<?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="00038418_0001"/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
h4<lb/>
Talent And Girls<lb/>
East Carolina's finest talent will be<lb/>
rocking and rolling again tonight lit<lb/>
tight o'clock in Austin Auditorium.<lb/>
1 he re' 11 be girls, talent, and girls.<lb/>
Eas tta rolinian<lb/>
'?- ?? - -?<lb/>
Bright Lights<lb/>
ist Carolinian's talent show.<lb/>
Lights of '57 will shine again<lb/>
tonight at eight o'clock in Austin Audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
Volume XXXII<lb/>
Wagner Chorale<lb/>
Presents Concert<lb/>
Here February 28<lb/>
24-Voice Chorus<lb/>
Is Making Second<lb/>
(ross-Country Tour<lb/>
. Roger Wagner Chorale, hailed<lb/>
? cs as the finest singing group<lb/>
America tolay, will appear in<lb/>
:? here, Thursday, Feb. 36,<lb/>
the auspices of the college<lb/>
tainment Committee. The pro-<lb/>
. ram is scheduled for 8 p. m. in<lb/>
I Auditorium.<lb/>
Headed by its dynamic French-<lb/>
i director. Roger Wagner, the 24-<lb/>
rhorua is now making its second<lb/>
js-country tour. During an eleven<lb/>
r:o<lb/>
i the youthful choristers<lb/>
: conductor will appear in<lb/>
75 cities from coast to coast.<lb/>
tie.s in which they will be<lb/>
in concert include Boston,<lb/>
I hia. N'tjw York, Chicago,<lb/>
aneisco and Seattle.<lb/>
Activities<lb/>
it of Roger Wagner' musical<lb/>
ties embraces every field of<lb/>
In addition to guiding ?the<lb/>
Diet of the group which bears<lb/>
in ,concert, radio, television<lb/>
motion pictures, as well as in<lb/>
rdings, Wagner iB choir director<lb/>
t. Joseph's Church and the Church<lb/>
: i'aui the Apostle, Los Angeles.<lb/>
- d .rector of choral music at<lb/>
.? University of California at Los<lb/>
es and head of the choral de-<lb/>
em at Marymount College in<lb/>
Angeles.<lb/>
i c director for three years of<lb/>
I Married Joan" television show,<lb/>
also conducted the choral<lb/>
nchtonizations for a number of<lb/>
it films including "Desiree "The<lb/>
tian" and "Day of Triumph<lb/>
Composer<lb/>
As a composer he has been lauded<lb/>
: i "Heritage of Freedom" and the<lb/>
mcis Mass, as well as contribu-<lb/>
iongi for Bing Crosby's latest<lb/>
An; thing Goes" and "We're<lb/>
Angels starring Humphrey Bo-<lb/>
His vocal arrangements of<lb/>
Foster .songs have been pub-<lb/>
under the title of Roger Wag-<lb/>
rale .series.<lb/>
? Roger Wagner Chorale reflects<lb/>
c energy, musicianship and impec-<lb/>
taste of its distinguished di-<lb/>
tor, according to critics, who have<lb/>
ecu .avish in their praiso of the<lb/>
bie.<lb/>
Adaptability t? any form of music<lb/>
allmark of the Roger WTagner<lb/>
ale, whether in concert, over the<lb/>
ives. on television or on the<lb/>
picture screen. It is this<lb/>
?ability which has won for the<lb/>
. the title of the nations<lb/>
? unique singing group.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1957<lb/>
Number 17<lb/>
roves<lb/>
ensive<lb/>
Legislature<lb/>
Indoctrination Of Honor System<lb/>
Dottie Jo James, V ilnutiton, and George Knight, Rocky Mount, who<lb/>
will be remembered as the comedy team in last year's "Oklahoma produc-<lb/>
tion, will play the leading roles in "Connecticut Yankee (Nora Willis photo)<lb/>
James, Knight Will Play<lb/>
Connecticut Yankee Leads<lb/>
By CLAUDIA TODD<lb/>
Ado Annie and Will Parker of last j who. as a result of a blow on the head,<lb/>
year's successful "Oklahoma" will be fimis nimse!f hurtled back into the<lb/>
whooping it up again this year in the; K. h(j <lb/>
SGA spring musical production, Aja introducing the mech-<lb/>
Connecticutt Yankee anisms f)f twentieth century into<lb/>
George Knight of "Rocky Mount he eighth century way of life. He<lb/>
and Dottie Jo James of Wilmington also rec0Rnjzes his twentieth century<lb/>
sweetheart in King Arthur's court,<lb/>
Pay Dues<lb/>
Business office officials this<lb/>
?eek urged students to pay their<lb/>
fees and have their permits<lb/>
stamped before the end of this<lb/>
quarter in order to avoid the<lb/>
rush on registration day.<lb/>
both juniors, will have the leading<lb/>
roles of the satirical Connecticutt<lb/>
Yankee and his scheming, coquetish<lb/>
sweetheart Alice, in the Rogers and<lb/>
Hart musical based on Mark Twain's<lb/>
famous novel, "A Connecticutt Yan-<lb/>
kee in King Arthur's Court<lb/>
This comedy team was a great<lb/>
success in last spring's SGA pro-<lb/>
duction, "Oklahoma as Ado Annie<lb/>
and Will Parker, and those who at-<lb/>
tended will remember those hilarious<lb/>
"Persian hellos" and "Oklahoma good-<lb/>
byes According to a review by<lb/>
George Perry of the music depart-<lb/>
ment, Dottie Jo Jarne6 came close to<lb/>
stealing the show on several occasions,<lb/>
and George Knight almost brought<lb/>
down the house with his song and<lb/>
dance number, "Kansas City Both<lb/>
also played in "Brigadoon" in their<lb/>
freshman year at East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
Co-Stars<lb/>
Co-starring are Barbara Harris<lb/>
of Beaufort as Fay, Ralph Shumaker<lb/>
of Greer, South Carolina as Sir Ga-<lb/>
lahad, Lloyd Bray of Greenville as<lb/>
King Arthur, and Ed Pilngton of<lb/>
Goldsboro as Merlin, and many others.<lb/>
The story revolves around Martin<lb/>
Barrett, th Connecticutt Yankee,<lb/>
and in the course of the story, even<lb/>
has to match wit.s with the court<lb/>
magician Merlin in order to save his<lb/>
head. Popular songs from the pro-<lb/>
duction are "My Heart Stood Still"<lb/>
and "Thou Swell, Thou Writty<lb/>
Directors<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Cuthbert of the Music<lb/>
department and Dr. Elizabeth Utter-<lb/>
back of the English department are<lb/>
directing the musical and dramatic<lb/>
phases of the production. This is their<lb/>
sixth consecutive year of directing<lb/>
the SGA spring musical. Others in<lb/>
the past were "Good News "Student<lb/>
Prince "Blossom Time "Briga-<lb/>
!o n and last spring's "Oklahoma<lb/>
Newspaper Talent<lb/>
Plays In<lb/>
Austin Tonight<lb/>
tirfght Lisrhts Of '57<lb/>
Features Outstanding<lb/>
Acts, Beauty, Talent<lb/>
An array of East Carolina's finest<lb/>
talent will be 'eatured when the East<lb/>
Carolinian's "Bright Lights of 1957"<lb/>
plays again tonight in Austin Audi-<lb/>
torium at eight o'clock.<lb/>
Jeaneel Teanders Dixieland Com-<lb/>
bo will be among the featured at-<lb/>
'ractions along with lovely marporette,<lb/>
Marvis Edwards and comedian Bubba<lb/>
Driver. Under the direction of vet-<lb/>
ran j layhouse director and actor,<lb/>
harlie Briggs, the talent show will<lb/>
also star campus beauty queens in a<lb/>
skit entitled "Standing on the Cor-<lb/>
ner Written and directed by Briggs,<lb/>
he and Driver will also be featured<lb/>
along with the coeds.<lb/>
Comedians and uke-playeis Arthur<lb/>
DeStout and Bucky Monroe will aid<lb/>
Driver and Briggs in their acts de-<lb/>
signed to lay the audience in the<lb/>
aisles. Especially popular with last<lb/>
night's audience was talented Rosalie<lb/>
Dalton who exhibited a tap dance,<lb/>
and crooner O. B. Gilley, a veteran<lb/>
of many campus talent shows. O. B.<lb/>
will be accompanied by ; ianist Jerry<lb/>
Powell who arranged Gilley's com-<lb/>
positions for the piano.<lb/>
Dances<lb/>
Also featured will be singer Jackie<lb/>
Parker, accompanied by Mac Ed-<lb/>
mondson, and dancers Gayle Clapp and<lb/>
Lil Rogers. Lynn Bane, lady comed-<lb/>
ienne left the audience roari?g with<lb/>
her display of dramatic comedy. Ra-<lb/>
chel Cordova, the Argentine ballad<lb/>
singer, will sing Latin American<lb/>
songs.<lb/>
Driver's act was acclaimed by the<lb/>
audience last night as one of the<lb/>
funniest performances to be given in<lb/>
any show at East Carolina. His and<lb/>
Briggs' rendition of the popular<lb/>
Harry Belafonte calypso tune "Bana-<lb/>
na Boat Song" also appeared as<lb/>
pleasing to the first-night viewers.<lb/>
Others<lb/>
Marvis Edwards will give her maj<lb/>
Dot McCo) and Jack Everlon will be crowned king and queen of the<lb/>
business department's annual Valentine Ball to be held in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
tomorrow night. They were selected by students in the department.<lb/>
(J. D. Henry photo)<lb/>
Annual Valentine Dance<lb/>
Scheduled Tomorrow Night<lb/>
The annual Valentine Dance spon-<lb/>
sored by the two business organiza-<lb/>
tions, the Future Business Leaders of<lb/>
America a?id Pi Omega Pi frater-<lb/>
nity, will be Veld tomorrow night in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium from 8:30 until<lb/>
11:30.<lb/>
Daring the course of the semi-<lb/>
formal af air, Dot McCoy, of Kinston,<lb/>
and Jack Everton, from Columbia, will<lb/>
mith Blues. Teaneel Teande: 's com-<lb/>
bo will play a variety of Dixieland<lb/>
Jazz numbers and accompany various<lb/>
others.<lb/>
The East Carolinian has sponsored<lb/>
a talent slow for the past few<lb/>
years. All roceeds go toward sending<lb/>
members of the newspaper staff to<lb/>
the annual Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
Association convention in New York<lb/>
orette act to the tune of "Blacks- City early next quarter<lb/>
Candidates For Phi Sigma Pi Sweetheart<lb/>
Cast Selected For Mister<lb/>
Roberts; West, Driver Star<lb/>
Kenneth West and Bubba Driver<lb/>
will play leading roles in the up-<lb/>
coming playhouse production of<lb/>
Mister Roberts director Charlie<lb/>
Briggs announced this week. A major<lb/>
workshop production, the immortal<lb/>
Navy comedy -will play March 13<lb/>
and 14 in McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
A cast of 30 people are included in<lb/>
the play. There is only one female role<lb/>
while 29 males compose the crew of<lb/>
t e U. S. S. Reluctant. This two-act<lb/>
play enjoyed one of the lengthiest<lb/>
runs in the L.story of the legitimate<lb/>
theater.<lb/>
West, a junior, from Wilson, will<lb/>
recreate the lead role of Lt. (jg)<lb/>
Douglas Roberts. He will be remem-<lb/>
bered for hia stirring performance<lb/>
in last spring's "Detective Story<lb/>
PuWer Role<lb/>
Driver, a native of Richmond, Va<lb/>
has been selected as the hilarious,<lb/>
weak-spined casanova, Ensign Frank<lb/>
Thurlowe Pulver. "Driver is one of<lb/>
the few natural comics -n campus<lb/>
and can be relied upon to give a<lb/>
praiseworthy portrayal of Pulver<lb/>
BrigK8 commented.<lb/>
The philosophical doctor will be<lb/>
brought to life by Tommy Hull of<lb/>
Durham. Hull is no stranger to<lb/>
East Carolina audiences since he has<lb/>
been active in practically every play<lb/>
sented by the Playhouse in the<lb/>
iat three years.<lb/>
Captain Morton<lb/>
A year ago, in "Detective Story<lb/>
the role of fiery Detective McLeod<lb/>
was rortrayed by Al Ca-r of Rocky<lb/>
Mount. He returns now to play the<lb/>
role of another such fiery character<lb/>
in the form of Captain Morton. The<lb/>
skippeT of the "Reluctant" was the<lb/>
incentive for open revolt by thP c-ew<lb/>
members and officers.<lb/>
Three newcomers to the McGinnis<lb/>
stage are introduced in the crew roles.<lb/>
Jay Robhins as Lindstrom, Don Has-<lb/>
kins as Wiley, and Gene Hunter a?<lb/>
Stephonowski are teamed with two<lb/>
veteran performers A. B. Benfield as<lb/>
Insign and Bob Tyndall as Mnnnion.<lb/>
Stan Jones returns to the footlights<lb/>
to act as the wise old saHy Chief<lb/>
Dowdy. Bill Briley an Schlommer and<lb/>
Benny Waters as Gerhart round out<lb/>
the enlisted personnel of the AF-116.<lb/>
Frank Bush of Jacksonville, an<lb/>
unexpected newcomer to the play-<lb/>
house, has been cast a Dolan, the<lb/>
persistent yeoman. Briggs pointed<lb/>
out that he "may well become the<lb/>
new clown prince of the greasepaint.<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
Tickets for the production will go on<lb/>
sale registration day. Only one thou-<lb/>
sand student tickets will be available<lb/>
for the scheduled two-day presenta-<lb/>
tion. Admission has been set at fifty<lb/>
cents for students and faculty and<lb/>
one dollar for outside visitors.<lb/>
e crowned as King and Queen of<lb/>
ILarts of the 1957 dance. The other<lb/>
candidates for king and queen will<lb/>
serve as the Royal Court.<lb/>
King and Queen<lb/>
The candidates for king and queen<lb/>
were chosen from junior and senior <lb/>
members of the two organization;<lb/>
elected by students of the Business<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
Besides the king and queen, the<lb/>
other members of tLe court are: Willa<lb/>
Rue Bowen, Rocky Mount; Jean Har-<lb/>
gett, New Bern; Martha Ann John-<lb/>
son, Benson; Lorraine Sutton, Faison;<lb/>
Greenville Banks, Maple; Mack Ed-<lb/>
mondson, Kinston; Alton Howard,<lb/>
Greenville; 1. K. Williamson, Prince-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Changes<lb/>
Severa. major changes have been<lb/>
mnde this year concerning the pro-<lb/>
cedure to be observed at the annual<lb/>
dance. The King and Queen of Hearts<lb/>
along with their Royal Court will be<lb/>
resented at the beginning of the<lb/>
dance and will be drowned just before<lb/>
? ntermission.<lb/>
This year a grand march in which<lb/>
everyone will be invited to participate<lb/>
will take the place of the usual figure.<lb/>
'rhe king and queen, the court, and<lb/>
officers of the two business organi-<lb/>
zation will lead the grand march<lb/>
around the auditorium.<lb/>
Other features added for this year's<lb/>
dance will be a free coat-checking<lb/>
service and refreshments.<lb/>
Dreamers Play<lb/>
Mu-ic for the dance will be fur-<lb/>
nished by Calvin Chesson's Dreamers<lb/>
and admission will be a dollar per<lb/>
couple.<lb/>
Fred Dav-nport and Isaac K. Wil-<lb/>
t'amaon, co-chairmen of the dance,<lb/>
ind Mrs. Charity Risher, advisor l?<lb/>
he dance committee said thp.t a<lb/>
Teat deal of work had been put into<lb/>
the preparation for the dance and<lb/>
that they expect the occasion to be a<lb/>
grand success.<lb/>
Duplicate Copies<lb/>
Of Code Will Be<lb/>
Distributed<lb/>
By OLIVER WILLIAMS<lb/>
An extensive indoctrination of the<lb/>
:onor system was given a vote of<lb/>
pproval by the student legislature<lb/>
ast night after being recommended<lb/>
v the Dean's Advisory Council.<lb/>
A committee studying the possibi-<lb/>
lities of establishing an honor sys-<lb/>
tem here suggested that the student<lb/>
government distribute duplicated<lb/>
copies of the committee'3 honor code<lb/>
as a means of indoctrinating the stu-<lb/>
dents with the proposed honor jlan.<lb/>
After the students are fully familiar<lb/>
with the system, Horace Rose, chair-<lb/>
man of the honor committee, sug-<lb/>
gested that a new classroom vote be<lb/>
taken to .iet if mo.v students are in<lb/>
favor of such a plan.<lb/>
Earlier Vote<lb/>
Li an earlier vote in the classrooms,<lb/>
'he students voted 1,018 for an honor<lb/>
system and 649 against such a plan,<lb/>
leaving approximately half of the<lb/>
students indifferent.<lb/>
Chairman Rose told the legislature<lb/>
that one class was allowed to conduct<lb/>
an informal debate on the honor<lb/>
Bystem and that most of the class<lb/>
opposed it, giving the following reas-<lb/>
' ns for doing so:<lb/>
1. The students are not ready for<lb/>
the honor system. Indoctrination<lb/>
should begin at the first of the fresh-<lb/>
man year.<lb/>
2. T'rere is no college tradition about<lb/>
an honor system. The development of<lb/>
one would take time and thus would<lb/>
be of little use now.<lb/>
3. Even if most of the students<lb/>
are honest, the few who wouid cheat<lb/>
would come to a time of reckoning<lb/>
sooner or later and reflect unfavor-<lb/>
ably on the college. The student<lb/>
making this point said nobody could<lb/>
"get by" indefinitely.<lb/>
4. A student feels more comfortable<lb/>
if a proctor is present during the<lb/>
administration of tests and examina-<lb/>
tions. When this is the case, be feels<lb/>
that he cannot be falsely accused<lb/>
by someone who may not like aim.<lb/>
He feels also that he is not respons-<lb/>
ible for reporting offenses.<lb/>
Judicial Body<lb/>
The honor code that is being for-<lb/>
mulated by the student government<lb/>
committee would establish an Honor<lb/>
Council which would act as a judicial<lb/>
body to try cases of students ac-<lb/>
cused of breaking the honor code.<lb/>
Of'enses to the honor code listed by<lb/>
the committee include cheating, lying,<lb/>
stealing, breaking one's pledged<lb/>
word of honor, or in any way acting<lb/>
dishonorably.<lb/>
It was also pointed out by the com-<lb/>
mittee that all scholastic work,<lb/>
whether it be in lecture room, li-<lb/>
brary, the .student's room, or else-<lb/>
where is under the honor code; thus<lb/>
any aid given to a fellow student or<lb/>
received from a fellow-student, with-<lb/>
out the consent of the professor, in<lb/>
tests, assignments or examinations,<lb/>
is cheating.<lb/>
Reporting Breach<lb/>
Under the proposed amendment,<lb/>
studetttfl who commit one of the in-<lb/>
ductions of the code will be pledged"<lb/>
to turn themselves over to the Honor<lb/>
Council. If one student sees another<lb/>
ch ating, he will be pledged to re-<lb/>
See HONOR, Page 4<lb/>
Election Of Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Sweetheart Set Thursday<lb/>
Pat Cameron<lb/>
Ragsdale<lb/>
A campus-wide election for the<lb/>
qieen and court of the Sweetheart<lb/>
Ball sponsored annually by Phi Sigma<lb/>
: fraternity will be held Thursday,<lb/>
Pehrary 21 from 8:00 until 4:30.<lb/>
The annual semi-formal dance has<lb/>
been chedu!ed th;s year for Satur-<lb/>
day night, March 2 at 8:00. The Caro-<lb/>
linians will play for this year's affair.<lb/>
Phi Sig Sweetheart<lb/>
One of the highlights of the big<lb/>
dance each year is t' e crowning of the<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi Sweetheart. Candidates<lb/>
for the sweetheart queen have been<lb/>
chosen by the dormitories on campus<lb/>
and the queen will be choaen by pop-<lb/>
ular vote intho?.aaJOjU8-wide election<lb/>
next week. The winner "will be an-<lb/>
nounced and crowned at the oance<lb/>
and the other candidates will serve as<lb/>
the court.<lb/>
Candidate<lb/>
Candidates for Phi Sig Sweetheart<lb/>
and the respective dormitory they<lb/>
represent are: Peggie Smith, Flem-<lb/>
ing; Ann Cookee, Umstead; Sybil<lb/>
Kelly, Jarvis; Martha Jane Hammond,<lb/>
Slay; Ann Hall, Gotten; Katie Ann<lb/>
Peel, Garrett; and Pat Cameron, Rags-<lb/>
dale. Pictures of the seven candidates<lb/>
will be placed in the college union the<lb/>
day before the campus-wide election.<lb/>
The figure this year will he com-<lb/>
posed of the officers of Phi Sigma<lb/>
Pi, their dates, and the girls of the<lb/>
court.<lb/>
According to Horace Rose, Presi-<lb/>
dent of the fraternity, the large<lb/>
Wright Auditorium will be decorated<lb/>
in abMBftUiong for this year's dance<lb/>
and the adnullfait price will be one<lb/>
dollar. "???<lb/>
?<lb/>
k'<lb/>
<pb facs="00038418_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
?- EAST CAftOLlMlAN<lb/>
THURSDAY FEBRUARY 14 iffl<lb/>
Negro Entertainment. <lb/>
Negroes are among the top entertainers<lb/>
in the world today.<lb/>
Personalities such as Louis Armstrong,<lb/>
Sammy Davis, Jr Pearl Bailey, Eartha Kitt,<lb/>
Harrv Belafonte, Sarah Vaughn, Fats Domino,<lb/>
Nat King CAe, and Billy Eckstine are only<lb/>
a few of the Negro entertainers who are cur-<lb/>
rently playing in movies, featured stars of out-<lb/>
standing television shows on all the major<lb/>
networks, top recording artists, and leading<lb/>
night club entertainers.<lb/>
Thev specialize in jazz, the current musi-<lb/>
cal craze all over the world. This younger<lb/>
generate n appreciates jazz, especially when it<lb/>
is presented by top performers as those men-<lb/>
tioned above.<lb/>
L uis Armstrong, who has been called one<lb/>
of America- most influential good-will am-<lb/>
bassadors by taking his music all ovr the<lb/>
world, told an Associated Press reporter:<lb/>
'There's only two kinds (music)?good and<lb/>
bad. Its no matter where in the world you are.<lb/>
Just like there's no difference between classics<lb/>
and jazz. The man writing each had the same<lb/>
kind of th ught?right from the heart<lb/>
Quite a few East Carolina students will<lb/>
pack their bags tomorrow and head for Caro-<lb/>
lina and the "Mardi Gras" to be held there<lb/>
1 ver the weekend. The annual affair this year<lb/>
features a fellom called Louis Armstrong. Fats<lb/>
Domino was a guest at the University back in<lb/>
Armstrong appeared on State Col-<lb/>
lege's campus last Wednesday night.<lb/>
L uis Armstrong could have appeared for<lb/>
?i concert and dance in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
recently instead of Tommy Tucker and at<lb/>
1250 less except for two reasons:<lb/>
1 Negroes don't entertain at East Caro-<lb/>
lina College. The c liege charter says this is<lb/>
an institution for the education of white men<lb/>
and women only. Nothing is said concerning<lb/>
Negroes as entertainers, but they don't en-<lb/>
tain here. .<lb/>
2 A ruling now in effect (which should<lb/>
be changed) prohibits having dances except<lb/>
, t weekends. Les Brown and his outstanding<lb/>
ip also c. uld have played here instead of<lb/>
Tucker at $250 less, but the ruling prevented<lb/>
East Carolina's Student Government As-<lb/>
sociation Council members last week whole-<lb/>
heartedly approved including outstanding Ne-<lb/>
groes on the yearly entertainment series sched-<lb/>
ule. The recommendation was scheduled to go<lb/>
.re the student legislature last night.<lb/>
The East Carolinian doesn't advocate an<lb/>
entertainment series which includes Negro<lb/>
-entertainers s lely. We do feel, however, that<lb/>
when outstanding Negro bands or singers<lb/>
ran be secured, steps should centamly be<lb/>
taken to take advantage of such an opportunity.<lb/>
Jimmy Ferrell;<lb/>
After Three Panty<lb/>
Raids An Armful<lb/>
Of Hanging News<lb/>
AFTER THREE PANTY raids, I<lb/>
was pretty interested in witnessing<lb/>
a campus hanging.<lb/>
THE FIRST FLOOR of the dorm<lb/>
usually reaches a state of quietness?<lb/>
or semi-quietness? around 1:30 or<lb/>
2 a. m. in the morning?not always<lb/>
but usually.<lb/>
You can siph with relief and settle<lb/>
down for a few hours of sleep when<lb/>
the last guest leaves a bull session<lb/>
or card game and asks his host,<lb/>
"You got a sex magazine I can take<lb/>
back to the room with me? Still<lb/>
won't be able to go to sleep<lb/>
Tha dorm laundry men make final<lb/>
pre arations" for hauling the night's<lb/>
take and things calm down consid-<lb/>
erably after some early-morning<lb/>
bather sinpr his last encore and trots<lb/>
off to bed.<lb/>
A knocking on your door interrupts<lb/>
the peace.<lb/>
"I've pot an armful of news for<lb/>
you a voice calls. "Somebody is<lb/>
heing hanged in effigy. Thought you'd<lb/>
like to know<lb/>
"Who<lb/>
"I don't know. But they're over vn<lb/>
front of the dining hall<lb/>
You think seriously for a moment.<lb/>
"If t is thing they're hanging is sup-<lb/>
posed to be me I'm not going to cover<lb/>
it Then you check the latest edition.<lb/>
Theres nothing in print about social<lb/>
frats, drinking, or culture?it should<lb/>
he .afe.<lb/>
Controversial Currents<lb/>
The Judgement Day<lb/>
By OLIVER WILLIAM-<lb/>
Honor System<lb/>
NEWS IS NEWS, and by Friday<lb/>
you're beginning to worry about<lb/>
:iing up next week's front page.<lb/>
So you redress, slip over to the dining<lb/>
hall and find the area as quiet as a<lb/>
?riavryard- -parking spaces galore,<lb/>
trlowing street lamps that seem big-<lb/>
ger than ever amid the darkness and<lb/>
misty rain, and a city police car going<lb/>
the wrong way down a campus one-<lb/>
way street.<lb/>
Not a coed in sight. No lynchers<lb/>
around anywhere.<lb/>
THE CHIEF strolls by. "I saw<lb/>
?me boy. over there a while ago<lb/>
dancing or something. Don't know<lb/>
whether they were high school kids<lb/>
or college people. Gone now<lb/>
Billy Arnold<lb/>
Southern Writings Come Of Age<lb/>
As the student legislators attend the SGA<lb/>
meeting next Wednesday night they will be<lb/>
faced with one of the most important deeis-<lb/>
m the history of the college. They will have<lb/>
Importunity of voting on an amendment<lb/>
that will introduce the honor system at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Incidents like the one in which March of<lb/>
Dimes cannisters were stolen or broken into<lb/>
and the plight of the Circle K Club's dollar<lb/>
project have caused some to point out that<lb/>
honor may be lacking at East Carolina.<lb/>
S me students feel that if the problem of<lb/>
stealing and cheating were taken out of the<lb/>
hands of the instructors and turned over to<lb/>
the students incidents like these would dis-<lb/>
appear. .<lb/>
The honor system would be beneficial not<lb/>
only to the college, but also to the individual<lb/>
student. It would attract a high quality of<lb/>
students and weed out those who are dis-<lb/>
honorable. It will give the student a sense of<lb/>
responsibility and a feeling of trustworthiness.<lb/>
It will assure the student that everyone<lb/>
has the same opportunity to make good and<lb/>
it will increase the prestige of the college in<lb/>
the eyes of its students, the public, and other<lb/>
colleges and universities.<lb/>
There are enough students who have ex-<lb/>
pressed their desire to have the honor system<lb/>
to indicate that there would be enough that<lb/>
would obey and enforce it, thereby assuring<lb/>
its successful operation.<lb/>
The students have shown in a poll con-<lb/>
ducted by the administration that they are<lb/>
in fav r of the honor system and the East<lb/>
Carolinian joins these in urging the members<lb/>
of the SGA to pass the proposed amend-<lb/>
ment that will put it into effect next quarter.<lb/>
AROUND EIGHT-THIRTY you<lb/>
head for the cafeteria and breakfast<lb/>
and discover that the lynchers com-<lb/>
pleted their job sometime during t.e<lb/>
eariy morning.<lb/>
Coach and Mrs. Porter are seen<lb/>
h aving the post ofice. They don't look<lb/>
toward the tree.<lb/>
The stuffed monster hanging there<lb/>
diJn't resemble Coach Porter at all.<lb/>
Rather, it reminded you of some of<lb/>
the people you've met since enrolling<lb/>
at East Carolina?overstuffed in a<lb/>
lot of ways.<lb/>
We hate losing to a smaller school<lb/>
with a total enrollment less than that<lb/>
of our freshman class and where<lb/>
some of our students go to rack up<lb/>
quality points.<lb/>
But somebody has to take the<lb/>
blame. Or rather, some people have<lb/>
to blame some individual.<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the Students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division, Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
First Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March 1956<lb/>
Entered ft second-class matter December 3, 1925 at<lb/>
the U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under<lb/>
the act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
Jimmy Ferrell Mary Ellen Williams<lb/>
Editor Buwness Manager<lb/>
Assistant Editors JAN F RABY,<lb/>
0I4VER WILLIAMS<lb/>
Feature Editor - JAN"LS2i<lb/>
Snorts Editor BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
NEWS STAFF Martha Wilson, Bryan Harmon,<lb/>
" Claudia Todd, Rosemary Eagles, Kathryn Johnson,<lb/>
Dee Hux, Lois Ann Webb, Betty Gaylord, Lou<lb/>
Ann Rouse, Beverly Proctor, Marjorie Davis.<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF Edna Whitfield, Carolyn Smith<lb/>
-Staff Artist  Billy Arnold<lb/>
Circulation Manager Lacy Harris, Peggy Stewnrt<lb/>
Exchange Editor  Mrs. &amp;uiJabk<lb/>
Editorial Advisor Mi? Mary H. Green.<lb/>
Financial Advisor  Dr. Clinton .?<lb/>
Technical Advisor -  Sherman M. Park.<lb/>
Printed hs-Safffrew Printing Co Greenville, N.<lb/>
ELECTION FEVER is spreading<lb/>
around campus like a common cold.<lb/>
If this prevailing interest in the up-<lb/>
coming SGA election continues, you<lb/>
can look for a red, hot battle and pos-<lb/>
sibly a record vote in March. That's<lb/>
exactly what the newspaper would<lb/>
like to see. (Interest in student gov-<lb/>
ernment needs a shot in the arm.<lb/>
Cam jus politics is being talked in<lb/>
the college union, the cafeteria, and<lb/>
in Umstead and Slay?late, late at<lb/>
night and early in the mornings. The<lb/>
East Carolinian has received reports<lb/>
from reliable sources that the presi-<lb/>
dential race will find only two can-<lb/>
didates seeking the top office.<lb/>
Many of the office-seekers have<lb/>
been campaigning for quite a while.<lb/>
There have been a lot of plans laid,<lb/>
a lot of changes made, and as I un-<lb/>
derstand it, a touch of back stabbing<lb/>
already.<lb/>
Those who figure they're playing<lb/>
it smart (party movements and that<lb/>
sort of thing) might not be playing<lb/>
it so smart after all.<lb/>
And I read somewhere that there's<lb/>
been only one SGA president from<lb/>
Greenville during the past 50 years.<lb/>
Let's see now, next year will run<lb/>
that figure to 51.<lb/>
Ever since the early day. of our<lb/>
nation, there has !ei-n talk of The<lb/>
Great Southern Renaissance of Lit-<lb/>
erature. The most outstanding critics,<lb/>
writers and thinkers down through<lb/>
the years have anxiously predicted<lb/>
and awaited this great production<lb/>
from below the Maon-Dixon line.<lb/>
Every other section of our country<lb/>
has already contributed to te ebb<lb/>
and flow of American Literature,<lb/>
turning out such notables as the<lb/>
West's John Steinbeck, the Middle<lb/>
West's Earnest Hemingway, F. Scott<lb/>
Fitzgerald and Mark Twain, and the<lb/>
North East's early mammoths like<lb/>
Longfellow, O'Neil. Hawthorne, Em-<lb/>
erson and Thoreau.<lb/>
Through the ages, the world of<lb/>
literature has looked toward the<lb/>
South and ? redicted that soon?some-<lb/>
time?it would spawn the world lea-<lb/>
ders in the field of writing. For many<lb/>
reasons they have wai'ed and looked.<lb/>
Now, it seems, that time has arrived.<lb/>
And it has creeped up on those who<lb/>
waited so anxiously.<lb/>
Perhaps Thomas Wolfe was the hint<lb/>
?of things to come. Wolfe took the<lb/>
taw, lonely plains and hills of North<lb/>
Carolina and transformed them into<lb/>
beautiful language. He tried to speak<lb/>
the unspeakable things of the South-<lb/>
erner's heart, tried to put onto paper<lb/>
the loves and fears, the hates and<lb/>
sorrow- :ind uncertainties that burn<lb/>
deeply in the Soul of the South?<lb/>
that undefinable quality that is so<lb/>
much a part of the Southerner, that<lb/>
makes him so vastly different and<lb/>
?part from the rest oT the nation. He<lb/>
did nol succeed fully, but he came as<lb/>
close, possibly, as any other writer<lb/>
of this or any other day.<lb/>
Since Wolfe, there have come many<lb/>
great names from this region of the<lb/>
Country. William Faulkner, of Mis-<lb/>
si&amp;sippi, Pulitzer Prize winner, is<lb/>
generally regarded as the world's<lb/>
top content orary writer today. Faulk-<lb/>
ner, too, in his way, ha tried to ex-<lb/>
press the strange, complex face- and<lb/>
depths of the South.<lb/>
Another writer of some note, w 0<lb/>
hails from Georgia, is Truman Capote.<lb/>
Capote was taken North with his<lb/>
family early in his life and ha.4 writ-<lb/>
ten niost.y about life in the city, how-<lb/>
ever, he has turned out some unique<lb/>
work about the deep South. Capote's<lb/>
writing contains a weird element of<lb/>
the supernatural, weaved into his<lb/>
tales of tVe South in such a way M<lb/>
to capture a flicker of the superstition<lb/>
and feeling of the romantic that still<lb/>
persists deep in the roots- of our her-<lb/>
itage.<lb/>
Tennessee Williams, whose work<lb/>
is being recognized currently in the<lb/>
theater, the movies and in book form,<lb/>
is still another Southerner who has<lb/>
attempted to depict th meaning of<lb/>
life in the South. Williams depends<lb/>
upon stark realism in the dramatic<lb/>
field for his effect and expression,<lb/>
using mostly Southern locales and<lb/>
characterisation. Tnongfe Williams'<lb/>
writings are rich with the basic moods<lb/>
and emotion applicable to every<lb/>
section of our country, he does delve<lb/>
into the richness of the South for<lb/>
color, for sectional focus, and for<lb/>
that same undefinable quality that<lb/>
is the soul of our region.<lb/>
Eudora Welty, another ItiaaiMip-<lb/>
pian, has shown a deep insight into<lb/>
that same uniqu. Southern person-<lb/>
met before. Her short<lb/>
stories, wi ? ? dist act Southern<lb/>
?;  ? ; fee iged to catch<lb/>
some of I e flavor of tl e coarseness<lb/>
and primitiveneaa that eiuwines it-<lb/>
self into the cultuie and gentleness<lb/>
of the South.<lb/>
Perhaps the t mergence of Southern<lb/>
writer as leaders in the field of lit-<lb/>
erature at this present moment in<lb/>
modern times, is due to the per-<lb/>
plexed, drastic, uncertain flavor of<lb/>
the twentieth century. The South<lb/>
has long lied under the stress and<lb/>
bondage of harried times?ever since<lb/>
the Civil War?severed, cut off from<lb/>
the rc-t of the land, to live a strange<lb/>
and different life and to build the<lb/>
heritage that is now becoming such<lb/>
a huge part of world literature.<lb/>
This being the last issue of tl<lb/>
and exams ju.st around the -<lb/>
eided to print this appropriate art<lb/>
as printed originally in the D Tar<lb/>
Heel and parsed along tfl rn via Di<lb/>
art.<lb/>
"And it came to pas that n<lb/>
the morning of the last day ol tht<lb/>
there ar M a multitude uniting th<lb/>
and wailing. And there was mi<lb/>
nd gnashing of teeth for the da<lb/>
ment was at hand, and they w<lb/>
For they had left undone tho.se thin<lb/>
they ought t have done and had d<lb/>
which they ought not to hsve d<lb/>
there v.as DO help for it.<lb/>
"And there were many al<lb/>
d ran who had kept witter. 0<lb/>
all night, but it naught availeth.<lb/>
there were who ar 0M smiling<lb/>
had prepared themselves the way.<lb/>
straight the pth of knowledge. A<lb/>
wise nes were known t 1 SOON<lb/>
of midnight oil, but by other- tl<lb/>
called the curve-1 users. And th-<lb/>
arose and ate a hearty break!<lb/>
"And they vjame unto the<lb/>
I lace, and their hearts were I<lb/>
thtm. And they came to pai<lb/>
pass out. And some of them rep<lb/>
riotous living, and bemoaned their<lb/>
thev had not a prayer. And at th<lb/>
there came among them one kn<lb/>
instructor, he - f the diabolical sn<lb/>
passed papers am.ng them, and w<lb/>
his way. And many and varied<lb/>
answers which were given, for some<lb/>
teachings had fallen among fertih<lb/>
ethers had fallen fallow among<lb/>
while still others had fallen flat.<lb/>
"And some were there who wi<lb/>
an hour, others wrote for two, some I<lb/>
away sorrowful. And of these man<lb/>
up a little bull in hopes of paci:<lb/>
instructor, for these were the one<lb/>
not a prayer. And when they had :<lb/>
they gathered up their belongings ai<lb/>
away quietly, each in his own direr-<lb/>
each one vowing to himself in his ma<lb/>
'I shall not pass this way again bul<lb/>
a long road that has no turning<lb/>
NOW THEY'RE SAYING<lb/>
building with the dancing patio if<lb/>
Student Union, but the College Uni<lb/>
AND SPEAKING OF CONTROYI<lb/>
IAL CURRENTS  a great deal is b.<lb/>
said about honor in the classroom, an;<lb/>
little is being said about honor around '<lb/>
campus. IVs almost like charity?which<lb/>
gins at home.<lb/>
Bryan Harrison<lb/>
A Golden Day<lb/>
SAUDI ARABIA'S King Saud has<lb/>
packed up his fancy headpieces, dark<lb/>
glasses, 75-member party, and haa<lb/>
taken off for a jaunt in Spain.<lb/>
He has agreed to let the United<lb/>
States continue using the Dhahran<lb/>
airfield for five more years while<lb/>
Faudi Arabia will receive "military<lb/>
equipment (jet planes), services and<lb/>
training Saud's country especially<lb/>
wanted more jet planes.<lb/>
The President presented the king<lb/>
ith"a"16-pieee blond desk set ani an<lb/>
Elsenhower oil painting of an outdoor<lb/>
Colorado scene before he left fer<lb/>
Spain. Just about everything but Ike's<lb/>
golf bag, I'd say.<lb/>
March 8, 1907 was indeed a golden<lb/>
day for some. It was tne day that<lb/>
East Carolina was founded. I can<lb/>
only imagine that the Founding Fa-<lb/>
thers envisioned great things for East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
I'll bet they dreamed that fifty<lb/>
years hence it would be a school of<lb/>
deep-rooted heritage with an inspir-<lb/>
ing and motivating atmosphere. This<lb/>
was the spirit in which East Carolina<lb/>
was founded.<lb/>
What would be more ideal than a<lb/>
. jrreat rebirth of this spirit in the<lb/>
year of East Carolina's Golden An-<lb/>
niversary ?<lb/>
The Founding Fathers left room<lb/>
for a lot. They left room for in-<lb/>
tellectual growth and maturity?not<lb/>
only the maturity that comes with<lb/>
years, but also the maturity that<lb/>
cornea with effort.<lb/>
Motivation comes as a desire on<lb/>
the part of the individual as a re-<lb/>
sult of inspiration and the proper in-<lb/>
centive. So where will our inspiration<lb/>
spring from in this desire to found a<lb/>
renaissance of spirit?<lb/>
To whose lot falls the task of re-<lb/>
newing the spirit in which East Caro-<lb/>
lina had its beginning? Where and<lb/>
10 whom do the students look for<lb/>
inspiration? -<lb/>
First of all, who says that East<lb/>
Carolina is lacking in these elements?<lb/>
Most of the complaints that I hear<lb/>
are from the instructors. Many blame<lb/>
the students for lack of initiative<lb/>
m learning on their own out of class.<lb/>
Most professors that I have.have<lb/>
stressed that we discuss things in<lb/>
class. They claim we have no desire<lb/>
to go to the library and dig for<lb/>
background and parallel reading. They<lb/>
say students do not read good books<lb/>
for their own enjoyment and knowl-<lb/>
edge. Criticism came especially high<lb/>
during religious emphasis week when<lb/>
there was such a poor turnout of<lb/>
student.<lb/>
I think most of their criticsm is<lb/>
justi'ied and, in many respects, true.<lb/>
I believe that these points are among<lb/>
those that are holding East Caro-<lb/>
lina back from full-fledged maturi-<lb/>
ty, tf! believe that?in some respects?<lb/>
the students are lacking in initiative<lb/>
and it comes up to the surface in<lb/>
the surrounding atmosphere. At the<lb/>
same time, I believe the students<lb/>
have an understandable plight.<lb/>
They are right, religious emphasis<lb/>
week experienced a poor turnout. But<lb/>
how many professors did you see<lb/>
at the meetings? A mere handfull.<lb/>
I'll bet the students who do their<lb/>
studies in the library every night<lb/>
could vouch that they don't see all<lb/>
the faculty over there and those<lb/>
they see are the same ones night af-<lb/>
ter night. How many instructors do<lb/>
you have that allow, through their<lb/>
method and manner, class discussion?<lb/>
How many professors ask you to<lb/>
come to their office and have a talk<lb/>
and how many go nut of their way<lb/>
to establish a eraonsl contact with<lb/>
the studentIt ia the out-of-class re-<lb/>
lationship t at inspires the student.<lb/>
It is the personal touch that pro-<lb/>
vides the incentive for learning. How<lb/>
many make you aware that they are<lb/>
constantly stiiving to help YOU?the<lb/>
individual?to learn?<lb/>
East Carolina needs a renaissrnce<lb/>
in spirit and atmosphere. An intel-<lb/>
lectual movement is needed to help<lb/>
it achieve its ideal. The faculty should<lb/>
take the responsibility in leading any<lb/>
intellectual movement. It is here and<lb/>
only here that IN can look for ins-<lb/>
piration.<lb/>
It is time that "East Caroiinianism"<lb/>
came of age. It should take on a new<lb/>
meaning?one which implies motiva-<lb/>
tion, inspiration, and maturity, rather<lb/>
than the sluggard, lifeless connota-<lb/>
tion that the term has 1. <lb/>
There is only one thing keeping<lb/>
East Carolina from growing up. In-<lb/>
dolence. Indolence in the leaders, re-<lb/>
s'tlting in indolence on the part of<lb/>
the followers.<lb/>
It would be great if we all lived<lb/>
fifty more years and were able to<lb/>
come hack to East Carolina's cen-<lb/>
tennial celebration. It would be ideal<lb/>
if we could find a college of heritage,<lb/>
honor, and above all, maturity.<lb/>
It would be t golden day indeed.<lb/>
Pot Pourri<lb/>
Letter From Cuba<lb/>
By JAX RABY<lb/>
While everyone is down in th'<lb/>
frc-m the latest 1 w blow to our prid<lb/>
wit, the AC game, here's a letter fr<lb/>
former high school classmate of mint<lb/>
was first quoted recently in The Loud<lb/>
er, the Elizabeth City High Sen ol <lb/>
of which I'm an ex-staff member. i<lb/>
goes to show that while things may be<lb/>
here, they're always worse elsewhere.<lb/>
Havana. Cuba, Jan. 7. 1"<lb/>
Dear Students,<lb/>
I don't want this letter to Bound<lb/>
a sermon, but I do want to say that<lb/>
don't know how lucky you are. Most I<lb/>
States citizens don't. Living here in<lb/>
these past four months has made me n<lb/>
how much Americans have for which I<lb/>
thankful. Perhaps you have seen in the<lb/>
pers that for about two months Cuba<lb/>
been in a state of revolution. President I<lb/>
tista stays in power by force. Other factj<lb/>
here in Cuba want to be in power. WI<lb/>
you pass the police stations here there<lb/>
sandbags in front and policemen stand 1<lb/>
with machine guns. In four provin<lb/>
Cuba now there are no constitutional gua<lb/>
tees, which means that officials can kill any-<lb/>
body and not be touched by law. In Oriente.<lb/>
the eastern end of the island, the Banguai<lb/>
church basketball team was debating whetl<lb/>
er or rot they should go to a nearby I<lb/>
for the tournament because a number of<lb/>
young men in that area had leen I and<lb/>
dead.<lb/>
If you were a university student,<lb/>
would have had several weeks of vacation<lb/>
before the Christmas holidays began. How<lb/>
wonderful, I can hear you say. The stu-<lb/>
dents here don't think so. You see. it means<lb/>
that someday they'll finish their course but<lb/>
who knows when. Each time political trouble<lb/>
comes, the university is closed for fear the<lb/>
students will take part as a mob.<lb/>
One other thing, appreciate your sch<lb/>
Cuba has free public education but the<lb/>
schools are so poor, the teachers are so<lb/>
unconcerned (speaking in general) about<lb/>
the students as individuals that any parent<lb/>
who possibly can will pay to send his child<lb/>
to a private school. Appreciate the interest-<lb/>
ing textbooks, Audio-visual aids, student<lb/>
council, and the usually friendly atmosphere<lb/>
between students and teachers.<lb/>
(Barbara Ann Smith)<lb/>
Quoting . . .<lb/>
"It is a good thing to be rich, and it<lb/>
is a good thing to be strong, but it is a better<lb/>
thing to be beloved of many friends<lb/>
?Euripides<lb/>
M<lb/>
TH<lb/>
?? ?ruiiiimi m,i iw<lb/>
<pb facs="00038418_0003"/><lb/>
V, FEBRUARY 14, iy57<lb/>
r h E<lb/>
CROWS NEST<lb/>
ition<lb/>
I<lb/>
itb<lb/>
Pl<lb/>
de<lb/>
B JOHNNY HUDSON<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
sbs<lb/>
PAGE THIUCI<lb/>
Elon Invading ECC Saturday Night<lb/>
Lexington, N. C. to-<lb/>
ri; are being made for<lb/>
State Tournament<lb/>
. 'fair which seems<lb/>
omc m Lexington<lb/>
waj February 27th and<lb/>
Hard 1st.<lb/>
once again prove<lb/>
a much stronger<lb/>
l : At the jiresent time,<lb/>
 State's nine eluba<lb/>
records. Only<lb/>
? and Appalachian<lb/>
av rage.<lb/>
among conference<lb/>
igh with Elon, the<lb/>
n Losing their<lb/>
? - of the season,<lb/>
ristians have 191<lb/>
ugh there is plentj of time<lb/>
the Bears i Lenoir Khyne!<lb/>
, ihe first team tn tnan years<lb/>
the tournament with an un-<lb/>
conference mark. Coach<lb/>
Hamilton's club has been the<lb/>
the conference this year,<lb/>
? one defeat marring its<lb/>
opening season loss to<lb/>
Vbbey. I he Bears must still<lb/>
Elon, and High Point, all<lb/>
me court, but it is still<lb/>
someone will put a stop<lb/>
rs before tournament ac<lb/>
i fact about the<lb/>
 enl - that it is<lb/>
e regu ar season<lb/>
? r is able to take<lb/>
a si . Only East<lb/>
and High Point<lb/>
a omplish the<lb/>
won loop honor<lb/>
. d in second I<lb/>
. E (<lb/>
awings have an important,<lb/>
mining the champion. The<lb/>
. does not act like the At-I<lb/>
it with the first place team'<lb/>
eighth, the second vs. the I<lb/>
i h? North State divides<lb/>
seeded teams into sep-<lb/>
kets with the third and<lb/>
clubfi drawing for separate<lb/>
also. These four first divi-<lb/>
then draw for their op-<lb/>
W1 of the bottom four teams,<lb/>
it i- possible for the No.<lb/>
nave to face the fifth ranked<lb/>
opening night and then the<lb/>
ked team in the second round<lb/>
iching the finals.<lb/>
irnament was filled<lb/>
? irit, Lenoir<lb/>
? ?. - ? rol ably iis-<lb/>
l hi? were few<lb/>
; for ECC, the largest<lb/>
? , . inference.<lb/>
allj a conflict between<lb/>
. ? irnament for ECC<lb/>
quarter ending<lb/>
. . e time. This year, the<lb/>
. held a week fol-<lb/>
should allow<lb/>
bring their own<lb/>
? a. It is a long way. but<lb/>
i full house in their<lb/>
p ftei 1 as indicated<lb/>
lid be ready by tour-<lb/>
"Vt are an improved<lb/>
stated the Pirate head<lb/>
mentor Despite the record. Porter<lb/>
his club will be stronger than<lb/>
in the past 3 or 4 yeais.<lb/>
Gaining special praise from Por-<lb/>
ter are sophomores Tim Smothers<lb/>
and Joe Plaster. Both are unproved<lb/>
boys this season and should be tough<lb/>
from here on out comments Porter.<lb/>
Don Harris, Nick Nichols, and Guy<lb/>
Mendenhall were also named for their<lb/>
steady play throughout the season.<lb/>
Saturday, the Bucs wil be played<lb/>
probably the strongest club in the<lb/>
conference. Elon, in Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Swimmers Place High In NC<lb/>
Collegiate To End Seaso i<lb/>
Swimmers Triumph<lb/>
The powerful swimmers of ECC<lb/>
smashed Duke University's varsity<lb/>
ta ikers 75-1 last weekend in Mem-<lb/>
orial Pool to claim their seventh win<lb/>
of the set-on against three losses<lb/>
aa d a tie.<lb/>
The victory over 'ht t?antic Coast<lb/>
Conference club was their most de-<lb/>
cisive of the year. Coach Ray Mar-<lb/>
ies' hoys walked away with every<lb/>
first place of the 10-evcut affair.<lb/>
They also copped all but one of the<lb/>
second ositions.<lb/>
Jim Meads and Harold MeK.ee<lb/>
grabbed two firsts each. Other firsts<lb/>
went to Oliver, Miugette, Sawyer and<lb/>
the 400-yard Medley relay team and<lb/>
400-yard Freestyle team.<lb/>
Elsey took Duke's only second place<lb/>
in the 200-yard backstrike.<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL?East Carolina's<lb/>
 immers rounded out their 1956-67<lb/>
season with a powerful performance<lb/>
in the North Carolina Collegiate<lb/>
Championships, here, Monday night<lb/>
Though no official team points were<lb/>
kept, the Pirate club ranked second<lb/>
only to North Carolina in th? unof-<lb/>
ficial tallies. The meet brought to-<lb/>
gether Big Four teams from Caro-<lb/>
iiia. N. C. State and Duke along with<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
Only individual scores were kept<lb/>
for t e big meet, and East Carolina's<lb/>
club bad an outstanding array of<lb/>
individuals. Every man who went to<lb/>
the meet placed.<lb/>
Coach Kay Martinez stated after-<lb/>
wards that he was "quite pleased"<lb/>
with his club's performance. He<lb/>
pointed out that in the meet, each<lb/>
team was allowed to enter three<lb/>
players for each event. There were<lb/>
eats to whittle down the field and<lb/>
only six scoring places were possible.<lb/>
Fast Carolina scored within the six<lb/>
in each and every event.<lb/>
Every first place was captured by<lb/>
either Carolina or State, with the<lb/>
exception of Bob Sawyer's first in<lb/>
the 200 yard backstroke. Sawyer,<lb/>
East Carolina's top candidate for<lb/>
All-American honors, hag been de-<lb/>
feated only once in that event this<lb/>
season. He lost to Carolina's All-<lb/>
America Charlie Krepp in an earlier<lb/>
match. Krepp did not perform in that<lb/>
event Monday night.<lb/>
Martinez praised Ken Midyette,<lb/>
ECC diver, as one of th? biggest Buc<lb/>
standouts in the trial. Midyette<lb/>
grabbed second place honors in the<lb/>
diving events, only 10 points behind<lb/>
the first position and 15 better than<lb/>
third.<lb/>
Others who placed for ECC weie<lb/>
Harold McKee, Dickie Denton, Jim-<lb/>
my Meads, Jack Koebberling, Sid<lb/>
Oliver, Teddy Gartman, Glenn Dyer.<lb/>
Martinez also reported early this<lb/>
week that the home meet with Wake<lb/>
Forest, scheduled to take place in<lb/>
memorial pool this weekend, has<lb/>
been cancelled by the Baptists.<lb/>
It is little wonder. In their earlier<lb/>
meeting this year, ECC trounced the<lb/>
Deacons 53-23 and broke nine Wake<lb/>
Forest pool records.<lb/>
With that final match cancelled,<lb/>
the Pirates have put the wraps on<lb/>
their third swimming season. It has<lb/>
been one of the most successful to<lb/>
date. They posted seven wins, three<lb/>
losses and one tie. And this came<lb/>
against some of the top competition<lb/>
in the nation.<lb/>
Pirate Jayvees<lb/>
Still Undefeated<lb/>
In Kine Contests<lb/>
Under the guidance of Coach Earl<lb/>
Smith, the East Carolina Jayvees<lb/>
have gone undefeated thus far in<lb/>
nine consecutive ball games.<lb/>
Smith, assisted by Head Coach<lb/>
Howard .Porter, has used a group<lb/>
rf juniors, sophomores and freshmen<lb/>
to mold the 1956-57 jayvee outfit into<lb/>
the most successful of such teams<lb/>
ever to perform here. Some of the<lb/>
dayers have seen reserve action with<lb/>
he varsity after performing well for<lb/>
'o ich Smith.<lb/>
One o the Jayvee regulars, Tim<lb/>
smothers, a 6-5, 210 pound sopho-<lb/>
more from Bethany, even made the<lb/>
big jum to a varsity starting posi-<lb/>
tion in several games tl is season.<lb/>
Testing (irounds<lb/>
The purpose for the Jayvee club<lb/>
is mainly to act as a testing grounds<lb/>
for those boys who ultimately wish<lb/>
io play varsity basketball for East<lb/>
Carolina. However, this season, the<lb/>
Fayvees have even outdone the varsi-<lb/>
ty cagers, sporting a !?-0 mark to<lb/>
Elon's cagers will visit memorial. earlier on the Christian floor Elon<lb/>
will be rated heavy favorites to be-<lb/>
come the third team this season to<lb/>
ca.sh in on the broken home-court<lb/>
record of the Pirates.<lb/>
Elon's Dee Atkinson nabbed 24<lb/>
joints and teammate Jim Crump<lb/>
added 22 is the earlier meeting to<lb/>
take high scoring honors. They are<lb/>
expected to be the big guns in the<lb/>
Chritian attack here this weekend.<lb/>
For Ea.st Carolina, Don Harris, Nick<lb/>
Nichols, Joe Plaster, Tim Smothers<lb/>
and Cuy Mendenhall are expected to<lb/>
start.<lb/>
The defending North State champ-<lb/>
ions, Elon has put up a Stiff battle<lb/>
to finish first in regular-season play<lb/>
this year, but has fallen short. Lenoir<lb/>
Khyne ha surpassed them, hut 'as<lb/>
not eliminated them rom top content-<lb/>
ion m the forthcoming NS Tour.<lb/>
Last year, the Christians knocked<lb/>
off 20 games in 26 regular-season<lb/>
flay.<lb/>
Gymnasium Saturday night to try<lb/>
their hand at defeating ECC on their<lb/>
v. r court.<lb/>
Having dropped he Buc.s 77-59<lb/>
i.s below .500 lecord in North<lb/>
State play.<lb/>
Competition for the Jayvee has<lb/>
been toug . They have gone against<lb/>
Chowan College twice, Edwards Mili-<lb/>
tary Institute twice, Durham AAA<lb/>
?? . school, Wake Forest Seminary,<lb/>
.he Guilford Jayvees, Wilmington<lb/>
Junior College and Greenville high<lb/>
school. They have won all of these<lb/>
games, some by large margins, twice<lb/>
by less t .an eight points.<lb/>
Outstanding performers for the<lb/>
Baby Bucs have been Smothers, Ike<lb/>
Riddick, Wallace Lewis, Waddell Sol-<lb/>
omon and Dennis O'Brien in the cor-<lb/>
ing de; artment. Each has been high<lb/>
scorer at least once. Gaining praise<lb/>
in their play-making ability have<lb/>
been Stacey Wells, Maurice Everette,<lb/>
Connie Hoffman, Durwood Hoffman,<lb/>
and Franklin Warren.<lb/>
Dora's Tewer GriB<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
HAMBURGERS<lb/>
COLD DRINKS<lb/>
HOT DOOS<lb/>
SANDWICHBS<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
CURB SERVICE<lb/>
Dancing Favillion For Your Pleasure<lb/>
Near TV Station and Flrt Tsmm<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/>
HE-MAN DREW<lb/>
Rich man of the campus was Danny Drew<lb/>
Because of his wonderful chest tattoo?<lb/>
A beautiful lady exquisitely etched?<lb/>
When he flexed his muscles she got up and stretched<lb/>
His buddies all gave him their hard-earned dough<lb/>
For the pleasure of watching<lb/>
his pectoral show.<lb/>
MORAL: Accept no substitute for real<lb/>
enjoyment. Take your pleasure BIG.<lb/>
Smoke Chesterfield and smoke for real<lb/>
Made better by ACCU-RAY, it's the<lb/>
Smoothest tasting smoke today.<lb/>
Smok for raol amok Che?tarf laid<lb/>
$60 for every philosophical veree ?cfeptf foJ ? -<lb/>
publication. cWerteld. P.O. Box 21. New York 46, NT<lb/>
O Ua?tt Tn T??? Ce. <lb/>
HARRELL'S REAUTY SALON<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
To All College GirU<lb/>
PERCENT OFF<lb/>
On All Services<lb/>
"PERSONALIZED HAIR<lb/>
Clings to the<lb/>
road like a<lb/>
stripe of paint!<lb/>
The '57 Chevy can give lessons<lb/>
on taking curves and holding the<lb/>
road to just about any car going.<lb/>
Few cars at any price are so<lb/>
beautifully balanced and so<lb/>
smooth, sure and solid in action.<lb/>
A car has to have a special kind of<lb/>
build and balance to keep curves<lb/>
under control. And nobody outdoes<lb/>
Chevrolet in that department! It<lb/>
"corners" with all the solid assur-<lb/>
ance of an honest-to-goodness sports<lb/>
car. Chevy doesn't throw its weight<lb/>
around on turns because it carries<lb/>
its pounds in the right places.<lb/>
And if the road should turn up-<lb/>
ward, Chevy can take care of that<lb/>
nicely, too?with up to 245 h.p.<lb/>
Come on in and take a turn at the<lb/>
wheel of a new Chevrolet<lb/>
1USA<lb/>
'57 CHEVROLET<lb/>
270-h.p. high-performance V8<lb/>
engme also available at extra cost<lb/>
TV"<lb/>
STYLING OUR SPECIALITY<lb/>
Phone 6815<lb/>
204 E. Third Street<lb/>
Stveet, smooth and srissv?that j Chevrolet all over. Above, you re took.r.9 at the Bel Air Sport Coup.<lb/>
Only franchised Chevrolet dealers<lb/>
CHEVROLET<lb/>
display this famous trademark<lb/>
See Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00038418_0004"/><lb/>
P ?.GE XUB<lb/>
EAST CAftOLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY u 1957<lb/>
Dr. Koonce Speaks Tonight<lb/>
In Anniversary Lectures<lb/>
Dr. Donald D. Koonce of Wilming-<lb/>
ton, president of the North Carolina<lb/>
Medical Society, will discuss "The<lb/>
Relation of Religion and Medicine"<lb/>
tonight. HLs address will be one of<lb/>
a series of five "Lectures on Teacher<lb/>
Education and Religion" sponsored<lb/>
by the college during February and<lb/>
Mat eh.<lb/>
Dr. Koonce will s; eak at a dinner<lb/>
at 6:16 p. m. in the North Dining<lb/>
Hall. The meeting will be open to<lb/>
the public. Those who do not wish to<lb/>
attend the dinner, which will be<lb/>
served in cafeteria style, are invited<lb/>
to be guests at the lecture, beginning<lb/>
at 6:60.<lb/>
A native North Carolinian, Dr.<lb/>
Koonce was born and reared in Wil-<lb/>
mington. He received his education<lb/>
st the University of North Caro-<lb/>
lina an ; the University of Pennsyl-<lb/>
vania.<lb/>
Chief Surgeon<lb/>
He is e ief surgeon on the staff<lb/>
of the Janus Walker Memorial Hos-<lb/>
pital of Wilmington. In addition to<lb/>
heading the state Medical Society,<lb/>
he sei vt<lb/>
Programs<lb/>
The programs are presented as<lb/>
part of a five-year study of Teacher<lb/>
Education and Religion now being<lb/>
conducted at East Carolina under tne<lb/>
sponsorship of the American Asso-<lb/>
ciation of Colleges for Teacher Edu-<lb/>
cation and the Danforth Foundation.<lb/>
They are included also on the Golden<lb/>
Anniversary Programs marking the<lb/>
fiftieth year since the founding of the<lb/>
college in 1907.<lb/>
Other speakers and their topics are<lb/>
Dr. John D. Messick, East Carolina<lb/>
president, "What la the Role of Re-<lb/>
ligion in Personal and Family Liv-<lb/>
ing?" February 28; Dr. Clinton R.<lb/>
Prewett and Dr. Judson White of<lb/>
t e college department of psychology<lb/>
"Can Moral Values Be Taught?"<lb/>
March 7; and Dr. Joseph D. Franzoni,<lb/>
director of Mental Health Service,<lb/>
Reader Says<lb/>
Students' Honor Can Be<lb/>
Purchased For One Dollar<lb/>
To the editor,<lb/>
Nearly a month ago the Circle K<lb/>
Club sponsored a project in which<lb/>
fhe students would be the recipients.<lb/>
The club put one dollar per day for<lb/>
five days on the Student Union bul-<lb/>
letin board ioi students that come to<lb/>
the soda shop and discover that they<lb/>
are broke. Along with the dollar bill,<lb/>
there was a paper stating the purpose<lb/>
for the money being there. The only<lb/>
stipulation was that a student had<lb/>
to .ay the dollar back to any of the<lb/>
Circle K members within one week.<lb/>
Today, one month later, the Circle<lb/>
K has not received back a single<lb/>
dollar.<lb/>
The students that have this money<lb/>
probably think they have put some-<lb/>
thing over on the Circle K, but they<lb/>
arecor oi -?? ???  haven't; they have only harmed them<lb/>
Pitt Countv Health Department, Re- avc b' J<lb/>
 ? , w l i ti ltv. ?? uli ia selves and the school.<lb/>
ligion and Mental Health March 14.<lb/>
the Nort<lb/>
. and<lb/>
i ee i<lb/>
Fraternity Sponsors<lb/>
Sock Hop Saturday<lb/>
it ne time as president of After Game With Elon<lb/>
Carolina Surgical Associa-<lb/>
A<lb/>
W<lb/>
a fellow of the American<lb/>
Surgeons and a diplomate<lb/>
in Board of Surgeons.<lb/>
he is a member of<lb/>
terian Church.<lb/>
HONOR<lb/>
(Continued from Page 1)<lb/>
port the suspect to the council.<lb/>
Anyone brought before the council<lb/>
will  givei a trial. It was pointed<lb/>
the Honor Council will not<lb/>
e powers but will merely<lb/>
a judgement as to whether or<lb/>
not the studem is guilty of violating<lb/>
There will be a sock hop Sat-<lb/>
urday night, February 16 after<lb/>
the basketball game with Elon.<lb/>
The sock hop is being sponsored<lb/>
by Phi Sigma Pi maternity and<lb/>
will be held in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
from after game time until 11:45.<lb/>
There will be music by a hi-fi<lb/>
record player. Admission is<lb/>
twenty-five cents per person and<lb/>
everybody is invited to attend.<lb/>
selves<lb/>
How can East Carolina grow in<lb/>
prestige and tradition as long as we<lb/>
are harboring such people? This<lb/>
campus, a society where we live nine<lb/>
months out of the year, has no vacan-<lb/>
cy for people with such low principles.<lb/>
The boys of Circle K are not in-<lb/>
dignant over losing five dollars, but<lb/>
hey are ashamed of the fact that the<lb/>
Honor of five students at EC could be<lb/>
purchase! for "one dollar<lb/>
Respectfully submitted,<lb/>
Horace Rose<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Please allow me to congratulate<lb/>
you and your staff on what I regard<lb/>
as a splendid editorial page, that in<lb/>
the February 7 number of East Caro-<lb/>
linian. All too often, it seems to me,<lb/>
are the editorial pages of our college<lb/>
and university papers drowned in<lb/>
.small beer. But whatever trivia ap-<lb/>
pears on your editorial page of Feb-<lb/>
ruary 7 seems to me to contribute<lb/>
to the judicious balance that made<lb/>
this page such a real pleasure to read.<lb/>
There was just the right blending<lb/>
of the serious, the whimsical, the<lb/>
philosophical, the critical, the specu-<lb/>
lative, and the humorous. Moreover,<lb/>
there was a refreshing absence of the<lb/>
sophomoric inanity and cliche and<lb/>
of the puerlity that from time to time<lb/>
characterize collegiate journalism.<lb/>
Kudos to you, Mr. Harrison, Miss<lb/>
Raby, Mr. Williams, and to Miss Wil-<lb/>
son! Mr. Arnold's cartoon provided a<lb/>
timely and very funny garish.<lb/>
Me, I'm already queued up to get<lb/>
?he next number of East Carolinian!<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Frank L. Hoskins<lb/>
Department of English<lb/>
to the<lb/>
ciplina<lb/>
ever.<lb/>
will then be turned over<lb/>
ective judiciaries lor dis-<lb/>
Rose explained<lb/>
as<lb/>
rt<lb/>
v action. Rose explained, how-<lb/>
at the president of the col-<lb/>
eg i? the only official which has<lb/>
authority in expelling a student.<lb/>
Honor Council<lb/>
The proposed honor council which<lb/>
will : ear cases of breach against the<lb/>
-honor system, will consist of eight<lb/>
regular members of whom four shall<lb/>
be men and four shall be women.<lb/>
One man and one woman will repre-<lb/>
sent each of the four classes of stu-<lb/>
dents and will be chosen by a screen-<lb/>
ing committee composed of the Presi-<lb/>
dent. Vice-President, Deans of Wo-<lb/>
men and Men, and the presidents of<lb/>
the Men's and Women's Judiciaries.<lb/>
Honor System<lb/>
The proposed honor code is pat-<lb/>
terned after a similar code established<lb/>
at William and Maty in 1779. The<lb/>
ence of the code is individual re-<lb/>
s' onsibility. It assumes that the<lb/>
principles of honorable conduct are<lb/>
familiar and dear to all students; it<lb/>
assumes that every student is deeply<lb/>
concerned with the strict observance<lb/>
of these principles, for his own sake,<lb/>
for the .ake of his associates, and<lb/>
for the sake of the college.<lb/>
BEDDINGFIELD'S PHARMACY<lb/>
FIVE POINTS<lb/>
REVLON and CARA NOME<lb/>
COSMETJCS<lb/>
REXAL DRUGS<lb/>
ONE DAY FILM SERVICE<lb/>
"Your Most Convenient Drug Store"<lb/>
SGA Keys<lb/>
SGA keys will be awarded to<lb/>
full-time legislature members at<lb/>
next week's meeting. Money was<lb/>
appropriated for the keys as an<lb/>
award to members for their ser-<lb/>
vice. Members should contact<lb/>
Vice-President Walter Hasty<lb/>
next Wednesday night.<lb/>
Basketball Coach<lb/>
Hung In Effigy<lb/>
After ACC Loss<lb/>
The campus was shocked last Fri-<lb/>
day morning by the "hanging" of<lb/>
Coach Howard Porter, ECC basketball<lb/>
mentor from a tree in the cafeteris<lb/>
yard.<lb/>
An effigy of the Coach, mad- I<lb/>
a combination of gym u- .iform ami<lb/>
oajama top, stuffed with a ; illow and<lb/>
bun by the neck, wa.s noticed early<lb/>
Friday morning, following ECC'l Ions<lb/>
o ACC to Mem -rial gymnasium the<lb/>
niunt before.<lb/>
The dummy's "Pace ' included hea-<lb/>
vily-penciled eyebrows, end had ?<lb/>
cigar stuck in the mouth. A cheap<lb/>
irolf cap was pushed down on the<lb/>
1 ead.<lb/>
Apparently, no official comment<lb/>
has been made either by the athletic<lb/>
department or the Administration<lb/>
huilding concerning the incident.<lb/>
The assailant responsible for the<lb/>
act have not been discovered, as yet.<lb/>
Coach Porter, whose Pirates arc<lb/>
having one of their worst, seasons<lb/>
to date (the record was 10-9 after<lb/>
the ACC game), was reportedly on-<lb/>
ruffled by tl e incident.<lb/>
Organizational News<lb/>
It's Time To Start Growing<lb/>
Beards For The APO Dance<lb/>
Cap? And Gowns<lb/>
Seniors should contact cm-<lb/>
plovers in the college book store<lb/>
for the cap and gown measure-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
The Alpha Phi Omega Fra<lb/>
teralty "ill sponsor a beard-<lb/>
Kro?inK contest beginning Feb-<lb/>
ruary 1?. The contest is to arouse<lb/>
interest in Fast Carolina's (iol-<lb/>
d Anniversary.<lb/>
Participants will be judged on<lb/>
(he basis that their beards are<lb/>
long, ugly, and well groomed.<lb/>
The winner will he announced<lb/>
at the APO-sponsored dance on<lb/>
March 8.<lb/>
B. S. U.<lb/>
( Ivin Knight will be the f?t at<lb/>
he Baptist Student Union and speak<lb/>
at forum on Monday, February 18,<lb/>
at 5W and 7:00 p. m. He was presi-<lb/>
ent of the B. S U. when a student<lb/>
at Wake Forest and also president<lb/>
of the North Carolina B. S. U.<lb/>
H?- ifl a young minister who tl now<lb/>
pastor of Providence Church, Rox-<lb/>
boro, N. C.<lb/>
. Delta Sigma Rho<lb/>
Delta Sigma Rho, newest frater-<lb/>
u1 ? on cam us, recently elected<lb/>
tew officera for the year of 1957.<lb/>
Newly elected officers are Harry<lb/>
rcher, president; Mike Katsia.s,<lb/>
ice-presiu'ent; Johnny Hudson, Sec-<lb/>
tary; Bucky Monroe, Treasurer;<lb/>
and Bttbba Driver, Parliamentarian.<lb/>
Archer is a senior from Portsmouth,<lb/>
Va Katsias is a sophomore from<lb/>
Virginia Beach, Va Hudson is a<lb/>
sophomore from Wadesboro, N. C.f<lb/>
SEE US AT THE <lb/>
2<lb/>
?<lb/>
117 W. 4th Street <lb/>
<lb/>
:<lb/>
FOR THE LATEST HAIR STYLES<lb/>
SEE US AT THE<lb/>
FRIENDLY BEAUTY SHOP<lb/>
Va and Driver a sopl<lb/>
Richmond, Va.<lb/>
( hi Bets Phi<lb/>
Four students became ??<lb/>
the nat.onal honoraj ,<lb/>
ternity Chi Beta Phi at an<lb/>
ceremony conducted I<lb/>
night of this week. Thou<lb/>
to join tie fraternitj<lb/>
standing records in the<lb/>
of science and mathema-<lb/>
New members of Chi K I<lb/>
Shirley Hunt and M&amp;rga<lb/>
Powell, Louis burg; William<lb/>
Jr Wilmington; and<lb/>
Monroe is a junior from Alexandria Was! ington. N. C.<lb/>
?<lb/>
L<lb/>
HEATH'S<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN HAMBURGERS and CHOICE<lb/>
T-BONE STEAKS WITH LOTS OF<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
Nemr TV Station at tha Croaaraad<lb/>
PIT-COOKED BAR-B-Q<lb/>
<lb/>
MUSIC ARTS<lb/>
FIVE POINTS<lb/>
Records  Instruments  H. F.<lb/>
LARRY'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
CampuM Footwear Ffr All Occasion<lb/>
At Five Points<lb/>
?:?? ?<lb/>
Perkins-Proctor<lb/>
The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville. N. I<lb/>
Pierce Selected For<lb/>
Teacher Of Creative<lb/>
Writing- Course Here<lb/>
Creative writing, being offered at<lb/>
Bast Carolina for the first time, will<lb/>
be taught Spring quarter by Ovid<lb/>
Pierce, author of "The Plantation"<lb/>
and member of the English depart-<lb/>
ment here. A three hour course em-<lb/>
phasis will be on the short story with<lb/>
the Bubri issfrn of two or three short<lb/>
stories h tl ; students.<lb/>
Approximately twenty students<lb/>
have signed up for this subject for<lb/>
which no textbook will be required.<lb/>
The first class meetings will be used<lb/>
to describe the criteria and problems<lb/>
of the short story. Ira the next series<lb/>
of classes students' works will be<lb/>
read and then criticized by the wri-<lb/>
ters and the teacher.<lb/>
Mr. Pierce stated that there would<lb/>
be no limitation of subject matter;<lb/>
the interests of those in the course<lb/>
would determine its composition.<lb/>
While there are no restrictions upon<lb/>
those signing up Mr. Pierce said that<lb/>
they should have a genuine interest<lb/>
in writing. He beleives that indivi-<lb/>
dual attention is necessary, but also<lb/>
that no course taught anywhere can<lb/>
teach a student how to write. The<lb/>
most a teacher can do is help a stu-<lb/>
dent discover himself.<lb/>
Chosen by the administration to<lb/>
teach this original course, Ovid Pierce<lb/>
has had previous experience at Sou-<lb/>
thern Methodist University and Tu-<lb/>
lane in creative writing courses.<lb/>
Mrs. Mortons Bakery<lb/>
We supply the SODA SHOP with FRESH<lb/>
BAKERY PRODUCTS every morning. j<lb/>
Enjoy your refreshments there.<lb/>
Girls, Watch For The<lb/>
CAMPUS DELIGHTS<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
A GOOD PLACE TO AT<lb/>
"0M Food MOMHtB<lb/>
CroedHmUhr<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
BAKER'S STUDIO<lb/>
Portraitist - <lb/>
317 k Evans Street<lb/>
?<lb/>
Register For Your Free<lb/>
THe WASHASLt CASUALS<lb/>
at<lb/>
BRODY'S<lb/>
IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
WHAT IS THE NOISE IN A<lb/>
BOWLING ALLEY?<lb/>
irvins petersoh. Pin Din<lb/>
n T. STATE COLL. FOR TEACHERS<lb/>
WHAT IS A TALL. BONY NORTHERNERt<lb/>
hrs. frank Oliver. Lanky Yankee<lb/>
u or TAMPA<lb/>
WHAT IS AN ANTEROOM IN AN<lb/>
ENGLISH POLICE STATION?<lb/>
jerry iichler. Bobby Lobby<lb/>
NORTH TEXAS STATE COLL<lb/>
WHAT WOULD A SOUTH SEA ISLANDER<lb/>
USE TO WASH WINDOWS?<lb/>
DAVID HOWRY.<lb/>
IOWA STATE COLLESI<lb/>
Fiji Squeegee<lb/>
FROM WHOM DO SAILORS GET<lb/>
HAIRCUTS!<lb/>
CARL BRYSON.<lb/>
CLARK UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Harbor Barber<lb/>
WHAT IS A PALE ROMEO?<lb/>
frW Jf?<lb/>
Jf&amp;<lb/>
DOU8 NARTIN.Wan Don<lb/>
U OP SOUTHERN CAL.<lb/>
CIGARETTES<lb/>
? ?? . <lb/>
MESSAGE to Botany majors: today's lesson is easy. No<lb/>
spore lore, plant cant or stalk talk. Just the fact that<lb/>
Luckies' fine tobacco is A-l Puff Stuff! This information<lb/>
won't help you graduate, but it'll cue you to the best<lb/>
smoking you ever had. You see, fine tobacco means<lb/>
better taste. A Lucky is all fine tobacco .  nothing but<lb/>
mild, good-tasting tobacco that's TOASTED to taste<lb/>
even better. Why settle for less? You'll say a Lucky is<lb/>
the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked!<lb/>
STUDENTS! MAKE $25<lb/>
Do you like to shirk work? Heres some easy money<lb/>
?start Stickling! We'll pay $25 for every Stickler<lb/>
we print?and for hundreds more that never get<lb/>
used. Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers.<lb/>
Both words must have the same number of syllables. (Don't do<lb/>
drawings.) Send your Sticklers with your name, address, college<lb/>
and class to HapoyJoe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y.<lb/>
Luckies Taste Better<lb/>
IT'S TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER<lb/>
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CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!<lb/>
AMERICA'S LIADINO MAMUrACTUKBB Of CIOARSTTBfl<lb/>
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