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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038607_0001"/>
<lb/>
o Sports Pages<lb/>
i.  .tndinian carries two sports<lb/>
ot1a tm complete coverage of<lb/>
(til. Ill <lb/>
EastCarolinia<lb/>
Volum-<lb/>
 I <lb/>
Fast Carolina Coj 1 e jre<lb/>
UKKN IU.eTn. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1958<lb/>
Student Opinions<lb/>
Read page two for student reflections,<lb/>
comments of ECC and the<lb/>
Number 1<lb/>
fcgley Proposes<lb/>
Resolution On<lb/>
Soci ! Sororities<lb/>
East Carolinian Executive Staff<lb/>
t4Vfiti<lb/>
ed in<lb/>
Bgh<lb/>
B4<lb/>
cniti<lb/>
in !<lb/>
ttUfth<lb/>
ley<lb/>
nter<lb/>
inter<lb/>
"Nil<lb/>
the <lb/>
torit<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
stn<lb/>
r<lb/>
to <lb/>
It<lb/>
dew<lb/>
eon<lb/>
Lit<lb/>
w<lb/>
It<lb/>
wo<lb/>
of<lb/>
.<lb/>
in<lb/>
ait<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
OH<lb/>
i<lb/>
tr<lb/>
lu<lb/>
w<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
w<lb/>
ll<lb/>
I)<lb/>
1:<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
Si iatoi i inn ge<lb/>
 ivoi ing locial<lb/>
v  n rt lj paaa<lb/>
Mi id i) night Mi<lb/>
i nt of PhM<lb/>
 I smbda<lb/>
called<lb/>
ititi i tad<lb/>
brought<lb/>
l .i i. . Kag-<lb/>
.( definite<lb/>
Stated he,<lb/>
i ' ions<lb/>
. i i student<lb/>
.1  . would ;<lb/>
ina bettei<lb/>
the conventions<lb/>
 .   With the Mh<lb/>
Homecomng<lb/>
and better<lb/>
parade kt t r a -<lb/>
scholastic<lb/>
m mbera ; ave<lb/>
01 H C! : thei eby<lb/>
i Hid be a benefit<lb/>
Bagb "s<lb/>
D Ver, he piesi<lb/>
 , and ailed the<lb/>
i idiculous ev r to<lb/>
Si nate ur Student<lb/>
at sororities<lb/>
in the 'in-<lb/>
I 0 at they<lb/>
i eeloj ment<lb/>
he called<lb/>
apabb of i art"<lb/>
at rylng<lb/>
Gloria Hof<lb/>
u u spoke the<lb/>
.  girls<lb/>
Katsias Overrules(!aiKfcter<lb/>
Opposition To Budget Plan<lb/>
Kathryn Johnson, Bill) Arnold,<lb/>
publication oi new spa pier this<lb/>
Hid ttod<lb/>
lohnn) Hudson, and ttoh Harper will lead<lb/>
Not pictured are Martha Martin and<lb/>
 ear<lb/>
Editor Johnson Names "58<lb/>
Newspaper Executive Stall'<lb/>
Kathryn Johnson, 1968 lUBU editoi iranc<lb/>
of the Ii  aiolinian,   n lea i d<lb/>
the named of the   cutiv - tafl foi ' Reb !<lb/>
 otuj nit tan m<lb/>
! I<lb/>
resg<lb/>
v eek.<lb/>
nine how<lb/>
tuallj intei.<lb/>
, i-aa choten<lb/>
. h Iks the :<lb/>
Prom the<lb/>
v ii h the girls<lb/>
uren pli ki d to form<lb/>
Marty Kel-<lb/>
Butler, Connie<lb/>
 i Jeanatte<lb/>
 nt Mike Kat<lb/>
; d the matting,<lb/>
t pportunity as<lb/>
, at sororletii  at<lb/>
cncei ned; tile StiA<lb/>
va IfKKi "<lb/>
this v. ur Ml are<lb/>
!  and hat alleadj<lb/>
trw ir dutii<lb/>
Bil Arnold is i <lb/>
ned<lb/>
to li -<lb/>
Marl<lb/>
us i i.i<lb/>
H i laon<lb/>
 ii<lb/>
rieli<lb/>
Vii"i'l lie I ued dev<lb/>
 w hii h ia 'he<lb/>
in :it Kt C. I!<lb/>
,i i toon is)<lb/>
.i  fifth ' <lb/>
of The lail Rcflecto<lb/>
daily new panel.<lb/>
w rit<lb/>
Iped<lb/>
;i !nl<lb/>
By BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
Pre ideut of the Ettt Carolina<lb/>
Stud nt Covernment Association, Mike<lb/>
Katsias broke a deadlock 12-12 senate<lb/>
vote Monday night to give approval<lb/>
to the 1158 appropriations handed<lb/>
down by the Budget Committee.<lb/>
Appropriations suggested by the<lb/>
Budget Committeewhich offered<lb/>
a drastic cut in finances for the most<lb/>
of the organisations involved<lb/>
were violently opposed by several<lb/>
kbeakers, both from the senate floor<lb/>
ind from the gallery. A discussion<lb/>
for and against raged in the Library<lb/>
Auditorium for over 30 minutes.<lb/>
President Katsias interrupted the<lb/>
.ii .ussion and called down the speak-<lb/>
ers, demanding a vote be taken on<lb/>
 resolution to accept the Budget<lb/>
'onimittees suggested appropria-<lb/>
ions.<lb/>
The vote ended in 12 to 12 dead-<lb/>
lock, forcing Katsias to cast the de-<lb/>
ciding vote Said Katsias: "This 12<lb/>
to 1- deadlock is a qorum and it<lb/>
ooks like 1 have to decide the matter.<lb/>
Bi tore I vote 1 would like to say<lb/>
thai I think the Budget Committee<lb/>
ha ioiie a good job in setting up<lb/>
these appropriations. I vote in favor<lb/>
of the resolution<lb/>
Katsias' vote ended the bitterest<lb/>
truggre over budget appropriations<lb/>
to take place in the East Carolina<lb/>
Student Government in many years.<lb/>
Disatisfied<lb/>
Speaking against the acceptance<lb/>
Last of the Budget Committee's advised<lb/>
! the appropriations, were representatives<lb/>
itermry from the DOC Productions Com-<lb/>
aiso a<lb/>
tmnist<lb/>
(Ii een<lb/>
mittee, THE REBEL, campus lit-<lb/>
erary magazine, and the Senior Class<lb/>
In defense of the measure were mem<lb/>
b. rs of the Budget Committee and<lb/>
representatives of the Playhouse.<lb/>
The objections were raised mainly<lb/>
against appropriations concerning<lb/>
individual organizations.<lb/>
Don Griffin, representing the Pro-<lb/>
ductions Committee, complained that<lb/>
"Productions cannot be presented on<lb/>
this amount of money to compare<lb/>
with those which East Carolina has<lb/>
been proud of in the past. The best<lb/>
asked Griffin why so much money is<lb/>
ne (itil. "Why cant we use some of<lb/>
the equipment we already have?"<lb/>
Griffin -aid, "We're still using<lb/>
some of the stuff we used when the<lb/>
Production Committee was first form-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Bryan Haiion, Editor of THE<lb/>
RREBEL, not a member of the Senate-<lb/>
was also permitted to voice his obj-<lb/>
ections. He commented that "Last<lb/>
year, when the magazine was first<lb/>
formed, the SGA requested that we<lb/>
publish four issues per year. Now, we<lb/>
Coy<lb/>
raised<lb/>
senior<lb/>
only<lb/>
Harris, of the Senior Class,<lb/>
the question as to why the<lb/>
class was appropriated<lb/>
$75 this year, with which to<lb/>
production ever given here by the 1 av been given just enough money<lb/>
Production Committee was probably to publish two issues. The magazine<lb/>
OKLAHOMA a few years ago. It is a creative and worthwhile project<lb/>
cost over $1,600 to produce that one.<lb/>
now you are asking ua to do a good<lb/>
job on $1,200<lb/>
"It takes money to put on a pro<lb/>
duction which the school can be proud<lb/>
of he further commented.<lb/>
Bubba Driver, of the Playhouse,<lb/>
for the students of the school.<lb/>
"With this" amount of money we will<lb/>
have difficulty putting out two issues<lb/>
and we won't even be able to mail<lb/>
ou1 the magazines to the people who<lb/>
should get them, who are interested<lb/>
in the intellectual doings here<lb/>
Betty Lane Evans<lb/>
i<lb/>
OI<lb/>
Martin has t.tki :<lb/>
stall a i manager,<lb/>
and Bill Boyd are sharing<lb/>
tment.<lb/>
Returning to po: aff, pho-<lb/>
 ai ei will hi Bob llai er. An<lb/>
experi need photographer, Harpei<lb/>
worked with ;k reconnoissanca outfit<lb/>
II. began working the newspaper<lb/>
here last year when he also wrote <lb/>
  1 lei o, e Boh w ill also  ub<lb/>
mil si vi i al columns this year.<lb/>
This will mark Billj Arnold's fifth<lb/>
veai on th itaff, He s rved fov three<lb/>
years as snorts editor and was man-<lb/>
aging editor- for the majority  last<lb/>
Alth.uii- M<lb/>
I Ml ol.d<lb/>
Mai Lvn i start ing<lb/>
v  otUI e.i . l t i tile :il '<lb/>
shi has also hed a great dtal of<lb/>
iswspaper experience. During h r<lb/>
freshman year sh served as assist-<lb/>
ant i ditor and  set ned s editor<lb/>
this past summer, Aside from these<lb/>
responsibilities Mart'a has helped<lb/>
in circulation and makeup editing.<lb/>
Johnn<lb/>
orts -i<lb/>
Id<lb/>
,<lb/>
!<lb/>
all<lb/>
li<lb/>
Arnold, who hails from Greenville,<lb/>
ha? h en ipiite active i<lb/>
othi i<lb/>
make up<lb/>
hat 'in ed as<lb/>
I ; (Carolinian<lb/>
Spoi t - Publicity<lb/>
allege, lu- the<lb/>
has been ECC'a<lb/>
port correspond nt with the Raleigh<lb/>
and Observe Mi. Hudson is<lb/>
present i ir t of the SGA<lb/>
lid during the summer BeS. ion he<lb/>
i i ed Bi Pit ' idellt<lb/>
21<lb/>
Pictures for the 1959 yearbook,<lb/>
THE BUCCANEER, are being made<lb/>
Monday thresgh Friday from 9:00<lb/>
to 12:00 and 1.00 to 5:00 in upstairs<lb/>
Wright. Appointments can be made<lb/>
on the College Union bulletin board.<lb/>
Anyone who has not filled out<lb/>
completely and accurately a cam-<lb/>
pus directory information card<lb/>
must come by the College Union<lb/>
office and do so imtr i'diately.<lb/>
I also student<lb/>
"CtOl of the<lb/>
; two ear.s h<lb/>
Pirate Mascot Honored This Weekend<lb/>
r<lb/>
month old Great weighs between 75<lb/>
arrival August but at maturity<lb/>
 in the weigh about lSu<lb/>
I (allege. He<lb/>
I project by<lb/>
BOA under the<lb/>
 .lohnn Hudson.<lb/>
that the (ireat<lb/>
 a mascot is be-<lb/>
I mho) of speed and<lb/>
h will symbolize<lb/>
i . a tide ties.<lb/>
9?ho ollie- fl 0m a long<lb/>
. champions, baa as<lb/>
I . di !t. title " Traw<lb/>
 King At the<lb/>
months. "Hue" now<lb/>
and SO pounds,<lb/>
he will prohablj<lb/>
pound and stand<lb/>
about ( Inches in height.<lb/>
At present oar mascot u living on<lb/>
the athletic field, in a BOUSi luiilt by<lb/>
the Maintenance Department, and in<lb/>
 pen bu.lt by Mr George Cherry of<lb/>
Paetolus, N C. Hughes Giles, who has<lb/>
hod iievious experience in the ban<lb/>
dling of dogs, has volunteered to bo<lb/>
in charge of "Buc<lb/>
Mr. Paul Julian of the cafeteria<lb/>
hat agreed to feed "Bin and at<lb/>
present SGA officials are negotiat<lb/>
ing with Red Heart and Purina dug<lb/>
food companies in an effort to get<lb/>
t  m tii feed<lb/>
An emeiit<lb/>
hi return for en<lb/>
their products, It Is<lb/>
the hope of SGA official! that vari<lb/>
Xappa Alpha Goes<lb/>
National Today;<lb/>
Drake To Be Host<lb/>
i-resm either a dance for the whole<lb/>
school or a present, while the Fresh-<lb/>
men Soi.hmore Senior Dance Com-<lb/>
mittee was. appropriated $760 for a<lb/>
dance which "won't be for the benefit<lb/>
of the whole 3chool.<lb/>
"With $75 Harris said, "What<lb/>
can you doYou can't buy a present<lb/>
or give a dance either<lb/>
"Confidential"<lb/>
One of the objectors raised the<lb/>
question of how the Budget Com-<lb/>
mittee arrived at its proposed appro-<lb/>
priation.s and why certain organiza-<lb/>
tions were given shSBper financial cuts<lb/>
than others.<lb/>
Dean James H. Tuck r, Advisor to<lb/>
the Budget Committee, replied, "I<lb/>
don't think we need to state reasons<lb/>
for our findings. The workings of the<lb/>
Budget Committee are confidential<lb/>
The apropriations are as follows:<lb/>
East Carolinian$8,000.<lb/>
The Buccaneer$22,500<lb/>
The Rebel$1,500<lb/>
Cheerleadi rs$175.<lb/>
Playhouse$2,500.<lb/>
Band$800.<lb/>
Inter-Religious Council$600.<lb/>
Intermursl Sports Piograni$1,200<lb/>
Jr. Class$800<lb/>
SGA$9,285.<lb/>
YM-GA$200.<lb/>
"Y" Hut stove, utensil-$250.<lb/>
YWCA$250.<lb/>
Sr. Class$75.<lb/>
ACE$125.<lb/>
SNEA96.50.<lb/>
O; era Theater$200.<lb/>
.Phi Mu Alphaomitted.<lb/>
East Carolina College Orchestra<lb/>
tabled.<lb/>
Production Committee$1,200.<lb/>
Entertainment Committee $8,000<lb/>
Photo by Bob Harper<lb/>
Miss North Carolina<lb/>
t<lb/>
out organisation on campus<lb/>
i onl i ibute to hi wardrobe<lb/>
The<lb/>
game<lb/>
will<lb/>
September 7 home football<lb/>
 aim t Guilford, has been<lb/>
nated as "I'm, Night and<lb/>
I uh nt John 1 Messick will be<lb/>
present to preside over half time<lb/>
 ities, "Thus far "Buc" has I<lb/>
good disposition and wlun he is a<lb/>
little older he may bi- allowed to<lb/>
run loose oi campus part of the<lb/>
time stated past SOA president<lb/>
Hudson.<lb/>
To Enroll At East Carolina<lb/>
"Buc' East Carolina's new<lb/>
Clint LeGette<lb/>
mascot is pictured wtth two who led the move to acquire him, Johnny Hudson ai<lb/>
Procedinga began today to install<lb/>
local fraternity Sigma Rho Phi as<lb/>
Camma Rho, the 83rd chapter of the<lb/>
Ka'i pa Alpha Order, a national col-<lb/>
lege niidei graduate social fraternity.<lb/>
National uui regional officers of<lb/>
the Kappa Alpha Order, as well as<lb/>
undergraduate members of other<lb/>
North Carolina chapters converged on<lb/>
the BCC campus this morning for the<lb/>
n tallation which will last through<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Sigma Rho Phi came into existence<lb/>
a service fraternity at East Caro-<lb/>
lina in 1951. It became a social fra-<lb/>
ternity in 1956. When the school's<lb/>
Hoard of Trustees approved the es-<lb/>
tablishment of national fraternities<lb/>
on campus last year, Sigma Rho Phi<lb/>
petitioned for a KA charter.<lb/>
The Order granted the charter in<lb/>
Maj of this year. At the present time<lb/>
there aie 30 active members. Edward<lb/>
C. Stone, Hi, of Durnam, is presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
T e Kappa Alpha Order, founded<lb/>
at Washington College, now Wash-<lb/>
ington and Lee University, in 1865,<lb/>
ledicated to perpetuating the best<lb/>
ideals of chivalry and gentility as<lb/>
manifested in the person of Robert E.<lb/>
Lee, who was president of Washing-<lb/>
ton College at the founding of the<lb/>
Older.<lb/>
Tie Greenville KA alumni chapter,<lb/>
under its President, the Reverend John<lb/>
W. Drake, Jr will act as host to the<lb/>
visitors. Dr. Frank L. Hoskins, of the<lb/>
English Faculty here, is Secretary<lb/>
oi the local chapter.<lb/>
Activities in the installation began<lb/>
ffcia afternoon at 2:00 with the initia-<lb/>
tion practice at Jsrvis Memorial<lb/>
Methodist Church. The First Degree<lb/>
Initiation team, furnished by N. C.<lb/>
State College, handled the practice.<lb/>
The team was made up of GeoTgc<lb/>
Howard, Richard Harvey, and James<lb/>
Crutchfield.<lb/>
At 4:00, the First Degree initia-<lb/>
(Continued on pag 6)<lb/>
Betty Lane Evans, Miss North Carolina of 1958 and<lb/>
fourth runner-up in the recent Miss America Pageant, plans to<lb/>
enter East Carolina College next quarter.<lb/>
The pretty 18-year old Greenville product has indicated<lb/>
her plans to enter ECC several times during the past few months<lb/>
and told an EAST CAROLINIAN reporter recently that she<lb/>
hopes to enroll "this Winter quarter<lb/>
Betty Lane ha expressed an interest in enrolling in<lb/>
speech and music courses here in November.<lb/>
Among her awards and honors, Miss North Carolina won<lb/>
two scholarships and her pick of any University in the land.<lb/>
Her choic was East Carolina.<lb/>
In 1956, Miss North Carolina was another East Caro-<lb/>
lina girl, Joan Melton, from Albemarle.<lb/>
Seems like ECC has the marked cornered on pretty girls.<lb/>
Epsilon Mu Members<lb/>
Make Northern Tour<lb/>
Eight members of Epsilon Mu j<lb/>
Chapter of .Pi Kappa Alpha Fra- <lb/>
ttrnity embarked August 26th, on a<lb/>
tour which included Williamsburg,<lb/>
Virginia, and our nation's capitol.<lb/>
Tom Farlow, Roy Martin, Jeffer-<lb/>
son Strickland, Tom Jackson, Grady<lb/>
Austin, Don Knight, Ken Nielson,<lb/>
and Paul Davenport attended for<lb/>
three days their fraternity leader-<lb/>
ship school, in which they were sub-<lb/>
jected to skillful training in leader-<lb/>
ship, pledg. instruction, and fi-<lb/>
nances. The men focused their atten-<lb/>
tion on various lectures and discus-<lb/>
sions, involving ideal principals of<lb/>
fraternal life and its effects on cam-<lb/>
nus activities.<lb/>
Following the conclusion of the<lb/>
leadership school, the brothers re-<lb/>
sumed their travels in" the direction<lb/>
of Shoram Hotel in Washington,<lb/>
D. C, where the ninety-first conven<lb/>
tion of Pi Kappa Alpha was to com-<lb/>
mence Sunday, August 31st. From<lb/>
that day until September 3rd, the<lb/>
men were involved in business mat-<lb/>
ters, both serious and light. Their<lb/>
daylight hours were spent in dis-<lb/>
cussions of fraternity business mat-<lb/>
' i and at a memorial service at<lb/>
Arlington Cemetery, where the Pi<lb/>
Ka pa Alpha deceased were honored.<lb/>
Nighttime activities included sight-<lb/>
seeing, socials, and banquets, high-<lb/>
lighted by the National Dream Girl<lb/>
Ball, at which Martha Brannon of<lb/>
Presbyttrian College was crowned<lb/>
the fraternity's national dream girl.<lb/>
The Epsilon Mu Chapter at East<lb/>
Carolina became affiliated with the<lb/>
national Pi Kappa organization last<lb/>
Kay 17 The chapter officially re-<lb/>
ceived it charter at the national con-<lb/>
vention in Washington.<lb/>
The first of Erst Carolina's frater-<lb/>
nities to have an off-campus resi-<lb/>
d nee, Pi Kappa Alpha has leased<lb/>
the home located at 562 Cotanche<lb/>
Street in Greenville. Twenty of the<lb/>
members of the chapter are now liv-<lb/>
ing in the fraternity house, which<lb/>
has accommodations for thirty-six<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Kelly To Star<lb/>
In Playhouse<lb/>
Fall Production<lb/>
THE ADMIRABLE CHICHTON<lb/>
will be the Fall major production<lb/>
for the East Carolina Playhouse. A<lb/>
four act English comedy by J. M.<lb/>
Barrie, the play has an unusually<lb/>
largt cast oi' thirteen women and<lb/>
twelve men. When asked about the<lb/>
play, Playhouse president Pat Baker<lb/>
commented: "This is really a good<lb/>
play . . . one I think every student<lb/>
at EC will enjoy seeing. It is a<lb/>
satire on English high society, and<lb/>
situations svhich devlop really make<lb/>
for a good, laughable comedy Dr.<lb/>
J. A. Withey, Director of the Play-<lb/>
house, will direct t! e play, with Mr.<lb/>
Robert Rickert, new Associate Direc-<lb/>
or of the Playhoue, acting as tech-<lb/>
nical director.<lb/>
The stage managrr for the pro-<lb/>
duction is Dan Yanchison, who will<lb/>
be remembered for his technical work<lb/>
on such plays as THE TEAHOUSE<lb/>
OF THE AUGUST MOON, and<lb/>
HOUSE OF CONNELLY. Mary<lb/>
Margartt Kelly will design the seta,<lb/>
which will be built by Sylvia Ruston,<lb/>
sc nery chairman, and her stage<lb/>
crew. Other technicalities on the<lb/>
play will be handled by the follow-<lb/>
ing committee chairmen: costumes,<lb/>
Mai vis Edwards; makeup, Shirley<lb/>
Dixon; publicity, Jim Trice; lighting,<lb/>
Bill Faulkner; properties, Alice Anne<lb/>
Home.<lb/>
Readings for the play were held<lb/>
September 16 and 17. "Because of<lb/>
the size and quality of the cast, it<lb/>
was an extremely difficult job to<lb/>
assign the roles, and a number of<lb/>
those with minor roles are also hold-<lb/>
ing positions on the Technical Crew<lb/>
stated Miss Baker. However, more<lb/>
people are needed, and the Playhouse<lb/>
urges all those who may be inter-<lb/>
ested in working on plays to come<lb/>
over to the theatre and help.<lb/>
The cast for ADMIRABLE CRICH-<lb/>
TON was announced by Dr. Withey<lb/>
on September 18. It is as follows:<lb/>
Crichton, Merle Kelly; Ernest, Bill<lb/>
Haslip; Treherne, Charles Jenkins;<lb/>
Lord Brocklehurst, Tommy Reese;<lb/>
Earl of Loam, Larry Craven; and<lb/>
Lady Mary, Genia Trulove.<lb/>
Others are Tweeney, Leigh Dob-<lb/>
son; Lady Catherine, Doris Robblna;<lb/>
Lady Agatha, Gwen MoClamrock;<lb/>
Lady Brocklehust, Shiley Dixon;<lb/>
i Fisher, Aik Home.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038607_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 <lb/>
'<lb/>
Time To Reappraise<lb/>
Attempts by the NAACP and some out-<lb/>
standing personalities to "dignify" the Negro<lb/>
Race in American Literature and Theatre<lb/>
have reached idiotic proportions.<lb/>
There have been attempts to ban Mark<lb/>
Twain's immortal HUCKLEBERRY FINN<lb/>
because the term "nigger' is used in it; pro-<lb/>
ducers of the broadway show STATE OF<lb/>
THE UNION were forced to change certain<lb/>
dialogue which Negro objectors claimed was<lb/>
unkind to them. The dialogue which was<lb/>
changed was a single line which read: "Why,<lb/>
that's mighty white of you<lb/>
In other instances, the old-fashioned<lb/>
black-faced ministrel which used to be<lb/>
popular throughout the country has all but<lb/>
vanished for the same reasons. Many books<lb/>
and articles which poke fun at America have<lb/>
been put out of print because of dialect,<lb/>
phraseology, or implications which some feel<lb/>
portray the Negro in an unfavorable light.<lb/>
The most recent incident along this line<lb/>
took place several weeks ago when Negro<lb/>
songstress Pearl Bailey caused a disturb-<lb/>
ance on the movie set of Gershwin's PORGY<lb/>
AND BESS. Miss Bailey complained that<lb/>
dialogue spoken by several minor Negro per-<lb/>
formers was "Unnatural, undignified, and<lb/>
in bad taste<lb/>
At Miss Bailey's insistance, Producer<lb/>
Sam Goldwyn told the Negro performers to<lb/>
leave out anything they did not like.<lb/>
Granted, all precautions should be taken<lb/>
not to slander or belittle any race or group<lb/>
of people. White or Black, or any other<lb/>
coloi. minority or majority. Granted, too, cer-<lb/>
tair elements of Literature and Drama are<lb/>
not dignified and natural to all concerned.<lb/>
The above incidents bring to light some-<lb/>
thing which has been building up for some<lb/>
time in America. The supreme court's 1954<lb/>
decision, and the events which have followed.<lb/>
have served to fire up the American people<lb/>
over what was before a peaceful and improv-<lb/>
ing situation. Americans have long been<lb/>
noted for their habit of pulling for the un-<lb/>
derdog. Cries of Liberty, Freedom, Equality,<lb/>
Civil Rights, and Integration have been<lb/>
pumped into the American people at such a<lb/>
steady rate since the 1954ruling that the<lb/>
people are now bending over backwards to<lb/>
accommodate, to liberate, to be fair to the<lb/>
Oppressed.<lb/>
Spurred on by Moral indignation, a blind<lb/>
determination to be Fair at all costs, and<lb/>
Yankee newspapers, the American people<lb/>
have bent over backwards to show the world<lb/>
USA democracy.<lb/>
Such incidents as those above indicate<lb/>
that they have bent over too far.<lb/>
When people bend over too far they show<lb/>
their posterior.<lb/>
Freedom Of The Press<lb/>
To develope and serve its community<lb/>
and to cultivate freedom of expression in<lb/>
the community as its editors believe just<lb/>
and fitting within their individual concepts<lb/>
of newspaper ethics is the duty and aim of<lb/>
the student press. The aim cannot be fully<lb/>
achieved unless the press's independence from<lb/>
all forms of external interference of censor-<lb/>
ship is maintained inviolate and complete.<lb/>
Since 1925. when the first student news-<lb/>
paper was published here, this publication<lb/>
has had complete press freedom. Realizing<lb/>
that a free and vigorous press is essential<lb/>
to a democratic society, and that freedom of<lb/>
expression and debate is basic to the effective-<lb/>
ness of an educational community in a dem-<lb/>
ocratic society, our administration has never<lb/>
once censored, before or after publication<lb/>
any issue of the EAST CAROLINIAN.<lb/>
Though we may be chastised or scolded,<lb/>
neverless there has been no censorship.<lb/>
Being free to present articles conceal-<lb/>
ing controversial matters and to comment<lb/>
freely is a right not shared by all student pub-<lb/>
lications on other campuses. At some other<lb/>
schools a faculty member is required to read<lb/>
all copy before publication, while at others<lb/>
the paper must be read by some faculty<lb/>
member or administrator before circulation.<lb/>
We may be thankful that such cases are few<lb/>
in comparison with student publications ac-<lb/>
corded their full rights.<lb/>
On this campus we should be proud, even<lb/>
greatful, that our administration is not<lb/>
afraid to read what their students think or<lb/>
believe. Any student on this campus is free<lb/>
to express his views, whatever they may be,<lb/>
in this publication. May we always guard<lb/>
jealously this right. May we honor the trust<lb/>
and faith placed in us. And always exercise<lb/>
the rights and responsibilities of editor with<lb/>
full regard for accepted standards of good<lb/>
journalism and with regard for the well-be-<lb/>
ing of every part of this college community<lb/>
and the students.<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1962.<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Intercollegiate Press<lb/>
North State Conference Press Association<lb/>
Enter as second-class matter December 3, 1926 at<lb/>
the U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under<lb/>
the act of March 8, 1879.<lb/>
Kathryn Johnson<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Marti Martin<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Co-Sports Editors<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
Billy Arnold<lb/>
 Johnny HucUon, Bill Boyd<lb/>
Boh Harper<lb/>
OFFICES n the second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, 6101, extension 84<lb/>
Editorially<lb/>
Speaking<lb/>
By KATHRYN JOHNSON<lb/>
Well, back to the old grind again<lb/>
and climbing up a flight of forty-<lb/>
four steps about twenty times a day.<lb/>
We are hoping to be in our new head-<lb/>
quart rs downstairs in Wright Build-<lb/>
ing by Christmas . . . hoping and<lb/>
praying.<lb/>
S. G. A. president Mike Katsias,<lb/>
treasurer Johnny Hudson, presiden-<lb/>
tial assistant Clint LeGette, Dean<lb/>
Tucker, and I returned from the<lb/>
United States National Student As-<lb/>
sociation Congress just in time for<lb/>
the opening of school. Prior to the<lb/>
Congress, President Mike attended<lb/>
the Student Body Presidents' Con-<lb/>
ference, Dean Tucker attended the<lb/>
Deans' Conference, while I was at<lb/>
the Editorial Affairs Conference.<lb/>
The entire Congress, which took<lb/>
place at Ohio Wesleyan University,<lb/>
made up of over a thousand students<lb/>
from colleges and universities all<lb/>
over the U. S plus a number of<lb/>
foreign students, who stood just<lb/>
about solidly for forced integration.<lb/>
The only students to stand up on the<lb/>
plenary floor and speak against<lb/>
forced integration were Fred Le-<lb/>
Cleuq, president of the SGA at the<lb/>
University of South Carolina, and<lb/>
his brilliant colleague Mike Osborn.<lb/>
Mr. LeCleuq, who was complimented<lb/>
time and time again by the Yankees<lb/>
for his gentlemanliness, sincerness,<lb/>
the level-headedness, stated that it<lb/>
was his firm belief that education<lb/>
was within the exclusive jurisdiction<lb/>
of state government, since it is not<lb/>
otherwise mentioned in the Constitu-<lb/>
tion and he presented a resolution to<lb/>
this effect. Some people more or less<lb/>
made fun of his resoluion, until<lb/>
Riordan Roett of Columbia College,<lb/>
N. Y an integrationist, spoke for<lb/>
t!e resolution, because he believed<lb/>
tne gentleman from S. C. was sin-<lb/>
cere . . . that his message had a sound<lb/>
of desperation in it, as it truly did.<lb/>
Roett insisted that for on to have<lb/>
such a feeling of desperation, surely<lb/>
there must be more to the problem<lb/>
than they realised.<lb/>
The most sincere person to speak<lb/>
against the resolution for segrega-<lb/>
tion and for integration was Don<lb/>
Furtado, president of the SGA Uni-<lb/>
versity of North CaroHna. Incidently,<lb/>
every representation from "TheHill"<lb/>
was solidly for integration. Of course<lb/>
the resolution was voted down but<lb/>
you better believe it was not unani-<lb/>
mous  I didn't turn quick enough<lb/>
to count them all but I counted at<lb/>
least five for it.<lb/>
I compliment Mr. LeCleuq for one<lb/>
thing even if he only got a mere<lb/>
fistful of voteshis courage. Stand-<lb/>
ing up to over a 1000 students who<lb/>
staunchly oppose you and telling<lb/>
them just what you believe is not<lb/>
an easy thing. Fred was "accused" of<lb/>
speaking like and using tactics akin<lb/>
to those of S.Cs John C. Calhoun.<lb/>
W 11 Calhoun would have been proud<lb/>
. . . Fred is one sharp politician.<lb/>
The boys have their fraternities;<lb/>
the girls want sororities. This cam-<lb/>
pus is growing steadily. Its large<lb/>
enough now for both sororities and<lb/>
fraternities. It is not just a little<lb/>
teachers college any more. Guess who<lb/>
thinks it still is?<lb/>
I say again this college is grow-<lb/>
ing . . . physically it has been grow-<lb/>
ing, expanding, and spreading out<lb/>
more and more. Now I think it's<lb/>
time for the students to grow men-<lb/>
tally a little more and catch up with<lb/>
all the buildings that are sprouting<lb/>
so fast. I'll be back on my soap box<lb/>
this year campaigning for better<lb/>
3poken English" again, raised scho-<lb/>
lastic standards, more learning<lb/>
courses for teachers in comparison<lb/>
to learning to teach courses, and an<lb/>
art appreciation course to help us real-<lb/>
ly learn to appreciate art. When a<lb/>
boy in one of my classes stood up and<lb/>
said to the group, "If you wus going<lb/>
to do this way instead of the way<lb/>
I've did it . . .  that made me mad<lb/>
about this English thing all over<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Everyone has been moaning and<lb/>
groaning about the good teachers<lb/>
we've lost, but just look around at<lb/>
the good ones we've gained. Dr. Bruce<lb/>
Jones (an ECC graduate incidental-<lb/>
ly) in the Education Dept and Dr.<lb/>
Carter in the Art Dept. are two<lb/>
men so interested in their work,<lb/>
that it's actually a joy, possibly a<lb/>
privilege, to be in cither of their<lb/>
classes. Thinking over the rostnm of<lb/>
the teachers here, we're lucky to have<lb/>
the fine profs we have.<lb/>
Does everyone know that out of all<lb/>
the schools in the world eh could<lb/>
attend free, Miss North Carolina<lb/>
chose East CaroHna? She hopes to<lb/>
begin courses her this spring if bar<lb/>
schedule permits. Her boy friend,<lb/>
Lawrence Perkins is enrolled here.<lb/>
Lucky boy! This is the second beau<lb/>
of a Miss N.C. that we've had on<lb/>
campus in three years.<lb/>
Cussin n' Discussin'<lb/>
Telescope<lb/>
Panty Raid, Sophomore Made, And Van Gogh<lb/>
"Freshmen! Freshmen! Freshmenl<lb/>
and I can't get a drop to drink<lb/>
This statement was made by an up-<lb/>
per classman who could not get<lb/>
waited on in the soda shop. The upper<lb/>
classman further stated: "If we<lb/>
could get ail freshmen to participate<lb/>
in a panty raid maybe half of them<lb/>
would be expelled. Then we could<lb/>
get waited on and drink our coffe<lb/>
in peace<lb/>
? <lb/>
We do have fourteen hundred new<lb/>
students moving around on campus<lb/>
from" class to class; from College<lb/>
Union to post office; from dormitory<lb/>
to the closest beer joint. . . .<lb/>
 <lb/>
Fourteen hundred students! That's<lb/>
a right good size number of new<lb/>
brothers and sisters to be rubbing<lb/>
elbows with. Assuming they all have<lb/>
a brain weighing the average three<lb/>
pounds each, we have a total of four<lb/>
thousand, two hundred pounds of<lb/>
new brains on campus.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Further assuming that each of<lb/>
these new students has twenty fin-<lb/>
gers and toes, we have a total of<lb/>
By BOB HARPER<lb/>
28,000 new fingers and toes on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
  <lb/>
I overheard one upper classman ex-<lb/>
plaining to wide-eyed freshman coed<lb/>
that he could make her a sophomore<lb/>
over night.<lb/>
  e <lb/>
Another upper classman was try-<lb/>
ing to sell his English II book to a<lb/>
freshman. "Buddy, you buy this book<lb/>
from me and I'll guarantee you a<lb/>
'one' on the course The book was<lb/>
sold for fifty cents above retail.<lb/>
  <lb/>
For those who haven't learned the<lb/>
trick of the trade, I offer ten of my<lb/>
top economical suggestions:<lb/>
1. Fill your fountain pen up at<lb/>
the post office.<lb/>
2. Don't date but once a quarter.<lb/>
3. Borrow all text books from<lb/>
your friends.<lb/>
4. Search trash cans for cigarette<lb/>
butt3 (after midnight of<lb/>
course).<lb/>
5. Rub two rocks together to<lb/>
avoid buying matches.<lb/>
6 Walk on grass whenever pos-<lb/>
sible to save shoe leather.<lb/>
7. Eat a mixture of catsoup and<lb/>
warm water every other day.<lb/>
8. Observe all Jewish Holidays.<lb/>
9. Transfer to Atlantic Christian.<lb/>
10. Go back home!<lb/>
  <lb/>
The air is filird<lb/>
with floating<lb/>
buds<lb/>
bursting with<lb/>
eagerness and<lb/>
burning desire to<lb/>
explore the dark<lb/>
corners that are<lb/>
supposed to be dark<lb/>
but are not always<lb/>
a Replica nowher<lb/>
among them all.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Van Gogh says: "Blessed is tfc<lb/>
man who has found his work and a<lb/>
woman to love him<lb/>
Tom "Panic" Jackson says: "Bless-<lb/>
ed is the man who doesn't have to<lb/>
work and has a woman 10 wait on<lb/>
him<lb/>
  <lb/>
Just a note to all freshmen who<lb/>
are having an extra hard time get-<lb/>
ting socially adjusted: Hold on un-<lb/>
til Home Comingthen you will all<lb/>
be veterans.<lb/>
Derry Walker<lb/>
Old Faces Missing On Campus<lb/>
It appears that practically everyone<lb/>
survived the summer. Nearly every-<lb/>
one is back, although some favorites<lb/>
are missing. Jim Causby may be<lb/>
married for ali we know. Darrell<lb/>
Hurst and "Preacher" Van are not<lb/>
among the troops, either, for various<lb/>
reasons. (Don't know who's gonna<lb/>
do the healing this year.)<lb/>
By now instructors and courses<lb/>
have been accepted or rejected, Uncle<lb/>
Julian is again slinging hash to the<lb/>
masses, the Freshmen are thoroughly<lb/>
confused, and inventories of feminine<lb/>
Freshmen pulchritude have been com-<lb/>
pletedly by horny male upper<lb/>
classmen. Freshmen and transfers are<lb/>
better oriented now, as they have dis-<lb/>
covered the C. U the Y. M. C. A<lb/>
and "Dora's<lb/>
Congrats to Ed Stone and brothers;<lb/>
they're in.<lb/>
Why Encourage Writers Today?<lb/>
By HUGH<lb/>
A SENSE OF AWARENESS<lb/>
There have been times, history<lb/>
shows us, when, literature held a place<lb/>
of vast importance to our culture.<lb/>
Some will hold that this is not the<lb/>
case in our time because this is an<lb/>
age of television, an age of greatly<lb/>
improved travel, all of which renders<lb/>
the need for the communication of<lb/>
new ideas through literary modes<lb/>
unnecessary.<lb/>
There was a time when it was not<lb/>
uncommon to find a small American<lb/>
town or village pulsating with in-<lb/>
terest over the work of some popular<lb/>
literary figure. Many times the<lb/>
figure who demanded their attention<lb/>
was not American but European.<lb/>
Such ia not the case today. It is<lb/>
true that much of the work of our<lb/>
American writers fails to find a place<lb/>
in the reading habits of our people.<lb/>
The case is even more dismal for<lb/>
European writers. Most Americans<lb/>
are familiar with Francoise Sagan,<lb/>
whose controversial novels have<lb/>
titillated an extensive American aud-<lb/>
ience, but to mention Albert Camua,<lb/>
D. H. Lawrence, Samuel Becket, and<lb/>
the like to the average American<lb/>
reader wouki be the equivalent of<lb/>
asking him to expound a bit on Ein-<lb/>
stein's Theory of Relativity.<lb/>
All of this brings us to thia<lb/>
question: Why continue to encourage<lb/>
genuine literary efforts on the part<lb/>
of our writers and writers-to-be?<lb/>
AGEE<lb/>
Will there again come a time when<lb/>
it will be the rule rather than the<lb/>
exception to find a pronounced in-<lb/>
terest in good literature, to find open,<lb/>
informal discussions of a particular<lb/>
writer's work? These are questions<lb/>
than we must continue to ask our-<lb/>
selves. The answers, we hope, will<lb/>
always be positive ones.<lb/>
It is the opinion of some that<lb/>
culture can only be measured by the<lb/>
quality of the art it produces. This<lb/>
may or may not be true. It is true,<lb/>
however, that, in order for a par-<lb/>
ticular culture to progress, the pro-<lb/>
ductive forces within that culture<lb/>
must be free to work.<lb/>
When we narrow this down to our<lb/>
own existance as students here at<lb/>
East Carolina, we must recognise our<lb/>
responsibility to (the advancement<lb/>
of the cultural interests of the college.<lb/>
The newest force in this advancement<lb/>
is our literary magasine, Th Rebel.<lb/>
The importance of this publication<lb/>
cannot be overemphasised. It is a<lb/>
full support of the student body, from<lb/>
student venture, and it dsservea from<lb/>
the students who read it in Its<lb/>
finished form to the representatives<lb/>
in the SGA who control the existence<lb/>
of it through their appropriations.<lb/>
Never overlook the importance of<lb/>
xiterary achievemnts. The ideas 00m-<lb/>
municated by a novel, short story,<lb/>
poem, or tssay may enlighten your<lb/>
entire intellectual experienca.<lb/>
This year will encompass more<lb/>
politics, and more politics. The Greek<lb/>
is back with his bag of political para-<lb/>
phernalia, the SGA is in second gear<lb/>
and more people are getting into the<lb/>
act. Those Freshmen who aspire to<lb/>
prominent political positions in their<lb/>
respective class will be given oppor-<lb/>
tunities to bellow their platforms via<lb/>
closed circuit television. Interesting!<lb/>
"(What hath God Wrought"?")<lb/>
They've been busy this summer.<lb/>
They hammered and banged and "built<lb/>
new buildings, torn old ones down,<lb/>
built them back again, etc. . They<lb/>
put signs up to denote the streets<lb/>
we've walked on all this time, and<lb/>
they bought a puppy dog. (Buc is<lb/>
not to be confused wih Tom Jackson<lb/>
who resembles former.)<lb/>
We are watching them live modern.<lb/>
They now have instructors teaching<lb/>
English, History, and Orientation to<lb/>
television cameras. Don't know if the<lb/>
cameras are learning anything but<lb/>
reactions from students, (what few<lb/>
hre are, favorable).<lb/>
They haven't found the bug on the<lb/>
Campus Radio yet, but hopes are<lb/>
high.<lb/>
Speaking of bugs, beware of the<lb/>
"silch" bug. Its bite Is dang near<lb/>
fatal. Symptoms of this new disease<lb/>
are similiar to those of influenza.<lb/>
Those of us who have been victims<lb/>
of the "silch however, are aware of<lb/>
it and can offer little advice on how<lb/>
to avoid it. The origin of the bug<lb/>
itself is suspected somewhere around<lb/>
or in She "Collegiate since the in-<lb/>
hababitants of that establishment<lb/>
seem constantly plagued with In-<lb/>
fection.<lb/>
Charles Craven ha3 lately featured<lb/>
some art work of typical UNC eto-<lb/>
'tents; (satirical) wish 1 could con-<lb/>
jure up the typical EC student to<lb/>
send him. Suggestions?<lb/>
Some people sure misinterpret<lb/>
quotes and pass them along. A lowly<lb/>
lass said she heard I called her con-<lb/>
ceited. Never in this world, My re-<lb/>
gards to a misinformed informer.<lb/>
You Can Be A Monkey<lb/>
By NANCY LILLY<lb/>
Now is the time of year lor decrepit<lb/>
upper-classmen to extend the palsied ha<lb/>
of welcome to the supposedly bewildered<lb/>
freshmen. Although the upper-classmen are<lb/>
definitely decrepit and palsied, the freshmen<lb/>
are certainly not bewildered. Admittedly<lb/>
freshmen are getting younger every year<lb/>
but they are also getting smarter. Perhap<lb/>
they have really been listening to all the prop-<lb/>
aganda about challenges and opportunities<lb/>
which is oo liberlly dished out at the begin-<lb/>
ning uf every school year. I, too, shall attempt<lb/>
to be&amp;tow some painful acquired wisdom upon<lb/>
the new crop of innocents.<lb/>
SEE NO EVIL, SPEAK No EVIL<lb/>
HEAR NO EVIL,<lb/>
In other words<lb/>
YOL TOO CAN BE A MONKEY<lb/>
1. iJo not think. Thinking is dangerous. Not<lb/>
uiily can it give you headaches  it cat<lb/>
also get you in quite a bit of trouble.<lb/>
2. Smile (do not laugh) at all paid person-<lb/>
nel.<lb/>
3. Do net partake of alcholic beverages.<lb/>
Beer makes you burp, vodka rusts your<lb/>
insides, and burbon makes you dangerous.<lb/>
4. Obey all college rules, you may not have<lb/>
much run, but remember, "Virtue is its<lb/>
own reward<lb/>
5. Brush your teeth twice a day (if that<lb/>
doesn't work, try Listerine), go to church<lb/>
every Sunday, keep your rooms clean, eat<lb/>
three square meals a day, and join the<lb/>
Young Democrats Club.<lb/>
If you obey all these rules faithfully,<lb/>
you will become a success. You won't live any<lb/>
longer than the rest of us, but you will be a<lb/>
success.<lb/>
The fact that someone has became<lb/>
money-hungry is quite obvious. Although<lb/>
paying to add and drop courses is painful, it<lb/>
is understandable because the privilege<lb/>
was abused when it was (free. But<lb/>
why do those of us who do not use<lb/>
the college laundry facilities have to shell<lb/>
out five dollars of our hard-earned cash<lb/>
for nothing? If we can receive better and<lb/>
cheaper services elswhere, why should we be<lb/>
forced to subsidize the laundry.<lb/>
The new week-end curfews for girls are<lb/>
certainly appreciated. It seems odd that half<lb/>
an hour should make so much difference, but<lb/>
somehow it does.<lb/>
Are You Drunk, Sir?<lb/>
By BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
SCENE: Two uninitiated faculty members<lb/>
at a football game. For clearance pur-<lb/>
poses we'll call one Dr. Figby and the<lb/>
other Dr. Marsh. They somehow got into<lb/>
the student section and are sitting be-<lb/>
nind a noisy young man in a burlap coat<lb/>
and three girls.<lb/>
MARSH:  I thought, by god, the week<lb/>
would never end. When ray last class<lb/>
filed out I didn't even tell them to have<lb/>
a good weekend and drive carefully.<lb/>
FIGBY: There comes the teams. They look<lb/>
like monsters.<lb/>
MARSH: They are. I teach some of them.<lb/>
Which is our team?<lb/>
FIG'BY: The program says we're the Purple<lb/>
and Gold.<lb/>
MARSH: I don't see any. Does it look like<lb/>
either one of them has on purple and gold<lb/>
to you?<lb/>
FIGBY: Ummmmm. No. You're right. Mabe<lb/>
someone else is playing. Pardon me<lb/>
Young man, who is playing? ffl<lb/>
YOUNG MAN: What shay?<lb/>
FIGBY: Are you drunk, air?<lb/>
MARSH: Disgusting!<lb/>
YOUNG MAN: Stand up for the Nashnul<lb/>
anfum, man.<lb/>
MARSH: My god, do they play it at bail-<lb/>
games, too?<lb/>
FIGBY: (As the anthem blares out) I do<lb/>
believe this man is drunk.<lb/>
MARSH: I'm expecting them to play it in<lb/>
vrMTXTcawteiLia next' each meal . . .<lb/>
OUNG MAN: Be quiet, disrespectful<lb/>
(frowning)<lb/>
Fooi Young man' Wha is your name,<lb/>
vhttSS: ;xT0r in the room, <lb/>
YOUNG MAN: Play Ball! (spraying his<lb/>
tuadoIt ai1 aroun and waving his arms.)<lb/>
ptp-rvH: at is your  sir?<lb/>
maoJj F?by- si"ing back down)<lb/>
JJARSH: No, not you. Him.<lb/>
YOUNG MAN: Stand up for the kickoff,<lb/>
man!<lb/>
uFi i1 are they doin&amp;now?<lb/>
MAKbH: Maybe they are playing it over<lb/>
again. This barbarian in front of us was<lb/>
making so much noise nobody heard it th<lb/>
first time.<lb/>
FIGBY: Look, they're playing. I say, that<lb/>
fat one with the number on his back is<lb/>
M2 " class- He spells cat with a W.<lb/>
o$iH: Whos Paying?<lb/>
FIGBY: Oh, I think his name is Smith. He<lb/>
comes in sits down and stares at the<lb/>
walls and gnats fly all over him and he<lb/>
doesn't even feel it<lb/>
MARSH: Thk yThaJolS. 2ftv<lb/>
push me my bottle I paid half of it<lb/>
?! (RsiB? Vm " I've got to go<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00038607_0003"/><lb/>
fHiHSUAY, SEPTEMBER 26, iy68<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
leparate Leagues Formed For First Time<lb/>
welve Teams In Intramural Football<lb/>
iver Rats Win<lb/>
jOver Country<lb/>
bents 19-14<lb/>
 Uttti team m the in-<lb/>
,i touch footboll league met<lb/>
I the River Rats<lb/>
 i ounti Gentlemen team<lb/>
  14 rule<lb/>
pi kction during that day<lb/>
w Bins' K;iiia Alpha squad<lb/>
(' lit km?- al the handi<lb/>
k  .  S  ma h.<lb/>
. . rening<lb/>
I ,  ii i ha squaring<lb/>
 . U- iia Sigma Pi<lb/>
 . onl  I wai all ovei it<lb/>
tbda I hi all the ara<lb/>
.  2 1 I<lb/>
Watts' Rivei Rats spotted<lb/>
Gentlemen managed by<lb/>
. : with 14 points be-<lb/>
from behind to win.<lb/>
ad opened the. contest<lb/>
n imprea tie 19 ard touch-<lb/>
But through tht com<lb/>
 Boh Moore, Dean<lb/>
i,t i ga illiams, Al Vaughn,<lb/>
Hilton Willard, hong<lb/>
Red Gainey, the Country<lb/>
. aas to the 19 big points.<lb/>
 of tin- imj n iet victory<lb/>
ted ' at the River Rata<lb/>
natt league play through-<lb/>
, ntire season.<lb/>
on and Larry Ty-<lb/>
seored touchdoama dur-<lb/>
. first half of play to build up<lb/>
 Si .i Nu lead of 12 to 0<lb/>
K  pa Alp a squad. Kelly<lb/>
another tone down during<lb/>
and whan It era all<lb/>
Dixie Hobgood'a team had it-<lb/>
re SI to 0 victory. Out<lb/>
 foi the Kappa Alpha team<lb/>
, defeat arere Bml WiUiama,<lb/>
i and Ralph Becton,<lb/>
, , three . concluded iu-<lb/>
 thall j laj for the pea<lb/>
k but eight bi were<lb/>
; to Uke place this week.<lb/>
Returns To Staff<lb/>
Back After Year's<lb/>
Leave 01 Absence<lb/>
Coach Ray Martinez, former suc-<lb/>
essful swim coach at East Caro-<lb/>
lina, has returned to the campus this<lb/>
year at'tci a years' absence.<lb/>
Martinea came to BCC in 1954. He<lb/>
initiated swimming here and produced<lb/>
uita a record before leaving last<lb/>
son to work on his Doctors de-<lb/>
kriff at State II of Iowa.<lb/>
The fust season that swimming<lb/>
was a part of the Athletic Program,<lb/>
it took its lumis, but Martinez and<lb/>
his i-lub learned many lessons and<lb/>
e following season posted a 9-3<lb/>
record. In 1956, the Pirate Meremen<lb/>
made East Carolina history as they<lb/>
swam to a 9-3 season and then went<lb/>
to Carlondale, Illinois and captured<lb/>
the I National Swim Meet.<lb/>
Coach Martinez lias had his club<lb/>
in - ape for the past couple<lb/>
.f v eek. and the swim tutor beams<lb/>
with enthusiasm when discussing<lb/>
his personnel. "We could have the<lb/>
best team KCC ever bad slates<lb/>
Martinea and he has raaaon to be-<lb/>
lt e !<lb/>
Only co captain Teddy Cartman is<lb/>
missing from last year's club. Re<lb/>
turning is backstroke ace Bob Saw-<lb/>
tr and driver Ken Midyette, both<lb/>
Swim Star Has<lb/>
Broken Leg<lb/>
Bob Sawyer, East Carolina's All<lb/>
American swim star, recently receiv-<lb/>
ed a broken leg while playing touch<lb/>
football<lb/>
Coac Jtay Martinis, much con-<lb/>
cerned over the accident, stated that<lb/>
Sawyer would probably be in a cast<lb/>
for about six weeks and then it would<lb/>
bfl anoth r three weeka before he<lb/>
could join the swimming team.<lb/>
Sawyer's early season loss will<lb/>
come as a big setback to Martinez,<lb/>
w o will be attempting to rebuild his<lb/>
wim club. U is doubtful that Bob will<lb/>
ready in time for the Pirates' first<lb/>
tneel with U. of North Carolina.<lb/>
The Greensboro native has paced<lb/>
the m remen in his three seasons<lb/>
bare with hi.s defeats in the back-<lb/>
troke b ing few and far between.<lb/>
Sawyer won the NAIA backstroke<lb/>
title in 19M as he paced his team-<lb/>
matt s to the national crown. He cut<lb/>
several aocouda off his time last year<lb/>
and was exj ected to be top in the<lb/>
south this winter.<lb/>
ECC only has one pre-Christmas<lb/>
swim meet .so Martinez will still be<lb/>
looking forward to plenty of service<lb/>
from his backstroke ace.<lb/>
To Direct EC Intramural Program<lb/>
copped national honors last season.<lb/>
Many other lettermen are back and<lb/>
the return to school by speed-mer-<lb/>
chant Jim Meads has also aided Mar-<lb/>
tinez's strtegy.<lb/>
Martinez has high prais for the<lb/>
recruiting job done by DeShaw,<lb/>
which has brought in some outstand-<lb/>
ing freshmen and transfers. "We<lb/>
have a little depth this season not<lb/>
much but a little cited Martinez.<lb/>
The opening meet is still a good<lb/>
ways off but the KCC swimmers will<lb/>
spend the fall afternoons getting in<lb/>
shape Afi official schedule has not<lb/>
been announced, but negotiations this<lb/>
eason have been made with Caro-<lb/>
lina, which is an annual meet, U.<lb/>
f Georgia, Emory College of Geor-<lb/>
gia, VMM U. of Miami, D. of<lb/>
Florida, and Florida State.<lb/>
Discussing the Budget alloted to the 1958-59 Intramural Program at East<lb/>
Carolina are Bill Boyd and Coach Earl Smith. Smith is the faculty director<lb/>
while Boyd is the ludeit director. Both anticipate a broad program for<lb/>
the coming college year. (EC Sports Photo)<lb/>
Spoone, Swing, Cockerell,<lb/>
Cooper And LeGette To Head<lb/>
Intramural Council For '58-59<lb/>
To aid Intramural Faculty Direc-<lb/>
tor. Mr. Karl Smith and Student<lb/>
Director, Bill Boyd, five officers<lb/>
t ir elected on the intramural coun-<lb/>
cil for the 1958-59 college year.<lb/>
One of EC's top seniors was nomi-<lb/>
nated for and elected to the position<lb/>
of president of the council. He is<lb/>
Jo! n Spoon a student, who has been<lb/>
active in the intramural program<lb/>
ever since coming to East Carolina.<lb/>
ENGUSH; high<lb/>
ENGLISH: writing<lb/>
instrument for plagiarist<lb/>
 lkin<lb/>
ay for mules<lb/>
0 dog<lb/>
THWKUaH: W"1 <lb/>
THWW-ISH: swpwww<lb/>
tiding Sj oone directly is first vice-<lb/>
president Walt Swing and second<lb/>
vice-president Wally Cockerell. Elec-<lb/>
ted to the position of secretary was<lb/>
Lyle Cooper and Clint LeGette was<lb/>
elected as publicity director for<lb/>
EC's intramural program.<lb/>
The intramural council will be re-<lb/>
sponsible to student director Boyd<lb/>
who is in turn responsible to faculty<lb/>
director, Coach Smith.<lb/>
All officers elected have worked<lb/>
with the Intramural program in some<lb/>
apacity previous to this.<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
Coach Ray Martinez has an-<lb/>
nounced that any boys interested<lb/>
in coming out for the swimming<lb/>
learn should come down to the<lb/>
pool between the hours of two<lb/>
o'clock and four o'clock.<lb/>
 Sport lighting Intramurals <lb/>
 By BILL BOYD <lb/>
: <lb/>
irkirttirkiriritititirkiHtirttitk <lb/>
East Carolina's intramural program is already off to a last start this<lb/>
qjarter and interest is running hign. Coach Earl Smith, the faculty director,<lb/>
and myself anticipate a broad program during the coming year.<lb/>
During the past several years there has been an ever increasing<lb/>
need for a large nrogram at DC. The student number of courses increases<lb/>
every fall and because of this, if for no other reason, the program must<lb/>
constantly be expanded. The Student Government Association and the budget<lb/>
committee have sen enough of the programs in the past to realize what<lb/>
will bo needed in the future.<lb/>
Fraternities Have Increased Interest<lb/>
Competition on an intramural level has arisen mainly through or-<lb/>
ganizational developments The fraternities are right at the top of the<lb/>
organizational list. Morale and interest runs high in every fraternity at<lb/>
East Carolina and when one fraternity plays another things begin to hap-<lb/>
pen. This morale spreads to non-fraternal organizations and thus a great<lb/>
deal is accomplished.<lb/>
Even though interest is constantly growing in the program it is a<lb/>
centered interest. By this I should state that only a select few involve<lb/>
themselves with the program. Of all the teams and members involved in<lb/>
t' is year's program this far, approximately ninety per cent are students<lb/>
who were involved last year. This means that transfer students and fresh-<lb/>
men do not care for intramurals when they first come here or they are not<lb/>
exposed to them very quickly. Frhaps they wish to see a more diversi-<lb/>
fied program installed, which is a very good idea.<lb/>
Intramurals Not Just Three Sports <lb/>
Football, basketball and softball of course make up the nucleus of<lb/>
the program, but they no more complete the program than studying ful-<lb/>
fills the requirements for a course in history. What amazes Coach Smith,<lb/>
myself and intramural council predent John Spoone is that you take the<lb/>
time to make careful plans and anticipate huge results in thi3 planning.<lb/>
Then when the actual time comes the students falter. We expected at least<lb/>
.sixteen teams in the touch footbail program this fall. We will have twelve<lb/>
from the looks of the situation at the present time. Because of this we<lb/>
have to abandon our hopes for two separate leagues. We desired a dormi-<lb/>
tory and fraternal league. It would keep the morale higher, it would pro-<lb/>
mote an incentive to stay at the top of the respective league knowing that<lb/>
one leag e champion would play the other in a bid for the campus champion-<lb/>
ship. This plan would work well in all sports involved but it appears that<lb/>
the students wish to read and watch, rather than play. Everyone at East<lb/>
Carolina cannot by any moans participate in a varsity sport. It is hard for<lb/>
me to believe that they can go through an entire year without becoming<lb/>
involved in some type of lengthy exercise. But even if they do get<lb/>
some exercise they are still depriving themselves of the social, mental and<lb/>
pnysical benefits fhey could derive from their own intramural program.<lb/>
Many wish to see volleyball, swimming and tennis installed as<lb/>
regular intramural sports. During the winter months we are going to<lb/>
attempt to register enough volleyball teams to make up a league. During<lb/>
the spring we hope to work out something that will allow intramural swim-<lb/>
ming competition. Of course tennis will be highlighted during the spring<lb/>
but even more so next year.<lb/>
It is the object of the intramural association at East Carolina College<lb/>
to give the students the type of sports they most desire, but this need must<lb/>
b evident before such a program can be, carried out. Otherwise much time<lb/>
and money vill be wasted.<lb/>
Legal Aspects of the Program<lb/>
For the first time we have written and adopted a constitution for<lb/>
the all-over program which is basic in approach and fundamentally sound<lb/>
It calls for a faculty director to preside over a student director. The student<lb/>
director in turn ca'ls for a meeting of all students interested in intramurals<lb/>
when the fall quarter commences. He than a ks for nominations by the<lb/>
students for positions on the intramural council. These positions are presi-<lb/>
dent, 1st vice-president, 2nd vice-president, secretary and publicity direc-<lb/>
tor. Then when the students select ?ome of their fellow classmates to theso<lb/>
positions the nucleus of the intramural program is formed as far as legal<lb/>
and administrative procedure go. The council, the student director and the<lb/>
faculty work together to promote a sound program. At the present time<lb/>
that is the purpose of our organizaion, to promote a sound program wHch<lb/>
will benefit all students interested in participating.<lb/>
At this point.I would like to request that any student who desires<lb/>
to offer any suggestions concerning the program may do so by writing<lb/>
Coach Smith or myself in care of the college P. E. department.<lb/>
THINKLISH<lb/>
SEKINGESS<lb/>
m<lb/>
Lucky Strike presents<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY STORE<lb/>
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Fine Meats and Groceries<lb/>
the funniest, easiest way yet to make money!<lb/>
PUT IN A GOOD WORD AND<lb/>
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We Specialize in Casual Hair Styling<lb/>
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it get you? Nothing! But start speaking<lb/>
Thinklish and you may make $25! Just<lb/>
put two words together to form a new (and<lb/>
much funnier) one. Example: precision<lb/>
flight of bumblebees: Swarmation. (Note:<lb/>
the two original words form the new<lb/>
one: swarm-f- formation.) We'll pay $25<lb/>
each for the hundreds and hundreds of<lb/>
new Thinklish words judged bestand<lb/>
we'll feature many of them in our college<lb/>
ads. Send your Thinklish words (with<lb/>
English translations) to Lucky Strike,<lb/>
Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclose<lb/>
name, address, college or university, and<lb/>
class. And while you're at it, light up a<lb/>
Lucky. Get the full, rich taste of fine to-<lb/>
baccothe honest taste of a Lucky Strike.<lb/>
"SUIT THE COLLEGE TASTE"<lb/>
COME TO SEE<lb/>
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CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED<lb/>
Joe Lcflln Paces<lb/>
Baby Bucs In Tie<lb/>
With E. City<lb/>
Coach Earl Smith and the Baby<lb/>
Bucs opened their season Friday<lb/>
night, September 12th and had to<lb/>
scramble for a 6-6 tie with Elizabeth<lb/>
City High School.<lb/>
Smith's yearlings had been on the<lb/>
ECC campus for only a few days and<lb/>
had not had the time to muster an<lb/>
offensive attack. ECC was forced to<lb/>
call on defense as its big weapon.<lb/>
Both teams scored in the second<lb/>
period and then settled to defensive<lb/>
ball in the second half to record the<lb/>
the deadlock.<lb/>
Elizabeth City broke the ice early<lb/>
in the second period by driving 39<lb/>
years for their lone touchddwn.<lb/>
Quarterback Pat McDowell's passing<lb/>
arm sparked the drive and then he<lb/>
climaxed it by passing seven yards<lb/>
to an end Al McPherson. The kick<lb/>
for the extra point was no good.<lb/>
East Carolina scored with le3s<lb/>
than a minute to play when Nate<lb/>
Caddy of Elizabeth City faked a<lb/>
punt and passed. Joe Loflin inter-<lb/>
cepted the toss and scampered 53<lb/>
yards untouched. The vital attempt<lb/>
for the extra point was blocked.<lb/>
Outstanding for the freshmen crop<lb/>
were Loflin, Melvin Riff, Tommy<lb/>
Matthews, and John Cutler.<lb/>
All the Latest Top Hit<lb/>
Records<lb/>
Still at the Same OW Price<lb/>
92c<lb/>
Music Gifts<lb/>
JOHNSON'S<lb/>
at Fir rotate<lb/>
mxt t<lb/>
Mary Aaa Sod mop<lb/>
t<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00038607_0004"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, lift<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLlNjAf<lb/>
t<lb/>
Miss North Carolina Meets 'Buc'<lb/>
MivS North Carolina visited East Carolina Saturday night at the ballgam.<lb/>
Along uith Carol McDaniel. Miss Homecoming of 57, Betty Lane meets our<lb/>
mascot 'Buc'<lb/>
Harrison Says<lb/>
REBEL To Be<lb/>
Released Soon<lb/>
Bryan Harrison, editor of the<lb/>
student literary magazine "The Rebel"<lb/>
at East Carolina College, has an-<lb/>
nounced that the first issue is now<lb/>
taking shape and will go to press to-<lb/>
ward the end of the month.<lb/>
The magazine, a new venture at<lb/>
the college, was approved by the<lb/>
East Carolina Publications Board<lb/>
Mt December. It is sponsored and<lb/>
financ d by the Student Government<lb/>
Association. One issue appeared<lb/>
.ast spring. Harrison has announced<lb/>
hat four issues are planned for the<lb/>
L958-196G term.<lb/>
senior from Asheville, N. C<lb/>
larriaon is serving for the second<lb/>
time as editor. The staff last year<lb/>
was headed by Co- ditors Harrison<lb/>
and Billy Arnold, Jr of Green-<lb/>
ville, who this year will be staff<lb/>
artist for the magazine.<lb/>
Other members Of the present<lb/>
editorial staff ar David Lne of<lb/>
Asheboro, managing editor; W. Hugh<lb/>
Age , Jr, of Petersburg, Va book<lb/>
review editor; Nancy Davis of Ash<lb/>
ville, business manager; John J.<lb/>
Pilicky, Jr of Raleigh, assiant<lb/>
husn.ss manager; and Martha A. Kel-<lb/>
lam of Hiscoe, exchange editor.<lb/>
Ovid W. Pierce, North Carolina<lb/>
novelist and faculty member of the<lb/>
East. Carolina Department of English,<lb/>
is faculty advisor.<lb/>
. y j Fashions Still In Vogue;<lb/>
New Look Emphasizes Freedom<lb/>
Playhouse Opens 1958<lb/>
Session With Tryouts,<lb/>
Freshman Night Affair<lb/>
The Baal Carolina Playhouse held i new apprentice system, ushers from<lb/>
its annual Freshmen night, Septem-1 the Playhouse were appointed to<lb/>
her 15. About SO f r shmen attended Lllow tne newcomers around Mc-<lb/>
' The Rebel" will include short<lb/>
stories, book reviews, poems, critical<lb/>
and controversial essays, and other<lb/>
types of writing. Only selections writ-<lb/>
ten by students will be published.<lb/>
tie short meeting, with old Play-<lb/>
house members giving a brief resume<lb/>
of the purpose, history, and campus<lb/>
faction of the Playhouse. Pat Baker,<lb/>
president of the Playhouse, intro-<lb/>
duced the staff of the Playhouse for<lb/>
I i year 1968-69, which included Del<lb/>
Driver, vice president; Larry Cra-<lb/>
ven, treasurer; Alice Anne Home,<lb/>
recording secretary; Shirley Dixon,<lb/>
corresponding secretary and Jay<lb/>
Kobbins, historian. Also introduced<lb/>
Ginnis Auditorium. Genia Trulove,<lb/>
Doris Kobbins, Del Driver, Larry<lb/>
Craven, and Leigh Dobson acted as<lb/>
the ushers.<lb/>
Following their tour around the<lb/>
theatre, the fresi.men were served<lb/>
refreshments; a general social time<lb/>
was held in which Playhouse mem-<lb/>
bers met and talked with the new-<lb/>
comers.<lb/>
Immediately following the reception,<lb/>
were the Director of the Playhouse, tryouts for the two one-act Fresh<lb/>
Dr. J. A. With v. and the new Asso- man plays were held. Larry Craven,<lb/>
r Director, Mr. Robert Richert.<lb/>
After Pat had explained the re-<lb/>
quirements for membership in the<lb/>
organization and had introduced the<lb/>
who directing "The Old Lady<lb/>
Show Her Medals and Del Driver,<lb/>
who is directing, Two Crooks and<lb/>
a Lady supervised the tryouts.<lb/>
Foreign Language Department Adds<lb/>
Beginning German To Curriculmum<lb/>
The East Carolina College foreign<lb/>
language department has added to its<lb/>
schedule of courses thin fall a class<lb/>
in German for beginners. Thirty-five<lb/>
students have begun their work in<lb/>
versity of Munich. Before coming to<lb/>
this country, he had experience teach-<lb/>
ing American students when he serv-<lb/>
ed a instructor to GPs in Germany.<lb/>
Both lie and his wife, Dr. Gertrude<lb/>
Homemaking Being<lb/>
Taught On Radio<lb/>
By Instructor<lb/>
The art ,f home making is being<lb/>
brought into many homes in the state<lb/>
b Alice Strawn of the Home Eco-<lb/>
nomics Department, who is currently<lb/>
appearing in a series of radio broad-<lb/>
casts sponsored by tin college.<lb/>
"Home Economics and You to<lb/>
be i resented each week through<lb/>
January 5, is now b ing broadcast on<lb/>
taped recordings over fifteen stations<lb/>
throughout the state, in a practical<lb/>
way, Miss Strawn discusses meals,<lb/>
fashions, short cuts in housekeeping,<lb/>
buying food for the family, home<lb/>
decorations, entertaining guests, and<lb/>
other topics. On several round-table<lb/>
sessions her students in home eco-<lb/>
nomics appear with her.<lb/>
A faculty m mber at East Caro-<lb/>
lina College for the past ten years,<lb/>
she has served as resident teacher-<lb/>
trainer in the home economics edu-<lb/>
cation. Her stud nts are now teaching<lb/>
in scores of public schools in North<lb/>
Carolina, and she has helped many<lb/>
young people lecome home econom-<lb/>
sts, teachers, and home makers.<lb/>
By LOIS BUTTLER<lb/>
Fashion Director<lb/>
As everyone knows, the past year<lb/>
has been a controversial one for fash-<lb/>
ion! Never before have women been<lb/>
.o timid about new styL. s, so doubt-<lb/>
ful about the tried and true fashions.<lb/>
Happily, for Fall, 1968, adaptions<lb/>
of the new relax d lines are providing<lb/>
so wareable and irresistible that<lb/>
wom It- and yes, men, too are<lb/>
satisfied with the newer look.<lb/>
Freedom from the body is th.<lb/>
keynote of the Fall siihouett. Whe-<lb/>
ther in the traces line, the eliptical<lb/>
round look, the high WBisted look or<lb/>
the low belt flounc , clothes are<lb/>
designed to be worn away form the<lb/>
body. Shoulders are narrower, aim<lb/>
holes are higher, si eves are short.<lb/>
Skirts will be worn shorter, a slightly<lb/>
below the kn e look.<lb/>
If one could typify or exemplify<lb/>
the fe ling for Fall 58 fashions,<lb/>
that one word would be . . Space . . .<lb/>
For space has color . . space has light-<lb/>
ness . . . space has freedom and<lb/>
the diversity of the fashion picture<lb/>
is a combination of color in fabric,<lb/>
lightn ss, fluffiness in fabric and<lb/>
freedom in silhouette.<lb/>
Mo' air is the single bigg st in-<lb/>
fluence in the fabric picture. Whether<lb/>
luffed, curled, looped, hairy, brushed.<lb/>
the mohair content, which gives bulk-<lb/>
wit! out weight, is the II w addition<lb/>
to the fabric story. Light in weight<lb/>
.ml spongy to the touch, woolens<lb/>
.com pace-setters in thet new dress<lb/>
shapes. And for after five, textures<lb/>
vary from supple cr pes and puffy<lb/>
niaUla.sse to wrap print taffetas<lb/>
and cut velvet<lb/>
The colors for fall are exciting,<lb/>
viln ant. alive. The green, red, blue<lb/>
family predominates. In black, the<lb/>
lull look is replacing the shiny black<lb/>
look. Also the coppers, rust and all<lb/>
the autumn forest tones inu t not<lb/>
b overlooked.<lb/>
In a tending fashion More recently,<lb/>
. tn tnf, in the latest fashiun creations Patsy Bradshaw<lb/>
p. wear, a silver headache band, no, much in vogue. Howitig back<lb/>
Lc, side panels accentuate the black cocktail dress. The mink stole in her<lb/>
hand is always in style . . <lb/>
Charlie wears a Cheviot suit with thv new natural shoulders. <lb/>
I aw a suit that 1 must describe; it. one.<lb/>
a. so good-looking and smart. Made<lb/>
 too, .1 mohair, it was u forest<lb/>
,  stroller suit, featuring the 31-<lb/>
inch long-distance jacket, which<lb/>
COCktai dl S.es were oUt of<lb/>
tbi world. A supple, flowing black;<lb/>
a fitted white sheath enhanced all<lb/>
ver with fringe, a champagn- lace<lb/>
how, a minimum skirt The round with sequin!<lb/>
ollar, fullness in back of cont and j b I were<lb/>
and low brown velvet<lb/>
breathtaking in their<lb/>
four poekeU made this an outstand-<lb/>
ing costume.<lb/>
A tweede trap se suit also caught<lb/>
ms atentlon. in black and brown<lb/>
mixture, the shoft dem-jacteet was<lb/>
double breasted with a fox collar, the<lb/>
kirt, of course, was a short conical<lb/>
beauty.<lb/>
Trudy there wa- no end to the<lb/>
go geous array of merchandise dis-<lb/>
play ed Space prohibit more as to<lb/>
street dress s, coats and every ap-<lb/>
ng item that the fashion-con-<lb/>
- iou; woman desires.<lb/>
Forty<lb/>
c<lb/>
New Instructors Join<lb/>
even<lb/>
East Carolina Faculty This Fall<lb/>
1) Peabody College, education, circuit TV.<lb/>
Other n weomera on the<lb/>
listed by departments, are:<lb/>
ART: Bruce Carter, E.Ed.<lb/>
 total oi forty-seven new iacui .<lb/>
tafi members began .heir duties  W. (Wield, B. S East Carolina,<lb/>
,ere this quarter.   Emor, University, periodicals<lb/>
Th group includes Dr. Robert L. librarian; Captain Vance M. Lock-<lb/>
Holt, director of administrations and .uuy A B anrj Distinguished Military<lb/>
supervising registrar, Dr. Earl<lb/>
Beach, head of the department of<lb/>
music; Dr. Corinne H. Rickert who<lb/>
fills the new position of director of<lb/>
closed circuit television; and members<lb/>
of fourteen department of instruc-<lb/>
tion, th library staff, the Dean of<lb/>
Women's staff, and Air Fore ROTC.<lb/>
Dr. Pattie Simmons Dowell, the<lb/>
first student to register at East<lb/>
Carolina and the first student to bj<lb/>
graduated, returned to the college<lb/>
this fall as a member of the education<lb/>
department. Dr. Dowell, Ed.D New<lb/>
York University, has previously<lb/>
taught at Wmthrop College and Miss-<lb/>
staff,<lb/>
ew course, which is taught by Runge Graf of the psychology de art-<lb/>
Eric Franz Graff, who joined the i ment, began their work at East Caro-<lb/>
. this fall.<lb/>
.lames L. Fleming, director of<lb/>
n languages, stnted that con-<lb/>
side rabe interest in the study of Ger-<lb/>
man has been shown by stud- nts.<lb/>
Aa a result he said, "plans are<lb/>
to offer continued courses which will<lb/>
students two full years of Ger-<lb/>
man<lb/>
Mr Graf, a native of Augsburg,<lb/>
iina this fall.<lb/>
Tl e new foreign language courses<lb/>
rive Fast Carolina students an op-<lb/>
portunity to study German for the<lb/>
first time in a numb r of years. Other<lb/>
languages offered at presenl by the<lb/>
department are French and Spanish.<lb/>
"Plans are now being discussed for<lb/>
the introduction of a course, in<lb/>
Russian during the present school<lb/>
Miss Straw is currently serving<lb/>
as vie president of the Home Eco-<lb/>
nomics Section of the National Edu-<lb/>
cation Association.<lb/>
issippi Southern College.<lb/>
in which thy are teaching, they are:<lb/>
Donald Umstead, iA.B. East Carolina.<lb/>
C P.A, business education; Douglas R.<lb/>
Jones, B.S M.A Eat Carolina<lb/>
Germany, i a graduate o .he Uni-1 year Mr Fleming itated.<lb/>
Dr. Utterback Contributes<lb/>
Another Story To Magazine<lb/>
Dr. Elizabeth Utterback, faculty A member of the East Carolina<lb/>
member of the English Department faculty since 1950, Dr. Utterback is<lb/>
Graduate, Fast Carolina, Air Force<lb/>
ROTC; and Herbert Carlton. B.S<lb/>
1. A , Fast Carolina Social studies<lb/>
1 addition Wyatt Brown, MA<lb/>
East Carolina, is teaching in the<lb/>
social department while Ralph Napp<lb/>
is, n leave of absence; and Mrs r aye<lb/>
. . (lay, M. A East Carolina, il<lb/>
substituting in the English depart-<lb/>
ment f0J Ovid W Fierce, on leave of<lb/>
absence during tie fall quarter. Ra-<lb/>
chael L. Johnson, now working to-<lb/>
ward the master's degree at East<lb/>
Carolina, is dormitory counselor in<lb/>
Garrett Hall.<lb/>
Eight of the new faculty members<lb/>
Five of the new faculty members either hold degrees form foreign uni-<lb/>
holds degrees from East Carolina versifies or have studied abroad. This<lb/>
College. Listed with the departments group includes Robert T. Rickert,<lb/>
Ph.D Birmingham University, Eng-<lb/>
land, English; Harry Goldgar, Docteur<lb/>
de l'University de Paris, English;<lb/>
Erich Franz Graf, graduate of the<lb/>
University of Munich and now work-<lb/>
ing toward a doctronate at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Zurich, foreign languages;<lb/>
Gertrude Ruge Graf, Doctor of Phi-<lb/>
losophy, University of Leipzig, phy-<lb/>
hology; Donald R. Petterson, Ph.<lb/>
D University of London, geo-<lb/>
graphy; Kathleen E. Dunlop,<lb/>
Ph.D , University of Illinois,<lb/>
scholarship student in the Mid-<lb/>
dle East, social studies; Corinne<lb/>
H. Rickert, Ph.D. University of Birm-<lb/>
ingham, England, director of closed-<lb/>
at East Carolina College, contributed<lb/>
the short story "The Bird on Mama's<lb/>
Hat" to the September issue of<lb/>
"Progressive Farmer The story is<lb/>
illustrated in color by the well-known<lb/>
artist John NcCelland.<lb/>
"The Bird on Mama's Hat" is Dt.<lb/>
Utterback's twelfth story dealing<lb/>
with the Lovelady family in Alabama<lb/>
All have appeared in issues of "Pro<lb/>
gressive Farmer<lb/>
the author of a high-school textbook<lb/>
entitled "Occupations" and a number<lb/>
of published poems, short stories and<lb/>
articles. At the college here, she is<lb/>
dirtctor of student teaching in the<lb/>
department of English. Each spring<lb/>
for the i ast seven years she has<lb/>
seived as drama director for the pop-<lb/>
ular and wid ly attended operetta<lb/>
presented by the Student Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Science Club Begins 1958-1959 Work<lb/>
The Science Club began the year i visit the club on its October 14 meet-<lb/>
with a social hour wekonv jng ana ev ry first Tuesday there-<lb/>
ing the freshmen. Plans for the after Mr H E sarnpson, a national-<lb/>
coming year were discussed at la3ablower from the Uni.<lb/>
the first business meeting on Septem-<lb/>
' versity of North Carolina, will give<lb/>
ber 16.<lb/>
AH freshmen and upperclassmen a demonstration at the October meet-<lb/>
iterested in science are invited to ing.<lb/>
Penn-<lb/>
sylvania State University; Thomas E.<lb/>
ers. M.F.A State University of<lb/>
lou a; a.ui Paul R. Minnis, MUA<lb/>
P nn-vlvania State University;<lb/>
BUSINESS EDUCATION: Sam-<lb/>
uel W. Dry, MA Appalachian State<lb/>
eachera College; William S. Hart,<lb/>
MS, Kansas Stat Teachers College;<lb/>
Peggl Lou Holman, M.A Colorado<lb/>
State College; William H. Watson,<lb/>
L.L.B University of North Carolina;<lb/>
SPECIAL EDUCATION: Ber-<lb/>
nard, Ph.D Denver University;<lb/>
ENGLISH: Francis R. Adams, Jr<lb/>
Ph.D University of Maryland; Loui3e<lb/>
B. Adams, M.A , University of Wis-<lb/>
corrsin; Ruth E. Coplan, M.A Uni-<lb/>
versity of Virginia; Grace Seiler,<lb/>
Ph.D. University of Missouri, David<lb/>
J. Whichard, A.B School of Journal-<lb/>
ism, University of North Carolina;<lb/>
FOREIGN LANGUAGES: Rob-<lb/>
ert R. Morrison, M.A Middlebury<lb/>
College;<lb/>
GEOGRAPHY: Woodford Garri-<lb/>
gu.s, Ph.D Clark University; Mor-<lb/>
ton D. Winsberg, Ph.D University<lb/>
,f Florida; Elizabeth Jean Lowry;<lb/>
" I) Yale University:<lb/>
HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDU-<lb/>
CATION: Gay Elizabeth Hogan, M.<lb/>
A University of North Carolina,<lb/>
replacing Mrs. Grace Eaton, who is<lb/>
on leave of absence;<lb/>
INDUSTRIAL ARTS: Ernie C.<lb/>
Finch. M.A , Peabody College;<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY: C. H. Allen, Ph.D<lb/>
Peabody College; Gertrude M. Neis,<lb/>
MA University of Florida;<lb/>
SCIENCE: Frank W. Eller, Ph.D<lb/>
Columbia University; Nancy Blair<lb/>
Eliason, M.A, University of North<lb/>
Pat Boone and Shirley Jones will Carolina; Joseph Q. Helper, Ph.D<lb/>
Sanford Univ rsity; Lyle F. Plymale,<lb/>
M.A Marshall College;<lb/>
SOCIAL STUDIES: Willard B.<lb/>
Gatewood, Ph.D, Duke University;<lb/>
Clifton H. Johnson, Ph.D University<lb/>
of North Carolina; Stanley Todd<lb/>
Lowry. Ph.D Louisiana State Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
Dr. Orval L. Phillip?, who resigned<lb/>
as East Carolina registrar last sum-<lb/>
mer, is now teaching in the depart-<lb/>
ment of mathemetics. Raymond Mar-<lb/>
tinez who has been doing graduate<lb/>
v.ork at State University of Iowa<lb/>
during the past year, has returned<lb/>
to the college as a member of the<lb/>
health and physical education depart-<lb/>
ment. Mrs Mark Owens of Green<lb/>
By GEORGE (OFFMAN<lb/>
Fashion Director<lb/>
Despite many opinions to the con<lb/>
Lrary there is a strong male inteir<lb/>
in fashion. A look around camp. <lb/>
fall should do much to prove thi<lb/>
point because JOE COLLEGE ul<lb/>
j.r.tt is much better dressed than <lb/>
predecessor has ev r been. Now, e.<lb/>
the freshmen wear suits on occasioBj<lb/>
t at would recently have called foi<lb/>
sport jackets and slack- This trend<lb/>
not localised. It is true is most majui<lb/>
took in the country. The but time<lb/>
were an important adjunct to<lb/>
ihe college wardrobe wt<lb/>
taj .f the knickei ; Lett tal<lb/>
ko k ai what the 1968 college m<lb/>
will be wearing this fall ai East<lb/>
 Carolina.<lb/>
In suits and sport jacket- natural<lb/>
- oulder clothing in the three butt<lb/>
ea y fitting model continue to elsim<lb/>
the highlight. Suit pants are st<lb/>
plain fron. hut for the ra  srt<lb/>
 back strap has been droppe<lb/>
beviots, worsted ehevoits, herring-<lb/>
one . muted -tripe aie particular<lb/>
wit the coh.i empha 00<lb/>
the darker shades. Sport jacket arc<lb/>
topped by the Shetland in olive ar.j<lb/>
dive mixtures. Many aie being won.<lb/>
with the metal buttons and paisley<lb/>
linings.<lb/>
On slacks hackstraps are rapidly<lb/>
being replaced by the flapped hip<lb/>
pockets. Most slacks are being worn<lb/>
very short showing as much a3 a<lb/>
half to three quarters of an inch of<lb/>
ock above the shoe. The one inch<lb/>
to inch and a quarter cuff still is tr.c<lb/>
most popular. Shades of charcoal<lb/>
gray and brown remain the favorite<lb/>
in flannels with a lot of interest<lb/>
i.eiiig shown in the wash'n wear<lb/>
blends of 70r; orlon - 30 wool<lb/>
Sweaters are really big news w.th<lb/>
the new three and four button<lb/>
cardigans hading the way. They are<lb/>
one of the most colorful, comfortable,<lb/>
casual items that have appeared in 3<lb/>
long time. Sleeveless sweaters <lb/>
also be good in three button styles<lb/>
Matty are made up with leather<lb/>
trim Crw Necks are not to be for-<lb/>
gotton. They are the basic for all<lb/>
around campus wear.<lb/>
Th- most colorful spot in the male<lb/>
college far?ion scene are the paisle<lb/>
and tear drop prints in button-down<lb/>
s. ort shirts. Sport shirts are begin-<lb/>
ning to follow a new trend to the<lb/>
placket for style. They are actually<lb/>
:he same authentic stylings as Ivy<lb/>
"styled dress shirts.<lb/>
Neck wear is still a big thing for<lb/>
the college man and one that offers<lb/>
room for a little origin? lity. The wool<lb/>
challis are still winning at a run<lb/>
away. Blacks in deep tone reds and<lb/>
firreeni are tie most popular colors<lb/>
The wool challis tie and belt sets are<lb/>
still very good and really help to<lb/>
brighten up one of the new dark tone<lb/>
suits.<lb/>
Raincoats are shown mostly in<lb/>
natural shades in the three quarter<lb/>
lengt' style with the traditiona<lb/>
ragland shoulders, bal collars, ticket<lb/>
nocket, and red plaid lining. Some-<lb/>
thing new are the dark iridescents.<lb/>
Styles often get their start on the<lb/>
college campus. The young college<lb/>
man is one of the greatest style<lb/>
innovators in the men's apparel<lb/>
picture and many of these styles<lb/>
last for long periods of time. Ivy<lb/>
and the Ivy influence in men's ap-<lb/>
parel has been the major impetu-<lb/>
n the general college trend toward<lb/>
hetter dress. The same influence is<lb/>
2enerally credited for a new upsurge<lb/>
of interest in fashion in men's ap-<lb/>
parel for all ages.<lb/>
Boone, Jones To Star<lb/>
In 'April Love' Here<lb/>
Michael Green, freAman, and Carlos Burt, junior, survey a structure wMch<lb/>
marks part of the expansion of our campus.<lb/>
head the celebrated cast of "April<lb/>
Lov" to be presented in Austin<lb/>
auditorium tomorrow night. This<lb/>
will mark Pat's second leading role<lb/>
and his first romantic one. Shirley<lb/>
Jones, tie popular young lass who<lb/>
sang her way into the theat-rr with<lb/>
performance. in "Oklahoma" and<lb/>
"Carousel will play opposite Pat<lb/>
along with Arthur O'Connell, who<lb/>
everybody remembers from "Picnic<lb/>
The movie is based on a novel by<lb/>
George iAgn-w Chamberlain and is<lb/>
roduced and directed by David<lb/>
Weisbart and H. Feador, respectively.<lb/>
"The Enemy Below" and "The<lb/>
Young Lions" are slated to appear<lb/>
October 3 and October 10 at Austin.<lb/>
All of these movies are for the<lb/>
b nefit of the students and the ad-<lb/>
mission is free.<lb/>
ville is substituting for a short time<lb/>
for Mrs. Marie Browning of the<lb/>
English Department. , <lb/>
eJ<lb/>
'3<lb/>
fri<lb/>
enM<lb/>
Nursing School<lb/>
Plans In Making<lb/>
East Carolina hopes to set up a<lb/>
four year nursing school in cooper-<lb/>
ation with several hospitals in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina. The State<lb/>
Board of Higher Education want<lb/>
us to have only a two year program,<lb/>
and it has recommended $30,000 to<lb/>
the state Budget Commission:<lb/>
"that the Nursing Education pro-<lb/>
gram requested by East Carolina<lb/>
ollege be modified so as to pro-<lb/>
vide for a program similar to<lb/>
the experimental nursing edu-<lb/>
cation program at Women's Col-<lb/>
leges or the less costly program<lb/>
now in effect at Western Carolina<lb/>
College rather than for a regular<lb/>
four-year collegiate School of<lb/>
Nursing, this same modified pro-<lb/>
gram to be affective in 1959-61<lb/>
in the discretion of East Carolina<lb/>
College, by direct appropriations,<lb/>
wnich ia here recommended, or by<lb/>
funds made available by East<lb/>
Carolina College under flexibility<lb/>
provisions recommended by the<lb/>
Board L<lb/>
<pb facs="00038607_0005"/><lb/>
AY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1968<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE FIVE<lb/>
nmt<lb/>
I<lb/>
R<lb/>
D<lb/>
A<lb/>
T<lb/>
N<lb/>
E'S<lb/>
W<lb/>
Guilford Here Sat; Bucs Bow To Presbyterian Squad<lb/>
Sat. Night Clash To Be First<lb/>
Bobby Perry  Back To ECC From Army<lb/>
I<lb/>
4-<lb/>
4<lb/>
h -<lb/>
 <lb/>
art<lb/>
and<lb/>
r1<lb/>
of<lb/>
pen)<lb/>
perwt<lb/>
I <lb/>
ft ii  returned to East Carolina College September 11. It<lb/>
the tw of the initial game of the season. Several gridiron<lb/>
werc on hand but most of Coach Jack Boone's squad asked, "Who<lb/>
he Greenville native went through his first drills.<lb/>
EJCC fans even had their doubts as whether Perry would re-<lb/>
- potUght, Extremists stated that .Perry would only be another<lb/>
fcdded o the roster of Coach Jack Boone's array of speedy backs.<lb/>
c  little more conservative. They realized his rotentialies<lb/>
ltd his big moments here. Yet, they too had questions con-<lb/>
E- - return Did the Army take away his desire for the game as<lb/>
ersl Would R be in any kind of shape? Would he be too<lb/>
with his family and finishing school to take football seriously?<lb/>
long list ut questions which awaited answering.<lb/>
st th barbel shop talk of James Speight making All-Ameri<lb/>
 e Perry doubters, there were always a couple of his followers.<lb/>
 .  iTO pounder by saying, "Perry is an exceptional boy.<lb/>
it n shape and will always love the game. His return will be a big<lb/>
toM i 1968 quad<lb/>
Pen bai now returned in realization and most of those<lb/>
 lltn answered. Overnight, he has bcome an All-American<lb/>
Jj la and no one can deny that his play has been anything but<lb/>
tiuMi'  i select irroup.<lb/>
la,k Boom knew all the time that Perry would be welcomed<lb/>
U ub even with such veteran backs as Speight, Lee Atkinson, Glenn<lb/>
I i Bishop, and Tommy Nash returning,<lb/>
t a8 on an unfamiliar spot, the bench, when ECC took the<lb/>
 night. There he stayed as his teammates battled scoreless<lb/>
and liny for three periods. Finally, the speed merchant was<lb/>
n 'he' fourth quarter. The situation was a crucial one for<lb/>
I" tes u maa fourth down end six yards to go for a first and eight<lb/>
, Perry responded by scampering his left end for eight<lb/>
 wn, giving his club a 64) lead. It was a great return,<lb/>
Lj the field with a big ovation.<lb/>
onl, the beginning for Perry and his return story. This<lb/>
e really established himself. Although not in the starting<lb/>
e Cirain came from the bench and helped the Pirates wipe<lb/>
 fourth quarter Presbyterian lead. His efforts produced two<lb/>
aBd only time saved the Blue Hose from his devastating fourth<lb/>
IVeCC threat I ad seemingly stalled when Perry put on his first<lb/>
R dashed of tackle, eluded five tacklers and sailed into the end<lb/>
!  . 18-yard touchdown jaunt. Minutes later, Perry made a brilliant<lb/>
, Ralph Zehring pass to account for 21 mole yards, and a touc-<lb/>
waa a great night for the Greenville sprinter.<lb/>
As  e Jason opened. Boon, thought that his supply of backs would<lb/>
those of say in the conference. He would never have believed<lb/>
tee uould wreck his backfield resources in the first two games.<lb/>
s return has surely been a "life-saver" to the Pirate tutor.<lb/>
, ee Atkinson, James Speight, and Glenn Bass are listed on the tejury<lb/>
PhTburden has been left to Tommy Nash, Charlie Bishop and Parry.<lb/>
ek Perry wfll probably get his first startng assignment of the<lb/>
Meeting Since EC Win In '52<lb/>
North J'ate play gets in full<lb/>
swing this week and at East Caro-<lb/>
lina there will be no exception- as<lb/>
Coach Jack Boone will pit his forces<lb/>
against the Guilford Quakers.<lb/>
aid Btal and Bill Cain at ends, Char<lb/>
les Cook and Henry Kwiatkowsky at<lb/>
tackles, Ed Emory and Wayne Davis<lb/>
at guards, and Charles Gordon at<lb/>
Icental.<lb/>
In the backfield will be Ralph<lb/>
male<lb/>
iisley<lb/>
(jegin-<lb/>
the<lb/>
daily<lb/>
if<lb/>
itr <lb/>
iffera<lb/>
wool<lb/>
run<lb/>
. md<lb/>
<lb/>
ly <lb/>
larter<lb/>
litiona<lb/>
ticket<lb/>
ISonie-<lb/>
Iscents.<lb/>
n th<lb/>
Allege<lb/>
style<lb/>
styles<lb/>
Ivy<lb/>
' sp-<lb/>
ipetus<lb/>
uward<lb/>
Ime '<lb/>
:surg<lb/>
's SP'<lb/>
i?<lb/>
up <lb/>
L0oper-<lb/>
ls n<lb/>
SUt<lb/>
wnt<lb/>
jgrsnii<lb/>
l000 to<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
olio<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
edu<lb/>
Col-<lb/>
rrat8<lb/>
jlin<lb/>
ruUr<lb/>
of<lb/>
pf-<lb/>
19-61<lb/>
lio<lb/>
Ies<lb/>
biUty<lb/>
the<lb/>
7 if so he'has earned it and by the hard way.<lb/>
N partiality has been shown on the part of the coaches He has<lb/>
- wa, back up by proving that the desire which was so ev dent<lb/>
o s-reice i .till there. That little shrug of the hips, a littte<lb/>
l ,h,i .rtr. burst of spd is still present in number 22<lb/>
IX another year of Lorfn, footb.1, in Coile.e Stadi<lb/>
i ;t it' third tilt of the season and first<lb/>
A Bart Carolina goes into its tmra uu 01 mc<lb/>
.ay, Perry is the leading runner and scorer for ECC, ai-<lb/>
seeinc onlv limited action. <lb/>
He J scampered 61 yards in 10 attempts and has registered three<lb/>
Pirate's four touchdowns. <lb/>
-week our Vats are off to you, BOBBY PERRY. Welcome back to<lb/>
( arolina College.<lb/>
Predictions<lb/>
rhat glorious game of football is once again taking th.<lb/>
, if fans. It looks like another interesting season provided with<lb/>
i and all those sort of things. <lb/>
It b believed that every campus man needs to know how to pick<lb/>
Z when paying the parlay cards and placing other bet, .by<lb/>
emand we have returned with the predictions of this weeks<lb/>
milar demand, w campus mates,<lb/>
a;X: 5"ay Si-iick, has advanced from<lb/>
f lolitics'Ulso out of the dorm). Well, here goes with another<lb/>
"wake forest over Virginia Tech by 8; Deacs roared over Terps in<lb/>
iMt weak  but may have another surprise coming up.<lb/>
Duke over Virginia by 13. Hurray Carlton leads conservative Dukes<lb/>
vanorV tarved Cavalier. Site in Va. could make deference.<lb/>
State Jve" Maryland by 8; Wolfpack will be down after UNC win . . <lb/>
already embrassed once. <lb/>
Xn'overC.Ude, by 6: Cn.s cut ioose after loss to CaUwba.<lb/>
' "V TCX . B.ue Hose J-<lb/>
p here. Bears must be loaded again after whopping Woff.nl. Let s hope<lb/>
erWw'offo,d over Eton by 18; hr.sti.ns not as lough H last seon<lb/>
Western C.rulin. over App.chi.n by 8: C.U haw strung tat<lb/>
" ' X" "velTwberry b, 8- Co.ch C.yd. Biggers and Ms big<lb/>
 "TclZ?ler Gu.iford by 13: IM. p.ced by Perry for their<lb/>
, K t State win sine. 1986. Things looking np in Pir.te Den.<lb/>
" N,ir "UP" highly possible in .11 above predkUona<lb/>
ECC will be seeking their second<lb/>
win of the season thus week when<lb/>
they don the .Puile and Gold. Last<lb/>
week they fell short in a fourth<lb/>
quarter uprising and ended up on<lb/>
the short e"d of a 24-16 score. The<lb/>
previous week they had stunned<lb/>
Emory and Henry with a brilliant<lb/>
12-0 upset.<lb/>
This week the Bucs will be trying<lb/>
to recuperate from their letdown and<lb/>
open up North State play on the right<lb/>
foot. This will be the first year the<lb/>
teams have met since ECC blasted<lb/>
the Quakers 41-0 in 1952 and 40-0<lb/>
;n 1953.<lb/>
Reports from the Guilford camp<lb/>
state the Quakers are expecting<lb/>
things to be better than ever. Twen-<lb/>
ty-nine letuinees are back including<lb/>
fourteen lettermen.<lb/>
Most of last year's club were soph-<lb/>
omores and freshmen, and have re-<lb/>
turned in hopes of hell ing the Quak-<lb/>
ers climb the conference ladder.<lb/>
Coach Herb Appenzeller is in his<lb/>
third .season at the Guilford helm.<lb/>
Bill Huber, 185-pound sophomore,<lb/>
is the big hope in Appenzeller's plans.<lb/>
Huber was a regular at quarterback<lb/>
last season and spaiked the club to<lb/>
their strong late season showing.<lb/>
Other veterans returning for the<lb/>
Quakers will bo Roy Boyles and Ken<lb/>
Deans, a pair of husky tackles.<lb/>
Turning to th Euji Carolina pic-<lb/>
ture, Coach .lack Hoone will field<lb/>
an injury-riddled club. The veteran<lb/>
coach has been plaqoed with injuries<lb/>
more tlii.s season than at any other<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Tie Pirate backfield which was<lb/>
loaded with de.th in pre season dope,<lb/>
will -uffu- must. All-Conference full-<lb/>
hack Janus Speight is still expected<lb/>
to be on the sidelines. The Green-<lb/>
ville native was sidelined with an<lb/>
inkle injury in the opening minutes<lb/>
of the Buc's first game.<lb/>
Other backs on the injury list in<lb/>
elude Glenn Bas<lb/>
Zehring at quarterback, Tommy Nash<lb/>
and Bobby Perry at halfs, and Vern-<lb/>
on Davis at fullback.<lb/>
The game will be observed as of-<lb/>
ficial Buc night in honor of the new<lb/>
nj ascot.<lb/>
Sixteen Point 4th<lb/>
Quarter Drive Mot<lb/>
Enough In Loss<lb/>
Presbyterian College of Clinton<lb/>
S. C. avenged last years 8-0 loss at<lb/>
the hands of East Carolina College as<lb/>
they staved off the Buc's 4th quarter<lb/>
ia!ly at 16 points and won by a score<lb/>
of 24 to 16. EC's second gridiron<lb/>
contest of the young 58 season was<lb/>
played last Saturday night in college<lb/>
stadium at East Carolina as the Blue<lb/>
Hose's Bobe Pate and the Pirate's<lb/>
Bobby Perry dominated offensive<lb/>
play.<lb/>
During the first quarter the running<lb/>
of halfback Pate kept PC's offensive<lb/>
unit moving as did Glenn Bass for<lb/>
ECC's offensive. Each team had to<lb/>
constantly kick out of danger during<lb/>
that scoreless first quarter and it<lb/>
end d with PC In possession of the<lb/>
pigskin on the Pirate's 25 yard line.<lb/>
Big John Lucus, fleet footed half-<lb/>
back for PC took a bandoff from his<lb/>
quarterback Bob Waters and went<lb/>
21 yards around his own left end on<lb/>
the second play of the second quar-<lb/>
ter to garner Presbyterian's first<lb/>
touchdown of the night. The pass<lb/>
attempt by Waters for the extra<lb/>
point was no good.<lb/>
East Carolina went fom its own<lb/>
H5 to the 50 yard strip in a series<lb/>
of ground gains lead by Bob Perry<lb/>
and Lee Atkinson. I but then Zehring tried to hit end<lb/>
Bucs Drop Emory-<lb/>
Henry In Opener<lb/>
By 12-0 Score<lb/>
East Carolina opened the 1958<lb/>
season in roaring fashion Saturday<lb/>
night, September 13th by stunning<lb/>
Envoy and Henry College 12-0 be-<lb/>
fore a capacity crowd of 6,500.<lb/>
The Bucs equaled the 1957 win<lb/>
total as th y pounced on two forth<lb/>
quarter fumbles and immediately<lb/>
turned them into touchdowns. It was<lb/>
the first horn- win since 1956.<lb/>
For three quarters, both teams<lb/>
battled up and down the gridiron,<lb/>
xchanging punts and short gains,<lb/>
but neither team able to tally.<lb/>
The deepest pnetration by the<lb/>
Wasps was checked at the ECC 35<lb/>
yard mark in th- second period. The<lb/>
highly-touted offensive attack of the<lb/>
visitors was unable to dent the ECC<lb/>
forward wall as (re-game guesers<lb/>
had predicted.<lb/>
Perry Pearson brought the crowd<lb/>
to life late in the third quarter when<lb/>
he halted a Wasp threat by recover-<lb/>
ing a fumble on the Pirate 33. The<lb/>
sling-shot arm of Ralph Zehring<lb/>
went to work and the Bucs were on<lb/>
the visitors 12 yard line as the quar-<lb/>
ter ended. A 53 yard pass from Zeh-<lb/>
ring to Howard Beale was the big<lb/>
play in tl e drive. Bobby .Perry, mak-<lb/>
ing his first appearance of the<lb/>
nig-ht and also since returning from<lb/>
service, climaxed the drive minutes<lb/>
later by scampering around left end<lb/>
for eight yards and a touchdown.<lb/>
The play came on a crucial fourth<lb/>
AtTepending 21 months in the Army as  Military Policeman, Greenville's down situation.<lb/>
The Pirates -were knocking on the<lb/>
Bobby Perry has donned another uniform. The 5 10, 170 pound halfback<lb/>
has already broken back into (oath Jack Boone's starting line up and has<lb/>
been.a predominant figure in the Pirate storing attack. Bob will be at the<lb/>
halfback slot again this Satuiday night when East Carolina takes on Guil-<lb/>
ford's Quakers of Guilford, N. C. (Photo by Bill Boyd)<lb/>
Bass, opening game star, received a<lb/>
banged-np knee against Presbyterian<lb/>
and is out indefinitely.<lb/>
Lynn Barnett, co-Captin and cen-<lb/>
ter, is also counted out for the Guil-<lb/>
ford tilt.<lb/>
Boone is expected to go with How-<lb/>
Clint LeGette<lb/>
Bill Cain in the left flat the pass<lb/>
fell short into the arms of Blue<lb/>
Hoist's Tony Benson, a halfback<lb/>
who picked up three blockers and<lb/>
had little trouble in scampering 55<lb/>
quick yadrs for another TD for PC.<lb/>
Nat Cole's attempt to run the extra<lb/>
point was not good.<lb/>
With the score 12-0 EC received<lb/>
the kick and carried it back to the<lb/>
29 yard line. A Zehring pass hit<lb/>
Bill CTain and he picked up a first<lb/>
down on the 41 yard line. The<lb/>
passing attack faltered though and<lb/>
the Clinton team took over. Short<lb/>
ground gains took them to EC's 26<lb/>
yard line led by the fancy running<lb/>
off to Presbyterian to open the<lb/>
second half of play after returning<lb/>
the kick a short distance. Lucus<lb/>
quickly got things rolling as he went<lb/>
25 yards on a handoff from his QB.<lb/>
With PC at the Pirate's 35 yard<lb/>
line halfback Bob Pate kept things<lb/>
going as he picked up numerous<lb/>
short gains. A short pass from<lb/>
WaUrs to the end Casteen put PC<lb/>
on the Buc's 5 yard line where a<lb/>
plunge by Bob Matthews netted them<lb/>
6 more .points. For the third time of<lb/>
the night they could not make<lb/>
the extra point or points.<lb/>
Aftei the kickoff EC had to<lb/>
give up the ball on downs and the<lb/>
Blue Hose could do no better as<lb/>
they had to kick back out after<lb/>
exhausting effortB to make a first<lb/>
down. At the beginning of the fourth<lb/>
line. A QB sneak by Waters gained<lb/>
6 more points but the extra point<lb/>
attempt was again a failure.<lb/>
Facing a 24 point deficit, the East<lb/>
Carolina offensive unit managed to<lb/>
get rolling with eight minutes of<lb/>
playing time left in the fourth quarter<lb/>
A PC fumble recovered by Jim Gordon<lb/>
team set the stage for Bob Perry's<lb/>
on th. 13 yard line of the visiting<lb/>
electrifying 13 yard run and East<lb/>
Carolina's first scoring of the night.<lb/>
Kes blocks by Wayne Davis and Da-<lb/>
vid Thomas gave Perry the running<lb/>
room he needed. Zehring's pass to<lb/>
end Joe Holmes for two extra points<lb/>
was good and the score ituod at 24-8<lb/>
favor PC.<lb/>
Presbyterian quickly gave up the<lb/>
on downs as the Bucs defenders<lb/>
Wasps goal once again late m the<lb/>
period as guard Wayne Davis re-<lb/>
covered a E &amp; H miscue on the ECC<lb/>
4. Zehring passed to Glenn Bass for<lb/>
36 yards and then two plays later<lb/>
hit Charlie Bishop in the end zone<lb/>
for a TDthe play covering nine<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Emroy and Henry took to the air<lb/>
for its final series of plays but were<lb/>
up against an inspired ECC eleven<lb/>
and were unable to move.<lb/>
Glenn Bass, sophomore halfback,<lb/>
was one of the game's many stars.<lb/>
Bass was the Bucs leading ground<lb/>
gainer and his defensive halfback<lb/>
: lay also was vital in the win. Ed<lb/>
Emroy, Wayne Davis, and Charles<lb/>
 Gordon stood wut in the ECC for-<lb/>
ward wall.<lb/>
l line lew uy tll j.frvj  .  v I .<lb/>
f Waters tat the half cut .hort quarter Bo FW. -t run. rf j  Zehring-S pa3Sig arm<lb/>
the rally. Waters' passing put PC m a goai<lb/>
Tackle H nry Kwiatkowski kicked I to go position on the Buc three yard<lb/>
OnfthVoff.cers on Uie newly<lb/>
elected Intramural Council is Clint<lb/>
LeGette, a senior from Greensboro,<lb/>
N. C. LeGette is the publicity di-<lb/>
rector for the councU and has been<lb/>
very active in intramural sporting af-<lb/>
fairs ever since coming to East Caro-<lb/>
lina College. (Photo by Boyd)<lb/>
irst Appearance<lb/>
The Marching Pirates the 108<lb/>
r ece band ended its first half-time<lb/>
Phow by forming an E C which is to<lb/>
jecome traditional in ending every<lb/>
lalf-time show. With the drums roll-<lb/>
ing in the background, the band went<lb/>
to its knees with th famous Queen<lb/>
Lnne Salute, followed hy the Alma<lb/>
iata.<lb/>
J Plan For The Coming Responsibilities<lb/>
Family<lb/>
Security<lb/>
East Carolina only had four rush-<lb/>
ing plys in the third quarter of1<lb/>
their game against Presbyterian Col-<lb/>
lege. Their rushing net foT the quar-<lb/>
ter was ? y1<lb/>
Three new married menTommy<lb/>
ih, Stuart Holland, and Parry<lb/>
earsonare on the Pirate roster<lb/>
ivsi fall- All were married this sum-<lb/>
r along with trainer BUI Tuackar.<lb/>
L<lb/>
Savings<lb/>
Military Service<lb/>
Retirement<lb/>
With<lb/>
GENE BAKER<lb/>
Students Life Insurance Representative<lb/>
With The<lb/>
State Life Insurance Company<lb/>
Here At East Carolina<lb/>
Phone 2066<lb/>
QMMMffMW4rW-WM I<lb/>
Dear students and faculty,<lb/>
We would likf to welcome you back with wishes for<lb/>
another successful year toward better education and high-<lb/>
er scholastic standards. East Carolina College has grown<lb/>
rapidly and produced many students of whom we are proud.<lb/>
We sincerely hope that you will continue to choose<lb/>
Brodv's as your shopping center. We carry one of Eastern<lb/>
Carolina's largest selections of sportswear. You will also<lb/>
find at Brody's some of Eastern Carolina's largest selec-<lb/>
tions of nationally advertised smart Capezios, I. Miller,<lb/>
Madamoiselle, nd Foot Flair.<lb/>
We invite you to make your shopping headquarters<lb/>
with us where you will find expert gift wrapping and<lb/>
check cashing service free. Budget charge accounts are<lb/>
invited. Make Brody's your home away from home.<lb/>
BRODY'S<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
w. nt to work again. Halfback Bob<lb/>
Perry eluded the PC secondary long<lb/>
enough for Zehring to hit him<lb/>
with a 23 yard aerial in the end<lb/>
He then proceeded to hit Holmes in<lb/>
exactly the same spot he threw to<lb/>
Perry and two more points rounded<lb/>
tot the ' nig for the night i<lb/>
both teams.<lb/>
Time was the important element in<lb/>
the big fourth quarter for East Caro-<lb/>
lina. Their best offensive showing<lb/>
mtsi of course .shown then but their<lb/>
teamwork as a whole was better.<lb/>
What looked to be a disasterous<lb/>
night for the Pirate team ended up<lb/>
in a good hard fought loss because of<lb/>
the final quarter.<lb/>
Glenn Bass, Buc halfback not only<lb/>
impressed the etowd with his running<lb/>
ability during t. e contest but time and<lb/>
time again ruined the PC passing<lb/>
and running attack in the secondary.<lb/>
The work of ends Bill Cain and David<lb/>
Thomas kept the PC backs going in-<lb/>
side or running wide most of the<lb/>
night. The tackling and blocking of<lb/>
Ed Emory also highlighted the game<lb/>
East Carolina goes at it again this<lb/>
Saturday night a3 they will attempt<lb/>
to btter their present 1-1 mark at<lb/>
the hands of Guilford College. Game<lb/>
time again is slated for 8 p. m. in<lb/>
college stadium.<lb/>
Ralph Zehring was one of NAIA's<lb/>
top passers last year in tossing 38-<lb/>
88 and 592 yards. This year the Pirate<lb/>
co-captain completed 14-24 and 202<lb/>
yards in the opening two games.<lb/>
WELCOME BACK! STUDENTS AND<lb/>
FACULTY!<lb/>
LAUTARES BROS.<lb/>
Greenville's only registered jewelers extends to you<lb/>
n hearty welcome to Greenville and ECC. We have been<lb/>
serving ECC students and faculty since 1912.<lb/>
Make our store your headquarters for gifts, silver,<lb/>
jewelry, fine leather goods, etc.<lb/>
LAUTARES BROS.<lb/>
Certified Gemologist - Registered Jewelers<lb/>
Diamond Specialists<lb/>
414 Evans Street<lb/>
<pb facs="00038607_0006"/><lb/>
PAGE SIX<lb/>
EAST C A BOUNIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25<lb/>
Methodists Move<lb/>
Into New, Modern<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
The new Methodist Student Center<lb/>
opened its doors at the beginning of<lb/>
the Fall Quarter and the director,<lb/>
Miss Mamiej Chandler, and the Wes-<lb/>
ley Foundation Council were there to<lb/>
greet the students as they arrived for<lb/>
orientation and registration. The<lb/>
Center, which is at the corner of<lb/>
Fifth and Holly Streets, just across<lb/>
from Garrett Hall, a project of the<lb/>
Woman's Division of Christian Serv-<lb/>
ice of the Methodist Church to pro-<lb/>
vide a "home away from home" for<lb/>
Methodist .students at East Carolina<lb/>
College. It is supported by the Wo-<lb/>
man's Division and the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Annual Confernce. The two Meth-<lb/>
odist Churches in Greenville make<lb/>
annual contributions toward its'<lb/>
maintenance.<lb/>
The modern brick structure was<lb/>
completed last August at a cost of<lb/>
aproximately $116,000. It is the result<lb/>
of careful planning on the part of<lb/>
the Building Committee, of which<lb/>
Mrs. W. H. Taft of Greenville was the<lb/>
chairman. Dr, John D. Messick, presi-<lb/>
dent of East Caroilna College, and<lb/>
Mr. J. H. Waldrop, member of the<lb/>
Board of Trustees, were also members<lb/>
of the building committee. The new<lb/>
building replaces the old frame house<lb/>
which stood on the same site and<lb/>
which was adapted and served as the<lb/>
Methodist Youth Center since 1945.<lb/>
The building is furnished through-<lb/>
out with new and modern furnishings,<lb/>
provided by the Woman's Society of<lb/>
the North Carolina Conference. The<lb/>
parlor, chapel, assembly and all-<lb/>
purpose room, workroom for students,<lb/>
office and conference room for the<lb/>
director are on the main floor. In the<lb/>
all-purpose room is a full size stage<lb/>
with lighting equipment for dramatic<lb/>
programs. On the basement Vwr is<lb/>
a large lounge with sectional furni-<lb/>
Students Enter New Religious Center<lb/>
Four New Department He ids Begin Work<lb/>
CONTINUED<lb/>
KA<lb/>
MManLi (handier, director of the Methodiat Student Center welcomes Bethhason and Dixon Hall to U.<lb/>
new center on Fifth Street.  <lb/>
New Students Total Over 1400<lb/>
Last year 761 students took leave til 1951 that its name was changed<lb/>
of East Carolina by marching ontoto East Carolina College.<lb/>
a platform and receiving their col-<lb/>
lege diploma. This year these schol-<lb/>
ars have been replaced by over 1400<lb/>
new students, most of which are fresh"<lb/>
man. The exact number of students<lb/>
has not been determined, but the<lb/>
figure stands well over 3600. "<lb/>
During the summer of 1068, 1877<lb/>
students attended the first term and<lb/>
1458 turned out for the second ses-<lb/>
sion. According to records the cumu-<lb/>
lative enrollment for the regular<lb/>
school year of 1957-58 was 3947.<lb/>
This figure s exceedingly larger<lb/>
than the 1317 students who attended<lb/>
in 1947-1948. East Carolina has<lb/>
topled its capacity within the past<lb/>
ten years.<lb/>
In 1947 extension courses were<lb/>
president; Mary Margaret Kelly, j unheard-of, but in 1958, 1438 people<lb/>
secretary;<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
ture, tables for games, record cabinet,<lb/>
book cases, and open fireplace. The<lb/>
third floor is furnished as an apart-<lb/>
ment for the director.<lb/>
The formal opening of this new<lb/>
student center will be on Sunday,<lb/>
October 5, but the Wesley Foun-<lb/>
dation, which is the program of the<lb/>
Methodist Church for the campus of<lb/>
East Carolina College, is now be-<lb/>
ing carried on. The center is open<lb/>
every day from 9:00 a. in. to 10:30<lb/>
p. m. On Friday and Saturday it is<lb/>
open until 11:30 p. m.<lb/>
Dr. Bruce Carter, Mr. Paul K. Min-<lb/>
nis, and Mr. Thomas Flowers, new<lb/>
faculty members of the Art De-<lb/>
partment, and the freshman art maj-<lb/>
ors were guests of honor at a special<lb/>
hour held by the Art Club Septem-<lb/>
ber 11 in the Y-Hut. The club has<lb/>
also had one regular business meet-<lb/>
ing. The officers thi.s year are Tom<lb/>
Minis president; Ed Lancaster, vice-<lb/>
and Sara Matthews,<lb/>
Richer! Added<lb/>
(Continued from page 1)<lb/>
tion took place at the church.<lb/>
At 9:30 o'clock, the Second Degree<lb/>
Initiation is to take place.<lb/>
An Installation Banquet is sched-<lb/>
uled for 6:30 p. m. at the Cinderella<lb/>
Restaurant, with Secretary Dr. Hos-<lb/>
kins, toastmaster.<lb/>
Highlight of the day will be the<lb/>
Installation Ball at the Greenville<lb/>
Moose Lodge beginning at 9:00.<lb/>
On Saturday, the first formal chap-<lb/>
ter meeting will be held for installa-<lb/>
tion of chapter oficer at the KA<lb/>
Room. President Stone will be in<lb/>
charge of tne procedingj. A formal<lb/>
pledge ceremony will take place at<lb/>
12:00, following the chapter meeting.<lb/>
Stone again will preside.<lb/>
took extension work in different<lb/>
I arts of North Carolina including:<lb/>
Bolivia, Camp Lejune, Edenton,<lb/>
Elizabeth City, Fayetteville, Jackson,<lb/>
Jacksonville, Kinstoh, Louisburg<lb/>
New Bern, Raleigh, Rock Mount,<lb/>
Tht East Carolina Playhouse wel-  Sharllotte. Smithfield, Warrenton,<lb/>
,un.ed this fall to its ranks a new j Washington, Wilmington and Wilson.<lb/>
Assiciate Director, Mr. Robert Rick- I East year students doing practice-<lb/>
ert. Mr. Richei t is a member of the teaching taught in the following sur<lb/>
Department of English, and has just<lb/>
returned from the University of<lb/>
Maryland College of Special and<lb/>
sounding communities: Ayden, Bear!<lb/>
122 obtain an A. B. certificate.<lb/>
With over 3600 student adorning<lb/>
its campus, it is no wonder that East<lb/>
Carolina needs more room for classes<lb/>
and housing. Seven new buildings and<lb/>
annexations are now being con-<lb/>
structed, the largest of which is to<lb/>
oe the new men's dormitory.<lb/>
This new dormitory is expected<lb/>
to be completed sometime in the very<lb/>
near future. Other project now<lb/>
underway include: an addition to the<lb/>
administration building, which will<lb/>
double its size; additions to the Music<lb/>
building and the cafeteria, a new<lb/>
classroom building 278 feet long,<lb/>
power plant and laundry additions<lb/>
and renovations and enlargements<lb/>
in Flanagan, including air-condition-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
East Carolina officials are also<lb/>
requesting a government loan for<lb/>
1959-1961 for capital improvements<lb/>
including street lighting for new<lb/>
dormitories site, additions to the<lb/>
heating plant, college union, infir-<lb/>
mary, library, Graham and Flana-<lb/>
gan buildings; a new Woman's dor-<lb/>
mitory and another mens dormitory<lb/>
for 520 students, North cafeteria<lb/>
Continuation Study, European Di-<lb/>
vision. In addition to his classes in<lb/>
Speech and English, Mr. Rickert will<lb/>
act as Technical Director of thte<lb/>
Grass, Belvoir, Chicod, Greensboro, lenovatioius outdoor atheletic facili-<lb/>
Creenville, Grifton, Grimesland, j ties, un elementary school building<lb/>
Kinston, La Grange, Bethel, Con- and a new gymnasium.<lb/>
tentnea, Karmville, Lucoma, Maury, Before 1947 Jarvis Hall was used<lb/>
ev Bern. Plymouth, Robtrsonville, (as a mens dormitory. Since then<lb/>
Rock Ridge, Snow Hill, Stokes, Tar- Slay and Umstead have gone up. In<lb/>
PlaylKmseV'a'irproucio'n of" THE I boro, Washington, Williamston and j fact, nearly half of the college has<lb/>
ADMIRABLE CRICHON. : Winterville. Of these practice-teach- . been built since 1947.<lb/>
For the past three years, Mr. era, 512 obtained their teaching de- East Carolina has grown immense- !<lb/>
Richert has worked the Air Force gree. -iiv both in population and in build-<lb/>
personnel of S.A.C. in Europe. As In 1940 only 25 students were ings. A former football player for j<lb/>
a graduate of the I'niv rsity of Min -graduated with an A. B. degree. Al- ECTC and a 1947 graduate, who is<lb/>
nesota. Rkheii has done technical though our college was authorized ; now principle of the Grimesland<lb/>
,sk u;th little Theatre groups to giant this degree several years ; schools had this .to say, in jest,<lb/>
both in the United States and in ago, BOC was basically a teacher's "After looking through the<lb/>
Europe. Ui.s wife, Corrinne is in j college as one could well under-<lb/>
charge of closed circuit television for stand by its name . . . East Caro-<lb/>
JECC 1ina Teachers' College. It wasn't un-<lb/>
Buccaneer, I believe that EC has<lb/>
more teachers now than we had stu-<lb/>
dents when I was attending<lb/>
Four new department heads have<lb/>
begun their new duties. These in-<lb/>
clude Dr. Meredith N. Posey, who<lb/>
heads the department of English; Dr.<lb/>
Harley P. Milstead, the department<lb/>
of geography; Dr. Paul Murray, the<lb/>
department of social studies, and<lb/>
Professor Earl E. Beach, the depart-<lb/>
ment of music.<lb/>
Dr Murray has been acting chair-<lb/>
man ' of the department of social<lb/>
studies since the retirement of Dr.<lb/>
A. D. Frank last November. He is<lb/>
a graduate of Emory University in<lb/>
Georgia and holds the doctor's degree<lb/>
I from the University of North Caro-<lb/>
line. His published works include<lb/>
'The Whig Party in Georgia one<lb/>
of the Sprunt publications of the<lb/>
University of North Carolina Press<lb/>
and a number of articles in scholar-<lb/>
ly journals.<lb/>
Dr Murray has taught at East<lb/>
Carolina for the past twelve years.<lb/>
During this time he has served as<lb/>
vice president of both the North<lb/>
Carolina Historical Society and the<lb/>
Literary and Historical Association<lb/>
of North Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. Milstead joined the East Caro-<lb/>
lina faculty last June. As head of<lb/>
the geogrpahy department, he will<lb/>
replace Dr. P. W. Pickelsimer, who<lb/>
retired in May after more than<lb/>
thirty years of service at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. Milstead is a graduate of Illi-<lb/>
nois State Normal University and<lb/>
holds the master's and doctor's de-<lb/>
grees from the School of Geography,<lb/>
Clark University, Worcester, Mass.<lb/>
Before coming to East Carolina,<lb/>
he was head of the geography de-<lb/>
partment at Montclair State Teach-<lb/>
pis College in New Jersey. He has<lb/>
also taught at Illinois State Normal<lb/>
University.<lb/>
A number of his articles have ap-<lb/>
peared in "Economic Geography He<lb/>
is also author of a book on the geog-<lb/>
rat hy of New Jersey.<lb/>
He is a member of the American<lb/>
Geographical Society; the Associa-<lb/>
tion of American Geographers; Gam-<lb/>
ma Theta Upsilon, national fra-<lb/>
ternity for geography; and other<lb/>
professional organizations.<lb/>
Dr. Posey, a faculty member at<lb/>
East Carolina for twenty years, will<lb/>
re: lace Dr. Lucilev Turner, who will<lb/>
set ire during the summer. A gradu-<lb/>
ate of the University of Texas, he<lb/>
received the B.tA. the M. A and<lb/>
'he Ph. D, degrees there and served<lb/>
as a member of the English depart-<lb/>
ment for thirteen years.<lb/>
Dr. Posey is now chairman of the<lb/>
Committee on Freshman Composition<lb/>
in the department of English at the<lb/>
college here.<lb/>
An active member of the North<lb/>
Carolina English Teachers Associa-<lb/>
tion, he belongs to the committee<lb/>
appointed to revise the constitution<lb/>
of the association and has written<lb/>
a number of articles for the official<lb/>
Hiblication "The Nortt Carolina Eng-<lb/>
lish Teacher<lb/>
Dr. Poses U president of the<lb/>
North Carolina Speech Association.<lb/>
He contributed tfl the speech section<lb/>
of the revision of the State "Lan-<lb/>
guage Arts Bulletin which is now<lb/>
being prepared t'. , ublication.<lb/>
The author of a number of Po-<lb/>
lished poems, Dr. Pey ha also<lb/>
written articles for "Modern Lan-<lb/>
guage Notes" and College Compo<lb/>
sition and Communication<lb/>
Professor Karl E. Beach, ha- been<lb/>
chairman at Musk Education, Un-<lb/>
dergraduate and Graduate Divisions,<lb/>
at the University of Georgia in<lb/>
At ens silhe 1950.<lb/>
WldelV kliortn foj i Work u<lb/>
ediMfctor, Bea-n i prominently i(jef<lb/>
jtifkd w.th the Musi L.uj.<lb/>
National Conference i n<lb/>
Ipresident of the - era Divis.<lb/>
of the Organisation.<lb/>
He replaces Dr. Kenf- . ut<lb/>
bert, who resigned <lb/>
to be. ease chairman of th, Depart-<lb/>
ment of Music at North Texaa State<lb/>
(College, Denton.<lb/>
Prof. Beach hold- Die i<lb/>
degree from l apita I<lb/>
'Columbus, Ohio, and the :c<lb/>
from Western Rrfht I'mver-<lb/>
sity<lb/>
THEY SAID IT COULDN'T BE DONE - BUT TODAYS l?M GIVES YOU-<lb/>
Puff<lb/>
by<lb/>
puff<lb/>
tars<lb/>
Four field goals in one game<lb/>
by a man who'd never kicked<lb/>
one before! Bobby Conrad<lb/>
himself said, "I never kicked<lb/>
a field goal in high school or<lb/>
college. In fact, I never even<lb/>
tried But the amazing Texas<lb/>
A&amp;M back broke two All Star<lb/>
records by booting four three-<lb/>
pointers, including one for 44<lb/>
yards, as the 1958 college<lb/>
stars upset the Detroit Lions,<lb/>
35 to 19. Conrad is now a<lb/>
Chicago Cardinal.<lb/>
taste<lb/>
DON'T SETTLE FOR ONE WITHOUT THE OTHER1<lb/>
Change to tfM and get 'em both. Such an improved filter and more taste! Better<lb/>
taste than in any other cigarette. Yes, today's UM combines these two essential<lb/>
of modern smoking enjoyment-less tars and more taste-in one great cigarette.<lb/>
-<lb/>
ffP<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
-Wrt<lb/>
 "ttMcco <lb/>
ltMi<lb/>
Tobacco Oo.<lb/>
Bi<lb/>
Pack<lb/>
Light into that live Madam Haver!<lb/>
f3<lb/>
307 EVANS STREET<lb/>
offtnani<lb/>
MEMS WEAR<lb/>
PROCTOR HOTEL BLDG<lb/>
Campus Representatives<lb/>
BILI WALLA4 E<lb/>
CEDRIC JOHNSON<lb/>
FASHION SHOW<lb/>
WINNERS<lb/>
Kelvin Wood is the winner of the New Muted Tone College<lb/>
Hall Sport Coat and matching Gray Flannel Slacks. This<lb/>
outfit was selected by Kelvin and judged by your East<lb/>
Carolina Fashion PanelJames Teachy, Lyle Cooper, and<lb/>
Mike Katsiastm being the best all around campus outfit.<lb/>
See it in our windows<lb/>
Dixie Hobgood ig the winner of this New Puritan 8-button<lb/>
bell Sleeve Cardigan. This handsome Lambswool Sweater<lb/>
has been a hit on every campus in the country.<lb/>
mmmom-mmm<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>