<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038362_0001"/>
tion.<lb/>
The Lady of Larkspur Lo-<lb/>
vill be given in the TV Room of<lb/>
Student I'nion Thursday night at<lb/>
0.15 The plu ? being produced by the<lb/>
ers riahoufce.<lb/>
asttarolinian<lb/>
Dog patch society comes to the campus<lb/>
Saturday, as East Carolina observes<lb/>
"Sadie Hawkin's Day The race is sched-<lb/>
uled to start ?t 3:30 p. m. Girls, catch a<lb/>
man for (he dance which will be held in<lb/>
Wright at 8:00 p. m.<lb/>
OLUMEXXX<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1954<lb/>
Number 10<lb/>
Jy-<lb/>
Thirty-Two EC Campus Leaders In National Yearl<lb/>
? n:t<lb/>
Ju?;<lb/>
!<lb/>
w<lb/>
Miss Grace Outland<lb/>
i.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Delegates Leave To Attend<lb/>
SGA State Meeting In Raleigh<lb/>
 representatives of East<lb/>
? liege left today for Ra-<lb/>
? attend the State Student<lb/>
in Assembly. They will re-<lb/>
in the capital until Saturday<lb/>
m T'n. trmup left tihis morn-<lb/>
? ? e regular campus SGA<lb/>
1st night.<lb/>
November 10th meeting of<lb/>
Milton Foley reported on<lb/>
ration he had made con-<lb/>
e pay phones on campus.<lb/>
tad two or more circuits<lb/>
?ampus. Foley suggest-<lb/>
?? lephone personnel here<lb/>
e that a telephone be<lb/>
Slay Haii. They reported<lb/>
ould be installed if<lb/>
;h organization would<lb/>
? . ? . phone itself.<lb/>
treasurer and busi-<lb/>
. r of the college, recom-<lb/>
? Foley that the SGA take<lb/>
of the safety of the<lb/>
mmen. ation was brought<lb/>
SGA and they agreed to<lb/>
the wishes of the phone<lb/>
;aranteeing the safety<lb/>
e which will be installed<lb/>
or 0! Slay Hall. The<lb/>
college administration will back the<lb/>
SGA in upholding this guarantee.<lb/>
The committee will remain in ac-<lb/>
tion to investigate having more<lb/>
phones for various location where<lb/>
they are needed.<lb/>
Ra y Edwards reported that there<lb/>
was still no possibility ?f having a<lb/>
drink machine in Autin or the near<lb/>
vicinity; however, there is a possi-<lb/>
bility of having a cigarette machine.<lb/>
If a cigarette machine is secured it<lb/>
will be placed just inside the dining<lb/>
hall lobby.<lb/>
According to Dr. Jorgensen, Sat-<lb/>
urday afternoon swimming has been<lb/>
discontinued due to the lack of inter-<lb/>
:??.<lb/>
Dean Pngwett personally thanked<lb/>
the students for their conduct during<lb/>
the hurricane. He reported that ev-<lb/>
eryone conducted themselves quite<lb/>
well.<lb/>
The secretary. Barbara Stickland,<lb/>
has been instructed to write a letter<lb/>
of condolence to the family of the<lb/>
late Governor William B. Umstead.<lb/>
Barbara will also write a letter to<lb/>
Appalachian congratulating th?m on<lb/>
winning the North State Champion-<lb/>
ship in football.<lb/>
Death Overtakes<lb/>
Infirrcery Head<lb/>
fcay Night<lb/>
ftrace Outland Dies<lb/>
From Heart Attack<lb/>
Miss Grace Mendenhall Outland,<lb/>
50, superintendent of the infirmary<lb/>
al East Carolina College, died at 10<lb/>
o'clock Monday night in Pitt Me-<lb/>
nu rial Hospital. She suffered a heart<lb/>
ek Saturday and had been con-<lb/>
I to the hospital since that time.<lb/>
Funeral services and burial took<lb/>
lace in Rich Square yesterday.<lb/>
Miss Outland joined tfie staff at<lb/>
Hast Carolina College in July, 1953,<lb/>
. . I since that time had served as<lb/>
upei otendentt of the infirmary. She<lb/>
had lived in Greenville since 1945 and<lb/>
ted carried on her professional du-<lb/>
ties iii various positions in the city.<lb/>
I! ;n and reared near Rich Square,<lb/>
V ? Miss Outland was the daughter<lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thomas Out-<lb/>
who with six brothers and two<lb/>
? - survive her.<lb/>
Aft r her graduation from the Rich<lb/>
Square High School, she attended<lb/>
the Westtown School in Pennsylvania<lb/>
and the Woman's College of the<lb/>
iversity of North Carolina, and<lb/>
after a year of teaching, received her<lb/>
training as a nurse at the Norfolk<lb/>
Genera Hospital, Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
A the Norfolk hospital she served<lb/>
5 supervisor of surgical nursing,<lb/>
night superintendent, and supervisor<lb/>
the Emergency Room and Out<lb/>
Patient Department.<lb/>
She was a member of Cedar Grove<lb/>
Society of Friends at Woodland, N.<lb/>
C. Among professional organizations<lb/>
 bs.1L  W - ? 1, Vr ??? -?-frPJ1??(A war?<lb/>
t.v.i r? -1 v.i ?. v ? . tJw l ?. - w<lb/>
the Virginia State Nurses Associa-<lb/>
tion, the North Carolina State Nurses<lb/>
esociation, the Alumnae Association<lb/>
or Norfolk General Hospital, and the<lb/>
Pitt County Nurses Association.<lb/>
In Greenville, where she had a wide<lb/>
circle of friends, she had been asso-<lb/>
ciate with a number of civic organi-<lb/>
zation She served as president of<lb/>
the Aries Book Club and as a merrr-<lb/>
ber of the Public Affairs Committee<lb/>
of the Business and Professional<lb/>
Women's Club, and was a member of<lb/>
Pitt County Executives Club.<lb/>
Surviving are her parents; six<lb/>
; 1 rthers, Ira D. Outland of Norris-<lb/>
town, Pa E. Frank Outland of Jack-<lb/>
son. N. C. Charles H. Outland of<lb/>
Ward, Pa William W. Outland of<lb/>
Winona, Ohio, Stanley Outland of<lb/>
Wilson Hall Entertains At Tea<lb/>
Shown above ig a scene from the "Harvest Tea" which took place in Wilson Hall Sunday afternoon. In<lb/>
the picture, standing third from the left, is Miss E&amp;tella Striplin, dormitory counselor of Wilson Hall, and pro-<lb/>
moter of the social hour. She was assisted by all the Wilson girls. Shown at the head of the table is Mary<lb/>
Pendergraft, who is pouring tea.<lb/>
Office Of Registrar Renders Multiple<lb/>
Services To East Carolina Students<lb/>
near Rich Square, and Edward Out-<lb/>
land of Greenville and two sisters,<lb/>
Mrs. Tomasina Outland Whitfield of<lb/>
Aseville, N. C. and Miss Rachel<lb/>
Outland of near Rich Square.<lb/>
The registrar at East Caroldna<lb/>
I College, Orval L. Phillips, is one who<lb/>
goes beyond his duties to be of serv-<lb/>
ice here. His office renders ser. ices<lb/>
to students which is not required of<lb/>
it. Student appreciate the "little<lb/>
things" such as the checklists of<lb/>
course to complete before gradua-<lb/>
tion and aitLs to follow in making for<lb/>
a simpler formality of registering<lb/>
for work. The extra hours of work<lb/>
put in by the registrar saves many<lb/>
students extra quarters at college.<lb/>
Dr. Phillips has worked for a sim-<lb/>
plified and quicker registration pro-<lb/>
cedure and has achieved that aim.<lb/>
Other te.ings among the duties of<lb/>
his office are keeping recorded all<lb/>
scholastic records, health examina-<lb/>
tions, freshman tests and discipli-<lb/>
nary records. Dr. Phillips acts as<lb/>
admission officer and determines<lb/>
whether students can enroll. He eval-<lb/>
uates all transcripts of transfer stu-<lb/>
dents and sends them out to other<lb/>
colleges or wherever the student<lb/>
wishts them to be sent.<lb/>
All enrollment statistics come from<lb/>
The Lady Gets A Kiss And A Crown!<lb/>
by Sylvis Farmer<lb/>
this office. Here all drop-ad slips<lb/>
are filed and a careful check is made<lb/>
on the number of hours for which a<lb/>
student enrolls. All withdrawals from<lb/>
college are made in the registrar's<lb/>
office and applications for gradua-<lb/>
tion are received there also. The<lb/>
office assistants order diplomas and<lb/>
prepare them for delivery to the<lb/>
seniors.<lb/>
In the registrar's office scholastic<lb/>
records are watched and carbon cop-<lb/>
ies of letters are sent to parents<lb/>
about their child's record. Selective<lb/>
service form 109 required by all draft<lb/>
boards in the tate is sent from this<lb/>
office to give boys' scholastic stand-<lb/>
ing. Each month a report has to be<lb/>
sent to the Veterans Administration<lb/>
on each Korean veteran enrolled at<lb/>
the college.<lb/>
Dr. .Phillips received his Master's<lb/>
degree from North Texas State Col-<lb/>
lege and his Doctor's degree from<lb/>
Columbia University in New York<lb/>
City. He received 13 month8 training<lb/>
at the Naval Academy in Annapolis,<lb/>
Md. At Louisiana State University<lb/>
he was an instructor in math and<lb/>
later was the head of the math de-<lb/>
partment at Mississippi Southern<lb/>
College. After being a supervisor for<lb/>
practice teachers at Columbia Uni-<lb/>
versity, he came to work at Bast<lb/>
Carolina College as registrar. Dr.<lb/>
Phillips served in the South Pacific<lb/>
and in the Aleutians as Lieutenant<lb/>
Senior grade in the Navy during<lb/>
World War II and was a weather<lb/>
officer there. During 196354 he act-<lb/>
ed as president of the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Registrar's Association.<lb/>
Dr. Phillips endeavors to make all<lb/>
students feel that his office is a<lb/>
friendly one, and a place where he<lb/>
can get information on registering,<lb/>
the course of study he should follow,<lb/>
his grades, his records and practically<lb/>
anything he wants to know. Members<lb/>
of the office staff are Mrs. Rebecca<lb/>
Starkey, assistant registrar; Mrs. Eli-<lb/>
nor Coleman, information; Mrs. Doris<lb/>
Lamb, secretary; Mrs. Pat Dollar,<lb/>
transcript clerk; and Janet Latta,<lb/>
Grace Jones, Willa Dean Lindsay and<lb/>
Joan Ashley, student assistants.<lb/>
Student Group News<lb/>
Wesley ander, Statesville; Joyce Boyd, New<lb/>
The Alpha Zeta Chapter of Wesley Bern; Jerry Crawford, Jacksonville,<lb/>
Players gave a supper at the Metho-<lb/>
dist Student Center on Monday eve-<lb/>
ning for the new pledges to the<lb/>
Chapter. Supper was served at five<lb/>
k by members of the Chapter.<lb/>
After supper all were invited into<lb/>
jhe Little Chapel for the Pledge cere-<lb/>
mony. Mamiej Chandler, sponsor for<lb/>
th Chapter, told soimuiing of the<lb/>
history of Wesley Players and inter-<lb/>
preted the meaning of pledgeship.<lb/>
Joan Crawford, president of the<lb/>
Chapt r, gave the pledge to the in-<lb/>
coming members.<lb/>
Pledges accepted were: Luke Alex-<lb/>
Apnroximately 250 psopls attended the Sweetheart Ball in Wright Saturday night. Ann Butt, wife of<lb/>
Lucius Calvin Butt who is a mmber of the Phi Sigma Pi Fraternity which ftponsered the dance, was crowned<lb/>
queen of the Ball. The members of the figure watch w the gentleman kisses hit lady after the crowning.<lb/>
Wilson Hall Residents<lb/>
Sponsor 'Harvest Tea'<lb/>
The residents of Wilson Hall were<lb/>
hostesses at a "Harvest Tea" in the<lb/>
dormitory parlor Sunday afternoon,<lb/>
November 14, between the hours of<lb/>
4:00 and 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
R reiving at the door were Doro-<lb/>
thy Tyndall, Lela Clayton, Sallie Es-<lb/>
terling, and Evelyn Sherman. Miss<lb/>
Estella Allen Striplin, dormitory<lb/>
counselor, Pauline Catel, French stu-<lb/>
dent, and the house committee com-<lb/>
posed the receiving line. They are<lb/>
Carolyn Bullard, president; Mary Lee<lb/>
Whitfield, vice president; Molly Cara-<lb/>
wan, secretary; Sadie Frances, treas-<lb/>
urer; and Miriam Sutton, social<lb/>
chairman. Shirley McLawhorn and<lb/>
Mary Pendergraph poured punch.<lb/>
A harvest and autumn decoration<lb/>
scheme wag used throughout the<lb/>
room and on the talblss.<lb/>
Florida; Patricia Daniels, Beaufort;<lb/>
James Daughety, Kinston; June<lb/>
Goldston, Wallace; Sadie Harris,<lb/>
Beaufort; Council Jarman, Kinston; ,<lb/>
Dot Lineberry, Lloyd Bray, Green-<lb/>
ville; Quay Roseman, Statesville;<lb/>
Ralph Sthumaker, Bishopville, S. C;<lb/>
Jackie Rouse, Havelock; Doug Mitch-<lb/>
ell, Greenville.<lb/>
Sigma Phi Alpha<lb/>
English Club<lb/>
The Sigma Phi Alpha, foreign lan-<lb/>
guage fraternity, held its regular<lb/>
monthly meeting with the English<lb/>
Chib. Harvey Davis, president of the<lb/>
English Club, presided.<lb/>
Pauline Catel, student from Lyons,<lb/>
France, spoke to the group on indus-<lb/>
try and education in her country.<lb/>
She concluded her remarks by telling<lb/>
something about a small town in<lb/>
France.<lb/>
Vets<lb/>
The final meeting of the quarter<lb/>
for the Veterans Club was in the<lb/>
form of a supper meeting held at<lb/>
the Town House Restaurant last<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
Harvey Davis, chairman of the<lb/>
program committee, presided over<lb/>
a discussion of lack of interest in<lb/>
ihe club and measures which might<lb/>
arouse new interest.<lb/>
The next meeting is scheduled for<lb/>
Thursday, December 2.<lb/>
Phi Omlcron<lb/>
The Phi Omicron held its Novem-<lb/>
ber meeting on Tuesday, November<lb/>
8. After tite regular busines, session,<lb/>
Lannis Crocker, program chairman,<lb/>
presented Dr. John B. Bennett, cam-<lb/>
pus religious director, who enlight-<lb/>
ened the club on the Christian views<lb/>
of segregation.<lb/>
In a nutshell, Dr. Bennett said that<lb/>
in general there are three views of<lb/>
segregation which' different Christian<lb/>
groups set forth. One is that God<lb/>
punished the descendants of certain<lb/>
of Noah's children, putting them in<lb/>
perpetual servitude to others. An-<lb/>
other view is that God has seen fit<lb/>
to make people of different races<lb/>
and capacities in accordance with-<lb/>
His will. A third view is that dis-<lb/>
crimination between people upon any<lb/>
basis is wrong. In considering these<lb/>
views, Dr. Bennett pointed out,<lb/>
church groups need to wake up and<lb/>
supply love, goodwill and courage in<lb/>
eliminating barriers that exist be-<lb/>
tween people.<lb/>
A.C.E.<lb/>
Mrs. B. L. Tyson, a former school-<lb/>
teacher in a nearby school, was the<lb/>
guest speaker at the A.C.E. monthly<lb/>
meeting held m th?? Training School<lb/>
Cafeteria last Tuesday.<lb/>
Miss Patsy Pappendick, president,<lb/>
presided over the meeting of approx-<lb/>
imately 65 members.<lb/>
Home Lc<lb/>
A skit entitled "The Trial of Miss<lb/>
Oso Uninformed and Miss Hattie<lb/>
Home Ec" was recently presented by<lb/>
the Home Ec Club members, ?<lb/>
A report of the coming Bazaar in<lb/>
December was given by Jo Bryson,<lb/>
The president. Marcelme Aycock,<lb/>
appointed a secretary to fill the<lb/>
vacancy created by the resignatior<lb/>
of Betty Boyette House.<lb/>
The annual budget was presented<lb/>
and approved.<lb/>
'Who's Who' List<lb/>
Includes Top Rate<lb/>
College Siiidents<lb/>
Thirty-two students at East Caro-<lb/>
lina College will represent the college<lb/>
in the 1954-1965 edition of "Who's<lb/>
Who in American Universities and<lb/>
Colleges nationally circulated year-<lb/>
book. This annual publication h'sta<lb/>
and gives biographical sketches of<lb/>
4udent leaders in educational insti-<lb/>
tutions throughout the nation.<lb/>
Selections of students for this<lb/>
year's volume was made at East Car-<lb/>
olina by a student-faculty commit<lb/>
tee. Bases determining the choice of<lb/>
representatives were excellence 'n<lb/>
xholarship, leadership and partici-<lb/>
ation in extracurricular and aca-<lb/>
demic activities, citizenship and serv-<lb/>
ice to the school, and promise of<lb/>
future usefulness to business and<lb/>
society.<lb/>
East Carolina's contribution to the<lb/>
1954-1955 "Who's Who" and the areas<lb/>
in which they have made some of<lb/>
their most outstanding achievements<lb/>
are:<lb/>
SGA: James Walter Alexander,<lb/>
parliamentarian; Kristen Anderson,<lb/>
vice chairman, Men's Judiciary; Wade<lb/>
Hampton Cooper, president; Don<lb/>
Raby Edwards, historian; Donald A.<lb/>
Kmg, Awards Committee; Shirley<lb/>
Jean Lassiter, secretary, summer<lb/>
school; Elsie Leigh Lawson, presi-<lb/>
dent, Women's Judiciary; William<lb/>
Howard Rooks, treasurer; A. Louis<lb/>
Singleton, first vice president this<lb/>
year and president last summer; and<lb/>
Louis Erwin Clark, homecoming<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
Home Economics: Marcellins Ay-<lb/>
cock.<lb/>
Publications: Emily Stewart Boyce<lb/>
and Faye Batten O'Neal, newspaper;<lb/>
Martha Jane Kanoy and Mildred Ma-<lb/>
rie Reynolds, annual.<lb/>
Religious work: Benjamin Bedford,<lb/>
YMCA, and Willa Dean Lindsay,<lb/>
YWCA.<lb/>
Athletics: Emma Jean Brake, Wo-<lb/>
man's Athletic Association; John<lb/>
"Toppy" Hayes, football; Cecil A.<lb/>
Heath, basketball; George Marion<lb/>
Tucker, football; and Anne DeLee<lb/>
Siler, cheerleader.<lb/>
Fraternities: Harold Colson, presi-<lb/>
dent, Phi Sigma Pi; Keith Goodson,<lb/>
treasurer of Pi Omega Pi and sec-<lb/>
retary of Phi Sigma Pi; John W.<lb/>
Hudson, president, .Pi Omega Pi.<lb/>
Clubs and organizations: Gene D.<lb/>
Lanier, Library Club; Arthur Irving<lb/>
Maynard, International Relations<lb/>
Clulb; Patsy Pool Pappendick, ACE;<lb/>
and Dalton Lee Mann, Mathematics.<lb/>
Otheis: Lucious Calvin Butt,<lb/>
AFROTC Cadet Colonel; Patricia<lb/>
Ann Dawson, Chief Marshal; and<lb/>
Mildred Rouse Suits, Citizenship.<lb/>
All these students will bs featured<lb/>
in the college yearbook. Selection to<lb/>
"Who's Who in American Colleges<lb/>
and Universities" is considered the<lb/>
most spectacular award presented to<lb/>
college men and women by most<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Orchestra, Glee Club<lb/>
Combine In Musical<lb/>
Presentation Sunday<lb/>
The East Carolina Orchestra, a<lb/>
student and community organisation,<lb/>
and the Varsity Men's Glee Club will<lb/>
be presented in a concert Sunday,<lb/>
November 21, at 3:30 pna. in ths<lb/>
College Theatre.<lb/>
The glee club will present Her-<lb/>
bert's Romany Life with Miss Jeanne<lb/>
Pritchard, soprano soloist, and Tseh-<lb/>
aikowsky's waltz from "Sleeping<lb/>
Beauty<lb/>
Miss Janet Watson and Mr. Jack<lb/>
Williford will play Mozart's Concerto<lb/>
in E Flat Major, a piano duet. This<lb/>
is one of the most difficult pieces<lb/>
of music ever composed.<lb/>
The East Carolina Orchestra drew8<lb/>
its members from faculty members<lb/>
and students of musk at the college<lb/>
and from musicians in Greenville and<lb/>
surrounding aieas. Membership in<lb/>
eludes approximately 65 men and<lb/>
women. Ths group is a member of<lb/>
the American Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
League and is now in Ha third year<lb/>
under Dr. CutbJbert's direction. The<lb/>
Varsity Men's Glee Club ig composed<lb/>
of 33 college students, also under<lb/>
the direction of Dr. Cuthbert, It is<lb/>
an organisation giving class credit<lb/>
to those desiring; however, moat<lb/>
members eomioer it as eacuaeuwk-ola<lb/>
activity.<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00038362_0002"/><lb/>
PAGB TWO<lb/>
?A8T CAROLINIA ?<lb/>
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, ic<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, 1925 at the<lb/>
U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under the act af<lb/>
Mareh 3, 1879.<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division Columbia Scholastic Preaa<lb/>
First Pkce Rating, CSPA Convention, March, 1964<lb/>
Editor-inchief  Faye Batten O'Neal<lb/>
Aeai.tant Editor  - VlexIa Sftie?r0n<lb/>
Managing Editor Bobby Ray Hall<lb/>
Feature Editor ? Anna George<lb/>
S. G. A. Reporter   J?yce Smlth<lb/>
Staff Assistants . Gene Lanier, Jerry Register,<lb/>
Lettv De Loach; Jimmy Ferrell, Evan Taylor, Pat<lb/>
Jackson, Margaret Smith, Sylvia Farmer, Lou Ann<lb/>
Rouse, Jonnie Simpson, Joyce Norris, Betty Jean<lb/>
Garrett, William Bryant, Roy Askew, Jan Baby,<lb/>
Mary Lou Stewart, Irma Leggett, Margie Jones,<lb/>
Tommie Stanton, JoAnne Harrisa, and Pat<lb/>
Humphrey.<lb/>
Sports Editor  Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
Sports Assistants J. .W. Browning, BiUy Arnold<lb/>
Busing ManagerEm" Massed<lb/>
Assistant Business Manager  Shirley Hargrove<lb/>
Business Assistant Edna Whitfield, Mary Ellen Williams<lb/>
Circulation Mtoager8 -  Jan Raby, Roy Askew<lb/>
Exchange Editor  Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
Editorial Advisor? Misg Mary H. Greene<lb/>
Financial Advisor  Dr. Clinten B, Prewstt<lb/>
Tschnicel Advisor -  Sheraoan M. Parks<lb/>
Printed by Renfrew Printing CoGreenville, N. C.<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves o?; 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/>
From the "Rubayalt of Omar Khayam translated by<lb/>
E. Fitzgerald<lb/>
Editorial Comment<lb/>
by Faye B. O'Neal<lb/>
The death of Miss Grace Outland<lb/>
left the campus with a hushed feeling<lb/>
of reverence Tuesday. Not a single<lb/>
student missed the feeling. During<lb/>
the few years she was with us, Miss<lb/>
(Jutland became an essential part of<lb/>
the infirmary staff and won the<lb/>
approval of all who came in contact<lb/>
with her.<lb/>
There is little doubt in the minds<lb/>
of those who knew her that Miss<lb/>
Outland died as she would have pre-<lb/>
ferred to die?in service to humanity.<lb/>
She was one of the rare persons<lb/>
w"ho lived her life almost solely to<lb/>
help others. Her loss is already a<lb/>
keen sorrow to us; we will remember<lb/>
her for a long time.<lb/>
Last week we ran a picture on the<lb/>
front page of East Carolina repre-<lb/>
sentatives at the Young Democrats<lb/>
Convention in Elizabeth City. We<lb/>
neglected to mention in the cutlines<lb/>
that Lawrence Wofford, staff photog-<lb/>
rapher for the NEWS AND OB-<lb/>
SERVER, made the picture. Our<lb/>
apologies to the fine photographer;<lb/>
all are agreed that the snot was one<lb/>
of the best we have used in our<lb/>
paper this year.<lb/>
Most of the pictures in this year's<lb/>
paper have been taken by our staff<lb/>
pnotognaphers.<lb/>
Who's Who Among Students At East CarolinA<lb/>
Vet Active In SGA, Campus Organizations<lb/>
Time, The Answer To All Problems<lb/>
In a timely and proper manner, the state of<lb/>
North Carolina has stepped out to take her stand<lb/>
on desegregation in the public schools of the<lb/>
South. In a brief, issued to the Supreme Court<lb/>
this week, the "Old North State much further<lb/>
embedded with Southern heritage and principle<lb/>
than her name or geographic location implies,<lb/>
has analyzed her position and, in the light of<lb/>
facts, offered the most sensible and logical rec-<lb/>
ommendations she could arrive at to help lower<lb/>
the head of the ugly beast of a problem now on<lb/>
ti i loose in the Southern states.<lb/>
North Carolina is asking for gradual deseg-<lb/>
regation, with authority to supervise the change-<lb/>
over being vested in Federal district judges. The<lb/>
idea behind this suggestion is to allow those who<lb/>
best know local conditions to implement the de-<lb/>
cree in light of those conditions. No particular<lb/>
plan was proposed.<lb/>
The brief, 188 pages long, goes on to list<lb/>
statistics, exhibits and answers to questionnaires<lb/>
sent to city and county school superintendents<lb/>
and police officials. An overwhelming number of<lb/>
the answers summed up the belief that immediate<lb/>
desegregation will not work in North Carolina<lb/>
and will lead to violence. The brief states: "If<lb/>
the public schools and the public peace are to be<lb/>
preserved, the decrees . . . must be framed to<lb/>
lit the conditions in the actual communities<lb/>
To go further, it is only a reasonable as-<lb/>
sumption that North Carolina is right in feeling<lb/>
that local conditions should modify the extent of<lb/>
the effectiveness of the decree. In Northampton<lb/>
County, with 71 Negro children to 29 white<lb/>
children, the circumstances are different than<lb/>
where there is one Negro to 99 Whites as in<lb/>
North Dakota. And we venture to say that all the<lb/>
99 Whites together in North Dakota do<lb/>
not feel any more strongly against commingling<lb/>
with blacks than does one person alone in North-<lb/>
ampton County, N. C. Whether this is right or<lb/>
wrong, we are not saying. But we do say that it<lb/>
is important. One tree is gnarled and crooked<lb/>
while another is tall and straight. They grew<lb/>
that way and neither will be changed until they<lb/>
are felled.<lb/>
Other problems known to have bearing on<lb/>
the situation in North Carolina are the rural<lb/>
distribution of population, the general unfavor-<lb/>
able reaction of the people to the decree and the<lb/>
number of Negro teachers available. Only three<lb/>
out of 131 white school superintendents feel that<lb/>
they can use Negro teachers here without causing<lb/>
trouble<lb/>
The problems must be handled in a way to<lb/>
provide the best results for both races. The public<lb/>
school system of the South may easily be wiped<lb/>
out if an overnight change-over is decided upon.<lb/>
It is the hope of all those who live in North Caro-<lb/>
lina and see the situation clearly from being born<lb/>
and reared in its midst that the officials who<lb/>
will be in charge of making definite steps will<lb/>
realize the truthfulness and sincerity of our state<lb/>
in seeking the best answer.<lb/>
Thank You, God<lb/>
Thank you, God, for all the many blessings you<lb/>
have bestowed upon rne this year, ?<lb/>
Thank you, God, for making it possible for me<lb/>
to further my education in a country free from<lb/>
communism,<lb/>
Thank you, God, for giving me the eyes to see<lb/>
the beauty of your wonders,<lb/>
Thank you, God, for giving me the privilege of<lb/>
attending the church of my choice where I can<lb/>
worship as I feel is right,<lb/>
Thank you, God, for protecting our many boys<lb/>
fighting for freedom, who are far from their<lb/>
homes and loved ones,<lb/>
Thank you, God, for watching over me and my<lb/>
loved ones throughout the year, and keeping us<lb/>
safe,<lb/>
There are so many things we as Americans can<lb/>
be thankful of, dear God,<lb/>
So I send my special prayers to the millions of<lb/>
war devastated people throughout the world who<lb/>
-are less fortunate than ourselves. They need your<lb/>
help and the help of all of us so badly.<lb/>
LAmen. A. G.<lb/>
Only a comparative handful of<lb/>
students turned out for the all-col-<lb/>
lege assembly Monday night. It is<lb/>
regrettable that so few students saw<lb/>
fit to attend the meeting. Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
addressed the group on the impor-<lb/>
tance of student contact with legis-<lb/>
lators in North Carolina. We agree<lb/>
with him that the students who can<lb/>
contact their representatives in the<lb/>
State legislature can go a long way<lb/>
in winning the approval of the Bud-<lb/>
get Committee for the money we<lb/>
need here so sorely.<lb/>
The "East Carolinian" will not he<lb/>
published for the next two weeks<lb/>
due to lack of time on the part of<lb/>
the staff to get out a paper. Next<lb/>
week we have examinations before<lb/>
leaving Wednesday for the Thanks-<lb/>
giving holidays and the following<lb/>
week we return too late to get in<lb/>
copy for an issue of the paper. We<lb/>
will resume our regular schedule<lb/>
with an issue on December 9.<lb/>
A. Louis Singleton, Plymouth, this<lb/>
week's Who V WJio, is majoring and<lb/>
minoring in the Welfare Work Pro-<lb/>
gram, and plans one day to become<lb/>
a social worker.<lb/>
Alter Louis heard Dr. John D.<lb/>
Messdck speak at his high sohool com-<lb/>
mencement exercises, he was very<lb/>
impressed. A-s he had already visited<lb/>
East Carolina lefore and liked it, it<lb/>
was only natural that he chose to<lb/>
come to East Carolina College.<lb/>
During the first quarter of his<lb/>
sophomore year. Louis was drafted<lb/>
into the Army and apent the majority<lb/>
of his enlistment doing administra-<lb/>
tion work in Tokyo, Japan. "The main<lb/>
changes I observed when I returned<lb/>
to East Carolina was that the college<lb/>
seemed to be growing with a future<lb/>
observed Louis.<lb/>
The summer school students elect-<lb/>
ed Louis to the office of President<lb/>
of SGA, and this year he serves as<lb/>
first vice president of that organi-<lb/>
zation. Louis stated, "1 am proud to be<lb/>
a member of SGA, for I feel that<lb/>
it is the finest college Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association in the country<lb/>
On November 7, Wade Cooper and<lb/>
Louis attended the Interim Council<lb/>
of . C. Student Legislative Assem-<lb/>
bly at Meredith College. This council<lb/>
is similar to the Executive Council<lb/>
of the SGA, as its main purpose is<lb/>
by Anne George<lb/>
.  "?: ?  ? ?<lb/>
Louis Singleton<lb/>
to draw up the plans and procedures<lb/>
that will be followed at the N. C.<lb/>
Student Legislative Assembly which<lb/>
will meet in Raleigh this week. Louis<lb/>
is one of the 14 delegates who will<lb/>
attend this meeting held in Raleigh<lb/>
for the purpose of discussing the<lb/>
various college Student Governments<lb/>
in te State.<lb/>
During his freshman year, Louis<lb/>
We a member of the Commerce Clulb<lb/>
and I. R. C; and now he is an active<lb/>
member of the Veterans Club, and<lb/>
holds the position of administrator<lb/>
of the Veterans Loan Fund. Louis also<lb/>
is chairman of the Ring Committee<lb/>
this year, and recently he has become<lb/>
a member of Circle K.<lb/>
With a twinkle in his eye, Louis<lb/>
said, "T?ae biggest thing that has<lb/>
ti;iirpened to me was the day I got<lb/>
married Louis and his wife, the<lb/>
former Nancy Kesler, were married<lb/>
May 25, just a few hours after Nan-<lb/>
cy graduated from Easrt Carolina, in<lb/>
.he V hut, witih services performed<lb/>
by Dr. Carl V. Harris. Tbu year<lb/>
Nancy is teaching English at Ay den.<lb/>
"I had Harvey Davis for a room<lb/>
mate, but he told such corny joke,<lb/>
1 decided I'd better get a new room-<lb/>
mate stated Louii with a smile,<lb/>
n ten asked why he got married.<lb/>
Nancy said, "Louis is a good cook,<lb/>
and he makes wonderful coffee His<lb/>
other, hob ies include reading and<lb/>
football. He isn't just a sport spec-<lb/>
tator, but enjoys participating also.<lb/>
This fall he has been playing football<lb/>
on an intramural league team about<lb/>
three afternoons a week. (In his<lb/>
socks, it's very informal!)<lb/>
His future plans include gradua-<lb/>
tion either next fall or winter quar-<lb/>
ter, at which time he will receive a<lb/>
B.S. degree Louis hopes to continue<lb/>
his studies by doing graduate work,<lb/>
preferably at Carolina, "but then, my<lb/>
wife may make me go to work<lb/>
POT POURR1<lb/>
by Valeria Shearon<lb/>
When the NCEA met on the campus<lb/>
Friday, there was a native North Carolinian<lb/>
author amung the speakers. Mrs. Mebane BUN<lb/>
gwyn from the Rich Square area of the state<lb/>
addressed the Library Division of the Nc?A<lb/>
As a writer Of books for young people, Mrs<lb/>
Burgwyn stated that there were four motives<lb/>
of a writer. The first three of these are sharing<lb/>
experiences, answering questions, and desirfe.<lb/>
to create. The fourth is embedded in the taith<lb/>
a ith which young people face the world, and stan<lb/>
out on their own. Perhaps this latter pertain,<lb/>
to h?-r area of writing, particularly. Mrs. Burgwya<lb/>
is the author of four books. In the elemental<lb/>
field, she has written "River Treasure" and<lb/>
'Lucky Mischief while her books for young<lb/>
people are "Penny Rose" and Moonflower<lb/>
Mountlower her latest, is recently off the<lb/>
press.<lb/>
Li this week's issue, we are announcing the<lb/>
official list of students who will represent East<lb/>
Carolina in the 1954-1955 Who's Who in Am<lb/>
can Universities and Colleges. There art 32 this<lb/>
year, a few more over last year's 28, which must<lb/>
go to show that East Carolina is producing n<lb/>
and more leaders. To these who have been select-<lb/>
ed to this place of honor on the basis of their<lb/>
achievement in scholarship, leadership, and<lb/>
zenship. we extend sincere congratulati- r You<lb/>
are a tribute to good ot the college.<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Several weeks ago an unsigned<lb/>
letter to tha editor aroused a good<lb/>
bit of controversy on this campus.<lb/>
Since thtri time the policy of the<lb/>
"East Carolinian" has been changed<lb/>
from one of printing letters and<lb/>
withholding the author' names to one<lb/>
rned lette<lb/>
will he<lb/>
Around 70 members of the BSU<lb/>
from East Carolina left on a char-<lb/>
tered bus for Salisbury to attend the<lb/>
State BSU Convention recently<lb/>
It was only last Spring that BSU<lb/>
members all over the state were in<lb/>
an agitated stir over the removal of<lb/>
their State Secretary from his posi-<lb/>
tion by the General Board of the<lb/>
N. C. Baptist Convention. Several<lb/>
students from ECC attended a pro-<lb/>
test meeting. There is still a ques-<lb/>
tion in the minds of most of the<lb/>
BSU'ers on the justice of this act.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the new man who now<lb/>
serves as State BSU Secretary is well<lb/>
liked, and it is hoped that the or-<lb/>
ganization will suffer no serious<lb/>
handicap from the upheaval last<lb/>
Spring.<lb/>
Now that the Student Union does<lb/>
handle the lost and found here, we<lb/>
have the following announcement<lb/>
from Miss Mendenhall: "We have a<lb/>
collection of glasses brought over<lb/>
here from Mi&amp;s White's office. Even<lb/>
last year's collections are still un-<lb/>
claimed. Also we are accumulating<lb/>
notebooks, fountain pens and books<lb/>
which no un<lb/>
printed.<lb/>
!t is my belief that this new<lb/>
policy is wrong aid that it restricts<lb/>
student expression.<lb/>
Two reasons were given for the<lb/>
new policy. They were (quotations<lb/>
from the original):  . . if you<lb/>
war to have something printed for<lb/>
ever?"ie to read, make it something<lb/>
you are proud to admit you said<lb/>
Reason :  . . the newsipaper<lb/>
cannot be responsible for things writ-<lb/>
ten by those outside its staff<lb/>
I take issue with both reasons.<lb/>
The first one misses the point<lb/>
behind letters to the editor entirely.<lb/>
It would be quite nice if everyone<lb/>
who wrote to newspapers felt that<lb/>
he could have his name printed with<lb/>
his letter hut this is not the case.<lb/>
I feel positive that the reasoning is<lb/>
not so much that the prospective<lb/>
letter writers aren't proud of what<lb/>
they have to sy hut that they fear<lb/>
what may happen to them if their<lb/>
names are printed.<lb/>
Reason two appears to he a bad<lb/>
ease of rationalization. The news-<lb/>
paper is responsible for what ap-<lb/>
pears in it but not in such a com-<lb/>
plicated sense as is indicated. The<lb/>
only rules which need he observed in<lb/>
printing a letter are: does it violate<lb/>
any law with regard to slander or<lb/>
libel and could printing it do DEF-<lb/>
INITE AND PROVEN harm to the<lb/>
public interest.<lb/>
I respectfully suggest that this<lb/>
policy be adopted:<lb/>
(1) Return to the previous policy<lb/>
of withholding students' names<lb/>
w f n they desire it in connection with<lb/>
letter writing.<lb/>
(2) Investigate FULLY any com-<lb/>
plaints that might be voiced in said<lb/>
letters.<lb/>
(3) Print the complete results of<lb/>
these investigations so that fairness<lb/>
may be done not only to the stu-<lb/>
di (it nt, should the faculty or ad-<lb/>
ministration be the target of his<lb/>
attack, to the latter groups as well.<lb/>
Re trlfls concerning the power of<lb/>
the i res; are well founded. That<lb/>
power can he used as effectively or<lb/>
as negatively as those in charge of<lb/>
it see fit.<lb/>
Respectfully,<lb/>
Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
P. S. I have written this letter<lb/>
not as a member of the newspaper<lb/>
staff who is attempting to disrupt<lb/>
editorial policy, but rather as a mem-<lb/>
ber of the student body who cannot<lb/>
conscientiously allow such a detri-<lb/>
mental change be allowed to pass<lb/>
unnoticed.<lb/>
(Editor's note: The purpose of a<lb/>
letter to the editor clumn is not to<lb/>
provide an outlet for those who are<lb/>
afraid to see their names in print.<lb/>
If a person has an honest gripe he<lb/>
will help himself toward the solution<lb/>
of his problem, not by airing his<lb/>
opinion to readers, the majority of<lb/>
whom are unconcerned with the<lb/>
pro) 1 em, but by first trying to reach<lb/>
those who are more immediately in-<lb/>
volved. Needless to say the beat way<lb/>
to reach agreement on a controversy<lb/>
is compromise between the disputing<lb/>
elements.<lb/>
We maintain that w? have always<lb/>
investigated fully the complaints<lb/>
brought into our office and will con-<lb/>
tinue to do so. We maintain that<lb/>
we did print the results of our in-<lb/>
vestigation of the letter in mention,<lb/>
in the October 28 issue of this paper.<lb/>
We will continue to print news tihat<lb/>
is unbiased and true as long as it is<lb/>
in good taste.)<lb/>
It's a lot of fun to ramble through antiqui-<lb/>
ties, even when the so called is as young as a<lb/>
1926 Tecoan. The Tecoan, as every- <lb/>
know, is the forerunner of the Buccaneer, the<lb/>
college yearbook. Sometime ago, during a ramb-<lb/>
ling .session, we came across a division of the<lb/>
1926 Tecoan which bore the name "Potpourri<lb/>
The pages that followed belonged there, for they<lb/>
contained little bits about lots of things, and<lb/>
(nie people we know. We are printing the forth-<lb/>
coming incident with the permission of Dr, I<lb/>
Adams of the Psychology' Department.<lb/>
On December 18, 1925, a WOtnanlesa wed<lb/>
won the spotlight here at East Carolina, as Dr.<lb/>
A. D. Frank became the bride of Pr<lb/>
Beecher Flanagan. Nuptial music was rendered<lb/>
by Dr. Adams, who sang "Just Before the Bati<lb/>
Mother' For the occasion, Dr. Adam. wore a<lb/>
pink-beaded evening gown, a black hat and to top<lb/>
off his ensemble, a gray squirrel choker. Dr.<lb/>
Adams laughs about the affair now, and admiti<lb/>
that it stirred up quite a bit of interest and en-<lb/>
thusiasm.<lb/>
Before another East Carolinian comea off<lb/>
the press, the student body will take a h lidaj.<lb/>
Thanksgiving vacation, the time we have aii been<lb/>
looking forward to since registration day, i<lb/>
most here. After enduring those final exam, we<lb/>
will need the holidays to recuperate. During the<lb/>
long weekend, we will be truvlim, e?i? ?w?-<lb/>
mous meals, and having lots ,i fun. All that ia<lb/>
fine, but in the midst of our enjoyment, wouldn't<lb/>
it be worthwhile to pause long enough to realize<lb/>
the true meaning of Thanksgiving Day? If you<lb/>
do, you will remember that it is more than a<lb/>
mere holiday. We have so much to be thankful<lb/>
for. "Count your Blessings and the number will<lb/>
amaze vou.<lb/>
Controversial Currents<lb/>
AROUND THE CAMPUS<lb/>
with Jimmy Ferrell<lb/>
Tom Ani'k-o, a freshman from Con-<lb/>
necticut, was very 'happy to see the<lb/>
temperature go down last week. Just<lb/>
before leaving for Norfolk for a<lb/>
weekend, he said he hated to leave<lb/>
North Carolina because the weather<lb/>
was right for the first time.<lb/>
Back in Conn Tom said he was<lb/>
a member of a group called the Polar<lb/>
Club. He and the other members used<lb/>
to take swims in dead winter and<lb/>
run around in bathing trunks in the<lb/>
snow afterwards. Tom gays it adds<lb/>
free years on to your life every time<lb/>
you do it. How does the song go?<lb/>
"I'd Rather Die Young . . <lb/>
Happy Thanksgiving!<lb/>
Don't worry about the exMtts that<lb/>
are just around the corner, think<lb/>
.about the turkey that's coming right<lb/>
behind them!<lb/>
ACC Joins ECC<lb/>
The big Trailways lus bearing the<lb/>
banner "East Carolina B.S.U stop-<lb/>
ped at ACC in Wilson last Friday<lb/>
to pick up three ACC students who<lb/>
were riding to the convention in<lb/>
Salisbury with the EC students.<lb/>
Those three fine and friendly people<lb/>
were Laverne Batten, Helen Whittey,<lb/>
and Leslie Wilkens.<lb/>
W en asked the big question about<lb/>
the two basketball games that ACC<lb/>
will be playing ECC in January and<lb/>
February, Helen Whittey replied,<lb/>
"We love all of you at ECC, but we<lb/>
hope we're going to beat you this<lb/>
j year. No, I'll say we are going to<lb/>
beat you?we've just got to We'll<lb/>
see!<lb/>
Mountaineers vs. Pirates?Again!<lb/>
All students at the Baptist Student<lb/>
Convention in Salisbury wore tags on<lb/>
vwhibh was printed their name and<lb/>
the school which they were from.<lb/>
I; was great l'un for an Appalachi-<lb/>
an student to go up to an East Caro-<lb/>
lina student and ask, "I heard Appa-<lb/>
lachian beat ECC, is that right?"<lb/>
Things got even worse when Sun-<lb/>
day's paper showed the score of the<lb/>
Tampa-ECC game. One boy from<lb/>
Appalachian took a cardboard box<lb/>
over to an ECC girl while her group<lb/>
waited for their bus. It contained a<lb/>
picture of a football. "Heard you<lb/>
lost again last night. Use this to<lb/>
practice with he told her.<lb/>
More On Pink V Black<lb/>
A lot of people have commented<lb/>
on the section that we printed a (few<lb/>
weeks back on the smart outfit of the<lb/>
day for men, which included a com-<lb/>
bination of pink and black. One girl<lb/>
told us that she didn't think that<lb/>
pink and boys went together at all.<lb/>
This brings on another story, about<lb/>
another freshman boy. This freshman<lb/>
boy was proud of his pink pants<lb/>
until he walked in front of Cotten<lb/>
Hall with this conspicuous outfit on.<lb/>
"Some of the girls yelled from the<lb/>
windows, 'Hey sport, how about a<lb/>
date tihe boy told us.<lb/>
Seen V Heard<lb/>
Dr. Martin while lecturing to a<lb/>
geography class said: "Do any of<lb/>
you know where the laplands are?<lb/>
Well, I asked a boy that once and<lb/>
he told me that it was Cotten Hall<lb/>
on Saturday night<lb/>
A boy sitting outside Dean Prew-<lb/>
ett's office awaiting his turn said<lb/>
to his friend: "Let's go somewhere<lb/>
tonight where we can get a good meal,<lb/>
like home<lb/>
Happy Thanksgiving!<lb/>
This Week's Movie<lb/>
This week's movie, "Vicki is a<lb/>
mystery drama in which Jear Peters<lb/>
plays the part of a young waitress<lb/>
who is ostensibly smart and sexy,<lb/>
although her torch singing motions,<lb/>
as interpreted by Jean Peters, some-<lb/>
times suggest that she is not so much<lb/>
syncopating as dissimilating an itch.<lb/>
She started on the road to fame<lb/>
through the efforts ?? a debonair<lb/>
promoter (Elliott Reid), and seized<lb/>
a Hollywood opportunity without<lb/>
bothering to cut him in. Presently,<lb/>
l're is murdered. Suspicions fall on<lb/>
many, including Jeanne iCrain, who<lb/>
plays the part of her sister, and the<lb/>
promoter (Reid). Jeanne Crain is in<lb/>
love with Reid.<lb/>
See this movie in Austin Audi<lb/>
torhim Saturday night at 7:00.<lb/>
Jeanette Smith and J. B. Nichob<lb/>
Couple of the Week<lb/>
by Joyce Smith<lb/>
Cotten Hall wa? the meeting place<lb/>
for this week's couple. In the midst<lb/>
of a freshman girl's confusion on her<lb/>
first day at college, Jeanette Smith<lb/>
managed to meet J. B. Nichols. He<lb/>
and some other boys were carrying<lb/>
ip luggage in Cotten Hall. J. B.<lb/>
laughs in remarfting, "I thought she<lb/>
was a flirt It seems she was flirt-<lb/>
ing with J. Bs best friend. It was<lb/>
the next week that they dated for<lb/>
the first time.<lb/>
Friday the 13th was no unlucky<lb/>
day for this couple. On November<lb/>
13 (Friday) 1963, Jeanette and J. B.<lb/>
started going fteady.<lb/>
When it comes to common interests<lb/>
they enjoy anything hat includes he<lb/>
two. They especially enjoy tennis,<lb/>
ping pong, and carpet golf. Jeanette<lb/>
?ays she kikes to do anything that<lb/>
she canbeat J. B. in doing. J. B<lb/>
with a cTuiek lauh, replied, "There<lb/>
(Continued on Page 4)<lb/>
McCarthy Committee<lb/>
by Bobby Hall<lb/>
When the Seriate convened to hear the Cen-<lb/>
sure Committee charges against Senator Joseph<lb/>
McCarthy, junior Republican senator from Wis-<lb/>
consin, the senator predicted his own defeat. Mc-<lb/>
Carthy says he will be found guilty because the<lb/>
Democrats and liberal Republicans are "out to<lb/>
get me<lb/>
McCarthy charged that the session will def-<lb/>
initely be a "lynching bee He only thinks he<lb/>
will get about 19 votes.<lb/>
The resolution, on which the Senate will<lb/>
vote, is based on a report in which the bipartisan,<lb/>
six man committee unanimously urged McCar-<lb/>
thy's censure for: His refusal to explain whether<lb/>
he misused anti-Communist funds; to appear<lb/>
before a subcommittee investigating his finances<lb/>
in 1951-52; abusing a committee member, Sena-<lb/>
tor Robert C. Hendrickson (R-N.J.), and abusing<lb/>
Brig. Gen. Ralph W. Zwicker.<lb/>
McCarthy said regardless of the outcome his<lb/>
campaign against Communism will "go on and<lb/>
on and on<lb/>
The three words "I am sorry" by McCarthy<lb/>
could have ended the censure session but he flatly<lb/>
refused to apologize for "abusing" the Elections<lb/>
Committee and Senator Hendrickson.<lb/>
Senator Francis Case (R-SD) introduced<lb/>
the plan calling for an apology by McCarthy. I<lb/>
McCarthy had apologized, the Senate could have<lb/>
killed the censure count charging abuse of th'<lb/>
subcommittee and its members, and could have<lb/>
"disavowed" his alleged abuse of Gen. Zwicker.<lb/>
Pro-McCarthy forces have worked out an-<lb/>
other compromise which they will present to the<lb/>
Senate later. It is believed this plan would prais<lb/>
McCarthy for alerting 'the American people to<lb/>
the menace of Communism and gently blame him<lb/>
without actually censuring him.<lb/>
When McCarthy appeared before the Senate<lb/>
he charged that in the censure move against him<lb/>
the Communist Party has made an "unwitting<lb/>
handmaiden" o' a Senate committee and extend-<lb/>
ed its "tentacles" to the Senate itself.<lb/>
McCarthy has two chances to come out witn<lb/>
a clean slate. First, if the Senate finds him not<lb/>
guilty, and, second, if he can keejp talking untu<lb/>
December 24 w'uen the extraordinary session dies<lb/>
automatically. The second is his best chance and<lb/>
should be no problem, according to his past. D<lb/>
cember 24, 1954, is the final deadline set in ??<lb/>
adjournment resolution agreed on by Congref<lb/>
last August. If there is no vote by that hour, tbjj<lb/>
pending resolution would expire with the 83r?<lb/>
Congress.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038362_0003"/><lb/>
rK?.pAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1954<lb/>
?ii i ??? ?  ?nH ii<lb/>
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itroducf<lb/>
Earthy- <lb/>
tr<lb/>
out<lb/>
wit to<lb/>
tWl<lb/>
I pra<lb/>
lame<lb/>
W<lb/>
fainBtl<lb/>
FunW"<lb/>
id ei<lb/>
UJltfl<lb/>
out1<lb/>
ion ajg<lb/>
jance<lb/>
SPORTS ECHO<lb/>
by Bob Hilldrup<lb/>
owed out at College Sta- established schools and of immediate<lb/>
tturday night, leaving East<lb/>
with a better than .500 mark<lb/>
sappointing. record as<lb/>
 W1V; li?53.<lb/>
to have been THE year<lb/>
e football and yet, perhaps<lb/>
seasoa has its advantages<lb/>
ear East Carolina ripped<lb/>
ne-gaOM schedule, losing<lb/>
npa University. And Pi-<lb/>
rtera had a ready answer<lb/>
, m the absence of Dick<lb/>
and Greenville were be-<lb/>
.ilk in terms of a new era<lb/>
Carolina athletics, one in<lb/>
. ? teams would run rough-<lb/>
! comers. PeYhaps 1964<lb/>
red its purpose in bursting<lb/>
bole.<lb/>
ttle question in our minds<lb/>
Ml several seasons have<lb/>
, ?d a new and brighter era<lb/>
I arolina, both in athleitics<lb/>
rwise, but even the most<lb/>
rooters must realize that the<lb/>
ace of 1954 cannot be ex-<lb/>
v the absence of Cherry or<lb/>
single performer,<lb/>
success of 1963 had people<lb/>
games with N. C. State,<lb/>
V I' I. and other larger and<lb/>
entry into the Southern Conference.<lb/>
Those arrtbkiens are commendable but<lb/>
cannot be attained overnight.<lb/>
We feel sure that wften the South-<lb/>
ern Conference does admit new mem-<lb/>
bers Eastt Carolina will be among<lb/>
them but until such time as that<lb/>
happens we trust that East Carolina<lb/>
fans will be loyal to the Pirates of<lb/>
tfhe North State Conference and place<lb/>
the concept of playing a good game,<lb/>
win or lose, ahead of more ambitious<lb/>
schedules or entry into higher ranked<lb/>
conferences.<lb/>
Saturday's finale with Stetson was<lb/>
certainly a pleasing game from the<lb/>
Pirate standpoint. East Carolina<lb/>
gained better than 400 yards on the<lb/>
ground alone and exhibited what<lb/>
appeared to be its best team play of<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
Particularly outstanding were two<lb/>
senior backs, Claude King and Tom<lb/>
Albbrook. King, whose kicking this<lb/>
year has been sensational to say the<lb/>
least, booted some beauties in addi-<lb/>
tion to turning in what may have<lb/>
been his best running game. Alls-<lb/>
brook closed out his college career<lb/>
with the evening's first touchdown<lb/>
and also turned in some of his finest<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
East Carolir<lb/>
Claude King Collects Pair<lb/>
Of Scores In Final Contest<lb/>
riT? ' - ? ? 1J" ? ' '  11 1 ? 1.1 T-n<lb/>
Downs H<lb/>
Senior fullback Claude King scored 1 quarter opened. Freshman quarter-<lb/>
, , . . , . ?? ifja back Dick Saltrick directed the at-<lb/>
two touchdowns and picked up 10? 1<lb/>
North State Conference Ends<lb/>
Season With Weekend Games<lb/>
games this weekend, none of<lb/>
reference contests, wind up<lb/>
. State Conference regular<lb/>
rrow night Guilford'g Quak-<lb/>
tv to Danville, Va. for t<lb/>
with Hampdten-Sydney. Then,<lb/>
Appalachian travels to<lb/>
meet the University of<lb/>
 while Elon winds up its cam-<lb/>
Davidson.<lb/>
surprises highlighted last<lb/>
action, the first being Appa-<lb/>
14-7 loss to Presbyterian<lb/>
Carolina's Little Three and<lb/>
r.d, Catawha's 33-7 pounding<lb/>
, niford. The Quakers had been<lb/>
led favorite? over a Catawba<lb/>
which had won only once in<lb/>
games.<lb/>
other games last week found West-<lb/>
? ?- t'arohna exploding for a 64-7 win<lb/>
Newport News Apprentice, Elon<lb/>
ting Lenoir Rhyne, 14-6, and<lb/>
Carolina closing out its season<lb/>
ag Stetson, 26-7.<lb/>
-?.ridings:<lb/>
CONFERENCE GAMES<lb/>
W L T Pet Pt Op<lb/>
. Man 6 0 0 1.000 121 63<lb/>
4 1 1 .700 116 77<lb/>
Guilford 1 3 0 .250 40 79<lb/>
Catawha  1 4 0 .200 79 122<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne 0 5 0 .000 52 77<lb/>
(Tie games count half game won,<lb/>
half game lost in conference.)<lb/>
yards rushing Saturday as East Car-<lb/>
olina College closed out its 1954<lb/>
football season with a 26-7 win over<lb/>
Stetson University from Deland,<lb/>
Fla.<lb/>
The game, played at College Sta-<lb/>
dium, found the Pirates unleashing<lb/>
a brutal running game which netted<lb/>
404 yards.<lb/>
East Carolina got its first touch-<lb/>
down with less than four minutes<lb/>
gone in the opening period. The Bucs<lb/>
received the kickoff on their own 30<lb/>
yard line and immediately drove 70<lb/>
yards for the tally. Halfback Tom<lb/>
AUsbrook did the honors with a<lb/>
twisting, 14-yard run. King added<lb/>
the point from placement.<lb/>
Five minutes later the Pirates had<lb/>
their second touchdown, this one com-<lb/>
ing on a 49-yard drive. King made<lb/>
the final yardage by diving over the<lb/>
left side of the Stetson line from two<lb/>
yards out. His attempted conversion<lb/>
was low.<lb/>
Second Half<lb/>
Stetson stiffened its defenses<lb/>
against the Pirate subs during most<lb/>
of the second half and it was not<lb/>
until the final three minutes that<lb/>
East Carolina was able to tally<lb/>
again. The scoring drive began on<lb/>
the Pirate 30 and came to an end<lb/>
when graduating quaiteilback Boyd<lb/>
Webb tossed 15 yards to King in the<lb/>
end zone. The try for extra point<lb/>
failed.<lb/>
The visitors unleashed an all-out<lb/>
pass pattern soon after the third<lb/>
tack, which stemmed from a spread<lb/>
formation and gave the Pirates con-<lb/>
siderable trouble.<lb/>
Saltrick completed eight passes in<lb/>
the third quarter alone, mainly to end<lb/>
Tom Hoffard and halfback Gene Ste-<lb/>
phenson. He finished the night with<lb/>
15 completions in 33 attempts and<lb/>
would have had half a dozen more<lb/>
had his receivers been able to hold on.<lb/>
The third quarter play resulted in<lb/>
a scoreless deadlock but both teams<lb/>
managed a tally in the final quarter.<lb/>
East Carolina went over first when<lb/>
sophomore quarter) ack Gary Mat-<lb/>
tocks, running the option play, electe<lb/>
to pitch out to James Henderson.<lb/>
The fleet Virginian headed for the<lb/>
sidelines and outraced the Hatter<lb/>
secondary for 43 yards and the touch-<lb/>
down. Mattock's placement wobbled<lb/>
over for the 26th point.<lb/>
Hatters Tally<lb/>
With only moments remaining in<lb/>
the contest Saltrick's good right arm<lb/>
paved the Stetson way to a score.<lb/>
The Hatters returned the kickoff fol-<lb/>
lowing Henderson's tally to near mid-<lb/>
field. Saltrick then pitched for five<lb/>
completions which moved the ball to<lb/>
the one-yard line. He scored from<lb/>
there on a quarterback sneak and<lb/>
then passed to Hoffard in the end<lb/>
zone for the score.<lb/>
For East Carolina the win meant<lb/>
a 5-4-1 season. Stetson now owns a<lb/>
mark of 1-7.<lb/>
Several players on both teams<lb/>
turned in outstanding games. For<lb/>
Stetson, in adddtion to Saltrick, line-<lb/>
men HoUingsworth, Hoffard and<lb/>
Shamrock played outstanding games<lb/>
Davidson First For Buccaneer Swim Team<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 down -by Pitt Theatre<lb/>
MR. CLIFTON PERRY, Owner and Manager<lb/>
A new varsity sport is being<lb/>
launched at East Carolina which<lb/>
could overshadow the big three of<lb/>
baseball, basketball and football that<lb/>
now dominate the Pirate scene. That<lb/>
is a tremendous statement, but one<lb/>
which can b? made with reasonable<lb/>
assurance after studying Coach Ray<lb/>
Martinez's up-and-coming swimming<lb/>
team. This is the college's first at-<lb/>
tempt to enter into the field of water<lb/>
PEOPLES BAKERY<lb/>
We supply the SODA SHOP with FRESH BAKERY<lb/>
PRODUCTS every morning<lb/>
by Billy Arnold<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Martin z is a tall, husky, and de-<lb/>
termined young man who has had<lb/>
swimming experience at Louisiana<lb/>
State University, in the A.A.U and<lb/>
in the Air Force. This is his first<lb/>
stab at coaciing on a college level<lb/>
and he geama eager and able to pro-<lb/>
duce a winning team.<lb/>
"We have some very good boys<lb/>
lie said of his squad, "and most of<lb/>
them are freshmen and sophomores.<lb/>
? kh means they will be improving<lb/>
all the time<lb/>
Several meets are already listed;<lb/>
however, the schedule is not complete<lb/>
as yet. The Pirate pool-men will com-<lb/>
pete at Davidson on the 3rd of De-<lb/>
cember and at The Citadel on the<lb/>
18th. They will also match their<lb/>
speed and ability against Clemson,<lb/>
Virginia Military Institute, and pos-<lb/>
sibly North Carolina State. Negotia-<lb/>
tions for contests with Duke, North<lb/>
Carolina, and V.P.I, are being held.<lb/>
It is early to determine the posi-<lb/>
tions and abilities of the entire squad<lb/>
as yet, but Martinez says, "We'll<lb/>
probably be strongest in the breast-<lb/>
stroke competition There are sixteen<lb/>
members forming the team at pres-<lb/>
ent, of which Shree are divers.<lb/>
Powerful Dickie Denton leads the<lb/>
group of free-style swimmers with<lb/>
an extremely fast exhibition of the<lb/>
American Crawl. "We all have a lot<lb/>
of work to do smiled Martinez,<lb/>
"but Denton should show up well.<lb/>
He's looked good in practice<lb/>
The sixteen swimmers axe led by<lb/>
another promising prospect, Ronnie<lb/>
(The Nose) Rose, who wear a con-<lb/>
traption to aid breathing while in the<lb/>
water. Other members of the squad<lb/>
are Garland Tuton, Wade Cooper, Ed<lb/>
Mathews, William Gartman, Frank<lb/>
Moore, Joe Rex Wallace, Phillip Wea-<lb/>
ver, William West, Benton White,<lb/>
Jan Cayton, El Ramey, Thomas An-<lb/>
thony, and Claude Tyson.<lb/>
3 2<lb/>
2 2<lb/>
0<lb/>
I<lb/>
.600<lb/>
.500<lb/>
73 59<lb/>
97 106<lb/>
L<lb/>
Records and Sheet Music<lb/>
5 RPM Accessories<lb/>
McCORMICK<lb/>
MUSIC STORE<lb/>
JACKSON'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
Better Shoes Reasonably Priced<lb/>
For the entire family<lb/>
509 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
. Several spaces available for Col-<lb/>
lege Boys, at the "Pirate Anna"<lb/>
al 11298. Evans Street. If inter-<lb/>
I rsted contact<lb/>
I t.RIER RENTAL AGENCY<lb/>
t Phone 5700<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/>
i<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
A GOOD PLACE TO EAT<lb/>
"Good Food Means<lb/>
Good Health"<lb/>
Gieson<lb/>
CHRISTMAS CARDS<lb/>
FOR ALL SPECIAL NAMES<lb/>
ON YOUR CARD LIST<lb/>
MOTHK ? FATHER<lb/>
HUSBAND ? WIFE<lb/>
SISTER - MOTHER<lb/>
SONS ? DAUGHTERS<lb/>
AUNTS ? UNCLES<lb/>
NEPHEWS - NIECES<lb/>
GRANDMOTHERS<lb/>
GRANDFATHERS<lb/>
GRANDDAUGHTERS<lb/>
GRANDSONS<lb/>
UTTU SOYS ewd UTTLE GIRLS<lb/>
SWEETHEART - DARUNG<lb/>
NEIGHBORS - SPECIAL PRi -4<lb/>
FRIENDS ACROSS THE MILES<lb/>
MINISTERS - PRIESTS<lb/>
THE BOSS - EMPLOYER<lb/>
 AND MANY OTHFJl<lb/>
CAROLINA OFFICE<lb/>
EQUIPMENT CO<lb/>
304 Evans St Dial 3570<lb/>
Underwood Typewriters<lb/>
HEATH'S<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN HAMBURGERS and CHOICE<lb/>
T-BONE STEAKS WITH LOTS OF<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
Near TV Station at the Crossroad<lb/>
OPEN ON-SUNDAYS<lb/>
Doras Tower Grill<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
COLD DRINKS<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
HOT DOGS<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
CURB SERVICE<lb/>
Dancing Pavfflion For Your Pleasure<lb/>
Near TV Station and Fire Tower<lb/>
On Display<lb/>
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12th<lb/>
The Beautiful New Ford for '55<lb/>
bn Flanagan Buggy Co 1<lb/>
IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
COLLEGE SMOKERS PREFER Luckies-and by a wide<lb/>
margin-according to the largest and latest coast-to-coast<lb/>
college survey. Once again, the No. 1 reason: Luckies taste<lb/>
better. They taste better because Lucky Strike means fine<lb/>
tobacco. Then, that tobacco is toasted to taste better.<lb/>
"Ifs Toasted"? the famous Lucky Strike process ? tones<lb/>
up Luckies' light, good-tasting tobacco to make it taste<lb/>
even better. The pleasure you'll get from Luckies better<lb/>
taste is vividly depicted in the Droodle above, titled:<lb/>
Modern artist enjoying Lucky while glancing in mirror.<lb/>
See the ecstatic smile? Well, you, too, can be happy.<lb/>
Just go Lucky!<lb/>
'Bettea taste Luckies<lb/>
LUCKIES TASTE BETTER<lb/>
CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!<lb/>
FISH COMMITTING .<lb/>
?T ATTACHIN?<lb/>
MLT TO BALLOON<lb/>
Jerry Gray<lb/>
University of California<lb/>
STUDENTSI<lb/>
EARN $25!<lb/>
Lucky Droodle are pouring in! Where are y?"??W? P<lb/>
$25 for all we um, and for many we don t uw. So send every<lb/>
original Droodle in your noodle, with it. deiptiv. title,<lb/>
u, Lucky Droodle, P.O. Box 67, New York 46, N.Y. m<lb/>
?DtOODUS, CopyrieM ?? y ???? <lb/>
?A-T.Co. PRODUCT Or<lb/>
JB?JUaa?MM Jo&amp;uteo&amp;?y??p<lb/>
;hS O ' CtOAtftTTKt<lb/>
<pb facs="00038362_0004"/><lb/>
PAGB FOUft<lb/>
Etiquette Far Men<lb/>
According to Dr. John Meseick<lb/>
an etiquette class, for boys will<lb/>
be offered winter quarter under<lb/>
the direction of Miss Nancy<lb/>
Wilmore, dormitory counselor.<lb/>
Because of the experimental<lb/>
nature of this classs it will be an<lb/>
elective non-credit course. Ma-<lb/>
terial for the class will be based<lb/>
on the interest of the members<lb/>
The first session will meet at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. Monday, November 29,<lb/>
in the Radio Studio of the Li-<lb/>
brary. Miss Wilmore would ap-<lb/>
preciate any boys, who are in-<lb/>
terested in a course of this type<lb/>
coming by her office in Jarvis<lb/>
Hall before then.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER ig. i<lb/>
"?'<lb/>
Religious Groups Plan<lb/>
Emphasis Week In January<lb/>
AAUW Offers Women<lb/>
Opportunity To Study<lb/>
At Oxford University<lb/>
Am opportunity now exists for<lb/>
American women to study at Oxford<lb/>
University in England, according to a<lb/>
recant publication by the American<lb/>
Association of University Women,<lb/>
through its Committee on Applica-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The AAUW Committee on Appli-<lb/>
cations for Oxford is an official link<lb/>
between Oxford and American women.<lb/>
As it8 name implies, it is the med-<lb/>
ium by which applications may ibe<lb/>
filed by American women wishing to<lb/>
Htudy at Oxford University.<lb/>
Applicants may be Fuibrigbt Award<lb/>
wnuiers. In the event of this, it is<lb/>
to their advantage to file an applica-<lb/>
tion with the AAUW Committee, since<lb/>
these applications are normally con-<lb/>
sidered prior to thoe made by Ful-<lb/>
bright candidates. All AAUW Com-<lb/>
mittee candidate are required to<lb/>
finance themselves for two years at<lb/>
the University in case they fail to<lb/>
receive a Fulbright or other award.<lb/>
Applications and inquiries should<lb/>
be directed to Dr. Margaret C. Honour,<lb/>
Chairman of the Committee on Ap-<lb/>
plications for Oxford, 42S Eaat 22nd<lb/>
Street. Brooklyn 26, N. Y.<lb/>
Religious Emphasis week at East<lb/>
Carolina College, annual observance<lb/>
on the campus, will begin January<lb/>
23, 1955, according to an announce-<lb/>
ment by Dr. John B. Bennett, director<lb/>
of religious activities at the college.<lb/>
The event is sponsored each year<lb/>
I by the Inter-Religious Council at East<lb/>
Carolina, an organization made up<lb/>
of representatives of the YMOA, the<lb/>
YWCA, and other student religious<lb/>
groups. Sara Giles of Linden, presi-<lb/>
dent, and various committees of the<lb/>
council are cooperating witih Dr. Ben-<lb/>
nett in planning the program for the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Five visiting speakers will partici-<lb/>
pate January 23-27 in a series of<lb/>
assemblies and of meetings for in-<lb/>
formal discussion and will hold con-<lb/>
ferences with student groups and<lb/>
individual students, according to pre-<lb/>
sent plans. By special' arrangements<lb/>
with departments of instruction, they<lb/>
will also speak before various classes<lb/>
at the collegf.<lb/>
Bisihop Thomas Wright of the Epis-<lb/>
copal Diocese of East Carolina; Dr.<lb/>
Maxine Garner of the department of<lb/>
religion at Meredith College; Dr.<lb/>
Robert L. Holt, vice president of<lb/>
Mars Hill College; Dr. Gordon W.<lb/>
Lovejoy visiting professor of sociol-<lb/>
ogy at Greensboro and Guilford Col-<lb/>
leges; and Dr. Howard P. Powell,<lb/>
pastor of the Edenton Street Method-<lb/>
ist Church, Raleigh, have been an-<lb/>
nounced as members of the visiting<lb/>
group of rligious leaders who will<lb/>
be present at East Carolina for Re-<lb/>
ligious Emphasis Week.<lb/>
A consultant from the Danforth<lb/>
Foundation will work with faculty<lb/>
groups. Discussion will center atten-<lb/>
tion upon a five-year project on Re-<lb/>
ligion in Teacher Education which is<lb/>
now being conducted at East Carolina<lb/>
and 14 other pilot centers in the<lb/>
United States under the sponsorship<lb/>
of the American Association of Col-<lb/>
leges for Teacher Education.<lb/>
Pick Up ID Cards<lb/>
Please do not forget to pick<lb/>
up your Student Activity<lb/>
Cards at Registration for<lb/>
next quarter, says Howard<lb/>
Rooks, SGA treasurer. A ta-<lb/>
ble will be located in the lobby<lb/>
of Wright Building where<lb/>
cards will be issued to each<lb/>
student after they have com-<lb/>
pleted Registration.<lb/>
TAFF OFFICE<lb/>
EQUIPMENT CO.<lb/>
214 East 5th St. Dial 2374<lb/>
He'll bless the day<lb/>
you gave him<lb/>
oresco<lb/>
U<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
whirlaway uiM<lb/>
? Shaves close first time, every time<lb/>
? Follows beard's natural growth<lb/>
" Qu'eest ?a" leading shavers<lb/>
? Easiest shaver toclean<lb/>
? Lubricated for life, needs no oil<lb/>
? Sharpens itself as it shaves<lb/>
15 day FREE home Mai<lb/>
$?M95 wilh (?&amp;<lb/>
At ACDC travel case<lb/>
ROTARY ELECTRIC<lb/>
JOHN LAUTARES<lb/>
Jeweler<lb/>
109 E. 5th Street Dial 8668<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
Ladies Ready-To-Wear<lb/>
Clothe<lb/>
QUALITY JEWELRY<lb/>
At Prices To Meet Your Budget<lb/>
Your Headquarters For<lb/>
Bulova Watches<lb/>
HAMILTON, HAMILTON ILLINOIS, ELGIN<lb/>
and BENRUS<lb/>
S-cientifi-caUy Trained Mechanics To Serve You<lb/>
STAUFFER'S JEWELERS<lb/>
407 Evans Street Phone 2452<lb/>
<lb/>
EXAM SCHEDULE<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
5th Period, 12:00-2:00<lb/>
7th ,Period, 2:00-4.00<lb/>
Monday night classes meet from<lb/>
5:00-7:00.<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
2nd Period, 8:00-10:00<lb/>
4th Period, 10:00-12:00<lb/>
6th Period, 1:00-3:00<lb/>
8th Period, 3:00-5:00<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
1st Period, 8:00-10:00<lb/>
3rd Period, 10:00-12:00<lb/>
Couple Of The Week<lb/>
(Continued from Page 2)<lb/>
fore we don't do anything<lb/>
Jeaneite quickly recalls her most<lb/>
embarrassing incident. "When I called<lb/>
J. B. Christmas to thank him for<lb/>
his gift he never did mention his<lb/>
present at all. I just figured he didn't<lb/>
like it. 1 found out later he didn't<lb/>
receive it until the day after Christ-<lb/>
mas<lb/>
J. B. says his most embarrassing<lb/>
incident was when he visited Jean-<lb/>
ette's home during the Azalea Festi-<lb/>
val. Jeanette says he was scared to<lb/>
meet her mother.<lb/>
Jeanette plans to graduate in fcht?<lb/>
summer of '56 with a degree in<lb/>
Grammar Education wihile J. B. plans<lb/>
to graduate in the spring of '57 with<lb/>
a degree in Business Education. By<lb/>
the way. J. B. is a local boy, while<lb/>
Jeanette hails from 'the' Wilmington.<lb/>
Twenty-five years from now we<lb/>
see Jeanette and J. B. happily mar-<lb/>
ried witjh five cute little children<lb/>
(all beys). J. B. has used his business<lb/>
education very well in setting up<lb/>
his (w" business. And Jeanette, she<lb/>
is also well applying her knowledge<lb/>
as she has her own kindergarten for<lb/>
her children!<lb/>
ECC Student Dies<lb/>
On Hunting Trip<lb/>
Clayton Over-ton, 19, a freshman ut<lb/>
Eat Carolina, wa3 drowned Satur-<lb/>
day morning when he fell from a<lb/>
boat into the Koanoke River. He was<lb/>
returning from squirrel hunting.<lb/>
It was reported that he fell from<lb/>
rhe I oat about 11 a.m. Persons who<lb/>
witnessed the tragedy said that he<lb/>
disappeared beneath the water im-<lb/>
mediately. The body wa, recovered<lb/>
at 1:30 p.m. The boat did not i-apize,<lb/>
and several squirrels ???.? had<lb/>
his gun and his dog were found in<lb/>
the boat.<lb/>
The accident occurred neai .James-<lb/>
viile. the home at the youth, who was<lb/>
spending the weekend with his par-<lb/>
ents.<lb/>
Alumni Ncwf<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
6:30 p.m. "V" Vespers will be<lb/>
held in the "Y" Hut.<lb/>
7:80 p.m The FTA will meet in<lb/>
Austin 103.<lb/>
8iM p.m A play. "The Lady of<lb/>
Larkspur Lotion will he presented<lb/>
by the Teachers Playhouse in the<lb/>
TV Room of the Student Union.<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
8:00 p.m. There will be informal<lb/>
dancing in the Lounge of the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
7:00 p.m.?The movie, "Vieki will<lb/>
be shown in Austin Auditorium.<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
 30 p.m -The Bast Carolina Or-<lb/>
C tra and the Men's Varsity (Jlee<lb/>
Club will give a concert is the I<lb/>
lege Theatre.<lb/>
K A LEIGH-WAKE ALL MM<lb/>
HOLD ANNUAL BANQUET<lb/>
Mis Mamie E. Jenkins of Raleigh,<lb/>
retired carter faculty member of<lb/>
Eft Carolina Collge, received special<lb/>
recognition at the annual banquet of<lb/>
the Raleigh-Wake County chapter of<lb/>
the East Carolina College Alumni<lb/>
? Delation held Wednesday night<lb/>
at the Carolina Country Club.<lb/>
James L. Whitfieid of Raleigh,<lb/>
president of tfce General Alumni As-<lb/>
ition, brought greetings from the<lb/>
? iation and gave the invocation.<lb/>
Special guests from the college in<lb/>
addition to Butlei and Perry were<lb/>
Mrs. Pen, and Mrs. Agnes Barrett,<lb/>
secretary to President John I Mes-<lb/>
sick.<lb/>
 ILM1NGTON ILUMNI<lb/>
REAR ECC OFFK 1 M.<lb/>
1 ? m ogress and ?:?? I"pm nA of<lb/>
Easl Carolina College are geared to<lb/>
he tepped-up tempo of Eastern<lb/>
orh Carolina's growth. AJumni See-<lb/>
r tarj Janus W. Butler of the Green-<lb/>
chool told New Hanover County<lb/>
alumni at a meeting in Wilmington<lb/>
November 15.<lb/>
1 Carolina Power and Lig.v<lb/>
Building, he meeting 0j<lb/>
heard a progress report of tat<lb/>
lege. Mrs. Hazei K Way, Net Han.<lb/>
over alumni chapter pft . T<lb/>
tided over the satsion<lb/>
Held m the Meesjjfeij : <lb/>
Butler also commended<lb/>
of the area for its suppur<lb/>
that the 154 aiujnni award ,f <lb/>
CaroMna College w?s pi. Mfs<lb/>
Hazel K. Way for distir<lb/>
ice to education.<lb/>
Plan were develop<lb/>
in,g for a dinner <lb/>
eastern Nortn Caronrm aluci<lb/>
held in Wilmington In Jamj <lb/>
part of the Founder- fir<lb/>
ance. CouMBttUea a<lb/>
soon for thi- project<lb/>
"Wt Rent Typewriter?<lb/>
CAROLINA OFFICE<lb/>
EQUIPMENT CO.<lb/>
IriaJ 8570:<lb/>
304 Evans St.<lb/>
 H. L. HODGES &amp; CO<lb/>
PAINTS, HARDWARE, FARM SUPPLIES<lb/>
j Phone 4156<lb/>
LARRY'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
Campus Footwear For All Occasions<lb/>
At Five Points<lb/>
?<lb/>
3fARLt5Sv3oiDlCK<lb/>
n<lb/>
by AL CARP<lb/>
PERKINS-PROCTOR<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
"Your College Shop"<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
- THAT'S ANYFACE. VIASTER<lb/>
OF h MILLION DiSGUiSES.r.r-<lb/>
ACIXASE, THAT GIRL. , VOU -<lb/>
BAAXEN CRIMINAL, OR l'll<lb/>
SHOOT YOU IN THE<lb/>
? ? f?BX GAS-TANK.V<lb/>
MA?NO SELF-RESPECTING<lb/>
HELICOPTER WOULD GO<lb/>
JOV-RiDinG wiTH LOOSE <lb/>
&amp;ANDUFf7GET wilDROOT<lb/>
CREAM-OIL, CHARLIE. T.r-<lb/>
t&amp;&amp;<lb/>
C3- ALCOHOLIC TONICS DRYING OUT YOUR SCALP f GET NON-ALCOHOLIC WILDROOT CA6AM-OIL, CHAWJC -?<lb/>
;T<lb/>
For Drug Needs, Cosmetics and Fountain<lb/>
Goods  Visit<lb/>
Biggs Drug Store<lb/>
Proctor Hotel Building<lb/>
Open 8 a. m10 p. m.  Sunday 8:30 a. m<lb/>
10:30 a. m 4 p. m10 p. m.<lb/>
r f<lb/>
Filmdom's Diana Lynn: "I<lb/>
think the Miracle Tip is the<lb/>
most modern filter . . . and L&amp;M<lb/>
the best-tasting filter cigarette<lb/>
David Wavne. Stage a Screen:<lb/>
"L&amp;Ms have the best filter of<lb/>
them all. Miracle Tip is right!<lb/>
There's nothing like it<lb/>
Mrs. Laddie Sanford, Socialite<lb/>
Sportswoman: "I love LaMs.<lb/>
Wonderful filter ? exceptional<lb/>
taste<lb/>
-<lb/>
Students Pampi d<lb/>
Asserts Old Giud<lb/>
Williston Glum, Clan of '18,<lb/>
mortal yesterday at the lux-<lb/>
uries afforded present-day col-<lb/>
legians. "In my time said<lb/>
Alumn Glum, "we used to have<lb/>
to walk for blocks to get a<lb/>
eold Dr. Pepper. It was worth<lb/>
it, of course, even the Day of<lb/>
the Big Wind, April 2nd, 1916,<lb/>
that was.<lb/>
"Today's students don't ap-<lb/>
preciate what they've got. Why,<lb/>
within easy walking distance<lb/>
of any spot on the campus Dr.<lb/>
Peppar is available . . . and<lb/>
it's always frosty sold ?you<lb/>
tow, with tiny flakes of ioe<lb/>
ifTejpfe, toaf s mighty eon-<lb/>
AfGt if he'd Ilka to gtb??k<lb/>
to the good eld days. 'THang<lb/>
no shouted Alumn Glum. P3<lb/>
DNNK<lb/>
No filter compares with<lb/>
rather be living bow when you<lb/>
can always, easily . . . Wake'<lb/>
up your taste with frosty cold<lb/>
Dr. Pepper<lb/>
Htjfcfim DrPeppan<lb/>
1WS MIRACLE<lb/>
for Quality<lb/>
or Effectiveness<lb/>
Isn't it time you tried the cigarette that is<lb/>
sweeping the country breaking record after record  winning<lb/>
more smokers in less time than anv cigarette ever did!<lb/>
Why such success for L&amp;M? It's the filter that counts, and<lb/>
L&amp;M has the best. You get much more flavor, much less nicotine<lb/>
 . a light and mild smoke . . . because only L&amp;M's Miracle Tip<lb/>
gives you the effective filtration you need.<lb/>
Enjoy I aM's king size or regular both at the same<lb/>
low price. Like thousands, you'll say ?"They're<lb/>
just what the doctor ordered<lb/>
MomHavor<lb/>
Less Nicotine<lb/>
'est Filter Cigarette!<lb/>
<pb facs="00038362_0005"/>
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