/>
ham, Hannah Phelps of Raleigh and-<lb/>
Mary Dunn Beatty of Greetrr?H<lb/>
Romantic leads in the story<lb/>
summer soek company ytwt.<lb/>
?' f JeanneP)rllcif:i;oi?5 <lb/>
City and James L. Thompson<lb/>
Durham, and Miss Pritehcrd, a<lb/>
prano, had a leading a??i<lb/>
Successful" in par gfvtag<lb/>
sieal tto-4s?atMal<lb/>
Jane Lingle of China<lb/>
Martin of W iHUttMrte?<lb/>
of WhiteviUe,<lb/>
Swan Quarter and Robert Gas<lb/>
Rocky Mount.<lb/>
Minor parts wereyei m t<lb/>
Sloan of Chinquapin, Jmm Ms<lb/>
Willow Springs, James Wl<lb/>
Asheboro, and Patricia<lb/>
Appearing in dance<lb/>
ing the evening in<lb/>
featured dancers .weft DEst?<lb/>
of Petersburg, Va Fay Um n .<lb/>
Gieenville, Ethel .Marcer sf<lb/>
ington and Elimbdfeb Das?;<lb/>
mington.<lb/>
Faculty<lb/>
HowTehpaKf<lb/>
Insl<lb/>
How to improve<lb/>
ccikg lev! was<lb/>
of<lb/>
Coifc?<lb/>
ing of the<lb/>
Ft<lb/>
lee<lb/>
dttCi<lb/>
<pb facs="00038340_0002"/><lb/>
FA3?,TWO<lb/>
THW<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 29. 1954<lb/>
? - j. ?-<lb/>
FRlP-1<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
- tt.v.a WooVlv bv the students of East Carolina<lb/>
" Phono 12. East Carolina College<lb/>
For News and Advertising<lb/>
Name changed from TF.CO ECHO November 7, 1952.<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925 at the<lb/>
U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under the act of<lb/>
March 3, 1879.<lb/>
Ye Editor's<lb/>
by T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Who's Who Am?ng Students At East Carolina<lb/>
Day Student Prexy Active In Dramatics,<lb/>
? 1 1  l??,i;? no<lb/>
Music<lb/>
POT POURR1<lb/>
by Emily S. Boyc<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
First Place Ratine, CSPA Convention, March, 1953<lb/>
EDITORIAL STAFF<lb/>
E-diter-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/>
Mathewa.<lb/>
Betty Salmons<lb/>
Mary H. Greene<lb/>
SrORTS STAFF<lb/>
Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Bruce Phillips, Answer Joseph and<lb/>
David Evans<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Business Manager Edna Massad<lb/>
Assistant Business Manager Faye Jones<lb/>
Business Assistants Edna Whitfield,<lb/>
Mary Ellen Williams and Jean Godwin.<lb/>
CIRCULATION<lb/>
SGA Reporter<lb/>
Facuky Advisor<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Sports Assistnats<lb/>
Spiritual Emphasis Week on the<lb/>
East Carolina campus last week prov-<lb/>
ed to be helpful for a number of<lb/>
students, according to reports. If the<lb/>
week's program only aided one stu-<lb/>
dent to a better way of life, then it<lb/>
was well worth the time and expense.<lb/>
We feel that a lot was learned<lb/>
from this team of five men well<lb/>
trained and educated in their field.<lb/>
Certainly they presented new ideas<lb/>
and refreshed old knowledge.<lb/>
 Commendations should be in order<lb/>
to Dr. Carl V. Harris, director of<lb/>
religious activities, the Interreligious<lb/>
Council and its president, Parker<lb/>
Marks. With Dr. Harris as the co-<lb/>
ordinator of the group the council<lb/>
made Spiritual Emphasis Week pos-<lb/>
sible.<lb/>
ii you aon" happen to be familiar<lb/>
with this week's Who's Who, Carolyn<lb/>
Clapp, be sure to attend the Teach-<lb/>
er's Playhouse production of "John<lb/>
Loves Mary There you will see<lb/>
Carolyn in the leading part of be-<lb/>
wildered Mary. Carolyn, who is a<lb/>
senior from Greenville, is majoring<lb/>
in Primary Education, but is most<lb/>
interested in dramatics, and has done<lb/>
much in that field while attending<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
A member of the Teacher's Play<lb/>
house for three years, she has taken<lb/>
leading arts in the productions, "You<lb/>
Can't Take It With You "Every<lb/>
Man "Charley's Aunt" and "John<lb/>
Loves Mary She was also student<lb/>
director of two of the plays and<lb/>
served as secretary of the organiza-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Interest In Music<lb/>
Carolyn is also very interested in<lb/>
music and has taken all of her elec-<lb/>
tive in that field. She plays the<lb/>
organ<lb/>
Carolyn Clapp<lb/>
Episcopal Church and<lb/>
especially enjoys playing for her<lb/>
a leading part and will also<lb/>
serve as student director in the<lb/>
musical "Blossom Time which will<lb/>
:e presented this spring.<lb/>
During the past three years, she<lb/>
ias been a member of the Women's<lb/>
Chorus and the College Choir.<lb/>
Carolyn was vice-president of th<lb/>
Women's Day Students last year<lb/>
and serves as president this yai.<lb/>
Last year she took a big interest<lb/>
in the re-decoration of the Women's<lb/>
Day Student Room.<lb/>
Sport Lover<lb/>
"I've always loved sorts Caro-<lb/>
lyo says, "and in high school I played<lb/>
on the boys' tennis team?1 was<lb/>
aumtber five man<lb/>
"I think many people in Greenville<lb/>
Lake East Carolina for granted she<lb/>
-ays, "but to me it is one of the beat<lb/>
and I've enjoyed every minute on<lb/>
this campus. In many ways I ac-<lb/>
tually hate to graduate, but I'm<lb/>
really looking forward to teaching<lb/>
Exchange Editor<lb/>
Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves oii: nor all your piety nor wit,<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,<lb/>
Nor all vour tears wash out a word of it<lb/>
?E. Fitzgerald<lb/>
Constructive Criticism Helpful<lb/>
In a few weeks. February 15-20 to be exact,<lb/>
students will evaluate the instructor of each of<lb/>
their classes.<lb/>
The purpose is to give a critical analysis of<lb/>
the instructor in order that he may recognize his<lb/>
good and bad qualities and in turn aid him to<lb/>
iprove instruction.<lb/>
It is not the intention to present this rate-<lb/>
jr-instruetor program for a means for students<lb/>
"get even" with the faculty, but it is to give<lb/>
individual instructor a better and clearer<lb/>
Fcture of himself. In order for the final tabula-<lb/>
Son of all the rating sheets to be accurate, stu-<lb/>
dents should be fair, and without prejudice, but.<lb/>
above all, be truthful.<lb/>
We feel that members of the faculty will<lb/>
appreciate this testing program, for it is an<lb/>
opportunity for them to know what students are<lb/>
really thinking about them, instead of being sus-<lb/>
picious of the student's outside comments. Some<lb/>
of the questions on the rating sheet may not<lb/>
reveal to the instructor anything new about him-<lb/>
self, but they will help him fully realize the im-<lb/>
portance of improvement.<lb/>
Faculty members should not take lightly the<lb/>
value of their ratings. In examining a sample<lb/>
rating sheet, we find the questions specific and<lb/>
sound, therefore offering concrete, constructive<lb/>
criticism.<lb/>
To the faculty members, they should not<lb/>
worry about embarrassment or loss of job. To<lb/>
repeat, this is constructive criticism and the pur-<lb/>
se is to inform them of any improvements in<lb/>
struction. In the 1951 evaluation program, in-<lb/>
ructors here, as a whole, were rated by the<lb/>
students in the highest rank.<lb/>
To some, the very thought of receiving criti-<lb/>
cism brings dread. However, it is to be noted that<lb/>
criticism may be good or bad.<lb/>
We all have some faults, we must admit,<lb/>
and as long as they go unrecognized, we are apt<lb/>
to do nothing in the way of correcting them. It<lb/>
is always good to know how others see us.<lb/>
Who's Who Among The Asses<lb/>
(From the Heights Daily News, New York Uni-<lb/>
versity)<lb/>
Following are some easy ways to<lb/>
fail a course, as written by Jack<lb/>
Seward for the Oregon State "Ba-<lb/>
rometer<lb/>
Enter the course as late as possi-<lb/>
ble. By changing your mind about<lb/>
the curriculum after the quarter<lb/>
starts, you should be able to avoid<lb/>
classes until the second or third<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Do not bother with a textbook.<lb/>
Put your social life ahead of every-<lb/>
g else. If necessary, cultivate a<lb/>
few friendships in the class. Inter-<lb/>
esting conversation should be able to<lb/>
drown out the noise of the lecture.<lb/>
Make yourself comfortable when<lb/>
you study. If possible, draw up an<lb/>
easy chair by a window.<lb/>
Have a few friends handy during<lb/>
the study period so you can chat<lb/>
when the work becomes dull.<lb/>
II you must study, try to lump it<lb/>
all together and get it over with.<lb/>
The most suitable time would be the<lb/>
last week of school.<lb/>
Avoid bothering with notebooks.<lb/>
If you plan to use one anyhow, so<lb/>
that you can draw pictures of air-<lb/>
planes during the lecture, try to fol-<lb/>
low the simplest arrangement: keep<lb/>
all the notes for a given day on the<lb/>
same sheet of paper.<lb/>
Remind yourself frequently how<lb/>
dull the course is. Never lose sight<lb/>
of the fact that you really wanted to<lb/>
sign op for something else.<lb/>
Review only the night before ex-<lb/>
amination, and confine this to trying<lb/>
to guess what the teacher will ask.<lb/>
Find out exactly when your final<lb/>
examination will be over so that you<lb/>
can plan to forget everything about<lb/>
the course at that moment.<lb/>
Noted Woman Author Writes:<lb/>
Are Youth Better Than Elders?<lb/>
(ACP)?"Young pople never are morality is<lb/>
that it has brought a<lb/>
Couple Of The Week<lb/>
by Erolyn Blount<lb/>
This week's romance began at<lb/>
Campbell College High School, and<lb/>
has continued to thrive here at ECC.<lb/>
Hannah Phelps, a sophomore from<lb/>
Raleigh says, "The first time I saw<lb/>
Paige Creech, also a sophomore from<lb/>
Warwick, Va. I thought, 'Mmm, I'd<lb/>
like to date him so I tried, but to no<lb/>
avail. After a while I gave up then<lb/>
wonder of wonders, he began to notice<lb/>
me<lb/>
Says Paige with a teasing grin,<lb/>
"Aw, I just took pity on her, that's<lb/>
all<lb/>
Hannah and Paige like movies,<lb/>
dancing, boating and swimming. Right<lb/>
now, Paige is teaching Hannah to<lb/>
shoot. This past summer they learned<lb/>
how to water ski together, and also<lb/>
tri d their hand at horseback riding.<lb/>
Says Paige with a laugh, "That didn't<lb/>
Communications from London provided work out too well<lb/>
what they were in somebody else's<lb/>
day<lb/>
So begins another analysis of to-<lb/>
days "lost "silent" and "unkiddable"<lb/>
generation. This one, however, pub-<lb/>
lishea by the St. Louis Post Dispatch,<lb/>
is by a writer who is actually in po-<lb/>
sition to know something about gen-<lb/>
erations?Margaret Mead, author of<lb/>
"Male and Fmale" and associate<lb/>
curator of ethnology at the Ameri-<lb/>
can Museum of Natural History.<lb/>
Anthropologist Mead says that, as<lb/>
far as anyone can guess, dissatis-<lb/>
faction with youth "has been going<lb/>
on since the Stone Age Even in<lb/>
Russia, she writes, where the younger<lb/>
generation has been thoroughly in-<lb/>
doctrinated and deviators have been<lb/>
expelled, "it is pretty doubtful wheth-<lb/>
er middle-aged Communists think<lb/>
young Communists are anything like<lb/>
as devoted to the Party as they were<lb/>
We cannot get an objective apprais-<lb/>
al of the present generation from our<lb/>
elders, therefore; nor, writes Miss<lb/>
Mead, can we yet a definitive answer<lb/>
from the young people themselves.<lb/>
A New Morality<lb/>
Today's youth, according to the<lb/>
noted anthropologist, is the product<lb/>
of a generation that "left their ado-<lb/>
lesc nts with little recourse except<lb/>
to try to work out a new, less con-<lb/>
tradictory and less authoritative<lb/>
morality (than the one imposed by the<lb/>
;revious generation) for themselves.<lb/>
"This new morality, the emerging<lb/>
morality of the 1950s, has a style<lb/>
of its own, and special strength and<lb/>
weaknesses  It can be summed<lb/>
up in a series of phrases. The fami-<lb/>
liar farewell which has replaced<lb/>
?Goodby' (God be with you) is 'Take<lb/>
it easy' . . . The modern version is<lb/>
an exhortation?not to idleness, but<lb/>
to lack of strain. Take it easy, keep<lb/>
your shirt on, don't get excited,<lb/>
you've only one life to live<lb/>
A second significant phrase used<lb/>
by the current generation is "It de-<lb/>
pends on the situation Miss Mead<lb/>
says. "Modern youth is unwilling to<lb/>
say categorically that any act is<lb/>
w-rong. To kill? But they are told<lb/>
it is their place to kill in defense of<lb/>
freedom. Adultery? When every state<lb/>
has different marriage laws? Theft?<lb/>
In a world where the partisan under-<lb/>
grounds of freedom are glorified? It<lb/>
depends on the situation<lb/>
What Is Necessary?<lb/>
shift from the morality of authority<lb/>
based on sacred codes and texts, to<lb/>
a morality of the machine. "Where<lb/>
the young people of li40 still asked<lb/>
'What ought I to do?' these young<lb/>
pec t.le of 1954 ask 'What is necessary<lb/>
to do? says Miss Mead. "And this<lb/>
question is as practicial and clear-<lb/>
cut as questions about mendng the<lb/>
carboretor or buying more gas. There<lb/>
is an answer?in the nature of the<lb/>
situation. If you have no gas, you<lb/>
get out and walk until you get some.<lb/>
There is no appeal to higher authori-<lb/>
ties. You can pray that you will re-<lb/>
member to fill the gas tank, but you<lb/>
do not pray the car will run without<lb/>
gas<lb/>
The new morality, says Miss Mead,<lb/>
; laces all things into this frame-<lb/>
work. "Granted the goals, what are<lb/>
the necessary means? To an adult<lb/>
generation that was often as glib<lb/>
about goals as it was careless of<lb/>
means, that wanted world peace but<lb/>
no League of Nations, world prosper-<lb/>
ity but no deduction of tarriffs, con-<lb/>
tinued 1 mployment but no govern-<lb/>
ment spending, ideal marriages and no<lb/>
sex education . . . these young people<lb/>
pose a question that is salutary and<lb/>
valuable<lb/>
Food<lb/>
For<lb/>
Thought<lb/>
by Wade Cooper, Don King, Ed<lb/>
Mathews and "Buzz" Young<lb/>
Iist week's source of information<lb/>
on the student supply stores was<lb/>
received from Business Manager F.<lb/>
D. Duncan. By error, Lloyd Bray,<lb/>
manager of the stores, was stated<lb/>
as the informative source.<lb/>
T3  r jxin tne rights of suffrage<lb/>
up in some way in these United States. And<lb/>
this year one phase of the suffrage a.<lb/>
firmly placed in public eye when Preside<lb/>
hower established his wishes on the sub<lb/>
his State of the Union message a few<lb/>
His convictions, old now, was that I<lb/>
should amend the US Constitution, i<lb/>
? the age for voting from 21 to li<lb/>
The short sentences he spoke on tl<lb/>
his message has consequently raised th<lb/>
table issue to a vivid level throughout th<lb/>
The "East Carolinian" has pre<lb/>
lished an article concerning this matter, n<lb/>
no stand and merely printing th<lb/>
few students here on campus. Note th<lb/>
appearing under Pot Pourri.<lb/>
President Eisenhower spoke of<lb/>
time of war being summoned to fight for <lb/>
and therefore should participate in th<lb/>
process that created such a summon<lb/>
ment appears to be the only nearly I<lb/>
offered for the lowering of ge ? -<lb/>
the qualities of courage and fightinj<lb/>
as intelligent voting and careful<lb/>
issue? It shouldn't be SO much 1<lb/>
ward for fighting, rather as a respon<lb/>
on a person as a mature citizen. '1;<lb/>
responsibility of voting is one that the 1 ? -y<lb/>
is wholly unprepared to meet and 1<lb/>
successfully. What dors the opposin<lb/>
about the reality (if they lower the aj<lb/>
ment) of dumping millions more ui<lb/>
voters at the polls amidst those unquali<lb/>
at present? No doubt mothers and I<lb/>
enough trouble deciding which man to 1<lb/>
without their teen-age children asking !<lb/>
to vote for. Former president Truman<lb/>
right idea (for once) when he said. "<lb/>
lowering the voting age from 21 to It<lb/>
be better if we raised it to 24.<lb/>
the startling news that the bearded fellows who<lb/>
dig up fossils have made a gross error<lb/>
the mighty Piltdown man, one of the few links<lb/>
between man and mokey, was no man but mostly<lb/>
monkey.<lb/>
This is startling news indeed, for Mr. Pilt-<lb/>
down has held a revered position in biology and<lb/>
history texts used on this campus.<lb/>
Even mighty Sampson should be stirred.<lb/>
Milleniums ago. with the jawbone of an ass, he<lb/>
made a monkey of man. Now the jawbone of a<lb/>
monkey has made an ass of man.<lb/>
Wit And Wisdom<lb/>
There are those who say it pays to worry - -<lb/>
because the things they worry about seldom<lb/>
happen. Proscript, Richmond Professional In-<lb/>
stitute, Va.<lb/>
This Week's Movie<lb/>
by Faye O'Neal<lb/>
A gay song and dince show is "I<lb/>
Love Melvin this week's campus<lb/>
movie. Donald O'Connor and Debbie<lb/>
Reynolds play as co-stars.<lb/>
The film is done in technicolor<lb/>
and is just about average as far as<lb/>
photography goes. The best feature<lb/>
of the movie is, as usually the case<lb/>
in a Debbie Reynolds picture, the<lb/>
music and dancing. O'Connor is<lb/>
slighted by not being allowed to show<lb/>
more of his musical and tapping<lb/>
ability.<lb/>
Debbie portrays a football in one<lb/>
dance number, which is particularly<lb/>
good.<lb/>
"I Love Melvin" is comical<lb/>
throughout. O'Connor is a brash pho-<lb/>
tographer's assistant who falls in<lb/>
love with a Broadway chorine, Debbie<lb/>
Reynolds. She tells him she wants<lb/>
her picture on the cover of his em-<lb/>
ployer's magazine. The big question<lb/>
is does he get it there.<lb/>
The story of the movie is a little<lb/>
below average in our opinion<lb/>
The<lb/>
Women's faults are many; men have only<lb/>
two - - everything they say and everything<lb/>
they do.<lb/>
Copied<lb/>
Good example has twice the value of good<lb/>
auvice. Copied.<lb/>
Look toward the light and your shadows<lb/>
will be behind you. Copied.<lb/>
Disdain not the field of wisdom because<lb/>
you have found a grain of truth.<lb/>
When asked to relate any interest-<lb/>
ing experiences they might have had<lb/>
during the two year's they've been<lb/>
going together, Paige said, "Well the<lb/>
only ones I can seem to remember<lb/>
now are the times the president of<lb/>
Campbell College caught us kissing.<lb/>
He used to lecture to us, trying his<lb/>
to be stern, but after all he'd<lb/>
been young once too<lb/>
Hannah and Paige went to see<lb/>
the pageant at Boone this past sum-<lb/>
mer, while there, they climbed<lb/>
Mt. Mitchell. They alsospent a week<lb/>
at Wrightsville with Hannah's mother.<lb/>
They seem to have divided the<lb/>
holiday, pretty well. Hannah spends<lb/>
New Year's and a week in the summer<lb/>
at Paige's home, while Paige spends<lb/>
Easter and a few days during the<lb/>
winter at Hannah's. Says Paige, "The<lb/>
first time I visited Hannah, Mrs.<lb/>
Phelps thought I was a ministerial<lb/>
student because so many go to Camp-<lb/>
bell College. Boy, did she watch her<lb/>
P's and Q's<lb/>
After finishing school, Paige, who<lb/>
is majoring in business, hopes to own<lb/>
and operate a retail store. Hannah,<lb/>
who is majoring in science, doesn't<lb/>
know what she wants to do. Waiting<lb/>
for something, Hannah?<lb/>
(Editor's NoteFor being named<lb/>
Couple of the Week, Hannah and<lb/>
Paige will each receive a gift from<lb/>
Saslow'g Jewelers and a ticket to the<lb/>
Pitt Theatre.)<lb/>
final characteristic of the new show is worth seeing, however.<lb/>
"Boy, we just got the girls home in time?Smiley wouldaa boati<lb/>
dosed in another 10 minntes<lb/>
Now that the basketball season is<lb/>
two-thirds over you might think that<lb/>
we are a little late with an article<lb/>
about it. But after hearing a number<lb/>
of people griping, we believe it is<lb/>
still a topic open for discussion.<lb/>
After a talk with Coach Howard<lb/>
Porter we find some very good an-<lb/>
swers to the much repeated question:<lb/>
"Why don't we have a better basket-<lb/>
ball schedule?" By "belter schedule"<lb/>
we assume it is meant more games<lb/>
and better opponents.<lb/>
Those of us who saw last year's UN<lb/>
C-ECC game will remember it as out-<lb/>
standing from the spectators' point<lb/>
of view. After the game Carolina<lb/>
was immediately approached concern-<lb/>
ing the possibility of future games.<lb/>
We received a very definite "No<lb/>
McGuire, Carolina's coach, stated that<lb/>
he did not want to play us as long<lb/>
as we had Hodges, or as long as<lb/>
he didn't have a center of equal size<lb/>
and ability.<lb/>
Wake Forest and Duke have also<lb/>
been contacted. They have a standing<lb/>
invitation to play us, backed by a<lb/>
r.dO guarantee. State College has not<lb/>
; en aproached in height of an oc-<lb/>
currence at Elon College. They said<lb/>
that they would be glad to play<lb/>
Elon, or any other North State school<lb/>
for a $2,500 guarantee, a sum of<lb/>
money normally beyond a North<lb/>
State school's reach.<lb/>
Coach Porter stated other examples<lb/>
of big schools' reluctance to play us.<lb/>
Kinston, Washington and Clinton<lb/>
tried to get "big time" colleges to<lb/>
play us in their cities but made no<lb/>
headway at all. They would be glad<lb/>
to play in those cities, they said,<lb/>
but wouldn't consider East Carolina<lb/>
as an opponent.<lb/>
Well, why won't they play us?<lb/>
There are some good reasons. They<lb/>
gain little if they win, but if they<lb/>
should lose it hurts their prestige.<lb/>
Porter has mad ? two trips to the<lb/>
University of Richmond seeking a<lb/>
game, but as they feel they might<lb/>
lose to us, they have refused. Then,<lb/>
too, should we schedule a team such<lb/>
as Richmond or Carolina on a home<lb/>
and home basis, they couldn't expect<lb/>
our team to draw a big crowd for<lb/>
them. They would lose on a financial<lb/>
basis as well.<lb/>
The fact is that our school is in<lb/>
the adolescent period between just<lb/>
being a small school and a big one<lb/>
able to meet anyone on an equal<lb/>
basis. And we don't have the seating<lb/>
capacity to offer a school a large<lb/>
guarantee. We don't have a name<lb/>
like Carolina or State or Wake<lb/>
Forest has.<lb/>
However, this does not mean that<lb/>
we should quit trying. Realizing that<lb/>
the situation b bad, we must be<lb/>
willing to make advances, to make<lb/>
attractive propositions, in order to<lb/>
get larger schools to come here. This<lb/>
necessitates taking financial risk on<lb/>
the part of the athletic department.<lb/>
Also support of our .program by the<lb/>
people of the surroundirg territory<lb/>
will be needed.<lb/>
We've come a long way since the<lb/>
days of no athletics here, but the<lb/>
journey is not over, and much more<lb/>
work will be required before we reach<lb/>
the top.<lb/>
The ariticle "How Did We Get .<lb/>
Heels?" by Richard Walser which i<lb/>
the January 24 issue of The News ai<lb/>
is a useful little piece that should be<lb/>
future reference. Oftentimes article<lb/>
which are grand to supplement th<lb/>
files which students make here. Jus1<lb/>
read the papers.<lb/>
Forum And Against'em<lb/>
Change Fifth Amendment?<lb/>
by Faye O'Neal<lb/>
Running a close sea nd for notori<lb/>
the civil rights protectorate, the Fourt<lb/>
Fifth Amendment to our United Sta I<lb/>
tion has recently ccme into national h<lb/>
Especially since the notable senator from<lb/>
consin became known as the originator 1<lb/>
tain imaginary disease called "McC;<lb/>
his efforts with the Senate Crime nv '<lb/>
Committee against accused Communists<lb/>
"pinks" in this country, has the privih<lb/>
cline response to interrogation on gr .<lb/>
endangering one's future security b<lb/>
argumented theory.<lb/>
Much discussion and opinionating has<lb/>
prevalent. It is not the whole of the Fifth A<lb/>
ment which is in dispute but only one pli<lb/>
"No person . . . shall be compelled, in any<lb/>
inal case to be a witness against himself<lb/>
There is some suggestion of "amendi<lb/>
amendment" by those who believe that th<lb/>
Amendment is being overridden. Others<lb/>
that it should continue to be a consl<lb/>
right of free Americans to reply to a<lb/>
decline to answer on the grounds that what 1<lb/>
might tend to incriminate me Chief among<lb/>
current controversies is the distinct pro<lb/>
the use and abuse of the Fifth Amendmt<lb/>
it really a shield for the innocent or is it a<lb/>
ter for the criminal?<lb/>
Following are a few opinions of East Ca<lb/>
lina students on the matter.<lb/>
Gerald Adcock, a sophomore from 11<lb/>
who is avidly interested in national a;<lb/>
has received honorable mention for his<lb/>
for the campus debate society, says, "1 do<lb/>
believe that any loyal American should or<lb/>
use the. Fifth Amendment to refuse to<lb/>
questions submitted by a Congressional in<lb/>
gating Committee. If one does, he must ha<lb/>
ulterior motive present, although he may pr f-ess<lb/>
to be simply safeguarding his personal<lb/>
and constitutional rights. It must be added<lb/>
some of the methods used to extract infer<lb/>
from witnesses might be corrected, iessenii<lb/>
problem as it exists today. Yet. I still d-<lb/>
lieve that any person for any reason -<lb/>
allowed to refuse to answer lawfully -<lb/>
questions. This should apply especially to th 3<lb/>
who might take advantage of this country's<lb/>
dom to aid some foreign country who is known<lb/>
to be our enemy. In the final analysis, it sh<lb/>
be well remembered that those who have n<lb/>
to hide certainly have nothing to fear<lb/>
Ann Bunting, a junior at East Carolina. 1<lb/>
us that she would favor legislation pn<lb/>
one northern judge recently which would guar-<lb/>
antee protection to the innocent who withh<lb/>
information because his knowledge of the act.<lb/>
of the guilty might endanger his future. She<lb/>
does think it advisable to find an answer to the<lb/>
problem of too many evasions of questions con-<lb/>
cerned with routing communism in America.<lb/>
Ed Mathews, president of the Young Demo-<lb/>
crats Club on campus, is enrolled in the pre-<lb/>
legal curriculum. Ed states, "I am definitely<lb/>
against the way the Fifth Amendment is being<lb/>
used in connection with the Communists in this<lb/>
country. However, I can hardly see how we can<lb/>
do anything about the situation without taking<lb/>
away constitutional rights of citizens who deserve<lb/>
the right of self protection. I hold that it would<lb/>
be a detriment to democracy if the Fifth Amend-<lb/>
ment was done away with. None should be com;<lb/>
pelled to get on the stand and condemn himself.<lb/>
It's<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
<pb facs="00038340_0003"/><lb/>
l?54<lb/>
FRIDAY. J X7JARY 99, 1954<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
PACK THREE.<lb/>
by Bub iiiud?n<lb/>
tack on the victory road once<lb/>
East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
ast week's upset at the<lb/>
v, tern Carolina and the<lb/>
pt ortunity to avenge<lb/>
- tonight.<lb/>
a record of nine conference<lb/>
e defeat, the Pir-<lb/>
ned their lost ground<lb/>
, e again appear to have the<lb/>
i1 le wrapped up. The<lb/>
I however, might make<lb/>
ts bring to town a<lb/>
v' can score with the best<lb/>
at well o along with<lb/>
winners of tonight's<lb/>
always means a lot<lb/>
we've never seen<lb/>
an it does to the<lb/>
?: ?rial gym was<lb/>
e winter of 1952 the<lb/>
ily one game there<lb/>
ned a confer nee<lb/>
Therefore, even<lb/>
one of the North<lb/>
5, v. e'll stick I v the<lb/>
v r<lb/>
tuation developed last<lb/>
SCOTT'S CLEANERS<lb/>
year after the Pirates dropped a<lb/>
L02-97 decision to Western Carolina<lb/>
at Cullowhee. The Cats All American<lb/>
guard Ronald Rogers bucketed 37<lb/>
points while the Pirates Sonny Rus-<lb/>
sell was collecting 3G. The story<lb/>
changed however, when Western<lb/>
Carolina invaded Memorial gym later<lb/>
in the season. Russell collected 32<lb/>
that night while Rogers was held<lb/>
to two field goals and the Pirate<lb/>
took an 86-67 decision.<lb/>
Although the regular season is<lb/>
ra, idly drawing to a close, the most<lb/>
important games are yet to come.<lb/>
No matter where a team finishes in<lb/>
' e regular standings, the champion-<lb/>
hip must still be decided in the<lb/>
North State tourney. The Bucs came<lb/>
out on top last year in regular<lb/>
season play but bowed out to High<lb/>
Point in the championship run-off.<lb/>
After the league tourney is complet-<lb/>
1 d there still remain the little mat-<lb/>
ter of the NAJiA playoffs. Last year<lb/>
the Pirates rallied from their tourna-<lb/>
ment upset to take the District 26<lb/>
title and win the right to journey to<lb/>
the national playoffs in Kansas City.<lb/>
East Carolina has always managed<lb/>
to make these two tourneys con-<lb/>
istehtly but never have they been<lb/>
crowned league champs and only<lb/>
once have they taken the NA.1A re-<lb/>
gional.<lb/>
All things change however, and this<lb/>
looks like as good a year as any.<lb/>
Buccaneers, Catamounts Clash Tonight<lb/>
Pirate squaa Uniting m nrxtowi ?.s &amp;?<lb/>
? <lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN FOOTWEAR<lb/>
It's<lb/>
MERIT SHOES<lb/>
Apps, Bulldogs<lb/>
Next For Pirates<lb/>
In League Play<lb/>
Appalachian and Atlantic Christ-<lb/>
ian will furnish the opposition next<lb/>
week as the East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
continue their drive toward the North<lb/>
State Conference cage title.<lb/>
Monday night the Bucs take on the<lb/>
A.rps at Boone and will attempt to<lb/>
record a repeat of an earlier win here.<lb/>
Rig man in the Mountaineers attack<lb/>
: ? guard O. D. Wallace. Wallace, a<lb/>
senior from Carthage, won the respect<lb/>
of Pirate fans with his stellar perfor-<lb/>
mance here January 21.<lb/>
Wednesday night the Bucs take on<lb/>
the Atlantic Christian Bulldogs in a<lb/>
renewal of one of the school's oldest<lb/>
rivalries. The cherished Bohunk<lb/>
trophy, symbol of conquest in Pirate-<lb/>
Bulldog clashes, will once more be<lb/>
at stake. The Bohunk is currently in<lb/>
the Pirates' possession due to a<lb/>
pair of laseball defeats the locals tag-<lb/>
ged on the Wilson school last spring.<lb/>
The Bulldogs rate as a mediocre<lb/>
club in th North State Conference and<lb/>
have been unable to defeat the Pirates<lb/>
in the cage game over a period of the<lb/>
last several years.<lb/>
Following the Atlantic Christian<lb/>
contest the Pirates will have three<lb/>
league games remaining. A return<lb/>
engagement with the Bulldogs plus<lb/>
contest with Elon and High Point<lb/>
round out the conference schedule.<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brcwui<lb/>
'Your College Shop<lb/>
-<lb/>
Good Food, Reasonable Prices<lb/>
and Friendly Atmosphere<lb/>
BEST IN FOOD<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
by David A. Evans<lb/>
Winter football practice sessions<lb/>
swung into action Monday afternoon,<lb/>
Januaiy 18, when the Buccaneer fresh-<lb/>
men and sophomore reservist took to<lb/>
the field in preparation for the 1954<lb/>
season<lb/>
Head Coach Jack Boone nd assist-<lb/>
ant Jim Mallory have been leading<lb/>
the boys through extensive drill<lb/>
starting with the first day. Most of<lb/>
the squad appears to be taking it<lb/>
pretty well but there have been a<lb/>
few injuries. Most of the injuries so<lb/>
far have been muscular. Only one<lb/>
broken  one has been suffered and<lb/>
that was not of a serious nature.<lb/>
The Pirate reserves were joined<lb/>
Monday by the regulars. For the first<lb/>
couple of days the regulars met no<lb/>
contact work but the reserves have<lb/>
not been faring as easy.<lb/>
According to Coach Boone, "The<lb/>
befem is being built now - - not next<lb/>
fall Even though the weather may,<lb/>
at times, be unfavorable at this time<lb/>
of the year, the boys have to ignore<lb/>
that and continue to "knock" heads in<lb/>
hopes of a successful coming season.<lb/>
The Buccaneer varsity of last year<lb/>
lost only six men, two of them reg-<lb/>
ulars, so they shouldn't lose too much<lb/>
of that vaunted power felt by the<lb/>
other members of the North State<lb/>
Conference in the 1953 season. Of<lb/>
those six, four of them were lost by<lb/>
graduation. They were last year's co-<lb/>
ca tains, Bo by Hodges and Jack<lb/>
Britt, along with Johnny Brown and<lb/>
John Daughtry. Another met the fate<lb/>
of the draft in the person of James<lb/>
"Algie" Faircloth, while the last one,<lb/>
Bubba Mathews, met academic dif-<lb/>
ficulties and had to leave.<lb/>
The winter practice game is set for<lb/>
February 18 as a measuring stick for<lb/>
next year's team.<lb/>
Pirates Defeat<lb/>
Guilford, 76-52<lb/>
Led by Captain Bobby Hodges the<lb/>
East Carolina College Pirates racked<lb/>
up their seventh wrin in the North<lb/>
State loop race by downing the<lb/>
Quakers of Guilford, 76-52, in a<lb/>
game played at Guilford College<lb/>
Saturday night.<lb/>
East Carolina took the lead during<lb/>
the first quarter by a 15-9 margin<lb/>
and by the time the half rolled<lb/>
around they had lengthened it to<lb/>
46-18. The third quarter saw the<lb/>
Bucs' scoring attack falter while the<lb/>
Quakers' offense seemed to click, but<lb/>
by time the fourth quarter came<lb/>
around the Pirate offense moved on<lb/>
to win 76-52.<lb/>
Bobby Hodges was high man for<lb/>
the night for both teams with 21<lb/>
points, followed by Charlie Huffman<lb/>
and J. C. Thomas with 12 points<lb/>
each. Little Cecil Heath was the<lb/>
standout on defense along with Don<lb/>
Harris.<lb/>
For the Quakers of Guilford it was<lb/>
Atkins with 20 points, while team-<lb/>
mate Mikies was the defensive star.<lb/>
As Pirates Seek Revenge<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
LARRY'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
CAMPUS FOOTWEAR FOR ALL OCCASIONS<lb/>
AT FIVE POINTS<lb/>
ITS ALL A MATTER OF TASTE<lb/>
 &amp;"?<lb/>
 <lb/>
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teir?<lb/>
oi 1?<lb/>
When you come right down to it, you<lb/>
?moke for one simple reason . . . enjoy-<lb/>
ment. And smoking enjoyment is all a<lb/>
matter of taste. Yes, taste is what counts<lb/>
in a cigarette. And Luckies taste better.<lb/>
Two facts explain why Luckies taste<lb/>
better. First, L.S M.F.T. ? Lucky Strike<lb/>
means fine tobacco . . . light, mild, good-<lb/>
tasting tobacco. Second, Luckies are ac-<lb/>
tually made better to taste better . . .<lb/>
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So, for the enjoyment you get from<lb/>
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Be Happy?Go Lucky. Get a pack or a<lb/>
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tkathatcs<lb/>
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tetions<lb/>
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lea.<lb/>
lkmo-<lb/>
pre-<lb/>
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In this<lb/>
v can<lb/>
linking<lb/>
It-serve<lb/>
would<lb/>
imend- '<lb/>
COJ3-<lb/>
iseif<lb/>
Where's your jingle?<lb/>
It's easier than you think to<lb/>
make $25 by writing a Lucky<lb/>
Strike jingle like those you see<lb/>
in this ad. Yes, we need jingles<lb/>
?and we pay $25 for every one<lb/>
we use! So send as many as you<lb/>
like to: Happy-Go-Lucky, P. O.<lb/>
Box 67, New York 46, N. Y.<lb/>
Heath Top Scorer<lb/>
As Pirates Down<lb/>
Catawba Indians<lb/>
by Anwer Joseph<lb/>
SALISBURY?East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege's Pirates moved closer to their<lb/>
yroal of renewing their hold on the<lb/>
North State Conference title by drop-<lb/>
ping: the Indians of Catawba, e3-54,<lb/>
here Monday night.<lb/>
The victory moved the .Pirates'<lb/>
total to eight wins against one de-<lb/>
feat in the North State loop, and an<lb/>
overall record of 10-1 for the season.<lb/>
After a slow start which found<lb/>
the lead changing hands twice, the<lb/>
Bucs took an 18-9 lead in the first<lb/>
quarter. At half time the lead was<lb/>
milt up to 40-20 for the Pirates. The<lb/>
art of the third quarter paw the<lb/>
Pirates' offense slacken, but the Pi-<lb/>
rates managed to hold the Indians'<lb/>
tttack down and roll on to win 63-54,<lb/>
Scoring honors for the Bucs went<lb/>
to Little Cecil Heath with 15, fol-<lb/>
owed by Don Harris with 14 and<lb/>
Huffman with 12, while Captain<lb/>
Bobby Hodg s and J. C. Thomas held<lb/>
down the defensive play.<lb/>
High man for the Indians was<lb/>
McKaig who had 16, and who also<lb/>
turned in the best defensive game<lb/>
for Catawba,<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
FEMALE POETRY<lb/>
CONTEST OPEN<lb/>
"Mademoiselle" magazine is offer-<lb/>
ing two $100 Dylan Thomas Awards<lb/>
for best poems by young women<lb/>
writers. One prize will go to women<lb/>
college students under thirty, the<lb/>
other to women under thirty who may<lb/>
or may not be college graduates.<lb/>
Poems submitted to the "Madem-<lb/>
oiselle" contest may not have been ' Fast Carolina (63)<lb/>
published previously except in college ' Huffman, f<lb/>
publications. No writer may send in Harris, f<lb/>
more than three poems. Entries should McArthur, f<lb/>
be typewritten, double-spaced on Hodges, c<lb/>
white paper. The contestant's name, Akins, c<lb/>
address, age, and "in college" or "not Thomas, g<lb/>
in college" should be clearly marked. Scarboro, g<lb/>
The deadline is April 15, 1954. Heath, g<lb/>
Send poems to Mademoiselle Dylan<lb/>
Thomas Award, Mademoiselle"<lb/>
magazine, 575 Madison Avenue, New<lb/>
York 22, N. Y.<lb/>
fg rt pf tp<lb/>
4 4 0 12<lb/>
CLOSE-OUT<lb/>
New 1953 Model Underwood<lb/>
Standard Typewriter<lb/>
only 145.25<lb/>
(Stock Limited) Plus Tax<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
Office Equipment Co.<lb/>
304 Evans St. Dial 3570<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
D<lb/>
1<lb/>
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4<lb/>
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6<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
?<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
2 14<lb/>
1 2<lb/>
5 10<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
3 10<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
2 15<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Catawba ("4)<lb/>
Edwards, f<lb/>
Lmtz, f<lb/>
McKaig, f<lb/>
Irvin, c<lb/>
Beaver, c<lb/>
Procter, c<lb/>
23 17 13 63<lb/>
fK ft pf tp<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
6<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
Sammy, g ? 2<lb/>
Lydon, g  2<lb/>
Porter, g  3<lb/>
Carter, g  0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
16<lb/>
8<lb/>
2<lb/>
8<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
6<lb/>
2<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Revenge will be in the air tonight<lb/>
at Memorial gymnasium when East<lb/>
Carolina College's Pirates attempt to<lb/>
avenge their only loss of the year<lb/>
against Western Carolina's Cata-<lb/>
mounts.<lb/>
The Cats upset the Pirates 68-65<lb/>
last week and proper reribution will<lb/>
be the Buccaneers' goal.<lb/>
Since that loss the Bucs have<lb/>
flattened Appalachian, Guilford, Ca-<lb/>
tawba and High Point and once more<lb/>
ap; ear to be making a runaway of<lb/>
the North State Conference chase.<lb/>
Western Carolina, however, has stay-<lb/>
ed close since their upset win and<lb/>
tomorrow's contest shapes up as one<lb/>
that may well have considerable bear-<lb/>
ing on the final standings.<lb/>
Lightning-Fast<lb/>
The Catamounts, who rely on a<lb/>
lightning-fast offense, have not suf-<lb/>
fered as much from the loss of their<lb/>
All-American guard Ronald Rogers<lb/>
as p re-season dopes ters predicted.<lb/>
Rogers set the North State afire<lb/>
during his four year tenure at the<lb/>
mountain school and sparked the<lb/>
Cats to a 102-97 win over the locals<lb/>
last year at Cullowhee.<lb/>
To match the high-scoring Western<lb/>
Carolina offense Coach Howard Por-<lb/>
ter can offer Bobby Hodges, team<lb/>
captain and center, who is pacing the<lb/>
league's scorers with an average in<lb/>
the vicinity of 25 points per game.<lb/>
Charlie Huffman, Cecil Heath, J.<lb/>
C. Thomas and either Paul Jones or<lb/>
Don Harris will round out the start-<lb/>
ing five for the Buccaneers.<lb/>
Huffman, a senior forward from<lb/>
Thomasville, is averaging near the<lb/>
ir point mark while Heath is rated<lb/>
as one of the top floor men in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Jones Underrated<lb/>
Forward Paul Jones, perhaps one<lb/>
of the most underrated players in<lb/>
Pirate history, suffered an ankle<lb/>
injury in the Lenoir Rhyne game<lb/>
last and probably won't see action<lb/>
tonight. Harris, a freshman from<lb/>
Laurinburg, has played exceptional<lb/>
ball upon occasions this year and is<lb/>
giving Jones a good run in quest of<lb/>
a starting post<lb/>
Thomas, the Raleigh sophomore,<lb/>
turned in an excellent periormance<lb/>
against High Point Wednesday and<lb/>
is xpected to start tonight<lb/>
22 12 19 54<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasii<lb/>
Featured In Article<lb/>
East Carolina College's Memorial<lb/>
Health and Physical Education SfeikU<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Score by quarters:<lb/>
East Carolina  18 22 9 14?64<lb/>
Catawba  9 11 11'17?54<lb/>
Free throws missed: East Carolina .  attentkm<lb/>
?Huffman 2, Harris 2, McArthur 2,<lb/>
Hodges 1, Thomas 2, and Heath 2;<lb/>
Catawba?Lentz 1, Irvin 3, Beaver 1,<lb/>
Lydon 3, and Carter 3.<lb/>
Officials: Phillips and Mills.<lb/>
JOHNSON'S<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN MUSIC<lb/>
At Five Points<lb/>
Records and Sheet Musie<lb/>
45 RPM Accessor!?<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE<lb/>
in the current issue ?f the a$cho!as-<lb/>
tic Coach a nationally circulated<lb/>
educational journal.<lb/>
Dr. N. M Jorgensen, director of<lb/>
the East Carolina department of<lb/>
health and physical education, con-<lb/>
tribuites t, the January issue of the<lb/>
magazine an article entitled "A Small<lb/>
College Physical Education Building<lb/>
A series of six illustrations, showing<lb/>
the excellent facilities offered in the<lb/>
building for carrying on health and<lb/>
physical education training, adda to<lb/>
the clarity and attractiveness of Dr.<lb/>
Jorgensen's discussion.<lb/>
The whole of Eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina, Dr. Jorgeusen says, can well be<lb/>
proud of the attractive, well planned<lb/>
building and its modern facilities<lb/>
and equipment.<lb/>
COIHI TH AMBMCAN TOBACCO COMPANY<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038340_0004"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, JANUARY 29,<lb/>
PAG? POUR<lb/>
AST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
College Offers Scholarships<lb/>
To Forty High School Students<lb/>
$100 each will ?oon be awarded by<lb/>
East Carolina College to promising<lb/>
high school seniors who need finan-<lb/>
cial assistance in order to attend<lb/>
college, Dr. Clinton R. Prewett,<lb/>
chairman of the college scholarship<lb/>
committee, has announced.<lb/>
Awards will be made by April 1,<lb/>
and recipients will be notified by<lb/>
April 15. The scholarships will be<lb/>
effective for the 1954-1955 term.<lb/>
This school -ar 39 students who<lb/>
received similar scholarships for the<lb/>
1953-1964 term are enrolled at East<lb/>
Carolina. "We are gratified Dr.<lb/>
Prewett stated this week, "at the<lb/>
excellent scholastic record established<lb/>
y this srroup of young men and<lb/>
UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITERS<lb/>
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"and we hope that they will prove<lb/>
to be a valuable factor in assisting<lb/>
outstanding students to complete their<lb/>
college work<lb/>
Basis for awarding the scholarships<lb/>
are need of financial assistance, total<lb/>
high school record, promise as a col-<lb/>
lege student and citizenship qualities,<lb/>
according to Dr. Prewett.<lb/>
High school principals throughout<lb/>
North Carolina have been informed<lb/>
about the availability of these schol-<lb/>
arsirs to outstanding seniors in<lb/>
their schools. Already, Dr. Prewett<lb/>
states, a number of applications have<lb/>
been received from young men and<lb/>
women who desire to obtain a college<lb/>
ciueation.<lb/>
Any .student who wishes to apply<lb/>
for a scholarship. Dr. Prewett has<lb/>
announced, should obtain an applica-<lb/>
tion form from him. record the proper<lb/>
information and return it to him as<lb/>
soon as possible.<lb/>
Dramatic TV Meeting<lb/>
Open To All Students<lb/>
Discussion and planning for<lb/>
dramatic teleyisionworkwbf<lb/>
of the Teacher's Playhouse Mon-<lb/>
day, 7 p.m in Austin 112.<lb/>
A representative from WNCT,<lb/>
Greenville television station, will<lb/>
discuss TV possibilities at the<lb/>
meeting. All students are in-<lb/>
vited to attend.<lb/>
Leave Your Shoes At COLLEGE VIEW CLEANERS<lb/>
SUB-STATION For Prompt Shoe Repairs<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE SHOP<lb/>
DIAL 2056<lb/>
Playhouse Presents<lb/>
Two Workshop Plays;<lb/>
Cast Tryouts Monday<lb/>
Tryouts for the last two plays in<lb/>
this quarter's workshop series will<lb/>
be held Tuesday in Room 14 of Aus-<lb/>
tin at 4 p. m the Teachers Play-<lb/>
house announced today.<lb/>
Scenes from the plays "The King's<lb/>
Henchman" by Edna St. Vincent<lb/>
Miilay and "The Contrast" by Royall<lb/>
Tyler will make up the program.<lb/>
Parts for four women and six men<lb/>
are available.<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
BETTER SHOES REASONABLY PRICED<lb/>
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY<lb/>
P The Most<lb/>
? Trusted Name<lb/>
? in Diamond .<lb/>
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Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
?4<lb/>
FOOT LONG HOTDOGS<lb/>
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Opportunity<lb/>
Knnelrc<lb/>
200 SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
AVAILABLE TO STUDENTS<lb/>
Approximately 200 work opportuni-<lb/>
ties are available for Baptist college<lb/>
students in North Carolina this sum-<lb/>
mer. The rewards for these jobs are<lb/>
valuable experience, some remunera-<lb/>
tion, and the means of rendering<lb/>
Christian service, states Gloria Blan-<lb/>
ton of the Baptist Student Union.<lb/>
Two summer assembli. s, Fruitland<lb/>
in the mountains near Hender.on-<lb/>
ville and Caswell on the beach near<lb/>
Southport, offer staff jobs for about<lb/>
ten weeks to 60 to 75 students. In<lb/>
various churches several types of<lb/>
work include that of minister of<lb/>
music, educational director, pastor's<lb/>
assistant ana church secretary. Asso-<lb/>
ciational work involves teaching study<lb/>
courses, teaching and directing Bible<lb/>
schools and taking religious census.<lb/>
The State Training Union and Sunday<lb/>
school departments provide six wevk<lb/>
of work for students interested in<lb/>
teaching study courses, making sur-<lb/>
veys and training leaders.<lb/>
Application blanks are now avail-<lb/>
able for those interested in any of<lb/>
these various types of employment.<lb/>
They may be secured from Miss Blan-<lb/>
ton, Baptist Student Union counselor.<lb/>
Personal conference may be arranged<lb/>
with her at her office at the Center,<lb/>
by any student interested in learning<lb/>
more about these summer opportuni-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Christian Living<lb/>
rovides Theme<lb/>
or Canterbury<lb/>
Sunday night at the regular Can-<lb/>
terbury Club meeting, Dr. Wallace<lb/>
I. Wolverton, rector of St. Paul's<lb/>
Church and Episcopal college chap-<lb/>
lain, will present the introductory<lb/>
session of a four week seriei on the<lb/>
"Fundamentals of Christian Living<lb/>
The purpose of this series is to<lb/>
discover how the early Christians<lb/>
lived by going hack to accounts of<lb/>
tflis in the Holy Writ and relating<lb/>
these accounts to lives today.<lb/>
The reason for this program is to<lb/>
fulfill a -eed expressed bj a number<lb/>
of students to find what is distinc-<lb/>
tive in being a Christian. By using<lb/>
the letters of St. John as a basis,<lb/>
it is hoped that answers to problems<lb/>
will result rather than just more<lb/>
problems being stated, Richard Otta-<lb/>
way, student worker of the church,<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Alumni News<lb/>
EAST HAMPTON SET<lb/>
Weed Company Appoint<lb/>
Joyner Representative<lb/>
On Campus For Year<lb/>
Max Joyner, sophomore of Green-<lb/>
ville, has been appointed campus<lb/>
Phillip Morris cigarette representa-<lb/>
tive, according to an announcement<lb/>
by Jim North, division manager of<lb/>
Phillip Morris and Co.<lb/>
Max will assume his position Mon-<lb/>
day and will distribute sample cig-<lb/>
arettes to students on campus. He<lb/>
replaces Dwight Garrett. who resign-<lb/>
ed in November.<lb/>
Adams Explains<lb/>
Electricity Functions<lb/>
To Industrial Arts<lb/>
Frank C. Adam of Rocky Mount,<lb/>
senior at East Carolina College, pre-<lb/>
sented a program on electricity at the<lb/>
January meeting of the student In-<lb/>
dustrial Arts Club of the college, held<lb/>
Tuesday in the Flanagan building.<lb/>
The meeting combined the program<lb/>
and a social gathering for members.<lb/>
Adams' talk was given to create an<lb/>
interest among members in unusual<lb/>
functions of electricity. He gave a<lb/>
demonstration of an induction coil<lb/>
called a Thompson Apparatus, ex-<lb/>
plained the use of a hand generator<lb/>
and demonstrated how to magnetize<lb/>
an iron bar with the earth's magne-<lb/>
tism and how to play a radio by<lb/>
electromagnetic induction.<lb/>
BURLINGTON-ALAMANCE<lb/>
7 .  SAMUABT MEET<lb/>
The Eaat Carolina College Alumni<lb/>
of Burls Uamance chapter held<lb/>
the January meeting at the Bason<lb/>
home on West Front Street in Bur-<lb/>
ling? I Ida Walters and<lb/>
Helen Johnson as hostesses.<lb/>
A short business meeting was pre-<lb/>
sided over by President William C.<lb/>
Council. Mrs. Jei I . Bryan gave<lb/>
he :ra urer's report. Samples of<lb/>
e All-Occasion card were displayed<lb/>
taken for them.<lb/>
 lite of rooms where bridge<lb/>
? n(i  were enjoyed was beau-<lb/>
iTull; d with growing plants.<lb/>
H  Pope arid Mrs. Thomas<lb/>
n m high -core prize, res<lb/>
ively. At the conclusion ol amea<lb/>
?) members played bridge rummy<lb/>
M ? lentiinga Bryan and Miss<lb/>
Martha Moseley as winner<lb/>
The hostess duo served a delect-<lb/>
able sweet eourse with nuts and cof-<lb/>
fee.<lb/>
  . MULLIGAN RECEIVES<lb/>
I ETATION FOR SERVICE<lb/>
rk suggestion which re-<lb/>
i in great r - ffici ncy and econ-<lb/>
omy, Cpl. William P. Mulligan Jr.<lb/>
a Suggestion Award Cer-<lb/>
? from Brig. Gen. Jam I<lb/>
Co i y. Commandant of the Medical<lb/>
Field Service School at Brooke Army<lb/>
Medical Cent' r, Fort Sam Hou I I<lb/>
Texas, when- Cpl. Mulligan is on<lb/>
duty in the 2d Battalion. Cpl. Mulli-<lb/>
gan is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-<lb/>
liam P. Mulligan Sr 4 Roswell<lb/>
Terrac ?. Glen Ridge, X. J. He is a<lb/>
graduate of Bast Carolina College.<lb/>
?i-ri.i.K GOES ON<lb/>
TWO-WEEK SPEAK IN(, T()t u<lb/>
.1 mes W. Rul f<lb/>
at Easl Cai<lb/>
ra' merits as a<lb/>
the next tw<lb/>
ito Virt<lb/>
I<lb/>
in various North I<lb/>
 itler wiil<lb/>
r wiil speak Tui<lb/>
'? at a five-eotti<lb/>
college Alan<lb/>
in L no r. W?<lb/>
 ,<lb/>
? a Foi<lb/>
i talk be! ? W<lb/>
Two<lb/>
? he following week v<lb/>
Dunn Februi<lb/>
ion<lb/>
a dinner. Butler<lb/>
?ia Kd .<lb/>
ti-m and ?<lb/>
n<lb/>
Crh m. <lb/>
Students Discuss<lb/>
Methodist Doctrine<lb/>
earning a  ,<lb/>
i<lb/>
? '<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
cu ion in which<lb/>
i<lb/>
Any w ? may<lb/>
invited to T<lb/>
ia 6:30 until<lb/>
She: Do you love me?<lb/>
He: Yes.<lb/>
She: Would you cry if I died?<lb/>
He: Yes.<lb/>
She: Show me how much you<lb/>
would cry.<lb/>
He: Die first.<lb/>
For Drug Neec8, Cosmetics and Fountain 1 Visit<lb/>
BIGGSDRUG STORK<lb/>
Proctor Hotel Building<lb/>
OpSO 8 A. M10 P.M. ? Sunday 8:30 A. M10.3 4 P. M10 P. 11M?<lb/>
Artcarved<lb/>
DIAMOND RINGS<lb/>
A name trusted and beloved by<lb/>
brides for more than 100 years.<lb/>
Each Artcarted Ring is regis-<lb/>
tered for your protection, and<lb/>
guaranteed by ua and by Art-<lb/>
carted.<lb/>
?Tr?d? m?r r?. ITIcm tnrl. IM. T?<lb/>
King, ?nlaree.i to ?how detail<lb/>
Tun? in LANNY ROSS rodio thow<lb/>
Sundays on Mutual<lb/>
John Lautares<lb/>
Opposite Belk-Tyler<lb/>
B AU,horiz?d Vtcarved )wi.f<lb/>
jrwa;<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
TWO STEAKS<lb/>
To The One Who Will Give A Name To<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S NEW<lb/>
DINE AND DANCE RESTAURANT<lb/>
Formerly Known As The Tar Heel Social Club<lb/>
On Highway 264 East<lb/>
 Deposit Your Entry At The<lb/>
Greenview Drive-in<lb/>
West End Circle<lb/>
By WEDNESDAY NIGHT, FEBRUARY 3<lb/>
1<lb/>
Pilot training begins at Lackland Air Force Base, where<lb/>
Aviation Cadets get 3 months of officer indoctrination.<lb/>
College Men<lb/>
Fly with the Fine<lb/>
in the Air Force<lb/>
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS WIN WINGS<lb/>
AS AIR FORCE LIEUTENANTS,<lb/>
EARN OVER $5,000 A YEAR!<lb/>
2 It's a hard grind, but Cadets<lb/>
m also find time to relax.<lb/>
Q In primary training the Cadet flies his first planes, a Piper<lb/>
Cub, and this T-6. Later he will fly the more advanced T-28.<lb/>
?'V?OX' '??'?? t"KWNSJX'<lb/>
jjcllWlWW<lb/>
,fMU<lb/>
4<lb/>
S&amp;KgJSSv; : ? '??? ? ?:?.<lb/>
After flying conventional planes, he moves on to jets<lb/>
 going up with an instructor in this T-33 trainer.<lb/>
ENTRY BLANK<lb/>
four Name<lb/>
liress<lb/>
Time <lb/>
How to qualify for<lb/>
Pilot Training as an<lb/>
Aviation Cadetl<lb/>
To qualify, you must be at<lb/>
least a high school graduate.<lb/>
However, you will be of more<lb/>
value to the Air Force if you<lb/>
stay in college, graduate, and<lb/>
then volunteer for training.<lb/>
In addition, you must be be-<lb/>
tween the ages of 19 and<lb/>
26i, and in top physical<lb/>
condition. If you think you<lb/>
are eligible, here's what you<lb/>
do: Take your high school<lb/>
diploma or certificate of grad-<lb/>
uation together with a copy<lb/>
of your birth certificate down<lb/>
to your nearest Air Force<lb/>
base or recruiting station.<lb/>
Fill out the application they<lb/>
give you. If you pass your<lb/>
physical arid other tests, you<lb/>
mm be scheduled foran Avia-<lb/>
tion Cadet Training Class.<lb/>
? For a fast, exciting and reward-<lb/>
ing career, make your future in<lb/>
the sky as an Air Force pilot. As<lb/>
a college student, you are now<lb/>
able to join that small, select band<lb/>
of young men who race the w i<lb/>
in Air Force jets. You'll have t i<lb/>
same opportunities to learn, ad<lb/>
vance and establish yourself ir<lb/>
the growing new world of jet<lb/>
aviation.<lb/>
Fly as on of the host<lb/>
The pilot training you get in the<lb/>
Air Force is the best in the world<lb/>
?the kind that makes jet m<lb/>
You'll learn to fly the fastest<lb/>
latest planes in the air?and fly<lb/>
them safely and well. Those who<lb/>
look to the skies will look to y<lb/>
for leadership and confidence.<lb/>
Info a brilliant future<lb/>
You'll graduate as an Air Fo-e<lb/>
lieutenant, earning over $5,000 a<lb/>
year. Your Air Force wings will<lb/>
serve as credentials for important<lb/>
positions both in military ami<lb/>
commercial aviation. Air Foro<lb/>
wings mark you as the very best<lb/>
in the flying profession.<lb/>
He wins his wings as an<lb/>
Air Force officer, earning<lb/>
? over $5,000 a year.<lb/>
-AND A PtiOT<lb/>
iS BORN!<lb/>
Then winds up his train-<lb/>
ing with the latest and<lb/>
fastest planes in the air<lb/>
admiJSSi fS?f 81!Ver Wing8 ? ? ? And won the respect and<lb/>
Fora ?F? St ? V52 f F10 ?? th United States Air<lb/>
t orce I From now on he'll rule the skies in an Air Force jet.<lb/>
WHERE TO GET MORE DETAILSt<lb/>
Contact your nearest Aviation Codet Soloction Team,<lb/>
T9?1C UnH' " Air F??? Rscruhing Offksr.<lb/>
w writ tot Aviation Cadot, Hoadqoartort,<lb/>
U. $. Air Fores, Wnthlotfou U, O. C<lb/>
It Pa<lb/>
That<lb/>
fa<lb/>
11<lb/>
v. I<lb/>
Am<lb/>
?<lb/>
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C<lb/>
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i<lb/>
fro: <lb/>
third l<lb/>
day.<lb/>
6:30<lb/>
iuctl<lb/>
W<lb/>
?ill b<lb/>
Tht-<lb/>
8 <lb/>
Collet<lb/>
8-11:1<lb/>
frarioe<lb/>
torium<lb/>
East<lb/>
in a<lb/>
afterno<lb/>
7 P.i<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038340_0005"/>
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