<?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="00038351_0001"/>
54<lb/>
I<lb/>
Pay Off<lb/>
allv pays off to do business with<lb/>
tusinesses that do business with<lb/>
slum a try and see.<lb/>
JEastrtarolinian<lb/>
Waiting<lb/>
Coed rushes to meet an appointment,<lb/>
but .spends much time waiting when she<lb/>
pets there. Story, page two.<lb/>
V'OU ME XXIX<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1954<lb/>
President Announces<lb/>
Graduation Program<lb/>
( ollege will observe<lb/>
. 456fa Annual Com-<lb/>
e held on the campus.<lb/>
t John D. Messiek has an-<lb/>
gram which includes<lb/>
 umni Day, Saturday,<lb/>
she commencement sermon<lb/>
vesper service of the<lb/>
 WOA, Sunday, May<lb/>
Monday, May 24;<lb/>
raduation of epproxi-<lb/>
eniors and graduate stu-<lb/>
? e college.<lb/>
W lliam B. Umstead of<lb/>
i and Dr. Daniel A.<lb/>
? :be Christian Herald<lb/>
known clergyman,<lb/>
i iirer, will be principal<lb/>
Governor Umstead will<lb/>
Ires to graduates Mon-<lb/>
10:30 in the Wright<lb/>
Dr. Poling will deliver the<lb/>
-trrnon<lb/>
standing for service will be made at<lb/>
this time.<lb/>
The Alumni Day program, arranged<lb/>
by James W. Butler, alumni secretary<lb/>
of the college, and association of-<lb/>
ficers, will include a luncheon in the<lb/>
eollge dining hall at 12:30; a tea hon-<lb/>
oring seniors, alumni, sitaff memfbers<lb/>
and guest erf the college at 3 p. m a<lb/>
lawn concent by the East Carolina<lb/>
Band at 4 p. m and a concert pre-<lb/>
senting "honors" students of the de-<lb/>
partment of music at 8 p. m.<lb/>
Sunday's events will include the<lb/>
annual vesper services held by the<lb/>
YMCA and the YWCA. A traditional<lb/>
candlelighting ceremony will be led<lb/>
by Charlie B. Bedford of Pikeville,<lb/>
John "Toppy" Hayes of Durham,<lb/>
Lilley of Gatesville, officers of the<lb/>
Maidred Morris of Kenly and Erleen<lb/>
two organizations.<lb/>
Academic processions by the fac-<lb/>
at 11 a. m. j ulty, graduates and special guests will<lb/>
Fill Out SS 109 Now<lb/>
Male students who desire scho-<lb/>
lastic draft deferment for the<lb/>
coming school year should fill<lb/>
out a Selective Service form 109<lb/>
at the Registrar's office between<lb/>
now and the termination of this<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Dr. Orville L. Phillips, regis-<lb/>
trar. said that this form must be<lb/>
filled and returned to the office<lb/>
in order that a student may be<lb/>
deferred on his high scholastic<lb/>
averages.<lb/>
Because of the large number<lb/>
dropped from AFROTC, those<lb/>
students who intend to enter col-<lb/>
lege next fall should make ap-<lb/>
plication for deferment. Dr. Phil-<lb/>
lips urged.<lb/>
Number 27<lb/>
Awards Night On Tap Monday<lb/>
Alumni Day Honors 9 Classes<lb/>
At Annual Reunion May 22<lb/>
 e Wright building.<lb/>
e college will open<lb/>
i spring meeting on the<lb/>
, a business session at 10<lb/>
?day in th Austin auditor-<lb/>
. L. Whitfield of Raleigh,<lb/>
: .? Alumni Association,<lb/>
: of the recipient of<lb/>
award to a graduate out-<lb/>
procede the programs Sunday and<lb/>
Monday mornings.<lb/>
Wendell W. Smiley, East Caro-<lb/>
lina librarian, heads the committee in<lb/>
charge of commencement this spring.<lb/>
iRoyce C. Jordan of Washington, N.<lb/>
C. and Vivian Talley of Wilmington,<lb/>
chief marshal, are among those as-<lb/>
sisting with plans for the graduation<lb/>
exercises.<lb/>
Priestley Gives Address<lb/>
Here On Global Problems<lb/>
tendence and initerrelation-<lb/>
ong  eople of the world, es-<lb/>
: vir effect on U,S. foreign<lb/>
. and peace through interna-<lb/>
law and order were stressed<lb/>
uia by Dr. S. E. Gerard<lb/>
. y a an address U students<lb/>
its f the college.<lb/>
i match- TOO people were<lb/>
. b ar the British historian,<lb/>
and author, whose talk was<lb/>
program on the College<lb/>
r ? for 1953-54. He was<lb/>
. to his audience by Dr.<lb/>
D. Frank, chairman of the college<lb/>
trtnv : of social studies.<lb/>
and technology have cre-<lb/>
?; a world, Dr. Priestley said,<lb/>
a become increasingly inter-<lb/>
ot and interrelated. Space, he<lb/>
i. no longer separates peoples<lb/>
rent geogratpihical areas of the<lb/>
D the sense it once did, and<lb/>
Science Academy<lb/>
ens State Meet<lb/>
Here This Weekend<lb/>
Op<lb/>
To<lb/>
encourage interest in science<lb/>
Bg high schools of No-nth Caro-<lb/>
a and to give recognition to super-<lb/>
students, the North Carolina Aca-<lb/>
emy of Science is sponsoring this<lb/>
-ar a series of exhibits and an essay<lb/>
contest, results of whieih will be an-<lb/>
rd at the annual meeting of the<lb/>
organization at East Carolina College<lb/>
tomorrow and Saturday.<lb/>
Mary O. Ellington erf the Needham-<lb/>
Broughton High School, Raleigh, is<lb/>
chairman of a committee of the<lb/>
Academy which is arranging the<lb/>
contest. Exhibits will be-on display<lb/>
here tomorrow and until 2 p. m.<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Among program events saheduleo.<lb/>
for the meet erf the Academy here<lb/>
will be a luncheon Saturday for the<lb/>
committee on High School Science,<lb/>
high school teachers of science<lb/>
througout North Carolina and other<lb/>
intrested persons. K will bake place<lb/>
the North Dining<lb/>
the media of communication have<lb/>
bee-n vastly expanded.<lb/>
"We need to understand the cul-<lb/>
tural patterns, the economy, the reli-<lb/>
gion and other aspects of the lives of <lb/>
other peoples Dr. Priestley contin-<lb/>
ued, "Misunderstanding, misinforma-<lb/>
tion and sheer ignorance" he cited as<lb/>
major hindrances to better r ation-<lb/>
shipe among nations and potent bar-<lb/>
riers in the establishment of peace<lb/>
in the world.<lb/>
The frontiers of the United States<lb/>
are no longer, he explained, the At-<lb/>
lantic and the Pacific. Isolationism<lb/>
in our foreign policy is being replaced<lb/>
with the spirit of internationalism.<lb/>
This spirit is beginning to grow in<lb/>
Europe also, he stated. He gave as<lb/>
evidence the Schumann Plan and the<lb/>
EDC.<lb/>
The United States has taken the<lb/>
lead in the establishment of the Unit-<lb/>
ed Nations, he said, and now occupies<lb/>
a position of leadership in it.<lb/>
"The ultimate goal of the United<lb/>
Nations he said, "is the establish-<lb/>
ment of the concept of international<lb/>
law and order .Peace and security<lb/>
will follow only if this goal is attain-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
"The United States he concluded,<lb/>
"has laid the cornerstone of the Tem-<lb/>
iple of Law and Order<lb/>
New Student Band<lb/>
Begins Performing<lb/>
Jimmy Page and his Orchestra, a<lb/>
newly organized student dance band<lb/>
on campus, performed at Louisburg<lb/>
Coll ge for their annual May Day<lb/>
lance Saturday.<lb/>
As a student-cooperative outiit,<lb/>
the orchestra baa had numerous oth-<lb/>
er booking It is composed of eight<lb/>
pieces with all mem' era fresihmen<lb/>
and so homores.<lb/>
Led by Jimmy Page, a sophomore,<lb/>
the dance band is open for bookings<lb/>
by contacting Charles Lovelace, busi-<lb/>
nes - manager, or any member of the<lb/>
band.<lb/>
The eight members and their in-<lb/>
struments are Jimmy Thigpen, vocal<lb/>
and piano; Roy Knight, trumpet;<lb/>
Dave Holder, tromlone; Jimmy Page,<lb/>
altoax; Charles Lovelace, tenor-<lb/>
Si clair Newman, tenor-sax;<lb/>
Durwood Pot-<lb/>
The college will honor nine classes<lb/>
of graduates who will hold reunions<lb/>
on Alumni Day, to be observed May<lb/>
22 as part of the 45tih annual Com-<lb/>
mencement on campus, Alumni Sec-<lb/>
retary James W. Butler has an-<lb/>
nounced.<lb/>
Invittuns were issued this week<lb/>
to more than 2,200 alumni who are<lb/>
members of honor classes, Butler<lb/>
states. A large attendance from these<lb/>
class es and others is exipected to be<lb/>
present<lb/>
Classes wi. ich will receive special<lb/>
honor during the day are those of<lb/>
1929, holding its silver anniversary;<lb/>
H?44, observing its tenth anniversary;<lb/>
and 195 meeting with the Alumni<lb/>
Association for the first time.<lb/>
Other classes holding reunions are<lb/>
tihose of 1914, 1919, 1924, 1934, 1939<lb/>
tx;<lb/>
i an y Blight, drum<lb/>
ter, bass fiddle.<lb/>
Playhouse Slates<lb/>
Two Final Dramas<lb/>
Two original one-act plays by stu-<lb/>
dents will form the last program in<lb/>
the Spring Workshop Series to be<lb/>
presented by the Teachers Playhouse<lb/>
Wednesday, May 12, i? the College<lb/>
Ttheatre at 8 p.m.<lb/>
"Who Wears the Pants a folk<lb/>
comedy by Tommy Thompson, is di-<lb/>
rected by Atwood Smith with a cast<lb/>
 -iuding: Bill Penuel, Robert Gard-<lb/>
ner, Patricia Goodwin and Pat Purvis.<lb/>
One Too Many a marital mixup<lb/>
conceived vv Sabra Nunalee, finds<lb/>
Jeanne L i r e directing Nancy Cooke,<lb/>
Jim Coium, Sylvia Vaughn, Jackie<lb/>
Jone ai 1 Mary Ann Marshbourne in<lb/>
the varioi. i ? .<lb/>
Bo'Jt plaj will be presented as<lb/>
dramatic readk gs. Students and the<lb/>
general public are invited without<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
FBLA Sponsors<lb/>
Musical At Pitt<lb/>
Sunday, Monday<lb/>
The Fvture Business Leaders of<lb/>
America will sponsor the movie<lb/>
"Rhaps ' ' at the Pitt Theatre Sun-<lb/>
day am. NJiday, May 9 and 10. The<lb/>
movie is sarring Elizabeth Taylor<lb/>
and co-staring Vittorio Gassman,<lb/>
John Ericsonand Louis Calhern.<lb/>
With such olorful locales as Zur-<lb/>
icih, Paris, Ro.ie, St. Moritz and the<lb/>
French Rivier. for its plot back-<lb/>
grounds, "Rhaody" tells the story<lb/>
of Louise Durat, music student at<lb/>
the Zurch Oonstvatory, who becomes<lb/>
romantically 'Volved with Paul<lb/>
Bronte, a violinu When the latter<lb/>
jilts her, she turs on the refcound<lb/>
to James Guest, -ho is willing to<lb/>
sacrifice his career as a concert pi-<lb/>
anist to marry Lou.e. The outcome<lb/>
of this one-sided mt-riage and the<lb/>
ultimate fate of Jamesmusical career<lb/>
are resolved in a narraVe permeated<lb/>
with dramatic and eniOonal intensi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
Tickets for this movie ,re nQw on<lb/>
sale by the members of he FBLA.<lb/>
m. in<lb/>
of the high school<lb/>
of<lb/>
at 12:15 p.<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Improvement<lb/>
program .powered by the Academy<lb/>
will be enrpWzed in discussions held<lb/>
at the luncheon. <lb/>
Ctash prizes and "??<lb/>
awards are offered to succ-???<lb/>
testants in the exhibit contest. Entries<lb/>
by one, two, or three students are<lb/>
eligible for cash pri; ?&amp; "?<lb/>
bylarger group, ????<lb/>
classes and science clubs are e &amp;<lb/>
to receive ??' emphasise<lb/>
Essay contest this year ev<lb/>
forestry and XZ<lb/>
urz?l?$ <lb/>
Practics" and Water<lb/>
of North Carolina .<lb/>
Industrial Arts<lb/>
Group To Fair<lb/>
Eleven students here attended the<lb/>
annual state Industrial Arts Fair in<lb/>
Greensboro Saturday.<lb/>
The Fair included a preliminary<lb/>
contest to select industrial arts proj-<lb/>
ects by students in this state for en-<lb/>
try in the Industrial Arts Awards<lb/>
Fair sponsored each year by the Ford<lb/>
Motor Company.<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Bing and Dr. Charles<lb/>
G. Risher, of the East Carolina facul-<lb/>
ty, accompanied tihe students to<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
Students who attended the Greens-<lb/>
boro Fair were Charles West, Charlie<lb/>
H. Wentz, Leroy Henderson, Aubrey<lb/>
T. Collins, Giles Dail, Eugene Fields,<lb/>
Thomas BKzzard, Henry E. Gilbert<lb/>
Jr John C. Johnson, Walter E. John-<lb/>
son and Roland Pridgen.<lb/>
Dr. Pingel Will Head<lb/>
Pitt Literary Group<lb/>
Dr. Martha Pingel of t; e depart-<lb/>
ment of English here has been ap-<lb/>
pointed Pitt County chairman of the<lb/>
Noiirh Carolina Literary and Histori-<lb/>
cal Association. Among her duties is<lb/>
management of the membership cam-<lb/>
paign now being conducted in this<lb/>
area.<lb/>
Dr. Pingel will attend May 14-15<lb/>
in Edenton the spring regional meet-<lb/>
ing of the association. Events will<lb/>
include a tour of historic places in<lb/>
Chowan County; a talk by Richard<lb/>
WalsT of State College; and a lunch-<lb/>
eon at Bandon Plantation, home of<lb/>
?ie novelist Mrs. Ioiglis Fletcher.<lb/>
Williford Gives<lb/>
Sunday Recital<lb/>
Jack Willirord of Farmville, stuCnt<lb/>
i inn sic here, won the approva of<lb/>
an audience which gathered Sunny<lb/>
afternoon in the Austin auditorily<lb/>
to hear his recital of works for tL<lb/>
and 1949.<lb/>
James L. Whitfield of Raleigh,<lb/>
president of the Alumni Association,<lb/>
will preside at a business meeting<lb/>
luring the morning. The recipient of<lb/>
the annual Alumni Award to an out-<lb/>
.anding graduate of the college will<lb/>
be announced at this time.<lb/>
Other events being planned for the<lb/>
day include a luncheon, a tea, two<lb/>
programs of music, class reunions<lb/>
and a tour of new buildings on the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Student Workers, Leaders<lb/>
Receive Honors In Field<lb/>
Hooper Presents<lb/>
Recital Tuesday<lb/>
Marietta Hooper of Elizal eth City,<lb/>
pianist, was presented Tuesday in a<lb/>
recital sponsored by the college de-<lb/>
partment of music.<lb/>
A senior at the college, Miss Hoop-<lb/>
er appeared in a program marking<lb/>
her graduation from the college this<lb/>
year. She is a pupil of Robert Carter,<lb/>
of the East Carolina faculty.<lb/>
For her recital Miss Hooper had<lb/>
chosen a varied group of selections<lb/>
by composers from the classic to the<lb/>
contemporary periods in music.<lb/>
Among numbers were Beethoven's<lb/>
Sonata, oo. 26; selections from Suite,<lb/>
op. 1, by Eugene d'Albert; and "Dance<lb/>
of the White Indian" by Villa-Lobos.<lb/>
Miss Hooper appeared last year as<lb/>
piano soloist with the East Carolina<lb/>
Orchestra, At the college she has been<lb/>
a member of the College Choir and<lb/>
accompanist for the Women's Chorus<lb/>
and the 1954 production of "Blossom<lb/>
Time" by the Student Government<lb/>
A.ssociation of the college.<lb/>
Baptists Slate<lb/>
Final Programs<lb/>
For School Year<lb/>
Forums for the remainder of the<lb/>
term have been announced by BSU<lb/>
Forum Chairman Mary Ann Marsh-<lb/>
burn.<lb/>
May 10, Florence McFaden, edu-<lb/>
cational director at Memorial Baptist<lb/>
Church, will lead a program on char-<lb/>
acter story telling and Bible study<lb/>
"or students interested in Vacation<lb/>
Bible School work during the summer.<lb/>
She will highlight the program by<lb/>
giving demonstrations.<lb/>
May 17, the Bi le School theme will<lb/>
The young pianist was brought to continue a discussion on<lb/>
Decision To Post<lb/>
Election Returns<lb/>
Passes In SGA<lb/>
A resolution was accepted by the<lb/>
Student Legislature last week to post<lb/>
numerical returns after all general<lb/>
elections hereafter. The former policy<lb/>
was rot to make publically known<lb/>
the count of votes.<lb/>
Don King- introduced the resolution<lb/>
which was composed by him and<lb/>
Owen Besselieu.<lb/>
One member said that the results<lb/>
may be "embarrassing" to a candi-<lb/>
: ite. Amother expressed that if the<lb/>
candidates wete willing to put their<lb/>
ram-as on ballot, "then they should<lb/>
be willing to take what the election<lb/>
orings them<lb/>
President Wade Cooper announced<lb/>
.it the meetitg that Warren "Sonny"<lb/>
Russell's basketball jersey has been<lb/>
officially retired and placed in the<lb/>
trophy ease at Memorial Gym. The<lb/>
outstanding Pirate cage star, who<lb/>
graduated lac-it year, wore the famed<lb/>
jersey number 14 which has been<lb/>
requested for retirement by the SGA<lb/>
all year.<lb/>
Louis Clark was unanimously elect-<lb/>
ed to fill the vacancy as general<lb/>
airman of next year's Homecoming.<lb/>
Charlie Kluttz, who was also unani-<lb/>
mously elected chairman the week<lb/>
before, withdrew' because of practice<lb/>
teaching next fall.<lb/>
Upon recommendations of the<lb/>
coaches here, the body voted for the<lb/>
hree teams to receive the John D.<lb/>
Messick Sportsmanship Award, an<lb/>
honor given annually to a team in<lb/>
the North State Conference. Votes<lb/>
from the student legislatures in the<lb/>
conference will be tabulated next<lb/>
week at the annual NS Senate. Col-<lb/>
leges cannot vote for their own teams.<lb/>
East Carolina's votes will be Appa-<lb/>
lachian, first; Guilibrd, second; Ca-<lb/>
tawf i third.<lb/>
by Valeria Shearon<lb/>
Annual Awards Night will bs held<lb/>
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Austin audi-<lb/>
torium, according to Award? Com-<lb/>
mittee Chairman Don Kmg, who will<lb/>
preside at the event. Receiving awards<lb/>
will be outstanding seniors in each<lb/>
department and other student leaders.<lb/>
Students receiving d partmev.tal<lb/>
awards have been selected by a joint<lb/>
committee of faculty and students of<lb/>
the various deartments. To be eligi-<lb/>
ble for a departmental award, a stu-<lb/>
dent must have at least a 2.2 average<lb/>
in cither his major or minor field.<lb/>
Student C:tizen Awards will be<lb/>
presented to the outstanding woman<lb/>
student and to the outstanding male<lb/>
student in the Senior Class. These<lb/>
elections are made on the basis of<lb/>
the vote oi the SGA.<lb/>
Other awards will go to members<lb/>
of tne Student Legislature, 28 stu-<lb/>
dents who were selected for "Wbo'?<lb/>
Who in American Colleges and Uni-<lb/>
versities athletes and members of<lb/>
the "Eat Carolinian" and "Bucca-<lb/>
neer" staffs.<lb/>
Both the faculty and the student<lb/>
u.iieers will be represented in the<lb/>
awards. Dean Leo W. Jenkins will<lb/>
present tfiue departmental awards.<lb/>
Publications awards will he made by<lb/>
Dr. John O. Reynolds o the "Bucca-<lb/>
neer" .staff, and by Mary H. Greene<lb/>
bo the "East Carolinian" staff. The<lb/>
"Who's Who" awards will be given<lb/>
by Dr. Clinton R. Prewett, dean of<lb/>
naiu and director of Student Affairs.<lb/>
Wade Cooper, SGA president, will<lb/>
present Student Legislature awards.<lb/>
Dr. W. E. Marshall, of the social<lb/>
Btudics department, will present tue<lb/>
lavo Ciriz nship Awards. Athletic<lb/>
awards will be made by Dr. N. M.<lb/>
Jorgensen, head of that department,<lb/>
assisted by the various coaches.<lb/>
At the close of the program, offi-<lb/>
cial presentation of the 1954 "Bucca-<lb/>
neer" will be made to Dr. Orval L<lb/>
Phillips, Registrar, to whom the an-<lb/>
nual has been dedicated. This dedi-<lb/>
cation cremony will be conducted by<lb/>
"Buccaneer" co-editors, Mildred Rey-<lb/>
nolds and Tommie Lupton.<lb/>
Kings Of Underworld And 'Peepers'<lb/>
Many Ways To Cheat On Exams<lb/>
by Anne George<lb/>
Many of us use some scrupulous I as tests have, and probably will be<lb/>
p.ano.<lb/>
the stage for more than a dozen<lb/>
curtain calls as selections on the<lb/>
ai'temoon's program were enthusias-<lb/>
tically applauded.<lb/>
Williford presented a varied pro-<lb/>
grn.v. in classic, romantic and modern<lb/>
a "ostions.<lb/>
Particularly well received by the<lb/>
audience were Beethoven's Sonata in<lb/>
D Minor, op. 31, no. 2 (The Tempest),<lb/>
Kb a; haturian's Toccata, The Lark by<lb/>
Glinka-Balakirew, and Liszt's Hun-<lb/>
garian Rhapsody, no. 6.<lb/>
A sophomore at the college and a<lb/>
pupil of Elizal eth Drake of the fac-<lb/>
ulty, Williford was one of a small<lb/>
number of students chosen this year<lb/>
by the faculty of the college depart-<lb/>
ment of music to appear in recital.<lb/>
Varsity Club Elects<lb/>
McAdams New Piexy<lb/>
Howard McAdams was elected to<lb/>
head next year's Varsity Club at a<lb/>
recent meeting. He succeeds Bobby<lb/>
Hedges.<lb/>
Other officers are J. C. Thomas,<lb/>
vice president; Boyd Webb, secretary;<lb/>
end Willie Holland, treasurer.<lb/>
The club is composed of members<lb/>
of varsity tt campus.<lb/>
Campus Calendar Of Coming Events<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
6:45?"Y" Vespers will be held in<lb/>
the "Y" Hut.<lb/>
Friday and Saturday<lb/>
The Academy of Science Conven-<lb/>
tion will convene on campus all day,<lb/>
with night sessions also. Meetings<lb/>
will be in Austin auditorium and the<lb/>
Training School auditorium.<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
7 p.m.?A free movie will he shown<lb/>
in Austin auditorium.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
4 p.m.?Walter Noona will give a<lb/>
piano concert in Austin auditorium.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
7 p.m.?The Creative Writers Club<lb/>
will meet in Flanagan.<lb/>
7:30 p.m.?Awards Night will be<lb/>
Ield in Austin auditorium.<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
6:30-8:30 p.m.?The ACE will meet<lb/>
an the Training School cafeteria.<lb/>
7 p.m.?The Home Economics Club<lb/>
will meet in Flanagan.<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
2:45 p.m.?Bast Carolina will play<lb/>
host to Atlantic Christian College<lb/>
here in the last home game.<lb/>
7 p.m.?The SGA will meet in<lb/>
Flanagan auditorium.<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
6:45 p.m.?"Y" Vesprs will be held<lb/>
in the "Y" Hut.<lb/>
8 p.m.?A Band Concert will be<lb/>
presented in the Training School au-<lb/>
ditorium.<lb/>
he use of handwork and recreation,<lb/>
'he panel directed by Shirley Lassi-<lb/>
r, Syrenna Thompson and Mary<lb/>
An Manshburn will mark the close<lb/>
of the forums for the year.<lb/>
ginning in September, forums<lb/>
"wttlbe under direction of the newly<lb/>
ffiied chairman, Shirley Lassiter.<lb/>
F?-ims are held at the Baptist<lb/>
Student Center every Monday evening<lb/>
at 5:3 All students are welcomed.<lb/>
Pern Announces<lb/>
Contest Winners<lb/>
Nancy Cartyn Hamilton and Effie<lb/>
Verlene MiteeU, both erf Kipling,<lb/>
won first-plac honors in the North<lb/>
Carolina divis Gf the National<lb/>
French Contest sponsored by the<lb/>
American Assoeiion of Teachers of<lb/>
French.<lb/>
Mrs. Marguerib a. Perry of the<lb/>
East Carolina Coege foreign lan-<lb/>
guages departmea state contest<lb/>
chairman, has just Enounced results<lb/>
oil the state-wide examinations which<lb/>
were administered It. Aipril. More<lb/>
than 2,000 students jn secondary<lb/>
schools in North Cardjt,a participat-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Miss Mitchell scored hest in the<lb/>
state in tests for second-vgj. students<lb/>
of French; and Miss ajiton, in<lb/>
that for first-year student,f French.<lb/>
Both are students in the V Fayette<lb/>
School and are enrolled inWgseg m<lb/>
French taught by Mrs. -orothy<lb/>
Spence Arnold.<lb/>
methods to help us gt through col<lb/>
lege! The gambler is well-known on<lb/>
camU.s, as is also the student who<lb/>
always does those little "extras" for<lb/>
ir-e teacher and comes up with high<lb/>
grades. But, how many of us know<lb/>
the cheaters on campus?<lb/>
King of Underworld<lb/>
Perhaps I shouldn't out and out<lb/>
call him a cheater, but refer to him<lb/>
as the "King of the Underworld<lb/>
During exams the "King's" populari-<lb/>
ty is immense, but all who seek his<lb/>
aid must 'pay a high price?loss of<lb/>
self-respect. You can usually spot this<lb/>
figurehead by various means. First,<lb/>
he always carries a ring of keys<lb/>
(that admit him to any building and<lb/>
room on campus). Second, if you<lb/>
notice closely, his finger tips are<lb/>
slightly burned. In bis occupations<lb/>
he must rely heavily on matches to<lb/>
cne by, for too much light would<lb/>
attract attention. Third, this man can<lb/>
be found usually surrounded by a<lb/>
crowd of admirers, all wanting bim<lb/>
to sell them certain exams. Beware<lb/>
of him!<lb/>
The Little "Peepers"<lb/>
Many of the "King's" hoods carry<lb/>
on other forms of this activity in the<lb/>
class rooms. Some forms are the<lb/>
"Peepers who can't resist taking a<lb/>
look at another's- paper. Some like to<lb/>
take their not-s with them la exams<lb/>
?either on their cuffs, socks, shoes,<lb/>
or even concealed in their watches.<lb/>
They are sly . . . but beware! Crime<lb/>
does not pay!<lb/>
Cheating has been with us as long<lb/>
handed down from generation to gen-<lb/>
eration, unless you yourself put a<lb/>
stop to it. It may be a way to get<lb/>
on the Dean's List, but when you<lb/>
)ave accomplished this, do you have<lb/>
th inner satisfaction that should go<lb/>
aiong with the honor?<lb/>
Beware of the shady way and rely<lb/>
on your own knowledge, for in the<lb/>
end it's what YOU know that counts.<lb/>
Campus Seen<lb/>
Brave East Carolina male, egg-<lb/>
ed on by other equally brave<lb/>
East Carolina males, taking baby<lb/>
squirrels f-om nest in back of<lb/>
Slay Dorm while mother squir-<lb/>
rel pleads for her children.<lb/>
Draft Deferment<lb/>
Student Exams<lb/>
Set For May 20<lb/>
The deadline for applications for<lb/>
the Sel ctive Service examination is<lb/>
midnight, May 10, according to a re-<lb/>
port released from the local draft<lb/>
board. The teat is an intelligence<lb/>
quiz and will be givn here for the<lb/>
last time this year on May 20. It is<lb/>
taken to determine whether or not<lb/>
male college students are eligible for<lb/>
deferment from the draft.<lb/>
If a student passes the exam with<lb/>
a satisfactory grade, he is deferred<lb/>
for four years, as long as he remains<lb/>
enrolled in college. Failure to pass<lb/>
the test cannot be made up, however,<lb/>
as the test is only given once to the<lb/>
same person.<lb/>
The official designation for the<lb/>
exam is the Selective Service College<lb/>
Qualification test. The present cri-<lb/>
teria for deferment as an undergrad-<lb/>
uate student are either a satisfactory<lb/>
score (70) on this test or a specified<lb/>
rank in class (upper half of male<lb/>
fre:hman, upper two thirds of male<lb/>
sophomore, or upper three fourths of<lb/>
male junior class).<lb/>
: ;<lb/>
<pb facs="00038351_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, MAY 6.<lb/>
Tfil'<lb/>
RSD-<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/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952.<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925 at the<lb/>
U. S. Pot Office, Greenvill<lb/>
N. C, under the act of<lb/>
March 3, 1879.<lb/>
by T.<lb/>
Editor s<lb/>
Say<lb/>
Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Who's Who Among Students At East Carolina<lb/>
Senior Prefers Teaching To Medical Career<lb/>
by Kay Johnston<lb/>
POT POURR1<lb/>
by Emily S. Boyce<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
First Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March, 1954<lb/>
Editor-in-chief<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Assistant Editor<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
Staff Assistants<lb/>
SGA Reporter<lb/>
Faculty Advisor<lb/>
Sport Editor<lb/>
Sport1- Aseistnata<lb/>
EDITORIAL STAFF<lb/>
T. Parker Maddrey<lb/>
Faye O'Neal<lb/>
Emily S. Boyce<lb/>
Kay Johnston<lb/>
Anne George, Pat Humphrey,<lb/>
Joyce Smith, Erolyn Blount, Faye Lanier, Jerry<lb/>
Register, Valeria Shearer Laura Credle and<lb/>
Jack Latta.<lb/>
Betty Salmons<lb/>
Mary H. Greene<lb/>
SPORTS STAFF<lb/>
Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Bruce Phillips, Anwer Joseph and<lb/>
J. W. Browning.<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Edna Massad<lb/>
Faye Jones<lb/>
Edna Whitfield,<lb/>
Busimss Manager<lb/>
Assistant Business Manager<lb/>
Business Assistants<lb/>
Mary Ellen Williams and Jean Godwin.<lb/>
CIRCULATION<lb/>
Ex,<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wit,<lb/>
urs it back to cancel half a line,<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word of it<lb/>
Omar Khayyam as translated by E. Fitzgerald<lb/>
Joe McCarthy, that probing little<lb/>
junior senator from Wisconsin, has<lb/>
set a new trend in the American way<lb/>
of doing things. Now everything has<lb/>
to be "investigated<lb/>
Not too long ago the Baiptiste in<lb/>
the state P? "n an investigation.<lb/>
Frequently, the Student Legislature<lb/>
passes on motions that begin "Inves-<lb/>
tigate tihe conditions . . <lb/>
Fir the past few months tobacco<lb/>
iji s.noking form, which North Caro-<lb/>
lina produces three-fourths of the<lb/>
world's crop, has been under heavy<lb/>
investigation. It isn't a Red investi-<lb/>
gation but a probe on colorless nico-<lb/>
tine, which is believed to be a cause<lb/>
of lung cancer, short life, shortness<lb/>
of breath and halitosis.<lb/>
As the Senate Investigations Com-<lb/>
mittee has put tihe American public<lb/>
against Communists, so has these<lb/>
nicotine probes put the same public<lb/>
against smoking. There has been<lb/>
quite a drop in tobacco consumption<lb/>
in thee last few months.<lb/>
Only this week, we receiTed <lb/>
note from an alumni reader who<lb/>
stated that she disapproved of cig-<lb/>
arette advertising to encourage the<lb/>
habit through college news-papers.<lb/>
She admitted tihat she was a victim<lb/>
of the nicotine master.<lb/>
All thee investigations may put<lb/>
m strongly against something we<lb/>
belitve is bad. but is it strong enough<lb/>
to make us act against it?<lb/>
Bob Pennington, an outstanding<lb/>
snior from Rocky Mount, has really<lb/>
gotten the most out of his college<lb/>
career.<lb/>
Bob chose East Carolina because<lb/>
he had heard from many of his<lb/>
friends what a great place this was.<lb/>
He Hkes almost everything about it,<lb/>
He likes most everything ai out it,<lb/>
but especially the friendly, "one big-<lb/>
family" atmosphere. "My previous<lb/>
plans were to major in pre-med, but<lb/>
I decided eight years was just a little<lb/>
too long for me Bob says. "I<lb/>
changed my major to industrial arts<lb/>
and my minor to science.<lb/>
Variety of Hobbies<lb/>
Bob has a variety of hobbies,<lb/>
and likes boat building, making fur-<lb/>
niture, boat racing, swimming, watei<lb/>
skiing, fishing, hunting and almost<lb/>
anything that keeps him outside.<lb/>
"1 did my student teaching in Tar-<lb/>
boro he says, "and liked it very<lb/>
much He was also chosen as alter-<lb/>
nate "Mr. Student Teacher" of 1953<lb/>
and 1954.<lb/>
Bofo has been a member of the<lb/>
Industrial Arts Club for four years,<lb/>
Robert Pennington<lb/>
and served as president last year. He<lb/>
has also been a member of the Science<lb/>
Club for three years. "Those science<lb/>
trips we take every spring are fun,<lb/>
as well as educational he says.<lb/>
A real lover of sports, he has<lb/>
been a member of the Varsity Club<lb/>
for four years. He also played varsity<lb/>
football during his freshman year.<lb/>
An outstanding ROTC cadet, Bob<lb/>
has been a member of the Cadet<lb/>
Officer's Club for three years, and<lb/>
was designated as a Distinguished<lb/>
Military Graduate.<lb/>
Many Activities<lb/>
Bob has enjoyed his membership in<lb/>
the Alpha Phi Omega, which promotes<lb/>
hadei,hip, friendship and service, for<lb/>
? ree years. This year he has served<lb/>
as corresponding secretary to this<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
An outstanding student in every<lb/>
reSj act, Bob was chosen as a rep-<lb/>
rr,entative to the yearly publication'<lb/>
if "Who's Who In American Uni-<lb/>
versities and Colleges<lb/>
Amonjr his many activities, Bob<lb/>
served on tihe Student Legislature dur-<lb/>
ing hus sophomore year.<lb/>
Bob will receive his ROTC com-<lb/>
mission upon graduation in May, and<lb/>
has received tentative orders to go<lb/>
into flight training at Graham Air<lb/>
Force Base in Marianna, Florida.<lb/>
(Editor's note: This week's Who's<lb/>
Who will receive a carton of Phillip<lb/>
Morr:s from Campus Representative<lb/>
Max Joyner.)<lb/>
Next year the students will once again vote<lb/>
on the entertainment for the coming year. Since<lb/>
it is thought that we do not know who and what<lb/>
is good and who isn't, two ways will be intro-<lb/>
duced to aid wise student selecting. The "East<lb/>
Carolinian" will run articles concerning each per-<lb/>
former giving all information possible on tin-<lb/>
type of entertainment each will be. To benefit the<lb/>
voting student oven further, the list will<lb/>
annotated on the check sheet. This time we will<lb/>
have the opportunity to vote for one ortwo n,<lb/>
bands to appear on campus during the year.<lb/>
Although it would benefit us all much n.<lb/>
to vote for one more good entertainment rather<lb/>
than another "here today" dance band, sadly<lb/>
enough, there doesn't seem to be much doubt that<lb/>
we'll have two bands next year.<lb/>
Coed Forgets About Points<lb/>
Ruilding Progress Cited<lb/>
Looking over the building expansion and<lb/>
other campus improvements East Carolina has<lb/>
made rapid advancement this year. An outlook to<lb/>
next year shows that even more progress will be<lb/>
le in the building program.<lb/>
To begin with, a college telephone switch-<lb/>
b -ard was installed to provide more and quicker<lb/>
communication on campus. Seating capacity at<lb/>
the College Stadium was increased by 1,400 last<lb/>
fall through the efforts of the Pirates Club, or-<lb/>
ganized last year by interested alumni and Green-<lb/>
ville business concerns.<lb/>
Ragsdale Hall got an additional wing that<lb/>
furnishes 90 more male students here with living<lb/>
quarters. Plans are underway to start construc-<lb/>
tion on a men's and a women's dorm which will<lb/>
w over 5)0 more students on campus.<lb/>
More sidewalks and drives have been laid<lb/>
r cently to ease the flow of automotive and pa-<lb/>
destrian traffic. More parking areas are being<lb/>
constructed to meet the present needs and the<lb/>
anticipated larger number of cars on campus next<lb/>
year. , . .<lb/>
The new Joyner Library is almost completed<lb/>
and will be ready for occupancy next fall. This<lb/>
huge building with its many rooms should ade-<lb/>
quatelv accomodate students and books.<lb/>
By next fall the renovated Wright basement<lb/>
will be completed for a Student Union, housing<lb/>
the Student Supply Stores and offices of student<lb/>
affairs.<lb/>
Credit for this campus expansion is due to<lb/>
many persons, but in particular to President<lb/>
John D. Messick, who showed our state legislators<lb/>
i State Budget Committee the need for more<lb/>
Got An Appointment To Make!<lb/>
Getting back to cigarette advertis-<lb/>
ing in the "East Carolinian there<lb/>
is a large majority of smokers already<lb/>
on this camipus and our advertisers<lb/>
are trying to get tihese to consume<lb/>
their brand.<lb/>
Iif a person makes up his mind<lb/>
that he won't smoke, no advertise-<lb/>
ment or any other means will force<lb/>
him to the hahit. The alumna who<lb/>
is against college cigarette ads prob-<lb/>
ably subscribes to a quality national<lb/>
magazine which advertises liquor.<lb/>
Now liquor forms a habit worse than<lb/>
tobacco. Again the same rule applies,<lb/>
"if a person makes up his mind not<lb/>
to drink, he isn't, regardless<lb/>
Those liquor ads help support that<lb/>
national magazine just as the cig-<lb/>
antte ad helps support this news-<lb/>
paper. We are not saying that we<lb/>
couldn't do without them, but with<lb/>
so much tobacco business done in this<lb/>
section of the state, what's wrong<lb/>
with the manufacturers leaving a por-<lb/>
tion of their ad expenditures with<lb/>
as?<lb/>
like iga<lb/>
at I<lb/>
just<lb/>
for<lb/>
by An ECC Coed<lb/>
As Told to Faye O'Neal<lb/>
A rather sleepy student, I look<lb/>
down at my watch a dozen times<lb/>
every day during my two to three<lb/>
clas. R's a boring old class, anyway,<lb/>
and I just live for the bell to ring.<lb/>
I'd never pa courses like that unless<lb/>
I taiked to the professor for a few-<lb/>
minutes after the class is over.<lb/>
Just yesterday I waited for the<lb/>
bell to break the dreamy daze I'd<lb/>
fallen into and when it did ring, went<lb/>
up to get in a few points. I stood by<lb/>
the desk waiting for my teacher to<lb/>
1 ave the group at the other side of<lb/>
the room?I always polish my apples<lb/>
better in private. Unconsciously, I<lb/>
looked down at my watch and saw<lb/>
hat it was 2:55.<lb/>
Suddenly I remembered! I had an<lb/>
appointment at the beauty shop at<lb/>
three. Forgetting all about my brown-<lb/>
ing points, 1 loft that classroom in<lb/>
a hurrv. Just an hour is<lb/>
abou: it for I had to get back to<lb/>
school for a c!as.? at four. Oh, don't<lb/>
you worry, well get to you 1 was<lb/>
assured.<lb/>
?u a red-haired girl who smelled<lb/>
riced cologne came over<lb/>
ta ted working on my hair. She<lb/>
?ru bed and brushed and brushed<lb/>
ibout five minutes. I sort<lb/>
To The Editor<lb/>
May Day Editorial<lb/>
To the Editor,<lb/>
There are some questions that<lb/>
come in mind as I read the editorial<lb/>
"Big Day For Heathens, Commu-<lb/>
nists First, should we abolish all<lb/>
celebrations that are pagan in origin?<lb/>
Including Christmas? Or only those<lb/>
tr.iat have not been transformed Into<lb/>
herefor a growing college. Credit is Christian celebrations? The editorial<lb/>
also due to F. D. Duncan, college business manag-<lb/>
er, who has the job of budgeting the State's ap-<lb/>
propriations wisely.<lb/>
There Are Criminals On Campus<lb/>
There are criminals on this campus. Now<lb/>
that final exams will be coming up two weeks<lb/>
fr m today, there will be students committing<lb/>
such crimes as breaking-and-entering and lar-<lb/>
It sounds bad to place these violations ot<lb/>
c liege regulations in criminal lingo, but the of-<lb/>
fenses are just about on the same order.<lb/>
Cheating itself sounds minor. But it isn't.<lb/>
N t when an instructor's office is opened by a<lb/>
pass key and next day's exam is stolen. This is<lb/>
the same as breaking-and-entering with a larceny<lb/>
charge. . ,<lb/>
Looking on someone's paper daring an exam<lb/>
to get information is petty larceny. This is a<lb/>
criminal offense in regard to stealing something<lb/>
from its rightful owner. It isn't fair to this own-<lb/>
er who has worked for himself to get his mark.<lb/>
In the long run. the fellow who gets cheated<lb/>
is the one who does the cheating. This phrase has<lb/>
been used several times to curb cheating but it<lb/>
does not seem to faze those cheating. If a student<lb/>
feels that he must cheat to pass a course, then<lb/>
he isn't receiving what that course offers includ-<lb/>
ing the benefits frcm it in later life.<lb/>
We are all probably against cheating. We<lb/>
are probably guilty of a little cheating ourselves.<lb/>
But are we willing to put it to a screeching halt<lb/>
now?<lb/>
of<lb/>
hinted t'r-it i was in a hurry and she<lb/>
s?aid :ha, I was just getting the pre-<lb/>
HmiiKirJ dandruff-removing treat-<lb/>
ment, sure must have had more<lb/>
iai.iiTt'f than I thought I had.<lb/>
She finally got my hair washed<lb/>
and vent off to find some pins to<lb/>
use n setting it. Five more valuable<lb/>
mipttes later she came back. The<lb/>
prct'ss began to progress slowly.<lb/>
'o make a too long story shorter,<lb/>
I in now sitting outside the Dean's<lb/>
oJice, after having been stood up<lb/>
1st night, trying to think of an<lb/>
before another class. I had called for xplanation to give for cutting the<lb/>
an ap ointment to have my hair set lest I had scheduled at four yester-<lb/>
a ter my roommate got me a date day.<lb/>
with a guy from State. The lady ha<lb/>
taken my name and asked if I wer<lb/>
sure I could be on time. Yes. I h-d<lb/>
told her, for I only had an hourto<lb/>
have my hair put up and dried.<lb/>
Food<lb/>
lor<lb/>
The work and organization which developed<lb/>
May Day into the spectacle we saw Saturday<lb/>
afternoon was a tribute to every member that<lb/>
participated in the affair.<lb/>
The real problem which May Day ha<lb/>
into was brought up at the SGA meeting<lb/>
Wednesday night by Miss Shaw of the phj<lb/>
education "department.<lb/>
The problem of "pupil participation" mal<lb/>
May Day a chore for the advisors. Students<lb/>
don't seem to want to be in the program, al-<lb/>
though everyone loves to go to the affair. Dr.<lb/>
ing students from the various PE classes ia<lb/>
tuinly nt satisfactory. If interest in the annual<lb/>
event doesn't change for the better, this will<lb/>
probably be our last May Day.<lb/>
Thought <lb/>
all I had<lb/>
Wit And Wisdom<lb/>
Experience is the best of schoolmasters, only<lb/>
the schoolfees are heavy.?Carlyle<lb/>
An excuse is worse and more terrible than a<lb/>
lie- for an excuse is a lie guarded.?Pope ?<lb/>
A good listener is not only popular every-<lb/>
where, but after awhile he knows something.?<lb/>
WUson Mizner<lb/>
Be courteous to all, but intimate with few,<lb/>
and let those few be well tried before you give<lb/>
them your confident-Washington<lb/>
noted that May Day has been cele-<lb/>
brated by Christians as the feast of<lb/>
St. John, however did not smuggest<lb/>
float this role be enlarged upon.<lb/>
Another reason given for abolish-<lb/>
ing May Day is. that in other MU<lb/>
tries it is a day of worshipping gods<lb/>
and goddesses. The important ques-<lb/>
tion is how is May Day celebrated<lb/>
hre? lis fee editorial objecting to the<lb/>
worship of Mrs. Brimson? Should all<lb/>
beauty contests be abolished as un-<lb/>
democratic and unChristian? In all<lb/>
fairness it ought to be mentioned<lb/>
that "White Christmas" and "Easter<lb/>
Parade" were featured.<lb/>
As for the charge that Communists<lb/>
celebrate International Labor Day,<lb/>
does that mean we should have no<lb/>
celebrations that the Communists<lb/>
have? Should we abolish our Septem-<lb/>
ber Labor Day? There are demo-<lb/>
cratic countries that celebrate Labor<lb/>
D?y on May 1.<lb/>
Should the criteria of celebrations<lb/>
be whetiher they are Christian and<lb/>
democratic? Is there room in our<lb/>
democracy for non-Christian prac-<lb/>
tices?<lb/>
A final objection was that May-<lb/>
Day was a celebration "honoring with<lb/>
humility the leaders of a monarchy<lb/>
nation Surely England is a democ-<lb/>
racy. Further, in medieval times "aV<lb/>
classes of people, young and old alik<lb/>
were up with the dawn, and we<lb/>
'a-Maying' in the woods. Branches<lb/>
trees and flowers were being oc-<lb/>
pied by those who shouldered ie<lb/>
maypole . . <lb/>
Then, too, it wa? attacked.<lb/>
As for me, I would have wened<lb/>
community participation so t I<lb/>
might have twirled on the gr with<lb/>
Mrs. Brinson. To the write? ?<lb/>
editorial, Kudos ifor aakin did<lb/>
Socrates, 'Why do we do w we do<lb/>
George PaW<lb/>
Since Bhe beauty shop is noar<lb/>
from school, I made it in thre and<lb/>
a half minutes. 1 practically M? all<lb/>
the way down there. I wen inside<lb/>
and sat down in the lobby. Tie odor<lb/>
of wave lotion, and the sienin.gly<lb/>
sweet smell of cosmetics frt circu-<lb/>
late in a beauty shotp keptne strug-<lb/>
gling for ' reath but I thow'ht it was<lb/>
worth it. I had been ji dying to<lb/>
date that cute boy?so ?"st look<lb/>
good.<lb/>
I waited patiently un 3:15. Know-<lb/>
ing that I had to get ?ck to take a<lb/>
test at four, I decided ask some of<lb/>
I the gossiping opera1 if I couldn t<lb/>
begin having my fixed- l ap-<lb/>
proached one of lp?? s?e said, "Let<lb/>
me call Miz Duk' she's 1? charge<lb/>
"Just a moment came a sophisti-<lb/>
cated reply. In ?ctly four minutes<lb/>
and 28 seconds ne emerged from a<lb/>
cuitained-off Fa and said to me,<lb/>
"Could we fix ?rr hair for you, dear,<lb/>
or maybe yon like to have a mani-<lb/>
cure or facia I could have scream-<lb/>
ed but I rered that I had made an<lb/>
appointment might as well forget<lb/>
Couple Of The Week<lb/>
by Erolyn Ulount<lb/>
Jean Dupree, a sophomore from<lb/>
Angier, and Jim Alexander, a junior<lb/>
from Columbia. Bret met about five<lb/>
years ago in Columbia. Jean's mother<lb/>
is from there and they often visit<lb/>
her'home. Jean and Jim began dating<lb/>
in September. 1953. and started going<lb/>
St ady January 6 of this year. Says<lb/>
Jean. "I thought Jim was a lot of<lb/>
fun and had a good personality the<lb/>
first time I met him. He's always<lb/>
teasing and cutting up. He thought<lb/>
I was a big snob, wihich I guess might<lb/>
have been true then<lb/>
Jean and Jim like dancing (Jean<lb/>
has to sit most of the time at dances,<lb/>
a Jim plays with the Collegians),<lb/>
movies, music, basketball games and<lb/>
other sports.<lb/>
"Doesn't look as if Jim will get<lb/>
home with me says Jean. "He never<lb/>
has any time. We did get to the Aza-<lb/>
lea Festival at any rate<lb/>
"We were at a friend's house when<lb/>
Jim gave me his class ring says<lb/>
Jean. "It was really romantic. All he<lb/>
said was 'Here' and stuck it on my<lb/>
finger. I gave him my ring to wear,<lb/>
I ut it's too small for him so we both<lb/>
by Donald King, Ed Mathews,<lb/>
"Buzz" Young<lb/>
It is, of course, too early to get<lb/>
a positive picture of the new Student<lb/>
Legislature and to judge what that<lb/>
body will accomplish, but we believe<lb/>
some rdcent actions of the group are<lb/>
of enough importance to merit con-<lb/>
significant changes and is hard at<lb/>
the coming year.<lb/>
After only two meetings the new<lb/>
legislature has already made some<lb/>
significant changes and is hard at<lb/>
work on others.<lb/>
In the past no accurate records si<lb/>
all that happened at the meetings<lb/>
were kept. In the minutes of past<lb/>
years only passed motions were in-<lb/>
cluded in tihe official record. Items on<lb/>
which the body spoke its opinion by<lb/>
a negative voice were not included.<lb/>
Often the names of those appointed<lb/>
to serve on committees were omitted.<lb/>
At the last meeting this was changed<lb/>
when a point of order was raised<lb/>
from the floor and from thus time<lb/>
forth the record of the body will be<lb/>
complete. The value of this change<lb/>
is self-evident.<lb/>
Alvo in tihe past the total vote<lb/>
received by each candidate in camipus-<lb/>
wide elections has been kept secret.<lb/>
A resolution was adopted at the last<lb/>
meeting which requires that all totals<lb/>
be made public as soon as possible<lb/>
after an election. This change of what<lb/>
had long been a custom of this school<lb/>
is significant for two reasons. First,<lb/>
the public announcement of the re-<lb/>
turns is, we believe, a step forward<lb/>
in democratic seltf-govermnent by the<lb/>
students here. And second, the<lb/>
change shows that we are capable<lb/>
of sometimes getting away from pre-<lb/>
cedence, of making changes when<lb/>
they are needed.<lb/>
The new administration has also<lb/>
made an early start on next year's<lb/>
Homecoming in order to make it tihe<lb/>
best we have ever had. Much can be<lb/>
done to improve Homecoming and it<lb/>
appears as if the present committee<lb/>
is approaching the matter in a<lb/>
straightforward, progressive way.<lb/>
As we said at tie beginning of this<lb/>
article it is too early to judge the<lb/>
new Legislature and administration.<lb/>
But devekn, mentis o far give the im-<lb/>
pression that a progressive attitude<lb/>
is being taken. East Carolina is a<lb/>
growing school. While in this state<lb/>
of growth it is always changing. It<lb/>
is the duty of all of us, individually<lb/>
and through our elected officials, to<lb/>
do what we can to lead this growth<lb/>
in the right direction. At this stage<lb/>
in our growth we can't afiford to relax<lb/>
our efforts to improve East Carolina.<lb/>
We hope tihat the recent attitude<lb/>
of the Legislature and administration<lb/>
will be carried through next year<lb/>
and that every student on this cam-<lb/>
pus will be ready at all times to help<lb/>
in carrying out their program. Im-<lb/>
provement and advancement must be<lb/>
the work of many. The effort of<lb/>
everyone is needed.<lb/>
Behind an able man there are always other<lb/>
able men.?Chinese Proverb.<lb/>
Old men are fond of giving good advice, to<lb/>
console themselves for being no longer in a<lb/>
position to give bad examples.?La Rochefoucauld<lb/>
A teacher who is attempting to teach with<lb/>
inspiring the pupil with a desire to learn is ham-<lb/>
mering on cold iron.?Horace Mann.<lb/>
Everybody who is incapable of learning has<lb/>
taken to teaching.?Wilde, "The Decay of Lying<lb/>
As turning the log will make a dull fire<lb/>
burn, so change of studies a dull brain.?Lung-<lb/>
fellow.<lb/>
Frura And Against'em<lb/>
"But Professor Snarf, aren't you checking out bookg your class will<lb/>
need to study before finals?<lb/>
take turns wearing his<lb/>
Jean plans to teach English, which<lb/>
is her major, when sfhe finishes. Jim<lb/>
has to go into the Ah Force when<lb/>
he finishes. Then She plans to either<lb/>
lplay in an orchestra or teach.<lb/>
(Editor's Note: This week's couple<lb/>
will each receive a ticket to the Pitt<lb/>
Theatre, a gift from Saslow's Jewel-<lb/>
ers, a meal at the Olde Towns Inn<lb/>
and a meal at Greenview Drive-In.)<lb/>
On Marshal Glory<lb/>
by Faye O'Neal<lb/>
by Faye O'Neal<lb/>
Many students here consider the selection<lb/>
the college marshals nothing but a farce. Seem-<lb/>
ingly there are only a few who know anyth<lb/>
about the requirements for those who want to be<lb/>
marshals who still think that the honor is really<lb/>
an honor.<lb/>
This discussion was begun in the East Caro-<lb/>
linian a few issues back. After hearing comrn<lb/>
in conversations with different groups around<lb/>
school, we decided to go further with it.<lb/>
Major requirements for being a marsh<lb/>
East Carolina follow, as copied from the 1953-54<lb/>
Handbook: The scholarship of marshals shall<lb/>
attain an average of not less than a three; . . .<lb/>
the chief marshal shall be elected from among<lb/>
th( m by a majority of all the marshals . .  no<lb/>
nember of . . . any organization which perfor<lb/>
at commencement may be a marshal.<lb/>
Other requirements concern dress and <lb/>
formance of duties after election. Marshals art<lb/>
picked by a student vote each spring during the<lb/>
annual SGA elections.<lb/>
The requirements regarded as too general<lb/>
are the major ones. An average of three ;s re-<lb/>
quired of any student who remains in school here;<lb/>
it is, then, evident that excellence of scholarship<lb/>
boars no emphasis in the situation. Maybe the<lb/>
idea that the marshals are those with the highest<lb/>
(Trades came from high school customs. At any<lb/>
rate it is safe to say that most people look on them<lb/>
as representing the best scholarship attainment.<lb/>
The chief marshal is chosen from the midst.<lb/>
therefore, she has no superiority. Yet the honor<lb/>
is considered among the highest one can achieve<lb/>
here. Bearing no thought of disrespect for any<lb/>
of those who have been picked as chief marshal.<lb/>
many of the students think the position is filled<lb/>
without proper thought.<lb/>
Also in dispute is whether or not student<lb/>
election is a valid way to select marshals. The<lb/>
ballot has in the past listed names of all the girls<lb/>
who wished to be candidates and voters have been<lb/>
asked to check 16. The voters check those names<lb/>
?"hey recognize and pick some others they don't<lb/>
even know to finish out the number in most ca<lb/>
Thus the situation develops from a popularity<lb/>
contest to a pick and choose game.<lb/>
Helen Bland believes the situation is in dire<lb/>
need of improvement. At least a two average<lb/>
should be required, she believes, and the student<lb/>
should not be allowed to choose the marshals.<lb/>
She suggests that they be picked by a committee,<lb/>
made up preferably of faculty and SGA members.<lb/>
Fan Green considers being a marshal quite<lb/>
an honor. She thinks, however, that the marshals<lb/>
should be at least nominated by a committee<lb/>
similar to the one Helen suggests.<lb/>
Kathryn Smith says: "Th? girls who fill the<lb/>
honored position of college marshal should be<lb/>
carefully scrutinized in regard to scholarship and<lb/>
leadership ability, moral character and general<lb/>
personality. They represent East Carolina College<lb/>
to the public and should be the best representa-<lb/>
tives in every way<lb/>
One girl who is now serving as a marshal<lb/>
states that she is inclined to agree with those who<lb/>
think the honor has faded from the job. Another<lb/>
well-known co-ed who has more than the require-<lb/>
ments refused to run because she saw no honor<lb/>
in winning.<lb/>
s<lb/>
? larj<lb/>
0<lb/>
?<lb/>
two<lb/>
maw<lb/>
lag <lb/>
really T<lb/>
from Mel<lb/>
ith<lb/>
if"<lb/>
olin<lb/>
ha<lb/>
SCO'<lb/>
A ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00038351_0003"/><lb/>
SMNSMMWIMi<lb/>
1964<lb/>
THURSDAY, MAY 6. 1954<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
: - ' ?<lb/>
L U,<lb/>
iT.ri<lb/>
vote<lb/>
Since<lb/>
what<lb/>
ljm.ro-<lb/>
r'Kast<lb/>
h Per-<lb/>
il- the<lb/>
fit the<lb/>
fl be<lb/>
I will<lb/>
name<lb/>
more<lb/>
ather<lb/>
adly<lb/>
n that<lb/>
loped<lb/>
turday<lb/>
that<lb/>
 slid<lb/>
last<lb/>
ical<lb/>
r -kes<lb/>
ip just<lb/>
. al-<lb/>
rai't-<lb/>
cer-<lb/>
tnnual<lb/>
will<lb/>
?ther<lb/>
fe, to<lb/>
n a<lb/>
auld<lb/>
tthout<lb/>
nam-<lb/>
 has<lb/>
in<lb/>
fire<lb/>
ion of<lb/>
?S 'fm-<lb/>
thing<lb/>
to be<lb/>
Jly<lb/>
-o-<lb/>
nents<lb/>
round<lb/>
mil at<lb/>
5S-64<lb/>
.?hall<lb/>
imong<lb/>
; no<lb/>
Iforms<lb/>
per-<lb/>
i are<lb/>
lg the<lb/>
;neral<lb/>
I is re-<lb/>
here;<lb/>
irship<lb/>
e the<lb/>
ighest<lb/>
It any<lb/>
them<lb/>
iment.<lb/>
lidst;<lb/>
honor<lb/>
ihieve<lb/>
r any<lb/>
Irshal,<lb/>
filled<lb/>
iudent<lb/>
The<lb/>
girls<lb/>
been<lb/>
imes<lb/>
don't<lb/>
leases.<lb/>
llarity<lb/>
dire<lb/>
krage<lb/>
jdents<lb/>
rshals.<lb/>
littee,<lb/>
ibers.<lb/>
quite<lb/>
jhals<lb/>
littee<lb/>
ill the<lb/>
Id be<lb/>
p and<lb/>
ineral<lb/>
lolleg?<lb/>
ie?t?-<lb/>
trsnal<lb/>
who<lb/>
lother<lb/>
iuir?-<lb/>
OTlOT<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Regular sea i pjj w contrasted<lb/>
g  when the . .rate tennis .s&amp;m<lb/>
19S4 season by bowing<lb/>
rVa ores. Overall the Bucs<lb/>
. g record but the few ppec-<lb/>
who turned out for the home<lb/>
iv some g-ood playing. <lb/>
rtioolarly of interest were the!<lb/>
two matches last week with defend- I<lb/>
ferenee champion Hih Point.1<lb/>
High Point's Carlos Horcasitas is<lb/>
BOBtething to watch. Hailing<lb/>
front Mexico, the suave server man-<lb/>
to combine a Rood bit of clowrt-<lb/>
uith Ms conquests. Particularly<lb/>
this in evidence last Thursday<lb/>
?hen Horcasitas chewed up East Car-<lb/>
olina's Craif Hester 6-1, 6-2. Kester<lb/>
his best but Horcasitas. who<lb/>
has been playing since childhtrod. was<lb/>
just !?) good.<lb/>
odd pant of the story is<lb/>
Horcasitas is not the best tennis<lb/>
r 1! gti Poii t. Seems that tjht<lb/>
o have enrolled a young<lb/>
I Mike Reyes-VareJa, also<lb/>
,i s ?? . whi can whip Horeasi-<lb/>
n the week. Reyes-<lb/>
a was la t year's singles eham-<lb/>
? ? North State Conference<lb/>
 I e  unable to play this year<lb/>
? a happy day for the Bucs<lb/>
. two graduate.<lb/>
East Carolina sends four men to<lb/>
?V e Conference golf tourney i? Lex-<lb/>
ig'ton today and the pressure is real-<lb/>
ly on. Every year but one since tihe<lb/>
Bucs entered the loop they have<lb/>
walked away with the leagu 's link<lb/>
crown. This year they've stomrped<lb/>
through four conference matches<lb/>
without defeat and are favored to<lb/>
Pirate Tracksters Best State By 58-55<lb/>
Tennis Team Ends Season<lb/>
By Bow To Wake Forest<lb/>
repeat in<lb/>
HereV<lb/>
the tourney.<lb/>
aping for another title.<lb/>
SCOTT'S CLEANERS<lb/>
It was interesting to note that<lb/>
nary a line concerning East Carolina's<lb/>
58-55 upset over N.C State in track<lb/>
Friday appeared in the Raleigh "News<lb/>
&amp; Observer Of course, we cannot<lb/>
blame anyone for this?perhaps it<lb/>
was an oversight?but we certainly<lb/>
were disappointed that the good word<lb/>
wasn't spread.<lb/>
Practically everyone knew that<lb/>
State was having one of its worst<lb/>
track seasons in history but few<lb/>
though i at the Pirates, in the first<lb/>
intercollegiate meet ever run by this<lb/>
school, would stand a chance against<lb/>
tihe more experienced Wolfpack.<lb/>
Students and faculty can well be<lb/>
I roud of the athletic accomplishm. nt<lb/>
and can expect a good showing on the<lb/>
; art of the squad in the coming<lb/>
conference meet.<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyme's Bears, the confer-<lb/>
ence's dominant power in track for<lb/>
v .e past several years, still is rated<lb/>
as the team to beat. The Bears always<lb/>
turn out a good club in any sport<lb/>
hut we have a ; remonition that East<lb/>
Carolina will give someone trouble<lb/>
in the conference runoff.<lb/>
The East Carolina tennis team<lb/>
i<lb/>
completed a somewhat disa pointing<lb/>
on Saturday y i'  to Wake j<lb/>
Forest, 6-3. The Pirate? finished the j<lb/>
season with a won-lo t record of j<lb/>
thi and ix and a conference mark<lb/>
of tor 'e and two.<lb/>
U" the racqaet-swinging netters<lb/>
from Cr i vill could have defeated<lb/>
High P  . twice last week, then the<lb/>
conference own could have been<lb/>
theirs, but th classy Panther squad<lb/>
was victorious in both matches by<lb/>
?ore of 5-2 and 4-3.<lb/>
Paul Cameron and Bob Will-<lb/>
iams won the North State Con-<lb/>
ference's doubles tennis champ-<lb/>
ion 'dp at Elan College Tuesday.<lb/>
The No, 1 seeded doubles team,<lb/>
Cameron and Williams turned<lb/>
back Shrader and Borfes of Elon<lb/>
6-2, 6-1 in the semi-finals and<lb/>
then defeated Frazier and Eller<lb/>
of High Point for the title 7-5,<lb/>
7-5. The two did not have to play<lb/>
in the opening round by virtue<lb/>
of drawing a bye.<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
BETTER SHOES REASONABLY PRICED<lb/>
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY<lb/>
509 Dickinson Ave<lb/>
Greenville, N. C<lb/>
Boh Williams was the season's top<lb/>
performer, winning seven and losing<lb/>
only two. The skillful net veteran<lb/>
tay d a remarkable coolness under<lb/>
ire as he held his own against all<lb/>
istition. His all-around court<lb/>
i lay, phi: an ultimate desire to do<lb/>
I  best at all times, contributed<lb/>
much to his splendid performance.<lb/>
Paul Cameron, usually a consistent<lb/>
la 1 wart, had a rather hot and cold<lb/>
season, but his skillful slants enabled<lb/>
him to obtain runner-up honors with<lb/>
a five and four record. His accurate<lb/>
placements and superior volleying<lb/>
?. i I him preserve a most commend-<lb/>
a : record.<lb/>
Frazier Bruton, always a difficult<lb/>
man to deal witih, proved to be a<lb/>
giant killer as the pint-sized racquet-<lb/>
e" r chopped his opponents down to<lb/>
size, Bruton's tricky placements and<lb/>
perfective strokes earned him a four<lb/>
and four record for the campaign,<lb/>
and his determined hustle kept the<lb/>
midget ace on top as he consistently<lb/>
mowed down his fearful opponents.<lb/>
Dal Fescue's superb strokes and<lb/>
g neral court Jv.xow-how contributed<lb/>
much to his four and five record. His<lb/>
re jivl does not fully justify his<lb/>
ability as he was acrificed a few<lb/>
times against tihe a. position's number<lb/>
one man, but he always displayed a<lb/>
sparkling performance?in victory as<lb/>
in defeat.<lb/>
Oraig Kester, tihe smooth stroker<lb/>
from High Point, J. W. Browning<lb/>
and Gene Russell rounded out the<lb/>
quad. Kester's work on the courts<lb/>
showed plenty of promise and tennis<lb/>
tfans will be glad to note that he is<lb/>
only a freshman. Gene Russell dis-<lb/>
i laved a game of considerable pa-<lb/>
tience and stamina as his consistency<lb/>
rewarded him with a one and one<lb/>
record.<lb/>
Ti e team as a whole scored 31<lb/>
points and saw their opposition rack<lb/>
mp 44 in nine matches. The statistics:<lb/>
SINGLES<lb/>
Won Lost<lb/>
Williams 7 2<lb/>
Cameron 5 4<lb/>
Bruton 4 4<lb/>
Russell 1 1<lb/>
Foscue 4 5<lb/>
Browning 1 6<lb/>
Kester  1 7<lb/>
DOUBLES<lb/>
Won Lost<lb/>
5 4<lb/>
5 4<lb/>
2 3<lb/>
 2 8<lb/>
1 5<lb/>
 1 5<lb/>
0 2<lb/>
 0 1<lb/>
 0 1<lb/>
 Played doubles against Wake For-<lb/>
est Saturday.<lb/>
Cameron<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
Browning<lb/>
Kester<lb/>
Bruton<lb/>
Foscue<lb/>
Russell<lb/>
 Barnes<lb/>
?Pickett<lb/>
Pirate Golfers<lb/>
Remain Unbeaten<lb/>
In League Play<lb/>
by J. W. Browning<lb/>
East Carolina's rampaging golf<lb/>
team is perched on the top in the<lb/>
North State standings after two<lb/>
matches witih High Point. The power-<lb/>
ful oca! linksters defeated the Pan-<lb/>
thf ? s rom High Point both rays last<lb/>
week by identical scores of 1S-0. Dave<lb/>
Martin, East Carolina's "Slamming<lb/>
Sam was medalist both days with<lb/>
a 74 followed by 73 the second day.<lb/>
Cither scores of the second contest<lb/>
include: Harry Rainey, 74, and Pat<lb/>
Hunt, 76.<lb/>
The victory was the fourth con-<lb/>
secutive one for the Pirates against<lb/>
Morten State Conference competition.<lb/>
They have lost only to Salisbury<lb/>
Country Club in a non-conference<lb/>
match.<lb/>
Tihe conf" rence championship will<lb/>
be decided this week by the tourna-<lb/>
ment which will start Thursday at<lb/>
the Starmount course in Greensboro.<lb/>
East Carolina is the defending cham-<lb/>
pion. Four men will make the trip.<lb/>
There are Dave Martin. Pat Hunt,<lb/>
Claude King, and Harry Rainey.<lb/>
Boih Braun and Dave Martin of<lb/>
East Carolina finished second and<lb/>
third respectively in last year's tour-<lb/>
nament in the individual honors brac-<lb/>
ket. In the tournament each indi-<lb/>
vidual player's score is added on to<lb/>
the others who make up the team<lb/>
and the lowest team total represents<lb/>
'the championship team.<lb/>
The golfers were confronted with<lb/>
the problem of a limited home sched-<lb/>
ule this year. In fact, the overall<lb/>
schedule was very limited and this<lb/>
was very disadvantageous to the<lb/>
squad. This competition limitation<lb/>
should have had a bad effect on the<lb/>
local squad, but the power-driving<lb/>
Pirates have made the most of their<lb/>
disadvantages.<lb/>
East Carolina should come through<lb/>
with the individual crown as well as<lb/>
the team crown. Either one of the<lb/>
four Pirates making the trip is capa-<lb/>
ble of winning the individual honors.<lb/>
First Meeting In History Nets<lb/>
Win Over Big Four Wolf pack<lb/>
<lb/>
Cherry Hurls Win<lb/>
As Bucs Triumph<lb/>
by Anwer Joseph<lb/>
Freshman righthander Mack Cherry<lb/>
led the Pirates of East Carolina<lb/>
College to their seventh win of the<lb/>
season in the Eastern Division of the<lb/>
North State Conifer ence loop race<lb/>
April 30 by pitching a two-hit, 8-3<lb/>
win over the Quakers of Guilford<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Cherry was credited with his third<lb/>
victory of the season but had to have<lb/>
help from teammate Gene Taylor aft-<lb/>
er h v n and twothirds 'tinings.<lb/>
Che y gave up only two hits in his<lb/>
stay on the mound and Taylor al-<lb/>
lowed another.<lb/>
Each team pushed across two rune<lb/>
in the first and the Pirates came<lb/>
hack in the fourtn to add two more<lb/>
along with one in the eighth and<lb/>
wo in tfoe ninth.<lb/>
W. C. Sanderson took the hitting<lb/>
honors for the day with two hit?<lb/>
for three trips to the plate. Sander-<lb/>
son was followed by Gaitiher Cline and<lb/>
Wilbur Thompson with two hits for<lb/>
four times at bat.<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
Guilford<lb/>
Charlton, 3b . 3 10 1<lb/>
Redeem, If 4 0 0 3<lb/>
Frye, rf 5 0 0 0<lb/>
Leary, lb 4 1 0 10<lb/>
Schmidt, 2b  3 0 1 1<lb/>
Beck, 2b .0100<lb/>
Cashion, sis  3 0 0 1<lb/>
Trafford, cf 2 0 13<lb/>
Jarrett, c 2 0 0 5<lb/>
Mikles, p 10 0 0<lb/>
Dowd, p 10 0 0<lb/>
A woman is like a geiger counter,<lb/>
every time she sees some bright<lb/>
metalic object in the window of a<lb/>
rtorc, she sounds off.<lb/>
EXCUSE: Something you wish you<lb/>
had after you have over-cut a class.<lb/>
AB R II O A E<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 2<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
4 0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
I<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Heath, 2b<lb/>
TTomj'son, ss<lb/>
Hux, If<lb/>
Penley, If<lb/>
G. Cline, 3b<lb/>
Sanderson, lb<lb/>
Hooper, of<lb/>
Nance, rf<lb/>
B. Cline, c<lb/>
Cherry, p<lb/>
1 Taylor, p<lb/>
28 3 2 24<lb/>
AB R H O<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
a<lb/>
o<lb/>
M<lb/>
9<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
2 2<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
2 0<lb/>
2 12<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 10<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
7 2<lb/>
A E<lb/>
2 0<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
2 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
3 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
gW FINEST QUALITY<lb/>
W FOR OVER 100 YEARS<lb/>
JArtcarved<lb/>
 DIAMOND RINGS<lb/>
30 8 8 27 11 2<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Score by innings:<lb/>
Guilford 200 000 010?3<lb/>
EOC  200 210 12x?8<lb/>
Runs batted in: Thompson, Penley,<lb/>
G. Clin. Sanderson ?2, Hooper, B. <lb/>
Cline, Schmidt 2, Dowd. Two base <lb/>
hits: G. Cline, Penley. Three base '<lb/>
hit: Schmidt. Bases on balls: Cherry j<lb/>
9, Mikles 7, Dowd 2. Struck out: .<lb/>
a.ierry 11, Mikles 1, Dowd 4. Hits<lb/>
off: Mikles 1 in 3 1-3; Dowd 7 in <lb/>
4 2-3, Cherry 2 in 7 2-3; Taylor 0 in I<lb/>
1 1-3. Winning pitcher: Cherry. Los<lb/>
tng pitcher: Mikles.<lb/>
You have always heard of the<lb/>
famous last word of men, but have<lb/>
you ever heard of a woman's famous<lb/>
last words?<lb/>
East Carolina College made a suc-<lb/>
cessful debut in a new sport Friday<lb/>
as the Pirate track squaa turned in<lb/>
an impressive 58-55 win over Norwi<lb/>
Carolina State College on the losers<lb/>
field. The outing marked the first<lb/>
time in history that a track team<lb/>
has been fielded by East Carolina.<lb/>
The charges of Coach Leon Ellis<lb/>
proved their merit in the final event<lb/>
of the day when, trailing 55-53, they<lb/>
rallied to take the mile relay which<lb/>
was good for a winning five points.<lb/>
Ex-Greenville High School athletic<lb/>
star Bobby Perry paced the Pirate<lb/>
triumph. Perry collected firsts in the<lb/>
100 and 200-yard dashes, the broad<lb/>
jump and ran a leg on the winning<lb/>
relay team to collect 16 1-4 points.<lb/>
Eight Firsts<lb/>
East Carolina took eight first pla-<lb/>
ces, four in the races and four in<lb/>
field events. Other firsts collect d by<lb/>
the Pirate tracksteris included Jack<lb/>
Picktt's win in the 440, Dave Lee's<lb/>
victory in tihe shot put and two firsts<lb/>
collected 'by Eddie Hurst in the pole<lb/>
vault and javelin.<lb/>
The Pirates showed particular<lb/>
strength in the 220 when they swept<lb/>
the tihree first positions. In addition<lb/>
to Perry's first place finish the Bucs<lb/>
scored on Toppy Hayes' second and<lb/>
Bob Chambers' third.<lb/>
Next r?n the agenda for the Bucs<lb/>
?s the -rth State Conference meet<lb/>
coming ip soon in which Lenoir<lb/>
Rhyne's Bears are defending champs.<lb/>
The summary:<lb/>
Track Events<lb/>
100-yeard dash: 1. Perry (ECC).<lb/>
2. Hayes (ECC). 3. Hall (State).<lb/>
Time: 10.3.<lb/>
220-yard dash: 1. Perry (ECC). 2.<lb/>
Hayes (ECC). 3. Chambers (ECC).<lb/>
Time: 23.2.<lb/>
440-yard dash: 1. Pickett (ECC).<lb/>
2. Dawson (State). 3. Thompson<lb/>
(ECC). Time: 56.9.<lb/>
880-yard dash: 1. Miller (State).<lb/>
2. Hardison (State). 3. Fratino<lb/>
(ECC). Time: 2:11.8.<lb/>
Mile: 1. Barbee (State). 2. Miller<lb/>
(State). 3. Profett (State). Time:<lb/>
4:52.2.<lb/>
Two-mile: 1. Jones (State). 2.<lb/>
Miller (State). 3. Roberts (ECC).<lb/>
Time: 10:43.<lb/>
Mile relay: Won by East Carolina.<lb/>
Time: 3:43.5.<lb/>
Field Events<lb/>
Broad jum?: I. Perry (ECC). 2.<lb/>
Dickman (State). 3. Hayes (ECC).<lb/>
Distance: 20 feet, one inch.<lb/>
High jump: 1. Yoder (State). 2.<lb/>
Dickman (State). 3. Tie between<lb/>
Hurst and Pickett of ECC. Distance:<lb/>
5 feet, 10 inches.<lb/>
Pole vault: 1. Hurst (ECC). 2.<lb/>
Atkins (State) and Croom (ECC)<lb/>
tied. Distance: 10 feet.<lb/>
Sfcot put: 1. Lee (ECC). 2. Dick-<lb/>
man (State). 3. Abernathy (State).<lb/>
Distance: 41 feet, 3 inches.<lb/>
Discus: 1. Abernathy (State). 2.<lb/>
Wolverton (ECC). 3. Lee (ECC).<lb/>
Distance: 118 feet, 6 1-2 inches.<lb/>
Javelin: 1. Hurst (ECC). 2. Bostic<lb/>
(State). 3. Abernathy (State). Dis-<lb/>
tance: 150 feet.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038351_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, MAY 6, I&amp;54<lb/>
. ?? ' nr<lb/>
Jose Dominquez Pitches Atlantic Christian<lb/>
To 7-3 Triumph Over East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
Jose Dominquez pitched Atlantic Jimmy Williams, c 3 0 0 3<lb/>
Christian to a 7-3 win over East j Dominquez, ip 4 0 2 0<lb/>
Carolina in an Eastern Division North . , ?,<lb/>
Totals ? o4<lb/>
State Conference baseball game play-1 Sc0re. by innings;<lb/>
cd in Wilson Saturday. Ea-t. Carolina<lb/>
Dominquez, who earlier this year<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
7 11 27 9 1<lb/>
pitched and won toth ends of a dou-<lb/>
l.leheader against Hi h Point, set the<lb/>
Pirates down with seven scattered<lb/>
hit. His mates collected 11 from the<lb/>
Blasts of four ECC hurlers.<lb/>
The Bulldogs grabbed three quick<lb/>
i in the opening frame and added<lb/>
tftier in the third to salt the gime<lb/>
away. Cecil Heath sparked the Pirate<lb/>
efforts win two hits in four attempts<lb/>
David Nanc? clouted a bases-<lb/>
erapty homer in the second inning.<lb/>
svas the fourth for East<lb/>
Carolina against seven wins.<lb/>
The box:<lb/>
ECC AB R H 0<lb/>
Heath, 2b<lb/>
Hux<lb/>
X<lb/>
H I<lb/>
Pine<lb/>
Ban<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
i<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
If<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
I<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
2 0<lb/>
0 (I<lb/>
2 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
. I<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
A E<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
3 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0 0 3<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
1<lb/>
?1<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
6<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
AiCC 301 003 OOx?7<lb/>
Rune ibatted in: Penley, G. Cline,<lb/>
Nance. Two base hits: G. Cline, Jerry<lb/>
Williams. Three base hits: Hooper,<lb/>
Dominquez. Home run: Nance. Stolen<lb/>
bases: Heath, Thomipson 2, Percise 2.<lb/>
Double plays: Cline to Heath to San-<lb/>
derson, Percise to Harris. Sacrifice:<lb/>
Davis. Base on balls, off: Hall 2,<lb/>
Bar.ies 2, Dominquez 3. Strikeouts,<lb/>
by: Piner 2, Barnes 1, Dominquez 3.<lb/>
Hits off: Hall 2 in 2-3; Piner 6 in<lb/>
4 2-3; Taylor 3 in 1; Barnes 0 in 1<lb/>
2-3. Passed ball: Cline. Losing pitch-<lb/>
er: Piner.<lb/>
10 0 0 0 0<lb/>
32 3 7 24 4<lb/>
x?Grounded out for Barnes in 9th.<lb/>
vec<lb/>
SB<lb/>
. rf<lb/>
i<lb/>
ray<lb/>
AB R H O<lb/>
3 10 2<lb/>
4<lb/>
A E<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
cf<lb/>
0<lb/>
O<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
2 5<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
4 2<lb/>
2 3<lb/>
0 11<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
YOUR AUTHORIZED<lb/>
Keepsake<lb/>
DIAMOND<lb/>
Dealer<lb/>
Greenville, MC.<lb/>
Elon Christians Hold<lb/>
Top Position In Loop<lb/>
As End Of Race Nears<lb/>
Monday mornimg found Elon's<lb/>
Christians still leading the North<lb/>
State Conference's Eastern Division<lb/>
as league play entered a crucial week.<lb/>
Elon, which met High Point in a<lb/>
doubleheader Tuesday, Deeded only<lb/>
another win or a loss by second-place<lb/>
East Carolina to wrap up the top<lb/>
position. An undefeated week for the<lb/>
Bucs, however, would put the title up<lb/>
For contention in Saturday's double-<lb/>
header between the two teams.<lb/>
The standings:<lb/>
EASTERN DIVISION<lb/>
W L<lb/>
Elon 10 2<lb/>
East Carolina 7 4<lb/>
ACC 6 6<lb/>
Guilford .48<lb/>
High Point 2 9<lb/>
WESTERN DIVISION<lb/>
Lenoir Rhysie 5 2<lb/>
Western Carolina 7 3<lb/>
Catawba . 4 5<lb/>
Appalachian . . .17<lb/>
USAF Puts Cadets<lb/>
On Active Duty<lb/>
With Commissions<lb/>
Orders hav been received here by<lb/>
the Air For I ?TC Detacihment,<lb/>
placing 13 cadets on active duty in<lb/>
(it? United States Air Force in the<lb/>
grade of second lieutenant. These<lb/>
orders are contingent upon the indi-<lb/>
viduals' accepting appointment as sec-<lb/>
ond lieutenant, Air Force Reserve,<lb/>
on May 24.<lb/>
The cadets are: Elbert Matthew<lb/>
Prescott, Robert E. Pennington, Willie<lb/>
Ray Sears, Shelby Eugene Rusp,<lb/>
Waylon T. Bass and Nolan C. Alcock.<lb/>
Ernest M. Bizzell, Paul A. Camer-<lb/>
on, Walter R. Colored) Jr James S.<lb/>
McCormick. William P. Emerson, Ma-<lb/>
jor I. Hooper and Julian R. Vainright.<lb/>
Thoy will report to Sampson Air<lb/>
Force Base, New York, for processing<lb/>
and reassignment to Graham Air<lb/>
Base, Marianna, Fla for training as<lb/>
Air Force pilots.<lb/>
Pet.<lb/>
.833<lb/>
.636<lb/>
.500<lb/>
.333<lb/>
.182<lb/>
.714<lb/>
.700<lb/>
.444<lb/>
.125<lb/>
j Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
? 45 RPM Accessories<lb/>
I McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE<lb/>
UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITERS<lb/>
We Rent Typewriters<lb/>
CAROLINA OFFICE EQUIP. CO.<lb/>
304 Evans St. Dial 3570<lb/>
"<lb/>
For A Snazy Snack<lb/>
VISIT<lb/>
DORA'S TOWER GRILL<lb/>
Near Fire Tower and TV Station<lb/>
CURB SERVICE<lb/>
is<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands<lb/>
"Your College Shop"<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Radio Schedule<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
1:30 p.m.?WPTF, Raleigh, Mari-<lb/>
etta Hooper presents a piano recital.<lb/>
6:30 p.m.?WGTC, Greenville, fea-<lb/>
tures Organ Reveries with George<lb/>
Perry, orgranistt.<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
9 a.m.?WRRF, Washington, pre-<lb/>
sents Organ Reveries with George<lb/>
Perry.<lb/>
2 p.m.?WGTM, Wilson, the College<lb/>
Choir sings under the direction of<lb/>
Dr. Elwood Keister.<lb/>
9 p.m WGTC, Greenville, features<lb/>
"Books Behind the News with Dr.<lb/>
K. D. Johnson, commentator.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
6:30 p.m.?WFTC, Kinston, pre-<lb/>
sents "Books BeHnd the News with<lb/>
Dr. E. D. Johnson, commentator.<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
6:30 p.m.?WFTC, Kinston, fea-<lb/>
tures Organ Reverses with George<lb/>
Perry.<lb/>
Bucs At Guilford<lb/>
For Single Game;<lb/>
Play Elon Next<lb/>
Four more games remain on the<lb/>
Pirate baseball schedule with the cru-<lb/>
cial ones coming up Saturday at<lb/>
Elon.<lb/>
Tomorrow tho Bucs journey to Guil-<lb/>
ford for the final bout of the year<lb/>
with the Quakers and then swing<lb/>
over to the home of the Christians<lb/>
for an all-imiportant twin bill.<lb/>
As of this writing East Carolina<lb/>
is the only team in the North State<lb/>
Conferences Eastern Division with<lb/>
even an outside chance of nabbing<lb/>
the Christians and, if they are to do<lb/>
this, they'll have to sweep Saturday'<lb/>
doubleheader.<lb/>
Alfter the Elon games, the Pirates<lb/>
return to Greenville for the final<lb/>
game of the year?this one on May<lb/>
12 with Atlantic Christian. This con-<lb/>
test, too, depending on the outcome<lb/>
o. he Elon series, may have a def-<lb/>
inite effect on the final standings.<lb/>
Without t.he pressure of having the<lb/>
top position at stake, however, the<lb/>
two clubs will still be tiyijig for the<lb/>
right to kee,p the Bohunk Trophy<lb/>
through the summer months. Cur-<lb/>
rently the Bohunk, an aged wooden<lb/>
ucket awarded to the victor of each<lb/>
game between the two schools, is in<lb/>
possession of the Bulldogs. The Pi-<lb/>
rates had it at the start of the base-<lb/>
ball season, lost it in the first game<lb/>
against AtC; got it back; lost it again,<lb/>
and now must retrieve it a second<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Hish Point Edges Buccaneers By 2-1<lb/>
In First Game, Locals Take Next, 3-2<lb/>
Bulletin!<lb/>
Formal approval of a plan to<lb/>
hold the 1954 homecoming foot-<lb/>
ball game in the afternoon in-<lb/>
stead of at night has. been re-<lb/>
ceived from the Administration,<lb/>
according to Louis (lark, chair-<lb/>
man of the homecoming commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Contacts are being made with<lb/>
Western Carolina in an attempt<lb/>
to discover if the Catamounts<lb/>
can switch their plans in order to<lb/>
play in the afternoon. Other<lb/>
plans which are curren'ly under<lb/>
consideration include staint: the<lb/>
annual parade in the morning<lb/>
and holding a gala homecoming<lb/>
dance that night.<lb/>
S ngle runs were the margins Atpril<lb/>
'28 as East Carolina and Higth Point<lb/>
split a baseball doublet;leader on the<lb/>
local field. High Point took the open-<lb/>
ing contest, 2-1, while East Carolina<lb/>
won te second, 3-2.<lb/>
Freshman Dave Harris started on<lb/>
the mo and for East Carolina in the<lb/>
first game and gave up only three<lb/>
 dining his six inning chore. Ken<lb/>
Ball pitched the seventh. The Pan-<lb/>
tfai ra scored the winning join in the<lb/>
sixth w. en Thurman Chap, el squeez-<lb/>
ed home Broaddus Johnson from<lb/>
third.<lb/>
East Carolina's only run tame in<lb/>
the sixth when pinchi'iitter Wilson<lb/>
Hux tripled home Bill (line.<lb/>
Second Game<lb/>
In the second contest the Pirates<lb/>
were forced to come from behind in<lb/>
f c fourth with two rune to take<lb/>
tihe win. Wi! ur Thompson scored on<lb/>
an eiTor to tie the game. Then Cecil<lb/>
II Btfti added the winning marker by<lb/>
tealing second, going to third on a<lb/>
balk, and bhen stealing home.<lb/>
Jimmy Barnes, the first of three<lb/>
Pirate pitchers, received credit for<lb/>
&amp;ie win.<lb/>
pot games were touch and go<lb/>
from t(? fx. ezthtg pitch. High Point<lb/>
played errorless hall in the opener<lb/>
while the Bucs were committing two<lb/>
miscues. In the second session High<lb/>
Point wa, charged with a single<lb/>
( rror while the Pirates were corn-<lb/>
mi'ting none.<lb/>
The boxes:<lb/>
First Game<lb/>
AB R II O A E<lb/>
2 0 0 2 10<lb/>
10 0 10 0<lb/>
3 0 0 0 0 0<lb/>
0<lb/>
3 0 0<lb/>
3 0 1<lb/>
n o o<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
(I 1<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
2 2<lb/>
7 1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
8<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
o<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
ECC<lb/>
Thompson, 2b<lb/>
Heath, 2b<lb/>
Hooper, ef<lb/>
Jones, si<lb/>
G. Cline, Sb<lb/>
Sanderson, 111<lb/>
Penley, If<lb/>
Nance, rf<lb/>
B. (line, c<lb/>
Harris, p<lb/>
x-Hux<lb/>
xx-Webb<lb/>
Hall, p<lb/>
To;<lb/>
x-Tripled for Harris in 6th.<lb/>
xx-Ran for Hux in 0th.<lb/>
Score by innings:<lb/>
1' m 001 001 0?2<lb/>
ECC 000 001 0?1<lb/>
Runs batted in: Chappel, Johnson.<lb/>
Mux. Two base hits: B. Cline, G.<lb/>
Cline. Three base hits: Johnson, Hux.<lb/>
Base on balls, off: Harris 3. Struck<lb/>
out, by Johnson 3, Harris 3. Hits off:<lb/>
Harris 3 in S, Hall 0 in 1. Losing<lb/>
pitcher: Harris.<lb/>
0 0 0 0 0 0<lb/>
0 0 0 0 0<lb/>
3 1 3 21 7<lb/>
Chappel, cf<lb/>
Swain, sa<lb/>
Fowler, 2b<lb/>
Varner, p<lb/>
Hedrick, .<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
B(JC<lb/>
ibvtth, 2b<lb/>
, cf<lb/>
Hooper, cf<lb/>
Hux, if<lb/>
C Cline, 3h<lb/>
Sanderson, lb<lb/>
0 j Nance, rf<lb/>
ompson,<lb/>
Britt, c<lb/>
Barnes, p<lb/>
-Penley<lb/>
Piner, p<lb/>
cx-Byrd<lb/>
Owen, p<lb/>
r ?<lb/>
3 10 3 0 0<lb/>
3 1112 0<lb/>
10 0 4 3 1<lb/>
10 10 0 0<lb/>
10 0 0 0 0<lb/>
23 2 5 Ife 13 1<lb/>
AB R H O A B<lb/>
3 114 4 0<lb/>
Hitrh PointABRII0AE<lb/>
King. 3b300430<lb/>
Duncan, lb3111100<lb/>
Stewart, rf300000<lb/>
Mabry, tf200000<lb/>
Morgan, e200310<lb/>
Ghappel, cf200310<lb/>
Swain, sso11030<lb/>
Fowler, 2b200030<lb/>
Johnson, p301010<lb/>
High Point<lb/>
Kirug, 3b<lb/>
Duncan, lb<lb/>
Lisk, 1H<lb/>
Stewart, rf<lb/>
Mabry, If<lb/>
Morgan, c<lb/>
Second Game<lb/>
ABRH0AE<lb/>
300150<lb/>
00201<lb/>
101310<lb/>
30000<lb/>
300100<lb/>
200310<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
2 0<lb/>
2 0 0<lb/>
10 0<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
b<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
Q<lb/>
1 0 0 0 0 o<lb/>
oooooo<lb/>
oooooo<lb/>
oooooo<lb/>
20 3 4 21 8 0<lb/>
X-Sacfe on error for Barnes in 4<lb/>
xx-VValked for Piner in 6th.<lb/>
Score by innings:<lb/>
High Point 020 000<lb/>
 ' 010 200 x?3<lb/>
Runs hatted in: Swain, Fo <lb/>
if at,h. Three base hit. Swain. Ba-t<lb/>
on balls, off: Barnes I, Varner 4,<lb/>
Hedrick 2. Struck out, by: Heir<lb/>
I, Barmv 2. Piner 2, Owen I. Hi<lb/>
off: Barney 4 in 4. Piner 1 in 2. Ower,<lb/>
0 in 1. Varner 3 in 4, Hedrick 1 in 2<lb/>
Winning ;itcher: Barney. Losing<lb/>
pitcher: Varner.<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN FOOTWEAR<lb/>
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Today's CHESTERFIELD is the<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038351_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>