<?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="00038422_0001"/>
.m-<lb/>
iaa ever<lb/>
on p??<lb/>
m? ?i<lb/>
Festival<lb/>
t Martha Wilsom covered the<lb/>
Festival for the East Carotin-<lb/>
the weekend. See bet report<lb/>
2.<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
m<lb/>
$:$8m- ??? ?????.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
I &amp; r "<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
K??iS<lb/>
-<lb/>
Ip<lb/>
1,<lb/>
fr<lb/>
P<lb/>
v<lb/>
Harris Wins Junior Presidency;<lb/>
Sessoms Takes Top Soph Office<lb/>
Senior Glass<lb/>
Elections Set<lb/>
Hext Thursday<lb/>
Oliver William<lb/>
Jan Raby<lb/>
Ike Williamson<lb/>
Board Asks Raby, VO illiams To Divide<lb/>
Duties; Ike Williamson Heads Annual<lb/>
 Publications agreed,the East Carolinian next year. Miss; next year<lb/>
editor candidates, 1 Raby coald serve as editor while 11 1. K. Williamson, who was unop-<lb/>
r Williams, should rodent teach during Spring quarter j See EDITORS, page 4<lb/>
time next year as editors<lb/>
ast Carolinian. I. K. Will-<lb/>
was unopposed for the<lb/>
I the Buccaneer, was<lb/>
selected to head the<lb/>
r art year.<lb/>
ng a decision on the edi<lb/>
Sam Donahue And Orchestra<lb/>
Appear Here Monday Night<lb/>
Wright Auditorium will be alive appeared with Betty Grable, FranK<lb/>
the East Carolinian, the with music and lancing when the Sinatra, and Lena Home.<lb/>
i I a plan whereby Oliver Entertainment Series presents Sam j Battle Of Music<lb/>
uld edit the East Caro- Donahue and his orchestra Monday<lb/>
the first half of the year night.<lb/>
would serve as editor! The orchestra, accompanied by<lb/>
half of the year. I singers Debbie Brown and Ernie Bern-<lb/>
Rai y's insistence, Dr. jhardt, will provide a concert at 7:30<lb/>
. krr. Chairman of the<lb/>
ationa, agreed to call<lb/>
and dancing will begin at 9:00.<lb/>
Sam Donahue, former director of<lb/>
ling of the board at a the famous Billy May orchestra, will<lb/>
She stated that she would!play his saxophone to all types of<lb/>
the chance to appear be- dancing music including Latin Ameri-<lb/>
iard and explain why she'ican. Dixieland jazz, and the latest<lb/>
that the system operat-<lb/>
deciaion would work.<lb/>
I don't want to work<lb/>
 Rather I .would<lb/>
my whole purpose for re-<lb/>
East Carolina next fall<lb/>
serve as editor of the<lb/>
.? interruption. I feel<lb/>
would be in the best in-<lb/>
 concerned Miss Raby<lb/>
.arter senior.<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
ted that he would ac-<lb/>
hits.<lb/>
( ommand Performance<lb/>
The Donahue Band has toured the<lb/>
nation playing at ballrooms, schools,<lb/>
theatres, and hotels. Donahue has had<lb/>
orchestral experience with service<lb/>
Donahue played a one-hour "battle<lb/>
of music" with Count Basie's orches-<lb/>
tra for servicemen all over the world<lb/>
on the biggest hook-up ever used in<lb/>
radio. He waged another battle with<lb/>
the Glenn Miller Armc' Forces or-<lb/>
chestra in London which, according<lb/>
to his billing, attracted the largest<lb/>
audience for a charitable cause in that<lb/>
city's history.<lb/>
After the service, Donahue was in-<lb/>
vited to join the late Tommy Dorsey's<lb/>
organization as an assistant band<lb/>
leader. Later, Billy May chose Dona-<lb/>
hue to lead h band while May re-<lb/>
tained his position recording for<lb/>
Capital Records. Donahue led the<lb/>
Messick Speaks<lb/>
During Phelps<lb/>
'nauguration<lb/>
President Messick has challenged<lb/>
newly-elected student government<lb/>
officials to start a revolution that<lb/>
woul 1 "intellectualize the campus<lb/>
Speaking at the inauguration of<lb/>
next year's SGA officers Wednesday<lb/>
night, the President asked the new<lb/>
egis'ature to concern themselves<lb/>
with measures that would safeguard<lb/>
"the things that we came here for<lb/>
With only a handful of the stu-<lb/>
dent present for the ceremony, the<lb/>
President asked the legislature to<lb/>
suppress panty raids and Port Ter-<lb/>
minal incidents. He called such activ-<lb/>
ity "the cheapest type of fun and<lb/>
reminded the students that even our<lb/>
national swimming team did not get<lb/>
front page headlines like those given<lb/>
to last year's panty raids.<lb/>
Revolution<lb/>
Instead of seeing what they could<lb/>
get for the students, Dr. Messick<lb/>
asked the Phelps administration to<lb/>
see what they could get that would<lb/>
help the students.<lb/>
Being specific, he asked the new<lb/>
administration to work on such things<lb/>
as good study plans, cultural enter-<lb/>
?ainment, and things that would start<lb/>
an "intelL-ctual revolution<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Mentioning the controversial enter-<lb/>
tainment topic. Dr. Messick said that<lb/>
there should be a balance between<lb/>
cultural and popular programs, and<lb/>
that the students should support both<lb/>
of these types of entertainment. He<lb/>
stated that before popular entertain<lb/>
Dock G. Smith . . .<lb/>
discusses his administration<lb/>
bands and has played with his own May orchestra for a period of three<lb/>
organization for servicemen overseas years, after which he returned to<lb/>
during World War II and the Korean his own and present band. Since then<lb/>
conflict.<lb/>
While in the service, Donahi 5a<lb/>
orchestra played command perform-<lb/>
ance shows and wa featured on ser-<lb/>
rd's decision. "It would vice programs such as "Yank Band-<lb/>
Jan and me to work on stand" and "Bands for Bonds and<lb/>
he has been traveling and playing<lb/>
throughout the country.<lb/>
The dance is being presented as a<lb/>
program on the Entertainment Series<lb/>
which will admit students free. The<lb/>
attire will be semi-formal.<lb/>
<lb/>
lizabeth Ann Bowman<lb/>
Future Holds Key To Success<lb/>
Of Smith's Administration<lb/>
By OLIVER WILLIAMS<lb/>
Dock Smith told the newspaper this :of the past administration Smith<lb/>
believes that the legislators tfbis year<lb/>
week that the future holds the key to<lb/>
the success of his administration in<lb/>
the student legislature.<lb/>
Smit who promised everything<lb/>
from tenni court lights to more un-<lb/>
nent was brought to the cam is, the jdeiVta-iding between the students and<lb/>
students should start attending cul- administration said that he believes<lb/>
tural programs. jthe legisiators wno retiml last night<lb/>
Pledging to promote the highest , <lb/>
i r Z r i ?u i enacted some important steps that t tn outstandine students in tfhe<lb/>
ideals of honor bv both personal con- ,oten uit ouisiaimwig ?i,uue?ius<lb/>
??uct and by fulfilling to the best ofi"wi11 Inake our scho?1 a bjfSer and 'gislature this year, Smith said that<lb/>
have done a great deal in building<lb/>
up Sast Carolina's prestige through-<lb/>
out the state by sending outstanding<lb/>
delegates to the state student legis-<lb/>
lature and the National Student Con-<lb/>
gress.<lb/>
Outstanding Students<lb/>
When asked who he thought had<lb/>
his ability 'the duties of tibia office, bter school for tomorrow<lb/>
Jimmy Phelps accepted the pre-j Specifically, the past chief execu-<lb/>
dencv" of the student government and tive, who stepped down to newly-<lb/>
admimstered the same oath to the ???? Jil?m ?? taat pbert Forrest, Bobby Patterson,<lb/>
other newly-elected officers. stated that he believed the biggest iWalter Hasty. Jimmy Phelps, Eddie<lb/>
Dennis, and Ann Wilkerson.<lb/>
much of the credit for the accomplish<lb/>
ments this year should go to such<lb/>
people as J. B. Nichols, Wiley Teal,<lb/>
Nichols was chairman of the home-<lb/>
Taking the oath as next year's kontribation. that his legislature<lb/>
fficers besides Phelps, were Bucky made were actions concerning social<lb/>
Monroe, first vice-president; Ray families and entertainment. .coming events, Wiley Teal handled<lb/>
Jovner. second vice-president; Eliz Social Fraternitles<lb/>
??beth Judge, secretary; Bobbv Patter-1 Promising ? his platform to re-I<lb/>
son treasurer; Johnny Hudson, assis- ??aiae social fraternities when they<lb/>
tant treasurer; and Calvin Chesson. iProve their worthiness, Smith saw<lb/>
historian.<lb/>
New Marshals Choose Chief<lb/>
 Elizabeth Ann BoW-<lb/>
more from Liberty, was<lb/>
ted chief marshal. Eliz-<lb/>
 science major and minor,<lb/>
a -king with the YWCA and<lb/>
-tudent activities, and<lb/>
he choir at Saint James<lb/>
1 urch.<lb/>
ri? girls to serve at various<lb/>
actions and keeping a record<lb/>
rvea when, so that everyone<lb/>
equa opportunities to serve<lb/>
? ifi. iuties of the chief<lb/>
? I was happy, surprised,<lb/>
proud when Miss Menden-<lb/>
to the marshals, told me<lb/>
1 a 1 won remarked Elizabeth,<lb/>
on as she told me, I told the<lb/>
has that 1 would try to<lb/>
od example and do my very<lb/>
1 want to try to do as good a<lb/>
retiring chief Ann Hughes of<lb/>
ville; she certainly has done<lb/>
? elous job she continued.<lb/>
Honor<lb/>
be a college marshal has always<lb/>
een considered an honor. They are<lb/>
sentatives of the college at pub-<lb/>
functions, especially at com-<lb/>
mencement, and the success of such<lb/>
ions can be sometimes affected<lb/>
by the way in which marshals serve.<lb/>
Ml marshals must attain a scholastic<lb/>
average of not less than a "3 After<lb/>
beine elected each spring by popular<lb/>
vote on the basis of their dignity and<lb/>
personality, they take office six weeks<lb/>
before the quarter elapses.<lb/>
Others<lb/>
On the afternoon preceeding an<lb/>
By KATHRYN JOHNSON<lb/>
1 entertainment for which reserve seat Alice Anne Home, Mary Lou Dick-<lb/>
tickets have been sold, it is the duty ens, Carolyn Aycock, Martha Wilson,<lb/>
of the marshals to mark the floor Barbara Davenport, Patsy Allman,<lb/>
and the seats in the Wright Audi- Sylvia Jones, Peggy Kepley, Janet<lb/>
torium. Other marshals, vho will I Wall, Ann Johnson, Hilda Lohve,<lb/>
assume these duties are Janet Hodges, IGayle Simpson, and Mary Lou Wyrick.<lb/>
Elizabeth Ann Bowman <lb/>
new Chief Marshal<lb/>
Playhouse To Present<lb/>
Children's Production<lb/>
When "Aladdin and the Wonderful<lb/>
Lamp produced by the East Caro-<lb/>
lina Playhouse, plays to the children<lb/>
of Greenville and Pitt County on<lb/>
April 8, 9, 10, and 11, in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium, it will be added to a<lb/>
notable series of children's plays<lb/>
started in February 1941, under the<lb/>
auspices of the Greenville Branch of<lb/>
the American Association of Uni-<lb/>
versity Women.<lb/>
The title role of Aladdin will be<lb/>
played by Jay Robbins of Greenville.<lb/>
Others playing important roles are<lb/>
Margaret Starnes as Princess Adora,<lb/>
Delano Driver as ' the Magician,<lb/>
Charles Jenkins as the Sultan, and<lb/>
Pat Baker, also of Greenville, as Alad-<lb/>
din's Mother.<lb/>
C. Thomas Hull is serving as stu-<lb/>
dent director and Dan Yanchisin as<lb/>
technical director.<lb/>
Dr. Joseph Withey of the English<lb/>
faculty is supervising the production,<lb/>
and Miss Louise Williams of the<lb/>
Mathematics department is in charge<lb/>
of the project for the AAUW.<lb/>
Some students have been inquiring<lb/>
whether the production ig ?Pen to<lb/>
attendance by college students. Those<lb/>
desiring to attend should be able to<lb/>
get ickets, priced at 25 cents, for<lb/>
either the 1:15 or the 3:30 perfor-<lb/>
mance on Tuesday. A fifth perfor-<lb/>
mance added this year provides room<lb/>
for college students ?v. "e first time<lb/>
since 1943, when the last night per-<lb/>
formance was held.<lb/>
This play should appeal particu-<lb/>
larly to all students who plan to<lb/>
teach children. Someone has said that<lb/>
children's plays, such a Aladdin, ap-<lb/>
peal to all ages except high school<lb/>
students, who are both too old and<lb/>
too young to appreciate them.<lb/>
during is administration permission<lb/>
from the Board of Trustees for social<lb/>
fraternities to organize on a trial<lb/>
basis. Even though this first opinion<lb/>
on fraternities was not a definite one,<lb/>
Smith believes that it was a form of<lb/>
recognition and that "social frater-<lb/>
nities will soon be a part of this cam-<lb/>
pus<lb/>
Commenting on entertainment, he<lb/>
said that a great deal of work had<lb/>
been put forth in order to secure the<lb/>
best entertainment for the students.<lb/>
Other Achievements<lb/>
More concrete achievements of the<lb/>
Smith administration include such im-<lb/>
provements aks the new ID card sys-<lb/>
tem that will go into effect next fall tration but that he thought they would<lb/>
and lights for the tennis courts. I do a good job since they are all "cap-<lb/>
Besides the concrete achievements able leaders<lb/>
the elections, and Robert Forrest and<lb/>
Bobby Patterson served as treasurers<lb/>
of the student government. Accord-<lb/>
ing to President Smith, Walter Hasty,<lb/>
Jimmy Phelipjs. and Eddie Dennis<lb/>
made the legislature meetings "more<lb/>
interesting and Ann Wilkerson was<lb/>
a "very dependable secretary<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Commenting on the student news-<lb/>
paper, which has received some cri-<lb/>
ticism during the past year as being<lb/>
Hdministrative-controlled, Smith said<lb/>
that "fne newspaper has been better<lb/>
this year than any of the other four<lb/>
years that I have been at East Caro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
When a'sked what he thought the<lb/>
new legislature would accomplish,<lb/>
Coy Harris will head the junior<lb/>
?lass and Wadt Sessoms will take<lb/>
vt : the top sophomore office when<lb/>
?Iri-t Carolina's fall quarter j I<lb/>
lext September. The e' ' n f or 1957-<lb/>
B sei ior class officers ha- been set<lb/>
ursday, April 11.<lb/>
Harris, a native of Carthage, re-<lb/>
d 143 of the 252 votes cast in<lb/>
? ? ? ion or junioi .lass off;<lb/>
iV tini sdny. His Mike<lb/>
Catsias and Br -ton. po<lb/>
5 : nd 2 1 votes r tiv ly.<lb/>
Sessoms, a business education ma-<lb/>
r from F el U ri d an im-<lb/>
ressive win over present frosb piesi-<lb/>
dent Tommy Ragland in Thurday's<lb/>
'more election, receiving 200 of<lb/>
the 298 votes cast.<lb/>
Junior-<lb/>
Other newly-elected junioi class<lb/>
fficers include Jay RobbtBS, Gr?<lb/>
ville, vice-president; Martha Jane<lb/>
Hammond, New Ben . cretary; Peg-<lb/>
gy Kepley, Durham, treasurer; and<lb/>
Mary Lou Wyrick, Gibsonville, SGA<lb/>
Representative.<lb/>
Robbins won over Purvis Boyette,<lb/>
132-116; Hammond over Mary Lou<lb/>
Dickens, 147-102; Peggy Kepley was<lb/>
unopposed; and Wyrick over Martha<lb/>
Wilson, 133-114.<lb/>
Sophomores<lb/>
Three runoffs will be scheduled<lb/>
among other sophomore officers.<lb/>
Emilie Tilley, 93, and Becky War<lb/>
122, will meet in a runoff for the<lb/>
first vice-presidency. Nancy Watsor.<lb/>
received 83 votes.<lb/>
Flora Ruth Boseman u<lb/>
secretary over Joyce Bell, 51, a-i '<lb/>
Mary E. Sanderson, 91.<lb/>
A runoff, also, will decide who<lb/>
tike over the position of treasur<lb/>
Jane Gidden, 122, will meet Bet1<lb/>
McCauley, 119. Mary Dora Pierce re-<lb/>
ceived 49 votes.<lb/>
Four coeds were seeking the S<lb/>
dent Government Association Repre-<lb/>
sentative position. Ellie Standifi<lb/>
72, will meet Nancy Keith, 113, W<lb/>
a runoff for the office. Phyllis Cor-<lb/>
bett received 61 votes and '<lb/>
Clapp polled 43.<lb/>
Statements<lb/>
Both of the newly-elected presi-<lb/>
dents issued statements to the East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
President Coy Harris stated, "I<lb/>
would like to express my deepest<lb/>
appreciation for the confidence placed<lb/>
in me by those who elected me presi-<lb/>
dent of (jbe junior class. I realize<lb/>
this is an office of utmost importance<lb/>
and pledge my best efforts to this<lb/>
task. I will endeavor to serve you to<lb/>
the best of my ability<lb/>
President Wade Sessoms said, "I<lb/>
would like to express my appreciation<lb/>
:o the freshman class for electing<lb/>
me, and especially to those who sup-<lb/>
ported me in the election. 1 will do<lb/>
my very best to meet the high re-<lb/>
Smith said t at there were many sponsibilities of this office and I am<lb/>
challenges facing the new adminis-<lb/>
calling on the support of all the rising<lb/>
sophomores to help make next year's<lb/>
sophomore class the most active one<lb/>
ever<lb/>
April 30, May 1, and May 2, in McGinnis Auditorium<lb/>
1 spring musical, "A Connecticut Yankee to be presented<lb/>
<pb facs="00038422_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CAB 0 L1H j A g<lb/>
Phelps And Cooperation<lb/>
Jimmy Phelps' impressive victory in last<lb/>
week's runoff indicates plainly that the majori-<lb/>
ty of the students interested in East Carolina's<lb/>
student government advocate his policies.<lb/>
With this strong student support and his<lb/>
pledge to bring "cooperation between the stu-<lb/>
dents and the SGA and between the SGA and<lb/>
the administration we see no reason why<lb/>
Phelps' administration shouldn't prove quite<lb/>
successful.<lb/>
The East Carolinian will continue to watch<lb/>
closely the Wednesday night activities in Flan-<lb/>
agan Auditorium, give praise when praise is<lb/>
due, and criticism when actions merit such.<lb/>
We feel that his platform lacked, in some<lb/>
instances, concreteness, but it included points<lb/>
which definitely need attention. He is absolutely<lb/>
right in saving that exams should not begin<lb/>
on the last day of classes. Students should have<lb/>
at least one free day between regularly sched-<lb/>
uled classes and examinations.<lb/>
And we'd like to see something done to<lb/>
enforce the points system here. Students who<lb/>
carry too many points are only hindering others<lb/>
from participating in campus activities.<lb/>
The campus parking system has been evalu-<lb/>
ated, re-evaluated, and evaluated again, which<lb/>
adds up to the stark conclusion that there<lb/>
aren't enough parking spaces for the number of<lb/>
cars on campus. And that's the way conditions<lb/>
will remain until someone finds a place for a<lb/>
couple of new parking lots. However, the new<lb/>
legislature should study the problem which<lb/>
exists at the Umstead dorm lot. Students have<lb/>
found that once you park your car there it's<lb/>
practically impossible to find a way out.<lb/>
There is no ill feeling in this office towards<lb/>
the new SGA president. We have watched him<lb/>
in operation during the past two years, and an<lb/>
evaluation of these observations led this pub-<lb/>
lication to support Eddie Dennis for the SGA<lb/>
presidency.<lb/>
Phelps. in the past, has tended to act too<lb/>
hastily when becoming involved in certain con-<lb/>
troversial matters only to do a complete about<lb/>
face in the final scene.<lb/>
The East Carolinian readily admits that<lb/>
Jimmy Phelps has initiative and vitality, but<lb/>
he must change past tactics and channel his<lb/>
assets in the right direction if he is to serve<lb/>
the students and East Carolina in the best pos-<lb/>
sible manner.<lb/>
He must study problems carefully, weigh<lb/>
both sides of the question before acting ex-<lb/>
temporaneously, and as Mr. Phelps said, "co-<lb/>
operate<lb/>
SGA's First Problem<lb/>
There are many problems awaiting the<lb/>
new legislature and student administrators<lb/>
who were inaugurated Wednesday night. Even<lb/>
though many problems were solved by the<lb/>
. utgoing officers, several big ones must be<lb/>
solved before the new legislature can accom-<lb/>
plish the things that they should.<lb/>
One problem that has received very little<lb/>
comment or mention throughout the year is<lb/>
the fact that the legislature by meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday nights can not be covered properly<lb/>
by the student newspaper.<lb/>
Throughout the year, we have tried to<lb/>
bring to the students the top news of the cam-<lb/>
pus. So often, however, the top news is that<lb/>
which is brought up before the SGA on Wednes-<lb/>
day nights. This creates a problem for the<lb/>
newspaper since leading news has to meet an<lb/>
early deadline in order to be published by<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
Undoubtedly, the problem existing be-<lb/>
tween the newspaper and legislature had just<lb/>
recently come to light, since the newspaper<lb/>
this year has tried to cover more compre-<lb/>
hesively the legislative activities.<lb/>
This problem could be alleviated by either<lb/>
of two methods. One would be to move perma-<lb/>
nently the East Carolinian publication date to<lb/>
Friday, as the case has been several times<lb/>
this year when the newspaper has attempted to<lb/>
cover important SGA meetings.<lb/>
A better solution to the problem, how-<lb/>
ever, would be to move the legislature meetings<lb/>
to an earlier night in the week. By meeting on<lb/>
either Monday or Tuesday nights, the news-<lb/>
paper could better cover the SGA news and<lb/>
still meet a Thursday evening distribution date.<lb/>
This problem concerns not only the news-<lb/>
paper and legislature but the whole campus.<lb/>
In order for both of these organs to serve the<lb/>
campus as they should, something should be<lb/>
done to alleviate this conflict.<lb/>
It is one of the first items of business<lb/>
that sh uld come before the new legislature.<lb/>
Jimmy Ferrell.<lb/>
Spring Sbows Its<lb/>
Face And Things<lb/>
Start Popping<lb/>
A LACKADAISICAL winter com-<lb/>
pletes its thaw, Spring shows its face<lb/>
and steps into the picture, then things<lb/>
start popping- . . . Carolina's Yankee<lb/>
Tar Heels capture the hearts of all<lb/>
red-blooded American TV viewers,<lb/>
Ike trawls into his limousine and drag<lb/>
raceg with reporters, Uncle Harry<lb/>
breaks out with one of his cussing<lb/>
spells, "Baby Doll" hits the college<lb/>
hook store stands, the Martinez's<lb/>
it the jackpot, Phelps proves he's<lb/>
got 8W friends, and coeds pack up<lb/>
their sweater and head for the un<lb/>
courts.<lb/>
Ifi JUipE and bis No. 1 Tar Heels<lb/>
served as North Carolina's finest pub-<lb/>
licity agent? simce State's Jackie<lb/>
.Mi, reiand ease hit the papers<lb/>
Max Lk'bman, the well-estaSb'shed<lb/>
television spectacular pro, couldn't<lb/>
have produced a more outstanding<lb/>
production than the NCAA basket-<lb/>
ball finals in Karasa City.<lb/>
Folks arc still talking about the<lb/>
spine-tingling games, the way Gov-<lb/>
ernor Hodges got on camera and<lb/>
smiled at all the teachers back home,<lb/>
unit they,re still commenting about<lb/>
"that damn tall nigger<lb/>
But ask the sports-minded cab dri-<lb/>
ver in New York. They'll tell you it's<lb/>
New York's team. And they're right.<lb/>
"BABY DOLL"?the Tennessee<lb/>
 illiams, Elia Kazan, and Cardinal<lb/>
Spel.man movie success?may now<lb/>
be purchased from the college book<lb/>
store in the handy pocket-size edition.<lb/>
One of our northern professors (some<lb/>
oi them feel at times they must try to<lb/>
reform the South) must be requiring<lb/>
studentfc to read the work.<lb/>
1 admit the Williams-Kazan-Spell-<lb/>
nian production was an interesting<lb/>
piece of work, but I'm relieved to<lb/>
learn that the pigs in the movie<lb/>
di.in'l win an Academy Award for<lb/>
a best supporting role as News and<lb/>
Observer columnist Charles Craven<lb/>
was predicting.<lb/>
FR1DA.Y, APRIL 6,<lb/>
tv ,  J .a <lb/>
Pot Pourri<lb/>
A Special Column<lb/>
For Special Guests<lb/>
Hit AN RABY<lb/>
Hilly Arnold<lb/>
Dior Hasn't Infiltrated Dixie<lb/>
AND SPEAKING of the Raleigh<lb/>
paper, the editors dropped their lat-<lb/>
ent big scoop (Percy FlowerB was<lb/>
awarded another ticket for speeding)<lb/>
and concentrated on an editorial con-<lb/>
cerning Ike's going over the speed<lb/>
limit when he visited his farm during<lb/>
the weekend. A group of reporters<lb/>
were reportedly neck and neck with<lb/>
the President's car until the highway<lb/>
patrol stepped into the picture.<lb/>
Then Harry Truman, who can cuss<lb/>
right along with the best of them,<lb/>
told the New York papers he didn't<lb/>
give "a damn" about his strained<lb/>
relations with (Ike.<lb/>
Maybe if Harry closed up his piano<lb/>
and took up golf, he'd receive an in-<lb/>
vitation to the White House. But<lb/>
they say Ike and Mamie are just crazy<lb/>
about Welk's "champagne music<lb/>
The South is generally regarded as<lb/>
stili the most backward section of our<lb/>
country by most observers. I would<lb/>
disagree violently in most cases, but<lb/>
I have finally found one point on which<lb/>
1 may agree with that belief: women's<lb/>
fashions.<lb/>
'I hank heaven the fashions of Dior<lb/>
and the "thei crackpot designers have<lb/>
mt yet infiltrated Dixie.<lb/>
Leafing t rough a copy of some<lb/>
woman's magazine the other day at the<lb/>
ientist's office. I was truly shocked at<lb/>
the kid of attire the well-dressed wo-<lb/>
man of to.lay is supposed to be sport-<lb/>
in Frankly, I think the dentist leaves<lb/>
these particular women's mags (such<lb/>
as Vogue, Fashion and Seventeen) ly-<lb/>
ing in hi waiting room for the ex-<lb/>
pressed purpose of making all his male<lb/>
patients laugh themaevea into a fit of<lb/>
exhaustion so that they'll be easy<lb/>
prey for ' im afterwards.<lb/>
It wouldn't surprise me if the whole<lb/>
thing- all this Dior business and those<lb/>
fashions in today's taste -were just<lb/>
some tremendous hoax. 1 just returned<lb/>
from New York two weeks ago and I<lb/>
didn't even spot anything that ridic-<lb/>
ulous up there.<lb/>
In fact, I don't recall ever having<lb/>
seen am woman dressed as those fash-<lb/>
ion books portray them. I even doubt<lb/>
if it's possible to put those concoctions<lb/>
on a real, live, actual human being.<lb/>
Take, for instance, the hats. Of<lb/>
course, a little of the phobia that pro-<lb/>
duced those outlandish things hat<lb/>
seeped down South. Go to church any<lb/>
Sunday and you'll see everything from<lb/>
replicas of the little pots Grandma<lb/>
used to keep under the bed, to a min-<lb/>
iature reproduction of Okeefeenokee<lb/>
Swamp, complete with birds, trees,<lb/>
crab grass and wild boar; and the con-<lb/>
traptions with the most alarming ef-<lb/>
fect seem to be the ones that are the<lb/>
most prized by women.<lb/>
But the designers don't stop at this.<lb/>
Before they are finished with the<lb/>
American woman, they must distort<lb/>
the whole figure, even down to the<lb/>
flesh and bone.<lb/>
Pick up any fashion magazine today<lb/>
and take a good long look at any of the<lb/>
models on any of the pages (if you can<lb/>
stand a good long look). What are they<lb/>
like? They look more like male es-<lb/>
capees from a World War II concen-<lb/>
tration camp than good old red-blooded<lb/>
American women, to me.<lb/>
Te models they use in these maga-<lb/>
zine must be rail-thin, must have<lb/>
very protruding hip bones, must have<lb/>
a bust ike Frank Sinatra, must have<lb/>
war-paint under their eyelids and must<lb/>
be able, to pose with the flexibility of<lb/>
a piece of 2"x4" lumber. And the stan-<lb/>
dard pose, of course, is this: hands on<lb/>
protruding hips; shoulders hunched<lb/>
forward so as not to e?pbaaiae non-<lb/>
existnm bust; neck thrust back; nose<lb/>
high in the air; one leg planted firmly<lb/>
straight in front and the other foot<lb/>
east back at a 97-degrea angle.<lb/>
Alright, with this kind of model as<lb/>
.standard operating material, all the<lb/>
designer has to do is invent something<lb/>
that will make her appear a total<lb/>
wreck, and is task is complete. And,<lb/>
from what I can sea, a designer has to<lb/>
be a genius to invent something that<lb/>
can distort that kind of figure. But<lb/>
they usually manage to do so.<lb/>
The North can move ahead with pro-<lb/>
gress it it desires, can shave down its<lb/>
women into pencil-thin, pretzel-legged,<lb/>
I at-chested monsters, if it chooses.<lb/>
The North can hang a "Best-dressed<lb/>
woman" tag un the results and sneer<lb/>
down its nose at the backward South,<lb/>
if it cares to. I prefer the backward<lb/>
South with iks rounded hips and<lb/>
bosoms.<lb/>
This jfl a special &amp; lumn for <lb/>
group o people who are h no<lb/>
caiTipUH t day for Hih School Da<lb/>
especially and also th w<lb/>
unable to come the last tin<lb/>
East Cart linn Is a traditioi<lb/>
olle  B don't be afraid 1 a I<lb/>
? aii - f the student We'll to<lb/>
ou in any way ?'?? W ?!???<lb/>
talk d t only to fr shmen bu1 al<lb/>
- niora as to th ii opini n of the i<lb/>
tin v ni as departments in ord i<lb/>
receive a '? ell-round d ie poinl<lb/>
Since you're her we prt<lb/>
in to attend college; h w<lb/>
not have decided n your ma or .<lb/>
field of info n st to aid y u ii<lb/>
career. We suggest that you i<lb/>
just one or tv . tit-Ids but<lb/>
and our schedule will permi<lb/>
are not d ft r changing I<lb/>
during the scho I year<lb/>
their abilities do not nil<lb/>
terests.<lb/>
Don't ft rget to ask ab<lb/>
funicular activities and the<lb/>
that you'll find at East (<lb/>
der how some of us find time t<lb/>
As for housing, we recommend<lb/>
b ft visit Umstead dorm and th<lb/>
over to Garrett You'll find tht<lb/>
beat in living comfortably. T<lb/>
have their good points, to .<lb/>
Speaking about our facull<lb/>
them well-versed in their fit nd<lb/>
eating personalities to boot. They<lb/>
all over the nation, presenting .<lb/>
 f background. The large nui<lb/>
tor's degrees emphasises tin<lb/>
college's educational standard<lb/>
the highest.<lb/>
Last but Rot least, the<lb/>
ECC, Dr. John D. Messick, is<lb/>
finest to ever hit this campus. Ii<lb/>
liness to the students is n tab<lb/>
to his office is always open to<lb/>
has worked diligently I build I<lb/>
up and to raise fund for mort<lb/>
necessary equipment vital '<lb/>
So look us over good, havt<lb/>
while y u're here?.and we h u'13<lb/>
back?as East Carolina College<lb/>
Controversial Currents<lb/>
Can We Expect What The<lb/>
Platforms Promised?<lb/>
Hi, OLIVER WILLIAMS<lb/>
Martha Wilson<lb/>
A Weekend In Wilmington<lb/>
Wilmington, March 31?East Carolina<lb/>
College packed its suitcase this week-<lb/>
end and hit the road South.<lb/>
According to the records in the<lb/>
Dean of Women' office, 815 girls<lb/>
vacated Coed Row. There's no telling<lb/>
how many boys left.<lb/>
Everybody know.s ECC is in town.<lb/>
We're beached from Wilmington and<lb/>
Wrightsville all the way down to<lb/>
Carolina, Kure, and Fort Fisher.<lb/>
Among all the colleges visiting the<lb/>
Azalea Festival, we have taken top<lb/>
honors.<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 as seeond-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 Business Manager<lb/>
Assistant Editors  JAN F. BABY,<lb/>
OLIVER WILLIAMS<lb/>
Sports Editor -  BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
NEWS STAFF Martha Wilson, Bryan Harrison,<lb/>
J Claudia Todd, Kathryn Johnson, Jerry Mills, Loia<lb/>
Ann Webb, Rosemary Eagles, Dee Hux, Faye<lb/>
Rivenbark, Janet Hill.<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF Edna Whitfield, Carolyn Smith<lb/>
Staff Artist  Billy Arnold<lb/>
Circulation Managers Lacye Harris, Peggy Stewart<lb/>
Exchange Editor  Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
Editorial Advisor Misa Mary H. Greene<lb/>
Financial Advisor  D- Clinton R. Prewett<lb/>
COACH RAY MARTINEZ is wear-<lb/>
ing the crown over in the athletic de-<lb/>
partment iiow and he did it all with-<lb/>
out a red vest. He and his fine swim-<lb/>
mers are to b i congratulated for<lb/>
bringing the college its first national<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
And I read someplace about Mrs.<lb/>
Martinez's making all l's last quarter.<lb/>
HOLLYWOOD can offer you people<lb/>
like Baby Doll Meighan, but televi-<lb/>
sion always comes up with new quiz<lb/>
shows and personalities from the old<lb/>
west.<lb/>
You think "Baby Doll" had drama<lb/>
and suspenseWyatt Earp, he's Hugh<lb/>
O'Brian without his spurs, emceed<lb/>
the Jackie Gleason circus extrava-<lb/>
ganza last Saturday night and closed<lb/>
the production with the heartwarming<lb/>
tnd well-chosen words: "And don't<lb/>
forget to eat your Gleams and brush<lb/>
our teeth with Cherrios<lb/>
Houseparties are just the thing<lb/>
around here. I'm with a 14-member<lb/>
one at Carolina Beach. Just up the<lb/>
street rum us Kappa Sigma Nu has<lb/>
hung its coat and hat. Flapping over<lb/>
thtir back door is an oversized sheet<lb/>
bearing their signature. You can't<lb/>
misg it.<lb/>
A few blocks beyond is the hotel<lb/>
Delta Sigma Rho has rented. Now<lb/>
there's one for you. They've even got<lb/>
a dance floor on the top story.<lb/>
Betty Jo Butts of East Carolina<lb/>
and a member of the Azalea Queen's<lb/>
Court has met them all. Her escort,<lb/>
Roy Dennis, is even sharing a room<lb/>
at the Cape Fear Hotel with Miss<lb/>
North Carolina's husband-to-be, Bob<lb/>
Grubbg of .Pfieffer College. Betty Jo<lb/>
and Roy enjoyed a sea food dinner at<lb/>
the Cape Fear Country Club Friday<lb/>
night together with Joan and Bob.<lb/>
Before the coronation pageant last<lb/>
night in Brogden Hall Betty Jo and<lb/>
Roy dined with movie star Dale Rob-<lb/>
ertson at the Cape Fear Hotel. And<lb/>
they've palled around town to teas<lb/>
and luncheons and such with Kathryn<lb/>
Grayson, Queen of the whole week-<lb/>
end; Diane Jergens; Col. Dean Hess;<lb/>
and all the rest of the dignitaries and<lb/>
personalities.<lb/>
Their party Friday night in the<lb/>
Cape Fear Ballroom extended down<lb/>
to Kure Beach when Johnny Dee<lb/>
joined the Greenville Day Student's<lb/>
house-party for a couple of hours.<lb/>
Johnny grabbed a uke and played and<lb/>
sang for the crowd "A Rose and a<lb/>
Baby Ruth which he wrote, and<lb/>
"Just Sittin' in the Balcony" and<lb/>
"A Plus in Love both of which he<lb/>
wrote and has recorded.<lb/>
a police car loaded with nurses and<lb/>
a dozen yelling children careened<lb/>
around a corner blaring "come get<lb/>
your child<lb/>
But it was a gala parade.<lb/>
All this sun has been a welcome<lb/>
change to us having just left the kid-<lb/>
ney of the East, or Greenville.<lb/>
it's a little chilly?especially if you<lb/>
insist on taking a dip in the ocean<lb/>
or riding in a low cut or a swim suit<lb/>
atop a breezy float in the parade.<lb/>
Some of the players in the Azalea<lb/>
Open Golf Tournament even admit-<lb/>
ted to the cold.<lb/>
But nobody minds. I've seen some<lb/>
students nicely toasted?er, nicely<lb/>
tanned already.<lb/>
And the dances.<lb/>
The Collegians left school Thursday<lb/>
to come down here and furni-h music<lb/>
for the street dance that night. Fri-<lb/>
day night they were playing out at<lb/>
the Lumina Pavillion at Wrightsville<lb/>
Beac1 for the Teen-Age Coronation<lb/>
Ball.<lb/>
When Betty Jo was introduced at<lb/>
each of these functions, the Collegians<lb/>
played extra loud and made her feel<lb/>
"real good<lb/>
Carolina's Ocean Plaza and<lb/>
Wrightsville's Shuiuiy's and The<lb/>
Spot rocked until all hours. E.C.C.<lb/>
freshman Bill Boyd attracted quite<lb/>
a crowd around there with his famous<lb/>
bop.<lb/>
After the Queen's coronation Ball<lb/>
last night at the Lumina the festival<lb/>
guests went to the swank Surf Club<lb/>
for a midnight supper. The party may<lb/>
still be going on.<lb/>
There are a great many th<lb/>
politicians do and say that to most<lb/>
are political pr pajranda. But v, I<lb/>
ing much thought to the matter. I<lb/>
suppose that a 'platform" is consid<lb/>
king of it all.<lb/>
Now on the national level. I<lb/>
platforms is bad enough, and<lb/>
suspect it's even more absurd in a<lb/>
campaign.<lb/>
One college newspaper listed tin<lb/>
fications for the campus off<lb/>
included such things as ability to c<lb/>
a parking lot, working knowledge<lb/>
problems, concern for the problems<lb/>
ternity men, athletes, and foreign<lb/>
and the ability to talk a great deal ai<lb/>
very little as prime factors in de<lb/>
best candidate.<lb/>
In addition, he must haw- three h<lb/>
one for shaking, one for patting, ai<lb/>
for painting posters while not '<lb/>
Well, what about platforms? Tin<lb/>
would be a little too much to ask a<lb/>
to present a platform.<lb/>
But whether or not the idea<lb/>
merit, b. th of the SGA presidential<lb/>
dates in the past election had good plat<lb/>
and all of the planks included thins<lb/>
the students need and want.<lb/>
Whether or not the winning ca<lb/>
can shake hands, construct a park; Of<lb/>
paint posters is beside the point. Whether<lb/>
i r not we can say the same tiling about the<lb/>
winning platform will be determined n d<lb/>
year about this time. ?<lb/>
Do you suppose the upperclassmen?<lb/>
with more privileges?will have a park<lb/>
spfece reserved fir them, and the Hast<lb/>
Carolinian without national advertising-<lb/>
will be praising a top-notch student legisla-<lb/>
ture next year this time?<lb/>
IT WAiS NOT I who said that next<lb/>
year's presidential candidate would<lb/>
probably use the campaign slogan:<lb/>
"Don't change president in the mid-<lb/>
dle of a frat house blue print<lb/>
The city of a million blossoms is<lb/>
entertaining several celebrities.<lb/>
The whole highlighted throng was<lb/>
riding in the parade yesterday. It<lb/>
was a t.n-mile long spectacle.<lb/>
Prettily holding a forward position<lb/>
on the court's huge float was Betty<lb/>
Jo in a gown of deep rose, a picture<lb/>
hat, and with a ribboned basket of<lb/>
azaleas.<lb/>
She said the other girls practically<lb/>
suffered from an inferiority complex<lb/>
afterwards, there had been so many<lb/>
East Caroliniarig lining the parade<lb/>
route and cheering for her.<lb/>
We nearly got run over once, when<lb/>
The azaleas are almost as beautiful<lb/>
as the camellias on the E. C. C. cam-<lb/>
pus. They are a throated flame-like<lb/>
flower that blooms every spring.<lb/>
Cars were bumper to bumper this<lb/>
morning along the scenic drive around<lb/>
flcHver-banfced Greenfield Lake. It<lb/>
wag a photographer's paradise.<lb/>
Going to leave in a few minutes<lb/>
now; there's a three-hour ride back<lb/>
to E. C. C. We've all had a most<lb/>
wonderful time.<lb/>
AND SPEAKING OF CONTROVERSIAL<lb/>
CURRENTS .<lb/>
A coed tried to accuse me of being un-<lb/>
fair when I promised to eat Controvert<lb/>
Currents last week if half of the students<lb/>
voted in the presidential runoff.<lb/>
"Why less than 50 voted in the re-<lb/>
cord-breaking ballot the week before she<lb/>
asserted.<lb/>
I told her that I was aware of this, but<lb/>
to prove that CC is always "good" I prom-<lb/>
ised to eat it if 40 of the eligible students<lb/>
voted in the class elections this week.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038422_0003"/><lb/>
.A.PML 5, 195T<lb/>
I<lb/>
he<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ident<lb/>
and<lb/>
true<lb/>
Pacing Bucs On Road Trip<lb/>
BAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
?ess<lb/>
Pirate Netters Journey To<lb/>
State, Wake Forrest, Elon<lb/>
Veteran Outfielder<lb/>
James Blake and Maurice Kverette, all veterans on the ECC tennis team, will be<lb/>
?n thvir current r??ad trip to NC State :n Thursday, Wake Forest on Friday and Elon on Saturday.<lb/>
This has been a busy week for East<lb/>
Carolina's tennis team.<lb/>
Last week, the Bucs battled Kala-<lb/>
mazoo (Michigan) and Elon, to open<lb/>
their season. TMs week, the Buc net-<lb/>
ters have taken off on a road trip in-<lb/>
to dangerous territory.<lb/>
As the "schedule was set up, the<lb/>
Pirate were to journey to Wake<lb/>
Forest on Thursday afternoon, then<lb/>
to N. C. State on Friday, and back to<lb/>
Elon on Saturday for another North<lb/>
tate contest.<lb/>
Pacing the EOC club this spring<lb/>
are three veterans and a host of new-<lb/>
.orriers, whir, may develop into the<lb/>
b.? tennis team ECC has had to date,<lb/>
according to reports from the Buc<lb/>
'amp.<lb/>
Maurice Everette, a junior from<lb/>
Ro ?ersonville and the defending North<lb/>
State singles champion, is number one<lb/>
Virginia Track<lb/>
Tea m Beats ECC<lb/>
71-51 In Meet<lb/>
hat<lb/>
Bucs Host To Bulldogs<lb/>
At College Field Today<lb/>
ARNOLD Sports Editor will probably go against ECC. Other iNorvilie, Troy Perry and Fred Rouse.<lb/>
Mallory will send his veterans are Howard Ham, Tommy J The game will begin at 3:00<lb/>
' e I I- ? May for their<lb/>
nference base-<lb/>
i 196"7 season.<lb/>
av had a full week<lb/>
u tual combat and<lb/>
? i en working hea-<lb/>
hera and has also<lb/>
i m? work with the Bucs<lb/>
Billy Benson, a freshman, turned<lb/>
in an excellent individual performance<lb/>
here last week to lead hi Hampden-<lb/>
Sidney track team to a surprise 71-<lb/>
51 victory over East Carolina.<lb/>
Benson nabbed first place victories<lb/>
in the 100-yard dash, the 220 and the<lb/>
broad jump to net 16 points and in-<lb/>
dividual scoring honors for the event.<lb/>
His times were 10.1 for the 100, 22.9<lb/>
for the 220 and he recorded a leap of<lb/>
19 feet three inches to take broad<lb/>
jump honors.<lb/>
ECC's Jim Henderson, w4 o last year<lb/>
man on the Pirate ladder at the pre- paced his club to a lopsided win over<lb/>
sent time. Everette has developed a ' the HampdenSidney crew in the ?amc<lb/>
good slice and speed into champion-<lb/>
ship assets and is expected o retain<lb/>
his crown for 1957<lb/>
manner as Benson did today, was<lb/>
second in the scoring with first in<lb/>
the high and low hurdles and a second<lb/>
With Everette, are James Blake, i yn the 100. He was given credit for<lb/>
a senior from Jacksonville, and Mike ig points<lb/>
Kat-ias, a sophomore from Virginia Henderson's times for the high and<lb/>
Beach. Both are 'veterans of the 1956 !ow hurdles were 16.5 and 25.9 re-<lb/>
- ? ? ?, games of the<lb/>
? m-conferenec affairs,<lb/>
ed VPI twice. 11-4.3-1,<lb/>
owerful Delaware<lb/>
Pitchers In Shape<lb/>
of worry for the<lb/>
league .star who has<lb/>
? E C since 1954,<lb/>
?n of his pitchers.<lb/>
top hurler in the Pi-<lb/>
been bothered by<lb/>
season opened<lb/>
? seen any action at<lb/>
- an All-State perfor-<lb/>
.1 a 5-U record.<lb/>
East Carolina three<lb/>
Russell has never been<lb/>
mound. His record<lb/>
tilav is .still<lb/>
ECC Players Participate In<lb/>
National Bridge Tournament<lb/>
Teams<lb/>
versit<lb/>
anil<lb/>
representing Cornel Uni-<lb/>
Oberlin College (Ohio)<lb/>
have won the 1957 National Inter-<lb/>
collegiate Bridge Tournament, it was<lb/>
announced today by C. C. Nolen, Di-<lb/>
rector of the Texa Union, University<lb/>
of Texas and Cmn. of the National<lb/>
Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament<lb/>
Committee. More than 2,000 under-<lb/>
graduates at 103 colleges and univer-<lb/>
sities in the United States and the<lb/>
District of Columbia took part in the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Paul Trent and Frank Goldring<lb/>
were on the Cornel! University team<lb/>
which won playing the North-South<lb/>
boards. Danny Kleinman and Dick<lb/>
Reeht payed the East-West boards<lb/>
land won for Oberlin College.<lb/>
hi second place were the North-<lb/>
South team of Jack C. Williams and<lb/>
Donald S. Burdick of Duke University<lb/>
At Elon<lb/>
After tangling witfn ACC here,<lb/>
Friday afternoon, East Carolina's<lb/>
baseballers will journey to Elon for<lb/>
another North State tilt.<lb/>
The Christians, a strong contender<lb/>
for the crown which ECC holds at<lb/>
present, are expected to be one of the<lb/>
toughest clubs to face the Buccaneers<lb/>
during the early season. They are al-<lb/>
ways strong at home, according to<lb/>
Coach Mallory.<lb/>
Mallory came to ECC in 1954 after<lb/>
a successful reign as baseball coach<lb/>
at Elon.<lb/>
team that ended the season in a three-<lb/>
way tre for the North State title,<lb/>
with High Point and Guilford.<lb/>
Newcomers to the squad who are<lb/>
"promising according to Martinez,<lb/>
are John West, freshman from Dur-<lb/>
ham; Billy Hollowell, freshman from<lb/>
Kinston; John Savage, freshman from<lb/>
Godsboro; Ken Chalker, Lawrence<lb/>
Brown, James Daughtridge and Dock<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
Another long road trip is sched-<lb/>
ded for the Bucs, beginning on April<lb/>
19, They are to journey to Jackson-<lb/>
ville (Fla) to test talents with Jack-<lb/>
sonville Navy on April 22, then to<lb/>
Stetson University on the 23rd, Uni-<lb/>
versity of South Carolina on the 24th<lb/>
and return home on the 25th.<lb/>
spectively.<lb/>
For the Pirates, it was their second<lb/>
loss of the season in two starts. They<lb/>
bowed to the University of Richmond<lb/>
by a narrow margin in their opener.<lb/>
ECC Honored<lb/>
Raleigh?The House of Repre-<lb/>
sentatives passed a bill last week,<lb/>
commencing East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege's Coach and Swimming team<lb/>
for winning the National Associ-<lb/>
ation of Intercollegiate Athletics.<lb/>
National Swimming champion-<lb/>
ship, at Carbondale, III.<lb/>
The resolution was proposed<lb/>
by representatives Wooten and<lb/>
Jones, of Pitt County.<lb/>
and the East-West team of Roger<lb/>
I he STregarded :Bohlt and Dunald Krau" rep?Benting<lb/>
he North State's best Stanford University. The Mississippi-<lb/>
arm difficulties in<lb/>
season lias been Dave Har-<lb/>
Mallory was plan-<lb/>
: r relief duty through-<lb/>
. Harris worked a little<lb/>
ware, but could not mea-<lb/>
been especially con-<lb/>
be inability of several<lb/>
is men to find the range<lb/>
?  Mack McPherson,<lb/>
Bruce Shelley, Mack<lb/>
B Miller have had their<lb/>
 ?rouble in control. "The only<lb/>
? a clear that up Mallory<lb/>
"is plenty of hard work<lb/>
at! er The Bucs have<lb/>
 the hot weather and a<lb/>
. ace their last tilt.<lb/>
seems to have derived<lb/>
satisfaction from Leonard<lb/>
freshman George Williams<lb/>
Hitting Good<lb/>
itting cannot be argued<lb/>
 The Bucs slammed<lb/>
tcks in their first three<lb/>
line a host of extra base<lb/>
t le liple-und-GoM at<lb/>
sve been Dean Robbins,<lb/>
Bermey Stevens, Tommy<lb/>
ini Tommy Nance. Nance's<lb/>
st VPI has been the<lb/>
igger thus far.<lb/>
ttrng will have to be good<lb/>
V tic hristian does not<lb/>
crew of returning vets or a<lb/>
n g ball club, but they will<lb/>
B staff of experienced pitchers<lb/>
I ii -enville.<lb/>
Ken Fulghum, a senior righthander<lb/>
Southern team of Rosemary Price and<lb/>
Jame C. Haughton took third place<lb/>
playing t e North-South boards, while<lb/>
the East-West third place winner<lb/>
was a pair from Kansas State Col-<lb/>
lege, Chi-sen Lai and Liun-Liueh<lb/>
Lee. More than 300 other students<lb/>
took regional and campus titles.<lb/>
Previous national winners of the<lb/>
tournament included Dartmouth and<lb/>
Harvard in 1956, Texas U. and Whit-<lb/>
man College in 1955, and Purdue and<lb/>
Dartmouth in 1954. Princeton, Rice,<lb/>
Washbum, M. I. T Wayne, Capital<lb/>
and University of California have<lb/>
also been winners of the tournament<lb/>
in previous years.<lb/>
The National Intercollegiate Bridge<lb/>
Tournament is sponsored by the<lb/>
Games Committee of the Association<lb/>
of College Unions.<lb/>
Here at Eaet Carolina College,<lb/>
John Fields and Barney Strutton won<lb/>
first place playing the North-South<lb/>
hand. Grady Bailey and Carlton Adams<lb/>
won first place playing the East-West<lb/>
! and. Also, we are proud to announce<lb/>
that Grady Bailey and Carlton Adams<lb/>
won second place in the South Eastern<lb/>
Zone which includes the four states<lb/>
of North Carolina, South Carolina,<lb/>
Florida, and Alabama.<lb/>
Bug Golf Team<lb/>
Preparing For<lb/>
Coming Season<lb/>
East Carolina's golfers began prac-<lb/>
tice a little over a week ago in pre-<lb/>
paration for their aef nit on the North<lb/>
State conference crown this year.<lb/>
Three veterans and three now-<lb/>
comers comprise the squad thus far.<lb/>
Regulars from last year's club who<lb/>
will be back for another crack at the<lb/>
title (they lost it last year for the<lb/>
first time in 10 seasons), will be<lb/>
Fred Sexton, Pug Beal and Harold<lb/>
Beck.<lb/>
T e three newcomers are Ira Land,<lb/>
Wayne Workman and Pinky Young.<lb/>
Reports from the ECC camp have<lb/>
it that the club should be stronger at<lb/>
every position this year and Coach<lb/>
Howard Porter has been putting his<lb/>
linksters through rigorous workouts<lb/>
to make certain. The Buc schedule<lb/>
has not yet been divulged.<lb/>
RAY PENN1NGTON?This hard-hittisg Kenior outfielder for Coach Jim<lb/>
Mallory's 1957 baseballers, who is a veteran of three year's play here. i<lb/>
expected to see plnty of duty against North State rivals today, here and<lb/>
tomorrow at Elon.<lb/>
Perkins-Proctor<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
FROM the Aurora, Mo ADVER-<lb/>
TISER "Lipon expiration of this<lb/>
leave he wi.l report to Mare Island<lb/>
for 18 months' snore duty?Read-<lb/>
er's Digest.<lb/>
TOD AY TOMORROW ALWAYS!<lb/>
WILTON<lb/>
SET<lb/>
Engagement Ring $125.00<lb/>
BridVt Circlet 65.00<lb/>
ouARANTEtD by Mm Artcarved<lb/>
rermanenl<lb/>
fVu? fHan<lb/>
At any time, you can apply the<lb/>
full currant retail value (see<lb/>
guarantee) toward a larger<lb/>
ARTCARVED diamond ring at<lb/>
thousands ol ARTCARVED jew<lb/>
ehirs throughout the U. S. A.<lb/>
I Aotfcrii?tf<lb/>
DANUBE $0500<lb/>
SET<lb/>
Engagement Ring $85.00<lb/>
Bride's Circlet $10.00<lb/>
Beloved<lb/>
by Brides<lb/>
for Over<lb/>
100 Years<lb/>
Trade Markj Reg.<lb/>
Rings Enlarged<lb/>
to Show Detail.<lb/>
Budget Terms<lb/>
Prices Incl. Fed. Tax.<lb/>
John Lautares<lb/>
109 East 5th St. Dial 3662<lb/>
From an interview with a fashion<lb/>
designer in the Los Angeles DAILY<lb/>
NEWS: "Her costumed are not just<lb/>
ordinary knitted unes, but are de-<lb/>
signed to bring out a woman's best<lb/>
I tints?Readers' Digest<lb/>
I<lb/>
BEDDINGFIELD'S PHARMACY<lb/>
FIVE POINTS<lb/>
REVLON and CARA NOME<lb/>
COSMETICS<lb/>
REXAL DRUGS<lb/>
ONE DAY FILM SERVICE<lb/>
"Your Most Convenient Drug Store"<lb/>
If It's New . . . It's At<lb/>
Dora's Tower GriB<lb/>
WKLGOKB<lb/>
HAMBURGERS HOT D??tt<lb/>
COLD DRINX SANDWICHES<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
CURB SERVICE<lb/>
Dancing Pavfflion For Your Pleasure<lb/>
Near TV Station and Fir Tow?r<lb/>
<lb/>
J<lb/>
1<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
A GOOD PLAGE TO BAT<lb/>
"&amp;d Food Jf?<lb/>
??<lb/>
BAKER'S STUDIO<lb/>
Portraitist<lb/>
317 V2 Evans Street<lb/>
1<lb/>
J<lb/>
For Drug Needs, Cosmetics and Fountain<lb/>
Goods  Visit<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
Proctor Hotel Building<lb/>
Open 8 a. mlO p. m.  Sunday 8:30 a. m<lb/>
10:30 a m 4 p. mlO p. m.<lb/>
Brody's<lb/>
NEW BUDGET<lb/>
CREDIT PLAN<lb/>
Tailored to suit your<lb/>
needs'<lb/>
TAKE 5 MONTHS<lb/>
TO PAY<lb/>
Brody's<lb/>
All eyes are on Capezios<lb/>
'cause Capezios are so much fun<lb/>
they're high . . . they're<lb/>
L<lb/>
O<lb/>
W<lb/>
They go with everything<lb/>
. . . Only Capezio make<lb/>
Capezios and every<lb/>
Capez-adorer knows it!<lb/>
Blue Leather,<lb/>
Beige Leather,<lb/>
Black Leather.<lb/>
Red Leather,<lb/>
White Leather<lb/>
$7.95<lb/>
Beige, Biaek &amp;<lb/>
White Leather<lb/>
With Raffia Bow.<lb/>
$10.95<lb/>
Thrfce Ways To Buuy ? Cash, Charge &amp; Layaway<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00038422_0004"/><lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL ;<lb/>
PAGE FOUB<lb/>
On Ckpipus Today<lb/>
Approximately 3,000 High Schoolisitors<lb/>
??? ? ; <lb/>
AST C AROLINI AN<lb/>
Spring In The Arboretum<lb/>
Will Observe Academic<lb/>
Work And Pleasures<lb/>
Of Student Life<lb/>
The college is expected to go all out<lb/>
Friday to give approximately 3000<lb/>
high-school guests a grand welcome<lb/>
with an extensive program of college<lb/>
events.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ed J. Carter, di-<lb/>
rector of the college Bureau of Field<lb/>
Services and chairman of the High<lb/>
School Day committee of students<lb/>
and faculty members, activities have<lb/>
been planned to give visitors i glimpse<lb/>
?? academic work at the college and<lb/>
the pleasure of student life on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
High School Day on campus ha.s been<lb/>
an annual event for the past fourteen<lb/>
years and has always been repre-<lb/>
sented with a large attendance of<lb/>
prh school juniors and seniors from<lb/>
schools over a wide area in this and<lb/>
neighboring states.<lb/>
President Messick will welcome the<lb/>
tudents to the campus with an ad-<lb/>
dress to a general assembly of guests<lb/>
Wright auditorium. The college<lb/>
choir, the college concert band, and<lb/>
the college orchestra will provide<lb/>
usieal selections.<lb/>
A host of other recreational and<lb/>
educational events have been planned.<lb/>
1 nt various department of instruc-<lb/>
tion will arrange convocations and<lb/>
exhibits. The convocations will allow<lb/>
th? prospective students an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to talk with professors and de-<lb/>
partment heads and discuss their<lb/>
special fields cf interest.<lb/>
BOTC Review<lb/>
The Air Force ROTC Group will<lb/>
stage a military review for the visi-<lb/>
tors. The East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
will present two one-act plays. A<lb/>
comedy, "The Followers and a seri-<lb/>
ous drama, "Mooncalf Mugford will<lb/>
make up the dramatic entertainment.<lb/>
Physical education activities will<lb/>
he held in the gym and the high<lb/>
schoolers will get a chance to ob-<lb/>
serve college spoils when te Pirates<lb/>
face Atlantic Christian College in<lb/>
nine innings of baseball.<lb/>
Style Show<lb/>
A style show will be presented by<lb/>
the Home Eeonom.es students. Ap-<lb/>
proximately fifty high school stu-<lb/>
dents will participate by modeling<lb/>
.Ires made by the students in their<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
A Science Fair sponsored by the<lb/>
college and the North Carolina Acad-<lb/>
emy'of Science will be held in the<lb/>
science department. Project, by junior<lb/>
md senior . igh school students in<lb/>
the northeastern counties of the state<lb/>
will be displayed during the day.<lb/>
Awards to district winners will be<lb/>
announced at an afternoon ceremony.<lb/>
Three Workshops For Public<lb/>
School Educators Planned<lb/>
The college has announced that the<lb/>
1957 summer s sion will include<lb/>
three specially scheduled workshops<lb/>
whic<lb/>
re expected to be of benefit<lb/>
and interest to teachers and other<lb/>
groups interested in public education<lb/>
in this state.<lb/>
The programs of stud' and the<lb/>
dates when they will be held are:<lb/>
Mora and Spiritual Values in Pub-<lb/>
lic Education, June 4-14; Alcoholism<lb/>
assisted by Mrs. Edna Earle Baker,<lb/>
supervisor of Pitt County schools,<lb/>
and Dr. Bennett.<lb/>
The American Social Hygiene As-<lb/>
sociation is granting fifteen scholar-<lb/>
Education. June 17-27; and<lb/>
Problems with Emphasis upon<lb/>
hips to this<lb/>
take care of<lb/>
workshop which<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
will<lb/>
Eleven Committees<lb/>
Chosen To Work With<lb/>
'Connecticut Yankee'<lb/>
Eleven committees for the SGA<lb/>
annual spring musical, "A Connect-<lb/>
icut Yankee to be presented April<lb/>
30, May 1. and May 2, in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium have been selected.<lb/>
in Hea<lb/>
Family<lb/>
Personal and Family Living, June<lb/>
?-J ily 9. Each will be offered for<lb/>
three quarter-hours of credit.<lb/>
The workshop in Moral and Spiri-<lb/>
tual Values in Public Education will<lb/>
be sponsored by the college and the<lb/>
American Association of Colleges for<lb/>
Teacher Education. Dr. A. L. Sebaly<lb/>
of Oneonta. N. Y national coordinator<lb/>
of the Teacher Education and Religion<lb/>
Project of the AACTE, will serve<lb/>
?s consultant.<lb/>
Dr. John B. Bennett of the college<lb/>
faculty, wo is in charge of arrange-<lb/>
 ts, has announced that members<lb/>
of various departments at the college<lb/>
will discuss the relationship of reli-<lb/>
gion to then art-us of work. Repre-<lb/>
sentatives of different denominations<lb/>
also give the views<lb/>
n i arding the rela-<lb/>
f moral and religious values<lb/>
School programs.<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
The workshop on Facts about Al-<lb/>
?o o! will he offered under the di-<lb/>
rection of Dr. N. If. Jorgensen, head<lb/>
of the health and physical education<lb/>
lepartment at East Carolina. Spon-<lb/>
jors will be the college and the North<lb/>
Carolina Alcoholic Rehabilitation Pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
EDITORS<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
posed in the race tor the editorship<lb/>
of the yearbook, expressed his ap-<lb/>
preciation to the Board of .Publica-<lb/>
tions for re-electing him editor of the<lb/>
annual. Since the 1958 edition is a<lb/>
coverage of the spring and fall of<lb/>
1957, he said that he is "planning to<lb/>
make the edition the 5th anniversary<lb/>
book He stated further that he<lb/>
would strive to make it "the very<lb/>
best coverage of Eat Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege students and events ever<lb/>
 illiamson<lb/>
Williamson has shared the Buc-<lb/>
caneer editorship this year with Shir-<lb/>
lee Morton Smith. He served as as-<lb/>
sociate editor last year under Lan-<lb/>
 Crocker. A senior business edu-<lb/>
cation major from Princeton. Will-<lb/>
iamson is a member of Pi Omega Pi,<lb/>
honorary business education fraterni-<lb/>
ty Board of Publications, the SGA,<lb/>
Organizational News<lb/>
FraternitieTElec t Officers<lb/>
To Head Next Year's Program<lb/>
Eddh<lb/>
ed<lb/>
5S3S<lb/>
When spring e?rr<lb/>
real main<lb/>
n.d in the arboretum. Last week the photographer caught Lawnon JackKm<lb/>
r.d INv Spraill admiring the beautiful Japanese cherry trees.<lb/>
(Nora Willis photo.)<lb/>
Dennis, of Durhmm, was<lb/>
. re id, nt of Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
a mee?t husiness meet-<lb/>
tag and smoker. At the same meeting<lb/>
 , , formulated for a schol-<lb/>
i, dp fund and an sward which will<lb/>
be K .en to the o i ts tending senior<lb/>
boy a chosen by t e iraternity.<lb/>
u?i to . erve along with Dennis<lb/>
M next year's officers were Ken<lb/>
rocker wo-p.esi lent; A. C. HintOO,<lb/>
secretary; Dan Godfrey, treasurer;<lb/>
Warren Browing, correaponding sec-<lb/>
retary; Don Ricketns, Sergeant-at-<lb/>
,tm Kl.e.i Richard, historian;<lb/>
u?d Oliver Williams, saiblkity di-<lb/>
reetoi.<lb/>
u   AJ. elected aa Phi Sigma<lb/>
? official delegate to the national<lb/>
, ntioa whfcb a i ll1  Mia<lb/>
 in April. Other business '<lb/>
up by the fiat. Mi  was tin- awarding<lb/>
it n he "1 an outstanding service key to out-<lb/>
going president Horace Rose and the<lb/>
newly-elected president Eddie Dennis<lb/>
for outstanding service to the frater-<lb/>
nity during thv past year.<lb/>
B. S. I<lb/>
I to mess I ' ?<lb/>
theme foi I<lb/>
Training <lb/>
i ient ' fnion<lb/>
convent I<lb/>
? church of Sanf<lb/>
28. Appro<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
in the woi ??<lb/>
?'<lb/>
Bapt '<lb/>
I<lb/>
d<lb/>
? I<lb/>
Revert<lb/>
,f Wat !?<lb/>
, I : t B<lb/>
graduate<lb/>
Schoi<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
the cont<lb/>
text oi<lb/>
Ann Mayo Wins Scholarship<lb/>
To Study In Foreign Country<lb/>
Ann Mavo of Plymouth, senior, mouth Hi SAool, b? m out- prtti ?<lb/>
I,tZoZjZ winner of the ,Sta,ulin, rooo u, a .fetal l Ea.t pitat; Hogta GBJdk.<lb/>
1'Hi Camma Pi<lb/>
New officers and an adv.<lb/>
been named for Phi Camma<lb/>
campua fraternity.<lb/>
Officers include Eugene<lb/>
;or have<lb/>
Pi, new<lb/>
Hunter,<lb/>
Appro<lb/>
:<lb/>
$660 scholarship offered by the Green-<lb/>
ville Branch of the American Assoc-<lb/>
iation of University Women for study<lb/>
in a foreign country this summer or<lb/>
next year. Se i majoring in French<lb/>
and minoring in the social studies.<lb/>
Jean Fisher of Wilmington, senior,<lb/>
Carolina. 1 i I qua t i she<lb/>
was<lb/>
one secretary; Graham Cooke, correa-<lb/>
1 nt<lb/>
of thirty students to make the highest<lb/>
possible mark- on all courses taken.<lb/>
She is a member of Kappa Delta l'i,<lb/>
national honoi " education;<lb/>
ponding secretary; Bobby Hoover,<lb/>
treaaurer; Cameron Denver, Chaplain;<lb/>
Richard Westhrook. business mana-<lb/>
ger; and Ted Rogers, Sergeant-at-<lb/>
has held offices in various student ,amis. Mr. Herbert R. Paschall, Jr<lb/>
orsrai<lb/>
and faith<lb/>
if th ?<lb/>
tion hip i<lb/>
to public<lb/>
a selected Ly the AAUW as first representative<lb/>
alternate, and' Barbara Harrig of<lb/>
Beaufort, junior, as second alternatt<lb/>
:luded a a of the social studies department, will<lb/>
of East Carolina in serve M advisor.<lb/>
the Dean dvi<lb/>
Business Leadei<lb/>
the Circle K Club.<lb/>
.Ian Raby and 01iv<lb/>
, i ouncil, ! ? ?<lb/>
of America, ami<lb/>
hounn;<lb/>
Oil<lb/>
th.<lb/>
assistant<lb/>
Bast Carolinian<lb/>
Williams are<lb/>
editor posi-<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
r.<lb/>
hoth<lb/>
tions<lb/>
Miss Raliy is an English major from<lb/>
Elizabeth City and has worked on<lb/>
the paper three years.<lb/>
Williams i a business education<lb/>
Lecturers wi<lb/>
?in<lb/>
include Dr. Norbert<lb/>
L. Kelly, education director and S. K.<lb/>
Proctor, executive director, both of<lb/>
the NCAJRP. The Nature and Extent<lb/>
nave Deen seiecieu. T<lb/>
sn k nAor- 'of Alcoho Problems, Educational Pro-<lb/>
Scenery construction will be under <lb/>
ceduree and techniques in Is. C.<lb/>
? As, and Some Aspects in the<lb/>
Alco-<lb/>
Mount<lb/>
"ast l<lb/>
and<lb/>
1<lb/>
arohnian<lb/>
the direction of Alpha Delta Tau,<lb/>
Honorary Industrial Arts Club with<lb/>
Dr. K. L. Bing and Dr. Charles Risher,<lb/>
co-advisors.<lb/>
Mis Mary Green is in charge of<lb/>
publicity while Bobby Patterson and<lb/>
Ralph Shumaker will handle the Fin-<lb/>
ance group.<lb/>
Make-up will he handled by Ed<lb/>
Pilkinton, Margaret Starnes, Jeannie<lb/>
Truelove, Pat Baker, Joyce Stephen-<lb/>
son, and .Pat Everton.<lb/>
The production committee is com-<lb/>
posed of Ralph Shumaker, Pat Ever-<lb/>
ton. Frank Keaton, George Knight,<lb/>
Nora Willis, Edith Rogers, and Lloyd<lb/>
Bray, Jr. with Dr. Kenneth N. Cuth-<lb/>
bert, Advisor.<lb/>
Mr. L. W. Tracy will handle the<lb/>
lighting and sound and Mr. James<lb/>
Butler will head the house committee.<lb/>
Properties are under the care of<lb/>
David Doolittle and Tony Brandon,<lb/>
while the set design and painting will<lb/>
be done by Joe Stell, Nora Willis,<lb/>
Letty DeLoach, Edith Rogers, and<lb/>
Jim Daughty.<lb/>
Stage managers are Joe Stell, Dave<lb/>
Doolittle, and Alton Jones. Ushers are<lb/>
the College Marshalls with Miss Elis-<lb/>
abeth Walker, advisor.<lb/>
Because of the overflow crowds<lb/>
at the production last year of "Okla-<lb/>
homa the production committee has<lb/>
decided that each East Carolina stu-<lb/>
dent must obtain a ticket for a single<lb/>
performance of "Connecticut Yankee<lb/>
Tickets may be secured on presenta-<lb/>
tion of your I. D. card to Miss Cynthia<lb/>
Mendenhall at the College Union.<lb/>
Details will be in next week's<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
Causation and Treatment of<lb/>
hoi n will be among topics of dis-<lb/>
Sponsors<lb/>
The American Social Hygiene As-<lb/>
sociation and East Carolina College<lb/>
will act as joint sponsors of the work-<lb/>
shop in Family Problems. Dr. George<lb/>
Douglas, coordinator of family life<lb/>
education in the Charlotte city schools,<lb/>
will act as coordinator. He will be<lb/>
major from Rocky<lb/>
been a member of the<lb/>
staff for two years.<lb/>
Selection<lb/>
The editors of the college publica-<lb/>
tions are selected by the Board of<lb/>
Publications which is made up of the<lb/>
editors of each of the two student<lb/>
publications. President John I). Ifes-<lb/>
sick. Dean Leo Y. Jenkins, Dr. James<lb/>
H. Tucker, Dean of Men and ("air-<lb/>
man of the Board of Publications<lb/>
and the advisors to the two publica-<lb/>
tions, Miss Mary 11. Greene and Dr.<lb/>
James Porndexter. The usual pro-<lb/>
cedure :or selection is that candidates<lb/>
submit a letter stating past exper-<lb/>
ience and other qualifications. A fi-<lb/>
nal selection is made after the board<lb/>
considers carefully their qualifica-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Miss Fisher is specializing in foreign<lb/>
anguages at the college, and Miss<lb/>
  in music.<lb/>
I he Greenville Branch of the Amer-<lb/>
ican .Association of University Women<lb/>
nitiated several years ago under the<lb/>
eadership of Mrs. Austin Perry the<lb/>
ijeet of raising a fund to be used<lb/>
oi study abroad by a student at<lb/>
East Carolina College. The $65u<lb/>
?cholarship offered this spring is the<lb/>
: I gi n; to be made.<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Ot eis working with Mrs. Perry<lb/>
 been Mrs. Jame L. Fleming,<lb/>
Robert L. Dumber, Neil Stal-<lb/>
i, and Lois Grigsby. The remain-<lb/>
of the fund, according to plans,<lb/>
Othei charter members are William<lb/>
s in American Universities and Byrd, Joe Benfieki, Larry Bailey.<lb/>
Colleges She is bhi daughtei of Mr. Harlon Oarrawny, Boyce Honeycutt,<lb/>
nd Mrs. W. .1 Mayo oi Plymouth. William Howell, Ray Joyner, Gordon<lb/>
As recipient of the AAUW scholar- Itobi ison, James Shropshire, Ronald<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ? Stat BS1<lb/>
Unitarian FellowfJi<lb/>
"Studies in 3<lb/>
pre tented d<lb/>
by the I<lb/>
vile and<lb/>
kin ?<lb/>
ip. she plans to study this aummer<lb/>
at the S . . University of Pai ?.<lb/>
to take coui ? French civilization;<lb/>
and to work toward improvement in<lb/>
. king Kit rich. Sh? p anj to becomt<lb/>
a teach r of Prenc .<lb/>
liens, George<lb/>
James Turner.<lb/>
Smothers and<lb/>
.U 1 s<lb/>
ling<lb/>
i<lb/>
i :<lb/>
e increased in the future until<lb/>
it can provide another scholarship,<lb/>
perhaps for a longer period of study.<lb/>
oice of the recipient of the scho-<lb/>
larship was made by a committee of<lb/>
AAUW members headed by Miss<lb/>
Grigsby and including as members<lb/>
.Mis. Hugh Patterson, AAUW presi-<lb/>
dent; Mrs. J. E. Winsiow; Mrs. Luther<lb/>
Herring; and Miss Stalling.s.<lb/>
Mayo<lb/>
Mis Mayo, ? graduate of the Ply-<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
The Special Projects Commit-<lb/>
tee, in cooperation ith the Pub-<lb/>
licity Committee of the College<lb/>
Union Student Beard, Is now<lb/>
working on a brochure for the<lb/>
College Union to be sent to all<lb/>
students and 1o incoming fresh-<lb/>
men this summer. 1 he chairman<lb/>
of the joint cornittees Miss Rachel<lb/>
Lang, has announced that a con-<lb/>
test for a brochure cover will be<lb/>
held and ? prise of five dollars<lb/>
will be given to the best design.<lb/>
All students are nrged to enter<lb/>
the contest, it you are interested,<lb/>
gQ to the mi ice of the College<lb/>
I mon and inquire as to the npe-<lb/>
cific requirements.<lb/>
Phi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Phi Kappa Alpha elected recently<lb/>
new officers to serve during the com-<lb/>
ing school year. Boh Williams was<lb/>
chosen a.s president. Other officers<lb/>
include Clark Taylor, vice-president; i.<lb/>
Tommy Gainer, secretary; Don - OP<lb/>
?<lb/>
bis b<lb/>
Elliot<lb/>
"V" But i<lb/>
M<lb/>
Knight, treasurer; Jefferson Strick- formal ?<lb/>
land, sergeant at-arms; and Bill S-<lb/>
chaplain. vit.<lb/>
YOUR ARE CORDIALLY INVITED<lb/>
To Test Drive A New<lb/>
1957 FORD At<lb/>
John Flanagan Buggy Co Inc.<lb/>
Since 1866<lb/>
11<lb/>
modern graduates<lb/>
choqseSill three<lb/>
ITS FOR REAL!<lb/>
by Chester Field<lb/>
Fraternity To Award<lb/>
Cup To Outstanding<lb/>
Actor And Actress<lb/>
The best actor and actress of the<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse will be<lb/>
awarded a silver cup by the members<lb/>
of the Phi Kappa Alpha Fraternity<lb/>
at a supper meeting Wednesday night<lb/>
at the Old Towne Inn.<lb/>
The "Best Actor" and the "Best<lb/>
Actress" will be selected from the<lb/>
students who had leading roles in<lb/>
the two major Playhouse productions<lb/>
this year, "State of the Union" and<lb/>
"Pygmalion<lb/>
Stars of "State of the Union" in-<lb/>
clude Bobbie Harrell, Bob Tyndall,<lb/>
Margaret Starnes, and Bill Dixon.<lb/>
Lloyd Bray and Alice Anne Home<lb/>
had the leading roles in "Pygmalion<lb/>
Bob Williams is the President of<lb/>
Phi Kappa Alpha, a social fraternity<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
"I beg your pardon, pretty Miss,<lb/>
But would you give me one small kiss?"<lb/>
"And why should I do such a thing?'<lb/>
"Because, my dear, today it's spring<lb/>
Because there's romance in the air<lb/>
Because you are so very fair<lb/>
'There's a lot in what you've said.<lb/>
Okay, kiss me  go ahead<lb/>
MORAL t Faint heart never won<lb/>
real satisfaction in smoking. If you<lb/>
like your pleasure BIG, smoke for<lb/>
real?smoke Chesterfield. Packed<lb/>
more smoothly by ACCU?RAY,<lb/>
it's the smoothest tasting<lb/>
smoke today.<lb/>
Smoke for roof . ? ? smoke Chesterfield 1<lb/>
$60 far mmy phUotophietd vttm ?WMOJ for publica-<lb/>
tion. ChetterUld, P.O. Box Ml, Ntm York 46, N.Y.<lb/>
OUoMtHrmMMMlh.<lb/>
Mrs. Morton's Bakery<lb/>
We supply the SODA SHOP with FRESH<lb/>
BAKERY PRODUCTS every morning.<lb/>
Enjoy your refreshments there.<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 Crowroad<lb/>
PIT-COOKED BAR-B-Q<lb/>
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GIFTS IN KER STERUNG;PATT?RN<lb/>
START AT LESS THAN 500<lb/>
Start or add to your favorite<lb/>
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Today's modern graduates select and register ail three ?<lb/>
sterling, china, crystal. And they almost always start with<lb/>
Sterling ? the keynote of any beautiful table.<lb/>
Remember, a gift of sterling In her very own pattern costs<lb/>
so little, and is so much appreciated. Prices shown include<lb/>
Federal Tax.<lb/>
MUSIC ARTS<lb/>
FIVE POINTS<lb/>
Records  Instruments  H. F.<lb/>
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t<lb/>
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No need to make s<lb/>
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