<?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="00038424_0001"/>
Sickness<lb/>
 sickacM prevails among East Caro-<lb/>
lina's vtuder body and student initia-<lb/>
te- iv HnipinK painfully. See the editor-<lb/>
n page 2.<lb/>
une XXXII<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Ih,<lb/>
'nee<lb/>
rsn:<lb/>
r "? it<lb/>
 ?? ??<lb/>
Ir V<lb/>
Lyric Soprano<lb/>
Performs Here<lb/>
In Final Recital<lb/>
Prances Veend Sings<lb/>
In Wriuht Auditorium<lb/>
Next Wednesday<lb/>
 a highly acclaimed<lb/>
ill appear in the fi-<lb/>
I ?? ege KnttM tairfs-<lb/>
season, singing<lb/>
 im on W Inesday,<lb/>
m<lb/>
Veei orm to the<lb/>
c piano accom-<lb/>
S hanz r.<lb/>
tmphs t'i date have<lb/>
. , Mew Yoi k City Opera<lb/>
any, in the<lb/>
ns, a- well u<lb/>
Chicago, St.<lb/>
she has had<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1957<lb/>
M u aukee<lb/>
in<lb/>
32SC<lb/>
?<lb/>
Funniest Musical Yet?Cuthbert<lb/>
u last eight<lb/>
v<lb/>
ipper<lb/>
?<lb/>
IP<lb/>
pearances<lb/>
' a i oil in opera with<lb/>
ins Optra Company,<lb/>
 O era Festival, and<lb/>
an Opera Festival.<lb/>
many American sym-<lb/>
stras, Miss Teend Las<lb/>
 ?! by the New York<lb/>
und r the batons of<lb/>
Leopold Stokowski;<lb/>
i the Philadelphia<lb/>
Eugene Ormandy;<lb/>
my both in Boston<lb/>
t e Minneapolis<lb/>
I he Shakespearean comedv<lb/>
"As You Like It will be presented April 25. 26 in the Flanagan Sylvan<lb/>
theater. Dr. (.eore ooke. Touchstone; Roberta Blalack. Rosalind;<lb/>
during rehearsals recently.<lb/>
and Eugenia Truelove. Celia; are shown<lb/>
(Page 1 photos by Nora Willis.)<lb/>
h Mimitri Mitroupou-<lb/>
Sym phony with<lb/>
Others<lb/>
has appeared with the<lb/>
? Pittsburg, Okla-<lb/>
. Nashville, Balti-<lb/>
 Symphony or-<lb/>
.i<lb/>
the soprano soloist<lb/>
? Symphony Orchestra's<lb/>
the Beethoven Ninth<lb/>
Early Training<lb/>
I Vancouver, Waah-<lb/>
as in the far north-<lb/>
her early mu-<lb/>
. g. She sang on radio in<lb/>
rk City before going into<lb/>
ral ie career.<lb/>
f Miss Yeend is a<lb/>
f th( concert originally<lb/>
r Mi mi Benzell. The Ben-<lb/>
late was cancelled be-<lb/>
ss of the artist.<lb/>
Will Provide For Extra Pages In Newspaper<lb/>
Danforth Committee Plans Special Projects<lb/>
Readers of the East Carolinian will<lb/>
be seeing a bigger paper next year.<lb/>
It is ail art of a three year plan<lb/>
and a 119,500 grant to the College<lb/>
by the Danforth Foundation in St.<lb/>
Louis, Mo.<lb/>
A middle page sponsored by the<lb/>
Da: oith Fund a.s been requested<lb/>
and will be given the space and ad-<lb/>
visory aid by the newspaper staff<lb/>
although the material will be writ-<lb/>
ten and prepare! by the Project<lb/>
I "ommittee.<lb/>
Dr. Jo n Bennett, chairman and di-<lb/>
rector of this project, is now in the<lb/>
; rocess of setting up the schedule<lb/>
for next year and need.s students to<lb/>
assist on the committee. Dr. Bennett<lb/>
is the Religious Coordinator for the<lb/>
college and will also head the special<lb/>
thl ee year project.<lb/>
The grant will be used in a series<lb/>
of study topics, organized in three<lb/>
units to extend over the three years<lb/>
and t is extra news sheet will be used<lb/>
primarily to publicize the program.<lb/>
The first year will have the topic,<lb/>
'T e Individual and the Family the<lb/>
second, "The Community and the<lb/>
Nation and the third, "The World<lb/>
For Next Year<lb/>
Five special projects for next year<lb/>
May Day Attendants Chosen<lb/>
May Dav attendants from the junior Janet Hill, 18.<lb/>
DiaiTa Johnson, who received 60<lb/>
vii.es, and Lillian Cohen, 58, will serve<lb/>
as representatives from the sopho-<lb/>
an.i sophomore classes were elected<lb/>
during two special elections earlier<lb/>
his week. The May Queen will be<lb/>
chosen from six senior class repre-<lb/>
sentatives following the holidays.<lb/>
The McDaniel twins, Jackie and<lb/>
Jerrie, Janet Hodges, and Ann Hughes<lb/>
will represent foe junior class during<lb/>
the annual festivities. They received<lb/>
75, 74, 7l and 58 votes respectively.<lb/>
Elizabeth Judge polled 56; Pat Sim-<lb/>
onds, 53; Barbara Whitehurst, 34;<lb/>
more class. Johanna Leewenberg re-<lb/>
ceived 57; Joyce Whittle, 56; and<lb/>
Hilda Lowe, 48 in the close race.<lb/>
Senior coe.i candidates for May<lb/>
Queen include Head Cheerleader Jane<lb/>
Croften, Ann Mayo, Janet Fletcher,<lb/>
Neel Dupree, Rachael Lang, and Pat<lb/>
Everton, The runneiup will serve as<lb/>
Maid of Honor. Freshman class re-<lb/>
presentatives have not been named.<lb/>
Johnston. Manos Named Presidents<lb/>
Y Organizations Elect Officers<lb/>
- the Young Women's and<lb/>
. pi Men's Christian Associations<lb/>
will be rising 5eniors Mar-<lb/>
m of ("harlotte and Gus<lb/>
Fayetteville.<lb/>
ark Miss Johnston's<lb/>
year in YWCA work. For the<lb/>
r il e as been a cabinet<lb/>
as Yes; er Chairman<lb/>
'?' Chairman. At present<lb/>
sting aa president of the<lb/>
Fellowship. Her other<lb/>
ude t o English Club,<lb/>
ormer president of the<lb/>
Council. She is an<lb/>
and social studies<lb/>
in ently<lb/>
serving aa vice-<lb/>
By MARTHA WILSON<lb/>
an active member for tfhe past two<lb/>
years. He also holds the p. utions<lb/>
of treasurer oj the Westminster<lb/>
Fellowship and of the Circle K Club.<lb/>
His other activities include the Can-<lb/>
terbury Club and the FBLA. Busi-<lb/>
ness education is his major.<lb/>
Plans<lb/>
These newly-elected presidents<lb/>
have begun making plans for next<lb/>
year. Their collaborations include<lb/>
continuation of the dormitory dis-<lb/>
cussions on "Marriage' as well as<lb/>
other interesting subjects, a series of<lb/>
forums on religious beliefs, and ef-<lb/>
forts to bring irarmony between the<lb/>
various social fraternities and clubs<lb/>
on campus by having them as part of<lb/>
YMCA, having been its program.<lb/>
MARTHA JOHNSTON<lb/>
Anderson<lb/>
Assisting Miss Johnston in the<lb/>
YWCA will be Tanya Anderson a<lb/>
vice-president, (Annette Capps as<lb/>
secertary, and Carole Ann Carr as<lb/>
treasurer. The cabinet is to be se-<lb/>
lected tonight.<lb/>
Working with Manos will be Cole-<lb/>
man Gentry as vice-president, Jessie<lb/>
Yick es secretary, and Freddie James<lb/>
as treasurer. Within the next few<lb/>
weeks the cabinet i?s to be elected.<lb/>
The urpose of this long-estab-<lb/>
lished campus organization reads:<lb/>
"We unite in the desire to realize fu'l<lb/>
and creative life t).rough a growing<lb/>
knowledge of God<lb/>
"This growing knowledge state<lb/>
Manos and Miss Johnston, "does not<lb/>
limit i's to a weekly vesper service<lb/>
r p? rtic'pation in a special service.<lb/>
?ring the holiday season but rather<lb/>
requires our fullest throughout the<lb/>
en-tire year in study, recreation,<lb/>
worship, service, and fellowshi <lb/>
Understanding<lb/>
T'i s Johnston and Manos continue<lb/>
r. their p ilosophy of the YWCA and<lb/>
c' e YMCA, "By study we would seek<lb/>
i better insight and understanding<lb/>
"f n"t only our own faith but the<lb/>
a!th t ! beliefs o! others as well.<lb/>
Included a'so would be a study of cur-<lb/>
rtnt events and problems on our<lb/>
own campus, in our nation, and in the<lb/>
world. This, however, does not mean<lb/>
that there would be all work and no<lb/>
play. Recreation and fellowship are<lb/>
a vital role of the program of tfie<lb/>
"Y for in this way there is more<lb/>
unity among the members.<lb/>
Weekly Services<lb/>
"iAnother 7hase ol the Y program<lb/>
is worship, which helps the mem-<lb/>
bers grow spiritually. Worship in the<lb/>
'Y takes tfre form of weekly vesper<lb/>
services on Thursday evening and<lb/>
trayer services on Friday morning<lb/>
As it is through the "Y' that unity<lb/>
See PRESIDENTS, page 4<lb/>
Connecticut Yankee'<lb/>
Begins Run April 30<lb/>
have been lined up by rLe Danforth<lb/>
Project Committee. j<lb/>
The theme "Preparation for Family<lb/>
Life" will be discussed September 23-<lb/>
25 with special guest speakers Harry<lb/>
and Bonaro Over-street, husband-wife<lb/>
team who are successful authors and<lb/>
lecturers in the field of human rela-<lb/>
tions. Also, at this time the North<lb/>
Carolina Family Life Council will be<lb/>
me :mg on the campus, with Dr. Bes-<lb/>
ie "McNeil acting as chairman of the<lb/>
program committee for this event.<lb/>
For the next project or unit the sub-<lb/>
ject "Personal Values" will be sched-<lb/>
uled for October 21-24 with Lois and<lb/>
Paul Harris invited to speak. Paul<lb/>
Harris is associated with Boy Scouts.<lb/>
YMCA, and Presbyterian Church (al-<lb/>
though a Quaker-Unitarian) and Nat-<lb/>
ional Council for Prevention of War.<lb/>
He is an author of numerous articles<lb/>
. nd several books. Lois Harris has<lb/>
traveled in Europe and South Amer-<lb/>
ica, is on the staff of t e Dean of Wo-<lb/>
men at Boston University, and has<lb/>
lectured and collaborated with her<lb/>
husband on article and books.<lb/>
Representatives<lb/>
"Choice of A Career" will be the<lb/>
theme of November 11-12. Repre-<lb/>
nt&amp;thres from four different career<lb/>
fields will be invited at this time and<lb/>
i definite emphasis will be made on<lb/>
vocational testing and counseling.<lb/>
On March 17-19 "Music, Art, Lit-<lb/>
erature in Family Living" will be dis-<lb/>
missed on campus at various meetings.<lb/>
It is planned that a musician-critic,<lb/>
an artist-lecturer, and a writer will<lb/>
represent t'rese areas.<lb/>
April<lb/>
The final unit will be on Socio-<lb/>
Po.itical Relations on April 14-16.<lb/>
The topic will be "The Individual and<lb/>
he Family in Relation to Social And<lb/>
Political Units A specialist in soci-<lb/>
ology and the family is expected to<lb/>
lecture and lead discussions.<lb/>
The faulty eonimitteie for the<lb/>
Danforth Project are: Dr. John Ben-<lb/>
nett, chairman; Dr. James Poindex-<lb/>
ter, Dr. Ed Hirshberg, Dr. Bessie<lb/>
McNeil, Dr. W. Marshall, Dr. Clinton<lb/>
revvett, Dr. Virginia Herrin, Dr.<lb/>
ames White, Miss Louise Williams,<lb/>
nd Dr. Leo Jenkins, ex officio.<lb/>
MrOinnis Auditorium lately has<lb/>
1 ten t e scene of large scale rehear-<lb/>
- or what promises to be the most<lb/>
' o ate n tiniea extravaganza ever<lb/>
 , v at East Carolina College<lb/>
 ? i" ? tan eighty singers, dancer.1'<lb/>
nd mu r ns are involved in the<lb/>
1og? ra : nd H rl musical, "A Connect-<lb/>
icut Yrnke " which will be presented<lb/>
here on April 30, May 1 an! 2. Dr.<lb/>
K nneth Cuthbert. who, with Dr.<lb/>
Elizabeth Utterback, is directing the<lb/>
'???' nmmented: "It's t'c fun-<lb/>
"i! nrn ;ra! yet. Outstanding in<lb/>
rehearsals have been those cast mem<lb/>
hers with humorous parts, especially<lb/>
George Knight. Dottit Jo James, Bar-<lb/>
bara Harris. Ral. h Shumaker and<lb/>
Myrl Maness. They really bringdown<lb/>
the house. Many have said, 'what<lb/>
can yon follow "Oklahoma" wit ?'<lb/>
They'll have their answer when they<lb/>
-e - onnecticut Yankee<lb/>
Dr. Cuthbert also stated that the<lb/>
SGA investment brings top enter-<lb/>
tainment to the campus. The same<lb/>
production by a New York road com-<lb/>
pany would cost six or seven thous-<lb/>
md dollars, he said.<lb/>
Highlights<lb/>
One o the highlights of the show<lb/>
will be the dancing, which is directed<lb/>
by choreographer Chuck Sheerest, of<lb/>
Dur am. "The dances are going to<lb/>
be something different announced<lb/>
Shearon, "the students haven't seen<lb/>
this type here before. It's a great<lb/>
variety of jazz, ballet and character.<lb/>
The dancers have shown very good<lb/>
cooperation Shearon has worked out<lb/>
dance routines for "Desert Isle<lb/>
"Camelot Samba "Lunchtime Fol-<lb/>
lies and other numbers in tie play.<lb/>
His background includes dancing in<lb/>
"The Lost Colony" and "Unto These<lb/>
Hills and four months study in New<lb/>
York under Alfredo Corvino of -the<lb/>
Metro; olitan Opera Ballet. He is<lb/>
now studying in Greenville with Marie<lb/>
Wallace.<lb/>
The leading male role is sung by<lb/>
George Knight, of Rocky Mount.<lb/>
Knight played Will Parker in last<lb/>
year's "Oklahoma He says of "Con-<lb/>
necticut Yankee" rehearsals, "They've<lb/>
been a lot of hard work, but also a<lb/>
lot of fun He added, "I'm sure the<lb/>
most fun will come when we pre-<lb/>
sent it<lb/>
Sandy, the principal female part,<lb/>
s handled by Dottie Jo James, of<lb/>
Wilmington, who played Ado Annie in<lb/>
.ast year's production. Miss James<lb/>
fees that her present role is "not as<lb/>
easy as Ado Annie, but just as en-<lb/>
joyable<lb/>
Orchestra<lb/>
, For the orchestration, which Dr.<lb/>
Cuthbert describes as being "mostly<lb/>
good solid jazz arrangement a thir-<lb/>
ty ; iece orchestra is being used.<lb/>
The cooperation among the varying<lb/>
By JERRY MILLS<lb/>
elements has, according to all sources,<lb/>
been excellent. Margaret Starnes, a<lb/>
dancer, expressed it in this manner:<lb/>
"I love the spirit of this musical.<lb/>
It's been just grand About Shearon, j appeared in a number of dramatic<lb/>
she said, "Chuck Shearon has done j roles, and i5 dancing in "Connecti<lb/>
the best choreographing job I've seen, See MUSICAL, page 4<lb/>
hort of tlie movies. He really de-<lb/>
3 rves the raves he'? getting from<lb/>
everyone Miss Starnes' opinion was<lb/>
hared by Alice Anne Home, who has<lb/>
Ralph Shumaker<lb/>
Baroara Harris<lb/>
Dance Chorus Leads<lb/>
Campus Station<lb/>
?fits Air Waves<lb/>
"This L radio station WWWS at-<lb/>
v8st Carolina College in Greenville, i<lb/>
North Carolina, Upturning to the<lb/>
ir 'or a new day of broadcasting<lb/>
This standard sign-on announce-<lb/>
ment was heard for the first time<lb/>
vesterday as East Carolina's new<lb/>
radio station WWWS began oera-<lb/>
tieis.<lb/>
With 91.3 megacycles, the new sta-<lb/>
tion is an educational FM and is au-<lb/>
thorized by the Federal Communi-<lb/>
cations Commission.<lb/>
Schedule<lb/>
Tn the beginning weeks, WWWS<lb/>
will broadcast from four to five in<lb/>
the afternoons and from eight until<lb/>
ten-ti irty in the evenings.<lb/>
The first week's schedule includes<lb/>
"ampUg news and weather, a campus<lb/>
concert, and a thirty-minute record-<lb/>
ed program in the afternoon.<lb/>
During the evening, the station will<lb/>
broadcast a program from 8 until<lb/>
9 p. m. "Music from the College"<lb/>
through WGTC in Greenville. At<lb/>
See RADIO, page 4<lb/>
Elvis The Pelvis<lb/>
Coeds Love Ludv 9<lb/>
East Carolina cceds don't love Elvis tender.<lb/>
At least, five of them have found a new leve.<lb/>
His name is Ludwig. And you, too. can love Ludwig, they<lb/>
say.<lb/>
Ludwig Van Beethoven is the new rage throughout the<lb/>
c untry and five of our coeds have jumped on the bandwa i<lb/>
and are starting a militant movement towards the establishm m<lb/>
of an "I Love Ludwig" chapter at East Carolina.<lb/>
The idea, begun by Edmund Goldsmith, an undergraduate<lb/>
at Yale University, is obviously the result of a rebellion against<lb/>
Presslian supremacy. (<lb/>
Earl Wilson informed local admirers of Beethoven about<lb/>
the m vement through his syndicated column in the Raleigh News<lb/>
and Observer. Goldsmith appeared last week on NBC-TV's "To-<lb/>
night" show.<lb/>
Ed urged all to join the movement. Of course, there is a<lb/>
money angle to it.<lb/>
In order to be a full-fledged Ludwigger, you must have<lb/>
possession of an "I Love Ludwig" button.<lb/>
In a letter to the five representa-<lb/>
tives of the East Carolina chapter,<lb/>
Edmund told the girls the buttons<lb/>
cost four for one dollar, fifty for<lb/>
$R, rd if they really wanted to go<lb/>
into business it would beJWfor four<lb/>
thousand, <lb/>
.H alS'o added, "If anything clicks<lb/>
at East Carolina College, I might<lb/>
coniier coming down. Got room?"<lb/>
The co-eds, Fan Green, Betty Da-<lb/>
meron Jrne Goldston, Agnes Mark-<lb/>
ham, and Mrs. Lillian Moore are tak-<lb/>
ing orders. Strangely enough, they<lb/>
pre home economics majors and<lb/>
??? n't making any profit off the deal.<lb/>
Still stranger, an impressive list is<lb/>
being made of Ludwig lovers.<lb/>
If Elvis doesn't get you "all shook<lb/>
up" and you are interested in be-<lb/>
coming a proud owner of the great-<lb/>
est button since "I Like Ike con-<lb/>
tact one of the co-eds mentioned<lb/>
above.<lb/>
-i<lb/>
Chuck Shearon and Carrol Harris rehearse<lb/>
dance numbers.<lb/>
Connecticut Yankee"<lb/>
Phi Sig Dance Set<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi will sponsor a sock<lb/>
hop in Wright Auditorium Saturday<lb/>
evening April 27 at 8:00 o'clock- The<lb/>
raternity promises a sock hop which<lb/>
is planned to be completely different.<lb/>
There will be a floor show entitled<lb/>
"Through the year at EOC Th?<lb/>
 ow will feature students recreat-<lb/>
ing the outstanding events of tihe<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
Highlighting the sock hop will be<lb/>
an election of the WOLF and DOLL<lb/>
at East Carolina. Any campus f-a-<lb/>
ternity may sponsor a boy and girl.<lb/>
The election will be held at the dance.<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00038424_0002"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, APRIL  ?<lb/>
PAGSTWO<lb/>
A Prevailing Sickness<lb/>
A sickness prevails among East Caro-<lb/>
lina's student body, and student initiative is<lb/>
limping painfully.<lb/>
Recent class elections created no more in-<lb/>
terest than did the big rally which was held<lb/>
here in the fall. The latter was the occasion<lb/>
of House Speaker Sam Rayburn's visit to<lb/>
Wright Auditorium along with Governor Lu-<lb/>
ther H. Hodges, Senator Kerr Scott. Senator<lb/>
Sam Erwin. and others.<lb/>
Students were urged to attend the acti-<lb/>
vities and hear Mr. Rayburn's address as well<lb/>
as the words of our state's leaders. Students<lb/>
didn't bother to show up. They weren't inter-<lb/>
ested in hearing our leaders. That's only one<lb/>
f many examples which we could cite, indi-<lb/>
cating a lack of student.initiative.<lb/>
Neither were they interested in eho sing<lb/>
their class leaders during the annual elections<lb/>
last week. 0t?y just refused to take time and<lb/>
go to the polls.<lb/>
We felt the probability of a gradual in-<lb/>
terest in campus political activity when over<lb/>
1600 turned out to vote during the Student<lb/>
Government Association elections. About 40<lb/>
per cent of the student body voted, and that is<lb/>
quite a drop below the percentage it should<lb/>
reach.<lb/>
It is, however, a heartwarming increase<lb/>
of 500 votes over last year's disappointing<lb/>
figures. And this small increase came only<lb/>
after the Elections Committee took the polls<lb/>
to Coed Row so East Carolina's weaker sex<lb/>
could handily cast a vote while picking up the<lb/>
murning paper or signing out for a weekend<lb/>
excursion.<lb/>
Figures from the various class elections<lb/>
reveal the stark fact that student interest<lb/>
concerning who is to lead what around this<lb/>
campus is just about shot.<lb/>
Only 252 of the approximate 707 soph-<lb/>
omore class members were interested in voic-<lb/>
ing an opinion as to who would head next year s<lb/>
junior class.<lb/>
And just take a look at the freshman<lb/>
vote?a disgusting 298. There are 968 fresh-<lb/>
men enrolled this quarter, you know.<lb/>
In the case of the juniors, however, the<lb/>
East Carolinian feels next year's seniors were<lb/>
justified in keeping clear from the polls last<lb/>
week. Actually, there was no choice for them<lb/>
to make. Opposition appeared in only one of-<lb/>
fice, the vice presidency.<lb/>
Despite this, 105 enlightened voters from<lb/>
the 597 member class found their way to the<lb/>
ballot box. We'd call that a serious case of<lb/>
chronic "Idongivadamnesia<lb/>
That's next year's "sick" senior class!<lb/>
Conditions reach a critical state when<lb/>
class members refuse to choose their leaders<lb/>
for the vear. But when students become so ill<lb/>
no one has the initiative to seek leading class<lb/>
offices, that's the time to delete them entirely.<lb/>
Those few students who attend class meet-<lb/>
tings should be afforded the privilege to form<lb/>
among themselves a committee to supervise the<lb/>
class's activities.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is for leaving the<lb/>
"sick ones alone in oblivion. That's exactly<lb/>
the way they'd have it.<lb/>
Jimmy Ferrell<lb/>
Sap Begins Rising<lb/>
And Raid Rumors<lb/>
Start Roaming<lb/>
YOU MIGHT say it happens every<lb/>
Spring. That's been the case for the<lb/>
past few years anyway. Sap begins<lb/>
rising in the freshman class and ru-<lb/>
mors start roaming  a panty raid<lb/>
is in the making.<lb/>
Rumors seep into the administra-<lb/>
tion building. Secretaries discuss it<lb/>
quietly, .hake their heads but smile<lb/>
a little, and President Messick com-<lb/>
ments before the new student legis-<lb/>
ature. He calls it "the cheapest<lb/>
type of fun Then the freshmen and<lb/>
other interested parties really talk it<lb/>
fcASt C A ft 0 LIK1 A K<lb/>
? ? ? ?. ?<lb/>
FINALLY, it .spreads across cam-<lb/>
pus, through the dorms along Coed<lb/>
Row, and down into the basement of<lb/>
Jarvis where our amiable law en-<lb/>
forcement officers have set up house-<lb/>
keeping. They shake their heads, too,<lb/>
without smiling. It's a thing they<lb/>
just can't understand. Panty raids<lb/>
accomplish nothing but trouble.<lb/>
They remember all of them?the<lb/>
time two years back when fire trucks<lb/>
were even called to threaten drench-<lb/>
ing the raiders while the girls hung<lb/>
out of Cotten's windows.<lb/>
AND they remember last year.<lb/>
That was (jhe time the boys held their<lb/>
little pow-wow between the two men's<lb/>
dorms when the noise boomed upward<lb/>
and could be heard all over town.<lb/>
Dorm counselors heard it, too. Shades<lb/>
were jerked down and every room<lb/>
was darkened 'as the counsellors<lb/>
shouted instructions over the dorm-<lb/>
itory intercom. It took you back to<lb/>
the 40's and you remember how your<lb/>
grandmother pulled down the shades<lb/>
and turned out the lights.<lb/>
. ??-<lb/>
S SSiSK-fci,<lb/>
Billy Arnold<lb/>
Civil War And Privy Poetry<lb/>
THAT WAS the night, too, when<lb/>
Dr. Messick came over to check into<lb/>
the nappenings. Prior to his visit,<lb/>
two coeds had slipped out on the<lb/>
second floor balcony at Jarvis' back<lb/>
entrance and dropped unidentified<lb/>
objects. The boys yelled and clapped.<lb/>
And the next day you talk with<lb/>
the city police chief and he braggs<lb/>
and explains how well the coeds co-<lb/>
operated. You didn't tell him about<lb/>
one girl who kicked and fumed be-<lb/>
cause the boys didn't make it to her<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
NOW THE RUMORS are on the<lb/>
move again and campus policemen<lb/>
wonder how it'll be the next time.<lb/>
They hope t-ere won't be a next time.<lb/>
One of them talks to you late at<lb/>
night over in Wright Building. They<lb/>
close up the coffee machines in the<lb/>
soda shop and the music stops in<lb/>
Mis.s Mendenhall's place.<lb/>
He makes his rounds to lock up the<lb/>
place and tren asks you. "Have you<lb/>
heard nything about a panty raid?"<lb/>
You tell him you haven't heard<lb/>
one smither.<lb/>
The Civil War may be over now,<lb/>
but you'd probably be surprised at<lb/>
the ferocity with which the Yankees<lb/>
and the Rebels still battle it out in<lb/>
the boys bathroom down at Austin<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
As far a 1 know, there has been<lb/>
no bloodshed yet, but the two forces<lb/>
are continuing to rage viciously at<lb/>
each other?on the hatroom walls.<lb/>
Unfortunately, I cannot quote to<lb/>
you the various colorful ph.rase3<lb/>
and commands printed -there?it has<lb/>
something to do with some kind of<lb/>
moral decency code among news-<lb/>
papers, I think?but ,1 can recommend<lb/>
it as a living example of how the war<lb/>
between the states continues to re-<lb/>
main a thing of reality in the hearts<lb/>
and bathrooms of the South.<lb/>
Aside from the fact that most of<lb/>
those who indulge in the bathroom<lb/>
war seem to have a lot of trouble<lb/>
with their grammar and spelling,<lb/>
their military maneuvers are very<lb/>
interesting. One rebel scrawled the<lb/>
term "Yankeys" for Yankees at a<lb/>
strategic place on the upper lefthand<lb/>
coiner of the  . Main Wall? At<lb/>
another point, .some Yankee described<lb/>
the Southerners as "Southerns Per-<lb/>
haps this is merely an intended dig<lb/>
rather than ignorance.<lb/>
Running Conversation<lb/>
One of the most exciting aspects<lb/>
of watching this scribbled bathroom<lb/>
brawl, is the fact that there is a<lb/>
running conversation now going on.<lb/>
When 1 came here in 1954, there were<lb/>
several slashing remarks posted there<lb/>
in pencil. Each year has brought more<lb/>
and more replies, more and more<lb/>
gripes, assertions, demands and tales<lb/>
on the wall.<lb/>
At least two participants in the<lb/>
battle, a Southerner and a Yankee,<lb/>
have been carrying on a steady blast<lb/>
at each other for some time now?a<lb/>
regular hand-to-hand combat thing.<lb/>
Every few days, an addition to the<lb/>
argument will be found scribbled<lb/>
beneath the foregoing one, placed<lb/>
there by one or the other of the two<lb/>
foes.<lb/>
So furious and frantic has the battle<lb/>
become in the three years that I've<lb/>
been here, that the entire West Wall<lb/>
has been filled almost to over-<lb/>
flowing with it. At some poai-<lb/>
tion.s along the battlefield, old<lb/>
scars of past wars remain,<lb/>
faded, partially erased or scratched<lb/>
through, or written over by younger,<lb/>
fresher reserves. And the field of<lb/>
war is not limited, either. The words<lb/>
and phrases stretch from about seven<lb/>
feet off the floor to within one or two<lb/>
inches of it. (the ones who accom-<lb/>
plish the seven-foot mark were un-<lb/>
doubtedly using heavy artillery or<lb/>
air enforcements).<lb/>
Others Join In<lb/>
Of course, along with the local<lb/>
War that is raging, there are<lb/>
the ever present privy poets, who<lb/>
must ad i their familiar four-line<lb/>
comments. These little jingle.s and<lb/>
doodles, I would not recommend for<lb/>
your reading. They are pointless and<lb/>
only ad i to the confusion.<lb/>
But on the whole, I would say that<lb/>
it L a fascinating mess that is un-<lb/>
folding here at BOC, right under our<lb/>
very'noses. The war rages on, year<lb/>
after year, always contributing to V e<lb/>
scene.<lb/>
Perhaps if the maintenance crew<lb/>
would take the trouble to install<lb/>
mirrors in Austin bathroom (as<lb/>
wel: as South Wright, upper floor),<lb/>
it would discourage the writing war<lb/>
by covering the walls. That is, if you<lb/>
an- interested in discouraging it. I'm<lb/>
enjoying it.<lb/>
If you're ever in the vicinity of<lb/>
the bathroom at Austin anytime soon,<lb/>
? hop in and get a first-hand view of<lb/>
the war. It's been there for three<lb/>
v. ars and 1 doubt if it'll disappear<lb/>
before you get a chance to see it.<lb/>
Of course , you girls will have to<lb/>
find your own literature.<lb/>
Ovid Pierce<lb/>
A Challenge To The<lb/>
Writers Of Southern Fiction<lb/>
(TTui is the iecond and<lb/>
mem from an address by Mr 0<lb/>
facultv member here, at the Nortl i<lb/>
I iterary Porum in Raleigh<lb/>
It is not for the defense<lb/>
that I ask, but for the writei<lb/>
m ral obligation to look again<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
Illumination and undei<lb/>
be gained from others, eertaii<lb/>
h ve broken ground before us,<lb/>
But their v i rid is not ours<lb/>
If vve bring humility to a task<lb/>
not mean that ve scorn that wh<lb/>
ay, contri -l. insincere? Sui<lb/>
nal bservable trappings, the tol<lb/>
South are not so permanent I<lb/>
needs them t survive. Cannot U<lb/>
writer be concerned with the hui<lb/>
tionthat which ia "S uthern"<lb/>
accident of place? There it<lb/>
Southern" love, or h nor. i r CO i<lb/>
is there such a thing as "South<lb/>
and hate and fear.<lb/>
These abstractions are meai<lb/>
 t f r thi life and significant<lb/>
brought t them in specifii<lb/>
world which hag just been en<lb/>
Nobody can win for the <lb/>
his page. His claim for the accei I<lb/>
illnsin must be increasingly<lb/>
and despair will have no meaning ? ?<lb/>
hich he gives,<lb/>
That is why we should u.<lb/>
stereotyped?whether in elii<lb/>
acter, or in th ught. A definition<lb/>
very nature of the novelist'<lb/>
him to U I very generalisation, ?<lb/>
? very form f action according I<lb/>
ing for the individual<lb/>
This is the difference betwt<lb/>
and psychology, fiction, and so<lb/>
tween art and craft.<lb/>
To quote Eud ra Welty.<lb/>
finest of the living- Southern<lb/>
seems that the art that speaks n<lb/>
most explicitly, directly, and <lb/>
from its place of origin will<lb/>
longest understood. It is through<lb/>
we put i ur roots, wherever birth<lb/>
fate or our travt-linjr selves put<lb/>
but where these r ots reach t<lb/>
ther in America. England, or 1 I<lb/>
is the deep and running vein.<lb/>
COaistent and everywhere purely its<lb/>
feeds and is fed by the human under<lb/>
The challenge to writers today. I tl<lb/>
not to disi wn any part of ur hei<lb/>
ever ur theme in writing, it is old ai<lb/>
Whatever our place, it has been ?<lb/>
the stranger, it will never be nev<lb/>
is only the vision that can be new:<lb/>
is enough<lb/>
Pot Pourri<lb/>
Why Not Start<lb/>
A Literary Magazine?<lb/>
Kii JAS KABY<lb/>
Bryan Harrison<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the Students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Caroltnm<lb/>
Name changed from TBCO ECHO November 7, 1952<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division, Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
First Place Rating, CSPA Convention, March 1966<lb/>
Entered as 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/>
Mary Ellen Williams<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
A FELLOW over in one of the<lb/>
men's dorms, ho usually has first-<lb/>
hand knowledge about this kind of<lb/>
thing, tells you there's no plans<lb/>
among the upperclassmen so far as<lb/>
e knows. And he usually knows.<lb/>
But you know how the sap starts<lb/>
rising in the freshman class, how<lb/>
the upperclassmen urge them on, and<lb/>
how some coeds throw a little fuel<lb/>
o?i the fire. That's right. A few coeds<lb/>
always have a hand in Cnese big do-<lb/>
ings like panty raids.<lb/>
Letter From A Friend<lb/>
Easter is just around the corner<lb/>
with the idea of new frocks there ia a<lb/>
important phase to be considered?a<lb/>
itual rebirth. It is a time for m<lb/>
and a re-valuation of one's beliefs<lb/>
how much is your faith worth to you?<lb/>
Jimmy Ferrell<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Assistant Editors<lb/>
JAN F. BABY,<lb/>
OLIVER WILLIAMS<lb/>
Sport Editor  BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
NEWS STAFF Martha Wilson, Bryan Harrison,<lb/>
" Claudia Todd, Kathryn Johnson, Jerry Mills, Lois<lb/>
Ann Webb, Rosemary Eagles, Dee Hux, Faye<lb/>
Rivenbark, Janet Hill.<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF . . Edna Whitfield, Carolyn Smiv.i<lb/>
Staff Artist   Billy Arnold<lb/>
Circulation Managers Lacye Harris, Peggy Stewart<lb/>
Exchange Editor  Mrs. Susie Webb<lb/>
Editorial Advisor  Miss Mary H. Greene<lb/>
Financial Advisor   D Clinton R. Prewett<lb/>
Technical Advisor  Sherman M. Parka<lb/>
Printed by Renfrew Printing Co Greenville, N. I.<lb/>
6FFIOBS on tne second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, 6101, extension 64.<lb/>
From the "Rubayait of Omar knaysm<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor w?,<lb/>
Shall hire it back to cancel balf a line.<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word of it<lb/>
translated by E. FitageTald.<lb/>
WHAT'S SO SPECIAL about a<lb/>
panty raid at East Carolina? Who<lb/>
k.iows? Maybe the News and Ob-<lb/>
server can tell you.<lb/>
They had a couple of flings over<lb/>
at Chapel Hill during the basketball<lb/>
season, but they never made the front<lb/>
! age. But you let the boys at East<lb/>
Carolina step out of the dorm, yell a<lb/>
couple ot times pretty loudly, the<lb/>
shades go down and tfhe lights go out,<lb/>
then the flash bulbs start popping.<lb/>
Next morning there'll be a big<lb/>
spread on the front page, showing<lb/>
some of the innocent bystanders at-<lb/>
tempting to duck from the camera's<lb/>
sight. The paper's big wheels might<lb/>
even have to cut out some story con-<lb/>
cerning Ike's appointing Harry to a<lb/>
big post, but it'll be tfcere just tine<lb/>
same. And some way, somehow the<lb/>
headline writers will place "EOC"<lb/>
in about a30-?point headline.<lb/>
SO WHAT'RE you going to do<lb/>
when the sap starts rising? Some<lb/>
fellow over in the soda shop com-<lb/>
ments about a panty raid, slaps a<lb/>
friend on the back and laughs. Some<lb/>
freshman takes it very seriously and<lb/>
tells a friend they've got to be in on<lb/>
the big deal. The uppeclassraen<lb/>
chuckle and know things are going<lb/>
Occasionally, when the old dead-<lb/>
line slips up on him, a columnist is<lb/>
desperate for something to write<lb/>
about. It is in these desperate mo-<lb/>
ments that he fills up his column<lb/>
with non-original material.<lb/>
However, it's not such a bad prac-<lb/>
tice if the guest columnist has some-<lb/>
thing worthwhile to .say. I received<lb/>
a very interesting letter the other<lb/>
day from a friend of mine, Ernie<lb/>
Spasmo, a sophomore at Barnhill<lb/>
Junior College, a thriving fortress of<lb/>
education up in the western part of<lb/>
the state. Ernie serves as a news-<lb/>
reporter for the "Barnhill Weekly<lb/>
and it is with his permission that I<lb/>
submit this letter.<lb/>
Dt ar Bryan,<lb/>
I'm writing to you because since<lb/>
you work on a college newspaper too,<lb/>
you are one of my friends who can<lb/>
really appreciate this.<lb/>
I was assigned to cover the Board<lb/>
of Trustees meeting the other day<lb/>
when they were working on the ad-<lb/>
well.<lb/>
Take a look at the headlines in<lb/>
last year's East Carolinian?"Frosh<lb/>
Dismissed as Panty Raid Trouble-<lb/>
makers Three students paid fines<lb/>
in recorders court and went home,<lb/>
receiving the brunt of blame for the<lb/>
action.<lb/>
ministration's budget request. Well,<lb/>
you know how those meetings are.<lb/>
Everything's "off the record" and<lb/>
everything else is not "subject for<lb/>
release at Dbii time And then some-<lb/>
one announces emphatically that this<lb/>
"is certainly not for publication in<lb/>
the college paper So there's really<lb/>
not much to do except wait around<lb/>
until after the meeting and get their<lb/>
carefully prepared statements about<lb/>
what went on.<lb/>
ilT'S BAD when students get kicked<lb/>
out of school over idiotic disturbances.<lb/>
If another tpanty raid comes, that'll<lb/>
be the case. And the upperclassmen<lb/>
will smile and say, "That's a fresh-<lb/>
man for you<lb/>
The only reason I go is because it's<lb/>
really amusing. I get a big kick out<lb/>
of how the administration wastes<lb/>
the donor's money. I'm glad it's rich<lb/>
men paying for it. I would hate for<lb/>
Barnhill to be state-supported and<lb/>
have all that tax money at the mercy<lb/>
of someone's whim.<lb/>
For instance, the administration<lb/>
asked for $25,000 for sidewalk re-<lb/>
pairs. Now I'll admit Barnhill's spread<lb/>
out over a pretty big area, and there<lb/>
are a lot of sidewalks, and some of<lb/>
them are in pretty bad shape, but I<lb/>
can hardly see $25,000 going into<lb/>
it. That much money would pave a<lb/>
six-lane highway completely circling<lb/>
the campus.<lb/>
The Board kept on giving them<lb/>
money until there was only about<lb/>
$50,000 left. I thought that they would<lb/>
probably request this for a new stu-<lb/>
dent union because ours is too small,<lb/>
but instead they requested it for<lb/>
starting a radio station called WBJC<lb/>
(Wonderful Barnhill Junior College.)<lb/>
They said that total costs would<lb/>
run to about $60,000, but they were<lb/>
sur? that they could get $10,000 from<lb/>
the Student Government. They said<lb/>
that they would save money because<lb/>
tl -y weren't going to broadcast like<lb/>
a commercial station, instead it will<lb/>
be over some frequency which would<lb/>
i quire a special set to hear it.<lb/>
When somebody asked them what<lb/>
kind o. programi they would play,<lb/>
V v replied that they would have<lb/>
classical music and poetry readings,<lb/>
"thus insuring high standard enter-<lb/>
tainment Now I can just see all the<lb/>
fellows up here running down town<lb/>
to buy a special radio to hear long<lb/>
hair music and someone read poetry.<lb/>
There is an ever-increasing demand 1<lb/>
a literarv magazine t i be created<lb/>
Carolina College to be a showcase<lb/>
creative talents of the student- Mr.<lb/>
Pierce. English faculty member, wh<lb/>
teaching a course in Creative Wj<lb/>
offered his assistance. The East Ca<lb/>
wishes to encourage such a public;<lb/>
is willing to aid in any way possib!<lb/>
SpeakinK of literary efforts<lb/>
of the Creative Writers group are urf<lb/>
contact Dr. Martha Pingel, adviser. : r the<lb/>
purpose of re-organizing for next year. A<lb/>
written constitution will be drawn up in<lb/>
the near future.<lb/>
Tut they said their main purpose<lb/>
was to train radio announcers and the<lb/>
like. Of course, wfren the Board gave<lb/>
them the money, nobody asked why<lb/>
radio announcers were so import-<lb/>
ant to society, that a liberal arts<lb/>
college would give $50,000 to pre-<lb/>
pare them.<lb/>
I could have thought of a million<lb/>
things to do with the money like<lb/>
hire more library workers, gie 100<lb/>
$500 scholarships, bring in some big-<lb/>
na e performers for the students,<lb/>
(thus insuring low standard enter-<lb/>
tainment) adding on to the student<lb/>
union and etc.<lb/>
When I mentioned this to one of<lb/>
the members of the administration,<lb/>
he replied, "Well, that's the way the<lb/>
mop flops<lb/>
Yours in earnest,<lb/>
Ernie.<lb/>
Now is as good a time as any t art<lb/>
urging students with journalistic ambit<lb/>
fcr next year to come over to the new-<lb/>
office for an interview. There's always a<lb/>
demand for reporters and also there wffl<lb/>
be a need for some people with sc-<lb/>
lents in the writing field. Anyone want<lb/>
be a file secretary?<lb/>
If you are a freshman here, you ms<lb/>
not know that ECC was selected in 19H8<lb/>
one of the 15 model colleges or pilot centert<lb/>
in the U.S. by the Danforth Foundation, tf<lb/>
educational trust fund in St. Louis. Mo<lb/>
the attempt to discover ways and means to<lb/>
teach the reciprocal relation between reli<lb/>
gion and other elements in human culture<lb/>
in order that the prospective teacher, whe-<lb/>
ther a teacher of literature, history, the arts-<lb/>
science, or other subjects, be prepared to<lb/>
understand and to convey to his students<lb/>
the significance of religion in human affair-<lb/>
Now that sounds like a breath and<lb/>
half-full, but what it means is that we were<lb/>
given money to aid students in their edu-<lb/>
cational needs thru intercollegiate program<lb/>
which stress the spiritual and religious <lb/>
pects of education. I'm bringing this &amp;<lb/>
your attention because you'll be hearing<lb/>
more about it in the future.<lb/>
MMMMmiNMIIMI<lb/>
<pb facs="00038424_0003"/><lb/>
.FR1L<lb/>
19CT<lb/>
BAST CABOLINUR<lb/>
PAGE<lb/>
Mint<lb/>
are to<lb/>
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rec.<lb/>
? i<lb/>
,?<lb/>
-a P<lb/>
iitation<lb/>
Just<lb/>
indf<lb/>
1st l&amp;<lb/>
for <lb/>
ir. 0<lb/>
is nc<lb/>
tolinitf<lb/>
irgf 3<lb/>
for<lb/>
teat-<lb/>
up :<lb/>
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?re <lb/>
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1954<lb/>
cental<lb/>
ltion.?J<lb/>
l<lb/>
cu!t<lb/>
?r <lb/>
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CROW'S NEST<lb/>
cat<lb/>
HI-<lb/>
ft<lb/>
R<lb/>
it<lb/>
?<lb/>
h<lb/>
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C<lb/>
fl<lb/>
t<lb/>
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I"<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
!s<lb/>
<lb/>
Bv JOHNNY HIDSON<lb/>
ECC Baseballers Make Good<lb/>
Showing In Home Games<lb/>
.sy in<lb/>
Km h Mi ar-vl the<lb/>
imti y I ave<lb/>
I CtMMM of<lb/>
Milwaukee<lb/>
i Tanks,<lb/>
have<lb/>
tod vott to<lb/>
. i t boaori<lb/>
l t tod tn re-<lb/>
- h- Nat-<lb/>
. t : all au-<lb/>
? m : a f eel-<lb/>
Yaaks also<lb/>
? I Nat.<lb/>
MM I etween<lb/>
t Cin-<lb/>
' : r.t-r major<lb/>
? ? ? ' <lb/>
rial it'a a<lb/>
Milwaukee<lb/>
?k has a<lb/>
Bti Q&amp;g for<lb/>
S ' . place<lb/>
? ? etwi en<lb/>
?? ? go writk<lb/>
Bro klyn still<lb/>
? ? (rets<lb/>
i<lb/>
hi, spring Most of the other North<lb/>
State schools have track, but found<lb/>
some reason to avoid scheduling the<lb/>
Bucs The only conference compe-<lb/>
tition BCC will face ris season is a<lb/>
eoup.e of unofficial meets with At-<lb/>
Oumtiaa and the Conference<lb/>
Meet East Carolina holds ei?ht North<lb/>
9? track records and should repeat<lb/>
M champs.<lb/>
Following tht BOC-App!acfcian<lb/>
t a . game, the visitors stated that<lb/>
BCC should repeat as champions.<lb/>
aid <lb/>
ttl , tting lo<lb/>
dug staff<lb/>
ties and their<lb/>
-  ECC Ath-<lb/>
? ? .aa Cinn.<lb/>
: r. .es<lb/>
f. and !jai<lb/>
I Brooklyn<lb/>
EaT Smith, Ass.<lb/>
- ? - to repeat in<lb/>
Nat aal 1 ? be-<lb/>
: Braves<lb/>
mentioned<lb/>
g ex eat? on<lb/>
 made sound<lb/>
? J ex-<lb/>
: the race<lb/>
. along with the<lb/>
na a ith the Reds<lb/>
g and Pr.ila-<lb/>
? y of trouble<lb/>
ver and could be<lb/>
? - In the Ameri-<lb/>
ire going out on a<lb/>
? Yanks in second<lb/>
American League<lb/>
Detroit Tigers<lb/>
 illations,<lb/>
tficiala Bad<lb/>
N i th State news,<lb/>
habit for poor i<lb/>
V, stern Carolina. It <lb/>
.a chore to defeat a<lb/>
n home territory<lb/>
f some bad calls on<lb/>
rt. Basketball seems<lb/>
pressure on tihe<lb/>
it C ?eh Jim Mallory<lb/>
ball team ran into<lb/>
almost lost the<lb/>
a couple of bad calls.<lb/>
 the road trip, Mal-<lb/>
the umpiring<lb/>
WO<lb/>
. r. Boone carries his grid-<lb/>
into the mountain region<lb/>
. ; run into trouble if<lb/>
  students continue<lb/>
? on officials.<lb/>
1 rack Schedule Light<lb/>
Miller and his defending<lb/>
ler champiotis had<lb/>
working out a schedule<lb/>
Pirate Netters<lb/>
At ACC For Big<lb/>
Encounter Today<lb/>
WILSON ? Atlantic Christian's'<lb/>
:tnni outfit plays host to the Pirates<lb/>
today, here, in a regular North State<lb/>
Conference tilt.<lb/>
Billy Widcreon and Chuck Hester,<lb/>
? ?trans. will spark the Bulldogs as I<lb/>
they attempt to break up a 3-0 unde-<lb/>
feated streak of the Bucs' in con-j<lb/>
ferenee play. EOC is now on top in<lb/>
the standings and only a return mater.<lb/>
ith Guilford and possible tests with<lb/>
H k. ? Point stand in the way of their<lb/>
taring the North State title for<lb/>
the second year in a row.<lb/>
After the ACC match here, today,<lb/>
the Pi rates will begin their swing<lb/>
 i t- Southlands to battle teams in<lb/>
Florida and South Carolina.<lb/>
Friday, they will .eave Greenville<lb/>
and Saturday, they will tangle with<lb/>
the University of Charleston, at South<lb/>
Carolina. Next, on Tuesday, they will<lb/>
battle Stetson University, then Jack-<lb/>
sonville Nava. Base, in Florida. On<lb/>
the.r way home, they will stop off<lb/>
U) meet the Citadel in a return match,<lb/>
oping to avenge a 5-4 setback suf-<lb/>
fered earlier at Greenville.<lb/>
Making the trip to meet ACC to-<lb/>
day, and also making the long road<lb/>
tru, will be Maurice Everette, John<lb/>
Savage. John Wast, Mike Katsias,<lb/>
Billy Hollowell, ar.d James Blake.<lb/>
Today's match is expected to be a<lb/>
five-singles, two-doubles event.<lb/>
Behind the .our-hit pitching of<lb/>
junior Bruce Shelley, East Carolina's<lb/>
baseballers notched their fourth con-<lb/>
secutive North State Conference vic-<lb/>
tory of the young eason. heie, Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Shelley truck out six and walked<lb/>
cmly one to take mound honors from<lb/>
Appalachian's Froneburger. at Col-<lb/>
tge Field, 8-1. Shelley also banged<lb/>
out two )ts to aid his cause.<lb/>
The Pirates rang up five big runs<lb/>
in the first inning to jump into a<lb/>
quick lead. First baseman Dean Rob-<lb/>
oins chopped a long double to bring<lb/>
in two o the scores. Others who<lb/>
helped were Joe: Long and Gary<lb/>
Greon.<lb/>
In the Fourth frame a sacrifice<lb/>
flj Ly Burniey Stevens brought in<lb/>
 trier tally, Appalachian scored their<lb/>
lone run also in that fourth inning,<lb/>
n an error. Thev earned no runs at<lb/>
ah.<lb/>
In the seventh. Stevens sent a<lb/>
long double in deep left-centerfield<lb/>
to bring home two more Pirates,<lb/>
making the score B-l.<lb/>
Robbins paced the batters with 3<lb/>
or 4 trips to" the plate, including two<lb/>
doubles and a single. Stevens got 2<lb/>
for 4.<lb/>
It was Shelley's first starting as-<lb/>
ignment for the Bucs and his first<lb/>
.vin of the year. East Carolina's mark<lb/>
in conference play jumped to 4-1 af-<lb/>
ter that contest.<lb/>
R H E<lb/>
EC" 500 100 8Hx? 11 t<lb/>
App 000 100 000?1 4 3<lb/>
.n their second game on Wednesday<lb/>
Appalachian downed fhe Boca 6-5.<lb/>
Leonard Lillej was the losing barter.<lb/>
The Box:<lb/>
App 200 400 000?6 18 2<lb/>
EC 1 200 HH 801?5 T 3<lb/>
Pirates To Meet NC State Here<lb/>
On May 3rd For Night Contest<lb/>
Tennis Team Is<lb/>
5-2 Victor Over<lb/>
Guilford Outfit<lb/>
By BILLY<lb/>
East Carolina's defending North<lb/>
Stte vMiam.ien baseball team will<lb/>
meet N. C. State, here at Greenville's<lb/>
St. Stadium. May 3rd.<lb/>
it will te a night contest in the re-<lb/>
amped arena and will mark the first<lb/>
lime State has ever played here.<lb/>
Pirate Trackster<lb/>
Ann Wilson Named New Head<lb/>
Of Association Next Year<lb/>
Ann Wilson will bt the new presi-<lb/>
dent of the Women's Recreation As-<lb/>
sociation for next year, it was an-<lb/>
nounced recently following an election<lb/>
of officers.<lb/>
The incoming vice president is<lb/>
Sylvia Beasley. a sophomore; secre-<lb/>
tarial duties will be handled by Betty<lb/>
Lee, freshman.<lb/>
Treasurer for the sr: ?p wfll He<lb/>
Hilda Roberts, freshman. Pat Dunn.<lb/>
a junior, is the new East Carolinian<lb/>
reporter and Libby Thompson, junior,<lb/>
will serve as Buccaneer reporter.<lb/>
iMaitinez'<lb/>
matches to post<lb/>
for ECC were<lb/>
Bill Hollowell.<lb/>
West and Mik<lb/>
doubles combina-<lb/>
and West and<lb/>
Peggy<lb/>
new out<lb/>
Davis, a fres man, is the<lb/>
licit chairman while Sue<lb/>
Edwards, sophomore,<lb/>
awards chairman.<lb/>
w i<lb/>
i<lb/>
the<lb/>
Golf Date<lb/>
GUILFORD?Fred Sexton and mis<lb/>
ECC golfing teammate oett their<lb/>
itoT link season, here, today against<lb/>
the Guilford Quakers.<lb/>
Sexton, a veteran, and five others<lb/>
will take to the green attempting to<lb/>
oring the North State Golf title back<lb/>
to BCC. The Pirates have held the<lb/>
title for nine eai in a row, only to<lb/>
bee it last season. This year, the<lb/>
Bucs aie going after it in earnest.<lb/>
Sexton Pug Bea. and Harold Beck<lb/>
are the veterans pacing the club. Ira<lb/>
Land. Wayne Workman and Pinky<lb/>
Young are the newcomers on the<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
Howard Porter is coaching the ECC<lb/>
six.<lb/>
At the last WRA meeting the an-<lb/>
nual house arty was planned for<lb/>
the first week-end in May. to be held<lb/>
at Atlantic Beach. Alo plans and<lb/>
committees were formed for the an-<lb/>
nual spring banquet to be hell taily<lb/>
in May.<lb/>
At the present, the WRA ha set<lb/>
up a girls Softball league with three<lb/>
teams being entered so far. They are:<lb/>
the Dope Addicts, the Wildcats, and.<lb/>
the Hornets Tw games are played<lb/>
a week, on Tuesday and Thursday at<lb/>
4 p. m.<lb/>
GUI LDF08JD?The Pirate tennis<lb/>
?eam defeated Guilford. bare, last<lb/>
Saturday. 5-2. in a regulation North<lb/>
State Conference tilt.<lb/>
oacb Raymond Bfartines'<lb/>
took all five single:<lb/>
be win. Winners<lb/>
Maurice Everette,<lb/>
Savage, John<lb/>
Katsias. Ti e Buc<lb/>
tions well Savage<lb/>
Katsias and Blake.<lb/>
The victory was East Carolina's<lb/>
third in conference play this year<lb/>
ind extendrd their overall mark to<lb/>
5-2 Th.y have defeated Wake Forest,<lb/>
V  State, Eon (twice) and Guil-I<lb/>
or . Thej have lost only to The j<lb/>
tadel and Kalamasoo, in an ex-1<lb/>
hibition match.<lb/>
Martinez raised his team's play<lb/>
against Guilford and singleu out i<lb/>
H ? lowel as one of the most<lb/>
promising in the fold. HoUowelTa win<lb/>
Saturday was i is sixth consecutive<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
La-t year. KCC. Guilford. and High<lb/>
Point tied for the loop tit.e. This<lb/>
vtar. ECC has already defeated Guil-<lb/>
ARNOLD<lb/>
The contest a<lb/>
State's Western and Eastern baseball<lb/>
powers, for t e Wolf pack is currently<lb/>
leading the Atlantic Coast C nfen<lb/>
and is the leader in the Big Four. ?<lb/>
BCC is making a strong bid to retain<lb/>
tlnir North State title.<lb/>
Coach Jim Mallory, P.rate Coach,<lb/>
commented ? week that<lb/>
boys art ig forwai i ame<lb/>
and "should givn them ac ' ?<lb/>
City Project<lb/>
1 e bringing tog- th I th<lb/>
:eani -  citj pi oject M ?<lb/>
school proje t Sohm q m r-<lb/>
?ral Greenville busi<lb/>
the idea in hopes that a . e of<lb/>
this area n 1 see top-<lb/>
Since ECC - .<lb/>
?<lb/>
? . v of<lb/>
Is) W, Ul<lb/>
 .<lb/>
et<lb/>
? i o<lb/>
them<lb/>
St<lb/>
V Mil!<lb/>
ford and Guilford in turn has<lb/>
eadj dropped High Point, 5-2.<lb/>
.Martinez however, says. "We<lb/>
havt a long way to go<lb/>
ai<lb/>
till<lb/>
i r m a Nea Bedfor.t. Mas nt-w<lb/>
paper: "Perfect leach house for your<lb/>
Staj on the cape: fishing, golf, tennis.<lb/>
canasta and Bridget Reader! Di<lb/>
ge?r<lb/>
( harlie Bishop, a native of Wash-<lb/>
Lngtou, and his ECC track teammate?<lb/>
?meyed to Norfolk yesterday af-<lb/>
ternoon for a match with Newport<lb/>
,f??. Apprentice and William<lb/>
Marv Division.<lb/>
h Stadium, ? ised to<lb/>
i t e horn ft<lb/>
1<lb/>
eni n Gre?<lb/>
j I he City and by thi s<lb/>
sin? ssm n. Th Cit; .<lb/>
roximntt lj $3,000 in j tl<lb/>
fences, painting :<lb/>
rom tht '<lb/>
in a new<lb/>
Is I've ev<lb/>
i best in t state, no v" Mall<lb/>
? " ?. I<lb/>
men ai i als out $2,500<lb/>
to the cause. Their money will be<lb/>
used to in . si<lb/>
am.<lb/>
Tickets are on a.t n<lb/>
in charge are hoping :<lb/>
dium with students, s<lb/>
and visitors from all over the Baste!<lb/>
' of the state.<lb/>
Perkins-Proctor<lb/>
"The House of Name Brands"<lb/>
?????????A ??-?<lb/>
Teacher- needed foralifornhi. Arizona. New Mexico, many other <lb/>
western states. Beautiful to?ns-cititfv Need grade teachers for com- J<lb/>
merce. home ec. English, nun ic. ind. arts, science. Salaries 5f 4000 up. <lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Teachers Specialists Bureau<lb/>
Boulder, Colo.<lb/>
1 MUSIC ARTS.<lb/>
FIVE POINTS<lb/>
Records  Instruments -H.F<lb/>
201 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
L7<lb/>
wbmnfi<lb/>
for a<lb/>
Charming Bridesmaid<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. m10 p. m.<lb/>
WHAT'S AN INSCRIPTION IN A CAVE?<lb/>
KATHLEEN POTTS<lb/>
CORNELL<lb/>
Grotto Motto<lb/>
WHAT IS SWUNJl lAKCENYt<lb/>
? avis iolstad. Deft Theft<lb/>
CHICO STATE COLLE6I<lb/>
WHAT IS A STURDY BOAT I<lb/>
H?IH? NOTES<lb/>
VASSAR<lb/>
Staunch Launch<lb/>
WHAT IS AMIDGETPLAYBOY?<lb/>
ivqy?vifa tdfKn ? aVr mm ' 1 ii3<lb/>
EDWARD GOODWINShort Sport<lb/>
WEST VIRGINIAu<lb/>
? Imat. e how delighted<lb/>
your bridesmaids will be<lb/>
with this personalized gift<lb/>
 ideal memento of the<lb/>
happiest day in your life.<lb/>
$5 Lovely sterling silver bra-<lb/>
(? celet bears tag engraved on<lb/>
one side with the name of<lb/>
the bridesmaid who will<lb/>
wear it. On the other with<lb/>
?h names of the bride and<lb/>
:? groom, and the wedding<lb/>
date.<lb/>
Also ovoilobw ?'? Qotd and gold lHd<lb/>
No 5116S STERLING SILVER<lb/>
$5.50 F.T.I.<lb/>
SCAUTIFUUY GIFT BOXED<lb/>
John Lautares<lb/>
M9 East 5th St. Dial 3662<lb/>
?<lb/>
Hitchhikers Bags<lb/>
with<lb/>
College Insignia<lb/>
Student Supply<lb/>
Store<lb/>
wand thVri  .STICKLE! MAKE '25<lb/>
Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word<lb/>
fP rhyming answers. Both words must have<lb/>
RJg the same number of syllables. (No draw-<lb/>
ings, please!) Weil shell out $25 for all we use?and for<lb/>
hundreds that never see print. So send stacks of 'em<lb/>
with your name, address, college and class to Happy-<lb/>
Joe-Lucky, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y.<lb/>
MILLIONAIRES: do your friends<lb/>
yawn at yachts? Do they think<lb/>
diamonds are dreary? Here's a pres-<lb/>
ent that would make even a banker<lb/>
hanker: introduce him to Luckies!<lb/>
While you're at it, be a sport: give<lb/>
him a whole Startiri' Carton! A<lb/>
Lucky is all cigarette . . . nothing<lb/>
but fine tobacco- mild, good-tast-<lb/>
ing tobacco that's TOASTED to<lb/>
taste even better. Invest in a car-<lb/>
ton yourself. You'll say Luckies<lb/>
are the best-tasting cigarette you<lb/>
ever smoked!<lb/>
CIGARETTES<lb/>
Luckies Taste Better<lb/>
"ITS TOASTED" TO TASTE BETTER . . . CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!<lb/>
WHAT IS A DISH NOISE t<lb/>
MARION WVNU.<lb/>
NtRCCR U<lb/>
Platter<lb/>
Clatter<lb/>
WHAT AK HAY AND OATSt<lb/>
JrCL?rG<lb/>
<lb/>
STANLEY PITERSMule Fuel<lb/>
tl. 0? SANTA CLARA<lb/>
WHAT'S A WORKER IN A CANDU MCTOHY1<lb/>
fa4<lb/>
i)r?0<lb/>
PAUL NILLIRTaper Shaper<lb/>
U. OP FLORIDA<lb/>
WHAT IS A SMAU PIER I<lb/>
charles jones Dwarf Wharf<lb/>
WILKESCOLLEGE<lb/>
? A.T.CO. Product of Urn<lb/>
XmmSmmamm ?jQ&amp;ceo-is wm mtiddlt<lb/>
<pb facs="00038424_0004"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, APRIL<lb/>
P UiE FOUE<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
18. 1U<lb/>
Pat Everton<lb/>
Will Go On California Trip<lb/>
For Annual ACE Convention<lb/>
led (iarlmun and A. C. Hinton are discusing plans for next years<lb/>
senior class, (iartman Has elected president and Hinton, vice president in<lb/>
the class elections last week. The new officers have promised to work on<lb/>
better representation at the class meetings.<lb/>
College Union Student Board<lb/>
Initiates Awards Banquet<lb/>
CU&amp;B initiated an annual<lb/>
awards banquet which was held in<lb/>
the Cellege Union last Monday night.<lb/>
event climaxed the year's ac-<lb/>
? ?, of the games committee and<lb/>
 onored those students who have<lb/>
ated in tournaments spon-<lb/>
bia committee.<lb/>
Tin- banquet was well attended by<lb/>
- of Cl'SB and special guests,<lb/>
according to Miss Cynthia Menden-<lb/>
direetor. Decoma Byrd gave a<lb/>
farewell address as she stepped down<lb/>
from the presidency ol CUSB, an<lb/>
. fice which she ha served faithfully<lb/>
and well for two years, and turned<lb/>
. ? t; responsibilities to LaVisa<lb/>
mon, the incoming president. La-<lb/>
Visa called for new business at which<lb/>
Cynthia Mendenhall presented<lb/>
Decoma with a lovely silver bowl, a<lb/>
- ft from the Student Board for her<lb/>
tstanding service.<lb/>
Davt arsoi represented the Ciames<lb/>
Committee in the presentation of<lb/>
awards. Sylvia Britt was the recip-<lb/>
ient of two trophies as girl's Champ-<lb/>
ion in ping  on both Fall and Winter<lb/>
Quarters. Charles Russell and Barney<lb/>
Strutton received piJig pong trophies<lb/>
? a and Winter Quarters, re-<lb/>
tively, and Barney received an<lb/>
additional honor of campus bridge<lb/>
conjunction with his<lb/>
C. Fields. Mr. Fields<lb/>
 to receive this honor.<lb/>
and Carlton Adams<lb/>
champion in<lb/>
partner John<lb/>
w&amp;s not resi i<lb/>
Grady Bailey<lb/>
were also campus bridge champions<lb/>
of the opposing team. The names of<lb/>
both teams. N-S and E-W arc en-<lb/>
: raved on a plaque which was<lb/>
awarded to the Union by the National<lb/>
Association o College Unions.<lb/>
Dr. James Stewart presided over<lb/>
:? ?- bridge presentations and gave<lb/>
Honorable Mention to Zeke Coggins<lb/>
foi having won in the mi -t games<lb/>
throughout the year. Zeke received<lb/>
a gift in this respect of a double<lb/>
deck of bri Ige cards.<lb/>
Mis. Frank Fagan showed the silver<lb/>
cu awaiting the winner uf the Chess<lb/>
aameni which is now underway.<lb/>
Mis Mendenhall introduced special<lb/>
guests which tnjcludfed Dr. James<lb/>
Stewart and Miss Mary Cifeene,<lb/>
? rid- enthusiasts, Miss Lorrayne<lb/>
Gra t Dr. Phillip Graefand Miss Janie<lb/>
Smith, dance enthusiasts, and Capt.<lb/>
George Patterson, who has helped<lb/>
organize the chess activity. Other<lb/>
special guests were the above men-<lb/>
tioned winners of the tournaments,<lb/>
and Mrs. Fagan and Mis Mendenhall<lb/>
who ave supervised committee ac-<lb/>
tivities.<lb/>
FOR THE LATEST HAIR STYLES <lb/>
SEE US AT THE J<lb/>
: FRIENDLY BEAUTY SHOP <lb/>
 117 W. 4th Street ?<lb/>
 <lb/>
By JAN RABY<lb/>
Note to talent .scouts: Pat Everton,<lb/>
president of the ECC chapter of As-<lb/>
sociation for (Chibdhood Education,<lb/>
will be in Los Angles, California,<lb/>
vpril 21-26.<lb/>
The beautiful blonde senior was<lb/>
selected recently to represent the<lb/>
group at the 1957 Study Conference<lb/>
f Association for Childhood Educa-<lb/>
tion International and will leave<lb/>
Friday morning from the Raleijrh-<lb/>
Durham airport lor her first plane<lb/>
rip.<lb/>
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. M<lb/>
Everton, o. Columbia, N. C, it will<lb/>
also be the first visit for her to<lb/>
California. Pat said, "I'm so excited<lb/>
. can't study a bit She already has<lb/>
her plane reservation and also her<lb/>
hotel reservation at the Biltmore.<lb/>
Annual Event<lb/>
"This is an annual event Pat<lb/>
said, "and last year it was held at<lb/>
Washington, D. C. and we sent nine<lb/>
I delegates<lb/>
"The theme of this: year's confer-<lb/>
ence is 'That All Children May Learn'<lb/>
and study groups will meet, hear<lb/>
background lectures, visit centers in<lb/>
the L. A. area to see children at work<lb/>
and also there will be exhibits of<lb/>
.special interest<lb/>
"For the group studies I signed<lb/>
up as my special interest "Interpret-<lb/>
irir t e School Program to the Pub-<lb/>
lic as I thought it would be more<lb/>
helpful to me as a beginning teach-<lb/>
er<lb/>
Meetings<lb/>
Going on to expain about the di-<lb/>
visional and regional meetings, I'at<lb/>
added, "Each of us will learn of the<lb/>
new trends in our special fields of<lb/>
interest as we meet with national<lb/>
educational leaders<lb/>
When asked how she felt about the<lb/>
trip, se said, "I'm tickled to death.<lb/>
It's a once in a life time lor me.<lb/>
I've been ready to go ever since 1<lb/>
found out<lb/>
Future<lb/>
Her future plans include teaching<lb/>
next year in the Raleigh city school<lb/>
system in the primary prades.<lb/>
The i resent president of the ACE.<lb/>
Pat a been in the college choir for<lb/>
three years, a past historian of the<lb/>
SGA, alternate for Miss Student<lb/>
Teacher this year, representative for<lb/>
ECC at the Wilmington Azalea Fes-<lb/>
tival last year, and also she was<lb/>
selected to "Who s Who In American<lb/>
Colleges and Universities<lb/>
Business Students<lb/>
Place Second In<lb/>
Shorthand Test<lb/>
Jane H:u lison of Kin-ton. has been<lb/>
notified by the Gregg Publishing<lb/>
Company that her paper entered in<lb/>
? e Ii tematioi a Gregg Shorthand<lb/>
' nmanship Contest laced third<lb/>
imong tin- 20.(1110 papers submitted<lb/>
v -tudents of Gregg a orthand.<lb/>
Fi im the intei mediate n I the ad-<lb/>
   ,i  i ?i cla ?-?- in the Bus -<lb/>
-jes Dc artment, 140 ' ?' nts en-<lb/>
Musical Star? James, Knight<lb/>
Continued from page 1<lb/>
This is my first musi- Carolyn Eiam, Teddy r ?  p<lb/>
ffin, C. A Jcnr<lb/>
?re'<lb/>
11 .<lb/>
ntei al iona! cor teat, ;<lb/>
nd<lb/>
i<lb/>
ejri<lb/>
!?'<lb/>
East<lb/>
tc H econd in<lb/>
i'at Everton . .<lb/>
ornia convention.<lb/>
will attend Cali-<lb/>
to I<lb/>
stud i<lb/>
(. Pol egiat ? Division.<lb/>
V . Hardison, a studi nt n th<lb/>
? ? ear si cretarial coin se, pi ced<lb/>
hint in t individual compi 1 ii ion<lb/>
ror Y lassifications. The East Caro-<lb/>
"n si pi t- entering the contest are<lb/>
of i sea in the depart-<lb/>
bnj ine s ed ti al ion taught<lb/>
Audrey V. Demi "?ey, Mrs.<lb/>
Ellis, and Dr. James L.<lb/>
loads of fun she com-<lb/>
enrh rs<lb/>
6h<lb/>
LARRY'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
Cum pas Footwear For All Occasions<lb/>
At Five Points<lb/>
1<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
A GOOD PLACE TO BAT<lb/>
'6?d Food M<lb/>
GmdMmMh'<lb/>
Pirate Festivity<lb/>
Set At Nags Head<lb/>
lext Weekend<lb/>
Dare County Pirates Jamboree to<lb/>
be held at the Nags Head-Hatteras<lb/>
area April 25-29, will be the occasion<lb/>
for much festivity for East Carolina<lb/>
students and other visitors including<lb/>
Governor Luther Hodges.<lb/>
Thursday there will be a dedication<lb/>
th? Croatan Sound bridge. On<lb/>
Friday t ere will be on the Outei<lb/>
Bank.s what is known as the largest<lb/>
fish frj in the world. Also there will<lb/>
be dances on Friday night there.<lb/>
The Nags Head Shrine Club will<lb/>
be the scene Friday night of the<lb/>
Roi i Jump with the Ski Notes<lb/>
? . this dance. It wi!l be<lb/>
from '?' ? m. until 1 a. m. EOT stu-<lb/>
lents will receive cut r.lL; for tr.is<lb/>
i sioi Advance tickets are $2.00,<lb/>
?ou le oi tag, or they may be pur-<lb/>
based for $(() at the door.<lb/>
Saturday there will be speed boat<lb/>
races, stock car races on the beach,<lb/>
mod airplane show and other sched-<lb/>
uled activities. Saturday night at<lb/>
the Nags Head Casino there will be<lb/>
the crowning of the Pirate Queen<lb/>
King as the highlighting event<lb/>
? the w.ek-end.<lb/>
Boat race will close out Sunday's<lb/>
act vities, en iinr the Pirates Jam-<lb/>
on e for another year.<lb/>
? Dr<lb/>
' ena i<lb/>
White.<lb/>
East Carolina student- have en-<lb/>
i ? ? h . onl t foi '?'?.era' years<lb/>
?mi ' have established ; commendable<lb/>
recorii in the Alternations 1 contest!<lb/>
Vast year, East Carolina students I<lb/>
ilaced t'ii st. In 1951 and again in <lb/>
1933 Ea I Can ina ree iv il h<lb/>
. ile mention. In 1952 and 11r?4 the<lb/>
nets students won a place among<lb/>
he top twe ' c ools participating<lb/>
in the contest, an i in<lb/>
? they won<lb/>
? i<lb/>
t Yankt e<lb/>
cal, and it's<lb/>
:n nted.<lb/>
C?rrol H?rrii ol amp Lejeune is<lb/>
? h. 'eat neu female dancer. "I've<lb/>
r1, ei working with  uck.<lb/>
t?, tots ot fun, and a real thrill for<lb/>
w aa her comment.<lb/>
Storv<lb/>
 t i- being ? bj Joe<lb/>
and built by the Industrial Artl<lb/>
Stell rdmiaea I "medieval<lb/>
ream setting<lb/>
n the atory, Martin, (Jeorge<lb/>
Knight, i- hit on the head during an<lb/>
iti rcati n with his fiancee, play d<lb/>
Ba bara Harris, and i? carried<lb/>
nto ? dream world of King Arthur<lb/>
iii in famous Round Table. Otttei<lb/>
b rs of the cast are: Sir Kay,<lb/>
William S eight; King Arthur. L<lb/>
Bray; Sir Lancelot, .Joe Stell; Sh<lb/>
bid, Ralph Sbumaker; Merlin.<lb/>
 Pi:kingtOnj Maid Angela, (aiolyn<lb/>
K am; Evelyn La Belle. Myrl Ma-<lb/>
Maemmule the slave, Ken Kille;<lb/>
n Guinevere, Peggy Griffin; Sir<lb/>
i'ri :an. Frankie Keaton; and Sir<lb/>
Sagi more, Linwood Pittman.<lb/>
'i he chorus ? ' of: Virginia<lb/>
Blai d, Nancy Caldwell, Dee Ann<lb/>
Dorsett, Dave Doolittle, Connie Dunn,<lb/>
 . hi Smith, and Euclid<lb/>
strong who have voluiiteerexJ to work<lb/>
ihng with the student produ ??. - ai<lb/>
an: on nee is.<lb/>
afisa Raulston pointed out<lb/>
student are needed to work<lb/>
the statio ne inter-<lb/>
should contact the <lb/>
ficials.<lb/>
gy Griffiri, C. A. Jenkins j. rat<lb/>
Kea'or Ken Killebrew, Ashlyn m<lb/>
den, Jo Ann Ku :y, Jerrj Pi<lb/>
ton Jones, Tony Brandon, n<lb/>
?'? Tcdd<lb/>
and Je Stc .<lb/>
Dancer i.<lb/>
Cayle :pp, Caro yn A<lb/>
dra Biann, Sandra Boo K hm?<lb/>
Bet - Peg ,<lb/>
wood Pittman, Jimmie Y. W? q<lb/>
-<lb/>
er y<lb/>
Tickata<lb/>
foi "A Conn ,<lb/>
must be ?acvn<lb/>
'?ntinj; ID card- at I<lb/>
lei ??? ? ing ?<lb/>
tickets for jruft who an<lb/>
iat. ! w ith i <lb/>
? ? an at the regu ai .<lb/>
nn ? of one <lb/>
ma. ? ed from A,<lb/>
B p. m. April 30. Dr. I<lb/>
emphatic in<lb/>
ticket arrangement wa for 1<lb/>
fit of the atndei<lb/>
might be unaide to jret sea<lb/>
the crowds which a:<lb/>
hand at the SGA pn i<lb/>
RADIO<lb/>
PRESIDENTS<lb/>
(Continued ft<lb/>
can ? I J<lb/>
? '? Mm<lb/>
? n urge ev ?<lb/>
. ? !1 ?<lb/>
gion, creed, Ol<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
 Continued fi om page 1<lb/>
Mm the program will be interrupted<lb/>
for a broadcast of the news, after<lb/>
which r e Jtation will continu broad-<lb/>
v as ting b WGTt<lb/>
At 9:30, a recorded educational<lb/>
program which will include, during<lb/>
the first weeks, such rograrn as<lb/>
"People Under Communism" and "Jef-<lb/>
ersonian Heritage" will be broadcast<lb/>
until the Btation sign? off wil<lb/>
new- for at 10:30.<lb/>
Personnel<lb/>
According to Radio and TV Di-<lb/>
rector, Miss Rosalind Roulston, stu-<lb/>
dent who have third-class opera-<lb/>
tors' license- ave been assigned to<lb/>
work with the station during its<lb/>
opera-ting hours a. Daily Producers.<lb/>
Studen acting as Daily Producers<lb/>
are Don Howell, general manager of<lb/>
the station, John Spence, Doris Ann<lb/>
Pate. Bill Briley, and Jim Daughety.<lb/>
Additional personnel of the station<lb/>
include A. C. Hinton. Larry Craven,<lb/>
BEDDINGFIELD'S PHARMACY<lb/>
FIVE POINTS<lb/>
REVLON and CAR A NOME<lb/>
COSMETVCS<lb/>
REXALL I)Rl'(;s<lb/>
ONE DA Y FILM SERVICE<lb/>
"Your Most Convenient Drug Stor("<lb/>
vc<lb/>
YOUR ARE CORDIALLY INVITED<lb/>
To Test Drive A New<lb/>
1957 FORD At<lb/>
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Since 1866<lb/>
-?<lb/>
Dora's Tewer Gril<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
HAMBUROSB6<lb/>
COLD DRDOCS<lb/>
HOT DO?S<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
CURB SERVICE<lb/>
Dancing: Pavillion For Your Pleasure<lb/>
Near TV Station and Firs Townr<lb/>
IT'S FOR REAL!<lb/>
by Chester Field<lb/>
BAKER'S STUDIO<lb/>
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31714 Evans Street<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 tba Croasroad<lb/>
PIT-COOKED BAR-B-Q<lb/>
Mrs. Morton's Bakery<lb/>
We supply the SODA SHOP with FRESH<lb/>
BAKERY PRODUCTS every morning.<lb/>
Enjoy your refreshments there.<lb/>
TOE DANCER CY<lb/>
At campus hops, Cy guards the wall.<lb/>
Why, he doesn't know at all.<lb/>
Cy thinks he's really quite a prancer<lb/>
In point of fact, a real toe dancer.<lb/>
But, as every wise girl knows,<lb/>
He doesn't dance on his own toes!<lb/>
MORAL t Stay on your toes! Take your<lb/>
pleasure BIG with Chesterfield King!<lb/>
Big length?big flavor  and the<lb/>
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of what you're smoking for.<lb/>
Uka yovr pleasure HO<lb/>
Ch?terfleld Kins<lb/>
has fverythlngl<lb/>
0O got to John R. Hendrickion, Florida State<lb/>
Univtrtay, for hi Ouster Field poem.<lb/>
$60 for eutry phuotcphical oerie accepted for puUi-<lb/>
catiari.Ch??mfirid,P.O.Box21,NmYorh46,N. Y.<lb/>
 i aim a ?? TotM- o?.<lb/>
AS NAVIGATOR OR PILOT<lb/>
GET ON<lb/>
THE TEAM<lb/>
THAT DEFENDS<lb/>
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The flying U. S. Air Force is a team of men who command the aircraft and men<lb/>
who plan the attack. These are the pilots and navigators, both equally important to<lb/>
the defense of America.<lb/>
You, as a young man of intelligence and sound physical health, may join this<lb/>
select group in the world's most exerting and rewarding adventure. Your training<lb/>
will stand'you in good stead, whatever your future plans may be ?and you'll be<lb/>
earning over $6,000 a year 18 months after training.<lb/>
If you are between 19 and 26 years of age, Investigate your opportunities as an<lb/>
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B?Md MMyof mm?d 1st Lmtimutnl m<lb/>
flight UtMt witt 2 mn' Mk? er rim.<lb/>
Washington 4, D. C.<lb/>
Graduate-Then FlyTJ. S. AIR FORCE AVIATION CADET PROGRAM<lb/>
 'V S?<lb/>
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