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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038357_0001"/>
Welcome, Alumni!<lb/>
gala affairs which will take<lb/>
i on the EC1 campus this weekend<lb/>
n your honor. Former graduates<lb/>
Friends are always welcome.<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Trip To Florida<lb/>
Student here will be provided trans-<lb/>
poration to the ECC-Tampa pme in<lb/>
November if they wisk to go S? e the<lb/>
details in the SporK Section.<lb/>
<lb/>
?x.  " .<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15. 1954<lb/>
Nun<lb/>
Campus Ready For<lb/>
nnu<lb/>
Homecomin<lb/>
New Woman's Dorm<lb/>
In Sight For Campus<lb/>
Homecoming Chairman Explains Program<lb/>
mean Reveals Many<lb/>
(! Facilities May<lb/>
!u Near Future<lb/>
?. . <lb/>
and<lb/>
?a ?, mien's i<lb/>
i asur-<lb/>
I ' k. Con-<lb/>
ina is<lb/>
. ! 1 ?? of ?<lb/>
ivat ,<lb/>
An<lb/>
g to-<lb/>
B ? . r ? ad-<lb/>
. . rcb.es-<lb/>
 i<lb/>
? ' tory will<lb/>
Hall. Ev-<lb/>
made to<lb/>
Septeml<lb/>
Student Legislature Wields<lb/>
Powerful hUnd On Campus<lb/>
bj Valeria Shearon and Mar<lb/>
Should you ted with the S; A . i<lb/>
' W ? ' ? mosl powerful Ea I I<lb/>
m on campus ?" ?e won?<lb/>
you would need to<lb/>
"the St Gov-<lb/>
? A a1 Probablj not.<lb/>
B er, are yon<lb/>
asl how b g and powerful<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
leadline<lb/>
? ? - ng<lb/>
v this<lb/>
e Stud' rrt I iov? 1 nmei I ocia-<lb/>
is composed of three branches,<lb/>
ttive, th I. ttive and<lb/>
ary. ?. most powerful of<lb/>
the Lej - ac-<lb/>
? h aw making body for all<lb/>
ictivities. The Legislature is<lb/>
seel ?  represental ives<lb/>
the whoh - mem-<lb/>
tte from every corner of<lb/>
ius. A mong tl e membei s an<lb/>
men ives from e ery organi-<lb/>
Duncan.<lb/>
he n to con-<lb/>
a  ? a pri-<lb/>
? e SGA on<lb/>
us, ea . ss, "Eas1 Carolin-<lb/>
"Buccara ? . .?? M  .I udici-<lb/>
 .  an. M ? '?- Day<lb/>
. I I <lb/>
? (ons,<lb/>
?? held<lb/>
Training<lb/>
y move their of-<lb/>
 the Austin<lb/>
ncctd with<lb/>
?e vacated when the re-<lb/>
he old library ie per-<lb/>
? . an saya no further plans<lb/>
tl can be made until<lb/>
ive the appropriation from the<lb/>
ire that President John D.<lb/>
ly requested. He feels<lb/>
ng asked for is vitally<lb/>
Eas1 Carolina<lb/>
e tl reci I f all<lb/>
r a su stantial part<lb/>
alumni can<lb/>
n flue nee in helping to<lb/>
 money for Emt<lb/>
a C ere Mr, Duncan.<lb/>
i<lb/>
V- ry<lb/>
ri dina<lb/>
 onvet 's Day Stud nts,<lb/>
nember<lb/>
f 1 U nding committees,<lb/>
studi ;it enrol East<lb/>
College becomes an auto-<lb/>
matic member of the SGA when he<lb/>
i ays the $11 ac1 i tj  e a1 registra-<lb/>
Over half of bhia amounl goes<lb/>
to the SGA for appropriation to the<lb/>
campus organizations and ac-<lb/>
es as applications are made for<lb/>
The l iture determines<lb/>
amount the appropriations,<lb/>
arhich beta ?- tt $40,000 yearly.<lb/>
T e ie SGA is to co-<lb/>
stud : affair- and to work<lb/>
full ' ? ?? ' the Admin-<lb/>
usl rat  foi  i good of the student<lb/>
? - most powerful<lb/>
inization on campus, even: item<lb/>
of campus life must pas through its<lb/>
 : e '? ecoming a 11<lb/>
I ? - con vet<lb/>
Lou Stewart<lb/>
sident, he assured us "that<lb/>
Ea I Carolina's SGA far surpass-<lb/>
? ie majority of other colleges in<lb/>
; I ie power I hey wield<lb/>
0fficers . this year's SGA are:<lb/>
dent, Wane Cooper; first vice<lb/>
president, Louis Singleton; second<lb/>
resident, Jimmy Alexander:<lb/>
, irer, Howard Rooks; secretary.<lb/>
ira Strickland; first assistant<lb/>
urer, Richard lvey; and histori-<lb/>
 Raby Edwards.<lb/>
T t- cc :vision of the SGA<lb/>
this article will treat is the<lb/>
Executive Council, composed of the<lb/>
afor ned SGA officers, chair-<lb/>
iti  and vice chairmen of the Men's<lb/>
Women's .Judiciaries, and the<lb/>
of the "East Carolinian" and<lb/>
the "Buccaneer totalling: 11 mem-<lb/>
bers.<lb/>
i e Executive Council has three<lb/>
ary functions. First, it is a poli-<lb/>
cy making body. Second, it approves<lb/>
impus clubs and organizations; and<lb/>
I, it recommends laws to be made<lb/>
: ie vote of the legislature maj<lb/>
u may not accept.<lb/>
The SGA meets every Wednesday<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in Flanagan auditorium<lb/>
except the first one in each month.<lb/>
e meetings arc open to all who<lb/>
wish to attend, ami the office are<lb/>
anxious for you U come and see<lb/>
first hand how the campus govern-<lb/>
ment is handled. On the first Wednes-<lb/>
day in each month, the Executive<lb/>
Council meets in the SGA office.<lb/>
Here is presented two-thirds of<lb/>
your campus government "in a nut-<lb/>
shell" you might say. By active par-<lb/>
ticipation in elections, attending SGA<lb/>
meetings, and cooperating an other<lb/>
ways, you, a an East Carolina stu-<lb/>
better campus citizen,<lb/>
ictter citizen of the<lb/>
Parade, Awarjs,<lb/>
j<lb/>
'eekenri Thri?<lb/>
i<lb/>
Homecoming Chairman James W. Butler talks over plans lor the event with the editor of the student<lb/>
newspaper and another committee member. Flans for the event are now complete and the celebration of annual<lb/>
Homecoming Day will get underway tonight with a pep rally. Butler worked hand in hand with Louis (lark,<lb/>
student representative on the Homecoming Committee and the two report that this year's Homecoming should<lb/>
be the best yet. Clark was out of town when the picture was made.<lb/>
Student Organizational News<lb/>
dent, can be a<lb/>
md in turn a<lb/>
M v.<lb/>
-tate. or country in which you<lb/>
on with Wade Cooper.<lb/>
You're In The Air Force, Son!<lb/>
Young Democrats the Methodist Student Center. Dra-<lb/>
Ti.e Young Democrats Club of East ma, music, recreation, worship, pub-<lb/>
Carolina College was greeted by pro- lications and literature were among<lb/>
bably the largest turnout since its the areas of interest discussed by<lb/>
inception as a college club here when th commission chaiman in which<lb/>
students may participate. Students<lb/>
asked questions about the activities<lb/>
on Thursday night. October 7, thirty-<lb/>
seven Democratic enthusiasts turned<lb/>
out for a supper meeting at the<lb/>
Old Town Inn Marine Room. The<lb/>
freshman class of the current year<lb/>
wag especially well represnted.<lb/>
The object of the meeting was<lb/>
to elect new officers to fill vacancies<lb/>
left y some of last year's officers<lb/>
who found they could not return to<lb/>
in which they were interested after<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
Ladies from the Centenary Metho-<lb/>
dist Church in New Bern served a<lb/>
picnic supper to about fifty students<lb/>
Sunday evening immediately preced-<lb/>
ing the vesper program.<lb/>
New Fraternity<lb/>
Tare was a call meeting of a<lb/>
school. The newlv elected officer-<lb/>
are: First Vice President, Caroline Proup of Busines. Education majors<lb/>
Wallace; Secretary, Carol Ann Sel<lb/>
in September 22, for the purpose of<lb/>
i ?.  i r ,iw ,r in iha i Force ROTC here when the temperature is 98 and<lb/>
Lite ran be prettv rugged for the gus in tne a 11 lone uon I1CIC r <lb/>
, . DriU Periad. Drilling is a regular part of the training the AFROTS boys get every week, however and it is<lb/>
rumored that sometime, even rain doesn't stop the marching. Shown above are members of the Drum and<lb/>
Iuglt- Corps of the Last Carolina AFROTC Attachment. The picture was taken on one of the hot days we<lb/>
experienced at the beginning of Fall Quarter. At least one or two of the fellows got away with drilling in<lb/>
nvilian clothes. We wager they fared better than the rest.<lb/>
Corum, Cooke Star Wednesday Night<lb/>
As Playhouse Gives 'Male Animal<lb/>
The opening performance on cam-<lb/>
pus of "The Male Animal starring<lb/>
James Corum of Reidwville and Nan-<lb/>
cy Cooke of Dunn was presented in<lb/>
the College Theatre Wednesday night.<lb/>
The Teachers Playhouse present-<lb/>
ed the thre act hit comedy by<lb/>
James Thurber and Elliott Nugent<lb/>
in its second and final performance<lb/>
on the campus last night at 8:15 in<lb/>
the College Theatre.<lb/>
The play was shown by the Play-<lb/>
bouse last Friday night as the open-<lb/>
in the State College 1954-<lb/>
55 entertainment series.<lb/>
A cast of thirteen and a 12-memtber<lb/>
technical crew were entertained at<lb/>
a banquet in Uhe new State College<lb/>
Student Union building Friday night<lb/>
preceding the performance. An in-<lb/>
formal coffee hour was given for<lb/>
the group by the State College Thea-<lb/>
tre Committee after the play.<lb/>
"The Male Animal" is directed by<lb/>
Dr. J. A. Withey of the English<lb/>
Departrmnt, assisted by Patricia<lb/>
Goodwin of Memphis, Tenn.<lb/>
Members of the cast include Sue-<lb/>
betle Jackson, Al Carr, Patricia<lb/>
Jackson, Bill Dixon, Travis Martin,<lb/>
Jerry Crawford, Merle Kelly, Laura<lb/>
Credle, Patricia Goodwin, Franklin<lb/>
Thomas and James Daughtry.<lb/>
The technical staff headed by Bill<lb/>
Fenuel of Goldsiboro includes Ernie<lb/>
White, Audrey Powell, Sue Richards,<lb/>
Elisabeth Dowdy, Ralph Smiley, An-<lb/>
na Avant, Marion Evans, Betty Sue<lb/>
Gay, Barbara Tucker and Tee Bar-<lb/>
nett. Tom Wills is business manager<lb/>
for the play.<lb/>
lers; and Publicity Chairman, Dave<lb/>
Evans.<lb/>
There will be another meeting<lb/>
announced at a later date for the<lb/>
purpose of forming a delegation to<lb/>
attend the Democratic rally to be<lb/>
held in Elizabeth City on October 21.<lb/>
Also included in the meeting was<lb/>
th ? selection of a sponsor for the<lb/>
lomeeoming parade, the choice be-<lb/>
ng Miss Shirley Johnson of Fair-<lb/>
mi in X. C. to represent the Demo-<lb/>
cral ?? aggregation .htere at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
All students desiring to become<lb/>
a memtber of the Young Democrats<lb/>
Club should contact Caroline Wal-<lb/>
lace, First Vice President in charge<lb/>
of membership.<lb/>
W.A.A.<lb/>
New memfbers were welcomed into<lb/>
the Women's Athletic Association by<lb/>
tne president, Grace Smith, at its<lb/>
first regular meeting recently. Plans<lb/>
were discussed for the Club's Home-<lb/>
coming Float and Bennie Fogleman<lb/>
was elected as the sponsor. It was<lb/>
decided to begin the intramural pro-<lb/>
gram within the next week having<lb/>
volley ball and tennis. An honorary<lb/>
varsity squad will be selected for<lb/>
each sport during the year.<lb/>
The newly formed women's swim-<lb/>
ming club "Aquanymhs" was ap-<lb/>
proved for affiliation with the Wo-<lb/>
men's Athletic Association and par-<lb/>
ticipation in the Swim Club will be<lb/>
equivalent to the participation in a<lb/>
seasonal sport.<lb/>
Methodists<lb/>
Janice Penny, vesper chairman on<lb/>
the Wesley Foundation Council, led<lb/>
a vesper program stressing the func-<lb/>
tion and aims of the Wesley Founda-<lb/>
tion, a part of the Methodist Student<lb/>
Movement, last Sunday evening at<lb/>
organizing a iratermty<lb/>
with the<lb/>
ultimate objective being a possible<lb/>
affilation with a national profession-<lb/>
al busness fraternity. The organi-<lb/>
zation is for male students in the<lb/>
Business Department only.<lb/>
The new-born fraternity will bear,<lb/>
or the time being, the name of 'The<lb/>
Delta Zeta Fraternity of East Caro-<lb/>
lina College<lb/>
Following the original meeting<lb/>
there was a meeting called for Tues-<lb/>
day, October 28, a supper at The<lb/>
Old Towne Inn for the purpose of<lb/>
adopting the constitution upon which<lb/>
the fraternity will be governed, and<lb/>
also to elect oficers in order to gain<lb/>
a functioning status so as to gain<lb/>
whatever benefits may arise in the<lb/>
immediate future.<lb/>
The officers elected were: Presi-<lb/>
dent. Lloyd Whitley; Vice-President,<lb/>
Donald Umetead; Vice President,<lb/>
Jimmy Smith; Treasurer, Johnny<lb/>
Brown; Secretary, George Pate;<lb/>
Historian, Clarence Brown; Ritual<lb/>
Chairman, Tommy Thompson; Social<lb/>
Chairman, Russell Newman; and<lb/>
Publicity Chairman, Dave Evans.<lb/>
Delta Zeta Fraternity will be re-<lb/>
presented by Miss Barbara Earle<lb/>
Modlin of Portsmouth, Virginia in<lb/>
th Homecoming parade as another<lb/>
attraction to the gala affair.<lb/>
Sigma Phi Alpha<lb/>
Tie Phi Sigma chapter of Sigma<lb/>
Phi Alpha held its first regular<lb/>
meeting for the 1954-55 term Tues-<lb/>
day, October 5, in the "Y" Hut.<lb/>
The Sigma Phi Alpha is going to<lb/>
sponsor a car in the Homecoming<lb/>
Parade. Riding in the car will 'be the<lb/>
three foreign students and Janet<lb/>
Wdlliams as sponsor for the fraterni-<lb/>
ty-<lb/>
Jean Fisher, Shirley Alford and<lb/>
Nelly lb rrington will serve on the<lb/>
Homecoming committee.<lb/>
Phe chapter was very fortunate to<lb/>
have as I g i -t speaker Dr. Reg-<lb/>
i npos, from Barcelona,<lb/>
n. Dr. Compos gave a most en-<lb/>
joyable talk on the tradition and<lb/>
culture of his native country, and<lb/>
-ion of the Cnited States.<lb/>
Circle K<lb/>
1 ie Circle "K" Club held their<lb/>
rd meeting oi the year at the Silo<lb/>
Grill on the evening of the fifth of<lb/>
October. Twenty members were pres-<lb/>
ent and a number of guests, among<lb/>
!i wre Dr. John Reynolds. Mr.<lb/>
John Barwhill and Mr. Wilkinson.<lb/>
presid nt and vice resident, respec-<lb/>
tively, of the local Kiwanis Club. Dr.<lb/>
J. B. Bennett, Director of Religious<lb/>
Education, was the guest speaker.<lb/>
Plans were completed for a trip<lb/>
to e taken by four ECC students,<lb/>
Bob Julian, Dalton Mann, Harold<lb/>
ion and Howard Rooks, as rep-<lb/>
resentatives to the National Circle<lb/>
"K Convention to be held in Car-<lb/>
hage, 111<lb/>
A wee n I<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
' W<lb/>
ng v. ? M <lb/>
if Gri<lb/>
i: v<lb/>
i<lb/>
'? i<lb/>
?<lb/>
Of . ! .<lb/>
Mo<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
cam<lb/>
 nake" dai ?<lb/>
Begim<lb/>
?<lb/>
R ?<lb/>
lay'<lb/>
?<lb/>
II<lb/>
p. m.<lb/>
At 10:30 a. m. con<lb/>
ing parade Partieipa<lb/>
college (.ici.ii<lb/>
pus queens, floi I .<lb/>
school hand- ah<lb/>
Carolina bai<lb/>
for the pi<lb/>
n Mann. ?<lb/>
that those inviti<lb/>
civic clu<lb/>
reber of Com<lb/>
tits' A<lb/>
in<lb/>
Silo. $15, ai<lb/>
?<lb/>
iv He<lb/>
T<lb/>
from dorm spoi<lb/>
dents' sponsor. ?<lb/>
organizal w <lb/>
who will appear<lb/>
ing in con<lb/>
nittee arc Rj<lb/>
Max Joyner. S<lb/>
are expected to <lb/>
daj 's event 5. S imi<lb/>
alumni. T<lb/>
Jacksom ille, 1 R<lb/>
Fuquaj Sprii 1 by<lb/>
. Dunn, i<lb/>
Smi1<lb/>
sonville, under R<lb/>
Greenville, lead<lb/>
Follow ing the Alum I<lb/>
Oct. IT thru 19.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Ten new members have undergone North Dining Ha<lb/>
initiation into the Phi Sigma Pi Fra- Cynthia Mend, nhall, rec<lb/>
tenuity this quarter. The initiation,<lb/>
staged Monday, took Mac Edmund-<lb/>
on, Frankie Keaton, Billy Sharber,<lb/>
Irving Mawiard, .lack Cutler, Horace<lb/>
Rose, .Jim Winstead, Gene Lanier.<lb/>
and Roy McGinnis into the club.<lb/>
Tii' se students were chosen on the<lb/>
basis of scholarship and leadership<lb/>
accomplishments shown here at East<lb/>
Carolina College.<lb/>
Chapel Hours Change<lb/>
From Twelve To Five<lb/>
O'clock In Afternoon<lb/>
The first five o'clock chapel<lb/>
services to be held at East Caro-<lb/>
lina College in many years was<lb/>
conducted Tuesday afternoon in<lb/>
Austin auditorium. This begins<lb/>
a new custom here, and acording<lb/>
to Dr. John Bennett, Director of<lb/>
Religious Education, the group in<lb/>
attendance was large.<lb/>
The move to change chapel hour<lb/>
from twelve noon on Tuesdays<lb/>
until five in the afternoon was<lb/>
instigated by administrative and<lb/>
faculty officials who sought to<lb/>
free the fifth period for more<lb/>
classes and to shorten the line<lb/>
in the dining rooms.<lb/>
rector, will be I<lb/>
in the Student Union, I in<lb/>
the basem I Wright 3<lb/>
Punch will be served.<lb/>
The h: lij ing iv af-<lb/>
fair eomes at 2:30<lb/>
Carolina Pirates ? e W<lb/>
Carolina Catamouit<lb/>
Conference ?<lb/>
Hal'lime w<lb/>
of the visiting bai<lb/>
After the game, there w<lb/>
dance in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
mainly for the nn high<lb/>
school bands, but everyone  invited.<lb/>
The dance will last until 6:00 p. m.<lb/>
Also following the g<lb/>
pus YWCA and VMtA will hold<lb/>
open house in the "Y" Hut 0<lb/>
organizations are planing ; ost-game<lb/>
affairs.<lb/>
The final c  n tl agenda is<lb/>
the Homecoming "Ho o S:00-<lb/>
12:OD in Wright Audi: ? <lb/>
j time the crowning of the Homecom-<lb/>
; ing queen will take pit<lb/>
South Carolina's entire ;ax of 21<lb/>
cents on each ton of fertiliser and<lb/>
cottonseed meal goes to the support<lb/>
of Clemson College. ?The Progres-<lb/>
sive Farmer.<lb/>
i?? ??"<lb/>
<pb facs="00038357_0002"/><lb/>
PAOB TWO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAK<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published by the Students of East Carolina College<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952.<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1926 at tke<lb/>
U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under the act of<lb/>
March 3, 1879.<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
Firat Place Raiting, CSPA Convention, Mareh, 1954<lb/>
Editor-inchief Faye Batten O'Neal<lb/>
A&amp;sistant Editor ? Valeria Slhearon<lb/>
Managing Editor . Bobby Ray Hall<lb/>
Feature Editor Anne George<lb/>
Sports Editor  Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Business Manager  Emil Massad<lb/>
Assistant Basines Manager - Shirley Hargrove<lb/>
Photographer  Sidney Jones<lb/>
S. G. A. Reporter  Joyce Smith<lb/>
Staff Assistants  Gene Lanier, Joyce Smith, Pat<lb/>
Humphries, Jerry Register, Dot Lloyd, Letty De<lb/>
Loath, Jimmy Ferrell, Evan Taylor, Pat Jackson,<lb/>
Margaret Smith, Sylvia Farmer, Lou Ann Rouse,<lb/>
Billy Arnold, Jonnie Simpson, Joyce Norris, Betty<lb/>
Jean Garrett, Bob Joyner, William Bryant, Roy<lb/>
Askew, Tommy Stanton, Tanya Anderson, Sidney<lb/>
Jones, Louise Yelverton, Jan Raiby, and J. W.<lb/>
Browning.<lb/>
Editorial Advisor  Misg Mary H. Greene<lb/>
Financial Advisor  Dr. Clinton W. Prewett<lb/>
Editorial Comment<lb/>
by Faye B. O'Neal<lb/>
Welcome back to all alumni of<lb/>
East Carolina College. This weekend<lb/>
will be yours and the students here<lb/>
are glad you are going to be here<lb/>
for a celebration.<lb/>
We know there will be "big do-<lb/>
ings" here beginning Friday night.<lb/>
Louis Clark, student chairman of<lb/>
Homecoming, gave us a story, printed<lb/>
on page one, that verifies our state-<lb/>
ment. The football game ibetween<lb/>
DOC and WOC will be held in the<lb/>
afternoon for the first time. This<lb/>
should enable more alumni and stu?<lb/>
dents to conveniently get to the<lb/>
dance Saturday night. We predict<lb/>
that East Carolina will be a suitcase<lb/>
college of a different sort this week-<lb/>
end. Instead of going off campus,<lb/>
lots of people will come on campus<lb/>
come Friday night and Saturday<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
Who's Who Among Stedento At East Carolina<lb/>
FBLA Leader Among Homecoming Sponsor<lb/>
by Anne George<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wit,<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word of it<lb/>
?E. Fitzgerald<lb/>
Our View On Current Press Squabble<lb/>
Recently one of the leading newspapers in<lb/>
North Carolina, the Raleigh NEWS and OBSER-<lb/>
VER in an editorial made a statement to the ef-<lb/>
fect that East Carolina College might as well be<lb/>
taken under the jurisdiction of the Greater Uni-<lb/>
versity if the state was going to continue to spend<lb/>
large amounts of money here. The Raleigh paper<lb/>
was referring to the fact that in the past few<lb/>
years our college has grown so rapidly as to ne-<lb/>
cessitate the additional funds that the state leg-<lb/>
islature has been good enough to appropriate to<lb/>
us. In another issue of the same paper was print-<lb/>
ed a news story stating that East Carolina's<lb/>
president Dr. John D. Messick had asked for<lb/>
$3,000,000 for more improvements to our college.<lb/>
We have waited for the other leading papers<lb/>
of the state to have their say about the situation<lb/>
and to think things over for ourselves before<lb/>
stating our views. For two weeks editorials from<lb/>
two of these state newspapers have been run in<lb/>
our paper and now we are ready to give our<lb/>
opinion.<lb/>
It is no secret that the NEWS and OBSERV-<lb/>
ER has never been partial to East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege. At times they have completely disregarded<lb/>
us when the other big members of the N.C. Press<lb/>
have been more than complimentary to us. We<lb/>
do not question the policy of the Raleigh paper<lb/>
in mention; we are sure they have their reasons<lb/>
for their policy. Neither are we offended nor do<lb/>
we mean to be offensive.<lb/>
There is a question in our minds as to what<lb/>
kind of advantages East Carolina College wrould<lb/>
be given as a member of the Greater University.<lb/>
The opinions of several other leading papers in<lb/>
the state seem parallel to our own. We have got-<lb/>
ten along pretty well without being a member<lb/>
of the Greater University and we believe the<lb/>
liabilities that would iurely result if a change<lb/>
were made now would outweigh the assets.<lb/>
The administration here has worked hard,<lb/>
bring our school from a small teacher's college<lb/>
to the third largest state-supported institution<lb/>
for education in N. C. It is no longer easy to get<lb/>
enrolled at East Carolina; the requirements are<lb/>
stiff and if you can get in, you might not be able<lb/>
to get a place to sleep in Greenville. Chances are<lb/>
that becoming a member of the Greater Universi-<lb/>
ty Unit would mean that East Carolina might<lb/>
again become a small specialized school for teach-<lb/>
er training and that we would get the scraps left<lb/>
over from the other units for faculty, staff and<lb/>
other necessities.<lb/>
We thank those newspapers throughout the<lb/>
state who want us to get the opportunities we<lb/>
need to keep growing. If we are ever shown that<lb/>
we would benefit from becoming affiliated with<lb/>
the Greater University, we will retract these<lb/>
well-meant words.<lb/>
From The Greensboro Daily News<lb/>
"The announcement that East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege has nudged out Woman's College as third<lb/>
largest unit in the state-supported college and<lb/>
university system is gratifying to those who<lb/>
have followed the growth of the Greenville In-<lb/>
stitution.<lb/>
It was both gratifying and surprising to us.<lb/>
We had kept up with the activities at "E-C-T-C<lb/>
as East Carolina used to be known, especially<lb/>
under the wise leadership of its president, J. D.<lb/>
Messick; but we had not realized that the college<lb/>
had grown so tremendously in recent years?at<lb/>
least not to the point that it could challenge<lb/>
Woman's College in size.<lb/>
But the truth is that Eastern Carolina needs<lb/>
exactly what East Carolina has to offer. There<lb/>
are not many large educational institutions for<lb/>
women in that area. East Carolina serves a tre-<lb/>
mendous college market which was not served<lb/>
well for years. Now that the institution has be-<lb/>
come so favorably known, it is turning appli-<lb/>
cants away in droves, and state budget directors<lb/>
wonder how to deal with the boom.<lb/>
We agree with the Rocky Mount Evening<lb/>
Telegram when it suggests that institutions<lb/>
outside the Greater University system can no<lb/>
longer be "treated as orphans If the demand<lb/>
for their services is great, then the state should<lb/>
provide facilities to meet it Obviously, East<lb/>
Carolina College has the kind of growing pains<lb/>
which a responsible state cannot ignore<lb/>
With so many guests coming here<lb/>
this weekend, the police force, con-<lb/>
sisting of Chiefs Harrell and Pitt-<lb/>
man, will have their hands full. We<lb/>
urge student cooperation with the<lb/>
polkemen. They will be vitally de-<lb/>
pendent on us to help keep order at<lb/>
the game, dances and to curb traffit-<lb/>
congestion. East Carolina students<lb/>
should keep their cars off campus<lb/>
as much as possible Saturday.<lb/>
While on the subject of the police<lb/>
department on campus, it might be<lb/>
said that Harrell and Pittman have<lb/>
no easy job at any time. It doesn't<lb/>
take a campus celebration to keep<lb/>
them busy. At night when only one<lb/>
of them is on duty, the chores in-<lb/>
crease in difficulty. Included in the<lb/>
duties of the policeman on duty from<lb/>
eight to half past ten every night<lb/>
are such jobs as patrolling the whole<lb/>
campus from the football stadium<lb/>
to t"he area beyond Wilson Hall to<lb/>
set k for offenders of the necking<lb/>
on campus rule, checking the build-<lb/>
ings to see if the necessary doors<lb/>
have been locked, being on the look-<lb/>
out for prowlers and thieves, and<lb/>
checking the ptudnt Union and<lb/>
men's dormitories to stop gambling.<lb/>
Chief Harrell says that the great-<lb/>
est mischief seems almost always to<lb/>
happen at one end of the campus<lb/>
while be is at the other. Yet he is<lb/>
always expected to be on the spot if<lb/>
something' does go wrong.<lb/>
This week's Who's Who not only<lb/>
has beauty, but brains, too! Bobbie<lb/>
Lou Avant, Whiteville, has been on<lb/>
Dean's List ever since she enrolled<lb/>
at East Carolina back in '51.<lb/>
"My main reason for coming to<lb/>
East Carolina said Bobbie, "was<lb/>
to take advantage of the excellent<lb/>
Business Department that my high<lb/>
school commercial teacher had told<lb/>
me was offered here<lb/>
Not only has Bobbie taken advan-<lb/>
tage of the Business Department,<lb/>
but through her active interest and<lb/>
participation in F.B.L.A. she was<lb/>
elected this past spring to hold the<lb/>
office of the first president of the<lb/>
new State F.B.L.A. Chapter in North<lb/>
Carolina. "1 hardly knew what to<lb/>
say when I was elected to this State<lb/>
office related Bobbie. "I knew it<lb/>
would be a lot of hard work, but I<lb/>
was willing to try.<lb/>
"The biggest thing that ever hap-<lb/>
pened to me since I came to East<lb/>
Carolina was when I became State<lb/>
President and automatically became<lb/>
the state delegate to the National<lb/>
F.B.L.A. Convention in Dallas, Tex.<lb/>
in June. I can't describe how I felt<lb/>
after riding for two days and two<lb/>
nights on the train, besides being<lb/>
alone! As soon as I arived at the<lb/>
hotel the National President called<lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER U, 1954<lb/>
POT POURRI<lb/>
by Valeria Shearon<lb/>
Fr<lb/>
an<lb/>
Bobby Lou Avant<lb/>
me and asked me to have dinner<lb/>
with her at one. I decided to stretch<lb/>
out for a few minutes on the bed<lb/>
for some much needed rest. The next<lb/>
thing I knew the phone was ringing?<lb/>
it was the National President who<lb/>
woke me! I have never been so em-<lb/>
barrassed, for it was after one o<lb/>
clock then. She was very understand-<lb/>
ing about it all<lb/>
During her<lb/>
freshman and sopho-<lb/>
more year Bobbie was F.BX-A. re-<lb/>
porter and this year she is a college<lb/>
marshal, treasurer of the junior<lb/>
class, recording secretary of F.B.L.A.<lb/>
and a member of Phi Omega Phi,<lb/>
1 honorary business fraternity.<lb/>
Since her sophomore year Bobbie<lb/>
has held a full-time self-help job as<lb/>
assistant to the Dean of Women<lb/>
Her duties in this position consist of<lb/>
serving as parlor hostess, typing let-<lb/>
ters and doing other general office<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"I love barbecue chicken says<lb/>
Bobbie. Music, tennis, and swimming<lb/>
are als included in her interests.<lb/>
Boh ie has been chosen by F.B.L.A.<lb/>
to represent them in the Homecoming<lb/>
Parade and secretly hopes, "We can<lb/>
w ar evening dresses, as I have a<lb/>
new one I'm dying to wear<lb/>
Although Bobbie will receive a<lb/>
B. S. degree in business she hag not<lb/>
decided definitely whether she will<lb/>
tfach. "I hope someday to get my<lb/>
Master's, and work on my Doctor's,<lb/>
but that is in the distant future<lb/>
Since Bobbie will not graduate<lb/>
until next May, we hope to see a<lb/>
lot more of her.<lb/>
As her roommate for two years<lb/>
Barbara Strickland says, "Bobbie is<lb/>
one of the finest girls I've ever met<lb/>
AROUND THE CAMPUS<lb/>
with Jimmy Ferrell<lb/>
dt would be safe to say that about<lb/>
half the students at East Carolina<lb/>
are old enough to vote in county,<lb/>
state and national elections. Also<lb/>
it would be safe to say that only<lb/>
about one fourth of those who are<lb/>
eligible are interested enough to<lb/>
learn enough about the political is-<lb/>
sues being decided to vote intelli-<lb/>
gently.<lb/>
In our opinion, it is the responsi-<lb/>
bility of good citizens to keep up to<lb/>
date on local and international af-<lb/>
fairs. For instance, right now the<lb/>
representative system of North Caro-<lb/>
lina is in foul condition and action<lb/>
is 1 eing taken in the State Legisla-<lb/>
ture to do something about it. To<lb/>
amend the State Constitution, elec-<lb/>
tions will have to be held.<lb/>
It might be a good idea for con-<lb/>
scientious North Carolinians, includ-<lb/>
ing college students of voting age,<lb/>
to look into the situation.<lb/>
East Carolinian Editor<lb/>
This week's campus personality is<lb/>
Faye O'Neal, Editor-in-Chief of the<lb/>
"East Carolinian<lb/>
Faye, a senior from Selma, is ma-<lb/>
joring in Social Studies and minor-<lb/>
ing in English. Aside from being<lb/>
head of the school paper she is also<lb/>
President of the Creative Writer's<lb/>
Club, Secretary of the Young Repub-<lb/>
licans, and serves on the executive<lb/>
board of the Student Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
During her four years at East<lb/>
Carolina she has held positions as<lb/>
Managing Editor, Assistant Editor,<lb/>
and was last Spring appointed by<lb/>
the Publications Board as Editor-in-<lb/>
Chief of the "East Carolinian<lb/>
She told me recently, "I feel a<lb/>
little inadequate at times for I know<lb/>
that the responsibility of editing the<lb/>
newspaper requires greater ability<lb/>
than mine<lb/>
L-I-S-T-E N<lb/>
L-ove, I-mpels, S-acrifice, T-oward,<lb/>
E-very, N-eed.?The Listen Cam-<lb/>
paign is being promoted by the East<lb/>
Carolina Baptist Student Union to<lb/>
hi 1; feed the hungry people of the<lb/>
world. Wouldn't you like to help them<lb/>
with their campaign by contributing<lb/>
a penny a day, or a meal a month?<lb/>
East Carolina contributed $192 last<lb/>
year, following only UNC which con-<lb/>
tri; uted $253.17, and NC State with<lb/>
WC contributed $90.15, Ap jazz as you can see by the number<lb/>
$209.50.<lb/>
palachian $50.00, Western Carolina<lb/>
136.23, and Pembroke $35.50.<lb/>
New Top Tunes<lb/>
The tile, "peapicker" himself, Tenn-<lb/>
essee Ernie Ford, and his version of<lb/>
"Give Me Your Word" rates number<lb/>
: one down at the Soda Shop now.<lb/>
"Shake That Thing the loud jazz<lb/>
number that received the most nic-<lb/>
kels a few weeks back, has dropped<lb/>
way down the list of campus favor-<lb/>
ites. But the students still ge for<lb/>
The cartoons you see on the sports<lb/>
pages of the "East Carolinian" are<lb/>
being drawn by a valuable new mem-<lb/>
ber of the staff. Billy Arnold, a<lb/>
freshman here, comes from Green-<lb/>
ville High School where his talent for<lb/>
drawing was coached by teachers in<lb/>
the journalism and art departments.<lb/>
Billy works regularly with Bob<lb/>
Hilldrup, Sports Editor, in deciding<lb/>
on cartoons for our paper.<lb/>
Poetry Contest Open<lb/>
To College Students;<lb/>
Deadline In November<lb/>
All college students are eligible<lb/>
to send entries for judgment by the<lb/>
Annual Anthology of College Poetry.<lb/>
Rules are simple! The manuscript<lb/>
must le typed or written in ink on<lb/>
one ide of a sheet; your home ad-<lb/>
dress, name of college and college<lb/>
address must appear on each manu-<lb/>
script.<lb/>
The theme and form may be of<lb/>
the student's desire. You may submit<lb/>
as many manuscripts as you wish<lb/>
i ut shorter efforts are preferred.<lb/>
Closing date is November 5. Send<lb/>
all entries to National Poetry Asso-<lb/>
ciation, 3210 Shelby Avenue, Los<lb/>
Angeles 34, California.<lb/>
two song "il've Got My Eyes On<lb/>
You (and "Drunk Again" which<lb/>
places third. "The Little Shoemaker"<lb/>
and "Sh-Boom" are still hanging<lb/>
around to complete the top five.<lb/>
Hot Time!<lb/>
Last week's hot weather really had<lb/>
everybody's nerves on edge!<lb/>
Over in Austin this teacher was<lb/>
busily preparing to give a test. Try-<lb/>
ing to save time, she told her class<lb/>
"I won't call the roll today, 111 check<lb/>
it by your papers<lb/>
Immediately after saying this she<lb/>
began to call the roll. "Why did you<lb/>
change your mind?" a hoy over in<lb/>
the corner asked her.<lb/>
"You're old enough to know that<lb/>
you shouldn't ask a woman why she<lb/>
changes her mind she replied.<lb/>
?It was quite warm Tuesday at noon<lb/>
as the Drill Team marched to the<lb/>
drill field. Remarks such as "Get<lb/>
your eyes off the ground "pull<lb/>
that stomach in and "straighten<lb/>
that rifle" were being thrown at<lb/>
them from all directions.<lb/>
Music filled the air as they march-<lb/>
ed by the Student Union. From the<lb/>
juke box came the strumming of Les<lb/>
Paul's guitar and his wife Mary Ford<lb/>
singing, "I'm a fool to care, when<lb/>
you treat me this way<lb/>
All over the campus, during the past week,<lb/>
there has been a prevailing air of the presence<lb/>
of many busy people as Alumni Office staffers<lb/>
and numerous committees have called upon<lb/>
brawn and brains to produce an effective and<lb/>
festive homecoming for the multitude of East<lb/>
Carolinians who will be returning to their Alma<lb/>
Mater for this annual event.<lb/>
Homecoming is a time for reunions and wsiih<lb/>
with classmates, teachers and friends. Everyone<lb/>
looks forward to homecoming with much z<lb/>
and enthusiasm, since it is the one time w<lb/>
old friends get together. Actually, it is just v.<lb/>
its name implies?a time for all East Carolinians<lb/>
to come "home" and visit with the rest of the<lb/>
tremendous, and ever increasing, family of the<lb/>
college.<lb/>
We attempted to find out how many home-<lb/>
comings East Carolina has previously seen. The<lb/>
closest we can arrive to factual information re-<lb/>
veals that this 1(J54 homecoming is the eighth<lb/>
since 1947. Sometime during the early per.<lb/>
World War II, homecomings were disconi.<lb/>
but were resumed at the close of the war. Other-<lb/>
wise, we can only say that homecomings date<lb/>
back to a fairly early period of East Carolina<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Indications from the Alumni Office I<lb/>
that several hundred alumni are expected<lb/>
weekend. They will "be on campus from all pa<lb/>
of the state and out of the state. The map.<lb/>
from out of state are expected to come from '?<lb/>
ginia and the District of Columbia. Several re-<lb/>
tired faculty members will be among those re-<lb/>
turning. Coming from Missouri are Mr. and Mn.<lb/>
E. C. Hollar. Mr. Hollar taught in the<lb/>
Studies Department prior to his retirement in<lb/>
1951. Other returning faculty are Profef<lb/>
Ralph Deal of Greenville, Miss Mamie Jenkins<lb/>
of Raleigh, Miss Kate Lewis, Miss Ola Ross, and<lb/>
Dr. Howard McGinnis, all from Greenville. No<lb/>
doubt a number of the alumni will remen.<lb/>
these faculty members and enjoy a few mom'<lb/>
with them.<lb/>
We are sure you have been briefed on the<lb/>
full calendar of activities that have been sch<lb/>
uled to insure pleasure for every moment of<lb/>
weekend. The highlighting events are the football<lb/>
game, parade, and dances on Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day nights. The most colorful attraction, v.<lb/>
exception of the parade, will be the dormitor.<lb/>
all decked out for trie occasion. Various campus<lb/>
organizations are planning open house or reun-<lb/>
ions. All indications point to a definitely cram-<lb/>
packed weekend of fun and excitement for both<lb/>
students and alumni.<lb/>
We don't claim to be weather prophets, but<lb/>
if we were, we would forecast a clear sky and<lb/>
moderately warm temperatures for the entire<lb/>
weekend. However, since this is out of our li<lb/>
we can only hope the weather man will look v.<lb/>
a favorable eye to Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
least during the afternoon football game.<lb/>
'Couple Of The Week'<lb/>
by Joyce Smith<lb/>
At this week's SGA meeting, too<lb/>
late for us to get an absolute scoop,<lb/>
Dr. N. M. Jorgensen, head of the<lb/>
Athletic Department here, talked to<lb/>
the legislature on several questions<lb/>
from the students to his department.<lb/>
Much dissatisfaction among the stu-<lb/>
dents could be quelled by talking<lb/>
with Dr. Jorgensen. For instance,<lb/>
he can tell you that the reason it<lb/>
would be useless to try to build a<lb/>
new stadium here hinges on the fact<lb/>
that we don't usually fill the one we<lb/>
have.<lb/>
A lot of comment has been made<lb/>
on the letter we ran last week con-<lb/>
cerning faculty participation in cam-<lb/>
pus club activity. Many students<lb/>
have personally contacted us and ex-<lb/>
pressed concern over the letter. Pt is<lb/>
safe to say that the letter in mention<lb/>
expressed the opinion of only a small<lb/>
minority. The views of most of the<lb/>
students on the matter contradict<lb/>
those taken in the letter. We feel<lb/>
that most of the clubs, and organiza-<lb/>
tions here would fold uip were it not<lb/>
for the help given by members of<lb/>
the faculty. The officers of the cluibs,<lb/>
as a rule, seek and welcome the<lb/>
suggestions of the faculty. Further-<lb/>
more, it is extremely doubtful that<lb/>
any club or organization here has<lb/>
ever ibeen controlled by the facult;<lb/>
members that help make up its mem-<lb/>
bership.<lb/>
I Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
This is my fourth year at East<lb/>
Carolina and while the school has<lb/>
advanced tremendously in many di-<lb/>
rections, it has seemingly gone back-<lb/>
wards in one.<lb/>
If you were on campus Monday,<lb/>
you could hardly have missed seeing<lb/>
the several weirdly costumed, idiotic<lb/>
acting people who were being initi-<lb/>
ated into a club.<lb/>
These initiations have continuously<lb/>
gotten more degrading, petty, and<lb/>
pointless since my freshman year.<lb/>
If there is a justifiable explanation<lb/>
lor such occurrences as these, I've<lb/>
yet to hear it, but I'm willing to lis-<lb/>
ten. If there is no explanation, other<lb/>
than the fact that people like to see<lb/>
other people being embarrassed and<lb/>
making fools of themselves, and that<lb/>
the members of the clubs who are<lb/>
doing the initiating chose this way<lb/>
to get some devilishness out of their<lb/>
systems, then I, for one, think that<lb/>
our school would be much (better<lb/>
off without them.<lb/>
It's up to the people responsible<lb/>
to realize that we are supposed to<lb/>
be young men and women merging<lb/>
into the adult world, rather than<lb/>
third or fourth graders having a<lb/>
party.<lb/>
Sincerely yours,<lb/>
Donald A. King<lb/>
Bruton Taylor and Jean Button<lb/>
Jean Sutton of La Grange and Brut-<lb/>
on Taylor of Kinston are this week's<lb/>
couple of the week. They have been<lb/>
five years, it was Bruton's cousin<lb/>
that played cupid for these two.<lb/>
"About two days before Christmas<lb/>
of '49, says Bruton, my couin in-<lb/>
troduced us and I tcok Jean to a<lb/>
movie. Six months later we were<lb/>
going steady<lb/>
Jean remembers when Bruton let<lb/>
her wear his class ring. She says,<lb/>
"We were coming back to school one<lb/>
Sunday night and Bruton just gave<lb/>
it to me. He never said a thing<lb/>
They both enjoy movieg and danc-<lb/>
ing. Bruton likes football and base-<lb/>
ball. Jean says she goes to games<lb/>
because Bruton likes to go. Above<lb/>
all they enjoy being together.<lb/>
Bruton worked the year after<lb/>
graduating from high schol so h?<lb/>
and Jean could start to college<lb/>
together. Then after being in schol<lb/>
for a quarter, Jean had to drop out<lb/>
of school due to illness. However,<lb/>
Jean was able to make up the<lb/>
quarter she lost, so they will graduate<lb/>
together after all.<lb/>
Jean is a primary major while<lb/>
Bruton is majoring in Business Ed-<lb/>
ucation. Both are Juniors. Bruton<lb/>
will have to go in service a$ soon<lb/>
as he graduates. Jean and Bruton<lb/>
are 1" nning their future together,<lb/>
so w adding bells will be ringing<lb/>
soon after they graduate.<lb/>
Tidbits<lb/>
by Jerry Register<lb/>
Car: Something to give a pedes-<lb/>
trian a run for his money.<lb/>
H you drink, don't drive, if you<lb/>
drive, don't drink?if you drink, don't<lb/>
walk?if you walk, watch out for the<lb/>
fellow that doesn't pay any attention<lb/>
to this slogan.<lb/>
The only thing the Russians have-<lb/>
n't fctmd out first yet is that nobody<lb/>
believes that they found out all those<lb/>
othef things first in the first place.<lb/>
Get out your application blanks,<lb/>
boys, Marilyn Monroe is free again.<lb/>
People are funnier than anybody<lb/>
else.<lb/>
Parking ticket: An RjS.V.P. iari-<lb/>
tation.<lb/>
Controversial Currents<lb/>
McCarthy In Dutch?<lb/>
by Bobby Hall<lb/>
After the Army-McCarthy hearings were<lb/>
over Senator Flanders (R-Vt) introduced a reso-<lb/>
lution calling for the censure of Senator Joseph<lb/>
R. McCarthy and forty-six supporting charges.<lb/>
The charges were fired at McCarthy by<lb/>
Flanders and Senators Fulbright (D-Ark) and<lb/>
Morse (Ind-Ore). They accused him of mis-<lb/>
conduct including contempt of the Senate, slur-<lb/>
ring fellow senators, abusing an Army general,<lb/>
and illegal use and solicitation of secret govern-<lb/>
ment documents.<lb/>
A six-man Senate committee, three Repub-<lb/>
licans and three Democrats, were chosen to study<lb/>
these charges. Republican Senators chosen were<lb/>
Arthur W. Watkins (Utah) ; Frank Carlson<lb/>
(Mich) and Francis Case (S.D.). Democrats<lb/>
chosen were Senators Edwin C. Johnson (Colo) ;<lb/>
John C. Stennis (Miss) ; and Sam J. Ervin Jr.<lb/>
(N. C). Senator Watkins acted as chairman.<lb/>
On September 27, the Senate censure com-<lb/>
mittee recommended that Senator Joseph Mc-<lb/>
Carthy should be "censured by the Senate<lb/>
It unanimously recommended censure on<lb/>
two of the five general charges it considered:<lb/>
1. That McCarthy was in contempt of the<lb/>
Senate when he failed to appear before a 1951-52<lb/>
elections subcommittee that investigated his fi-<lb/>
nances and other activities.<lb/>
2. That he abused Brig. General Ralph VV.<lb/>
Zwicker, former commanding officer of Camp<lb/>
Kilmer, N. J.<lb/>
The committee did not find enough evidence<lb/>
to constitute a basis for censure that McCarthy<lb/>
had abused Senate colleagues, including Senator<lb/>
Flanders.<lb/>
Senator Flanders, one of the first senators<lb/>
to defy McCarthy, charged McCarthy abused<lb/>
him by calling him "senile<lb/>
The committee found that Senator Flanders<lb/>
induced Senator McCarthy to make ther re-<lb/>
marks by his own conduct in respect to McCar-<lb/>
thy. However, the committee did say "the re-<lb/>
marks of Senator McCarthy concerning Senator<lb/>
Glanders were highly improper<lb/>
November 8 his been set as the date for<lb/>
the Senate to hear and vote on the committee's<lb/>
recommendations. The plan had been for a special<lb/>
session to hear the charges.<lb/>
Senator Knowland, who recommended the<lb/>
November 8 date, said he did so because he want-<lb/>
ed senators to "have an ample opportunity to<lb/>
study the testimony and the report, to assure<lb/>
that the ultimate action of the Senate would take<lb/>
place in an atmosphere free from pre-election<lb/>
tensions.<lb/>
What action will be taken November 8 no<lb/>
one knows But everyone can be sure that Mc-<lb/>
Carthy will be using every political trick known<lb/>
to defend himself even if it means bringing new<lb/>
censure charges against members of the Senate<lb/>
committee who recommended that he be ceniured.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038357_0003"/><lb/>
FRIDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1964<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Freshmen At East Carolina<lb/>
Active In Pre-Collcge Days<lb/>
by Lou Anne Rouse<lb/>
year the freshman class i wan in Leeburg, Florida.<lb/>
campus leaders. Many Kenneth Crocker<lb/>
eaders are the persons j A r cipient of Eagle Scout Award<lb/>
in their home town and the God and Country Award,<lb/>
ermeth Cixcker, i. another freshman<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
? ia, I <lb/>
East Carolina  A Suitcase College<lb/>
9C<lb/>
,vere active<lb/>
! . b schools from which<lb/>
faated. We scouted around<lb/>
eeked unto the records of some<lb/>
e uu tubers of the present fresh-<lb/>
 and found out a lot of<lb/>
a out the following people:<lb/>
Peggy Quincy<lb/>
Quincy is a girl who each<lb/>
an be proud to have as a fellow<lb/>
at ECC. 1'eggy was winner<lb/>
State 4-H Club Dress Revue<lb/>
and won a trip to the National<lb/>
vention m Chicago last Nov-<lb/>
i e Bhe met outstanding boys and<lb/>
from all over the United States<lb/>
an) toreign countries. Peggy<lb/>
?V? her a strange feeling to<lb/>
art of such a group and that it<lb/>
broadened her outlook on<lb/>
id<lb/>
re<lb/>
th<lb/>
I<lb/>
l.ou Gene Smith<lb/>
te but athletic girl around<lb/>
oa for the first time this<lb/>
ou Gene Smith. Lou Gene<lb/>
B. F. Grady High School<lb/>
have probably already seen<lb/>
ing on TV.<lb/>
doea both creative and square<lb/>
She has been in several<lb/>
dancing teams which danced<lb/>
N C. State Fair. Last year<lb/>
earn won the trophy. Lou Gene<lb/>
participated in folk festivals<lb/>
Vshevilie and Chapel Hill. She j<lb/>
long the cast of "The Duplin<lb/>
as a t.lancer. Lou Gene is<lb/>
g to be a physical education!<lb/>
el.<lb/>
Jo Ann Booth<lb/>
Booth was a very outstand-1<lb/>
H A. member in high school<lb/>
g as president of the Hethesda<lb/>
A. in her senior year. Not all<lb/>
leatic, Jo Ann was queen of the<lb/>
a . Cotton Festival, proving her<lb/>
. tiveneaa.<lb/>
Ann has a lovely voice and sings<lb/>
parta as well as in groups.<lb/>
Sadie Louise Harris<lb/>
Another girl who is worth taking<lb/>
out to meet is Sadie Louise<lb/>
Karris. She has a wonderful person-<lb/>
and most striking, is always<lb/>
to lend a helping hand.<lb/>
idie attended the 14th Annual<lb/>
State in the summer as Beau-<lb/>
- School representative. In<lb/>
case you uie not familiar with how<lb/>
is selected for that honor, we<lb/>
K<lb/>
boy that we should be proud to have<lb/>
as a fellow student. Kenneth hails<lb/>
from Smithfield where he was very<lb/>
outstanding in high school. He helped<lb/>
organize and became president of<lb/>
the Future Teachers Association in<lb/>
-is high school. He was a member<lb/>
of the Glee Club, Dramatics Club,<lb/>
Journalism Club, and was on the<lb/>
annual staff. Kenneth has served as<lb/>
a nature counselor at various Boy<lb/>
Scout camps for the past four years.<lb/>
Bobby Hall<lb/>
Bobby Hall is a G.I. who entered<lb/>
ECC t is summer as a freshman. He<lb/>
served two and a half years in the<lb/>
Air Force. While in service, Bbby<lb/>
wrote for the squadron paper. Ecl by<lb/>
is serving as Managing Editor of the<lb/>
"Beat Carolinian" at present. Bobby,<lb/>
who is working his way through col-<lb/>
lege, is majoring in Pre-Law. He is<lb/>
very interested in international af-<lb/>
fairs and current events. His home<lb/>
is in Ei-win.<lb/>
Quay Koseman<lb/>
Quay Roseman is another young<lb/>
man who will soon demand some<lb/>
attention, the facts being that he is<lb/>
talented. Quay plays the guitar and<lb/>
has made several radio appearnces.<lb/>
Quay was president of the Celeste-<lb/>
Henkl 4-H Club and the Audio-Vis-<lb/>
ual Club president. He was vice-<lb/>
. president of the F.F.A as well as<lb/>
reporter for the Varsity Club. Here<lb/>
i at ECC. Quay has gone out for dra-<lb/>
matics. He has the part of Fred in<lb/>
I the play the Teacher's Playhouse is<lb/>
1 presenting November 11.<lb/>
tell you.<lb/>
Frosh Pick Nominees<lb/>
For Class Offices;<lb/>
Students Vote Soon<lb/>
The freshman class held its ft15<lb/>
mass meeting this week in Austin<lb/>
auditorium for the purpose of nomi-<lb/>
nating candidiates for its class of-<lb/>
ficers. SGA President Wade Cooper<lb/>
and Dr. Clinton .Prewett presided<lb/>
over the meeting.<lb/>
A huge slate of nominees was<lb/>
entered. Wayne E'pley, Eddie Dennis,<lb/>
George Knight, Ken Chalker, Joe<lb/>
Mayo and George Bagley are the<lb/>
candidates for president. Jean Row-<lb/>
land, Janrs Henderson, Patsy Ruth<lb/>
The school faculty Daniels, JoAnn Ashley, Jonnie Simp-<lb/>
Jovce Godwin, pretty East Carolina coed from A hoskie. is ready to leave the campus for the weekend.<lb/>
(N1 this weekend.) Stanley Jones, Norfolk, assists the lady as she gets into the oar. The above scene .s com-<lb/>
Lon on our campus after twelve noon on Friday. It's good to be able to go home but a shame so many people<lb/>
always leave East Carolina for the weekend.<lb/>
School Rules In Early NC<lb/>
Require Penalty In Lashes<lb/>
Virtually everyone know? that education as a project is only a little<lb/>
over a hundred years old in North Carolina. Advanced education is younger<lb/>
than this.<lb/>
The first university established in the state was the University of<lb/>
North Carolina and seven faculty members made up the faculty. Prior to<lb/>
the opening of colleges and universities, however, there were necessarily a<lb/>
few schools or academies, as they were called which provided opportunities<lb/>
lor scholars to grasp the Ibas-ics of the tihree R's reading, writing and<lb/>
arithmetic. Sometimes these institutions had only one teacher who w?s<lb/>
chie! of all activities. Sometimes they were run as boarding schools.<lb/>
All t'is was in the days before public school education.<lb/>
Most East Carolina students and staff members are still young enough<lb/>
to remember their days in grammar grades and high school. Sometimes<lb/>
the going was rough and some of the rules were thought hard to abide by.<lb/>
Below are some of the rules set up Wy the sUfperinrtendent of Stokes County<lb/>
Academy in 1848. C. L. Coon preserved the manuscript in his documentary<lb/>
history on N. C. schools and academies. The numbers on the right re-<lb/>
present the number of lahes given by the teacher for violation of the rules.<lb/>
RULES OF STOKES COUNTY ACADEMY, 1848<lb/>
Lashes<lb/>
Boys and Girls Playing Together<lb/>
Quarreling <lb/>
Fighting -  <lb/>
Quarrelintg at School  <lb/>
Gann ling or Betting at School <lb/>
Playing at Card at School<lb/>
Telling Lies <lb/>
Telling Tales Out of School <lb/>
Nicknaming Each Other <lb/>
Giving Each Other 111 Names<lb/>
Hackgardiing Each Other<lb/>
For Misbehaving to Girls<lb/>
For Drinking Spirituous Liquors at School<lb/>
Making Swings and Swinging on Them . -<lb/>
For Misbehaving when a Stranger is in the House<lb/>
For Wearing Long Finger Nails<lb/>
Mi-behaving to Persons on the Road<lb/>
For Going to Girl's Play Places<lb/>
Girls Going to Boy's Play Places<lb/>
Coming to School with Dirty Face and Hands<lb/>
For Calling Each Other Liars<lb/>
For Playing Bandy<lb/>
For Wrestling at School<lb/>
Scuffling at School <lb/>
For Not Making a Uvw when going out to go home<lb/>
For Wetting Each other Washing at Play time<lb/>
Mor Hollowing and Hooping Going Home <lb/>
For Delaying Time Going Home or Coming to School<lb/>
For Not Saying Yes Sir and No Sir or Yes Marm or No'Marm<lb/>
For Troubing Each Others Writing Affairs .<lb/>
For Not Washing at Playtime when going to Books<lb/>
For Going and playing about the Mill or Creek<lb/>
Pronunciation Varies Little Year To Year<lb/>
Oral English Classes Provide Enlightenment<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
3<lb/>
. 4<lb/>
10<lb/>
7<lb/>
8<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
6<lb/>
10<lb/>
g<lb/>
7<lb/>
6<lb/>
. 2<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
10<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
 2<lb/>
 2<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
 6<lb/>
For Going about the Barn or doing any Mischief about the Place 7<lb/>
I<lb/>
be-<lb/>
by<lb/>
d<lb/>
IF<lb/>
ir-<lb/>
al,<lb/>
rn-<lb/>
<lb/>
Ion<lb/>
he<lb/>
52<lb/>
fl-<lb/>
ip<lb/>
ice<lb/>
hy<lb/>
tor<lb/>
rs<lb/>
bed<lb/>
?rs<lb/>
re-<lb/>
tr-<lb/>
re-<lb/>
tor<lb/>
for<lb/>
e's<lb/>
lial<lb/>
-es a student on the basis of out-<lb/>
iing scholarship, citizenship and<lb/>
lity to get along with people. The<lb/>
t Girls' State is to train the<lb/>
youth of today to be better citizens<lb/>
: tomorrow.<lb/>
Jane Crofton<lb/>
Moat all of you have seen pretty<lb/>
petite Jane Crofton, "Miss Sum-<lb/>
School of 1954 Jane is such<lb/>
 eet and modest girl that she<lb/>
r thought of telling anyone that<lb/>
being a beauty queen wasn't new at<lb/>
all to her. It wasn't, for Jane was<lb/>
second place winner in the "Miss W.<lb/>
T. A. R. TV" contest sponsored by the<lb/>
Norfolk channel 1 and in the Potato<lb/>
Festival. She isn't likely to admit<lb/>
it but she was declared "Miss Wash-<lb/>
ington County" while she was a sen-<lb/>
ior in high school and was the run-<lb/>
ner-up the previous year. Jane can<lb/>
?? seen cheering enthusiastically for<lb/>
the East Carolina Pirates at any foot-<lb/>
ball game, so be sure to meet her.<lb/>
Not wishing to exclude the boys<lb/>
from our freshman spotlight, let's<lb/>
tok at some of the accomplishments,<lb/>
past and present, of several male<lb/>
era ?f the freshman class.<lb/>
Marion Hales<lb/>
Marion Hales is a tall athletic<lb/>
young man who entered ECC as a<lb/>
freshman this fall. To be more spe-<lb/>
cific, Marion is six feet four inches<lb/>
?all and as you might guess is here<lb/>
on a basketball scholarship. In 1951<lb/>
Marion was an All-State basketball<lb/>
; layer. His high school, New Han-<lb/>
over High, won the State Basketball<lb/>
l impionship in the Triple A division<lb/>
in iy51. Marion was also a football I<lb/>
star. He made the All-Eastern foot-<lb/>
all team. Marion has served in the<lb/>
anmy for two years. Here at ECC<lb/>
he is majoring in physical education.<lb/>
Lloyd Bray<lb/>
Lloyd Bray Jr. is not a newcomer<lb/>
to East Carolina campus by any<lb/>
means, although he is a freshman<lb/>
thi year. Lloyd has practically lived<lb/>
on the campus for the past few<lb/>
years so he feels quite at home. Lloyd<lb/>
took the part of Father in the play<lb/>
'The Male Animal He also was in<lb/>
the Greenville Passion Play last East-<lb/>
er.<lb/>
He is very interested in church<lb/>
work and he plans to be a Methodist<lb/>
minister. So far he has had plenty<lb/>
of experience to qualify him for that<lb/>
goal. He is a member of the North<lb/>
Carolina Conference Council of the<lb/>
Methodist YoutJh Fellowship and ci.<lb/>
the Wesley Foundatien Council here<lb/>
at ?CC. On the former, he served<lb/>
as the Chairman of Ortetian Fellow-<lb/>
ship. Lloyd ha alao attended several<lb/>
recreational workahope, one of which<lb/>
son, Ann Johnson and Pat Alex-<lb/>
ander are all on the ballot for sec-<lb/>
retary. Six students are running for<lb/>
vice-president, seven for treasurer<lb/>
and eight girls are in the race for<lb/>
the spot of freshman representative<lb/>
to the student Legislature.<lb/>
The oficers will be elected by<lb/>
student vote among the freshman<lb/>
class.<lb/>
One of the requirements for every<lb/>
graduate of East Carolina College<lb/>
is passing a course in oral English.<lb/>
Every quarter two such courses are<lb/>
offered to students: English 218 and<lb/>
English 119. Most students take 119,<lb/>
more commonly known as Voice and<lb/>
Diction. The course consists mostly<lb/>
of oral drills aimed to improve hab-<lb/>
its of speech.<lb/>
Several members of the English<lb/>
department are qualified to teach<lb/>
oral English. Dr. M. N. Posey, one<lb/>
of these professors, holds one or two<lb/>
of the classes each quarter. Accord-<lb/>
ing to Dr. Posey, many interesting<lb/>
and surprising things happen in his<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
by Jonnie Simpson<lb/>
the air is blocked when you produce<lb/>
the consonant sound.<lb/>
Many times people living in this<lb/>
area make little or no distinction<lb/>
between the short "i" as in "pin"<lb/>
and the short "e" as in "pen<lb/>
Night, light, and right are words<lb/>
often pronounced as nite, lite, rite.<lb/>
Careless and lazy speech habits are<lb/>
often the cause of this error.<lb/>
Improvement can be and is made<lb/>
as a result of speech courses taken<lb/>
at East Carolina College, according<lb/>
to Dr. Posey. He adds that, "Indif-<lb/>
ference on the part of the student<lb/>
is one of the most alarming tragedies<lb/>
DAY BEFORE HOMECOMING<lb/>
by Lou Anne Rouse<lb/>
'Twas the day before Homecoming,<lb/>
And all through the dorms,<lb/>
Every girl was hurrying,<lb/>
To decide what should be worn.<lb/>
Some chose to wear suits,<lb/>
Others skirts and sweaters.<lb/>
And one pretty young thing<lb/>
Chose the star halfback's letters.<lb/>
Oh, such a mad scramble,<lb/>
You've n'eer before seen.<lb/>
When the topic was discussed,<lb/>
Who'd be Homecoming Queen.<lb/>
ten prevent the necessary improve-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Dr. Posey says, "My aim is to keep<lb/>
sectional speech, for the essence of<lb/>
this is what makes a language inter-<lb/>
esting, but 1 do want my students<lb/>
to speak the best sectional speech<lb/>
and know the general American<lb/>
speech<lb/>
Each section of our country has its'<lb/>
own peculiar habits of speech and in<lb/>
no section is English spoken more<lb/>
correctly than others. Dr. Posey feels<lb/>
that "Careful people everywhere try<lb/>
to speak the best English at all<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
A GOOD PLACE TO EAT<lb/>
'Good Food Means Good Health'<lb/>
?t<lb/>
m<lb/>
the course Indifference can of times.<lb/>
speech j<lb/>
?????<lb/>
Dr. Posey finds that his s<lb/>
classes this year rate about the same<lb/>
in accordance to previous years. East<lb/>
Carolina students have the same dif-<lb/>
ficulties and show little dif-<lb/>
ference in their pronounciation from<lb/>
year to year.<lb/>
Words such as "mists "physi-<lb/>
sists "tasks "asks "wasps and<lb/>
"lisps which involve the consonants<lb/>
sounds "sts "sps and "sks pro-<lb/>
duce one of Eastern Carolina's most<lb/>
common errors. The singular sounds<lb/>
of these words are equally simple to<lb/>
make, but the plural is the sound<lb/>
that becomes troublesome because<lb/>
????????????????????a-AAAAAAAAJ.<lb/>
 <lb/>
H. L. HODGES &amp; CO<lb/>
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Phone 4156<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
"t X"I1UIIC tlW jL.<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
Better Shoes Reasonably Priced<lb/>
For the entire family<lb/>
509 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
?.<lb/>
When home work's got you down<lb/>
!<lb/>
YOUR FRIENDLY SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
ROSE'S 5-10-25c STORE<lb/>
I<lb/>
PEOPLES BAKERY<lb/>
We supply the SODA SHOP with FRESH BAKERY<lb/>
PRODUCTS every morning<lb/>
?<lb/>
TOWN HOUSE RESTAURANT<lb/>
We Specialize In<lb/>
SEAFOODS, STEAKS, and BARBECUE CHICKEN<lb/>
Open from 6 a. m. to 10 p. m.<lb/>
WE CATER TO PARTIES<lb/>
Located on Evans Street Opposite the<lb/>
City Library<lb/>
S3<lb/>
No other drink<lb/>
you up like<lb/>
Dr. Pepper<lb/>
The special apaxkle of<lb/>
Dr. Pepper gives you new life and<lb/>
energy for work or fun, at home<lb/>
or away. Enjoy it in the aix-bottle<lb/>
carton or the 12-bottle canton;<lb/>
buy it by the case . . . and<lb/>
look for it at aoda fountaine<lb/>
and vending machines, too.<lb/>
Greenville Fire Department<lb/>
FIREMAN'S BALL<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
BILLY MAY ORCHESTRA<lb/>
under the direction of Sam Donahue<lb/>
Thursday, November 4, 1954<lb/>
Tickets on Sale at Varsity Shell Station<lb/>
BEDDINGFIELD'S PHARMACY<lb/>
FIVE POINTS<lb/>
REVLON and CAR A NOME<lb/>
COSMETICS<lb/>
1c SALE WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY<lb/>
"Your Most Convenient Drug Store"<lb/>
e?-<lb/>
Dora's Tower Grill<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
COLD DRINKS<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
HOT DOGS<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
CURB SERVICE<lb/>
Dancing Pavillion For Your Pleasure<lb/>
Near TV Station and Fire Tower<lb/>
Dr. Pepper -<lb/>
J. C. PENNEY CO.<lb/>
"Always First Quality<lb/>
College Students Are Always Welcome To Visit<lb/>
Penney's At All Times<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
"Your College Shop"<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
(il'WiWIWMWBWlill<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00038357_0004"/><lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1954<lb/>
Elon Christians Upset Bucs,<lb/>
20-6 In Crucial League Game<lb/>
Loss May Cost Pirates<lb/>
League Title; Boado<lb/>
Scores Only Touchdown<lb/>
by David Evans<lb/>
A fired up band of Christians from<lb/>
Elon College took advantage of Pi-<lb/>
rate aiscues to stun the North State<lb/>
Conference champions with a 20-6<lb/>
defeat at Burlington last Saturday<lb/>
night. The loss was the first the Bucs<lb/>
"have suffered in conference compe-<lb/>
tiiion since Lenoir-Rhyne did the<lb/>
trick two years ago by a score of<lb/>
7-6.<lb/>
The Pirate offense showed up well<lb/>
in the opening minutes of the game<lb/>
with Erao Boado, Toppy Hayes, and<lb/>
Harold O'Kelly earring for substant-<lb/>
ial gains. The Buccaneer success dim-<lb/>
inished rapidly following this early<lb/>
game surt. The Pirates, with their<lb/>
ground attacked thwarted, filled the<lb/>
air with passes only to have five in-<lb/>
tercepted during the course of the<lb/>
night This, coupled with the of-<lb/>
fensive running fireworks of diminu-<lb/>
tive halfback Kerry Richards, of<lb/>
Mahanoy City, .Pa practically spelled<lb/>
the defeat for the champion Bucs.<lb/>
Injured Return<lb/>
The Buccaneer attack was bolstered<lb/>
by the return to action of guard Dave<lb/>
Lee, fullback Claude King, quarter-<lb/>
back Boyd Webb, and reserve full-<lb/>
back Bobby Cay.<lb/>
After a couple of exchanged punts,<lb/>
one resulting in a 37 yard return by<lb/>
Emo Boado, East Carolina was forced<lb/>
to kick from its own end-zone with<lb/>
Claude King doing the booting. He<lb/>
got off an excellent kick, that came<lb/>
out to mid-field where Richards<lb/>
grabbed the ball and set sail for the<lb/>
score. The kick was good and Elon<lb/>
led 7-0.<lb/>
Emo Boado and co-captain Toppy<lb/>
Hayes gave the Pirate rooters a little<lb/>
encouragement in the dwindling min-<lb/>
utes of the first half but the half<lb/>
ended without result.<lb/>
The East Carolina marching band<lb/>
made the trip and gave an excellent<lb/>
performance during halftime, repeat-<lb/>
ing the salute to Glenn Miller given<lb/>
previously in College Stadium here<lb/>
at the Catawba game.<lb/>
Second Half<lb/>
The second half showed no im-<lb/>
provement over the first half for the<lb/>
trailing Bucs. Midway in the third<lb/>
quarter the BuCg were again with<lb/>
their backs to their own goal. King,<lb/>
?standing in his own end zone, punted<lb/>
out to the East Carolina 45 where<lb/>
it was returned to the Pirate 32. Af-<lb/>
ter an exchange of punts the Elon<lb/>
quarterback hit his end over the<lb/>
middle on a jump pass and he went<lb/>
all the way for the second Christian<lb/>
score. The try for the extra point<lb/>
was good and Elon led, 14-0.<lb/>
Following the next kick-off an at-<lb/>
tempted East Carolina pass was in-<lb/>
tercepted near midfield. Elon fum-<lb/>
bled the next play and the Bucs re-<lb/>
covered on their own 42. From there<lb/>
Milton Collied hit Emo Boado with<lb/>
a pass he grabbed the ball and out-<lb/>
ran the Elon defense down the right<lb/>
side line for the lone Pirate score.<lb/>
The attempted extra point was no<lb/>
good.<lb/>
Late in the fourth quarter the<lb/>
Christians punched acrosg from 14<lb/>
yards out for their final score. The<lb/>
extra point attempt was wide.<lb/>
The Christians suffered a number<lb/>
of injuries with three men being<lb/>
carrid off the field. The condition<lb/>
of these men was not disclosed. The<lb/>
Pirates came out of the game un-<lb/>
scathed as far as injuries are con-<lb/>
cerned.<lb/>
Initial Basketball Workouts<lb/>
Find Six Lettermen Returning<lb/>
Hayes Leads Bucs<lb/>
Scoring With 18<lb/>
Points This Year<lb/>
With six lettermen returning from<lb/>
last year's Nerth State Conference<lb/>
champs, the East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
began 'basketball drills October 4.<lb/>
Coach Howard Porter says the fresh-<lb/>
man prospects are good but it will<lb/>
take time to find each boy's ability<lb/>
at the different positions.<lb/>
The loss by graduation of All-<lb/>
State center Bobby Hodges and All-<lb/>
Conference forward Charlie Huff-<lb/>
man dampens the outlook. Frosh<lb/>
prospects along with lettermen Cecil<lb/>
Heath, J. C. Thomas, Don Harris,<lb/>
William MacArthur and Waverly<lb/>
Akins should bolster the Pirate<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
At present 24 boys are partici-<lb/>
pating in the one-a-day drills. As-<lb/>
sistant football coach Earl Smith<lb/>
will serve as assistant to Coach Por-<lb/>
ter when the grid season is over.<lb/>
The Bucs open a 22-game schedule<lb/>
December 4 at Guilford. They return<lb/>
to Greenville Decemiber 10 for their<lb/>
home opener with Catawba. Sixteen<lb/>
of the contests are with conference<lb/>
foes while the remainder are against<lb/>
Erskine, Presbyterian, Belmont Ab-<lb/>
bey and McCrary's Eagles. Erskine<lb/>
and Presbyterian are newcomers to<lb/>
the Pirates' regular season schedule<lb/>
but the Bucs trimmed both teams<lb/>
in the NAIA District 26 playoffs<lb/>
here last winter.<lb/>
The schedule:<lb/>
Dec. 4?Guilford, there<lb/>
Dec. 10?Catawba, here<lb/>
Dec. 11?Lenoir Rhyne, here<lb/>
Dec. 15?Erskine, here<lb/>
Dec. 17?Appalachian, here<lb/>
Jan. 6?Presbyterian, here<lb/>
Jan. 8?Elon, there<lb/>
Jan. 10?High Point, there<lb/>
Jan. 12?Belmont Abbey, here<lb/>
Jan. 15?Lenoir Rhyne, there<lb/>
Jan. 17?Western Carolina, there<lb/>
Jan. 18?Belmont Abbey, there<lb/>
Jan. 22?Guilford, here<lb/>
With the mid-point of the 1954<lb/>
grid schedule already reached, the<lb/>
East Carolina Pirates have fallen<lb/>
behind their touchdown output of a<lb/>
year ago.<lb/>
The Pirates have tallied a total<lb/>
(if 64 points, an average of slightly<lb/>
better than 12 a game, while giving<lb/>
up 39 to the opposition. Last year<lb/>
at this stage East Carolina had<lb/>
recorded 159 markers while allowing<lb/>
opponents but 38.<lb/>
Top man in the individual scoring<lb/>
race has been Toppy Hayes, co-<lb/>
captain and left halfback. Hayes' 18<lb/>
points on three touchdowns are fol-<lb/>
lowed by Harold O'Kelly's 12. Four<lb/>
other players, Larry Rhodes, Bobfcy<lb/>
Perry, James Henderson and Emo<lb/>
Boado. have a touchdown each to<lb/>
their credit. In the extra point de-<lb/>
partment fullback Claude King and<lb/>
quarterback Milton Collier are tied<lb/>
with three each. The Bucs also have<lb/>
two safeties included in their total,<lb/>
one of which was intentional. The<lb/>
other was credited to linesmen Gai-<lb/>
fcher Claie and Charlie Smith.<lb/>
fRlDA'<lb/>
Jan. 28?Western Carolina, here<lb/>
Jan. 31?.Appalachian, there<lb/>
Feb. 3?Atlantic Christian, here<lb/>
Feb. 5?McCrary's, there<lb/>
Feb. 7?McCrary's, here<lb/>
Pel). 9?Catawba, there<lb/>
Feh 12?Elon, here<lb/>
Feb. 15?High Point, here<lb/>
Feb. 19?Atlantic Christian, there<lb/>
Apps Lengthen<lb/>
Conference Lead;<lb/>
Remain Unbeaten<lb/>
Catawba is at Appalachian and<lb/>
Western Carolina at East Carolina<lb/>
tomorrow in games that may well<lb/>
decide the 1954 North State Confer-<lb/>
ence football champion.<lb/>
The Apps, pre-season darkhorses,<lb/>
won their fourth in a row from Le-<lb/>
noir Rhyne, 21-14, last weekend but<lb/>
the biggest news was the 20-6 upset<lb/>
by Elon over defending champion<lb/>
and favorite East Carolina. The Pi-<lb/>
rates now have a 2-1 record, still<lb/>
good enough for second place.<lb/>
Title At Stake<lb/>
Should Appalachian defeat Cataw-<lb/>
ba this week then even the East<lb/>
Carolina-App game at Boone on Oc-<lb/>
tober 30 would make no difference<lb/>
as far as the Bucs are concerned.<lb/>
Because of a quirk in the schedule,<lb/>
East Carolina plays only five con-<lb/>
ference games while the remainder<lb/>
of the loop plays six. The Pirates'<lb/>
loss to Elon leaves them a maxi-<lb/>
mum possible total of four wins<lb/>
while even should they beat the<lb/>
Mountaineers then Appalachian could<lb/>
still finish with a 5-1 mark.<lb/>
In another loop game scheduled<lb/>
for Saturday, Lenoir Rhyne travels<lb/>
to Guilford. The Bears have an 0-2<lb/>
conference record and a 1-2-1 overall<lb/>
mark while Guilford is wlnless at<lb/>
0-1 in the conference and 0-3 overall.<lb/>
A fourth game involving league<lb/>
teams finds Elon visiting Newberry.<lb/>
Last Saturday's action at Burling-<lb/>
ton in which Elon emerged the win-<lb/>
ner was unquestionably the upset of i Appalachian <lb/>
the year in the North State Confer- East Carolina<lb/>
encv. Elon, regarded as from two to Elon <lb/>
three touchdowns to the bad, com- ! West. Carolina<lb/>
pletely dominated the game.<lb/>
Apps Scared<lb/>
At Lenoir Rhyne, however, Appa-<lb/>
lachian was pushed right to the wire<lb/>
by the Bears when, after leading<lb/>
21-0 at the end of three periods, fhey<lb/>
watched Lenoir Rhyne tally twice in<lb/>
the final period. The game ended<lb/>
with the ball in the Bears' possession<lb/>
and resting on the Appalachian one-<lb/>
foot line.<lb/>
Other action last week saw West-<lb/>
em Carolina record its first win in<lb/>
nine games with Catawba, 26-13. The<lb/>
Indians were favored early in the<lb/>
year to give East Carolina its tough-<lb/>
est battle for the title but now have<lb/>
lost four of five ames.<lb/>
Little Guilford lost to Emory and<lb/>
Hem v, 13-6, at Marion, Va.<lb/>
CONFERENCE GAMES<lb/>
W L Pet. Pts. Op.<lb/>
4 0 1.000 81 33<lb/>
2 1 .667<lb/>
1 1 .500<lb/>
1 1 .500<lb/>
0 1 .000<lb/>
0 2 .000<lb/>
0 2 .000<lb/>
On The Sidelines At Elon<lb/>
Guilford<lb/>
Catawba<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
39<lb/>
26<lb/>
33<lb/>
6<lb/>
21<lb/>
20<lb/>
33<lb/>
26<lb/>
40<lb/>
19<lb/>
52<lb/>
28<lb/>
ALL GAMES<lb/>
W L<lb/>
Appalachian 4 0<lb/>
E. Carolina 3 2<lb/>
Elon 12<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne 1 2<lb/>
W. Carolina 1 3<lb/>
Catawba 1 4<lb/>
Guilford 0 3<lb/>
T Pet Pts. Op.<lb/>
0 1.000 81 33<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
.600<lb/>
.333<lb/>
.333<lb/>
.260<lb/>
.200<lb/>
.000<lb/>
64<lb/>
39<lb/>
65<lb/>
60<lb/>
73<lb/>
33<lb/>
39<lb/>
47<lb/>
42<lb/>
68<lb/>
92<lb/>
66<lb/>
News Of Bygone Days<lb/>
From the files of the East Caro-<lb/>
linian:<lb/>
Five Years Ago?-1949?-East Caro-<lb/>
lina dropped a 19-6 decision to West-<lb/>
ern Carolina Teachers College at<lb/>
Canton. Bill Darby scored the only<lb/>
Pirate touchdown on a 12-yard dash.<lb/>
Tn Years Ago?The Mus-<lb/>
tangs topped the Warhawks, 22-6,<lb/>
in the opening intramural football<lb/>
contest here. Jessie Parker paced the<lb/>
victory as man-less East Carolina<lb/>
entered its third wartime season<lb/>
without a formal football squad.<lb/>
Fifteen Years Ago?1939?West- t<lb/>
ern Carolina took a 12-6 decision over<lb/>
East Carolina here on the strength<lb/>
of a 96-yard touchdown run on the<lb/>
final play of the game.<lb/>
Twenty Years Ago?1934?Dr. A.<lb/>
D. Frank, head of the history depart-<lb/>
ment here, issued a call for tryouto<lb/>
for the girl basketball team. 1Tie<lb/>
previous year Dr. Frank had coached<lb/>
the squad to six victories in as many<lb/>
games.<lb/>
and won!<lb/>
by JoAnne Harris<lb/>
Not since the opening confer-<lb/>
ence game of the 1952 football<lb/>
season had an East Carolina<lb/>
team teat to a North State op-<lb/>
ponent. Then, last Saturday at<lb/>
Burlington, it happened. Eloa<lb/>
Christians rose up and smote the<lb/>
Pirates, 20-6, and for the first<lb/>
time in more than two year-<lb/>
Fast Carolina had lost to a con-<lb/>
ference foe.<lb/>
Just what was it like? From<lb/>
the sidelines, here's the report:<lb/>
A Christian player being sup-<lb/>
K)rted on his injured leg to the<lb/>
waiting bus, "Well, if I don't<lb/>
play again all season, we've<lb/>
beaten ECC<lb/>
An East Carolina student to<lb/>
an Elon pedestrian, "Better get<lb/>
road. A Pirate<lb/>
'OU.<lb/>
A - swered  e Elonite, "Tl ? P<lb/>
rates haven't done much rur I<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
Said another East Oarolii<lb/>
student to a b one-weary ('?<lb/>
player. "You<lb/>
game tonight<lb/>
Mistaking Bruce Phillip (P<lb/>
rate sport publicist) for an E<lb/>
? r. a Christian co-ed ran<lb/>
up, gave baffled Bruce a bear<lb/>
hug and exclaimed, "Oh, I've<lb/>
been o bap<lb/>
Hysterics Elon Coach<lb/>
Varney, "The beat the boys have<lb/>
ever played for me! After that<lb/>
first touchdown I knew we'd<lb/>
win<lb/>
WASHING - GREASING - GAS<lb/>
COLLEGE ESSO STATION<lb/>
i<lb/>
St Peter and St Thomas were<lb/>
playing golf one heavenly afternoon<lb/>
and St. Peter's first drirs was s<lb/>
hole-in-one.<lb/>
"All rigs now said St. Petes,<lb/>
"let's eat oat the miracles and play<lb/>
golf.<lb/>
The names of America's Olympic greats are easily<lb/>
remembered. Because the men and women we have<lb/>
sent to past Olympic Games have always given us some-<lb/>
thing to remember them by. Jesse Owen's four gold<lb/>
medals at Berlin . . . Bob Mathias' decathalon record<lb/>
at Helsinki . . . Andrea Mead Lawrence's historic<lb/>
"double" in women's skiing. In recalling past triumphs<lb/>
we can all be reminded of a simple fact about any U. S.<lb/>
Olympic victory; we won because we were there, and<lb/>
We musi be therm  7e Win I<lb/>
In 1956 America will again take the field in Melbourne,<lb/>
Australia against the world's best. Some of these nations<lb/>
will be very tough to beat. For in an effort to insure<lb/>
victory, many countries, especially those behind the<lb/>
Iron and Bamboo curtains, have entered "government-<lb/>
subsidized" teams. Whether these nations are defeated<lb/>
depends in large part upon you?and every American<lb/>
who would rather see the Stars and Stripes hoisted<lb/>
above the victor s stand. You can count on the men tad<lb/>
women we send tr Melbourne to perform brilliantly?<lb/>
they are there. But it takes money to get diem there.<lb/>
Which is why LIFE is joining with the Olympic Com-<lb/>
mittee to urge you to<lb/>
f upporr Your Olympic Teem Pvmdt<lb/>
Congress has authorised President Eisenhower to de-<lb/>
clare October 16th to be National Olympic Day. Bob<lb/>
Hope in his October 12th nation-wide telecast is giving<lb/>
his far reaching and effective support Throughout the<lb/>
country, local civic groups, spearheaded by the Junior<lb/>
Chambers of Commerce-have actively begun to raise<lb/>
funds. Many are helping. But everybody can help. And<lb/>
you can do your share by mailing a contribution, large<lb/>
or small, to the Fund's Chicago headquarters, today.<lb/>
I<lb/>
 U. f. OLYMPIC TIAM PUND<lb/>
MS Nerth MltftifM Avtmrt, 6Mm? U. M<lb/>
ttwrt ?y Mfttritotlte?at mnM t?<lb/>
HEATH'S<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN HAMBURGERS and CHOICE<lb/>
T-BONE STEAKS WITH LOTS OF<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
Nea TV Station at the Crossroad<lb/>
OPEN ON SUNDAYS<lb/>
?-<lb/>
<lb/>
INTRODUCING OUR STUDENT "SPECIAL"<lb/>
A SURE AID TO<lb/>
BETTER MARKS<lb/>
I ??<lb/>
? LIGHTS AT ANGLE ?<lb/>
REDUCES EYI FATIGUI<lb/>
? HOLDS 10 VOLUMES<lb/>
WITHIN EASY REACH<lb/>
O ADJUSTARLE iOOK REST<lb/>
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? FADS HOLDER LEAVES<lb/>
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O SAVES 17 IN DESK<lb/>
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 Perfect for study and taking<lb/>
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new and smart two-tone Desert<lb/>
Bronze with Pastel Gray book<lb/>
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approved by Underwriters Lab-<lb/>
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Carolina Office Equipment Go.<lb/>
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GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038357_0005"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1954<lb/>
 ,  ? ? i  <lb/>
me<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE FIVE<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
WCC 'Cats Here For Homecoming<lb/>
Pirates Seeking Conference<lb/>
Win Following Upset By Elon<lb/>
??: "X&amp;v<lb/>
ow to the Pirate cause but<lb/>
- never cease.<lb/>
speaking, the situation the kurt two<lb/>
s  something like this:<lb/>
 .i-t Carolina unquestionably<lb/>
is to win its remaining games.<lb/>
.iLuhian. now in first place<lb/>
uith a 4-0 mark, must l?se to<lb/>
l atawba at Salisbury this week-<lb/>
ami then take a licking<lb/>
n Bast Carolina at H??one the<lb/>
(0th of this month.<lb/>
P rates were under the gun<lb/>
taut in that Guilford refused<lb/>
contract with the Bucs<lb/>
 risk of being unduly pesi- steadily since that time except for<lb/>
have to voice the opinion the war yfars when m football waa<lb/>
. arolma'a hopes of retain- ; pyed<lb/>
North State Conference foot- The betwfM1 two &amp;m&amp;<lb/>
? have just about had it. haa alway&amp; been hotly0.nteBted<lb/>
urda - setfcack at the hands of sometimes too much so. In the first<lb/>
four years when the two teams play-<lb/>
ed no contest was decided by a mar-<lb/>
gin greater than seven points. For<lb/>
years the Bucs have<lb/>
been victorious but in 1952 East<lb/>
Carolina, under the tutelage of coach<lb/>
Bill Dole, kicked away a 20-0 half-<lb/>
tune lead and lost, 34-20.<lb/>
Western Carolina hasn't had what<lb/>
could be termed a tremendously suc-<lb/>
cessful season. For the past couple j the Elon victory. Since the Bucs play<lb/>
of yeans the Catamounts have fallen j one les-s league game than any other<lb/>
on evil days, especially as far as the j conference team, a victory over<lb/>
extra point is concerned. The Cats Western Carolina is a must.<lb/>
had lost three in a row this year be- Cats Win<lb/>
fore defeating Catawba on Saturday i Western Carolina also pulled one<lb/>
ai T at left the Pirates with and iat year dropped nine of ten I of the big surprises of the season<lb/>
as conference game than the j decisions, four of them by one point. I last week in trampling Catawba, 26-<lb/>
teams and one foot in the hole i<lb/>
with.<lb/>
tomorrow's<lb/>
Western Carolina meets East Caro-<lb/>
lina here tomorrow afternoon at 2<lb/>
p. m. as the Pirates celebrate Home-<lb/>
coming festivities. A downtown<lb/>
parade plus a dance tonight will<lb/>
precede the contest.<lb/>
The Catamounts will attempt to<lb/>
administer a second consecutive de-<lb/>
feat to East Carolina, which was up-<lb/>
set by Elon last week, 20-6. The Pi-<lb/>
rates hopes of repeating as title-<lb/>
holdrs were seriously damaged with<lb/>
fever the case.<lb/>
Western Carolina in the<lb/>
g game here should be one<lb/>
r games of the year. A<lb/>
work has gone into<lb/>
year's trame the best<lb/>
ng yet.<lb/>
articular point that has been<lb/>
1 out for the Homecoming en-<lb/>
sqodbble over guest<lb/>
At O.e first of the week<lb/>
500 tickets were available to<lb/>
 students at $2.50 each.<lb/>
tickets entitle the holder to<lb/>
? student section and thereby<lb/>
? . lents' guests to sit with<lb/>
Sou that something has been<lb/>
i tor the Homecoming game<lb/>
list that a permanent plan<lb/>
be put into action so that<lb/>
students' guests will be adequate-<lb/>
I) taken care of. It's a bad thing<lb/>
? hen someone invited to a game<lb/>
here ha to sit on one side of the<lb/>
field and the student on the other.<lb/>
East Carolina-Western Caro-<lb/>
? . longest rivalry in<lb/>
e Pirates are engaged. It<lb/>
in in 1936 and has continued<lb/>
Students Given<lb/>
Chance To Visit<lb/>
Florida For Game<lb/>
wishing to attend the<lb/>
?OC-Tampa game in Tampa, Fla.<lb/>
provided transportation and<lb/>
probably be furnished rooms in<lb/>
PIRRA CLUB<lb/>
Serving The Best In<lb/>
Foods, Steaks, Seafoods and<lb/>
Regular Meals<lb/>
Live Entertainment On<lb/>
WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS<lb/>
Temporarily Located At The<lb/>
New Enterprise Warehouse<lb/>
On Memorial Drive<lb/>
by J. W. Browning<lb/>
13, on a brillaret offensive display<lb/>
by halfback Jim Garrison. The ram-<lb/>
paging backfield star scored three<lb/>
times and picked up over 300 yards<lb/>
on the ground and in the air. Clyde<lb/>
Biggers, the Catawba coach, paid<lb/>
tribiute to the Catamounts as "the<lb/>
bast Western Carolina team we've<lb/>
sen. Bt was the first Catamount<lb/>
victory over Catawba in the history<lb/>
of the series between the two schools.<lb/>
East Carolina apparently re-<lb/>
covered from the injuries that have<lb/>
plagued them earlier in the season.<lb/>
Little All America quarterback Dick<lb/>
Chrry dressed for the Elon game<lb/>
but did not see action. Cherry broke<lb/>
his foot in pre-season practice and<lb/>
was considered out for the season.<lb/>
A trio of quarterback, Boyd Webb,<lb/>
Milton Collier, and Gary Maddox,<lb/>
have guided the Pirates ofensive<lb/>
attack well although Cherry's ab-<lb/>
sence has been a hindrance to the<lb/>
squad. Either of these signal cal-<lb/>
lers may be at the helm Saturday<lb/>
against the Catamounts.<lb/>
King To Play<lb/>
Claude King, who had previously<lb/>
been injured but played in the Elon<lb/>
game last week, will probably get<lb/>
the nod at fullback. Harold O'Kelly,<lb/>
who performed brillantly in King's<lb/>
absence, will probably see plenty<lb/>
of action also. Toppy Hayes and<lb/>
Emo Boado, always offensive threats,<lb/>
will be at their regular halfback<lb/>
posts.<lb/>
iltt the line J. D. Bradford<lb/>
and Larry Rhodes should be ready<lb/>
to go at ends along with tackles<lb/>
Willie Holland and George Tucker.<lb/>
IXave Lee, who has recently recover-<lb/>
ed from a leg injury, will be back<lb/>
at his old guard post along with<lb/>
Don Burton. Louis Hallow should<lb/>
get the starting asignment at center.<lb/>
SOPH STARS?Quarterback Milton Collier (15) and tackle Ray Overton (55) are two of he sophom<lb/>
players sparking the 1954 edition of the East Carolina Pirates. Collier's extra point kick gave the Bu<lb/>
win over Lenoir Rhyne while Overton's play throughout the season ha been consistently outstanding.<lb/>
Prevues And Revues<lb/>
East Carolina 21, Norfolk Navy 0<lb/>
East .Carolina 4, West Chester 6<lb/>
East Carolina 7, Lenoir Rhyne 6<lb/>
East Carolina 26, Catawba 7<lb/>
East Carolina 6, Elon 20<lb/>
Oct. 16?Western Carolina (Home-<lb/>
coming), home<lb/>
Oct. 23?East Tennessee, home<lb/>
Oct. 30?Appalachian, away<lb/>
Nov. 5?Tampa University, away<lb/>
Nov. 13?Stetson University, home<lb/>
"My husband is a bookworm<lb/>
"You're lucky. Mine is just the<lb/>
ordinary kind<lb/>
LARRY'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
Campus Footwear For All Occasions<lb/>
At Five Points<lb/>
?.<lb/>
KARES RESTAURANT<lb/>
FOR THAT EXTRA SNACK<lb/>
GOLDEN BROWN BUTTERED WAFFLES<lb/>
FAfU&amp;SSQSDICK<lb/>
by AL CAPP<lb/>
SAVE AfE LJ THAT'S MO<lb/>
FROM THIS T MACxfM<lb/>
OCTOP0SW35??C6cPM"<lb/>
DtS&amp;UISE TfT<lb/>
SCOTT'S CLEANERS<lb/>
PATSY LEGGETTE, Woman's Hall<lb/>
JOHN SMITH, 118 Slay<lb/>
on<lb/>
? T<lb/>
the University of<lb/>
campus, according to Bill<lb/>
spokesman for the group of<lb/>
- and administrative officials<lb/>
ge. Curry stated this week<lb/>
chartered bus will leave the<lb/>
at three o'clock on Thursday,<lb/>
liber 4, for Tampa. The cost<lb/>
? round trip to Florida and<lb/>
be $22 per student.<lb/>
- is the first attempt of a stu-<lb/>
:???-administrative group to provide<lb/>
? nation for out-of-state games.<lb/>
ng here on Thursday, the bus<lb/>
expected to arrive in Tampa by<lb/>
on Friday. The game will be<lb/>
. ? ridsy night, leaving Saturday<lb/>
for touring and rest before the<lb/>
. trip which will be made on<lb/>
?ay. Curry said, "We are almost<lb/>
al those who wish to go to<lb/>
da with us will be able to stay<lb/>
e dormitories at the University<lb/>
of Tampa<lb/>
Women students wishing to make<lb/>
iip may go provided they wr-ite<lb/>
for special i ermission from their<lb/>
nts, according to Dean of Women<lb/>
R ? White. Miss White added that<lb/>
permission will be granted only aft?r<lb/>
permits have been received by<lb/>
til in her office.<lb/>
Those who plan to make the trip<lb/>
ild contact Bill Curry in room<lb/>
112, Ragsdale, or Peggy Vause in<lb/>
n 172, Jarvis.<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
Ladies Ready-To-Wear<lb/>
Clothes<lb/>
.Hi<lb/>
Jl<lb/>
3?<lb/>
?2<lb/>
7-THAN THE AVERAGE NEAT-<lb/>
WELL-GROOMED OCTOPUS AND<lb/>
THAT-iTCiflS WHAT GAVE<lb/>
you awav . oet wwaaocrc<lb/>
CREAM-OIL<lb/>
J BUT, THAI<lb/>
rr,<lb/>
NO MATTER WHAT<lb/>
WOULD ?1 YOUR NAME 15, YCU<lb/>
BE ILLEGALWOULDN'T NEED 8 A I<lb/>
MY NAME IS TO GET A OIRL, IF<lb/>
BEN I' YOU'D USE WILDRCOT<lb/>
CREAM-OIL , WITH<lb/>
LANOLIN Tff<lb/>
WILDROOT CREAM-OIL KEEPS HAIR COMBED FROM MORNING TILL NIGHTa WITHOUT GREASIMESS<lb/>
CAROLINA DAIRIES<lb/>
Milk and Ice Cream<lb/>
"None. Can Be Finer<lb/>
THAN CAROLINA"<lb/>
-f you drive "for -the sheer zest of it<lb/>
you owe yourself<lb/>
'this hour!<lb/>
Every time you graduate in the<lb/>
i of experience, .someone thinks<lb/>
new course.<lb/>
?ay<lb/>
Doctor?-Stick out your tongue and<lb/>
ah.<lb/>
Absent-minded professor from ECC<lb/>
AH.<lb/>
Doctor?Your tongue looks all<lb/>
ight?but why the postage stamp<lb/>
n it?<lb/>
Professor?Oh, so that's where I<lb/>
ut it.<lb/>
A five-vear-old boy whose sun-<lb/>
nxrn had reached the peeling-?K<lb/>
tagt was heard muttering a he<lb/>
ashed his face, "Only five years<lb/>
11, and wearing out already<lb/>
If a girl doesn't watch her figure,<lb/>
Jobody else does.<lb/>
All men are alike, the bachelor<lb/>
iris shout. What 1 wonder is how<lb/>
ley found out.<lb/>
Welcome Alumni To<lb/>
RESPESS-JAMES<lb/>
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?<lb/>
Intersection<lb/>
Ayden-Farmville Highway<lb/>
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Phone 4160<lb/>
AIR CONDITIONED<lb/>
If your hands rejoice in ths pre-<lb/>
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You'll find it is, quite literally, like no<lb/>
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of the true -ports car with all that is best<lb/>
in American engineering.<lb/>
There is the velvet smoothness of a<lb/>
Powerglide automatic transmission (but<lb/>
with the classic floor selector-lever).<lb/>
The trouble-free durability of a Chev-<lb/>
rolet "Blue-Flame" engine (but with three<lb/>
side draft carburetors to unleash its flash-<lb/>
ing ISO horsepower).<lb/>
The raggedness of an X-braced box<lb/>
girder frame (but with the astonishing im-<lb/>
pact resistance of a gUus-fibtr-and-plastio<lb/>
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Luxurious seating for driver and passen-<lb/>
ger in deep foam rubber (but cradled in<lb/>
the traditional security of bucket seats).<lb/>
Generous luggage room, the panoramic<lb/>
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flair of tomorrow's styling (but within the<lb/>
polo-pony compactness of a real road car).<lb/>
The Corvette blends all this and more.<lb/>
For it is a driver's car  a low-slung<lb/>
torpedo with a center of gravity only 18<lb/>
inches above the concrete . . . with outrig-<lb/>
ger rear springs that make it hold to the<lb/>
road like a stripe of paint with a 16 to<lb/>
1 steering ratio that puts needle-threading<lb/>
accuracy at your finger tips.<lb/>
Frankly, the Corvette is a "limited edi-<lb/>
tion made only in small numbers. It is<lb/>
intended only for the man or woman to<lb/>
whom driving is not just transportation but<lb/>
an exhilarating adventure, a sparkling chal-<lb/>
lenge to skill and judgment. If you are one<lb/>
of these, then you owe yourself an hour<lb/>
with a Chevrolet Corvette.<lb/>
Call us now and let us set up a demon-<lb/>
stration run  for in a short 60 minutes<lb/>
you can discover that motoring has a<lb/>
whole new dimension of delight<lb/>
Make a data to drive the<lb/>
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150-h.p. overhead-valve engine with three side draft carburetors ? Four-leaf outrigger springs<lb/>
in rear ? Powerglide automatic transmission ? Center-Point steering, 16 to 1 ratio ? Form-<lb/>
fitting Individual seats ? Full instrumentation, with tachometer, oil pressure gauge, and ammeter.<lb/>
YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER<lb/>
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PAGE SIX<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1<lb/>
Dont let the picture fool you. The work on William H. I mstead Dormitory is going along fine and it<lb/>
is hoped that a picture will be taken soon of the new dorm as it nears completion. The above shot is one of<lb/>
Slay Hall just before it was finished. Umstead Dormitory is being built in the same style and will look similar<lb/>
to Slay Hall. It will face Tenth Street from the Back of Slay Hall. The same contractors who built Slay Dormi- '<lb/>
tory are working on the new men's dorm and it is expected to be finished next summer.<lb/>
Reporter Writes<lb/>
On Popular EC<lb/>
Talent Artist<lb/>
Movie News<lb/>
by JoAnne Harriss<lb/>
Larry Parlor, the ivory pounding<lb/>
"cat" of the Circle K and "East<lb/>
Carolinian" talent shows has been<lb/>
the topic of much conversation late-<lb/>
ly. Exhibiting rare talent in the<lb/>
Louis Armstrong line, Larry first<lb/>
brought down the houj6e at the<lb/>
Circle K and was recalled for a<lb/>
repeat performance.<lb/>
The fame of the ECC music de-<lb/>
partment lured Larry from AC-C,<lb/>
after two years, with Uncle Sam to<lb/>
our campus. At present a junior, he<lb/>
is majoring in voice and miiioring<lb/>
in piano.<lb/>
If you had been watching ABC<lb/>
TV last March, you might have seen<lb/>
Larry on Arlene Frances' show,<lb/>
"Army Talent Patrol Perhaps<lb/>
you didn't recognize Larry because<lb/>
he was not at the piano, but on the<lb/>
string bas. Most of Larry's en-<lb/>
tertainment work was done with an<lb/>
army combo, alternating between<lb/>
the trumpet and the string -bass.<lb/>
We hope we'll be hearing more<lb/>
from this versatile Durham lad soon. I j<lb/>
Visitors at Virginia Beach nert sum- j<lb/>
mer can hear him in another combo<lb/>
team on the vocals. Welcome to the<lb/>
campus. Larry. Just keep spread-<lb/>
ing the talent around.<lb/>
by Roy Askew<lb/>
Many favorite and widely acclaim-<lb/>
ed movies are coming to Greenville.<lb/>
Top stars are exhibiting their best<lb/>
talent in the coming attractions.<lb/>
"Flame and the Flesh" with Lana<lb/>
Turner, Pier Angeli and Carlos<lb/>
Thompson, new leading man discov-<lb/>
ery, in a story of a girl to whom love<lb/>
is just a commodity by means of<lb/>
which she can get the material<lb/>
things of life, until she meets an<lb/>
unexpected man and finds herself<lb/>
involved in a romance.<lb/>
"Duel in the Sun greater than<lb/>
ever on a wide screen with all-time<lb/>
stars Gregory Peck, Jennifer Jones,<lb/>
and Joseph Cotten.<lb/>
"Rogue Cop revealer of mob-<lb/>
warare. with blondes and thrills<lb/>
and Mailing Robert Taylor. Janet<lb/>
Leigh and George Raft.<lb/>
Out of all the films listed above,<lb/>
we recommend that you see "Duel<lb/>
in thf Sob Especially if you haven't<lb/>
seen it, this should provide a very<lb/>
entertaining couple of hours for you.<lb/>
College Students,<lb/>
Plan To Attend<lb/>
Firemen's Dance<lb/>
East Carolina students are<lb/>
invited to dance to the music<lb/>
of the Billy May Orchestra<lb/>
at the Annual Firemen's<lb/>
Dance, scheduled for the New<lb/>
Carolina Warehouse Thursday,<lb/>
November 4, from 8:00-12:00<lb/>
midnight.<lb/>
The dance will be chaper-<lb/>
oned. College girls may obtain<lb/>
12:00 privileges, but they<lb/>
must secure a special permit<lb/>
from their parents.<lb/>
Advanced tickets are on sale<lb/>
at the Varsity Shell Station<lb/>
on Fifth Street. Cost of ad-<lb/>
vanced tickets is $2. Tickets<lb/>
purchased at the door will be<lb/>
S2.50.<lb/>
SOUVENIRS, JEWELRY,<lb/>
and SPORTSWEAR<lb/>
with Your College<lb/>
Emblem<lb/>
this<lb/>
"We used to call him the' Human Dynamo but his tenure started<lb/>
year<lb/>
STUOEMTS SUPPLY STORES<lb/>
:t<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY STORE I<lb/>
East Fifth and Cotanche Streets<lb/>
Fine Meats and Groceries<lb/>
Jarvis Dormitory<lb/>
Holds Open House<lb/>
The residents of Jarvis Hall will<lb/>
entertain at an Open House Satur-<lb/>
day afternoon from 4:30 to 5:30<lb/>
m. The occasion is in honor of<lb/>
graduates who formerly lived in<lb/>
Jarvis Hall and their guests. Other<lb/>
gue?' ? will be welcome if they choose<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Dean of Women Ruth White and<lb/>
Jarvis Hall Counselor Nancy Wilmore<lb/>
are cooperating with Sara Giles,<lb/>
social chairman of the dormitory.<lb/>
L.ight refreshments will be served<lb/>
to the guests.<lb/>
Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
45 RPM Accessories<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE<lb/>
u<lb/>
Vi:<lb/>
JOLLY ROGER<lb/>
Known To Some As The PORT<lb/>
Welcome's The Alumni<lb/>
and<lb/>
All E. C. C. Students<lb/>
To Visit Us<lb/>
3 Miles East on Highway 264<lb/>
Open from 8 a. m. till 12 p. m.<lb/>
WE SERVE DELICIOUS SANDWICHES<lb/>
AND COLD DRINKS<lb/>
??<lb/>
T,<lb/>
JOHN LAUTARES<lb/>
recommends:<lb/>
THE ONLY RING f&amp; W<lb/>
FOR YOU! '&amp; s<lb/>
SHERATON SET<lb/>
Engagement Ring $300.00<lb/>
Bride's Circlet . $75.00<lb/>
Groom's Ring $100.00<lb/>
CANTERBURY SET K<lb/>
Diamond Ring $250.00 L<lb/>
Wedding Ring  $10.00 y<lb/>
OAKDALE SET<lb/>
Diamond Ring $300.00<lb/>
Bride's Circlet $100.00<lb/>
BRUNSWICK SET<lb/>
Diamond Ring  $800.00<lb/>
Bride's Circlet  .$200.00<lb/>
rtcarved<lb/>
DIAMOND RINGS<lb/>
There is no more fitting expression of your love than afl<lb/>
exquisite Artcarved diamond ring. Every Artcarved<lb/>
diamond ring is guaranteed and registered for color, clarity, cut<lb/>
and carat weight for your protection. Choose an Artcarved<lb/>
diamond ring . . . beloved by brides for over 100 year.<lb/>
?Tr?d? mark rag. Price, incl. F?d. Tu. Rlnca ?m?rg?d to ?bow otuU J<lb/>
At Scan<lb/>
In Life<lb/>
and LOOK<lb/>
SANTA ROSA SET<lb/>
Diamond Ring ? $400.00<lb/>
BridVs Circlet ? $100.00<lb/>
John Lautuase<lb/>
Jeweler<lb/>
109 E. 5th Street Dial 3662<lb/>
Diamonds<lb/>
We are direct importers<lb/>
Fifty-three years experience as diamond merchants<lb/>
Finest quality - Lowest prices<lb/>
BEST JEWELRY COMPANY<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
<lb/>
For Drug Needs, Cosmetics and Fountain<lb/>
Goods  Visit<lb/>
Biggs Drug Store<lb/>
Proctor Hotel Building<lb/>
Open 8 a. mlO p. m.  Sunday 8:30 a. m<lb/>
10:30 a. m 4 p. mlO p. m.<lb/>
BELK-TYLER'S<lb/>
For The Very Latest<lb/>
CAMPUS STYLES<lb/>
i<lb/>
8433-34<lb/>
-35-36-37<lb/>
FOOTWEAR FOR EVERY OCCASION<lb/>
AT POPULAR PRICES AT<lb/>
BELK-TYLER'S<lb/>
.j &amp;&amp;<lb/>
BfsrfOf you<lb/>
WHAT A BUY! Chesterfield regular and king-<lb/>
size. (Both at the same price in most places).<lb/>
Jack Webb and Ben Alexander want what you want<lb/>
from a cigarette. Relaxation, comfort, satisfaction. They<lb/>
know where to find it?because in the whole wide world,<lb/>
no cigarette satisfies like a Chesterfield.<lb/>
Chesterfields are best to smoke because they alone<lb/>
have the right combination of the world's best tobaccos.<lb/>
Chesterfields are best for you because they're highest<lb/>
in quality, low in nicotine.<lb/>
Try a carton of Chesterfields today.<lb/>
C Lmwt Mm Tomcoo Co,<lb/>
LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE<lb/>
IN AMERICA'S COLLEGES<lb/>
I<lb/>
and<lb/>
them<lb/>
sou<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
J. P<lb/>
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ROT1<lb/>
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He<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Oi<lb/>
j<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
are<lb/>
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11<lb/>
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IN<lb/>
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