<?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="00038431_0001"/>
<lb/>
Dedication<lb/>
? .uohnian welcomes the<lb/>
dedicating this first<lb/>
Easttawlinian<lb/>
i<lb/>
Foreign Students<lb/>
v<lb/>
Se? page two for interviews with our<lb/>
two foreign exchange students.<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
ruii i. lj-<lb/>
Will<lb/>
G'REENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1957<lb/>
Number 1<lb/>
New Buccaneer Officers<lb/>
Official Says<lb/>
Parking Problem , ? - oi i t ti o i<lb/>
lew improved To Take SGA To 1 he btudents<lb/>
Phelps Administration Plans<lb/>
oi<lb/>
u.r Williams, Aldolphus Sp?in. I. K. Williamson,<lb/>
1958 Buccaneer<lb/>
Many Chanses,<lb/>
To Have<lb/>
400 Pases<lb/>
havt many<lb/>
four hun-<lb/>
ts g innivereary<lb/>
.  ? as of<lb/>
tamson, stated<lb/>
the first<lb/>
staff and begin<lb/>
eet<lb/>
28th.<lb/>
Staff along with<lb/>
. , Editor: Adol-<lb/>
Mai iger: Joyce<lb/>
tant Bus-<lb/>
McKeel. Copy<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
nl sections<lb/>
 Event<lb/>
. mstrong;<lb/>
McKay; Feature'<lb/>
. Rich;<lb/>
Student Gov-<lb/>
M . Drama,<lb/>
nbei g ;<lb/>
 U -ion,<lb/>
r Scho-<lb/>
Faculty a? d<lb/>
Davis; Senior<lb/>
inioi Claaa:<lb/>
. (lass:<lb/>
i. . ? ? lass:<lb/>
 yeai Business and<lb/>
u Jenkins; Mili-<lb/>
!? al ei n I es:<lb/>
i ? ? Ed lie Dennis:<lb/>
the annual this<lb/>
 person, but<lb/>
i sa East Carolina<lb/>
in the past<lb/>
E. Staples, Shirley Elizabeth Lewis,<lb/>
Jean Yvonne Mullen, Evelyn S. Dix-<lb/>
 Wilma Hall, Kay Frances Smith,<lb/>
Sue Ziglar, Eiaine Page, Edna Earle<lb/>
S aw. Bo e Jean McDaniel, Bar-<lb/>
bara Bo: I, Bai ai a I ?avenport, Juli-<lb/>
ette Cain, Nancy Rigsbee, Charlotte<lb/>
Strickland, J ? Kelly, Margaret Con-<lb/>
v, rs, Nancy Joan Will - Sj via Sam-<lb/>
Noah B. Barefo t, James<lb/>
JTriceEdith Fitzgerald. Mike Katsias<lb/>
Worth Baker, official in charge of<lb/>
:if ;? on campus, stated recently<lb/>
:?: t i parking situation at East<lb/>
i . this year "has improved<lb/>
 over 1956<lb/>
This is true despite the registrat-<lb/>
ion of 1300 autos on campus this <lb/>
11, 4(?0 more than last year.<lb/>
Baker attributes the improvement<lb/>
0 the fact that traffic ticket fines<lb/>
. ere raised to $2.00 last school year.<lb/>
he added, a set of rules and<lb/>
emulations has been given to all<lb/>
'reshmen an i transfera at the hegin-<lb/>
114 of this quarter. The older stu-<lb/>
1 nts, of course, learned first hand<lb/>
.n 1956.<lb/>
Even more cars are ex.ected to<lb/>
-? registered next quarter, when<lb/>
reshmen are allowed to bring autoa<lb/>
? i . mpus.<lb/>
i oncerning improvements, Baker<lb/>
?Ued out that the I'instead Dorm<lb/>
parking lot has been paved and<lb/>
narked off. "Money from last year's<lb/>
fines paid for that lot Baker aid.<lb/>
As far as new parking space3 for<lb/>
campus are concerned, Baker stated<lb/>
flatly that "there is no more space<lb/>
Available He said that to provide<lb/>
more spaces on campus would make<lb/>
for a "too commercial ap; earance"<lb/>
by doing away with much of the cam-<lb/>
pus greenery.<lb/>
"Besides he added, "we feel that<lb/>
the parking situation for day stu-<lb/>
dents has been well taken care of,<lb/>
now. Half of the football parking lot<lb/>
has now been made available for day<lb/>
students, and there is also a lot<lb/>
across the street from the gym-<lb/>
nasium.<lb/>
Baker concluded -with a statement<lb/>
about faculty parking. "Some stu-<lb/>
dents have complained about the<lb/>
SGA President Jimmy Phelps<lb/>
Three Other Major Goals<lb/>
Outlined By The President<lb/>
Bv BRYAN HARRISON<lb/>
<lb/>
Outlines policy for coming school year.<lb/>
Group Leads<lb/>
Delegation In<lb/>
Integration Measure<lb/>
ECC<lb/>
Dixie<lb/>
Ann Burnhara Wade Ward, number of faculty parkingpaces.<lb/>
Dorine Rouse. Patricia Ann Biggs, 1' .Mike to point out that percentage-<lb/>
Patricia Turner. Doi.s Thenien, and wise, students are allotted mucn<lb/>
ndaj Jenkins. ' nw? ????? lhan the ?<lb/>
East Carolinian Executive Staff<lb/>
B0<lb/>
, Wilson, Bryan Harrison. Johnny Hudson. Billy Arnold Carolyn<lb/>
Smith Jan Raby, Martin Harris. Janet Hill, Purvis Boyette. I laud.a Todd.<lb/>
the anniversary edi-<lb/>
page section is de<lb/>
and college events.<lb/>
spring and fall of<lb/>
ay product-<lb/>
 special act-<lb/>
ited in by college<lb/>
it for the very first<lb/>
- are to be draped for<lb/>
. i. The Senior girls will<lb/>
lower classmen<lb/>
drapes are black and<lb/>
. I" e boys must<lb/>
Hid ties in keeping<lb/>
aat years. Henry-Messick<lb/>
I the pictures which<lb/>
. September 13th. Ail<lb/>
s must sign up one day before<lb/>
I have their pictures<lb/>
 up may be done on<lb/>
h are posted in the Stu-<lb/>
The staff requests that<lb/>
Forty-One Attend 1st Staff<lb/>
Meeting Of East Carolinian<lb/>
3tudents showed up forlsias, Betty Lou Bell, and Sue Lassi<lb/>
Forty-one<lb/>
the first staff meeting of the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN, the largest number<lb/>
in three years, and possibly a record,<lb/>
it was announced by editor, Jan Raby.<lb/>
Returning staff members will com-<lb/>
pose a newly formed Executive Com-<lb/>
mittee to meet regularly and form<lb/>
policy matters and guide the various<lb/>
projects of the college newspaper.<lb/>
They are: Billy Arnold, managing<lb/>
editor; Carolyn Smitih, business man-<lb/>
ager; Martha Wilson, feature editor;<lb/>
Johnny Hudson, sports editor; Bob<lb/>
special assis-<lb/>
Harper, photographer;<lb/>
uents for pictures be made ? lantSf jan6t Hill, Bryan Harrison,<lb/>
H earliest convenience. Claudia Todd, Purvis Boyette, a<lb/>
liafcnson announced that last<lb/>
year at the National School Yearbook<lb/>
Association in Columbia, Missouri,<lb/>
the '57 Buccaneer received a rating<lb/>
of B-plus. Although this is not the<lb/>
highest rating offered by the N.Y.<lb/>
S it is 1" the upper 9 '?<lb/>
association judges and criticixes all<lb/>
books very strictly- <lb/>
considered a high honor to recetve<lb/>
SUOthaerindents working on this<lb/>
7 .i are- Joyce Pierce, Dot<lb/>
tvear's annual are- "v<lb/>
Retsv Redding, Beverly Ann<lb/>
at ! ' lane Bullock, Mary H. Plea-<lb/>
rjvrham, Jane ?u ' tt Bar<lb/>
. orie AnTn.a.u5: ?V. Jan<lb/>
Mike Katsias. The editor will head<lb/>
the Executive Committee.<lb/>
Feature Staff<lb/>
The feature staff will be composed<lb/>
of Faye Rivenbark, Patricia Farmer,<lb/>
Leigh Dobson, Barbara Batts, Eliza-<lb/>
beth Williams, .Phyllis Langston, El-<lb/>
na Caulberg, Lee Phillips, and Margie<lb/>
Davis, and will be headed by Martha<lb/>
Wilson, feature editor.<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Circulation Staff<lb/>
Working on the circulation staff<lb/>
are Barbara Jenkins, Ruth Line-<lb/>
berger, Jean Caps, Susan Ballance,<lb/>
Kathryn Crumpler, Janice Langston,<lb/>
Mary Elizabeth Stewart, Anne Jack-<lb/>
son, Martha Kellam, Helen Sturkie,<lb/>
Lenora Pate, Lee Phillips, Nancy<lb/>
Cox, Wilma Gray Hall, .and Martha<lb/>
Anne Martin. Typists are Yvonne<lb/>
Fleming, and Mary Frances Ayers.<lb/>
Martin Harris is assistant pho-<lb/>
tographer.<lb/>
Special projects for this year in-<lb/>
clude delivering the papers to the<lb/>
rooms in the dorms, and presenting<lb/>
the annual talent shows fall and win-<lb/>
ter quarters to get money to send<lb/>
staff members to the newspaper con-<lb/>
vention in New York in March.<lb/>
Announcement<lb/>
Billy Arnold, managing editor,<lb/>
will direct fhe news staff which in-<lb/>
cludes Aline Condon, Bryan Harrison,<lb/>
Claudia Todd, Kathryn Johnson, Le-<lb/>
Ge0rbu J?ckie ByTd J'nelnora Pate- Judy Samuels, Mika Kat-<lb/>
English majors and minors are<lb/>
reminded of the English Club<lb/>
meeting tonight at 7 p.m. at the<lb/>
Alumni Building, in an anounce-<lb/>
ment by Dr. Frank L. Hoskins,<lb/>
adviser. A discussion on the<lb/>
Modern Novel will be conducted<lb/>
by Dr. Cook, Poindeater, and Mr.<lb/>
Pierce, noted author en campus.<lb/>
Ann Arbor, Mich.?The United<lb/>
States National Student Association<lb/>
passed a resolution here last month,<lb/>
endorsing the 1954r55 integration<lb/>
ruling of the Supreme Court and urg-<lb/>
ing "the swiftest possible integration<lb/>
of races at all educational levels in<lb/>
all parts of the country<lb/>
One thou and delegates reprcse. t-<lb/>
; the 3.500 colleges and universi-<lb/>
ties of the USNfiA passed on the<lb/>
resolution. Four East Carolina Col-<lb/>
fege re resentatives were present at<lb/>
e meeting and played a large part<lb/>
j , tin proceedings.<lb/>
i fh? representatives from the Vir-<lb/>
: i nia-Carolina delegations?including<lb/>
he four EJL'C students- were in-<lb/>
crumental in adding a clause to the<lb/>
NSA resolution advising "under-<lb/>
u.nd education" in tackling<lb/>
I ? pi obl? m.<lb/>
A two-week battie against over-<lb/>
 Iming odds was waged by the<lb/>
Virginia-Carolina group to insert<lb/>
two sentences and a phrase into the<lb/>
? . lution.<lb/>
Representatives<lb/>
1  re resentatives were Jimmy<lb/>
Bf president of the SGA; Cal-<lb/>
Chesson, Summer school repre-<lb/>
entative and Historian of Cr.e SGA;<lb/>
Bucky Monroe, First Vice President;<lb/>
and Bobby Patterson, Treasurer.<lb/>
Working in the interests of Sou-<lb/>
thern schools, which included only a<lb/>
handful of the total representatives,<lb/>
,h East Carolina team combined<lb/>
with Virginia to demand an under-<lb/>
standing of certain problems which<lb/>
iii,t arise in certain areas regard-<lb/>
ing integration.<lb/>
"We felt said Bucky Monroe,<lb/>
"that we could not vote for the reso-<lb/>
lution in its original form and still<lb/>
rightfully represent East Carolina<lb/>
as a Southern school. We agreed<lb/>
with the article basically, but the<lb/>
wording was a bit too strong<lb/>
Phelps added, "WTe realize, of<lb/>
course, that integration is a reality<lb/>
and a thing that cannot be ignored<lb/>
any longer. Segregation is unconsti-<lb/>
tutional. But we?and the delegates<lb/>
from Virginia?felt that it was not<lb/>
a measure to rush into carelessly<lb/>
Realistic Approach<lb/>
The Southern delegation asked for<lb/>
a realistic approach to the matter<lb/>
.nd attacked the NSA's "rush" ap-<lb/>
proach. "The original policy stated<lb/>
Chesson, "seemed to be this: Segre-<lb/>
gation is illegal. We'e opposed to it.<lb/>
Do away with it. Now. Right away,<lb/>
without delay of any kind<lb/>
"We pointed out Phelps contin-<lb/>
ued, "that there would necessarily<lb/>
be variations in the procedures, due<lb/>
to the different situations in differ-<lb/>
ent parts of tftie country. It took us<lb/>
two weeks to put that idea across<lb/>
Members of the Bast Carolina<lb/>
group made speeches to the entire<lb/>
delegation of 1,000 members, stres-<lb/>
sing their point of variation and dif-<lb/>
ferences in regard to situations.<lb/>
attenv. t to lodge the issue said<lb/>
Patterson, "but merely an attempt to<lb/>
show the importance of individual<lb/>
differences in areas where a 'full<lb/>
speed ahead1 approach might not be<lb/>
accepted as wise<lb/>
Statement<lb/>
Through t e work of the Southern<lb/>
delegation, which was speeiheaded<lb/>
by EOC participation, the following<lb/>
statement of principle was adopted<lb/>
,y the USNSA: (the italicized<lb/>
phrases and sentences are contribu-<lb/>
tions of the Southern Delegation).<lb/>
"Segregation in education by race<lb/>
i 'unethical and unwise) incom-<lb/>
rtible with human equality. It is<lb/>
tow also unconstitutional. The<lb/>
PNSA, pledged to seeing the elim-<lb/>
 i  of such segregation, urges<lb/>
the swiftest possible integration of<lb/>
aces a, all educational levels,<lb/>
n all arts of the country. In the<lb/>
ace i f ethical concepts, legal require-<lb/>
ments and global ramifications, there<lb/>
can be no justification for dtlay in<lb/>
Lha implementation of the Supreme<lb/>
t Decision, there can be, how-<lb/>
ex rr, no substitute for understanding<lb/>
and education in areas where poli-<lb/>
tical, social and psychological prob-<lb/>
lems are most acute. The words,<lb/>
deliberate speed' as used by the<lb/>
United States Supreme Court will<lb/>
necessarily suggest variations in the<lb/>
prooedures required for implement-<lb/>
ation of the Supreme Court'g decis-<lb/>
ion "<lb/>
"This year we are gointr to take<lb/>
 SGA to the students President<lb/>
Jimmy Phelps told a packed Flana-<lb/>
? .hi Auditorium when the student<lb/>
?gblature met for the first time last<lb/>
nesday.<lb/>
 e President outlined three other<lb/>
ai ; i goals as his new administra-<lb/>
ion K?t into full swing.<lb/>
He offered lans to train legis-<lb/>
t rj to I e campus leaders, asked for<lb/>
united campus, and stressed a<lb/>
rogram which would "broaden the<lb/>
cope of the SGA<lb/>
Combat Apathy<lb/>
In his address to the law making<lb/>
body, Phtps explained that his pro-<lb/>
 was primarily designed to eora-<lb/>
:? student apathy. Also his plans<lb/>
nclude closer cooperation with the<lb/>
faculty and administration, the 1FC.<lb/>
and the East Carolinian.<lb/>
Speaking of the student ; aper, he<lb/>
aid, "I think there will be an im-<lb/>
provement in relations over last<lb/>
 ear<lb/>
In taking the SGA to the students<lb/>
the officers will speak in orienta-<lb/>
? classes, hold regularly scheduled<lb/>
:adio programs, and keep the various<lb/>
i rt:pus clubs informed of student<lb/>
activity.<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
The SGA members will actually go<lb/>
to class next week to study parlia-<lb/>
mentary procedure which will be<lb/>
the first in a series of classes of<lb/>
"leadership training<lb/>
Also in this phase of the Presi-<lb/>
dent's plans classes will be con-<lb/>
ducted for C e individuals who repre-<lb/>
aent Bast Carolina at various stu-<lb/>
dent conventions.<lb/>
"Scope'<lb/>
Phelps called for a closer contact<lb/>
with the National Student Associa-<lb/>
tion and asked that a co-ordinator<lb/>
with this organization be appointed<lb/>
iarper, staff ' ?, rapher.<lb/>
The body also apprawed Miss Baby's<lb/>
nmendation of Mike Kat3ias to<lb/>
erve as official SGA reporter.<lb/>
Parking<lb/>
Pr sident Phelps reported on the<lb/>
arking situation saying- that the<lb/>
Board of Trustees had stated that no<lb/>
 spent to build<lb/>
tarking lots. They also stated that if<lb/>
the situation doesn't improve fresh-<lb/>
men and sophomores may lose their<lb/>
rights to have cars.<lb/>
Phelps advised that the students<lb/>
"make the best out of th bus<lb/>
" A committee to investigate<lb/>
the possibilities of setting up a new<lb/>
system of registration was also sug-<lb/>
gested by tl e president.<lb/>
A used hook exchange was an-<lb/>
other idea offered by Phelps although<lb/>
neither of these suggestions were re-<lb/>
ferred to a committee.<lb/>
Wright Circle<lb/>
A ; mise to have the condition<lb/>
I a . ? Circle pool investigated<lb/>
after representative Eddie<lb/>
President of Phi Sigma Pi,<lb/>
? rhat the appearance of this<lb/>
"a disgrace to the campus<lb/>
Dtative Charles Elgin pro-<lb/>
posed ' -omething be done to al-<lb/>
leviate the telephone situation in<lb/>
Umstead Hall. The body was then in-<lb/>
formed by the  resident that an in-<lb/>
cident occured in Umstead last spring<lb/>
In which someone ripped the phones<lb/>
from the wall causing approximately<lb/>
$300 damage.<lb/>
Bobby Patterson, Treasurer of the<lb/>
SGA, reported that the legislature<lb/>
was faced with the bill. Phelps said<lb/>
that something will l.t- worked out<lb/>
i nts of that dorm. El-<lb/>
jin withdrew the motion.<lb/>
A new r tatrve was recog-<lb/>
d with a healthy round oi ap-<lb/>
plause at the meeting when Roddy<lb/>
Later in the meeting Calvin Chesson rones, President of the newly-formed<lb/>
was appointed and approved to fill<lb/>
this position.<lb/>
The President reported that the<lb/>
legislature had been strangely in-<lb/>
active in passing resolutions in the<lb/>
ast. He stressed the importance of<lb/>
resolutions claiming that, "We<lb/>
should let the people know how we<lb/>
feel on important matters<lb/>
Other Action<lb/>
Other action at the meeting in-<lb/>
cluded a motion brought to the floor<lb/>
by Ray Joyner, 2nd Vice President,<lb/>
which asked for an official delega-<lb/>
ked to stand.<lb/>
A report was heard from Freddy<lb/>
? coming emmittee chair-<lb/>
who reported that only recog-<lb/>
fraternitiee, upperclaBemen's<lb/>
iormitories, and the day students<lb/>
could elect sponsors .eligible for<lb/>
Homecoming Queen.<lb/>
Duties<lb/>
At the close of his address to the<lb/>
legislators. President Phelfs out-<lb/>
lined their general duties. He asked<lb/>
that:<lb/>
(1) Officers will fulfill duties and<lb/>
be sent to the EC-Richmond live up to the requirements of the<lb/>
football game. Aifer considerable office or answer to the Executive<lb/>
discussion the, motion was voted arid the student legislature.<lb/>
down. ! (2) Legislators will ne expected to<lb/>
Jan Raby, Editor of the East Caro participate "actively" in the various<lb/>
linian, asked the approval of staff SGA affairs.<lb/>
members. The body approved Billy (3) Members will be responsible<lb/>
Arnold as Managing editor, Caro-<lb/>
lyn Smith, Business manager, John-<lb/>
 (later eliminated by request of I ny Hudson, Shorts editor, Bryan<lb/>
he Southern delegation). I Harrison, Associate editor, and Bob<lb/>
promoting the interests of the<lb/>
studei y and the college and to<lb/>
maintain good relationships with the<lb/>
community and thr state.<lb/>
Family Life Council Here September 22-24<lb/>
The Tenth Annual Family Life, will use in their lectures the "Owr-IHtod tioe. Forth Their syndicated<lb/>
Conference of the North Carolina U?reet Colloquy an informal pl.t- JJJZZ<lb/>
Family Life Council will take place<lb/>
at East Carolina College September<lb/>
22-24. Harry Allen Overstreet and<lb/>
known authors, lecturers, and leaders<lb/>
in the fields of human relations and<lb/>
mental health, will appear in a series<lb/>
of discussions to be presented as ma-<lb/>
jor attractions of the state-wide<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Plans for the conference began at<lb/>
East Carolina College. Headed by Mrs.<lb/>
Sam B. Underwood, Jr of Green-<lb/>
ville as chairman, a committee from<lb/>
the campus and the city have made<lb/>
oca arrangements for the meeting.<lb/>
"Making Family Life Make Sense"<lb/>
will provide the theme of seven gen-<lb/>
ual sessions and a number of in-<lb/>
formal group meetings during the<lb/>
conference. The committee preparing<lb/>
the psogram includes Dr. Bessie<lb/>
McNeil, director of the East Carolina<lb/>
home economics department, chair-<lb/>
man; Dr. John B. Bennett of Brevard<lb/>
College; Mrs. John Overton of Green-<lb/>
ville; and the Rev. Marvin Vick of<lb/>
Kinston.<lb/>
The Overstreets will be featured<lb/>
speakers on programs September 23<lb/>
Our efforts were in no way an j and 24. A popular lecture team, they<lb/>
form conversation.<lb/>
"The Mature Mind Dr. Harry A.<lb/>
Overstreet'a most widely read works,<lb/>
was a Book-of-the-Month selection<lb/>
and a national best-seller for more<lb/>
than two yearB. Mrs. Overstreet is<lb/>
appears weekly in some twenty-five<lb/>
papers throughout the nation.<lb/>
Ethel Nash of Chapel Hill, president<lb/>
of the Mori Carolina Family Life<lb/>
Council; Edwin Preston of the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Public Welfare, Raleigh,<lb/>
author of "How To Think About president elect; and Corinne G. Eng-<lb/>
Ourselves "Understanding Fear I lish, family life specialist in Exten-<lb/>
Md other books. Together they have sion, Raleigh, second vice-president,<lb/>
written a number of popular works, j will preside at major sessions during<lb/>
including "The Mind Alive" and "The the conference.<lb/>
I<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
1:1<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
s.<lb/>
n<lb/>
Dr. H A. Overstreet and Wife<lb/>
<pb facs="00038431_0002"/><lb/>
THUSflDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, m<lb/>
AST CAR0L1NIAN<lb/>
PACE TWO<lb/>
. 1<lb/>
Tf? -a<lb/>
Get A Good Start<lb/>
Editorially Speaking<lb/>
Once again East Carolina opens itsjraof g gjg 'USll<lb/>
And once again it is time for a little<lb/>
advke for tine newcomers. We have all<lb/>
reasons. Some come because<lb/>
friendly<lb/>
come for<lb/>
that s what I<lb/>
termed the project of getting out<lb/>
lS an B page edition for the first issue,<lb/>
fhern to come and no doubt there are some here This issue i3 dedicated to the fresh-<lb/>
who do not know why they are here. mm cl?, as a whole, for we salute<lb/>
Once I heard a man address a class hoping<lb/>
he would be able to persuade some of them to<lb/>
tter graduation. He said, "Young<lb/>
go to college 1 s f s<lb/>
neorjle, go to college. 11 uu v-a" v ? , <lb/>
?.? rr. fwn trn one. and 11<lb/>
you. You have already shown that<lb/>
you have spirit and ambition by your<lb/>
large turn-outs for college activi-<lb/>
ties. We hope that you will continue<lb/>
to keep up the good work.<lb/>
To help the freshman<lb/>
;lass<lb/>
Waft! -?wm<lb/>
you learn will be a big help.<lb/>
And so here we are<lb/>
to make curse<lb/>
)rtl?rXiaUSlltVWeiS toVt Wednesday nigH except the first<lb/>
We can't iust take things for Wednesday in each month, at which<lb/>
3 A K?i?Su"r Hve?drifnion? if we wish time the Executive Council meets.<lb/>
granted and let our ??? "?tt ai g pm m<lb/>
to succeed Nc.goodfairy Jb auditor5um and any stu-<lb/>
Tnd .tVthe"oinge ges roug'h we have to dig dent may attend and observe<lb/>
even harder<lb/>
ing editions we will run special ar-<lb/>
We have opportunities tides about the various student gov-<lb/>
Jreat'in the world of tomor- ernment organizations. Incidentally,<lb/>
? make 'f that opportunity is largely the Student Legislature meets every<lb/>
row. What we maKe 01 nat vrZ11 ?? ?? w.a?i.? ifct except the ??<lb/>
up to us. Most impo<lb/>
it<lb/>
sessions.<lb/>
and to limit the national ads. By<lb/>
work hard enough to retaining our advertising the news-<lb/>
find our capacities of<lb/>
old saying, "Life isn't easy<lb/>
is able to partially support<lb/>
bookstore we see the entire financial burden. In recent<lb/>
years we have returned to the SGA<lb/>
school in three easy over a thousand dollars by this med-<lb/>
put before us. then we would have begun<lb/>
the path to success.<lb/>
Many of us do not<lb/>
work. We have heard the paper<lb/>
easv numberless times, itself; otherw.se, the student gov-<lb/>
In this modern age there is a dangerous trend to em-eat budget would.have ? rj<lb/>
make everything too easy. In a<lb/>
-uch books as "Spanish In Ten Easy Lessons or<lb/>
signs saying "Finish high sch.ol in three ?W ft <lb/>
K?ta nevereasy. VA'SS'4SS - -nd to continue such a<lb/>
down not Never put off il torn-row what pohey REFERENCE <lb/>
SJT Don't -tu'nn SE'S 0, deadline for club and other j<lb/>
SiFto beg n vu studies. Studying is a habit Jf? ?? ?? Y?<lb/>
ust like anvthing else, that must be formed and Monday. We expect to have 6 stx<lb/>
JUSI line diiyLiiinK page jssues during the year with the<lb/>
dUigNo onePwa?ts to be going home at the end remainder being four page issues<lb/>
f the fSst quarter but all of US are not bril- (depending upon the size of our ap-<lb/>
tfwiT do some studying and we have JJ-jgg" TSffML<lb/>
tn have 2 time to do that studying. It will not WE REGKr-i  . . deeply ine ae.t<lb/>
be easv to Stay in when the rest of the crowd of Mr. Lloyd Bray, Sr manager of<lb/>
U Z out Just remember some one has to say the college book store. His passing<lb/>
XttpSS first. When your aw during the second session of<lb/>
Crowd is going OUt and you have Studying to do, summer school came as a shock to<lb/>
e vour conscience be your guide. What is most the campus. We would a<lb/>
let vuui wuavre j o express our sympathy to 1<lb/>
nP?iS" buckle down now. Reach for the high- Snyder, Garrett dorm counselor in<lb/>
est star in the heavens and don't stop until you're the passing of her mother Who died<lb/>
holding it. The way is rough but the goal is worth<lb/>
it.<lb/>
mvR<lb/>
For Puritans And Such<lb/>
By PURVIS BOYETTE<lb/>
Our editor, if one is so generously Human<lb/>
as to call her that, speaks, the lots fall and it fe<lb/>
my draw to write the first Installment for fhu<lb/>
e lesiastical document, facetiously called by<lb/>
?0 e, the EAST CAROLINIAN. It's good to be<lb/>
b ck, cnce again pecking away, ministering to<lb/>
the five who so religiously read this column, the<lb/>
editor, the assistant editor, the feature editor,<lb/>
and myself (I usually read it twice). went tc<lb/>
the trouble of listing those who read thia column<lb/>
because I thought it would enhance my iatd-<lb/>
lectual standing if everybody knew that 1 asso-<lb/>
date with editors and the like. Furthermore. rm<lb/>
that much nearer finishing out my space allot-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
I'm starting my third ear here and a<lb/>
result of negligence or what-have-you, I<lb/>
failed to take a required freshman course. Try.<lb/>
ing to swallow the bitter pill, I have to tolerate<lb/>
the intolerable. For instance, the profess r k<lb/>
teJing our class of 99 per cent first<lb/>
freshmen that everybody, just everybody, (n<lb/>
ing the pr fessors) loves us here. Onl<lb/>
great restraint, do I refrain from sound<lb/>
truth bell?tain't so, tain't so. May ignoi<lb/>
be blessed and the ingenue too.<lb/>
Et nontenant, le Francais?Paul Fort<lb/>
The Datins Technique<lb/>
?<lb/>
By BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
to vou fresh-<lb/>
would alse like to<lb/>
Mrs. Helen<lb/>
Welcome Newcomers<lb/>
To the Freshmen and Transfer Students<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
recently of cancer.<lb/>
OUR SOLUTION  .to the park-<lb/>
ing problem is a simple one, but<lb/>
we're not too sure how valid. Use<lb/>
bicycles instead of cars :They're<lb/>
quite popular on many of the larger<lb/>
college campuses. And you must ad-<lb/>
mit they take up less space. But this<lb/>
theory might ruin our "suitcase"<lb/>
college<lb/>
A word of warning<lb/>
men:<lb/>
Every year, in one class or an-<lb/>
other, some teacher inevitably takes<lb/>
it u on himself to give his boys and<lb/>
girls adviae in how to go about get-<lb/>
ting a date. This always comes from<lb/>
tr e bottom of his heart and is a<lb/>
gesture of kindness aimed toward the<lb/>
young and inexperienced.<lb/>
But you better beware. Their ad-<lb/>
vice is prone to be too old fashion-<lb/>
ed for modern consumption.<lb/>
Instead, I ave found a form to fol-<lb/>
low (for both boys and girls) which<lb/>
is guaranteed to bring results.<lb/>
First the boy must call by phone:<lb/>
Boy: Who is this?<lb/>
Girl: Helen Smaltz<lb/>
Boy: Oh. What a lovely name.<lb/>
Girl: Thank you.<lb/>
Boy: Helen, you probably don't re-<lb/>
member me, but I'm Join.<lb/>
Girl: Oh, how nice.<lb/>
Boy: Yes. How are you?<lb/>
Girl: I'm fine. How are you?<lb/>
Boy: I'm fine. What are you doing?<lb/>
Girl: Oh, I don't know. Why?<lb/>
Hoy: Well, I thought that if you<lb/>
weren't too' busy I might ask you<lb/>
something.<lb/>
Girl: What?<lb/>
Boy: Well, there's a dance (or<lb/>
movie or whatnot) tomorrow night.<lb/>
Girl: Oh, how nice.<lb/>
Boy: And I thought I would go.<lb/>
Girl: Why, that's wonderful. I<lb/>
hope you have a nice time.<lb/>
Boy: Thank you. I know that 1<lb/>
will if you will go with me.<lb/>
Girl: What?<lb/>
Loy: I said I just invited you to<lb/>
go with me.<lb/>
Girl: Why, that's mighty sweet<lb/>
of you, Jov.n. Whatever made you<lb/>
think of me?<lb/>
Boy: Well, I saw your name writ-<lb/>
ten on the wall down . . . uh, some-<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Girl: Oh. How marvelous.<lb/>
Boy: See, that's probably why you<lb/>
don't remember me, right off.<lb/>
I should've<lb/>
Girl: Why, of course,<lb/>
thought of that.<lb/>
Boy: Well?<lb/>
Girl: Of course, I'd love to go, but<lb/>
I ion't even know your last name,<lb/>
John.<lb/>
Boy: Oh. It's Smitfc.<lb/>
Girl: Why, of course, I should've<lb/>
thought of that.<lb/>
Boy: Well, will you go?<lb/>
Girl: Well, I don't know anything<lb/>
about you, John.<lb/>
Boy: I'm eighteen and I'm a fresh-<lb/>
man. Will you go?<lb/>
Girl: Are you single?<lb/>
Boy: Yes. Will you go to the dance?<lb/>
Girl: Well  (long pause. Let<lb/>
him sweat.)<lb/>
Boy: Well, somebody's calling me. I<lb/>
better . . .<lb/>
Girl: Alright, John. I'll go. I'll go.<lb/>
Boy: Welllll  I don't know . . .<lb/>
(let her sweat.)<lb/>
Girl: What time? What time?<lb/>
Boy: Seven o'clock. Bye.<lb/>
CLICK<lb/>
THE MOORING LINE (A Sailor' bo<lb/>
Why try to patch up the affair<lb/>
Is loving worthwhile after all?<lb/>
The mooring line's broken, my dear.<lb/>
Was it you that was tugging too hard<lb/>
Was it me? Wras it God? Was it s meb<lb/>
else? Well,<lb/>
It's broken. And who's to blame no one<lb/>
tell.<lb/>
1<lb/>
To vou who are entering colege for the first DO YOUR DUTY<lb/>
was the<lb/>
keynote of one legislative member<lb/>
to her fellow members in asking<lb/>
them to be aware of their responsi-<lb/>
freshman to participate in the fresh-<lb/>
man elections and to seek out good<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
time, and those of you who are coming to East<lb/>
Carolina from other educational institutions, it<lb/>
is a pleasure and privilege for me on behalf of<lb/>
the citizens of Greenville and the entire mem- bilities as such and to take it upen<lb/>
bership of its Chamber of Commerce, to extend t em?elves individually to urge the<lb/>
cordial gretings and a hearty welcome.<lb/>
In the years ahead at East Carolina College<lb/>
you will be preparing yourselves to take your<lb/>
place in your own communities and wherever IN vain  I have swatted the<lb/>
you go, that all may be better places in which gn?tS5. Now the only thing left to<lb/>
to live. We trust that you will find your stay at do is ejther buy a transparent plastic<lb/>
East Carolina and in our midst, not only pleasant space helmet or find some good in-<lb/>
but most profitable in the future. sect repellent which will not also<lb/>
Greenville citizens are looking forward to your neighbors.<lb/>
the pleasure of being of any assistance possible r noticed  an interesting ar-<lb/>
that you may feel at home here and they cherish ticie in tie number 2 issue of the<lb/>
the hope that you will consider this city your Canterbury paper titled "Are We<lb/>
home during your stay at East Carolina College, softies?" T e writer has some good<lb/>
We welcome your families and friends at joints to make and we urge you to<lb/>
all times and express our best wishes for the Uj a copy.<lb/>
success that you desire. SOMETHING NEW  is our<lb/>
Sincerely yours, plan to promote a variety in colum-<lb/>
M. W. Aldrldge nists in order to better sample the<lb/>
President, thinking of the campus. Some col-<lb/>
Greenville Chamber of Commerce uxnniats will alternate weekly, with<lb/>
additional columns added in the six<lb/>
page issues. I have retired "Pot<lb/>
Pourri" as a student column and it<lb/>
will be used for guest faculty col-<lb/>
Georseous Imports For ECC<lb/>
By CLAUDIA TODD<lb/>
!i met Hilda Maria Sandgren Cuel-<lb/>
lar last week! South nencan girls<lb/>
are beautiful, as Miss Lniverse from<lb/>
Peru proves, and Hilda goes along<lb/>
with tradition.<lb/>
Hi ia is from the northern section<lb/>
of the continent-Bogota, Colombia.<lb/>
But she will be living here on the<lb/>
'East Carolina campus for one year,<lb/>
over in Jarvis 108. By "a lot of luck"<lb/>
as she put it, she won a competitive<lb/>
scholarshi from the International<lb/>
"After 8:00 a girl cannot go out with<lb/>
a boy without a chaperone An-<lb/>
other difference she noticed was in<lb/>
the studies. "The subjects seem to be<lb/>
easier here was her observation,<lb/>
"but students here are required to do<lb/>
more work<lb/>
Two things that Hilda misses are<lb/>
the good South American food, which<lb/>
she prefers to ours, and the cool cll-<lb/>
Love goes into so many hearts?<lb/>
It's a line passed to so many ships,<lb/>
And it's wound around so many bitts?<lb/>
Whose fault is it if the line parts?<lb/>
Iere are too many lovers on earth all<lb/>
heaving away at one sin.<lb/>
Is it really the fault of love if the rope<lb/>
is worn so thin?<lb/>
Why try to patch up the affair?<lb/>
Ts loving worthwhile after all?<lb/>
The mooring line's broken, my dear.<lb/>
And it's you that was tugging too hard.<lb/>
?FIN I<lb/>
Hope the Puritanical aren't too shocked!<lb/>
The quill for this column passes from scribl<lb/>
to scribe alternate weeks. I touch pen to papei<lb/>
tw weeks hence. In the meantime, may the savj<lb/>
iges who follow this column reproduce thei<lb/>
mate in Bogota, located in the high<lb/>
lands of her country. "It is so hot kjnc aT1d infiltrate the campus<lb/>
she wailed. "I will be glad when the<lb/>
weather gets cold<lb/>
Hilda, who is planning to return<lb/>
at the end of :er studies and teach<lb/>
the English language in her own<lb/>
country, is assisting with Spanish<lb/>
classes in the foreign language de-<lb/>
partment here at East Carolina.<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the Students of East Carolina College, u?"s:<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Teachers College Division, Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
First Place Rating, CS.PA Convention, March. 1956<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 8, 1879.<lb/>
JAN RABY<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
Sports Bditor  Johnny Hudson<lb/>
Executive Committee Jan Raby, Carolyn Smitih,<lb/>
Martha Wilson, Janet Hill, Billy Arnold, ByTan<lb/>
Harrison, Jopnnny Hudson, Claudia Todd, Purvis<lb/>
Boyette, Bob Harper, Mike Katsias<lb/>
IF YOU'VE MISSED  the<lb/>
7, 1952 closed circuit television which was<lb/>
 due on campus this fall, the reason<lb/>
is failure of equipment to arrive, I<lb/>
was informed by a reliable source.<lb/>
Winter quarter, or more likely,<lb/>
spring may be our first glimpse of<lb/>
the new teaching media.<lb/>
HOMECOMfiNG  is the week-<lb/>
end of October 11 and you'll be hear-<lb/>
ing more about it later. Remember,<lb/>
this is our Golden Anniversary year.<lb/>
u ?? You ca? eP?t big doings.<lb/>
Martha Wilson 0UR APOLOGIES for not <lb/>
able to cover the big game at Ports-<lb/>
mouth, but the dates just would not<lb/>
coincide.<lb/>
PARDON ME,  but I must in-<lb/>
clude a personal note. This summer<lb/>
The French Accent<lb/>
CAROLYN SMITH<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
News Staff Kathryn Johnson, Margie Davis, after first ses3ion of gummer ichool<lb/>
Lcnore .Pate, Judy Samuels, Mike Kateias, Betty<lb/>
Lou Bell, Sue Lassiter, Bryan Harrison, Claudia Todd,<lb/>
Aline Condon<lb/>
Feature Staff   Pat Farmer, Leigh Dobson,<lb/>
Barbara Batts, Elizabeth Williams, Faye Rivenbark,<lb/>
Phyllis Langjston, Elna Caulberg, Lee Phillips<lb/>
in which my staff and I managed<lb/>
to publish 3 issues (whkh hasn't<lb/>
been done lately), I had a short va-<lb/>
cation. An old Air Force friend In-<lb/>
vited me to visit New Hampshire<lb/>
via National Airlines for a week<lb/>
Business Staff<lb/>
that- wonderful country. New Hamp-<lb/>
shire is noted for its hospitality and<lb/>
Martha Ann Smith, Shirley Holt, and toumJ me gomJ 260 miUa Qa<lb/>
Nancy Cox, Barbara Ford, Sara Garrison<lb/>
Staff Artists  Billy Arnold, Claudia Todd<lb/>
Exchange Editor  Mrs. Susie Webb the peoplt j met pr0Ved it beyond a<lb/>
Editorial Advisor  Miss Mary H. Greene doubt If you lflw to j jsflj<lb/>
Financial Advisor  Dr. Clinton R. Prewett recommemi jt t0 yoU ft <lb/>
Tv nical Advisor  Sherman M. Parks noted for its winter aportiw Come by<lb/>
and see me for some "real" maple<lb/>
syrup.<lb/>
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, 6101, extension 64<lb/>
Hilda Maria Sandgren Cuellar<lb/>
Institute of Education to come here<lb/>
as azi exchange student ani further<lb/>
her study of the English language.<lb/>
S lie's happy here. The North<lb/>
Americn music she likes, especially<lb/>
by Glenn Miller, the Three Suas,<lb/>
Bing Crosby, and Doris Day. "Smoke<lb/>
Gets in Your Eyes" is her favorite<lb/>
song. However, when I asked her<lb/>
if she liked rock and roll, she said,<lb/>
"Nooo<lb/>
.She seemed impressed with the<lb/>
friendliness of the students on cam-<lb/>
pus. 'When I walk across the cam-<lb/>
pus everyone smiles and says Hi<lb/>
Hilda said.<lb/>
She said she was also impressed<lb/>
with the American girls. She thinks<lb/>
they are very -pretty and dress beau-<lb/>
tifully, but she prefers South Ameri-<lb/>
can boys.<lb/>
Hilda noted several differences in<lb/>
the way of life for the American<lb/>
college students and for students In<lb/>
her country. The girls do not live In<lb/>
dormitories in South America as they<lb/>
do here, but live in special homes<lb/>
directed by nuns. Boys live in dorm-<lb/>
itories, but have to be good students<lb/>
to get in them. "Girls have much<lb/>
more freedom here Hilda told me.<lb/>
Chantal Leroy, a pert 19-year-old<lb/>
exchange student from Paris who<lb/>
ai rived at East Carolina on Septem-<lb/>
ber 12th, believes that the biggest<lb/>
difference between people of her<lb/>
country and America lies in "the way<lb/>
t. ey look at life<lb/>
Chantal says that the difference<lb/>
is simply in the approach, the view<lb/>
of things in general.<lb/>
As far as comparing America with<lb/>
France, she says simply, "It cannot<lb/>
be done. They are entirely different<lb/>
Chantal, who speaks Gorman as<lb/>
well as English and French, hopes<lb/>
to become an interpreter eventually.<lb/>
She will study here along those lines<lb/>
and will also work with the depart-<lb/>
ment of Foreign Languages during<lb/>
her stay.<lb/>
The young French girl, blonde and<lb/>
blue-eyed, was chosen from a large<lb/>
group of applicants to come to Amer-<lb/>
ica on the Student Exchange plan.<lb/>
She made her application to the Uni-<lb/>
versity Office in Paris along with <lb/>
transcript of her work and recom-<lb/>
mendations from her teachers. The<lb/>
application was forwarded to the In-<lb/>
stitute of International Education,<lb/>
in New York. It was then forwarded<lb/>
to Mr. Fleming, head of the French<lb/>
Department here, for his approval.<lb/>
Having foreign students visit this<lb/>
campus has been a policy for East<lb/>
Carolina for the past 10 years. Each<lb/>
year, a Spanish-speaking student and<lb/>
a French-speaking student spend a<lb/>
full school year here.<lb/>
Her hobbies are swimming, classi-<lb/>
cal dancing, and she also likes musk.<lb/>
She comments that "calypso is very<lb/>
popular in France now. Harry Bela-<lb/>
fonte is very well liked there<lb/>
Her own musical tastes, she says,<lb/>
A Gnatty Problem<lb/>
By PAT REYNOLDS<lb/>
Throughout the history of man there havi<lb/>
ben countless pestilences that have harassed riinj<lb/>
and helped to make his life a bit more miserable<lb/>
than it would have otherwise been. The Egypj<lb/>
tians had their locusts, Charles II had his buj<lb/>
bor.ic plajrue, the Southern Gentleman had hij<lb/>
boll weevil, ECC College Joe has his gnats.<lb/>
Now you, no doubt, have heard the old clich<lb/>
Chantel Leroy<lb/>
So the entire campus of ECC joins in<lb/>
singular plea. Please rid us of the gnats.<lb/>
T 4<lb/>
are beginning to shift toward Classi-<lb/>
cal and semi-classical arrangements,<lb/>
although she once was an avid fan of<lb/>
American jazz.<lb/>
Her favorite American Author is "Strain at a gnat, and swallow a camel Per<lb/>
Ernest Hemingway. "I hav read n , fer camej to the horde<lb/>
"A Farewell to Arms" and "The Old . , , <lb/>
Man and the Sea she says amiably. Pess that attack and somehow manage to daj<lb/>
She also admires some American here and there on your face, everywhere at onct<lb/>
drama. Especially Tea and Sym- at the same time crawling into your eyes, you<lb/>
.pathy which she saw in Paris on mouth, and your nose.<lb/>
the stage.<lb/>
Quite articulate, Chantal speaks of An unenlightened observer, perhaps lcok<lb/>
her first impression of New York ng ;nt0 a window of Austin or any other buih<lb/>
(her landing place in this country) in . WQU,d 31 to behold the antics<lb/>
comparison with her native Paria. , . , , , T. u??? u<lb/>
"Paris she says, "is more har- fll professors and student. It would appear th<lb/>
monious, more unified and seems to the whole student body and faculty of ECC we<lb/>
have a hue of blue and grey about bait for a mental institution. There is a franti<lb/>
the city. New York is more of a waving of hands, swatting the air, and slappi<lb/>
black and grey and there are fewer Qne,s head Now to one on the outside looking I<lb/>
treas. Nrw York is a more erratic  ? , j<lb/>
Place, with streets of different sUm the whole me8S ?f W0Uld <lb/>
and widths, while Parit is more uni- touched by moon sickness.<lb/>
t0Tm" But we are not lunatics. We are not evei<lb/>
?T2??SS?r Tw sliht deviates-We ? "?"? with wh1 wo<lb/>
trip to America on the "Queon El- ? compared to the locusts, the scourge, the boi<lb/>
aheth most of her fellow travelers weevil. The gnats have invaded.<lb/>
thought that she waa an American. &amp; mQre R 90unds<lb/>
And more uncomfortable. It is enough that thi<lb/>
weather is much too warm for school, ?t is difj<lb/>
ficult enough to become accustomed to the olf<lb/>
grind again. Must we ther have to endure a<lb/>
tilence that doubles our adjustment troubles?<lb/>
I believe in this case both faculty and sti<lb/>
dent body are in accord. Isn't there somethii<lb/>
that can be done about the gnats? We have spn<lb/>
for mosquitoes, disinfectants for bugs, D. D. TJ<lb/>
and rat traps. Isn't there a gnat killer? I hardlj<lb/>
think we can find traps to fit them.<lb/>
the<lb/>
sit<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038431_0003"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1957<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
Scanning The Campus ECC Claims<lb/>
h<lb/>
By MIKE KATSIAS<lb/>
 ax ever-faithful roomie "sacrifices a few precious moments of<lb/>
 and shakes you from your vivid dream world. You gaze at the clock,<lb/>
eard of hour of seven in the morning stares back at you. Finally,<lb/>
few knieks from t'V.e razor and a mild cup of coffee, you're ready<lb/>
daily grind with life arid all its elements.<lb/>
ugh this little opening paragraph depicts my outlook on waking<lb/>
?ung, I think 1 can safely say that it's a ritual which is fami-<lb/>
corea of others. In a loose, indirect way, it bring to mind a joki<lb/>
v iva Mem to garner a good smirk  An eagle-eyed mortician<lb/>
i crone shuffling away from a funeral service at is parlor.<lb/>
i i Low uid she was. "0ie hundred aid one cackled the old<lb/>
'Well, well said the mortician suavely. "Hardly worth<lb/>
No Cure For Homesickness<lb/>
'Try.<lb/>
tkr Dm<lb/>
le cs<lb/>
all<lb/>
lope<lb/>
Lrd.<lb/>
fNl<lb/>
:ked!<lb/>
scrit<lb/>
to pal<lb/>
the Ba1<lb/>
the<lb/>
lere havj<lb/>
jsed hii<lb/>
liserabll<lb/>
e El<lb/>
his bi<lb/>
had h<lb/>
lats.<lb/>
Wd clichj<lb/>
el Pel<lb/>
horde<lb/>
e to di<lb/>
at one<lb/>
yea, yoi<lb/>
ips lool<lb/>
ier buile<lb/>
antics<lb/>
bpear thi<lb/>
J1CC wei<lb/>
a frantfl<lb/>
slappii<lb/>
skin? ii<lb/>
ir to<lb/>
not eve<lb/>
mt woulj<lb/>
the bo<lb/>
lit sound<lb/>
that thj<lb/>
it is di<lb/>
the ou<lb/>
lure a .<lb/>
Rubles?<lb/>
and sti<lb/>
Isomethil<lb/>
ive spraj<lb/>
D. D.<lb/>
I? I hai<lb/>
idly.<lb/>
 is<lb/>
It<lb/>
1 try to complete this column to meet another deadline, many<lb/>
ghts abound in me and 1 think it's time 1 put some on paper.<lb/>
( m eriencc for a fellow in college to ave a chance to<lb/>
the school pa er. H?MS ? job that gives you the opportunity to<lb/>
take part in many of the newsworthy evtnts that happen i?<lb/>
? community.<lb/>
 al sorts of folks and realize that on the whole, people<lb/>
Innately, we all have a streak of black, the only<lb/>
 legreel W en 1 graduate, 1 hop to retain same al the<lb/>
I've learned during my stay at East Carolina.<lb/>
n and now as a junior trying to grasp this luxury<lb/>
trity '? still hear so many cynical characters say. "Eas1<lb/>
1 don't owe this college anything I've let that remark dwell<lb/>
I thia summer and my answvr is the opposite. I owe mj<lb/>
given me every outlet needed to nelp mold a future life<lb/>
very grateful<lb/>
?s<lb/>
tile ehnekk that took place in Stokes' barbershop this<lb/>
tag Btudent waike.i in and approached the barber in<lb/>
it suddenly stopped. He asked the waiting shearer,<lb/>
v who cut my hair iast time?" "Yes replied the bar-<lb/>
I at answer, the fellow turned and went to the next chair. Even<lb/>
has bis rough moments these day<lb/>
rttinue the comical touch, another humorous tale ii<lb/>
Beauty Queens<lb/>
By ELNA CAULBERG<lb/>
East Carolina was certainly well<lb/>
 sented this past summer in the<lb/>
N tth Carolina" beauty pag-<lb/>
eant, for two of our freshmen, one<lb/>
phi more and one senior were lar-<lb/>
;? . Miss Roanoke Rapids and<lb/>
li Kinston, Doris Paye Robins and<lb/>
fimi McDanul respectively, are both<lb/>
imen. Miss Greenville, Ronita<lb/>
; , i: a sophomore and Miss<lb/>
Marjorie Ann Tingen,<lb/>
A<lb/>
ibly spurted his line to the bosomv b<lb/>
ifereu:<lb/>
delight<lb/>
P<lb/>
vou<lb/>
ma Pi dance. Finally the luscious creature<lb/>
wooing, but first she related what ha i ha. pened on<lb/>
saying ? few words, he kissed me, 1 almost fainted<lb/>
ta way to cur man's face as he surveyed the girl and<lb/>
bi what I've got to say, you'll die<lb/>
fell<lb/>
her<lb/>
" A<lb/>
-aid.<lb/>
Hill! V<lb/>
! 5 Faye, an English major wbo<lb/>
, - ? in Gotten Hall, has a long<lb/>
trin? beauty titles and honors<lb/>
ehind her. In high school she was<lb/>
.(- Kej : lub Sweetheart and also,<lb/>
be was in the Homecoming Court.<lb/>
5he ! ow holds the titles of "Miss Nat-<lb/>
onal Guard" and "Miss Rescue Squad<lb/>
,f Roanoke Rapids In the state<lb/>
: Doris Paye presented George<lb/>
Bernard Shaw's dramatic "Cleopat-<lb/>
a Incidentally, this lovely ash-<lb/>
, is one of the school's aewly-<lb/>
elected majorettes.<lb/>
i MoDaniel is a Ragsdale resi-<lb/>
who is majoring in Primary<lb/>
This dark-haired beauty<lb/>
vas selected "Best-Looking" by her<lb/>
ligh school last spring; also, she<lb/>
was crowned Kinston Homecoming<lb/>
n and Queen of Hearts. Her<lb/>
talent in te Miss North Carolina"<lb/>
contest was an excerpt from Street-<lb/>
eat<lb/>
College Union Plans Start<lb/>
Meeting for the first time this fall records for the Union, jazz sessions<lb/>
the College Union Student Board be- and it rents special art exhibits to<lb/>
Nurse Hales tells freshman Jaye Finnegan that the Infirmary just<lb/>
doesn't have any pills to cure that terrible malady called homesickness.<lb/>
en quite some tinte since I tried my hand at<lb/>
? an attempt which 1 hope you'll like.<lb/>
ttle bit of<lb/>
i!<lb/>
 i<lb/>
eat, the cannons roar,<lb/>
This ia the sound of dreaded war.<lb/>
will live men will die,<lb/>
And men will fight like I,<lb/>
thing called war.<lb/>
When will this ceaseless struggle end?<lb/>
1 ever see the home, children that lie round the bend?<lb/>
He walks t e streets a lonely man,<lb/>
There is no guide to hold his hand.<lb/>
His was a love so very dear,<lb/>
His was a love of many a year;<lb/>
Yet now that love is broken, now it is gone,<lb/>
A lost man wanders on.<lb/>
'liltistiun<lb/>
ld?rsisti<lb/>
?M Iav<lb/>
Named Desire. Incidentally, Jimi<lb/>
sd 3rd in the contest. Beauty<lb/>
in .limi's family for her<lb/>
Carole, was selected<lb/>
Student" here at the col-<lb/>
lege last year,<lb/>
Ronita Respass, the hometown<lb/>
eauty? ia a sophomore majoring in<lb/>
Busin ss. For the talent division of<lb/>
tin state contest, Ronita presented<lb/>
the dramatic recitation "Mary of<lb/>
Scotland When asked by this in-<lb/>
ewer had sftie ever held any<lb/>
A Helping Hand<lb/>
By ELIZABETH WILLIAMS<lb/>
Big Sisters are one of the biggest around the dormitory. They take the<lb/>
blessings in the life of a freshman counselees on a tour of down town<lb/>
irirl. Most freshmen do not know what Greenville, helping them to locate<lb/>
to expect when they enter college, and churches, movies, department stores<lb/>
the friendliness of a Big Sister helps<lb/>
gan making plans for student en-<lb/>
tertainment at a full committee meet-<lb/>
ing held in the College Union recent-<lb/>
i his grouv consists of about fifty<lb/>
students and is htaded by La Visa<lb/>
Choismon, president of this year's<lb/>
)oard. Flora Ruth Boseman is the<lb/>
acting secretary, Fre.dric Roberson<lb/>
is the treasurer and Miss Cynthia<lb/>
Mendenhall, Recreation Supervisor,<lb/>
is the advisor to the CUSB.<lb/>
The CUSB is divided into many<lb/>
committees which work together in<lb/>
planning activities and projects for<lb/>
the students at ECC who take advan-<lb/>
tage of the Union's many facilities.<lb/>
Mike Katsias. chairman of the So-<lb/>
cial Committee, said that plans were<lb/>
in the making for such .hings as a<lb/>
Ua for foreign students, a decorating<lb/>
Htrty in the Union at Christmas,<lb/>
couples night, homecoming open<lb/>
oust, and Senior recognition. The<lb/>
Freshman darce held September 3,<lb/>
a- planned by this committee.<lb/>
Buddy Mangum is chairman of the<lb/>
Danct and Record Committee which,<lb/>
as its title indicates, has a lot to do<lb/>
with furnishing and planning the mu-<lb/>
sic programs of the College Union.<lb/>
The Cultural and Fine Arts Commit-<lb/>
tee under Nancy Lilly and Phyllis<lb/>
Pool handles the classical and jazz<lb/>
be displayed for the students.<lb/>
The Special Projects Committee<lb/>
headed by Martha Wilson and Jimmy<lb/>
Wall is in charge of the making of<lb/>
the Campus Directory, Carnival<lb/>
Night, the C U Night Club night,<lb/>
visits made to other college Unions<lb/>
aiid many more large projects which<lb/>
do not come under any other commit-<lb/>
tee head.<lb/>
The Games Committee has as its<lb/>
chairman Eddie Dennis and this com-<lb/>
mittee takes care of all tournaments<lb/>
and game materials. It also handles<lb/>
the instructions given beginners in<lb/>
sue . things as bridge and chess.<lb/>
The Publicity Committee with<lb/>
Betty Fleming as chairman handles<lb/>
the job of making the College Union's<lb/>
scrapbook, making posters, fixing the<lb/>
bulletin boards, and in general keep-<lb/>
ing the students well informed as to<lb/>
the activities of the College Union.<lb/>
The Union will plan also to send<lb/>
some of its members to the regional<lb/>
meeting of the Association of Col-<lb/>
lege Unions to be held at Duke Uni-<lb/>
versity sometime in October.<lb/>
Summer school students will pro-<lb/>
bably remember the Talent Show, the<lb/>
tournaments, the Awards Banquet,<lb/>
the new bicycles, and the watermelon<lb/>
cuttings all of which were sponsored<lb/>
by the College Union this summer.<lb/>
i girl overcome many of the difficul-<lb/>
? . that arise. It is very nice to see<lb/>
the smiling face of your Big Sister<lb/>
when you enter Cotten Hall for the<lb/>
'irsl time.<lb/>
I t Student Counselor, or Big Sis-<lb/>
ter, has many duties. One is to set<lb/>
ties, the petite, brown- j a goad example at ail times for their<lb/>
laughingly replied, ? counsellees. This includes attitudes<lb/>
We de the initial attempt for this column with the hope that<lb/>
enjoyable media for its reader. Also a reminder.theres ?<lb/>
that some professors are instigating t.e usage of testa tor<lb/>
lemie melting ot Beware! <lb/>
V:<lb/>
tate<lb/>
.tie<lb/>
QlU<lb/>
HI<lb/>
th(<lb/>
 venth<lb/>
Ann Tingen, a Grammar<lb/>
Utterback Tours<lb/>
Isle Of Britain<lb/>
Elisabeth Utterback, member<lb/>
Carolina College English<lb/>
en1 and director of the spring<lb/>
 productions, toured the Bn-<lb/>
of Stratford were all highlights of<lb/>
Dr. Utterback's crowded itinerary.<lb/>
Of the English pec pie. Dr. Utter-<lb/>
back commented on them as being<lb/>
very nice and living at a slow pace.<lb/>
!eauty contests, for this blue-<lb/>
ass was "Miss Apex" in 1954.<lb/>
?h school, she was selected<lb/>
Queen. Like most of<lb/>
hei contestants, Marjorie Ann,<lb/>
ramatic recitation. She<lb/>
allin' Mody Fields<lb/>
h e ? oem in Negi o dialect.<lb/>
vs talte notice of the<lb/>
girls you see around you on<lb/>
in class, or in the soda<lb/>
cafeteria. Who<lb/>
? You mig' I be sitting next<lb/>
uture Miss America!<lb/>
toward the rules of the college, ad-<lb/>
ministrative officers, and professors<lb/>
as well as other students. They advise<lb/>
hi hand at girls of correct ideas about dating,<lb/>
.hewing gum, wearing scarves on<lb/>
their hair to the dining hall and talk-<lb/>
ing in a loud voice. The counselors<lb/>
stress the importance of being well<lb/>
groomed at all times. Also they tell<lb/>
heir counselees the importance of<lb/>
using good manners, and they empha-<lb/>
- e iiood h- alth and study habits,<lb/>
keeping up grades, spending time<lb/>
a h ely. getting enough sleep, and<lb/>
eating meals regularly.<lb/>
The Counselors greet their girls on<lb/>
the first day and help them to get set-<lb/>
tled in their room and learn their way<lb/>
restaurants, banks, and cleaning est-<lb/>
blishments. A tour of the campus is<lb/>
roth r use ul activity. The Big Sis-<lb/>
tera explain dining room procedure<lb/>
and all the rules in the Handbook.<lb/>
The necessity of these rules is pointed<lb/>
out, and counselees are urged to attend<lb/>
all college functions during the first<lb/>
wek.<lb/>
Answering questions, helping solve<lb/>
personal ; roblems. and entertaining at<lb/>
m11 parties are some more of the<lb/>
nice things that the Big Sisters do.<lb/>
They are always ready to help in any<lb/>
way trey can.<lb/>
The Big Sisters in Cotten Hall are<lb/>
Barbark Davenport chairman, Pat<lb/>
 wis. Marilyn Shavender, Johnis Har-<lb/>
desty, Nancy Keith, Marjorie Sutton,<lb/>
Mary Sanderson, Marian Humphrey,<lb/>
Elisabeth Leary, Nancy Rigsby, Juli-<lb/>
ette Cain, Dottie Walker, Dolly Mc-<lb/>
Perry Takes Trip To Europe;<lb/>
Sees Sights, Former Students<lb/>
By ELIZABETH WILLIAMS<lb/>
Mrs. Marguerite Perry, who teach-1 for the first time. In Florence most<lb/>
es in the foreign language depart- of her time was spent in visiting<lb/>
meat visited several European coun- museums in which the original works<lb/>
.ries this summer, seeing many in-<lb/>
teresting sights and renewing old<lb/>
acquaintance.<lb/>
Mrs. Perry, who sailed over on<lb/>
e S. S. Flandre, a French line on<lb/>
May  met Monique Farge on the<lb/>
hip. Monique, who was on her way<lb/>
kome to Paris, studied at East Caro-<lb/>
lina iast year. The boat landed at<lb/>
Le Havre where Mrs. Perry also met<lb/>
Monique's parents.<lb/>
Arriving in Paris in time for the<lb/>
last part of the theater and opera<lb/>
season, Mrs. Perry attended plays<lb/>
ranging from old favorites by Cor-<lb/>
aeille. Moliere, Musset and others<lb/>
o modern drama and musical com-<lb/>
sdy. She attended tbe operas Le Mar-<lb/>
vr de St. Sebastien, La Boheme, and<lb/>
I'eeca. A strike bv the stage hands<lb/>
sha Evans, Betty Hart, Jo Ann Bryan,<lb/>
Flora Ruth Biseman, Marlene Dudly,<lb/>
Barbara West, Francis Day, Rosalee<lb/>
Banks, Shelby Sheffield, Mary Mar-<lb/>
garet Kelly, Sharon Daughtry, Edna<lb/>
P illips, and Mary Porter.<lb/>
Even, Phyl House, Betsy Mills, Mar- prevented her attending Lakme. Be-<lb/>
Pans, she saw Dinah<lb/>
Messick Announces New Staff, Faculty<lb/>
President J. D. Messick of East<lb/>
Mes during the past Buramer- Carolina College has announced the<lb/>
isiled from South Hampton on<lb/>
12 aboard one of America's<lb/>
modern luxury liners, the Unit-<lb/>
! States.<lb/>
As one of eighty graduate students,<lb/>
attended the Stratford Avon<lb/>
Shakespeare Institute which is held<lb/>
every summer by Birmingham Uni-<lb/>
In the Mason Croft School,<lb/>
. attended lectures in the morning<lb/>
? seminar of her choice in the<lb/>
ioon. Lecturers came from the<lb/>
rersities of Oxford, Cambridge,<lb/>
jh, London, Belfast, Dublin,<lb/>
Glasgow. Dr. Alardya Nichol,<lb/>
uf the Institute, is a world au-<lb/>
rity on Sr.akespeare. The Insti-<lb/>
itc holds the distinction of owning<lb/>
i Shakespearian library in<lb/>
world. Fourteen countries were<lb/>
esented in the eighty students<lb/>
tor;<lb/>
Aside from studies of the Eliza-<lb/>
bethan and Jacobean stage, the stu-<lb/>
worked closely with the Shake-<lb/>
re Memorial Theatre. During<lb/>
term, five splays were presented;<lb/>
"Julius Ceasar "As You Like It<lb/>
?The Tempest "King John and<lb/>
?( ymueline Staring in these plays<lb/>
ve-re Sir John Gieljud and Dame<lb/>
Peggy Asfr.croft. After each perform-<lb/>
ance, a party was given in the Insti-<lb/>
tute's Green Room for cast and stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
Complementing lecturea given by<lb/>
the wardrobe manager, the students<lb/>
visited the gigantic stage and c?-<lb/>
tume department. Of all her impres-<lb/>
sions, Dr. Utterback said she was<lb/>
most impressed with the elaborate<lb/>
ta and lighting system.<lb/>
Weekends saw Dr. Utterback in<lb/>
London where she attended several<lb/>
plays, one of which was "Titus An-<lb/>
dronicus starring England's first<lb/>
family of the tftieatre, Vivian Leigh<lb/>
and Sir Lawrence Olivier.<lb/>
Scotland, the Bdinburg Music Pes-<lb/>
Hvai with the Emperial Swedish<lb/>
appointment of more than 50 new<lb/>
staff and faculty members who are<lb/>
being added to the college staff for<lb/>
1957-58.<lb/>
Joining the faculty are 35 persons<lb/>
who are in addition to others who are<lb/>
to replace resignations and retired<lb/>
people. The full slate of new faculty<lb/>
members of the East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege staff was approved by the EOC<lb/>
board of trustees at its meeting here<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
President Messick's announcement<lb/>
contains the names of the following<lb/>
people listed by departments:<lb/>
Artr? Roberta Stokes Persick, B. S<lb/>
Southeast Missouri State College;<lb/>
M. A University of Missouri; M. F.<lb/>
A New York State College of Ce-<lb/>
ramics; Mrs. Persick came to East<lb/>
Carolina as Miss Stokes in Septem-<lb/>
ber, 1955, and is best known for her<lb/>
work in ceramics.<lb/>
Business Education ? Thadys<lb/>
Dewar, B. S M. A East Carolina<lb/>
College, on faculty Bethel high school;<lb/>
William Durham, B. S East Caro-<lb/>
lina College; M. A University of<lb/>
North Carolina; on Wae Forest Col-<lb/>
lege faculty before going to Indiana<lb/>
University where he is completing<lb/>
wort for his Ed. D. degree; Harold<lb/>
McGrath, A. B M. A Colorado State<lb/>
College of Education, in business and<lb/>
teaching Distributive Education in<lb/>
Colorado; Jane White, B. S Central<lb/>
College, Missouri; M. Bus. Admn<lb/>
University of Denver, comes to ECC<lb/>
from position in California.<lb/>
Education? Ruth Modlin, A. B<lb/>
East Carolina College; M. A Colum-<lb/>
bia University; D. Ed George Pea-<lb/>
body College; on faculty Greenville<lb/>
schools, Oswego State College, Os-<lb/>
wego, N. Y coming from Cedar<lb/>
Crest College in Pennsylvania; John<lb/>
H. Home, A. B M. A Ed. D Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina, principal<lb/>
Grainger high school, Kinston, past<lb/>
10 years.<lb/>
English?Marie Browning, A. B<lb/>
Marshall College; M. A Duke Uni-<lb/>
Richard Caj well, A. B Brown Uni-<lb/>
re sity; M. A Yale University; Ph.<lb/>
IV. Duke University; on faculty of<lb/>
Universitj of Missouri and Ohio<lb/>
Wesleyan University; Mary Good-<lb/>
man, A. B Woman's College of Uni-<lb/>
versity; M. A East Carolina College;<lb/>
on faculty of Greenville high school;<lb/>
Rachel H. Kilpatrick (Mrs. Norman).<lb/>
A. B Pembroke College; M. A Rad-<lb/>
cliffe College; Ph. D Brown Uni-<lb/>
versity; has taught at State Uni-<lb/>
rersity of Iowa.<lb/>
Janice Hardison, B. S M. A. East<lb/>
Carolina College, on faculty of Wil-<lb/>
mington Junior College; Antoinnette<lb/>
Jenkins, A. B Georgia State Col-<lb/>
1 ge for Women; M. A University<lb/>
Of North Carolina; taught in Ten-<lb/>
aessee, Maryland, and North Caro-<lb/>
lina; Edgar B. Jenkins, A. B M. A<lb/>
Ph. D University of North Carolina;<lb/>
on faculty of Western Maryland Col-<lb/>
lege, instructor at U. S. Marine<lb/>
Corps Air Station at Cherry Point,<lb/>
and Norti. Carolina high schools;<lb/>
Earh LaBaron, A. B Mount St.<lb/>
liary College; M. A .Ph. D Univer-<lb/>
sity of Rome, Italy; taught in Mary-<lb/>
land, Georgia, and Pensacola, Flor-<lb/>
idaLena Reynolds, A. B Eastern<lb/>
Kentucky Teachers College; M. A<lb/>
East Carolina College; on faculty of<lb/>
Greenville high school; Frances Wink-<lb/>
l.r, A. B St. Joseph's College; M. A<lb/>
University of Southern California;<lb/>
UL. B Southwestern University; Ph.<lb/>
D University of Southern California;<lb/>
comes to East Carolina from St. Mary<lb/>
,f the Plains College, Dodge City,<lb/>
Kansas; has taught in California<lb/>
and Kansas.<lb/>
Public Relations and Foundations?<lb/>
Ralpi Brimley, B. S North Carolina<lb/>
State College, M. A University of<lb/>
North Carolina; Ed. D George<lb/>
Washington University; comes from<lb/>
Montreat College where he was head<lb/>
of Department of Education and Psy<lb/>
M. A Ph. D University of North<lb/>
Carolina; on faculty Mars Hill Col-<lb/>
comes from Millsaps College,<lb/>
lackaon, Miss part-time in French<lb/>
part-time in Engish; Frederick<lb/>
W :f. A. B College of Puget Sound,<lb/>
Was ington; M. A East Carolina<lb/>
College; graduate assistant in De-<lb/>
partment of Languages, 1956-57;<lb/>
full-time member of department this<lb/>
ear.<lb/>
Geography?Barley Milstead, B. E<lb/>
Illinois State Norman University;<lb/>
A. B Ph. D Clark University; comes<lb/>
to ECC from State Teachers College,<lb/>
Montcair, N. J where he was head<lb/>
of Geography department; Stuart<lb/>
Rothwell, B. A M. A Ph. D Syra<lb/>
 c. since 1949; Robert Paysinger,<lb/>
B S. Ed M. S. Ed Alabama Poly-<lb/>
technic Institute; graduate study<lb/>
Michigan State University; machin-<lb/>
ist, technician, and teacher industrial<lb/>
arts; from Central Junior high school<lb/>
Saginaw, Mich.<lb/>
Library Science?Ruth B. Prince,<lb/>
A. B Meredith College; B. S Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina; teacher<lb/>
and librarian, North Carolina schools<lb/>
and Oak Ridge Military Institute,<lb/>
Vemie Bert Wilder, B. S M. A<lb/>
East Carolina, taught in West Edge-<lb/>
combe high school, home, Nashville,<lb/>
N. C.<lb/>
Mathematics?David R. Davis, A.<lb/>
li. A. M Indiana University, Ph. D<lb/>
of t.e great artists and particularly<lb/>
Mithelangelo are displayed. While<lb/>
visiting Rome, she saw the fountains<lb/>
ir.to which people throw coins. Mrs.<lb/>
r-eri y saw the opera La Traviata in<lb/>
an outdoor performance at the site<lb/>
of some old Roman baths. At Romeo<lb/>
and Juliet's home in Verona, she saw<lb/>
Juliet's tomb which was empty. The<lb/>
tomb of Dante, the Italian poet, i3<lb/>
located in Ravenna, a charming little<lb/>
town. Some of her time in Italy was<lb/>
spent in the beautiful lake region.<lb/>
M issed Franco<lb/>
Twice while she was in Spain, Mrs.<lb/>
Perry just missed seeing General<lb/>
Franco, once when she was in San<lb/>
Sebation and again in Burgos. Most<lb/>
of her time in Spain was spent in<lb/>
the southern part which is known as<lb/>
Andalusia. She also visited Cordoba,<lb/>
Siveille, (iranada, and the Alhambra<lb/>
where the Moorish influence can 3till<lb/>
be felt. While she was in Madrid,<lb/>
Mrs. Perry visited Natacha Sesena,<lb/>
a former East Carolina student who<lb/>
ent her warmest greetings to every-<lb/>
one at East Carolina. Natatfha will<lb/>
return to the United States to teach<lb/>
at Barnard.<lb/>
Saw Ann Mayo<lb/>
In Paris, Mrs. Perry saw Ann<lb/>
Mayo, who graduated from East<lb/>
Carolina last year as a French major<lb/>
and who has been studying in Pfcris<lb/>
on a scholarship. Mrs. Perry said<lb/>
she could not emphasize too much<lb/>
the importance of people studying<lb/>
and living in a foreign country. This<lb/>
is the only way to really become ac-<lb/>
Io:e leaving<lb/>
Porter, daughter of East Carolina<lb/>
coach Howard Porter. Dinah was<lb/>
.ety enthusiastic about spending her<lb/>
junior year studying in France.<lb/>
For a couple of weekf, Mrs. Perry<lb/>
visited Yugoslavia. Most of this time<lb/>
.vas .spent visiting coastal towns. She<lb/>
said the water there seemed bluer<lb/>
nan that of the Mediterranean Sea<lb/>
if that were possible. She went inland<lb/>
at Dubrovnik to visit Sarajevo which<lb/>
is where the incident that started<lb/>
World War I occured. Tlie things<lb/>
that impresed Mrs. Perry the most<lb/>
were that there were so few cars.<lb/>
The country is very poor, but the in-<lb/>
habitits seem content under Tito's<lb/>
rule. Tito's 'jicture is displayed<lb/>
everywhere in the country. The lan-J quainted with the people of a country<lb/>
guage of Yugoslavia is Serbo-Croat, anc<lb/>
which is interesting to hear but very-<lb/>
difficult to learn.<lb/>
First Time in Italy<lb/>
Coming by boat from Yugoslavia<lb/>
to Venice, Mrs. Perry visited Italy<lb/>
nd it helps a person to speak a<lb/>
language the way it is actually spo-<lb/>
ken.<lb/>
After seeing several other friends,<lb/>
Mrs. Perry arrived back in New<lb/>
York on August 30.<lb/>
mersitv; 1956, faculty of St. University of Chicago; new head of<lb/>
.yurence University; 1954-55, taught Mathematics Department, coming<lb/>
Engl Jh for Brazilian students in<lb/>
the "Centro-Catura Brazileire-Norte<lb/>
Americano" Caxias de Sul, Rio<lb/>
Grande de Sul, Brazil.<lb/>
Health and Physical Education?<lb/>
Lorrayne Graff, B. S LaCrosse State<lb/>
Teachers College, Wisconsin; M. E<lb/>
University of North Caroline, has<lb/>
from State Teachers College, Mont-<lb/>
clair, N. J where he was head of<lb/>
Mathematics Department; Mildred<lb/>
H. Derrick, A. B B. S University<lb/>
of Georgia; M. A East Carolina<lb/>
College; taught in Georgia, since 1955<lb/>
in Greenville high school; A. C Hol-<lb/>
land, A. B Presbyterian College of<lb/>
substitute, now full-time mem- South Carolina; M. A University on<lb/>
eer of EGC Health and Physical Edu-1 North Carolina; Ed. D University<lb/>
cation women's division; Francis H.<lb/>
Madigan, B. S East Carolina Col-<lb/>
Nebraska Wesleyan University; M.<lb/>
A Teac. ers Collgee, Columbia Uni-<lb/>
versity; Ph. D University of Ne-<lb/>
braska; taught in Nebraska, Miss-<lb/>
issippi, and Belhaven College, Jack-<lb/>
on, Miss Julia Marshall, B. S M.<lb/>
A Kent State University, Ed. D<lb/>
University of Maryland; taught in<lb/>
Ohio, Maryland, and Hastings Col-<lb/>
ege, Nebraska; Robert L. Ormsby,<lb/>
University; taught in University of<lb/>
Idaho, Randolph-Macon and Memphis<lb/>
State Colleges; Ruth Keesey, A. B<lb/>
New Jersey College for WTomen; M.<lb/>
A Ph. D Columbia University;<lb/>
taught in New Jersey and New York;<lb/>
James LaPoe, Ph. B Waynesburg<lb/>
College; M. A University of Pitts-<lb/>
burgh; Ph. D Ohio State Univer-<lb/>
sity; on faculty of Rutgers Univer-<lb/>
A. B University of Toronto; M. A sity; Ralph R. Napp, B. A Univer-<lb/>
.hology, former superintendtemt of<lb/>
Forsyth County Schools; to direct<lb/>
public relations, foundations and ex-<lb/>
tension.<lb/>
Foreign Languages?J. Roy Prince,<lb/>
and teas by the Wales Eng- versity; joins English staff full-time<lb/>
kingjytond the Mayor after having been part-time instruc- A. B University of South Carolina;<lb/>
lege; M. A University of North<lb/>
Carolina; taught in High Point Col-<lb/>
lege, 2 years with U. S. Air Force<lb/>
in Japan, comes from Needham<lb/>
Broughton high school faculty, Ra-<lb/>
leigh; William B. McDonald, B. S<lb/>
M. A East Carolina College, coach<lb/>
at Shaw AFB, Sumter, S. C, 1956-67;<lb/>
Francis F. Pyne, B. P. H. E Uni-<lb/>
versity of Toronto, Ontario. M. A<lb/>
Ph. D University of Minnesota; on<lb/>
faculty of University of Saskatche-<lb/>
wan, University of Minnesota, and<lb/>
dtan of men at Washburn University<lb/>
of Topeka, Kansas.<lb/>
Home Economics?Alvertia Ques-<lb/>
enberry, B. S Radford College of<lb/>
V. PI M. A Virginia Polytechnic<lb/>
Institute; taught in Lexington, Va.<lb/>
and Marion College, Va.<lb/>
Industrial Arts?Robert W. Leith,<lb/>
B. S N. C. State College; M. S Bow-<lb/>
ling Green State University, Ohio;<lb/>
tau<lb/>
of Oklahoma; former superintendent<lb/>
of Jones County, N. C, public schools;<lb/>
principal, Manteo high school; vice<lb/>
president and dean of Belin Univer-<lb/>
sity, Missouri.<lb/>
Music?Thomas Miller, B. S State<lb/>
Teachers College, West Chester, Pa<lb/>
ML A East Carolina College; U. S.<lb/>
Army Band, part-time teacher in<lb/>
ECC Music Department, last year,<lb/>
and now full-time; Ulrich Wolfgang,<lb/>
Festch, B. Music, M. Music, Univer-<lb/>
sity of Denver; completing work for<lb/>
Doctor of Music at Indiana Univer-<lb/>
sity; instructor in piano at Osaka<lb/>
Education Center, Honshu, 1946-48;<lb/>
assistant in piano at Indiana Univer-<lb/>
sity; Carl Hjortsvang, A. B Dana<lb/>
College, B. Music, American Con-<lb/>
servatory of Music; Doctor of Sacred<lb/>
Music, Union Theological Seminary;<lb/>
music supervisor, Nebraska public<lb/>
schools; voice, American Conserva-<lb/>
tory and Huron College; since 1963,<lb/>
Peace College, Raleigh.<lb/>
University of Frieburg; taught in<lb/>
Georgia, Idaho, and Mitchell College,<lb/>
New London, Conn Frank A. Scott,<lb/>
. B A. M Duke University; Ph.<lb/>
D University of Georgia; taught in<lb/>
Hiwassee Junior College, Brenau<lb/>
College, and in 1956-67 was research<lb/>
assistant on Kellogg Foundation<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
Social Studies?C. J. Bradner, A.<lb/>
B Atlantic Christian College; B. D<lb/>
University of Chicago; M. A Ph. D<lb/>
Columbia University; U. S. Army,<lb/>
taught in Virginia and since 1962 at<lb/>
Denison University, Ohio; will be<lb/>
director of Religious Activities and<lb/>
teach courses related to this work;<lb/>
George Douglas, A. B University<lb/>
of Michigan; Ph. M University of<lb/>
Wisconsin; Ph. D Johns HopkhiB<lb/>
University; taught in Maryland and<lb/>
Alabama; on faculty at Davidson<lb/>
College; since 1961, co-ordinator of<lb/>
Family Life Education program in<lb/>
Charlotte, N. C; to teach in Social<lb/>
Studies Department and direct Dan-<lb/>
forth Religion in Education project.<lb/>
J. M. Howell, A. B M. A Uni-<lb/>
UtZjrTXX-K15 K. B?U.?y of AUU'PK D? D?k.W D?o ofOU .<lb/>
sity of Alabama; classwork completed<lb/>
for Ph. D in Munich, Germany U.<lb/>
S. Airborne Division; Charles L.<lb/>
Price, B. S Davidson College; M. A<lb/>
and classwork completed for Ph. D.<lb/>
at University of North Carolina;<lb/>
part-time instructor at UNC; 1956-<lb/>
57. West Georgia College.<lb/>
Science?J. G. Boyette, B. S M.<lb/>
A East Carolina College, graduate<lb/>
study at Duke University; 1966-5f,<lb/>
Bath high school faculty; Robert<lb/>
Haubrich, A. B M. S Miehigan<lb/>
State University; Ph. D University<lb/>
of Florida; this summer worked at<lb/>
the E. S. George Reserve of the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Michigan; Joseph N. La-<lb/>
Conte, B. S M. S Emory Univer-<lb/>
sity; Ph. D University of North<lb/>
Carolina; on faculty of Flora Mac-<lb/>
donald and Presbyterian Junior Col-<lb/>
leges; Floyd Read, Jr B. S. Ed<lb/>
M. Ed University of Florida; grad-<lb/>
uate study at University of Florida;<lb/>
on faculty Jacksonville, Fla. schools.<lb/>
De; -i of Graduate Studiea?Dr. J.<lb/>
K. Long, who has been chairman of<lb/>
the Education Department, has been<lb/>
fc<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00038431_0004"/><lb/>
AST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER g<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
Maloney Replaces Partridge<lb/>
As Professor Of Air Science<lb/>
Admission Tests For Grad<lb/>
Business Study To Be Held<lb/>
Time To Study<lb/>
Lt. Col. Edward J. Maloney has<lb/>
just begun a two-year tour of duty<lb/>
as Professor of Air Science in the<lb/>
the department of air science at East<lb/>
Carolina College. He replaces Col.<lb/>
Lewis J. Partridge, who, after a per-<lb/>
iod of two months in jet training<lb/>
school, will be located, at Shaw Air<lb/>
Force Base, Sumter, S. C.<lb/>
Lt. Col. Maloney has been at East<lb/>
Carolina for the past two year as a<lb/>
staff member of the department of<lb/>
air science, A native of Littleton.<lb/>
Colorado, he attended Colorado Uni-<lb/>
versity in Boulder, where he received<lb/>
training in civil engineering.<lb/>
Hie service record includes tours<lb/>
of duty with Military Air Transport<lb/>
Service in the United States 1942-<lb/>
1946 and in Europe, where he partici-<lb/>
pated in the Berlin Airlift, 1946-1949;<lb/>
and with the 315th Air Division in<lb/>
Korea and Japan 1953-1965. Awards<lb/>
which he has received include the<lb/>
Bronze Star, the Air Medal, the Ber-<lb/>
lin Airlift Medal, and two campaign<lb/>
star in Korea.<lb/>
New members of the East Caro-<lb/>
lina AFROTC staff include also M.<lb/>
Sgt. Joseph G. Weiland, Jr who will<lb/>
act as sergeant major; Tech. Sgt.<lb/>
Leon Manning; and Tech. Sgt. Tho-<lb/>
Colonel Maloney<lb/>
mas E. Winstead. Sgt. Manning and<lb/>
Sgt. Winstead are North Carolinians,<lb/>
from Greenville and Wilson, respect-<lb/>
ively.<lb/>
AFROTC staff members who are<lb/>
leaving the college and the places<lb/>
where they will next report for duty<lb/>
are M. Sgt. Alfred Gates, to Shaw<lb/>
Air Force Base; Tech. Sgt. Dallas<lb/>
Mahoney, to technical school, Denver,<lb/>
Colo M. Sgt. Vernoo Collins, to<lb/>
Air Defense Hdqt. in Colorado; and<lb/>
M. Sgt. David A. Horn, to Grand<lb/>
View, Mo.<lb/>
East Carolina College's Air Force<lb/>
ROTC detachment began work for<lb/>
the 1957-1968 term Friday morning,<lb/>
.ith a total of 156 participating<lb/>
cadets, Col. Edward Maloney, pro-<lb/>
fesor of air science, has announced.<lb/>
Ninety freshmen joined the detach-<lb/>
ment this fall. Sophomores, juniors,<lb/>
and seniors continuing their work<lb/>
In the East Carolina AFROTC num-<lb/>
er 65.<lb/>
Robert Osbem Ballance, Jr is now<lb/>
acting as cadet colonel of the detach-<lb/>
ment. A senior from Manteo, he is<lb/>
majoring in the department of in-<lb/>
dustrial arts at the college.<lb/>
Capt. George Patterson will serve<lb/>
during the present school term as<lb/>
commandant of cadets and chief ad-<lb/>
visor for the cadet corps. Capt. Jean<lb/>
Crane will act as education officer;<lb/>
and Lt. Robert Vining as assistant<lb/>
to the commandant of cadets. These<lb/>
new assignments of duties have just<lb/>
I een announced by Col. Maloney.<lb/>
The Air Force ROTC at East Caro-<lb/>
lina, Col. Maloney said here today,<lb/>
will carry out an active program du-<lb/>
ring 1957-1958. Prospects for a suc-<lb/>
cesful school year are good, he stated.<lb/>
Announcement of The Admission<lb/>
Test for Graduate Study in Business,<lb/>
required for entrance by a number<lb/>
of graduate business schools or di-<lb/>
visions throughout the country, will<lb/>
b? offered on four dates during the<lb/>
coming year, according to Educa-<lb/>
tional  esting Service, which pre-<lb/>
pares and administers the test.<lb/>
During 1956-57 many students<lb/>
took the test in partial satisfaction<lb/>
of admission requirements of gradu-<lb/>
ate business schools or divisions of<lb/>
the following universities: Carnegie<lb/>
Institute of Technology, Columbia<lb/>
University, Harvard University,<lb/>
Massachusetts Institute of Technolo-<lb/>
gy, Northwestern University, Syra-<lb/>
cuse University, University of Chi-<lb/>
cago, University of Michigan, Uni-<lb/>
versity of Pennsylvania, University<lb/>
of Virginia, and Washington Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
A candidate must make separate<lb/>
.ppiication for admission to each<lb/>
business school of his choice and<lb/>
s ould inquire of each whether it<lb/>
wishes him to take the Admission<lb/>
Brimley To Head Public Relations<lb/>
Post At E C C, President Announces<lb/>
Test for Graduste Study in Business<lb/>
and when. Since many business schools<lb/>
select their entering classes in the<lb/>
?; ring precedizig their entrance, can-<lb/>
didates for admission to the 1958<lb/>
classes are advised to take the test<lb/>
at as early a time as possible.<lb/>
The Admission Test for Graduate<lb/>
Study in Business is not designed to<lb/>
test specific knowledge in specialized<lb/>
academic subjects. Normal under-<lb/>
graduate training should provide<lb/>
sufficient general knowledge to an-<lb/>
swer trie test questions. Sample<lb/>
questions and information regarding<lb/>
registration for and administration<lb/>
of the test are given in a Bulletin<lb/>
of Information.<lb/>
The tests will be administered on<lb/>
November 2, 1957, and February 6,<lb/>
April 19, and July 26 m 1958. Ap-<lb/>
plications and fees must be filed with<lb/>
the Admission Test for Graduate<lb/>
Study in Business, Educational Test-<lb/>
ing Service, 20 Nassau Street, Prince-<lb/>
ton, New Jersey, at least two "weeks<lb/>
be.ore the testing date desired in<lb/>
order to allow ETS time to complete<lb/>
the necessary testing arrangements.<lb/>
Pat Dunn Heads Baptist Group<lb/>
For Second Year; Has Plans For BSD<lb/>
By MARTHA UNDERHILL<lb/>
Dr. Ralph F. W. Brimley, widely<lb/>
known throughout the state as an<lb/>
educator, will serve as Director of<lb/>
Public Relations and Foundations at<lb/>
East Carolina College, President<lb/>
John D. Messick of the college has<lb/>
announced.<lb/>
In this newly created position, Dr.<lb/>
Brimley will head the work of the<lb/>
college News Bureau and Alumni<lb/>
Office, organize and manage a spea-<lb/>
kers' bureau made up of college per-<lb/>
sonnel, direct the extension and field<lb/>
service programs of the college, and<lb/>
carry out other duties i nregard to<lb/>
public relations both on and off the<lb/>
campus. Through his office also a<lb/>
study of foundations interested in<lb/>
the advancement of education will<lb/>
be made.<lb/>
Dr. Brimley, a native of Raleigh,<lb/>
N. C. received his education at North<lb/>
Carolina State College; the University<lb/>
of North Carolina; and George Wash-<lb/>
ington University, from which he<lb/>
.olds the degree of doctor of education,<lb/>
He began his career as a teacher<lb/>
and school administrator in the Win-<lb/>
ston-Salem city schools, with which<lb/>
he was connected from 1928 to 1940.<lb/>
For the next seven years he was a<lb/>
faculty member of the department of<lb/>
education at Woman's College of the<lb/>
University of North Carolina in<lb/>
GrGreensboro, served three years in<lb/>
the U.S. Army anj studied and taught<lb/>
at George Washington University.<lb/>
In lt47 he became superintendent<lb/>
of Porsyth County schools in this<lb/>
state and continued in this office un-<lb/>
til 1956. For the past year ne has been<lb/>
head of the department of education<lb/>
and : sychology at Montreat College.<lb/>
Dr. Brimley's father and uncle were<lb/>
noted North Carolina scientists. His<lb/>
lather, Dr. C. S. Brimley, who acted<lb/>
as president of the North Carolina<lb/>
Academy of Science and of the North<lb/>
Carolina Bird Club, is author of<lb/>
"Birds of North Carolina "Insects<lb/>
of the South and other works of<lb/>
cientific interest. Dr. Herbert Brim-<lb/>
ley, an uncle, was director of the State<lb/>
Museum.<lb/>
Dr. Brimley's wife is the former<lb/>
Louise Wood of Cleveland Township<lb/>
in Johnston County. They have two<lb/>
daughters, Mrs. Ann McNeill of<lb/>
Galax. Va and Mrs. Jean Newton of<lb/>
Mooresville, and four grandchildren.<lb/>
Miss Patricia Dunn, president of<lb/>
the East Carolina Baptist Student<lb/>
Union, has successfully led the BSU<lb/>
into another school year. Patricia,<lb/>
with the assistance of the BSU Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Council which is composed<lb/>
of twenty-six members made tenta-<lb/>
tive plans for the coming year dur-<lb/>
ing their Pre-school planning Re-<lb/>
in<lb/>
Freshman Jae I innegan decides it turn- for a little research<lb/>
the library.<lb/>
BSU Forum Series<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union has<lb/>
announced that plans have been made<lb/>
for an extended forum series entit-<lb/>
led "The Christian Student in a Col-<lb/>
lege Community The purpose of<lb/>
this series is to acquaint Baptist and<lb/>
other Christians with the problems<lb/>
that college people must face. There<lb/>
will be eleven forums, a single topic<lb/>
being discussed each Monday evening<lb/>
at 5:15 p.m. and a repeat at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
The series began September 9,<lb/>
when a panel composed of six stu-<lb/>
dents discussed "The College Daze<lb/>
September 16, Dr George A. Cook, a<lb/>
professor in the English department<lb/>
at the college, discussed "Student-<lb/>
ship The remainder of the series<lb/>
will be as follows:<lb/>
Sept. 23?a film?"The Christian<lb/>
Family It will correlate with the<lb/>
Tenth Annual Family Life Conference<lb/>
of N. C. Family Life Council which<lb/>
will be held on the East Carolina<lb/>
campus Sept. 22-24.<lb/>
Sept. 30?"What are Morals"<lb/>
Groups will assemble in "buzz ses-<lb/>
sions<lb/>
Oct. 7?"Religious Literacy" Dr.<lb/>
Herbert Paschal, Social Studies de-<lb/>
partment, East Carolina College.<lb/>
Oct. 21?"Facing Your Doubts in<lb/>
College Rev. John Davis, Fountain<lb/>
Baptist Church, Fountain, N. ?.<lb/>
Oct. 21?"Developing a Real Con-<lb/>
cern for Others?Rev. Irby Jack-<lb/>
son, Immanuel Baptist Church, Green-<lb/>
ville, N. C.<lb/>
Nov. 4?"Living on the 24 Hour<lb/>
Day<lb/>
Nov. 11?Lethargy on a College<lb/>
'Campus Miss Cynthia Mendenhall,<lb/>
College Union Recreation Supervisor,<lb/>
EaBt Carolina College.<lb/>
Nov. 18?"What is Honesty?"<lb/>
A special forum will be held Oct-<lb/>
Marshall, Keister Resign;<lb/>
Will Teach In Other States<lb/>
Two East Carolina College pro-<lb/>
fesors, Dr. W. E. Marshall and Dr.<lb/>
Elwood J. Keister, in letters to Pres-<lb/>
ident J. D. Messick, announced their<lb/>
resignations here to accept positions<lb/>
in other states.<lb/>
Dr. Marshall, for 12 years a mem-<lb/>
ber of the faculty in the Social Stu-<lb/>
dies department, has accepted a po-<lb/>
sition as professor of political science<lb/>
in a Tennessee college. For a time he<lb/>
served as dean of men and was the<lb/>
first director of student affairs at<lb/>
East Carolina. A native of Texas,<lb/>
Marshall held bachelor's and master<lb/>
of arts degrees from the University<lb/>
of Texas and his Ph. D. degree from<lb/>
American University in Washington,<lb/>
D. C. He was considered an authority<lb/>
on American government and the<lb/>
United Nations.<lb/>
Mrs. Marshall was a member of the<lb/>
faculty of the Wahl-Coates Labora-<lb/>
tory School of East Carolina for a<lb/>
number of ears. She and Dr. Mar-<lb/>
shall actively participated in com-<lb/>
munity life and Dr. Marshall was<lb/>
generous in supporting civic, relig-<lb/>
ious and educational projects here.<lb/>
Dr. Keister, a native of Ohio, came<lb/>
to the East Carolina Music Depart-<lb/>
ment in the fall of 1954 as instructor<lb/>
in voice and strings and director of<lb/>
choral music. His choirs established<lb/>
a musical reputation which was<lb/>
Southwide For the past two summers<lb/>
he directed "The Lost Colony" sym-<lb/>
phonic choir and wrote new musical<lb/>
-cores for the production at Roanoke<lb/>
Island.<lb/>
Dr. Keister will become director<lb/>
of the choral division of the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Music of the University of<lb/>
Florida at Gainesville. He holds the<lb/>
bachelor of music degree from Bald-<lb/>
win-Wallace Conservatory of Music,<lb/>
the Master of Music degree from the<lb/>
Eastman School of Music, Rochester,<lb/>
N. Y and a Doctor of Education de-<lb/>
gree from Teachers College of Col-<lb/>
umbia University. Before coming to<lb/>
East Carolina he was a number of<lb/>
the internationally famous Robert<lb/>
Shaw Chorale for two years. He and<lb/>
Mrs. Keister have a two-year-eld son.<lb/>
treat which was held September 1-3<lb/>
The program consists of a 5:00<lb/>
p.m. and a 7:00 p.m. forum on Mon-<lb/>
day, Vespers Tuesday and Wednes-<lb/>
day at 6:30 p.m. and Bible discus-<lb/>
sion groups Wednesday at 6:45 p.m.<lb/>
and Friday at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Patricia, who is a Physical Educa-<lb/>
tion major and English minor has<lb/>
devoted a great deal of her time to<lb/>
BSU. Sr.e has served on the execu-<lb/>
tive council in the capacity of Sun-<lb/>
day school 'president and as Listen<lb/>
chairman. However Pat's activities<lb/>
have not been restricted to BSU.<lb/>
She has been active in the FTA,<lb/>
W'RA and EOC Association of Health<lb/>
and Physical Education. She was on<lb/>
t. e annual staff her sophomore and<lb/>
junior years and vice-president of<lb/>
Fleming Hall her junior year also.<lb/>
What is more, she has been a self-<lb/>
help student and has maintained a<lb/>
good scholastic average.<lb/>
Pat 3ays, "BSU has meant more<lb/>
to me than any organization I have<lb/>
ever been a part of. Here I have re-<lb/>
ceived a fuller knowledge of how<lb/>
 Christian faith affects the total of<lb/>
 one's li.e and here J have experi-<lb/>
I enced genuine Christian fellowship<lb/>
Family life Conference<lb/>
Schedule<lb/>
?<lb/>
Family Life I ii<lb/>
?, Easi ?<lb/>
ober 28, in preparation for the Bap-<lb/>
tist State Convention, the theme of<lb/>
which is "Christ in You?The Hope<lb/>
November 25 will be left open to<lb/>
conclude the series.<lb/>
One Instead Of Three<lb/>
This Year, Selective<lb/>
Service Announces<lb/>
Plans to limit the Selective Service<lb/>
College Qualification Tests to one<lb/>
in the 1957-58 school year instead of<lb/>
three per ye?r as in the past have<lb/>
been announced ay Lt. General Lewis<lb/>
B. Hershey, Director of Selective<lb/>
Service.<lb/>
Scores on the tests, and student<lb/>
crass standing are criteria used by<lb/>
local boards in the consideration of<lb/>
guests by college students at both<lb/>
 undergraduate and graduate level<lb/>
5 ferments from induction in or-<lb/>
" continue their studies.<lb/>
A test pl??m?d for the next<lb/>
school year probably will be held in<lb/>
the Spring. Three tests per school<lb/>
year have been provided for students<lb/>
each year since the 1951-52 school<lb/>
term. In the Spring of 1951 when<lb/>
the testing program was initiated,<lb/>
four tests were given within a three-<lb/>
month period.<lb/>
Main reasons cited by the Selective<lb/>
Service Director for offering only<lb/>
one opportunity next year for stu-<lb/>
dents to take the test are:<lb/>
1. The number of students taking<lb/>
the tests has fallen steadily from<lb/>
74,327 in the first full school year<lb/>
under the program to 11,122 in the<lb/>
school year just ended.<lb/>
2. Induction calls are presently<lb/>
cast for men 22 years of age and<lb/>
older. The student who progresses<lb/>
Young Democrats Meet;<lb/>
Announce New Goal<lb/>
"Strengthening the call of the dem-<lb/>
ocratic party and increasing the mem-<lb/>
bership will be the dual goals of<lb/>
the Young Democratic Club this year,<lb/>
announced Marcia Forbes, new re-<lb/>
porter and historian for the organi-<lb/>
zation.<lb/>
Bobby Hall was re-elected Presi-<lb/>
dent when the club met for the first<lb/>
ume September 9.<lb/>
Dr. Kathleen Stokes was voted by<lb/>
the group to serve as the first hon-<lb/>
orary member. She will also act as<lb/>
club sponsor this year.<lb/>
OtFer new officers are Jane Duke,<lb/>
1st Vice President; Clark Taylor,<lb/>
2nd Vice President; Barbara Anne<lb/>
Whitehurst, secretary; Jean Duke,<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
Bob Young, Jackie Byrd and Dan<lb/>
lanchinson were elected to the ex-<lb/>
ecutive council.<lb/>
Plans were discused for a float for<lb/>
the annual Homecommg Parade.<lb/>
Carolyn Jackson and Geraldine Smith<lb/>
were elected co-chairmen of this com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
normally through school will com-<lb/>
plete his four years of undergraduate<lb/>
work by that age, thus the demand<lb/>
Tor the tests has fallen.<lb/>
During the 1956-57 school year,<lb/>
5,859 students across the Nation<lb/>
were tested on November 15, 1956, at<lb/>
269 testing centers; 3,871 studenta<lb/>
took the teat on April 18, 1957, at<lb/>
274 centers; and on May 16, 1957,<lb/>
1,392 students were tested at 198<lb/>
centers.<lb/>
Methodist Given Big<lb/>
Welcome By Churches<lb/>
Methodist students at East Caro-<lb/>
lina College were welcomed by the<lb/>
two Methodist Churches in Green-<lb/>
ville on September 8, the first Sun-<lb/>
lay of the Fall Quarter, with special<lb/>
ervices and events planned in their<lb/>
honor. Red roses were given the stu-<lb/>
dents who attended Morning Worship<lb/>
Jarvis Memorial Church on Sunday.<lb/>
A Buffet Supper to which all Meth-<lb/>
odist students were invited, was gi-<lb/>
ven by the Women's Societies of Jar-<lb/>
vis Memorial and St. James Church-<lb/>
es, at the Methodist Student Center,<lb/>
from 5:00 to 6:00 on Sunday eve-<lb/>
ning. Members of the Societies who<lb/>
B4 rred the supper under the leader-<lb/>
ship of the two secretaries of Stu-<lb/>
dent Work, Mrs. N. G. Raynor and<lb/>
Mrs. Robert W. Fennell, were: Mrs.<lb/>
W. G. Garner, Mrs. R. C. May, Mrs.<lb/>
J. L. Horton, Miss Deannie Boone<lb/>
Haskett, Mrs. Graham Quinn, Mrs.<lb/>
John A. Clark, Mrs. Dallas Clark,<lb/>
Mrs. Alton Clapp, Miss Margaret<lb/>
Johnston, Mrs. Carleton Taylor, Mrs.<lb/>
H. A. Coleman, Miss Hazel Ccpeland.<lb/>
Following the supper, a Vesper<lb/>
Service was conducted at the Y-Hut,<lb/>
at which time the Wesley Foundation<lb/>
Council was commissioned by the<lb/>
Rev. W. M. Howard, Pastor of Jar-<lb/>
vis Memorial Church.<lb/>
Buns and Coffee and Cocoa were<lb/>
served Methodist students on Sunday<lb/>
morning, from 9:00-9:80, in the Y-<lb/>
Hut. iA Class for College Students<lb/>
at Jarvis Memorial met in the Y-Hut<lb/>
at 10:45 a.m. Worship was led by<lb/>
Gayle Clapp, of Greenville, Chairm<lb/>
of WF Commission on Worship. Miss<lb/>
Mamiej Chandler began a series of<lb/>
studies in the Gospel according to<lb/>
St. Mark. A Class for College Stu-<lb/>
dents met at St. James Methodist<lb/>
Church, with Mrs. George Smith as<lb/>
Teacher.<lb/>
Open House for Methodist Fresh-<lb/>
men was held at the Student Center<lb/>
on Thursday evening, following the<lb/>
Denominational Meetings in Austin<lb/>
auditorium. Members of the Wesley<lb/>
Foundation Coundil greeted the guests<lb/>
and showed them over the Student<lb/>
Center. Refreshments of punch and<lb/>
, cookies and nuts were served by<lb/>
(Elaine Page, Chairman of Hospital-<lb/>
. ity, assisted by members of her Com-<lb/>
 mission.<lb/>
Sunday, September 22<lb/>
7:30 P. M. Informal Rec i d Skit<lb/>
IV i ? Mi f dent N. C.<lb/>
?kit: The Ins and 0 its P<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Directed ? Edgar W. H i shberg<lb/>
Dii ; ? lei Prank (?. Pul<lb/>
Mondi y. September 23<lb/>
9:00-9:30 R. gi tratii<lb/>
9:30-10:00- OPENING SESSION<lb/>
Pi ? siding: Ethel Nash, I , I<lb/>
Invocation: .J. II. Waldrap, Jr Grace Method it Chu Clii<lb/>
Greetings: John 1?. Messick, P - illege<lb/>
.). ii. Rose, Supei Greenville City &amp;<lb/>
i<lb/>
Austin Audit<lb/>
. C<lb/>
Wo<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Green.<lb/>
Thirty-Nine Late<lb/>
Hour Courses Will Be<lb/>
Taught This Year<lb/>
East Carolina College has sched-<lb/>
uled for the fall quarter 39 courses<lb/>
to be taught in the late afternoon,<lb/>
at night, or on Saturday morning,<lb/>
Vice President Leo W. Jenkins has<lb/>
announced.<lb/>
This program, he explained, pro-<lb/>
vides for those who work or who for<lb/>
other reasons are unable to attend<lb/>
classes during the day the opportuni-<lb/>
ty of beginning or continuing their<lb/>
college training. Since specially sched-<lb/>
uled classes are taught each quarter<lb/>
at East Carolina, he said, the partici-<lb/>
pating student will be able to continue<lb/>
his work until requirements for a<lb/>
degree are completed.<lb/>
The 39 courses offered this fall<lb/>
include work on all levels of instruct-<lb/>
ion, from classes for freshman to<lb/>
those for graduate students. Twelve<lb/>
departments of instruction are par-<lb/>
ticipating in the program. Courses<lb/>
have been planned to meet the edu-<lb/>
cational needs of students of widely<lb/>
varied needs, interests, and back-<lb/>
grounds.<lb/>
Areas of instruction include art,<lb/>
business, education, English, geogra-<lb/>
phy, health, and physical education,<lb/>
home economics, industrial arts,<lb/>
mathematics, psychology, science,<lb/>
and history.<lb/>
Further information on the pro-<lb/>
gram may be obtained from Dr. Phil-<lb/>
lips or Dr. Jenkins at the college.<lb/>
Harry<lb/>
Iv.<lb/>
English Course Being<lb/>
Taught Over TV Now<lb/>
"History of the Theatre the col-<lb/>
lege's current televised course of In-<lb/>
struction on WNCT channel 9 of<lb/>
Greeii-Mlle, under the direction of<lb/>
Dr. James D. Allison, is being taught<lb/>
each Saturday from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m.<lb/>
for a period of thirty weeks.<lb/>
The program was earlier scheduled<lb/>
to be broadcast st 1 p.m. Monday<lb/>
through Friday of each week, but a<lb/>
change in schedule wag made for the<lb/>
teachers who wished to take the<lb/>
course, but were unable to view it at<lb/>
that hour.<lb/>
The course is being offered as a<lb/>
free elective on the junior level spon-<lb/>
sored by the department of English.<lb/>
Those completing requirements will<lb/>
Flaiuu<lb/>
P. T. A.<lb/>
10:00-10:50?COI.I.OQUY: "Learning to Live with Out<lb/>
and Bonaro Overstreet.<lb/>
11:15-12:00- Discussionsi Whal 'Learning<lb/>
Ourselves") mean lo me a- who vroii<lb/>
a it children: K. en Cai id<lb/>
with adolescents: Fannie B. Hasten, leader,<lb/>
with college students: Joseph S. Himes, Lead<lb/>
with adults: Eugenia Van Landingham, leader.<lb/>
12:30-2:00?ANNUAL CONFERENCE I.IV HLON East I I Ha<lb/>
(Reservations must bi in hands of tin Local Arrangement<lb/>
Committee by Wednesday, Se 18.)<lb/>
Pre (??! n;ii. G. Eng Family Laf?<lb/>
in Extension, Raleigh.<lb/>
"The Experience f Writing Poei J Bonaro Over-<lb/>
street.<lb/>
2:30-3:00?AFTERNOON SESSION Austin An<lb/>
Presiding: Leo W. Fen , Vice- at, E'ast Carolina College.<lb/>
"The North Carolina Family Li e Council Marvin Vick,<lb/>
Queen Street Methodist Church, Einston.<lb/>
3:15-4:15?Interest Groups<lb/>
Stx Education, Mary Hayes, leader.<lb/>
The Family Enjoys Music, Arnold Hoffman, leader.<lb/>
The Family Enjoys Books, Lilly Carr, leader.<lb/>
The Family Plays Together, Beth Okum, leader.<lb/>
The Exceptional Child, Luciano L'abate, leader.<lb/>
6:00?Dinner East Dining Hall<lb/>
(Reservations mut he in hands of the Local Arrangements Com-<lb/>
mittee by Wednesday, Sept mber 18.)<lb/>
7:80-8:16?EVENING SESSION Austin Auditorium<lb/>
Presiding: Edwin Preston, Department of Public Welfare,<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
oquy: "The Home as a place tor Maturing Harry and<lb/>
Bonaro Overstreet.<lb/>
8:15-0:00?DEMONSTRATIONS OF ROLE PLAYING<lb/>
Leaders: Ethel Nah, George A. Douglas, Vera Douglas, Irwin<lb/>
V. Sparry, and Marvin Vick.<lb/>
Tuesday, September 21<lb/>
9:00-9:50?BUSINESS MEETING Austin Auditorium<lb/>
Presiding: Ethel Nash, President N. C. F. L. C.<lb/>
10:00-11:50 CLOSING SESSION<lb/>
Presiding: Irvin V. Sperry, Woman's College, U. N. C.<lb/>
Colloquy: "Where Personal Problems Become Social<lb/>
Problems Hairy and Bonaro Overstreet.<lb/>
Panel: "Agencies which Help in Solving Family Prob-<lb/>
lems<lb/>
Moderator: George.A. Douglas, East Carolina College<lb/>
Myrtle Wolff, State Board of Public Welfare,<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
B. Gordon Gentry, Judge, Domestic Relations<lb/>
Court, Greensboro.<lb/>
Edythe King, Harriet Tubman, Y. W. C. A.<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
Jesse H. Lanning, Plymouth Methodist Church,<lb/>
Plymouth<lb/>
Margaret H. Paris, Family Service Society,<lb/>
Raleigh<lb/>
receive three hours of credit. It<lb/>
will deal with (She development of the<lb/>
theatre from its beginning in ritual,<lb/>
magic, and play to the present day.<lb/>
Plays will be discussed from time to<lb/>
time, but the major emphasis will<lb/>
be on the theatre as a social and hu-<lb/>
man force; the physical theatre s<lb/>
a product of ita time; the audience<lb/>
and the nature of theatre-going; and<lb/>
the people who have added to man's<lb/>
experience through theatre.<lb/>
Presentation will include lecturea,<lb/>
demonstrations, models, artifacts<lb/>
: ictures, drawings, slides, and guests'<lb/>
who will participate in the progrmms<lb/>
Dr. James D. Allison, teacher of<lb/>
the course, has worked with the fa-<lb/>
mous Cleveland Playhouse and Opera<lb/>
Guild and the Momingside Playersin<lb/>
New York, and has studied theatre<lb/>
nt Teachers College of rw7<lb/>
University, the Sta'te U?SvJ<lb/>
lova, and the University of D.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038431_0005"/><lb/>
DAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE FIVE<lb/>
Two Mexican Students<lb/>
Pick Our Campus To Study English<lb/>
an a little confusing<lb/>
11. B. Monroe household<lb/>
only because the at-<lb/>
is suddenly become bi-<lb/>
ill started with the ar-<lb/>
;uvv students oil Sept.<lb/>
are vai no dormitory<lb/>
two students put<lb/>
By ALINE CONDON<lb/>
a Mexican magazine, Javier made<lb/>
the necessary arrangements and took<lb/>
ff for Hattiesburg, Mississippi and<lb/>
a three-month English course offered<lb/>
there by Mississippi Southern. Later,<lb/>
Claudio arrived, but the boys soon<lb/>
.uncovered that they lad so many<lb/>
I Latin America classmates, they were<lb/>
?<lb/>
and Started out bright I improving their Spanish more than<lb/>
heir English! More constructive con-<lb/>
versation with a North Carolinian,<lb/>
however, brought the name of Dr.<lb/>
Orval .Philips (who was formerly<lb/>
at Misissippi Southern) to their<lb/>
ears, and the two decided to write<lb/>
ext morning to i g.ster<lb/>
However, almost<lb/>
ran into difficulty,<lb/>
obvious that they<lb/>
ac special advice and<lb/>
Marguerite Perry, of<lb/>
anguagea Department<lb/>
jj i ice, since the<lb/>
Mexican and spoke very-<lb/>
Mi- Perry helped the<lb/>
U schedule classes<lb/>
Ens. Lsh and social<lb/>
It bj little came the<lb/>
they 1 ied to land<lb/>
audio Armen-<lb/>
D wiio decided<lb/>
. crease their busi-<lb/>
at borne if they<lb/>
ish. All well and<lb/>
e oj s were not content<lb/>
I t? traditional manner,<lb/>
classrooms and cus-<lb/>
d country. Instead<lb/>
n an English-learning<lb/>
ave rather startled<lb/>
contemporaries in<lb/>
 of Huixtia, 50 miles<lb/>
uthei n border.<lb/>
 a a, by an add in<lb/>
??H ;?<lb/>
Javier Cicero and Claudio Armen-<lb/>
lariz.<lb/>
away for an East Carolina catalogue.<lb/>
Last Tuesday, with all entrance form-<lb/>
alities complete, the two arrived in<lb/>
Greenville to begin (they hoped)<lb/>
-hen English education in earnest.<lb/>
When Mrs. Perry heard the parti-<lb/>
culars, she introduced Javier and<lb/>
Claudio to Mr. Wolf, who checked<lb/>
again to make sure there was no<lb/>
dormitory space available. There<lb/>
va. n't, but then the Monroes came<lb/>
into the picture. Mr. Monroe, a mem-<lb/>
ber of the Industrial Arts depart-<lb/>
ment, decidLcl that it was just about<lb/>
time that his family learned to speak<lb/>
Spanish, and, he figured logically,<lb/>
he Monroe family could help the boys<lb/>
earn to speak English. This idea was<lb/>
ccepted joyfully by all concerned,<lb/>
ie i nly stipulation being that the two<lb/>
lexicans would let a little Spanish<lb/>
? " on the Monroes for room and<lb/>
i ard.<lb/>
H -at now, it's a little hectic, but<lb/>
inp: never stem to have to be re-<lb/>
peated more than two or three times<lb/>
efore the parties concerned begin to<lb/>
understand. This method might seem<lb/>
a tittle slower to some, but as Javier<lb/>
aid, "I'm just too "flojo" (lazy) to<lb/>
I learn English any other way<lb/>
Bowman Heads<lb/>
Marshal Group<lb/>
For Functions<lb/>
Chief mars: a! for the school year<lb/>
1967-1958, is Elizabeth Ann Bowman.<lb/>
Elizabeth, a junior from Liberty is<lb/>
?i science major. She was elected<lb/>
?hief marshal by her fellow marshals<lb/>
ast spring, following the campus-<lb/>
vvid election of marshals. Miss Cyn-<lb/>
?hia Mi-ndenhall, advisor of the mar-<lb/>
-hals, says of Elizabeth, She's a<lb/>
vivicious, energkstfc little beaver<lb/>
Elizabeth's specific duties are: to<lb/>
make usignments to other marshals,<lb/>
to lead all academic processions, to<lb/>
?all .ractice or informative meetings,<lb/>
o appoint a comittee for the select-<lb/>
o.i of graduation dresses, and lastly,<lb/>
-o keep a record of the marshals sei-<lb/>
zure and to see that all serve equally.<lb/>
To serve as a marshal is consid-<lb/>
er i to serve in a position of honor.<lb/>
Our marshals are representatives of<lb/>
the college at public functions; there-<lb/>
fore the success of such occasions<lb/>
can be definitely affected by the way<lb/>
Miss Ruth Lassiter<lb/>
Directs Activities For Coming Year<lb/>
Miss Ruth Lassiter, a 1956 gradu-<lb/>
ate of East Carolina College, has be-<lb/>
come acting director of the Baptist<lb/>
Stu :ent Union at ECC. In this posi-<lb/>
tive for the next 12 months she will<lb/>
head a program during the absence<lb/>
of Miss Gloria H. Blanton, former<lb/>
director, who will be doing graduate<lb/>
-tudy in the Duke University Divi-<lb/>
nity School.<lb/>
Miss Blanton has a Danforth<lb/>
Foundation Campus Christian Work-<lb/>
r grant which permits her to begin<lb/>
graduate work toward a Doctor of<lb/>
)' iloso hy degree.<lb/>
A native of Four Oaks and grad-<lb/>
uate of Four Oaks High School before<lb/>
ntering East Carolina College, Miss<lb/>
Lassiter has already begun a pro-<lb/>
iam of studies toward a Bachelor o'<lb/>
Divinity degree in Southeastern Bap-<lb/>
tist Theological Seminary at Wake<lb/>
i orest. At ECC she majored in Eng-<lb/>
i-h and minored in Library Science.<lb/>
She attended the li57 summer term<lb/>
it Southeastern Seminary.<lb/>
For two summers Miss Lassiter<lb/>
managed the Caswell Baptist Book<lb/>
tist Book Store, as a part of the<lb/>
Caswell Baptist Assembly near South-<lb/>
iort. She was librarian at Whitaker<lb/>
Elementary School in Winston-Salem.<lb/>
During her student days at East<lb/>
Carolina, Miss Lassiter was an active<lb/>
worker in the BSU, serving as Bap-<lb/>
tist Student Center hostess, devo-<lb/>
tional vice president, and later a<lb/>
president. She served the State BSU<lb/>
Council as secretary in 1955-56, was<lb/>
active in campus organizations and<lb/>
was elected to "Who's Who Among<lb/>
Students in American Universities<lb/>
and Colleges" during her senior year.<lb/>
Miss Lassiter will work with an<lb/>
executive council of 25 members head-<lb/>
d by Miss Patricia Dunn of Raleigh<lb/>
in working out a program to meet<lb/>
the ntHjds of approximately 1,200<lb/>
Baptist students at East Carolina<lb/>
College. Co-operating in this program<lb/>
will he the Immanuel and Memorial<lb/>
Baptist Churches of Greenville. The<lb/>
activities will be conducted in these<lb/>
lurches and the Baptist Student<lb/>
enter on East 8th Street in this<lb/>
ity. Forums, vespers, Bible discus-<lb/>
ion groups, and other planned acti-<lb/>
vities are to be held at the Student<lb/>
ter and worship services, Sunday<lb/>
Miss Huih Lassiter becomes acting I school, and Baptist Training Union<lb/>
The Man With A "Chain"<lb/>
B PURVIS BOYETTE<lb/>
"Dear Mom, send G. I. brogans he had seen much black shank around<lb/>
n the other farms. With all sincer-<lb/>
Fashion Notes<lb/>
L SPEARS<lb/>
i ew in the collegiate<lb/>
.ied our campus this<lb/>
. casual look. Co-<lb/>
ting crew neck sweaters<lb/>
 i b a ool in a vari-<lb/>
i  white, beige, navy,<lb/>
ever popular grey,<lb/>
n and charcoal green.<lb/>
lied-to-match Shetland<lb/>
r;g outfit, the co-ed<lb/>
? counterpart of her<lb/>
. e. For "steady couples<lb/>
eck sweaters are<lb/>
style Pleated plaid skirts<lb/>
crew neck sweaters<lb/>
girl a heavier look.<lb/>
. clothes of all types<lb/>
is fall; the mono-<lb/>
 v neck sweater is no<lb/>
is adds a feminine look<lb/>
? aters,<lb/>
 etj pins, sieatter pins,<lb/>
. such as the Mal-<lb/>
? worn on sweater necks,<lb/>
topa, with scarfs, alone, al-<lb/>
way one wishes. Bulky<lb/>
? gold draped chains that fill<lb/>
to compliment the new<lb/>
sweaters preferred by<lb/>
vie with crew neck<lb/>
t most popular outfit<lb/>
Sweaters in oatmeal, red,<lb/>
fellow, and black are be-<lb/>
ies the popular white.<lb/>
- go well with this type<lb/>
Ion are daring but the<lb/>
simply styled.<lb/>
e b:g color in classroom<lb/>
Pointed toe loafers in<lb/>
and black and white<lb/>
addles add the finishing<lb/>
eae outfits?one which<lb/>
I n by the majority<lb/>
IS.<lb/>
This was the opening sentence of a<lb/>
letter by Mr. Herbert Carter, dire-<lb/>
tor of the East Carolina College<lb/>
tands, to his mother during the first<lb/>
session of summer school. Mr. Car-<lb/>
it y. Mr. Carter replied that he didn't<lb/>
recognise tobacco types too well,<lb/>
but that if the farmer were growing<lb/>
my, " e shouldn't sign the paper. The<lb/>
ter was starting to do something lie j farmer's eyes rolled unbelievingly,<lb/>
bad never done before?rising at! his lips pursed slightly, and he didn't<lb/>
four o'clock in t e morning, eating ? ask any more questions.<lb/>
a hearty breakfast as opposed to his i "1 was glad to see how much the<lb/>
usual quick coffee and toast, and ' people of Pitt County take an inter-<lb/>
going to the fields. But not to plow jest in East Carolina College said<lb/>
or harvest a tobacco crop. He was Mr. Carter, "and I was surprized to<lb/>
measuring Acreage allotments and!learn how many farm families have<lb/>
inspecting tobacco types. children in school here or have al-<lb/>
Mr. Carter's first day out proved! ready seen them graduate. All in all,<lb/>
to he an experience in learning. ' !f summer was uneventful, hut it<lb/>
After introducing himself at the first' did sfcow me a new facet of my en-<lb/>
farm house he went to, Mr. Carter ! .ironment<lb/>
whipped out a form sheet which if ,<lb/>
signed stated that the fanner was !<lb/>
not growing any of the non-support<lb/>
tobacco varieties. During the course<lb/>
of the conversation, the farmer asked<lb/>
in which they serve. Marshals must Stor?i a branch 0f the Raleigh Bap-1 lirector of Baptist Student Union, i at the churches in Greenville<lb/>
serve at whatever college functions!<lb/>
the group votes to serve and that the ?<lb/>
cola gt administration requests. They ,<lb/>
also may serve at functions promoted<lb/>
at the college by civic groups if they<lb/>
vote to do so.<lb/>
All marshals must maintain an<lb/>
average of "3<lb/>
ifc is year's elected marshals are<lb/>
the following: Elizabeth Ann Bow-<lb/>
man (chief), Patsy Allman, Carolyn<lb/>
ycock, Barbara Davenport, Mary<lb/>
Lou Dickens, Peggy Kepley, Hilda<lb/>
Grey Lowe, Janet Wall, Janet Hod-<lb/>
ges, Alice Ann Home, Ann Johnson,<lb/>
Sylvia Jones, Martha Wilson, Mary<lb/>
Lou Wyrick, Jean Mitchell and Nan-<lb/>
cv Joan Willis.<lb/>
our unsuspecting band director if<lb/>
jEatons Return<lb/>
from Kansas<lb/>
Trying Freshman Days<lb/>
By BARBARA L. BAITS<lb/>
Wanted: Reliable foot doctor!<lb/>
(Our) blisters and corns (of us<lb/>
freshmen) caused by standing in line,<lb/>
walking, and more standing are al-<lb/>
most cured by now, but oh! that first<lb/>
aching week!<lb/>
Confusion and just plain green-<lb/>
ness made many a young person<lb/>
ready for home before he or she even<lb/>
gave college a fair try.<lb/>
By gritting our teeth and holding<lb/>
ast, we weathered the waves of<lb/>
homesickness, an abominable disease,<lb/>
and we are now, for the most part,<lb/>
happily settled.<lb/>
The newness of classes has already<lb/>
worn off and the majority have set-<lb/>
tied down to some serious studying.<lb/>
After all, we're here to make some-<lb/>
thing of ourselves!<lb/>
We agree that the friendliness<lb/>
and helpfulifess of upevclassmen<lb/>
have helped us to adjust to the<lb/>
strangeness of college and change<lb/>
from the slower and more easy-<lb/>
going pace of high school.<lb/>
We groan, complain, and find fault<lb/>
-but, don't let us fool you; we love<lb/>
every hectic moment of college life!<lb/>
H LEE PHILLIPS<lb/>
and dedication to their<lb/>
I artly describe Mr. and<lb/>
lore H. Eaton, Jr who<lb/>
ned to the campus this<lb/>
g summer work at the<lb/>
of Kansas.<lb/>
n is now in the physical<lb/>
department, thus conclud-<lb/>
, years leave of absence<lb/>
summer work as a physical<lb/>
t at the university hospital.<lb/>
While at the university on a vialt-<lb/>
esorship status, Mr. Eaton<lb/>
e scientific research and I<lb/>
asses in comparative anato-<lb/>
s chief interest.<lb/>
In 1951, his book, "Comparative An-<lb/>
f the Vertebrates was pub-<lb/>
 Harper and Brothers. He<lb/>
v working on its second edition.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Mr. Eaton has written<lb/>
67 scientific articles that have been<lb/>
I published in journals and especially<lb/>
the Journal of the Elisha Mitchell<lb/>
Scientific Society or the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Academy of Science.<lb/>
Much of his work at the college is<lb/>
centered around his laboratories, that<lb/>
ore well supplied with his personal<lb/>
collection of specimens relating to<lb/>
toology, human anatomy, !human<lb/>
physiology, ?nd embryology. The lat-<lb/>
fter being f?r pre-med and more ad-<lb/>
ranced students.<lb/>
c<lb/>
u<lb/>
News<lb/>
Mondays, at 7:00 p.m Duplicate<lb/>
Bridge Session.<lb/>
Tuesdays, at 3:00 p.m Inter-<lb/>
mediate Bridge Instruction<lb/>
Tuesdays, at 8:00 p.m Square<lb/>
Dancing<lb/>
Wednesdays, at 7:00 p.m Chess<lb/>
Playing and Instruction.<lb/>
Thursdays, at 3:00 p.m Begin-<lb/>
nerg Bridge Classes.<lb/>
Fridays, 8:00 p.m. to 10:45 p.m<lb/>
Dancing.<lb/>
Saturdays, 8:00 p.m. to 11:15 p.m<lb/>
Dancing.<lb/>
Special Event: Hear ye, hear ye!<lb/>
Coach Jack Boone .is going to<lb/>
show the ECC football game mo-<lb/>
vies in the lounge of the College<lb/>
Union on Thursdays at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
College Union committees are<lb/>
building all the time. Won't you<lb/>
come into the office and join a<lb/>
committee?<lb/>
Want to brush up on your bridge<lb/>
playing? Come to intermediate<lb/>
bridge class on Tuesday after-<lb/>
noons. If you are a beginner,<lb/>
come Thursdays.<lb/>
Savage, McLemore<lb/>
Serve In Garrett<lb/>
Peggy Savage and Lena Kay Mc-<lb/>
Lemore, both seniors, copped the<lb/>
chief executive positions in Garrett<lb/>
Hall's second annual elections, held<lb/>
in West and East Garrett respective-<lb/>
ly, last Tuesday night. Peggy, from<lb/>
Wiiliamston, and Lena Kay, of Hen-<lb/>
lerson, as president-elect of their<lb/>
dorms also automatically assumed<lb/>
the places on the Student Legislature<lb/>
and on the Women's Judiciary which<lb/>
go ith their new offices.<lb/>
Other top officers elected in Last<lb/>
Garrett were Alyce Britt, junior,<lb/>
vice-president, Betty Mae Freeman,<lb/>
senior, secretary, and Margaret An-<lb/>
drews, aio a junior, treasurer.<lb/>
The girls in West Garrett cast<lb/>
their ballot in favor of senior Nora<lb/>
Tean Siler for V P. and Joanna Leeu-<lb/>
wenburg, a junior for secretary. Jun-<lb/>
ior Silvia Beasley will handle the<lb/>
money.<lb/>
On Wednesday the following proc-<lb/>
tors were elected. East Garrett:<lb/>
Eleanor Pierce, Emily Gonoer, Suz-<lb/>
anne J. Terry, Letitia Batts, June<lb/>
Miller, and Faye Pierce.<lb/>
West Garrett: Katy Peele, Annette<lb/>
Surley, Ann .Pleasant, Dorine Rouse,<lb/>
Geraldine Smith and Patsy Allman.<lb/>
The foregoing officers and proc-<lb/>
Johnston, Manos<lb/>
Lead Y Drive<lb/>
Under the leadership of Martha<lb/>
Johnston and Gus Manos the Young<lb/>
Women's and Young Men's Christian<lb/>
Associations have resumed their act-<lb/>
ivities on campus for the new term.<lb/>
Tomorrow. September 20, the Cab-<lb/>
inets of these two organizations will<lb/>
leave for a week-end planning con-<lb/>
ference at a camp site near Washing-<lb/>
ton, N. C. A program for the year<lb/>
will be outlined and inaugurated by<lb/>
the group. Assisting with the wor-<lb/>
ship fellowship and recreation of the<lb/>
retreat will be Miss Cynthia Menden-<lb/>
hall, College Union Recreation Su-<lb/>
pervisor, and Dr. Bradner, Director<lb/>
(if Religious Education.<lb/>
A main project of the YW and<lb/>
summer as an early graduation gift. : YMCA is their current membership<lb/>
Ferae, who is majoring in science drive, which started Monday, Sep-<lb/>
and minoring in math, has been go-<lb/>
ing to Nuremberg, Germany for the<lb/>
past three summers to visit her par-<lb/>
ents, Mr. and Mrs. S. N. Highsmith.<lb/>
Mr, Highsmith works for the United<lb/>
Volkswagen To Arrive<lb/>
On College Scene<lb/>
By BARBARA L. BATTS<lb/>
Ferae Lorraine Highsmith, senior,<lb/>
who is due to graduate from East<lb/>
Carolina College in February of 1958,<lb/>
is eagerly looking forward to driving<lb/>
her Volkswagen, a small German car<lb/>
which her parents gave her this<lb/>
States government in Germany.<lb/>
Feme lived in Germany for five<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"1 am very fascinated by the num-<lb/>
ber of miles tat the car gets to the<lb/>
gallon?Si miles per gallon. It's al-<lb/>
so fascinating that such a small<lb/>
motor couid ran a car states Feme,<lb/>
.( small attractive girl with short<lb/>
ight brown hair, arresting eyes, and<lb/>
a riendly cooperative manner.<lb/>
The Volkswagen, a small German<lb/>
teople's car, is black, holds five<lb/>
assengers, with a little crowding,<lb/>
iid has four forward gears. It is<lb/>
:ot a convertible but it has a sliding<lb/>
sun roof.<lb/>
Feme drove the car 1800 miles<lb/>
hile in Germany this summer. "I<lb/>
enjoy driving it because it is small<lb/>
and easy to get around she says.<lb/>
tember 9, and will continue through<lb/>
Thanksgiving. TT is drive is being con-<lb/>
ducted through personal contacts of<lb/>
the Cabinet with each student on cam-<lb/>
p  "Membership in the Y will en-<lb/>
title the student to the full Y pro-<lb/>
gram the presidents state.<lb/>
Luring Orientation Week the Y,<lb/>
operating from an information booth<lb/>
in Wright Building, guided and coun-<lb/>
eled t e freshmen on Registration<lb/>
Day, as has been the policy in the<lb/>
ast. Also they held an Open House<lb/>
September f to introduce the new-<lb/>
comers to the Y hut. The Cabinet,<lb/>
mingling with the freshmen, extend-<lb/>
ed a welcome to ECC.<lb/>
Future program plans include a<lb/>
report from Janet Fletcher, Gus<lb/>
Manos, and Tanya Anderson, offi-<lb/>
cial delegates to the Southern Re-<lb/>
gional YWYMCA Conference held<lb/>
early in June in Berea, Kentucky.<lb/>
In the fall of 1953, Feme, origin-<lb/>
lily from Greenville, came to ECC<lb/>
ait dropped out at the completion of<lb/>
he winter term. She enrolled again!<lb/>
n the fall quarter of 1955. She is' events; and publications of the Y,<lb/>
This year for the first time the Y<lb/>
is operating a library in the Y hut.<lb/>
Among its holdings are books of re-<lb/>
ligion, faith, marriage, and recre-<lb/>
ation; a scrapbook of the year's<lb/>
resident of the math club, secretary<lb/>
f the Chi Beta Phi, a member of<lb/>
the science club, and is on the<lb/>
BUCCANEER staff.<lb/>
IFC Meets To Form<lb/>
tors make up the House Committee <lb/>
which will meet weekly to act on Schedule Of Projects<lb/>
disciplinary problems and plan future<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Six Majorettes<lb/>
To Lead Band<lb/>
Six women students chosen for their<lb/>
skill and attractive appearance will<lb/>
march with the East Carolina College<lb/>
Bund this year as majorettes.<lb/>
They are Earlene Cullipher and<lb/>
harlotte Fitchett of Elizabeth City;<lb/>
Ellen Sturkie of Rockingham; Gayle<lb/>
Davenport of Portsmouth, Va Doris<lb/>
Bobbins of Roanoke Rapids, and Shel-<lb/>
;y Jean Grady of High Point. Alter-<lb/>
nates are Barbara Pleasant and Judy<lb/>
Biedsoe, both of Paleigh.<lb/>
William Speight of Roanoke Rapids<lb/>
and Robert Ellwanger of Rockingham<lb/>
act as drum majors for the band.<lb/>
Linwood Pittman of Rocky Mount<lb/>
heads the Marching Band as president.<lb/>
During the school term the band will<lb/>
appear at all football contests played<lb/>
on the campus here, participate in the<lb/>
annual parade October 12 on Home-<lb/>
coming Day for Alumni, and take part<lb/>
in various community events in Green-<lb/>
ville and other towns of the state.<lb/>
The Interfraternity Council, com-<lb/>
posed of the five social fraternities<lb/>
at East Carolina, held its first meet-<lb/>
ing of the new quarter last week.<lb/>
President Rodney Jones presided over<lb/>
the meeting and immediately an-<lb/>
nounced some of the Council's pro-<lb/>
jects for the coming school year. The<lb/>
Council is composed of 19 members.<lb/>
Jones informed the gathering that<lb/>
? e Council's office in the basement<lb/>
of Fleming Hall will be ready for<lb/>
occupancy within a few weeks. He<lb/>
also expressed the desire to see each<lb/>
fraternity do an exceptionally out-<lb/>
standing job with whatever role they<lb/>
may play in the Homecoming activi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Tr.e direct goal of this organiza-<lb/>
tion is to constantly strive to improve<lb/>
the stature of the fraternities on<lb/>
campus. They also supervise the<lb/>
"Greek Week" which is held after<lb/>
the Christmas holidays to accept<lb/>
freshmen as pledge candidates.<lb/>
At the present time, the Council<lb/>
is composed of the following fra-<lb/>
ternities: Delta Sigma Rho, Kappa<lb/>
Sigma Nu, Phi Kappa Alpha, Sigma<lb/>
Rho Phi, and Phi Gamma Pi. The<lb/>
remaining officers of the Council are:<lb/>
Vice-President?Mac Lancaster, Se-<lb/>
cretary?L. E. Alford, and Treasurer<lb/>
?Mike Katsias.<lb/>
both local and national.<lb/>
Presiding over the YWCA are<lb/>
Martha Johnston, president; Tanya<lb/>
Anderson, vice-president; Annette<lb/>
Capps, secretary; and Carole Ann<lb/>
Carr, treasurer. Members of the<lb/>
Cabinet are Ann Brooks and Julia<lb/>
Kendall, vespers; Ann Lane, per-<lb/>
sonnel; Carolyn Merritt and Eleanor<lb/>
Johnson, social service; Dora Pierce<lb/>
and Beth Chason, recreation; Eliza-<lb/>
beth Bowman and Mercedes Harman,<lb/>
publicity; Martha Wilson and Faye<lb/>
Rivenbark, reporters; Hilda Tedder,<lb/>
music; Nellie Ward and Lou Ellen<lb/>
Flowers, properties; Dotty Walker,<lb/>
inter-collegiate; Jinnill Whaley" and<lb/>
Barbara Jenkins, religious education;<lb/>
Ruth Turnage, night watch; and<lb/>
Sara Asbell and Sue Flanagan, so-<lb/>
cial.<lb/>
Officers of the YMCA are Gus<lb/>
Manos, president; Coleman Gentry,<lb/>
vice-president; Jesse Vick, secretary;<lb/>
and Freddie James, treasurer. Mem-<lb/>
bers of the Cabinet are Joe Pearce,<lb/>
membership; Gordon Weeks, proper-<lb/>
ties; Bill Shaw, publicity; John Dunn,<lb/>
publicity; John Andrews, program;<lb/>
Mike Katsias, program; Jim Bowden,<lb/>
music; and Ondte Black, social.<lb/>
Dr. Elizabeth Utterback and Dr.<lb/>
Clarence Monk serve as the advisors.<lb/>
The Y Hut will be available to<lb/>
campus organizations as their meet-<lb/>
ing site with the stipulations that a<lb/>
week's notice be given and that a<lb/>
$5 deposit be made, returnable in the<lb/>
event no damages to the Hut are in<lb/>
curred.<lb/>
iloskins Makes<lb/>
Bream A Reality<lb/>
Dr. Frank Hoskins of the English<lb/>
department saw a childhood dream<lb/>
unfold into reality this summer as<lb/>
he and his mother boarded a plane<lb/>
for Luxembourg, Germany, and "Eu-<lb/>
rope unlimited This trip took them<lb/>
through the countries of Switzerland,<lb/>
France, Austria. Ttaly, Liechter stein,<lb/>
Belgium, The Netherlands, Scotland,<lb/>
md their principal cities.<lb/>
While in Paris, mother and son<lb/>
-aw Notre Dame, the Eiffel Tower,<lb/>
the Left Bank and all other points of<lb/>
interest including the "Folies Ber-<lb/>
gieres<lb/>
Three weeks of their European<lb/>
tour were spent in London, England,<lb/>
where Dr. Hoskins renewed an old<lb/>
friends ip with a previous student<lb/>
of his who is now a Rhodes Scholar<lb/>
at Oxford University. While visiting<lb/>
Oxford, Cambridge, and various<lb/>
?ther universities and colleges, Dr.<lb/>
Hi.skins noted the difference between<lb/>
the English and American educa-<lb/>
tional system. "The English system<lb/>
ig far superior he stated.<lb/>
In Stratford-on-Avon, they viewed<lb/>
Alec Clunes, a : rominent British act-<lb/>
or, in Shakespeare's immortal "Ju-<lb/>
lius C aesar "Although the British<lb/>
'stuck to the story' of Julius, they<lb/>
were highly stylized in staging and<lb/>
Through Bessie McNiel, chairman j acting, but very experimental in<lb/>
of the program committee from the costuming noted Dr.<lb/>
Family Life Conference and associ-<lb/>
ated with the Home Economics De-<lb/>
partment of East Carolina, our cam-<lb/>
pus is extremely fortunate in that<lb/>
Harry and Bonaro Overstreet have<lb/>
been scheduled to highlight this year's<lb/>
"Family Life Conference?<lb/>
Harry Overstreet was for years<lb/>
Head of the Department of Philoso-<lb/>
hy an i Psychology of the College of<lb/>
he City of New York. A native of<lb/>
California, his under-graduate work<lb/>
A-as done at the University of Cali-<lb/>
ornia, and his graduate degree was<lb/>
earned at Oxford University. His<lb/>
first ten years of teaching were done<lb/>
nt the University of California, then<lb/>
he was called to New York.<lb/>
Poet and Psychologist<lb/>
Bonaro Overstreet is both a poet<lb/>
and psychologist. She was educated<lb/>
:it the University of California and<lb/>
Columbia University. Her teaching<lb/>
was done in California until her mar-<lb/>
riage to Harry Overstreet, in 1932,<lb/>
made her a resident of New York.<lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. Overstreet have great<lb/>
Tenth Family<lb/>
Life Conference<lb/>
To Begin Here<lb/>
A new "first" for East Carolina<lb/>
vill be t e meeting of tne tenth an-<lb/>
iua "Family Lire Conference of the<lb/>
orth Carolina Family Life Council"<lb/>
A-hich will he held September 22-24<lb/>
r the college cam-us. This i.s a state<lb/>
ffiliated program, ami this will be<lb/>
he first annual meeting of the Coun-<lb/>
ii held east of Raleigh.<lb/>
We arc afforded with such an op-<lb/>
crtunity by t.e Danforth Founda-<lb/>
ioti now directed by the immediate<lb/>
t president of the North Carolina<lb/>
family Life Council, Dr. George<lb/>
Douglas of East Carolina College.<lb/>
Dr. Douglas was also the former<lb/>
coordinator of Family Life Educa-<lb/>
tion in Charlotte.<lb/>
Danforth Grant<lb/>
Fast Carolina College has a grant<lb/>
rom the Danforth Foundation to be<lb/>
sed to bring better moral, spiritual,<lb/>
and cultural life to our campus. This<lb/>
is done artly by bringing in out-<lb/>
tanding speakers The Danforth<lb/>
Foundation Committee set up a three<lb/>
year program. This year the theme is<lb/>
"Personal and Family Relations<lb/>
next year, it will be in the area of<lb/>
the "Community and the Nation<lb/>
und the third year will bring the dis-<lb/>
cussion of "International Relations<lb/>
The last country visited by Dr.<lb/>
Hoskins and his mother was "bonnie<lb/>
ole Scotland the country of warm,<lb/>
friendly and generous people. From<lb/>
Edinburgh, which is one of the love-<lb/>
liest cities hi Enrope, the Hoskins<lb/>
family again boarded a plane but this<lb/>
time for the long trip home with a<lb/>
over in Iceland for lunch.<lb/>
Methodist Center Site<lb/>
Construction Begins<lb/>
Foundations have been excavated<lb/>
and construction work begun on the<lb/>
new Methodist Student Center on a<lb/>
ite adjacent to the campus of East<lb/>
Carolina College here.<lb/>
The ground on which the Student<lb/>
Center is being erected has been con-<lb/>
secrated for this purpose in cere-<lb/>
monies jointly participated in by the<lb/>
Rev. W. M. Howard, Jr minister of<lb/>
the Jarvis Memorial, and the Rev. J.<lb/>
Malloy Owen, TCI, minister of St.<lb/>
James Methodist churches, and Miss<lb/>
Mamie J. Chandler, Director of the<lb/>
interest in teaching adults concern-1 Wesley Foundation at East Caro-<lb/>
ina College. Members of the two<lb/>
ing human relations. Together, they<lb/>
have written best-seller books, the<lb/>
most recent being The Mind Goes<lb/>
Forth. Separately, they have also<lb/>
written well-known books.<lb/>
Mrs. OVerstreet has the poet's<lb/>
quality of sensing the overtones of<lb/>
life, the psychologist's power to probe<lb/>
?Ie detver levels of our human need,<lb/>
and the healthy human being's in-<lb/>
terest in having life go well for other<lb/>
eople.<lb/>
Going hand-in-hand with Mrs.<lb/>
Overstreefs qualities, Dr. Overstreet<lb/>
s endowed with a keen sense of the<lb/>
uman and the power to make com-<lb/>
plicated problems clear without<lb/>
"watering them down He has been<lb/>
called the ideal combination of schol-<lb/>
arliness, personal charm, and natural<lb/>
-?asy platform personality.<lb/>
Together, in the past ten years,<lb/>
these two have been doing platform<lb/>
speaking. Both are internationally<lb/>
known and are in demand on college<lb/>
and university campuses. The demand<lb/>
requires mostly their famous "Over-<lb/>
street Colloquy" which is a platform<lb/>
conversation in which, spontaneously<lb/>
back-and-forth, they together devel-<lb/>
op their central theme.<lb/>
There will be no fee for tfce facul-<lb/>
Methodist congregations in Green-<lb/>
ville joined in the rites of the Meth-<lb/>
odist church for the ground-breaking.<lb/>
The new facility for the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center is located at the cor-<lb/>
ner of East Fifth and Holly Streets,<lb/>
across from the West campus of the<lb/>
college, and will cost approximately<lb/>
$125,000 when completed. The struct-<lb/>
ure will be modern throughout, in-<lb/>
cluding furnishings, with adequate<lb/>
lounges, a chapel, a commodious all-<lb/>
purpose hall with well-lighted stage,<lb/>
iressing and co3tume wardrobe, re-<lb/>
i reation room, and kitchen.<lb/>
The new Methodist Student Center<lb/>
project was initiated by the Woman's<lb/>
Division of Christian Servioe of The<lb/>
Methodist Church, in which the North<lb/>
Caroina Conference of the denomin-<lb/>
ation is also co-operating.<lb/>
Miss Chandler comments that tre<lb/>
new "Center" will be a "home away<lb/>
from home" for the Methodist stu-<lb/>
dents at East Carolina College.<lb/>
ty and students of East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
For this conference Mrs. Sam B.<lb/>
Underwood, Jr is chairman of local<lb/>
arrangements.<lb/>
f<lb/>
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Lookinu I<lb/>
VARSITY GULF STATION<lb/>
1007 E. Fifth Streel<lb/>
I e  C<lb/>
<lb/>
 . at<lb/>
TINTING CURLING<lb/>
Friendly Beauty Shop<lb/>
? <lb/>
Saddle Horses Fur Rent<lb/>
HOl RS<lb/>
kday I ?? M ? dark<lb/>
to dark !<lb/>
tf  Bern highway <lb/>
1 Ie.<lb/>
V'1.i t.<lb/>
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WJ FA I LTV and STUDENTS<lb/>
MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS<lb/>
( osnn tics -? ('ost iitnt ? u rfry<lb/>
216 Eas1 Fifth Telephone R896<lb/>
LeAnne<lb/>
Beauty Shu,<lb/>
lit!) Eas1 4th '<lb/>
Died 35 t  iin - !?<lb/>
Mm. Dorothj<lb/>
(wnei<lb/>
HEATH'S<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
FOR THE BEST IN HAMBURG'ERS and CHOICE<lb/>
T-BONE STEAKS WITH LOTS OF<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
Wear TV Station at the Crossroad<lb/>
PIT-COOKED RAR-B-Q<lb/>
Leave Your Shoes<lb/>
For Prompt Expi ' S)<lb/>
Repairs At<lb/>
College View Cleaners<lb/>
Sub-Station?5th St i<lb/>
All Work GuaranU d<lb/>
Saad's Shoe Shop<lb/>
113 Grande Ave. Dial 2056<lb/>
Pick-up and Deliver Servia<lb/>
iz<lb/>
'<lb/>
!i ii I<lb/>
1 A N<lb/>
I<lb/>
P- '? <lb/>
irates bow<lb/>
To Richmond In Opener<lb/>
Richmond-ECC Action<lb/>
Intramural Council Has First <lb/>
Meetiiiii: Iflicc'rs Vre Kl? rted<lb/>
?<lb/>
ij<lb/>
??<lb/>
e Rixa<lb/>
?  i cro se? th I ' <lb/>
 o i. ns theii goal<lb/>
h , i Spid. i ted th B ii 10-7<lb/>
appears b<lb/>
?oca! Clinic<lb/>
Salmon In Action<lb/>
i<lb/>
V R O L 1 N<lb/>
R I L<lb/>
? ??.?; :?. . ???? .<lb/>
-i man hi It'back, w as the big man in 1 -<lb/>
niah t.<lb/>
-<lb/>
RRY'S SHOE STORK<lb/>
 i,<lb/>
? Fiv !<lb/>
Perkins-i'roctor<lb/>
"The Houe of Name Brands'1<lb/>
VRRIS GROCERY STORK<lb/>
Ea '<lb/>
I ine Meats and Groceries<lb/>
! I<lb/>
!<lb/>
I <lb/>
Dora's Tower Grill<lb/>
 Li OME<lb/>
RGER HOT DOGS<lb/>
?; n DRINKS SANDWICHES<lb/>
FREN II FRIES<lb/>
CURB SERVICE<lb/>
cj Pavillion For Your Pleasure<lb/>
i Station and Fire Tow ei<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
??????<lb/>
MUSIC ARTS<lb/>
<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 <lb/>
<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
Records  Instruments<lb/>
IL I<lb/>
<lb/>
C. Heber Forbes<lb/>
I ADIES READY-TO-WEAR<lb/>
(LOTHES<lb/>
BeddingHeld's Pharmacy<lb/>
ID '<lb/>
i y i<lb/>
) Iost I <lb/>
i I OR TWO FULL YEARS WARRANTY<lb/>
R SEW 1957 F)RD PURCHASED FROM<lb/>
i Flanagan Buggy Co Inc.<lb/>
Since 1866<lb/>
r Used Horsedrawn and Gasolim Powered<lb/>
Buggy's for ninety-one thars<lb/>
PECIAL SCHOOL TEACHER FINANCING<lb/>
Taff Office Equipment Company<lb/>
College School Supplies<lb/>
MAY AND 1 SED P H PEW1<lb/>
Rent es !C<lb/>
214 E. 5th Streel<lb/>
Sorth ('arolina<lb/>
:<lb/>
<pb facs="00038431_0007"/><lb/>
Al iErTEMBER 19, 1907<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FAXi atvaN<lb/>
Haver Of The Week<lb/>
ECC Sophomores<lb/>
Boone Honored<lb/>
In Home Town<lb/>
Davidson Next<lb/>
For Bugs<lb/>
Former Prep Star<lb/>
Entertained By<lb/>
Sports Club<lb/>
The Pur. le and Gold of East Caro-<lb/>
o iit(l their 1957 season last<lb/>
trday night against the Univer-<lb/>
of Richmond Spiders. This was<lb/>
i big test for Boone and his charges,<lb/>
but only a little taste of what was to<lb/>
i. ?? of a nine game schedule which<lb/>
i  the toughest assignment<lb/>
i ,?  hool'i history.<lb/>
S?G??X??2? ???-?-c? ??  ?thr<lb/>
- <lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
4<lb/>
?<lb/>
Jerry Brooks<lb/>
Bj JOHNNY HUDSON<lb/>
a s orts staff Off to Jerry<lb/>
i  f Aim Week I competitor.<lb/>
a Player oi i.e nw? j<lb/>
At this<lb/>
Brooks, a truly great<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
Pirates have not<lb/>
season and as<lb/>
? r, we are picking<lb/>
, to a streak of hard<lb/>
 y ee only little act-<lb/>
Oai tef choice this week<lb/>
the hard-luck ridden<lb/>
New Coaches<lb/>
On ECC Staff<lb/>
Two new additions have been added<lb/>
to the East Carolina coaching staff<lb/>
for this fall. The new additions, a<lb/>
a couple of football veterans, join<lb/>
his high school (playing ,ea(j COach Jack Boone and assistant<lb/>
? he most succesful prep ' coaches Earl Smith and Jim Mallory<lb/>
? state. Bill Eust in rebuilding another football power-<lb/>
a regular tackle bouse. The new members are Frank<lb/>
g am during 1948, Madjgan and Bill McDonald, both<lb/>
 three years the 0f Portsmouth, Va.<lb/>
Madigan was a former center for<lb/>
the Pirate before going into the<lb/>
tung career. His first position<lb/>
was atHigh Point's Allen Jay High<lb/>
e he produced a 6-4 record. He<lb/>
then entered service and served at<lb/>
Swimmers Off To<lb/>
Early Start In<lb/>
Defense Of Crown<lb/>
Last year's NAIA swimming<lb/>
champs have been hard at work during<lb/>
: the opening weeks of school. Though<lb/>
official practice doesn't begin until<lb/>
the .irst of October, last year's vets<lb/>
i are anxious to get back in shape to<lb/>
hkend their national crown. This<lb/>
week has been devoted to conditioning<lb/>
and also to a survey of freshman<lb/>
prospects.<lb/>
Though the squad boasts over 50<lb/>
returnees, the Bucs may be hurting<lb/>
tor free stylers, as four of the top<lb/>
point-getters, Harold McKee, Jim<lb/>
Meads, Dickie Deaton. and Steve<lb/>
Wilkerson, are gone. The loss of<lb/>
McKee, a distance man, and Meads,<lb/>
a sprinter, could create a weakness<lb/>
this winter unless replacements turn<lb/>
up-<lb/>
Forming a steady and dependable<lb/>
nucleus are Bob Sawyer, the top<lb/>
backstroke artist in the South, Teddy<lb/>
Gartman, Ken xMidgette, Mike Wil-<lb/>
liamson, Jack Kobberling, Glenn<lb/>
Dwyer, and Sidney Oliver. Also back<lb/>
Jmgensen Has Article In<lb/>
Coach And Athlete<lb/>
East Carolina College's first fifty Jorgensen<lb/>
The Portsmouth (Va.) Sports Crab<lb/>
opened its 1957-58 series of pro-<lb/>
grams last Friday evening, Sept. 13<lb/>
by holding Jack Boone Night. The<lb/>
organization was host and toasted the<lb/>
popular East Carolina College head<lb/>
football coach. Boone is a native of<lb/>
Portsmouth.<lb/>
The organisation headed by Presi-<lb/>
dent Harry C. Hull honored Boone,<lb/>
a product of Woodrow Wilson High<lb/>
School, on the eve of the East Caro-<lb/>
lina?University of Richmond foot-<lb/>
Richmond is Davidson, j ball game at a testimonial dinner. The<lb/>
gafee on Saturday night was the first<lb/>
college game played in Portsmouth<lb/>
in 14 years and was played at the<lb/>
stadium where Boone was a high<lb/>
school star and later played there in<lb/>
the short-lived Dixie Pro football<lb/>
 ther .strong Southern Conference<lb/>
, ven. The Wildcats will offer the<lb/>
bales their first test at home a-<lb/>
,11 borne fans. It will also be the<lb/>
r0 tate foe's fiist appearance at<lb/>
league.<lb/>
Invitations to the Friday evening<lb/>
re<lb/>
95<lb/>
.leenville.<lb/>
Also scheduled to give the Pirates<lb/>
plenty of trouble are five North State dinner were extended to the five fr-<lb/>
rivals featuring Lenoir Rhyne, last er coaches under whose tutelage<lb/>
.year's top small college in the nljack Boone developed his football<lb/>
, . . U.V tion Elon's Christians offer the Bucs "jtnow.how They are Ernest Wilde,<lb/>
director of the neaitn ?f ??mnotin(m fnr hnmeoomine t ????- v;ki? u,<lb/>
plenty of competition for homecoming<lb/>
reara of growth and service and its and physical education at u? ? night.<lb/>
?ti?nU for the future bere.gives a historical sketch of! Additional members to this years<lb/>
leading article of the current issue of 1907 to the present. Emphasis is<lb/>
"Coach and Athlete The maga- placed on the facil ties available<lb/>
zine, a "slick paper" publication, is<lb/>
.tevoted to sports and has a wide cir-<lb/>
culation, particularly in the Southern<lb/>
States.<lb/>
"Campus Close-Up" by Dr. N. M.<lb/>
students of health and physical edu-<lb/>
ction and on the diversified sports<lb/>
program staged by the college.<lb/>
Dr. Joigensen's close-up of East<lb/>
Carolina is illustrated with campus<lb/>
scenes, action shots of East Carolina<lb/>
athletic contests, and a photograph<lb/>
is A. B. Benfield, team manager and<lb/>
morale builder.<lb/>
Coach Ray Martinez, the man re-<lb/>
sponsible for ECC's rapid water fame,<lb/>
has departed for a year, but has left years, the college has had its most<lb/>
his champions in the capable hands , 5pectacuiOT period of growth.<lb/>
of the P. E. department's Dr. De- Carolilia campus, Dr.<lb/>
Shaw. , tn,t.n Mys, a feeling of optim-<lb/>
The schedule once again .proves ?n- ?<lb/>
difficult with Carolina, N. C. State, ism revails . The future point, to<lb/>
Wake Forest, Davidson, U. of Geor- . continued growth in n??<lb/>
eia V ,P I V M I. and Washing ties, increased enrollment, and a,<lb/>
ton &amp; Lee as likely foes on the swim ; diversified curriculum to meet the<lb/>
1 needs of this area.<lb/>
slate.<lb/>
teams, Newberry and Presbyterian,<lb/>
who may someday emerge into the<lb/>
Noit State loop. Both these clubs<lb/>
oast strong material and will be out<lb/>
to make impressive showings against<lb/>
North State teams.<lb/>
Improvement is anticipated by the<lb/>
Pirates, but after looking over the<lb/>
schedule, it is hard to see. The slate<lb/>
marks an interesting one with four<lb/>
games staged for Greenville, three<lb/>
President J. D. Mesick, underon nvai fields, and the Richmond tilt<lb/>
whose leadership during the past ten was on neutral ground<lb/>
The remaining schedule lor the<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
Lester Kibler, Horace Hendrickson,<lb/>
Dutch Clark, and Hamp Poole.<lb/>
East Carolina officials were also<lb/>
included on the invitation list, in.<lb/>
addition to Coach Boone, were Dr.<lb/>
J. D. Messick, president; Dr. Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins, vice president and dean of<lb/>
the college; Dr. N. M. Jorgensen,<lb/>
head of the physical education depart-<lb/>
ment and director of athletics; and<lb/>
Alumni Secretary and Sports News<lb/>
Director James Butler.<lb/>
The Portsmouth Sports Club has<lb/>
honored two other Portsmouth native<lb/>
sons with testimonial dinners. The<lb/>
honor guests on former occasions<lb/>
were Ace Parker and Channel Harper.<lb/>
Sept. 21 open date; Sept. 28, Dav-<lb/>
id on, in Greenville; Oct. 5, Catawba<lb/>
Si -bury; Oct. 12, Elon, in Green-<lb/>
ville; Oct. 19, Western Carolina, in<lb/>
CuUowJ.ee; Oct. 26, Newberry, in<lb/>
Greenville; Nov. 9, Lenoir Rhyne,<lb/>
? Greenville; Nov. 16, Presbyterian<lb/>
South Carolina, in Clinton, S. C.<lb/>
1957 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
Sept. 28?Davidson, here<lb/>
Oct. 5?Catawba, there<lb/>
Oct. 12?Elon, here<lb/>
Oct. 19?W. C. C, ther<lb/>
Oct. 26?Newberry, here<lb/>
Nov. 2?Appalachian, here<lb/>
,ov. 9?Lenoir Rhyne, here<lb/>
Nov. 16?Presbyterian, there<lb/>
top spot in the<lb/>
em AA Conference<lb/>
i to state champion-<lb/>
g ning bia college career,<lb/>
, b in the Marines<lb/>
be a<lb/>
service star Misawa Air Base in Japan. He was<lb/>
or<lb/>
Cherry<lb/>
at East Carolina, the<lb/>
.ier immediately<lb/>
,v on the EOC grid-<lb/>
?v of action and let-<lb/>
t first two year,<lb/>
led for a regular spot<lb/>
: The Rockingham<lb/>
ds eak in practice<lb/>
M quickly mentioned<lb/>
erence honors. Bad luck<lb/>
i and bad. In the open-<lb/>
-t V. P. L, Jerry was<lb/>
,u out with an ankle to-<lb/>
rn out for several<lb/>
en on his return, he re-<lb/>
 iry?this time to<lb/>
ankle. Taped up and<lb/>
? walk, his love of the<lb/>
esire gave him many<lb/>
minutes in the 1956<lb/>
Jettog the season, Jerry<lb/>
an operation on his foot<lb/>
. . Bsful. Another op-<lb/>
. . ve I and a pin was placed<lb/>
ankle, Still wanting to<lb/>
gain his senior year, Jerry<lb/>
lati r a, : mt?<lb/>
Far Eust Ail<lb/>
whic<lb/>
head coach of the<lb/>
Force All Star team<lb/>
defeated the Naval and Army<lb/>
All Star teams in two bowl games.<lb/>
Last year he served as assistant'<lb/>
coach of Needham Broughton High<lb/>
at Kaieigh.<lb/>
McDonald also did his playing ball<lb/>
at ECC where he was a standout<lb/>
tackle. Most of his coaching ex-<lb/>
perience mes from service ball<lb/>
where he was head football coach at<lb/>
Shaw Air Base a?d compiled a 7-2-1<lb/>
mark in 1955. The following season<lb/>
I ?i<lb/>
BIS CIO<lb/>
"a the<lb/>
f tht<lb/>
won eight and lost two while<lb/>
picked as the number 3 team<lb/>
nation. He was selected as one<lb/>
outstanding coaches in service<lb/>
football.<lb/>
Loth coaches played high school<lb/>
ball at Woo trow Wilson High in<lb/>
p rt nouth, also the place where<lb/>
head coach Boone won his high school<lb/>
fame.<lb/>
???wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww<lb/>
ankle all summer but<lb/>
to come.<lb/>
i.een working hard dur-<lb/>
. ening weeks of practice<lb/>
,as been counted high on thej<lb/>
tie list, but he still bears<lb/>
; ; his playing time is un-<lb/>
I e foot has slowed him<lb/>
ierably.<lb/>
he may not see too much<lb/>
fall it is almost certain<lb/>
me will keep him on the tra-<lb/>
iqaad. He is a big lift to the<lb/>
and his courage and determin-<lb/>
- admired by every player.<lb/>
It is a shame that such a player<lb/>
with t e desire and love of the game<lb/>
a- Jerry should sit on the sidelines,<lb/>
but with his desire and hard work,<lb/>
it would not be a miracle to see him<lb/>
running at full strength before this<lb/>
season is over.<lb/>
On behalf of the team and the stu-<lb/>
dent body we would like to say "Hats<lb/>
XPRtSS.NG YOU <lb/>
Lautares Bros.<lb/>
IQQ . Today's most exctting cigarette 1<lb/>
The campus favorite that gives you<lb/>
"Live Modern" flavor plus the pure<lb/>
white Miracle Tip. Draws easier<lb/>
tastes richer smokes cleaner.<lb/>
Evans<lb/>
Recreation Center<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
JRVING REGULAR<lb/>
DINNERS<lb/>
X Greenville's only Registered J<lb/>
X <lb/>
-S Jewelers ft<lb/>
i'<lb/>
?<lb/>
j-<lb/>
?<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
414 Evans Street<lb/>
Geo. Lautares, ECC '41<lb/>
PositThe freshest new taste in<lb/>
smoking .with soothing Menthol mist<lb/>
and easy-drawing pure white filter.<lb/>
On campus they're saying: "O'flavor,<lb/>
O'freshness, Oasis<lb/>
ChesterfieldThe big brand for big<lb/>
men who like their pleasure big! For<lb/>
full-flavored satisfaction  it's<lb/>
Chesterfield .the cigarette that always<lb/>
goes where the fun is.<lb/>
Yes, the BMOC go for<lb/>
LMOC! How about you?<lb/>
i<lb/>
? I ???????????????????? ? ? it I<lb/>
ami<lb/>
?OX OK PACKS<lb/>
fUVOft-TIGHT SOX<lb/>
KINO a ItfOUlAS<lb/>
?<lb/>
 1<lb/>
1<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
s.<lb/>
n<lb/>
<pb facs="00038431_0008"/><lb/>
PA&amp;E felGHT<lb/>
S<lb/>
A S T CAfiQLlNlAN<lb/>
THUftfiftAV, SRPTEMaut I, m,<lb/>
Construction To Begin Soon On New<lb/>
Dorm And Cafeteria; Will House 512<lb/>
A new dormitoiy and cafeteria will"<lb/>
get under construction early this fall,<lb/>
F. D. Duncan, Business Manager of<lb/>
the colege announced last week.<lb/>
The construction, which is expect-<lb/>
ed to greatly facilitate the campus<lb/>
housing problem, will cost $1,22,<lb/>
305. Duncan stated that this figure<lb/>
is more than the college ihaa available<lb/>
for the project at this time.<lb/>
However, a conference with Archi-<lb/>
tict Eric G. Flanagan to make minor<lb/>
alterations in the original plans is<lb/>
being schedule.1 in Raleigh this week.<lb/>
H Shape<lb/>
The H-shaped construction, which<lb/>
will bouse &amp;12 men and will include<lb/>
a cafeteria unit, will be erected on<lb/>
East 10th Street south of the Me-<lb/>
morial Gymnasium and the college<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
The new building is to be financed<lb/>
through a loan by the Federal Housing<lb/>
and Home Loan Agencj who vill re-<lb/>
view the bids in Atlanta tihia week<lb/>
Low Bids<lb/>
Bh.is wen tted in August by<lb/>
general contractors, 13 plumbing,<lb/>
14 ting and IT electrical con-<lb/>
tract or s,<lb/>
ders in each cate-<lb/>
L Shackleford of Kin-<lb/>
titract, $978,319; Hil-<lb/>
of Durham, heating,<lb/>
5,429; and plumbing, $64,665;<lb/>
Dick's Electrical Company of Wilson,<lb/>
electrical work. $68,892.<lb/>
An All Girl Cast<lb/>
The lowest<lb/>
gory ? ere: 0<lb/>
ston, get<lb/>
co Company<lb/>
THE LAST CAROLINIAN STAFF?'ihis year's East Carolinian staff is<lb/>
the biggest in three ears. Composed of 41 ? riers and?believe it or not?<lb/>
carriers, the staff promises bigger and better newspapers.<lb/>
Prominent New York Artists Waldrop Named<lb/>
Make UpfcCurrentAExhibition3 tq ?QQ goar(J<lb/>
Work by three prominent New<lb/>
York artists makes up a current ex-<lb/>
hibition et the Joyner Memorial<lb/>
Librarj at East Carolina College.<lb/>
The show, sponsored by the depart-<lb/>
ment of art at the college, comes to<lb/>
'he campus through the courtesy of<lb/>
i Pickett of the Studio Guild,<lb/>
W. Redding, Conn.<lb/>
Included are lithographs and cas-<lb/>
Eizabeth Erlanger, water-<lb/>
coiors by Kent Day Coes, and wa-<lb/>
tercolors and caseins by A. Leslie<lb/>
Ross. The public is invited to see<lb/>
these works during the next week,<lb/>
Monday through Friday from 8 a.m.<lb/>
to 10 p.m Saturday from 8 a.m. to<lb/>
5 p.m and Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.<lb/>
The exhibition is the first in a<lb/>
? s to be sponsored dur-<lb/>
.ug esent school year by the<lb/>
Carolina department of art. Dr.<lb/>
Welington B. Gray, director of the<lb/>
department, has announced that later<lb/>
shows will include photography, the<lb/>
graphic arts, and work in oil and wa-<lb/>
tercolor. Several exhibitions by tal-<lb/>
ented students are also being planned.<lb/>
Elizabeth Erianger's work, "as<lb/>
contemporary in style as tomorrow's<lb/>
newspaper is semi-abstract in sub-<lb/>
ject matter. '1 he paintings on ex-<lb/>
hibition here include figures and land-<lb/>
scapes in liv ly colors.<lb/>
A traditional watercolorist, Coes<lb/>
contributes to the show ten paintings<lb/>
on New England themes, all of which<lb/>
axe exhibited for the first time.<lb/>
Others of his works have been dis-<lb/>
played throughout the United States<lb/>
in conjunction with the American<lb/>
Watercolor Society.<lb/>
The ten paintings by Ross on view<lb/>
here show a progression from almost<lb/>
pr.otographici realism to, and in<lb/>
eluding, the abstract. He has been<lb/>
exhibiting for a number of years<lb/>
Rehearsals Begin As<lb/>
College Orchestra<lb/>
Observes 7th Year<lb/>
Rehearsals have begun for the<lb/>
East Carolina College Orchestra,<lb/>
starting its seventh year, and a num-<lb/>
ber of programs are scheduled for<lb/>
eastern North Carolina, according to<lb/>
Dr. Keneth N. Cuthbert, Conductor.<lb/>
At its second full rehearsal of thf<lb/>
year, held September 12th, the fol-<lb/>
lowing officers were elected: Robert<lb/>
Ell- anger, junior from Rockingham,<lb/>
President; John Lowery, junior from<lb/>
Kinston, Vice President; and Marion<lb/>
Morrison, from Hamlet, Secretary.<lb/>
Committee chairman named by Ell-<lb/>
wanger included Franklin Bullard,<lb/>
High Point, Social Chairman; Fran-<lb/>
ces Hilburn, Raleigh, Historian;<lb/>
Frances Johnson, Roanoke Rapids,<lb/>
Publicity Chairman.<lb/>
Plans for the year include thean-<lb/>
nual Christmas concert, scheduled for<lb/>
December 8, 3:30 p.m in McGinnia<lb/>
Auditorium. This concert will fea-<lb/>
ture Barbara Harris, soprano from<lb/>
Beaufort as soloist. Out of town con-<lb/>
certs are planned for Henderson,<lb/>
Kinston, Roanoke Rapids and Wash-<lb/>
ington. In addition, the orchestra<lb/>
accompanies the annual Student<lb/>
Government Association musical pre-<lb/>
sented each year, plays a spring con-<lb/>
id furnishes music for com-<lb/>
exercises.<lb/>
and has had his work in the shows<lb/>
of the American Watercolor Society<lb/>
and in leading exhibitions over the<lb/>
United States, particularly in the<lb/>
New England and the Middle At-<lb/>
lantic States.<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
Are Awarded To<lb/>
Seven Freshmen<lb/>
Seven ECC freshmen are recipients<lb/>
of $500 scholarsbij s as a result of<lb/>
a fund of $14,000 being received by<lb/>
the college from an anonymous donor.<lb/>
One student from each of the seven<lb/>
larger counties in the First Congres-<lb/>
sional District?Pitt. Beaufort, Mar-<lb/>
tin, Hertford, Washington, Chowan,<lb/>
and Pasquotank?have received a<lb/>
scholarship of $500 effective this<lb/>
quarter. If the student maintains a<lb/>
satisfactory record in academic work,<lb/>
a like amount will be awarded each<lb/>
year until the recipient completes the<lb/>
four-year college course.<lb/>
In each county a committee made<lb/>
up of the superintendent of schools<lb/>
and two other members selected the<lb/>
igh school graduate to be given the<lb/>
award this fall. Criteria included the<lb/>
student's academic standing in the<lb/>
upper third of the graduating class<lb/>
and need of financial assistance in<lb/>
getting ?n education.<lb/>
Those from the seven counties to<lb/>
whom scholarships have been award-<lb/>
ed are: Pitt, Janie Stancill Rollins,<lb/>
Bethel; Beaufort, Frances Ruth Da-<lb/>
vis, Pantego; Martin. Mollie Marie<lb/>
ttiggs, Williams ton; Hertford, Eliza-<lb/>
oeth Ann Taylor, Como; Washing-<lb/>
ton, Lois Jacquin Harrison, Plymouth;<lb/>
Chowan, Leigh Dobson, Edenton; and<lb/>
Pasquotank, Patricia Ann White,<lb/>
Elizabeth City.<lb/>
Of Trustees<lb/>
J. Herbert Waldrop, executive vice<lb/>
president of the Guaranty Bank and<lb/>
Trust Co Greenville, was recently<lb/>
appointed for a six-year term of of-<lb/>
fice as a member of the Board of<lb/>
Trustees of East Carolina College by<lb/>
Governor Luther H. Hodges. He re-<lb/>
places Mis. B. T. Wihiams of Sted-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Reappointed by Governor Hodges<lb/>
u tin Board ut "ruste s, also for six-<lb/>
year terms are Henry Belk of Golds-<lb/>
boro, journalist and editor; E. E.<lb/>
me businessman; and<lb/>
Jr of Warrenton,<lb/>
Raw), Greenvil<lb/>
W. W. Taylor,<lb/>
attorney.<lb/>
Mr. Rawl i- serving at present as<lb/>
chairman of the Budget-Building<lb/>
"ominittee of the Board and as a<lb/>
member of the Scholarship Founda-<lb/>
ii ns Committee. Mr. Belk is a mem-<lb/>
ber of the Executive Committee; and<lb/>
Mr. Taylor of the Budget-Building<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Other members now serving on the<lb/>
East ' aroiina Board are Arthur L.<lb/>
rylei u Rocky Mount, chairman;<lb/>
Di Charles Carroll of Raleigh, state<lb/>
superintendent of public instruction;<lb/>
ftal Hodges, Washington; I. H.<lb/>
O'Hanlon, Fayetteville; Judge Luther<lb/>
Hamilton, Morehead City; Fred Wil-<lb/>
letts, Wilmington; Charles H. Lar-<lb/>
kins. Kinston; N. Elton Ayd!ett,<lb/>
Elizabeth City; and Mrs. W. B. Urn-<lb/>
steal. Durham.<lb/>
ID Card Project<lb/>
Near Completion<lb/>
Dennis Announces<lb/>
About 1500 uppWelassmen have<lb/>
their new type ID cards, and pictures<lb/>
for 1489 more, including freshmen,<lb/>
have been taken since fall registra-<lb/>
tion, according to rVidie Dennis,<lb/>
chairman o the committee working<lb/>
on t , ID cards. This leaves about<lb/>
'00 to 350 more to be eon leted.<lb/>
Students who did not have their<lb/>
etutea for ID cards made before<lb/>
he dea lline and those who must<lb/>
. ve retakes may have them made<lb/>
it the Messick-Henry Studio, located<lb/>
lowntown above the College Shop.<lb/>
tudent should clear with tfne SGA<lb/>
sffice fore having pictures taken.<lb/>
Jetakes ill be free, but new pic-<lb/>
tures will have a charge of $2.00.<lb/>
The ID cards will be distributed in<lb/>
.he College Union on two dates to be<lb/>
announced later over the public ad-<lb/>
dress system. After that they can be j<lb/>
. tained at the BGA office.<lb/>
Dennis gave a great deal of credit<lb/>
to Mike Katsias, who headed, the<lb/>
committee for tfoe actual picture<lb/>
taking and pater work, and the girls<lb/>
who assisted him on the committee.<lb/>
ohanna Leeuenburg, Janet Hodges,<lb/>
Bd Lillian Cohen helped recruit<lb/>
girls from their respective dormitor-<lb/>
ies to serve as assistants during the<lb/>
week in which the pictures for the ID<lb/>
cards were taken.<lb/>
The need for identification cards<lb/>
t at could not be transferrei arose<lb/>
because of the fact that many out-<lb/>
siders have been using student iden-<lb/>
tification to gain admittance to Col-<lb/>
ege functions. Dennis stated that he<lb/>
eh if competent ticket checkers<lb/>
were placed on doors an increase in<lb/>
gate receipts will be noticed. Also<lb/>
the new cards would alleviate card-<lb/>
. wav ping,<lb/>
The student response to the new<lb/>
ID cards has been good, according to<lb/>
Dennis, with the only objection being<lb/>
the long waiting lines when pictures<lb/>
were taken. However, the rush will<lb/>
not be as bad in the following years,<lb/>
is the I) cards are made for the<lb/>
entire four years a student is enrol-<lb/>
d at East Carolina College. He ad-<lb/>
ded that he felt there is still room for<lb/>
uprovement, but there has been a<lb/>
ig step forward from what we have<lb/>
had in the years past.<lb/>
Both Dennis and Katsias said they<lb/>
considered the ID cards as good or<lb/>
? tter than those of any school In<lb/>
he state with which they are famil-<lb/>
???. Katsias stressed also that it was<lb/>
a student inspired project that gained<lb/>
the administration's approval and be-<lb/>
came a reality through student ef-<lb/>
II! I 1 C EXPRESS?This is the advertising section of the Atlantic Coastline paHsenger train that carried about<lb/>
.T.0 meft) making students to Portsmouth, Va. last weekend to see the EC-Richmond football game.<lb/>
Participation In Teacher Education Work<lb/>
Brings National Recognition To College<lb/>
East Carolina College's partici-<lb/>
pation in the nation-wide Teacher<lb/>
Education and Religion Project sPon-<lb/>
sored by the American Association of<lb/>
Colleges for Teacher Education re-<lb/>
ceives favorable attention in the<lb/>
Durham Receives Music<lb/>
Degree From Eastman<lb/>
W. Edmund Durham, faculty mem-<lb/>
ber of the department of music at<lb/>
East Carolina College, has received<lb/>
from the Eastman School of Music,<lb/>
Rochester, N. Y the degree of doc-<lb/>
tor of philosophy. In his work for the<lb/>
degree, Dr. Durham specialized in<lb/>
the works of the composer Mozart.<lb/>
A native of Kentucky, he joined the<lb/>
East Carolina faculty in 1950 and as<lb/>
a staff member of the department of<lb/>
music has taught theory and other<lb/>
courses. He is a graduate of Berea<lb/>
College in Kentucky and of the Uni-<lb/>
versity o! Oklahoma.<lb/>
Before coming to East Carolina, Dr.<lb/>
Durham taught at Shurtleff College<lb/>
;n Illinois, Simpson College in In-<lb/>
diana, and Northwestern State Col-<lb/>
lege in Louisiana.<lb/>
quarterly "News" published by the<lb/>
association, Vol. Ill, N'os. 9 and 10.<lb/>
The entire eigl t-page issue is de-<lb/>
moted to studies and activities con-<lb/>
ducted at the college during almost<lb/>
four yearg of work on the project.<lb/>
The cuiier issue of the "News" is<lb/>
now being distributed throughout this<lb/>
country.<lb/>
President John D. Messick and<lb/>
Vice-President Leo W. Jenkins, chair-<lb/>
man of the project committee, con-<lb/>
tributed introductory discussions deal-<lb/>
ng with the objectives and the bene-<lb/>
fits lerived on the campus from the<lb/>
study and its implementation on the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Other articles, written by members<lb/>
of the Committee on Teacher Edu-<lb/>
catioi and Religion on the campus<lb/>
here and other faculty members, dei<lb/>
with ways and means of teaching the<lb/>
reciprocal relationships bet.vttn re-<lb/>
n and such areas as literature,<lb/>
tistory, ths arts, science, geogro<lb/>
and vconomics.<lb/>
A uthor-committee member<lb/>
tured i n the front page of the "New -<lb/>
are Dr. Jenkins, Dr. Bessie McNt<lb/>
the home economics department; Dr.<lb/>
Edgar W. Hirshberg of the En.j<lb/>
department; J. O. Derrick of<lb/>
ce depaitment; Dr. W. E. Mar-<lb/>
shall of t- e social studies depart-<lb/>
ment; Dr. N. M. Jorgensen of the<lb/>
health and physical education depart-<lb/>
ment; and Dr. John B. Bennett, co-<lb/>
nator of religious activities.<lb/>
Other contributors include Dr. We -<lb/>
ton B. Gray of the art depart-<lb/>
?. Dr. Kenneth N. Cuthbert of<lb/>
the music department. Dr. R. E. Cra-<lb/>
mer of the geography department,<lb/>
and Dr. P. A. Toll of the social stu-<lb/>
dies d j ai tment.<lb/>
I STAUFFEITS JEWELERS :<lb/>
t YOUR BULOVA, HAMILTON. ELGIN, MILK) WATCH I<lb/>
t and DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS :<lb/>
 38 Years in Greenville I<lb/>
 I<lb/>
 ????????????????????????????????I.<lb/>
MORE PEOPLE DRIVE CHEVROtETS THAN ANY OTHER CAR<lb/>
All students who plan to com-<lb/>
plete their work by the end of<lb/>
the spring quarter and who have<lb/>
not applied for graduation are<lb/>
reminded by Dr. Orval L. Phil-<lb/>
lips, Registrar, that the diplomas<lb/>
will be ordered on January 18,<lb/>
1957. This is very important, as<lb/>
each year a few students do not<lb/>
make applications in time to re-<lb/>
ceive their diplomas.<lb/>
WELCOMES YOU<lb/>
BACK TO E. C. C.<lb/>
We also invite you to come in to see all<lb/>
of our new fall merchandise<lb/>
CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED<lb/>
The College Shop The College Shop<lb/>
222 E. 5th St. Durham, N. C.<lb/>
New Chevrolet Bel Air Sport Coupe with spunk to sparel<lb/>
Great to have-and only Chevy's yot em !<lb/>
Chevrolet's the only leading<lb/>
low-priced car with any of<lb/>
these advances ? the only car<lb/>
at any price with all of them!<lb/>
BODY BY FISHER. You get more<lb/>
to be proud of in Chevrolet. No<lb/>
other low-priced car is quite so<lb/>
beautifully or substantially built<lb/>
down to the last detail.<lb/>
SHORTEST STROKE V8. This<lb/>
helps explain Chevrolet's smooth<lb/>
and lively V8 ways. Short-stroke<lb/>
design also means less piston<lb/>
travel, longer engine life. Here's<lb/>
super-efficient power with plenty<lb/>
of vim and vigor!<lb/>
STANDARD BALL-RACE STEER.<lb/>
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POSITRACTION REAR AXLE.<lb/>
When one rear wheel slips in mud<lb/>
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TRIPLE.TURBINE TURBO-<lb/>
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one gentle stream of motion,<lb/>
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P.S. Chevy's got the big "details<lb/>
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GET A WINNING DEAL ON A<lb/>
NEW CHEVY-THE GETTINGS<lb/>
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Only franchised Chevrolet dealers<lb/>
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